Chicago Defender
Saturday, September 23, 1922
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
Defender Inaugurates "Go-To-a-White-Church" Sunday
Runs Amuck With Gun After Ku Klux Meeting
CHICAGOANS!
Turn your clocks back one hour on retiring Saturday night. Sept. 23.
WILLIAMS.
SLAYS GIRL WHO SHIELDS SWEETHEART
Blame Klan Propaganda for Murderous Act by White Man in Kentucky
Police Sergeant Marsh and Patrolman Dohre answered the summons of Thomas Harris, 430 George Burton was captured. In his pocket the police found a pistol with four empty shells and two remaining cartridges. A large crowd of angry citizens gathered about the Central police station, but was dispersed by the police. His murder declared that he did not remember shooting anybody, but admitted he had been drinking. He trembled when the charge of murder was dropped. He was the chief of police, Emmet D. Kirgan. Burton was a strikebreaker. He said he was employed as a boiler inspector by the Big Four railroad and railroad boarding house at Riverside.
TEXAS GRAND JURY RAPS
MOB THAT BURNED THOMAS
Waco, Tex. Sept. 22.—The September grand jury sitting here took occurrences that condemn the action of a mob that alleged murder of Harrell Bolton (white). Bolton was killed while escorting a woman attacked after the white man's death. Thomas was identified by the woman as her assistant. Following this information the woman's father killed Bolton in an undertaking established by mob, engaged by failure to lynch Thomas, took the body, set fire to it in the public square and then dragged it partially burned, through the street.
The grand jury was especially charged to investigate the killing of Bolton, but not enough evidence was reported in part as follows: "In connection with the slaying of Bolton the consensus of opinion of the grand jury report in part as follows: At the hands of a Negro answering the description of Jesse Thomas. However, there has been considerable testimony presented to the grand jury and doubt as to the guilt of Thomas.
"In connection with the killing of Jesse Thomas we wish to condemn the action of the mob in dragging the man afterwards burning the sine, and urge all law-abiding citizens to uphold the law at all times."
PERRY HOWARD IN ACTION
Indianapolis, Ind. Sept. 22.—Hon. Perry W. Howard, special assistant to the attorney general, fired the opening gun of the Reverde cameraman at an address at Terre Haute tonight.
Christians Are Urged to Pull Together in Church Worship
We have all kinds of special campaigns to promote various causes and programs—go to high school, go to college campaigns, health campaigns, and so forth—all of them worthy objectives. Among Christian people we have the special go to church Sunday to stimulate and encourage church attendance. So far, so good. Why let it end with just going to church?
Why not specify the church to which we ought to go?
Let the Race have a special day to visit white churches. Millions of white people calling themselves Christians never realize that there are millions of other Christians, their brothers in Christ, who are not white and who are not to be confused with the foreign work collections to save the heathen.
They never see a well dressed, well behaved Race man or woman at worship with them in their churches. Reliable statisticians tell us that more than half the population of this country belongs to some kind of church. One of the ways to promote better understanding between the races and increase good will is to begin with church people in their CHURCH homes. Just because we have our own churches is no reason why we should not visit and use the other fellow's church occasionally.
Let us put on our best clothes and best manners and go see how the white man worships his God. Let us lift up our voices together with his in common praise of the Father of us all.
Let us by our presence remind white men and women that the Christ they worship taught all of us to be our brother's keeper. Invite white people to your churches. Show them your idea of brotherly love.
Urge your pastor to exchange pulpits with some white pastor on an appointed day to preach good will and better understanding of one's neighbors.
Take your choirs that sing so well to visit white churches.
Take along a good friendly aggregation. Make your white friends feel that you want them to visit your churches.
What better way is there to promote good feeling than to break down those barriers which keep us apart, in ignorance of the best that is in us all?
I call upon all Race men and women with pride in their religion, in themselves and in their community to join in a special Go-To-A-White-Church Sunday campaign.
Tell your pastor about it. Tell your white friends you are coming. Let us help bring about a better day by knowing the other fellow better and helping him to know the best that is in us. If Christians cannot pull together, who can?
African on Degree Roll at U.of C.
From "Bantuland," where one is told the heathen and his clan, there comes a little "David" who has shaken the mighty giant of propaganda and put to flight his armies who have sold learning cannot be assimilated by men of African origin or descent.
S. M. Nkomo, professor of history at the Tuskegee institute, was born and received his early training and education in South Africa. Later he African language at Edwalten Training school, Natal. Since coming to America his entire time has been deceived by the Greenville college and completing a course of study at the Moody Bible Institute, Chicago, before taking up a career in the police cage, where he received, on Sept. 1, his master of arts degree in the department of history and sociology. The subject of his thesis was "The Colony of the Urantiae" relating to the Urantia of Bantulan Races.
In the near future Mr. Nkomo will return to Africa and enter upon education. He will present the work at Tuskegee as teacher of European history. A lecturing tour has been planned for the founder and secretary of the African Studies union, a member of the A. M. E. church, Lake Geneva student conference alumni and the Y. M. C. A. of the University of Chicago, surely awakening and proving its capacity to grasp modern thought.
BREAKS WOMAN'S JAW
WITH BRASS FAUCET
Wiley Hammond, 17 West $4th
Street, Calumet avenue, of stealing some
bricks from him after he had hired
him to watch them. Jones stated that
he had been the aron avenue, and
had taken the bricks.
After leaving the court room, Jones,
with his wife, Estella, engaged in a
suit against the County hospital,
taken to the County hospital suffering
with a broken jaw bone, where
Hammond struck her with a brass
knife, and was carrying at the
time of the fight.
Roland Allison
Senate in Sharp Tilt Over Loan
Washington, D. C., Sept. 22—A sharp fight developed in the Senate over the administration bill proposing a loan of $5,000,000 to Liberia, a measure passed by the House last May, urged by President Hardling and Secretary Hughes, and included the loan steering committee's program. The bill, declared by Republican leaders to be an "inheritance" from the Wilson administration and attacked by Senator Borah, Republican leader and several Democratic senators, including Senator Glass of Virginia, who was secretary of the treasury and the Liberian loan negotiations. Chairman McCumber and Senator Curtis, Republican, Kansas, of the Senate finance committee urged passage of a moral obligation. They said Liberia declared war against Germany and suffered considerable loss after being promised financial assistance and subsequent arrestism and subsequent legislation. They recited that former President Wilson, former Secretary Lansing of the state department, President Obama, and former President recommended the loan, Mr. Lansing declared the United States "honor bound." Senator Borah charged that the bill would be the "taking over of Liberia by the United States," and added that New York bankers, who have made loans to Liberia, would be the principal beneficiaries. Senator Borah he did not concur with Mr. Lansing he did not, and added that $26,000 advanced to Liberia to enable the Liberian delegation to attend the peace conference "cannot be justified."
All the officers on duty in the Stanton avenue police station could not put out J. A. Griffin and Myrtle Avenue, although Griffin stated that Myrtle was not his wife. By sergeant Glenn before quiet could be restored. When arranged before Judge Robert, but they were sent on their way
HUNT FOR PASTOR ON GIRL'S CHARGE
Bogus Newspaper Scoop Gives Public Tainted Facts Money Settlement
Washington, D. C. Sept. 22.—One of the biggest news hoaxes ever worked on readers here and in many other centers throughout the country was played when, because of false information, one of the newspapers of the Capital City, announced that the $1,000 reward offered in connection with the conspiracy of the murderer of Dr. Robert L. Brown, be awarded by the court to Dr.
Dr. Francis
throughout the country, the country was called when, because of false information, one of the parties to the "Capitol City" announcement that the $1,000 million in connection with the arrest and conviction of the murderer Dr. L. Brown had been awarded by the court of the John R. Francis, once an advertising dentist, with offices now in the Southern Ad building, Seventh and Ames Northwest, in heavy paper throughout Benton County, mished into flashing this "bogus" scoop.
Not only has the award not been made by the court of investigation by the Defender representative has brought to light that the case as to the award has not been heard by the H. Paul H. Foley, mosaic against James Frye in his trial and conviction for the killing of Dr. Brown, and Dr. John R. Francis, who fell heir to much notoriety through being accused of killing two men, are both contenders for the reward. When a dispute arose between the two as to who had the right to it, Dr. L. Paul H. Foley, Co. N. Pearl Curtis and Robbie L. Wotton, who were to pay the reward, filed an interleader suit in the Equity court asking that tribunal to
In an interview with S. H. Rutherford, president of the National Benefit Insurance, the Defender represents the tolls to the Noallment of the reward has been made by the court to Dr. Francis, nor has the case been heard. I am the plaintiff, and had happened, since the company of which I am president is one of the plaintiffs in the suit. Furthermore, will he be heard before next January? At the office of the clerk of the Equity court the reporter was in question, and the case was thus: On Aug. 19, 1922, defendant. Dr. John R. Fram, filed a cross bill against the National Benefit Insurance Co, and both said plaintiffs. First of all, this will be set to be settled before any question as to the interpreter itself can proclaim the probate date of the trial the clerk said. "It cannot be heard before October and maybe not then."
Frye is now in the District jail for an appeal in his case.
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DEATH FARM SLAYER MADE PEN OFFICER
Millegoilleville, Ga., Sept. 22—Triflambant against the forces of justice. J. S. Williams, "world's worst slayer," convicted in Georgia 18 months ago of the murder of 11 men on his notorious "death farm" and variously connected with the slaying of a score of others, has been made the "straw boss" of the state prison farm, where he is serving a sentence. The arch-slayer has become the most trusted of the trusts. Despite the fact that his sons, wanted in connection with the crimes enacted on his farm, were not tried, fled from the arm of justice and took refuge in hiding, the superintendent of the white prison has seen it to place the utmost confidence in
Criminals Terrorized
Saved His Life
Forces of disorder in the state went the limit in their efforts to prevent Williams from being sentenced to be convicted of a life sentence his friend was given a life sentence his friend because he was convicted on the testimony of a man who was not white, Clyde Manning, a sort of sub-boss to Williams, and Manning was established to Williams murdered men denied Manning's story. Later Manning was tried and given the same sentence as Williams. He is getting a life sentence. Following the trial men and women formerly imprisoned by Williams escaped and told the public stories of brutality on the "death farm" that Williams murdered Mr. Johnnie, as they called him, was painted as a tyrant who murdered men and women with the same case that he killed cattle or dogs. Men and women were killed in Yellow River were first struck over the head like cattle and then hacked with an ax. Twenty-six grypus are said to have been buried in a lime pit. Williams was a life apart from all law. The rules of his farm were his law. Outside forces never interfered with him.
CARPENTER KILLS MAN;
POLICE SCOUR DISTRICT
Under the personal command of Capt. Morgan of the East Chicago Avenue station, a squad from three scourer ships, South Side in an effort to reach the South Avenue, who was wanted for the murder of Benjamin Emery. 1133 North Wells street, where he shot and killed Sunday morning. The scourer stated that he was brown skinned, about 45 to 50 years old, is 5 feet 11 inches tall and has a mustache. He wore the time of his escape a brown soft hat, blue overalls and shirt and a pair of pants. Taylor is a carpenter by trade.
FORGING AHEAD
MISS THELMA V. LUCAS
s, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. street, Columbus, Ohio. Miss the East High School, class of state University, department of fall. She is the most charm- accomplished pianist. NG COMMISSION MIXED BOUTS
Miss Thelma Vivian Lucas, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lucas, 255 North 21st street, Columbus, Ohio. Miss Lucas is a recent graduate of the East High School, class of 1922, and enters the Ohio State University, department of commerce and journalism, this fall. She is the most charming of the younger set, and an accomplished pianist.
NEWYORK BOXING COMMISSION LIFTS BAN ON MIXED BOUTS
New York, Sept. 22. "The bars against mixed houts were let down this week by the New York State Boxing commission. This southern hout of several months against the commission, George P. Moore, light promoter of Portland, Ore. and the war of the Golden West hotel of that city," Mr. Moore caust. East in the spring of 1889, theiger of Danny Edwards, batam-welpe the Pacific coast. Unable to get any
Boxing commission. This enlistment against of several months against the commission led by George Moore, light promoter of Portland, Ore. and part owner of this Golden West city, Mr. Moore came East in the spring as manager of Danny Weight boxer of the Pacific coast. Unable to get any matches in this city for Edwards against him, he reason. He discovered there was an unwritten law against Colored and white boxers fighting in the state.
Moore started to clear up the situation but found the buck being passed from one promoter to the commissioners and from the commissioners to the promoters. Then came the famous letter episode. Moore received a letter from the New York commissioners to the boxing commission in Philadelphia. The letter "fell" into the hands of a police officer and the police governor of New York trouble. An untiming fight led by Moore, assisted by Alderman George Harris, Charles W. Anderson, former assistant manager of New York and part of New York and
20 PAGES This Paper Not Complete Without TWO PARTS
PRICE TEN CENTS
BOSS
eeting
CHARGE
ASK CHURCH TO UNFROCK CLERGYMAN
Citizens Bombard Character of Religious Leader as Girl Tells Story
East St. Louis, Ill. Sept. 22—Charging that the Rev. W. M. Grant, pastor of the Colored Methodist Episcopal church here, made improper proposals to 13-year-old Lauberthe Williams and attempted to attack her in her home at 1471 Broadway, the East St. Louis Welfare league has filed complaints against the clergyman with officials of the church seeking to unrock him.
Tells of Assault
According to a sworn affidavit now in the hands of John M. D. Brown, corresponding secretary of the league, the girl was a prisoner in Jackson. During his visit to the girl's home, Williams home on Aug. 31, paid the girl's young brother to leave the house and carry a basket of coal to a neighbor in Jackson. During his visit to the girl's home, embraced her and demanded that she accept his vile proposals. The timely arrival of her brother, she says, resigned from the prison run high when the news became generally known. Citizens demanded that Rev. Grant be punished, with by the church and the state, whether a warrant has been issued for his arrest. Relatives of the girl are said to be awaiting the action of the church and the sheriff of the city. However, the church is treated with passing interest by this source legal steps will be taken, it is claimed. Present Rev. Grant cannot be located. A Defender reporter's efforts to reach him were unavailing. A visit to the girl's home, however, was not made. The warrant has been ferred $300 to smooth the matter over and save the name of the church and its pastor." This offer was indignantly refused and the minister, ports, at a deacon's home, was spirted out of town. He is thought to be in Missouri. A leader of the Welfare league are engaged by the conduct of officials of the church who, they claim, are condoning crime. This fact was brought out by the statement made by a brown to a Defender representative.
Blames Church
"I think when the church steps from its high pedestal of helping to uplift fallen humanity to condone it should be able to refine it it should cease to exist in the community," he said.
Others expressed similar beliefs, some to such an extent that Rev. Grant was declared that the girl would have to look to the law of the state for redress, declaring that Rev. Grant was a big money raiser" and stood among officials high in the denomination.
Members of the church are divided on the issue, the majority rallying to uphold the law, while others consume Rev. Grant along with those who uphold him.
BEATS ADOPTED GIRL TO MAKE HER GET BELIGION
During the month of May, 1920, Mrs. Callie Bennett, a prominent church member, 3343 Indiana avenue, was arrested through the instrumentality of Mrs. Jessie Thomas, juvenile probation officer, and charged with cruelty beating her 10-year-old daughter, Ophelia, for which she was fined $10 and costs by Judge George for Mrs. Bennett was arrested Monday for the same offense. Ophelia had gone to the home of Mrs. Estelle Lewis, 3418 Indiana avenue, Friday night, where she big well stood in out relief. She stated that Mrs. Bennett had told her that she was going to kill her some day if she did not have friends. When Mrs. Bennett appalled before Judge William Morgan of the court of domestic relations she asked her to be heard before Judge the case be heard before Judge room 1106, city hall, on Sept. 24.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
Bottle Up Board of Education;
Corps of Race Teachers
Sits Smug on Job
Springfield, Ohio Sept. 22—Despite the impediment of I. W. Bullock, Knoxville college graduate, who has been imported to this city to be principal of the new Jim Crow school, and who, referring to the light that the citizens of this city are making against segregation in the schools, explains that he is not interested in the school system, willing to hold a job and serve as the head of an un-American institution. The Civil Rights Protective league is asking the Tulon school, a battle to have the Tulon school, as a separate school for Race children, abolished. They have been learned here by the losing fight made in Columbia and Dayton against segregation in the public schools. The Civil Rights Protective league, through its leaders, is asking the Tulon school to lose weaknesses as caused failure in the other cities. Funds are already being subscribed to wage court battles and the leaders in the movement have unfulfilled and unyielding stand.
Hungry See Jobs
Efforts to adopt a Jim Crow school system have been brewing for some time. In at other cities they received older students from a certain school, and the effect of the agitation a chance for themselves—an opportunity to get jobs. The charge is openly made here, the local parachute have insisted the school not segregate on the ground that the preachers or their friends would thereby get a whack at the city paycheck. Telling the people that there was a desire to put Race teachers in the schools and making the people think that mixed schools were meant, a local parachute said, of education, which got 300 signatures. When the people woke up they sound that they had been fooled into asking for a school all their own, and that their teachers would be employed.
Sian New Petition
As soon as this duplicity was learned of the Civil Rights Protective league put out a counter-petition that presented at the same time as the original. Peculiarly enough, it here a number of the names of the first names—mames—been thrown off the way. The board of education voted for the Jim Crow school 3 to 2, the women members discenting on the ground, to be removed. It is from the standpoint of illegality that the league intends to fight the matter out. The league has placed pickets in front of the school in the morning and sends their children there. On the opening day, out of a total registration of 242, only 34 pupils appeared in the morning of the event, which will be urged to discontinue. The league has promised to bear the expense of court action in case the board of education has been compulsory education law. The league is desirous of forcing the board into the courts. It is assured that the law will knock the entire row of Ku Klux Klan members.
Order Children Home
Hand bills were distributed by members of the Civil Rights Protective league. The hand bill message, which is signed by Charles McKenna, George C. Daniels and Mrs. A. Riggs reads: "If you don't want Jim Crow schools keep your children at home. The Civil Rights Act gives you a court anyone arrested for not sending children to this illegal Jim Crow school. "Mr. McKennd, in justifying himself mentions a petition to represent the Jim Crow school, but he fails to mention a petition of 1,200 names, opposed to the school, submitted at the same time." N. Summers (whitel, former judge of the State Supreme court, has been retained by the league to defend its interests. Mr. Summers will be hearing Jaymes and George W. Daniels. So far the school board has avoided bringing the issue to a point. It refuses to order the arrest of any person who violates its policy of watching it is the intention of the league to file charges against the board for not enforcing the compulsory education law—thus catching them going and
A corps of teachers has already been secured and they are sitting trilist: saying nothing, nothing, nothing; interview telling of what a nice time he expects to have as soon as his people come around. The entire corps is unashamed of his position, whose principles to make sense and butter.
WOMAN ACCUSES MAN OF
HONING THREE HANDS
Washington D. C. Sept. 22—You have heard of "Two-Gun Hicks" Well, Washington goes you one better, with Three-Gun Taylor, whom you have heard of Alexander Taylor was arrested in Judge Matteringly's court on a charge of assault, Ella Cleveland charged as follows: judge, your honor. That judge, your honor, with the other hand he hold a razor and with the other he hold a pistol. Examination, however, the orthodox number of hands. When questioned about the "kiss outter," Taylor claimed he found it in Dupont circle, where the police officer Benjamin Schonefeld came along, hit him on the head and arrested him. The court gave Taylor some free probation for a year.
RECEPTION FOR NEWLYWEDS
McKeesport, Sep. 11-23, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sisson gave a reception Friday, 8 in morning, a marriage of their daughter, Castle, and James T. Downs. Invitations were issued to about 100 guests, Jerry Sisson, queen of love and beautiful presents, Mr. and Mrs. Downs will leave on their honey-moon trip to visit the parents of the groom and friends in the West on Oct. 7.
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CHICAGO ILLINOIS
Beats Minister Who Refused to Call Him Mister
Jefferson, Texas, Sept. 22.—This is one of the towns where you have to walk to the bar to buy Buris cigar because Tommy Buris was a white man. Old-time slavery methods are not the law here more, but they are still the custom. A short ago, the Rev. Epiphany Dean was hulled into court by one of one Lather Ball (white). During the hearing the prosecutor asked the minister if he shot Balls and replied no. I never shot them before.
The attorney then advised the clergyman to say Mr. Hall, advice the Rev. Dean did not head. Disagreement on this way, finally settling down on a box in front of a friend's grocery store. He had not been there long when Hall, the white farmer, came behind him. Before the minister knew anything of the white man's presence, the latter had struck him over the head, knocking him senseless. In the presence of a crowd, the minister wounded him probably fatally. He then made a speech to the spectators, telling them that "all niggers must call him mister, or we will kill him." Nothing was done about it. The minister is not expected to live.
Married Man Is Father of Her Baby
Married Man Is Father of Her Baby
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 22—Seeking a name for her 2-year-old baby, pretty Minnie Crispin, IX, has pointed a finger at the Uppsala office and furniture dealer at 1204 Pennsylvania avenue. The girl claimed that she had been loath to name her betrayer until he ceased making ceramic dishes and furniture before Judge Gorter, who handed down a verdict naming Carroll as guilty. Many witnesses on both sides took the stand. Most of these were mums and grandmothers, the actor of the girl and the man. Some of the witnesses testifying for Carroll claimed that Miss Crispin did not understand the request. These suggestions were disputed by others speaking for Miss Crispin, who referred to her having spent a period of time in St. Catharine home for her education and protection.
The girl's story fastening guilt upon Carroll told first of his enticing her 16 years of age at the time. She had gone to the store to purchase a piece of furniture. Carroll lived in the house where she wife at the time, so the girl says, and no one occupied his room except himself. She declared that she was forced to pay the room alone with her mother. Discovering soon after that she was to be a mother, she informed officials of the Watson Aid society. She was told that the case was heard before a magistrate. The upholsterer denied paternity, but agreed to pay $2 a week for her. When he stopped his weekly payments that Miss Crispin again brought the case into court. The assesses for Carroll, an acquaintance of the upholsterer, named Carroll also, told the court that he had been intimately associated with her. It was suggested that he might have to suffer the consequences of her plight, he told a story showing that he had not been involved with the first Carroll. The guilty man is married.
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Frank Flowers Here.
Frank E. Flowers, well-known business man at San Antonio, Texas, and former representative for the Defender and the Defender for Wednesday and visited the Defender plant.
TUSKEGEE OPENS CLASS ROOMS TO NEW STUDENTS
School Heads Expect 2,000 Enrollment; Dr. Moton in Welcome Address
Tuskegee, Ab., Sept. 22—Dr. Robert 11, Moton, Princeton and industrial institute of Tuskegee. Norman and industrial institute of Tuskegee. Sutton, 12 in addressing the teachers and students assembled in the institute chapel Tuesday evening, declared that the institute had opened new facilities, welcomed the students and urged them to apply themselves diligently to their work in the classrooms, held and showcased equipment, held the Tuskegee institute is no place for sluggards. Among others things he said: "We are very much pleased to welcome so many students and hope you have come with the determination to take advantage of every opportunity offered at this institute and that you are ready to provide useful service. To acquire this preparation it is necessary to apply yourselves diligently to every study and to every activity and to provide a splendid opportunity to young men and women who are willing to work and who are willing to study; but it is no place for sluggards. We are from rising students every day."
The opening day enrollment of this forty-second scholastic year was more than 1,600 and surpassed that of the forty-third year, and of new students begin Friday morning, Sept. 5, and at the close of the first week of registration there were yet many on the campus and those are coming in on every truth. The enrollment of the year is expected to reach the 2,000 mark, and who have enrolled this year are representatives of every Southern state, of several Northern and Western states, of South American Central and South Pacific islands. The students from the foreign countries in the main have come to take advantage of the splendid agricultural course offered by the Tuskegee
At the regular chapel exercises the teachers listened to a splendid address delivered by Isaac Fisher, editor of the University, Nashville, Tenn. Mr. Fisher, who is a distinguished graduate and a former instructor of Tuskegee institute, urged the students to use their hands and hands, and enumerated those things as: the promise of God to be with them; the large physical plant of Tuskegee institute; a highly trained faculty; the spirit of Dr. Moton and the opportunity to see God. The speaker explained the last expression as follows: "Any person who looked at the flowers, and looked upon them today with these beautiful buildings erected thereon, and the fields rich with harvest, cannot doubt that God is here. And you see, that God is Him while he is working His wonders here through science and philosophy."
PASTOR GETS GIFT
$10.00 to $50.00 INHIBIT
MENT. See me at once if you have these
infections. Hour: Daily from 10 A. M.
to 6:20 P. M. to F. M.
B. BENNETT
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Mrs. Coffey Gets Taste of Sumpin' Stronger 'n Tea
"If you are caught speaking to this man in the next six months you are going to suffer severely," Morgan said. "The husband of your own, instead of preying upon the husbands of other men, is the judge Morgan of the court, domestic relations as he addressed Mrs. Ella Coffey, 48, 4329 Indiana avenue, with james Johnson, 48, year old, on complaint of Johnson's wife, Mrs. Blanche Johnson, 3221 Prairie Street. She sheared that all of her husband's hair was cut off by Mrs. Coffey. Each of them received a tame of $25 and costs, but the husband put on probation for six months, providing that she Johnson alone.
Knocked Out by Blow of "Soup Bone"
Dubique, town, Sept. 22—Chicagoans imported to this place by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad to work as strikebreakers are giving and taking in battles with the white strikers. There are almost daily fights involving the two groups of men. Local police side with the strikers, and the white. The railroad company is backing up the strikebreakers. The most recent dispute involved a waiter, Clover had acquired a train on which to post a letter. White workers seeing him are reported to attention. There is one of them nigger scabs. There is one of them attention to the insult until it was repeated three time with worse words thrown in. He approached the speaker and advised him not to insult him any more. The white man, unaware, took one step backward and uncorked a blow over the white man's ear that knocked the latter out cold, the was left for dead. The other
When the waiter had been in his quarters a short time he was found sitting in his chair, but he was prevented from doing so by the interference of Samuel Fours, another Chichengon. The off-duty waiter was taken. The next morning he was called before Justice Green. The judge inquired of him the nature of the case, in which he had struck the white man. "My first, your honor," replied Glover. It is then reported to have been a whispered conversation between the justice and some of the strikers, after which the waiter was fired $100 and the railroad company paid the fine. Humors after the hearing to the court were gathered to gather a mot to hang Glover resulted in his being quickly spirted out of town to his home in Chicago. The other men in the yards are hold
EIGHTH CORPORAL HONORED
Jackson, Tennessee, Sept. 22—William
Ewing, former corporal in the
eightth district, has been elected state executive commit-
tee-man to represent the interests of
Race x-service men of this state at
the state convention. He will be held in New Orleans. He was nominated by a white man and
backed by the entire white delegation
to the convention. He is the student of Roger Williams university
and is now attending Lane college as a bachelor of the government for
the state.
THE FIRST WEDDING OF THE MARRIAGE OF THE MARRIED MAN AND WOMAN
Agents Making Big Money
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RELEASE FOUR IN GEORGIA ON LYNCH CHARGE
Forsyth, Ga., Sept. 22—Four men charged with murder in connection with the lynching of John Glover Aug. 1, were freed by a jury in the Monroe superior court here.
The four men were Troy Ittles, Nathan Unice, Gordon Herndon and Hector L. McSwain. The jury was out only 30 minutes before returning a verdict or not guilty. The state accused the men of being ringing the victim from the officers after he had been identified as the clerk of Deputy Sheriff Walter the Clerk of Bibb County. According to the testimony of the defendants they were at the scene of the lynching, of course, but they said, "to aid the officers in carrying out the law." They were anxious to help because a "death gang had been found." The police said Glover to skip. Why and they wanted to find out who the gang leaders were.
The jury for the state altered their testimony for the extent that Sollector General Owens in his argument before the jury declared that the attack had been presented to the jury. "The most changed evidence I have ever seen."
PAYS HIGH FOR TASTE
OF SOCIAL EQUALITY
Washington, D. C. Sept. 22, —The high cost of sleeping” had its rejection last week on John McMerbert, who came weary and fatigued under his “financial burden,” $2,400, carried fastened to his neck. McMerbert, it was said, was a marathon man. Sylvia Robinson, a race woman; to rest his wary honeys within her humble dwelling, is under invitation, but upon awakening he found his hostess departed, also his hostess, who was a costly case of “social equality.”
The "Woman in the cense" was arrested on the charge of robbery and because of her criminal record, the hound of $1,500 was raised to $1,000.
BAPTIST CONVENTION
CSES TO ST. LOU
Helena, Ark. Sept. 22—At a meeting of the executive board of the National Baptist convention in this year, the committee on the 42d annual session of the National Baptist convention in St. Louis, Mo. Dec. 6-11, discussed on the importance of holding a meeting this year, the distance of travel, the nature of the trip to be made to California, St. Louis, being more centrally located, the committee was of the opinion that he would be had there in the winter season.
GO TO CUBA
Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 22—Mr.
and Mrs. George W. Clark, 131 North
Tennessee avenue, and a party of
York to sail by Meeker to Mobile,
Mla, and New Orleans and Cuba.
They will return home about Nov. 10.
Rooms To Rent—Idlewild Hotel,
50 East 33d st. $4 and $5 per week.
Pastor Rides in Taxi Cab Though Broke
New York, Sept. 22.—The Rev. Cornelius Griffin, 42, of Mornsterrt, N. J., arrived in town the other day and halted a taxi owned by Charles W. Browne, after riding about town from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. La Oncedra discharged his passenger at 135th street and Lenox avenue, stating that the meter registered $7. Being a resident of Lenox, he parked on a charge, discharged conduct at the 33th precinct police station last Thursday.
Bank Worker Is a Spare Time Artist
By Walter G. Page
Boston, Mass., Sept. 23—Some years ago John Latterton Rollin began a serious study of the art of oil painting, and as he progressed in his first attempts, so did the quality of his work improve until today he has a wide acquaintance among lovers of art and numbers among his patrons many of the prominent citizens of Boston. Other member of his race has reached such a high position in art as has Mr. Rollin, and considering his experience come and with but slight help from any source, yet with a comprehensive intelligence and consuming desire to perfect himself, he has attained conformation in the painting of landscapes.
He has a fine sense of color and with the natural love for warm, earthy colors, he loves to paint autumn scenes—fall foliage—when nature takes her palette and brushes and shows the artist what color is and what it
Mr. Rollin is connected with one of the leading banking houses in Boston, where he has been during his spare time. When others are enjoying a holiday at the shore Rollin, with the true joy of his work, spends his time with canvas and brush. His talent is appreciated by the business men of Boston among other people. If circumstances favored Rollin giving his entire life to the study of art, it is easy to imagine that he has been a wife, a wife recognized position, but fate is not always kind.
MISS COLEMAN IN TOWN
Miss Bessie Coleman, world's greatest aviator, has arrived in Chicago after giving exhibition flights in 1915. She expected that the bronze flyer will remain in Chicago indefinitely. So far she has not made public her plans, although before she arrived it was open a flying school for Chicagos.
BUILDINGS THAT PAY
FOR SALE—Very choice 3-flat, st
hood: steam, electricity; strict
$1,500 Cash, Bala
FOR SALE—Strictly high-grade
strictly modern. Income $60
$2,500 Cash, Bala
FARMS—Five acres and larger as
WILBUR
BUILDINGS THAT PAY FOR THEMSELVES
FOR SALE—Very choice 3-flat, stone front, in high-class neighborhood; steam, electricity; strictly modern. Income $215 per month.
$1,500 Cash, Balance Easy Terms
FOR SALE—Strictly high-grade 5-flat; steam, electricity, hardwood; strictly modern. Income $860 per month.
$2,500 Cash, Balance Easy Terms
FARMS—Five acres and larger as low as $10 per month.
WILBUR LEMON.
Phone Randolph 2318. 1110 Hartford Bldg., 8 S. Dearborn St.
Sleek Glossy
Sleek, Soft, Glossy Hair
The beauty secrets of the ancient Moors have been discovered by a modern scientist. These secret formulas are now being manufactured and put on the market at a price which is within the reach of everyone. All ZURA preparations are guaranteed to be free from injurious chemicals and will positively do all that is claimed for them.
Clip the coupon below and mail it with fifty cents to ZURA, Inc. Dept. 16, 508 S. Dearborn St. Chicago, Ill., and get a bottle of ZURA Hair Gloss and a copy of ZURA, Queen of the Moors, free.
ZURA, Inc., Department No. 16,
508 S. Dearborn Street, Chicago, Ill.
Enclosed you will find fifty cents, for which
you will send me a bottle of ZURA Hair Gloss
and a copy of ZURA, Queen of the Moors, free.
Name ...
Street Address ...
Route No...... Box No..
City or Postoffice.
State .....
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SELECT GROUND FOR NEW SCHOOL NEAR BALTIMORE
Cardinal Gibbons Institute to
Cost Catholic Church
Over $500,000
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 22—Selection of a 200-acre farm on Smiths creek, near Ridge, St. Mary's county, Maryland, as a site for Cardinal Gibbons institute—which is to be a boarding and day school for face boys—was announced recently by the board of trustees through its vice president, Admiral William S. Benson. An employee will be employed at once to develop plans for the building and grounds. The institution plant is expected to cost $500,000. The collection of funds are being made by the finance committee, of which Senator David C. Manan, an organizer and principal to take charge of the campaign was authorized at last Monday's meeting of the officers of the institute ar. President, Arebishop Michael J. Curley, vice president, Admiral William S. Benson; second vice president, William S. Aumens; secretary, Arthur C. Monahan; treasurer, Lawrence P.
"It is hoped to make Cardinal Gibbs institute the beginning of a national movement that will have for its aim the betterment of educational facilities for Colored youth," said Admiral Benson in discussing the school's plans.
LUCKY STRIKE
CIGARETTE
IT'S TOASTED
It's toasted. This one extra process gives a delightful quality that can not be duplicated
AY FOR THEMSELVES
stone front, in high-class neighbor-
ly modern. Income $215 per month.
ance Easy Terms
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per month.
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low as $10 per month.
LEMON.
10 Hartford Bldg., 8 S. Dearborn St.
, Soft,
y Hair
Money
find fifty cents, for which
bottle of ZURA Hair Gloss
, Queen of the Moors, free.
Box No.
PAGE THREE
Blood Cell
SERUM
Copyright 1900
Administered Free in Chicago
All sufferers from Rheumatism, High Blood Pressure, Diabetes, Obesity. Low Vitality and Debility are invited to the Laboratory, where a special Protein Serum for each case will be administered. One serum gives relief in most cases. Patients pay small cost of serums only. Metabolism increased in every case. Blood and skin disease yield be
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150 Patients Interviewed
At the joint request of the press,
I interviewed 150 of your patients
on examination, high blood pressure
and low vitality. Over 95 per cent
claimed to have received not only
wonderful benefit but restoration
to their health.
Yours truly,
GEO. T. MICHOLS,
209 S. State St. Chicago, IL
Tel. Harrison 4873.
Public Clinic, South Chicago
9207 Commercial Avenue
Blood Cell Serum
Laboratory
32 North State Street
7th Floor Reliance Bldg.
HOURS 10 to 8 P.M.
Sunday Until 1 P.M.
Wandorful Bargain
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2 Pair
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SEND NO MONEY
Just send to your name ad-
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You will gladly accept every payment you have paid.
MONEY CHEERFULLY REFUNDED
LEE THOMAS CO., DEPT. 233
CHICAGO
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Call Edward Dyson Representing Wm. E. Renich Co. 5653 INDIAAN Ave. Douglas 2783 Easy Terms. Strictly Confidential
Markus Botheme, Jack
Burrell, and formerly
barber, all formally
of L. Markus & S. Ban,
have a market and
marker, EOE S.
the best and highest
grades of groomers and
barbers in fresh fruits and vegetables
in fresh fruits and vegetables
early in late autumn
at price rates.
#
Sixth and Seventh
Journals of Misses,
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STAR BOOK CO.
Camden, N. J.
Dept. D
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to Browns College, Lincoln, Nebraska.
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PAGE FOUR
SHEOWIGK JAMIESON, VETERAN
PULLMAN EMPLOYEE, IS DEAD
Sheddick Wright Jamieson, veteran Pullman employee, with a record of dropping dead at his port of duty on train No. 13 of the New York Central Railroad, day about noon near Hudson, Ind. The body was removed at Blind, Ind. The man was killed in a death was due to high disease which was aggravated by high blood pressure. Mr. Jamieson was born in Troy, N.Y., 64 years ago. He came to Chicago in 1920, and grew up with friends and relatives, a widow, Mrs Jesse Jamieson, and a daughter, Miss Nancy Jamieson. He died morning from his late home, 551 Wabash avenue, the key, H. E. Stewart of Quinnipiac University, and is cremated at Graveland cemetery.
Nobody can afford to miss this. The Mist Lizzie company, now playing at the "Susie Miss Lizzie" company, plays at the Avenues company, playing at the Avenues company, playing at the Green Mill gardens, playing at the feature theatre in the city, will be able to be the Chicago Special music and songs for this occasion. Patrons are asked to come enough to reach the剧院 in time, it also speaks of the unattendance of the Tromsland owners to please the Mrs. Cume, who of the shoe manufacturer, has been a patron of the museum here last week. Thirty guests were present. Saturday afternoon matinees start at 5 S. Music by Mime, Mime same high-class entertainment and dinein. Food served at reasonable Chinese cuisine. Courts to all. The pretension café in the entire country. Don't forget the Thursday matinees in which much the joy has been taken. Enjoy yourself. Only one dreamland — one place to have a
WEST SIDE NEWS
Su John Worley Jones
TUXEDO CAFE
2012 Indiana Avenue
Corner of 51st Street Upstairs
THE FINEST
CHINESE &
AMERICAN
RESTAURANT IN CHICAGO
Music by the "Wonderful Orchestra"
MEALS from 11 A.M. TO 2 A.M.
WE SERVE NOTHING BUT THE
FINEST FOODS
Our Service Is Second to Nane
TOM LEMONIER'S SONG SHOP
RECORDS—ROLLS
SHEET MUSIC
Religious Music a Specialty.
All Orders Promptly Filled.
Orders sent C. O. D. if desired
3640 STATE STREET
Phone Blvd. 2056
---
Assaulted on Street Car
An unknown man, whom witness stated insisted upon crowding possession alive when Richard Mason, 20, 548 Allende square, venniped his car into an interior he intercepted out a knife and inflicted a five-inch cut on his face. He one-half-inch cut on the shroud. He then jumped off the car and made good his escape. He testified in Accident With seven teeth knocked out, a fractured leg and a possible fracture of the skull, he was carried to the duma avenue, was carried to the County hospital. While at 32d street he was taken into a Checker car which was passing. Suffered *Suffrager* Ankle While getting off of a street car at the Scott, 21, 692 North South avenue, was struck by an automobile. She sus
Prospecting for Links
Carter Hays, chaimman of the board of the Windy City Golf Club, said sodation has just returned from Idlewild, where he was involved. He also obtained a shirt for an 18-hole course for the Windy City Golf Club.
Fractures Ribs
When in the set of playing with two other players, Kick Johnson, 15, two State street, suffered two fractures in his right knee. A removal was removed to the County hospital.
Injured In Collision
The collision of an automobile in which he was riding with another one on the street, to suffer various injuries. The accident occurred at 433 and State
Stabbed in the Back
The police of the Third district are the only one who is living in the vicinity of 58th street and 59th street, and are stationing Nathaniel Mobley, 15, S12F2. He is being held on the arm during an argument with him on the arm during an argument.
Police Trace Automobile
As Willie Johnson, 31, 460 Federal street, was attempting to ally from a car he was struck by an automobile. The car he was struck by an automobile. The needs to the accident stated that the driver and a passenger of the automobiles Johnell fell, Johnson, who was serially injured by the accident stated that the police traced the man and the car to the 25th St. avenue. The police traced the man and the car to the 25th St. avenue. Newton was arrested. At 19 East 25th St. Armour. A description of Alex Armour, sometimes called Fred Jones, has been sent to the police with intent to kill. The wife of Fred Jones, in his grocery store, 460 Dearborn street, Armour left the house and fired three shots at Smith, one of the shots striking him in the 460 Dearborn street. Collision Injuries Three An 460 Federal street, Smith, 460 State Street, and driven by Willie Johnson, a street car at 31th and State streets. As a result Mimi Ehrel was struck by a car and Begie Hayes, 452 Wahsh Avenue, total suffering with various injuries.
Lawnkeeper Get Prizes
The Nyamalim Improvement association of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Green, 535 Bryan avenue, for the purpose of awarding him keepaws and flower gardens. A com. neighborhood to look over the front and back, decided he first prize should be given to Samuki Jackson of 535 Bryan Thomas, 324 East 56th street. The ass. winner, Frank Anderson and C. H. Green, won wonderful work in the community.
Catcher Thief: Lots Him Go
Mrs. Stratton Nexca
Mrs. Sarah Riordan, princess of Gates
and the Queen of England, known
known fernish, has moved to 201
Cotton Grove avenue, where she
lives. She is her many fraternal
friends with her.
Visitors at Plant
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
Bahai meet every Sunday at 3:30 in Masonic temple, corner Randolph and State streets. All welcome.
Old Settlers Most
Four juniored members and friends of the family, who were made up of people who have lived in Chicago for years or more, gave me a gift: a driveway. Monday night to attend a dance, the feature of which was an old-fashioned Virginia reel made by Mrs. Kevin Hardin.
Mrs. Mary Grace Green Returned
After years in California, during which time she waited in a hotel room at a state, Mrs. Mary J. Brown, mother of her grandmother, returned to Chicago she home with her son-in-law and family.
Shoots Off Glue of Ear
---
Spits Woman's Cheek Open
In 1981, a woman opened her
State street between the housekeeper,
Burna, the inmate carmine, and
the woke woman Laurea. Laurea was fired
months in the house of correction when
she opened her mouth and stated that it had required 22 years of service.
Miss Bengate Returns
Miss C. D. Bennett, 3020 Fine Grove
College, from Greenwich, CT,
weekly, in her jail cell,
gives excuses, and pieces in Dalton
and Greenwich, and brought her
great niece to Chicago with her.
Returns from Virginia
J. B. Street, vice president of the
Virginia society, president of the John
M. Z. school, president of the M. Z.
who spent two weeks visiting
Burbank, Va., and Hampton institutes
his alma mater, has returned to
Nex Newland Back
Mrs. N. B. Newbould, motown and as-
sistance institute, 414 Abilene square,
returned from a two weeks' vacation at
Mrs. J. Newbould, Mrs. J. J. lew-
ley, for collage, Carrie
Mme. Carter Returns
Jimma, Erica Matheis Carter, Gos
Prairie avenue, who spent several
years as a teacher at the Normal
School, Nashville, Tenn.
performing a special course and after-
warding a special course, holding the annual session of the Hair-
dressers association at Fitzgerald Ga,
Nashville. She received great ovations for her work
at every place she stopped while on her
---
Visiting Brother
Mrs Mary Washington of Des Moines and mother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs William Washington. 15 West 56th street in Philadelphia while he relinquishes in white blouse.
Stork Arrives
Friday, Sept. 15, Mrs. Louise Hague,
Hague girl by my husband of Gaussen year
18. Hague by Provident hospital
Hague Hague dental Student at Child
Hague dental Student at Child
Returns to Arkansas.
Mr. Adillee Williams, Gordon, Ark.
Mrs. Adillee Williams, Gordon, Ark.
William L. Chandler, 1101 Prairie Ave.
William L. Chandler, 1101 Prairie Ave.
home last Thursday. She was accepted
as far as st. Louis, Mo. by
her.
Married 30 Years
Friday evening, Sept. 15, Mr. and Mrs. Brueaux celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary, celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary, their honor by their children. About 72 guests were present, and Mr. and Mrs. Brueaux were many beautiful presents. Mrs. Patrina gave an extra grip in the East, and from Philadelphia to Washington, Philadelphia and Washington. Noted Musicians Entertained. Mrs. Kruma Collins Payne, contralto with Herbert Wheeler, Newport course with Herbert Wheeler, Newport course who returned from Europe. St. Brueaux and Mrs. James Cube were joined by the band Gavin. 450 Cube avenue, on Sunday, tented the ball game. Grace Lycacea, and a party at the Avenue theater in the city. Mrs. Payne was the house guest of City Sunday midnight. Mr. and Mrs. Brueaux guest of Mr. Brueaux will here.
Home Budgetized
The home of E. C. Hose, a Defender of the Church, and the burglared Sunday. A small amount of money, a watch and some rings were stolen. *Gloria G. Elsie Chicago*. *Martha R. Prince of Pasadena*. Cal was the house guest of her sister-in-law, Martha Champlin avenue, during the past 14 days. *Miss Prince is a recent graduate of Southern California*. She left the city Wednesday evening for a visit to Morris Brown university as an instructor in physics and chemistry. *Slaughter System Beauty Shop*. Has you visited the Slaughter System apartment A7. *Phone Douglas 1865* or *Laurie Laughlin*; prop. *Laurie Laughlin*; admin.-Adv.
Dr. Minott to Leave City.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
J. Gay Lacas, and Ford S. Black, pub-
cled the book *A Year in the School
tourmaster*. Mrs Jenna Kline, the
chairman of the social committee, for-
warded the book to the school,
close of the meeting a unique gift was
presented to Dr. Minott by Mine
Kline, on behalf of the alumni of the school.
Jobless Come Here.
At least six or seven men a day come to Detroit to work on the city's urban legacy from Detroit. Their testimony is that the automobile business company, is suffering a slump in the automobile industry during the season, go to other places seeking work. it is probable that it is Chicago than those which come into the city. It is likely that if the Ford factory, employing a large number of Have nets close down for the automobile industry in Detroit, the number of men may be expected from Detroit to have been the one big plant in the automobile industry in Detroit since the year since the demand for Ford is constant rather than seasonable.
Rutherfords Entertain
Mr. and Mrs. G, C. C. Rutherford, 460 Calmet avenue, gave a party sat party Aug. 1 evening and dinner party Sun. Atlanta, Fla.; father, Matthew Slim Atlanta, Ga.
Stradford Hotel Meeting
Monday evening, senting. South Side Community house, 3201 Wabash avenue, will be the occasion of the public admittance to hall's capacity.
Autumn Festival
Class In Journalsm
The Wendell Phillips evening school offers a series of writing news articles and special feature stories. Recent literature often be adequately treated, information will be provided. The stories, also live cash prices of $1 each for the host class papers written each week, the book of the publication of Willis N. Hughes, editor of The College of the Mountaineer column of the College Defender.
Rose Annual Sermon
Have Enlighten Elits
Colddes With Street Car
Suffering with various injuries, Frank Winfield, aged 42, 53, East 12d street, injured in a car accident, injured at Root and State streets, when a truck which was driving collided with a street. Will Interpret. It will be a long time before Milton McCann will sit on the running board of a car, set down on the running board of a machine which was standing in front of a car, not knowing that Milton was sitting there, shown to the street, Milton, who is 50 years old and lives at 513 State street, was painfully bruised. Bus Passenger injury, was carried to Dearborn street, was carried to Providence street, was carried to the head. She was riding as a passenger in a automobile bus when it hit a street car at 25th and State streets.
Russell Himself Severally
While attempting to start a fire in a house, the man was hit by a car, leaving Clark, 35, buried in a lane, Avenue, Levering Clark, 35, buried in a lane, Avenue, Levering Clark. The mistake a can of gasoline for the contents on a lighted match.
Fractures Shoulder
An examination of her injuries recalled that she was 26 years old. Grand boulevard, had sustained a fractured shoulder, which resulted in a broken arm. She was skinned at the corner of 30th and 31st streets, for a car, when the cobb stair bar, in *Shot With "Unleashed" Gun*. The some old story, that they did not paint the walls in the case of John Durley, 20, was repeated in the playground at 24th street and Wash ash avenue, when the careless man who stabbed her did not know that he did not know that he resulted in him being in the leg.
Officer Geyington Inlured
In an effort to save pedestrians from being hit by cars, the Nathan Avenue station, assigned to the Nathan Avenue station, was himself painfully injured. He was running to the corner of Nat and Sato streets to direct traffic when a fire engine came to the ground, to the ground, lacerating both knees.
Cut by Husband
White quarreling over domestic abuse in a street, Kendra Murray, 27, was asked to stop a street, Kendra Murray, 27, was asked to stop a two-inch cut on her forehead. Murray is also known as John Allen. A children's flight was staged in the street. A Fast East street, no one knew where it was.
OTK
EF
about, not how it started, but at the end of the battle Charles Wilkins. 10 years old, was found with a knife on his forehead. He stated that it had been inflicted by Dorothy Dayton, who lives in this city.
Found Dead In Home.
A vletin of heart trouble, A. B. B. found dead in his home. He lived on the second floor rear. The enroner stated he was a sufferer of the heart for some time.
Struck by Yellow Gab.
As he was attempting to cross the street to St. Mary's and State streets, Bradford School was struck by a Yellow cab. He was easily bruised and crushed about the body. Woman Dies Suddenly, the Mrs. St. Mary's St. 252, 525 Federal Street, Bradford School. Death is supposed to be due to alcoholism. The cause is determined at the hospital. The victim is held at the undertaking of Porke and Boll, 252, 525 25th street. Wife Murder Sentry A wife was killed on September 2, passed away at the county hospital, where she was born. Their home at 250 Wollm street. The police are looking for the husband, who was shot in the head. Ham Simmons. He is described as 52 years old, with grey eyes and gold teeth.
Assaulted by Husband
According to the store told by Mrs Sydney Cranham, 31, 155 State street street when she was assisted by her husband. She was carried to St. Luke's hospital where it was determined that she was suffering with a fractured knee bone.
Diez Suddenly In Lobby
The body of a man, as if it crumpled to the floor, attracted the attention of two nurses of somine house 925 of WKW. The nurse, the man life was extinct. He was lived at the hotel for quite awhile. His death was due to organic heart trouble.
Found in Dazed Condition.
Spots of blood which spattered the floor of the hospital were found by Seymour and Glimin at 15th street and Michigan avenue, where the found Oceanside coroner had placed a deformed condition. His face was destened and he was unable to move. How he was injured. He was sent to the county hospital.
**When Dangerous Wounded.**
In danger, he played in a game of cards in the rear of 746 State Street, issue involved in an argument with another man, who was beast and also in the back. He is dangerous. The palms are looking up at him, whom witness claim is responsible
Has Occupied Heart Trouble
Living on the sidewalk at 11th place and Michigan avenue, paused for a moment, the street is a helix condition. He was rushed to the county hospital. He was suffering from organic heart trouble.
Usher's League Annual Sermon. The sermon will hold his annual sermon Sunday, March 16th. Mr. M. R. church, 330 and South Park avenue, James Lillard, tenor, will sing. Public invited.
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Eupers, 24st, 41st street, and Mrs. Jenkins, 24st, 41st street, will last week for a three month trip to California, Seattle and Vancouver.
Mars Blue Inkused
Attending B. M. C.
George T. Kersey, James A. Perkins
Moses Charles, Charlie
other prominent
Odd Fellows are attending the B. M. C.
which is now in session in Cleveland.
Moves to Detroit.
Thelma Bola, 4622 St. Lawrence avenue,
New York, NY 10017. 524 Walton street, Detroit, Mich
Her mother, formerly Mrs. Marion Lester,
Walton, died lightfoot in Detroit. Thelma was
accompanied on her trip to New York,
where she was highly entertained during his brief stay there.
Mme Bridges Entertains
College at Green Sunday
SOLDIER AT GREECE CHURCH
be the solitary at Grace Presbyterian church
Seth and Vincenna avenue, Sunday
morning.
Easter Lilies In Court
Charges that the Easter Lily club had failed to may certain硅业 benefits were made. A. N. Guiliano, who had inadvertently sent the S. Attorney Richard Westpools took up the case and had a motion to dismiss the case and the case reinstated for trial Sept. 17. The plaintiff will file an answer to the charge of Mrs. Marie Davall and Mrs. Anna Bartlett, Sept. 17, the plaintiff will be entitled to full full amount of the claims by default.
Honor Gary Brooks
Wednesday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Brennan entertained with a birthday party in honor of their son, Cary R. Jr., who was in the dining room of the filibustered ballroom, which were disturbed to the tots. Fifteen babies played like they were babies, their mothers, individual foes and angelic ake, on which one candlelight burge
Attends Funeral
Dr. H. E. Stewart was called to Adrian, Mich. by the death of his mother, Adrian Mich. will return in Time to preach the first session of the conference year Sunday.
At Son's Bedside.
Mirie, Lizzie K. Cannady, Ondale, Mich. will preach at her son, Wilhelm G. Hunt, 2017 Calm avenue, Miss Berrie, her daughter, is Miss Berrie.
Malones at Quincy, Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Malone, St. Louis, who were here last week, will be there, where they will spend two weeks before going to their home.
Bethle's Special to Keokuk.
Bethle's special to Keokuk, bound for Keokuk, town, where the church was in session. James A.
Mundy headed the party with his Pakee
Luther Nelson, driver, Mrs. and
Luther Nelson, driver, Mrs. and
Aime Owens. Through the鞭笆
party, reached Geekuk seven hours
after the party.
Bright OnWeek for Invention
Reports have reached this city that the patent department, Washington, D.C., Grumman compressed air device invention may reach the market in a producer perpendicular motion, "he inventor, Thomas Anderson, passed away on the eve of victory."
Anderson and Wright Back Home.
Alderman L. B. Anderson and E. H. Wright, second ward committeeman, Anderson, passed away on summer home at Idealville Mich.
Clarks Entertainment
Miss Prince to Teach.
Miles W. Prine of Tasmania, Cal.
with master of science degree, ten-
season through college at Cal.
to teach at Cal. where she is
to be instructor in the science de-
gree.
Given Surprise Party
Marsilin Snell, 558 Prairie Avenue, gave a birthday party for her daughter, Mrs. Eukhl Bird. Her guests included Alice White, Mrs. Lorlie Carter, Mrs. Jeannie Johnson, Mrs. Hanchee Jones and Robert Dunbar of Boston, Mass.
Dr. Summerville Leaves.
Dr. Vada Summerville, Los Angeles, gave party given by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Simpson of Gary, Ind. Last Friday she classes, including Washington, D. C., where she was the one delegate to the Women's Club meet, and also attended the Women's Club in H昂蒙, Va. She was highly entertained by chicagos with theater partners. She left for Los Angeles Sun
in New Mexico
George Garner, popular tenor singer, with his company, which is composed of the city Monday evening for New Mexico residents to return to Chicago in the spring. Mr. Garner's charming wife accompanied them on the trip.
To A Peach at College, College, 3152 Grand boulevard, the city Monday evening for New Mexico residents to position as domestic science teacher in Lane college. Mice Mollson is the host of the known Chicago attorney. She is an ex-College Lincoln institute. Jefferson City, Mo., and Paline college, Augusta, Ga.
Beauty Parlor Now Complete. Beauty school is now prepared to care for the care of her patrons, having a beauty school in the person of Dr. B. F. Level, in the person of Dr. B. F. Level, Kashmir institute, 3423 Indiana avenue - Advertisement.
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Lloyd Snout, 4058 Durham street, real estate agents of the city, being real
city, being repaired, to be bought real estate and cash. He was born in Wood to Kentucky, when he went to Lexington in July, $80. He went to Louisville when he lived with his father and lived there then going to I ndia a n polls, ind. where he was Mr. Srad, hav-
worth $25,000 in Nescafe, New York. He was cash. He was born in Woodford County, Kentucky, to two Lexington and Versailles in Indiana. He went to Louisville when 15 years old, with his father and lived there and then going to Indiana a polls, lived four years. Mr. Snead, having a keen business insight, came to Chicago to buy the World's fair and without any capital. He was the first man to sell the World's fair and without any grounds and since that time he has continually pushed ahead until he is one of the beacon lights of the world.
EXANSTON NEWS
A Beautiful Summer Resort near Chicago,
with special accommodations for -ate-
chicken dinners. CHICKEN DINMERS A SPECIALTY
GRIP OF THE LAW
Must Keep the Peace
Falls to Appear
After obtaining a warrant against
Malee Bowman, who she claimed had hit her in
the head, she was jailed for 12 years.
Malee Bowman, 12, frightened guests,
and her woman, she was dismissed for want of
want.
Cuts at Woman
Office Andrew testified before Judge
Oliver Williams, 21, the arm of Thomas Marshall, 21, the
vice president, to keep him from cutting fellow
Marshall was fined $25 and costed
Sent to Prison
Mir. Cleona Mays, 351 State street, Boca Raton, FL. A house of correction for 15 days and a house of correction for 15 days were arrested by Serpentos German and Rocketos in the department store.
Falls to Support Wife
William Brown, 41, 288 La Salle street, street that was arrested by Officer Dennis W. Willett of his wife, Louise, was sentenced to 60 days in the house of correction by the judge of the court of domestic relations.
Charged with Serious Crime
George Story, 31, 261 Federal street, street that was arrested by Neale of the Court of Ontario charged by Miss Vivia Ousley, 2020 La charged by Miss Vivia Ousley, 2020 La being the mother of her unborn child.
Capture Wanted Man
James Williams, alian John Jones
James Williams, alian John Jones
East 29th street, was captured by Ser-
manian forces, carried over to the police of the War
married to James Jones was charged
with assault on Jones was charged
Tries to Buy Witness
Mrs. Philo Atkins, 4142 Washahase avenue, prearranged a warrant for Anby J. McCormick, 4142 Washahase avenue, accused of stealing a diamond ring, valued at $100,000 in matters she will explain to Judge John F. Haa, Sean. 27, just what McFeston what he in her bed
Assured of Guilty
Mara, Milda Jones, who occupies the first floor, was accused by Mrs. Lee Jackson, who occupies the first floor, of putting lion heads on the chairs lions varied so greatly as to what was the real cause of the sore on the chair face. The judge sentenced Tillie to move.
Bloknockta Fload
Upon the testimony of Officers Ran-
working the streets, she stared at Jas-
india avenue, and Wille Wilson, 422
Fraile avenue, and Wille Jones, 422
Fraile avenue, and Wille Jones, 422
Attempta Murder
The police of the Dai Panlin state
office said that who is wanted for the attempted
murder of her husband Saturday. The
woman was killed by her friends on the South Side.
Bethal Gate New Baston
FOSEH REMAINS
Fossil remains of mammals and birds
Desert of Gobi, China, by the third
Asiatic expedition in Central Asia and
dinosaur and prehistoric sites
very little is known concerning the
fossil mammals of this region.
Hotel 51
3rd st., 51 st., 51 st. per week
STATEMENT OF THE
BINGA STA
STATE STREET A
As made to the Auditor of Public
September
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts..... $ 70,908.41
Real Estate Loans..... 143,600.00
Bank Billing..... 186,412.31
L. S. Certificates..... 25,463.31
Furniture and Fixtures..... 15,124.18
Accrued in Banks..... 15,124.18
Pow from Banks..... 136,244.17
Cash on Hand..... 44,721.31
Other Resources..... Lease
Total..... $840,584.22
OFFICE
JESSE BINGA,
President
JOHN R. M.
Vice-President
DIRECT
R. S. ABROTT, Publisher
JESSE BINGA, Publisher
Oscar B. DREES, Capitalist
JOHN R. M. MARSHALL, Board of Directors
MAKE IT Y
BINGA STA
Under State Supervision and Ch
A Message of Hope for
BINGA STATE BANK
As made to the Auditor of Public Accounts at the close of business September 15, 1922
Under State Supervision and Chicago Clearing House Association
A Message of Hope for Sick Men and Women
When you are sick and discouraged in your search for health it is very important to put your case in the hands of a specialist whose long experience has given him unusual skill in his line of work.
I have been treating new as well as chronic and special
illnesses for years. And the longer experience I have had
how to do these well, and the longer experience I have had
the longer goes well, in the shortest possible time, by the
reliable methods, and at least cost.
My Charges Are Low and Terms Very Easy
I Make No Charge for Consultation
DR. WHITNEY 175 N. Clark Street
Chicago, Illinois
Between Randolph and Lake Site. Office Hours. 9 to 4 and 6 to 8 daily. Sundays 10 to 1
DR. WHITNEY 175 N. Clark Street
Between Riverside and Lake Ridge. Office #2921 in Edison, Southern California.
PETER H.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
MRS. IDA B. WELLS-BARNETT OPENS GRACE LYCEUM SEASON
The opening of Grace Lyceum was attended by parents and friends emphasized the fact that the enthusiasm of the past Mrs. his Wells Barnett, distinguished clubman and editor of the Women's Club, and so splendid was her address to the visit, audience for nearly an hour, National Women's Club of Colored Women's clubs which held the blended audience to the Senate and President Hardlime. She told of her trip abroad in 1893, in the South, exposing the methods of the women, of first time in England. Also of the columns devoted to her by the Associated Women, which caused her bankship from the women, which caused her bankship from the women, of the country in product of shaman upon Negro womanhood and organization of Colored Women's clubs in 1895. She was the dedication of the Frederick W. Johnson Journey from Richmond. This event was given in detail, followed by a reception, representing the 15 states whose senate and President. The committee stated their interest in and for the calendar for the present session, the calendar for the present session, of their life and at least they had their duty as a woman, keenly interested
MAKING MOONSHINE A
VERY SIMPLE MATTER
"It is a very simple matter, your hourly sugar, some yeast and a little water, and you call it moonshine. Then the sugar, some yeast and a little water, near all profit," explained Alva Jackson. "Federal street, to Judge John P. Haas, arrested by Officers Wand and Cogger as he was attempting to dispose of his wares. He pleaded guilty to the crime, and your profit is pretty all clear. I will answer a fine of $20 and costs," explained the court. "I explained that he had just finished making a little moonshine when Sergeant Lainv and Officer Stokes applauded a fine of $50 and costs."
DINNER DANCE
Every Tuesday Evening
5 to 8—No Cover Charge
VINGENNES HOTEL
DANCE
Every Tuesday Night
8 to 1-Admission 50c
(tertiary Wardrobe)
WATSON'S ORCHESTRA
MRS. RANNYET, Hostess.
Analyzed by BOBBY HARDEN
THE CONDITION OF THE
STATE BANK
AND 36TH PLACE.
Accounts at the close of business
May 15, 1922
LIABILITIES
Capital ..... $100,000.00
Supplies ..... 70,000.00
Dividends ..... $140,000.17
Nautile ..... $200,000.32
Cocktail Checks ..... 72,711.71
Cabinet Checks ..... 6,132.62
Ticket Checks ..... 129.00
Collection ..... 144.70
Bills Payable ..... $244,544.22
Bills Payable ..... 6,000.00
Total ..... $604,544.22
CERS
MARSHALL ..... C. N. LANGSTON,
Student
CTORS
W. A. BORRISON, Lawyer
C. U. L. MARSHALL,
Chairman, Nat. Bap. Pub. Bd.
L. A. NUTH, Fivestrel and Specialist
C. N. LANGSTON, Cashier
YOUR BANK
STATE BANK
Chicago Clearing House Association
For Sick Men and Women
Health You Cannot Enjoy Life
Prosper in Your Business
Are sick and discouraged in your
health it is very important to put your
health on a level of care for longevity
given him unusual skill in his line.
MICAL ATTENTION MAY ADD YEARS
STATE AND HAPPINESS TO YOUR YEARS
Giving new as well as chronic and special
care and the rare experience has brought me
in the disease and given my patients their
in the better possible time, by the
and at least cost.
EY 175 N. Clark Street Chicago, Illinois
9 to 4 and 6 to 8 daily. Sundays 10 to 1.
---
14.33
CHICAGO SOCIETY
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
Mrs. Folk Schaffer, 4556 Champlain
avenue, left Saturday for Couders-
Harris, after which she will visit
Ruffalo, Nigra Falls and Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cole of Wabash avenue are visiting friends and relatives. Mrs. Albert G. Johnson and children, 3455 Rhodes avenue, returned to the city after spending two months visiting relatives in the East. Mrs. Albert G. Johnson returned to visiting friends in Denver, Colo., and Denver. She was guest of honor Sunday at a dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. James Hardin. Mrs. and Mrs. James Langley avenue, visiting Nashville, Tennessee. She will also visit relatives in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Louisville, Ky. Mrs. and Mrs. Joe Langley avenue, visiting Nashville, Tennessee. She will also visit relatives in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Louisville, Ky. Mrs. and Mrs. Joe Langley avenue, visiting Los Angeles and San Francisco, Cal. Mrs. Mararet Webb, Summit, Williams, her son, Sol. Williams, 3455 Aldine square.
Mrs. C. J. Howell, 3227 Calumet avenue, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Laura May of St. Louis, 3228 Orleans La. is visiting her sister, Mrs. Bertha Ortington, 3514 Prairie avenue. New city, who is visiting here, was the ghost of Mrs Jerry Mills for dinner Sunday.
Mrs. Lowery, 4204 Indiana avenue, returned home after visiting Boston, Cats Cod and other Eastern joints. Mrs. Lewis, Evansville, Ind., is attending the University of Chicago.
Mrs. Raymond Deviney, Mrs. Volliver Hass of Richmond, Ind., and Mrs. Volliver Hass of Burlington, Ind., are trained to their homes after visiting Mrs. William Piper, 4926 Indiana ave.
立
Mrs. Julia Murray Jackson, 4517
Prairie avenue, entertained Mrs.
M. Wright, Trump at Louisville,
Ky. Wednesday evening. The home
was beautifully decorated and those
present enjoyed themselves playing
whist and dancing.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Grace, Memphis,
Tenn. returned home Thursday
after attending in the church guests
their wife and brother-In-law.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Harris, 3210
Indiana avenue.
SEND NO MONEY
10 DAYS' FREE TRIAL
DR. KOERTS, the well-known REPRAIRIONIST OF CHICAGO, has traveled thousands of satisfied patients and reputation of making it possible for anyone, no matter who you live to, to take advantage of KOERTS and his DOSTPAID to anyone who writes him, starting with glassware if any pair of his EXTRA LARGE HANDSOME FILLED SPEACHTABLES on A 10 DAYS FREEL TRIAL, on wear at any task that you may have to accomplish. KOERTS are not to be compared with any seen advertised, as they tend to be without them. As they are equal to those sold for $13 and the Ford to be without them, as they enable you to see far and near, do the finest kind of work or read the best books you see far and near. Your friends are sure to compliment you on your appearance, and the PENNY of your money until you are satisfied. ACCEPT THE PENNY of your money until you are satisfied. ACCEPT THE PENNY of your money until you are satisfied. DR. H. H. KOERTS, 1808 MARYLAND AVE. CINEMAS, 1111 WEST 10TH ST. DR. H. H. KOERTS, 1808 MARYLAND AVE. CINEMAS, 1111 WEST 10TH ST.
E. Washington, The East 424 street, entertained with a card party Thursdays at Atlanta, Ga., who is visiting in the city.
Mrs. Pamie Henry, entertained in Atlanta, Ga., with the Lincoln Lewis Foyley of Nashville, Tennessee, who was recently married to Lilburn Valley of Minneapolis, Minn. The newlyweds will make their home where they will make their home.
Mrs. H. Warren, 3347 Indiana avenue, entertained with a farewell dinner at Royal, Raton Rouge, La., who has been visiting relatives here.
Mrs. Valley Allen, 5056 State avenue, entertained with a dinner party on Monday evening, honoring Mrs. Lula McLauren, Memphis, Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher, 2104 Alabama avenue, are visiting relatives in Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. John Holloday, 613 East street entertained at dinner honoring Matthew Sims, Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. R. J. Whismall, Salisbury, N.C., who for the past two weeks has been visiting with Miss Jeanette Whismall, business secretary of the Y. W. C. A. left Wednesday. En route home she will stop
Mme. Annette White Bradford, 4427 Prairie avenue, has returned to the city after a visit throughout the school. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Love and daughter, Lena, 3445 State street, left on Monday to visit relatives in Metropolitan. Mrs. Naomi V. Thomas, 3253 Avenue avenue, is spending a month's vacation the guest of her cousin, the Roy, and Mrs. Hamilton, in St. Louis, Mrs. Mary Horsley, 5121 Wabash avenue, has gone to Kansas City, Mo., where she met the guest of her brother, Dr. Dr. Mrs. Marion Cotton. Joe Rowman, 5828 Wabash avenue, is expected home for the winter after spending summer months on the Atlantic sea coast. Mrs. Charles Forrece, Minneapolis, has returned to her home after spending days with her sister, Mrs. George Duncan, 4346 St. Lawrence avenue. Mrs. Mabel Ruffin, Los Angeles, Calif., who has been visiting in New York, has George Duncan, has returned to her home.
Miss Sadie C. Lee, Montgomery, Ala., who has been visiting her sister, Miss Martha, at the mete avenue, has returned to her home. While here, Miss Lee, who is a teacher in Alabama, took some special courses at the Chicago summer school. Miss Ruth McCoo, 3842 Calumet avenue, has left the city for New York, Boston, Buffalo and other east points. She will remain for one month. Mrs Katherine Threatkill and Mrs Mabel Overton-Young have returned to Montgomery, where they were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Walker. Mrs E. W. Jackson, 3435 Giles avocado, depending several weeks with relatives and friends at Jamestown, Ohio. E. B. Johnson, Jelfco, Tenn., is in car rout home to Montgomery. Minnie of his brother, C. P. Johnson, 6613 Vernon avenue. Mrs Calvin Davis, Greenville, Miss is in the city the guest of M. Hoffman, 5556 Rhodes avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Mason, Greenville, Miss, are in the city the guests of A. L. Anworth, 3707 Indiana Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Thompson,
5254 Wabash avenue; entertained at
Mrs. and Mrs. Herbert Mitchell, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Mitchell, Mr.
and Mrs. Dismukes, Mr. and Mrs.
Greenlee, Mrs. Ferguson, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul V. Robinson and Mr. Pat-
terson. Mrs. Emily Day, 4542 Wabash
avenue, left Wednesday to visit the bed-
side of her brother, who is very ill IU
Miss Hexter Wilson, 4542 Wabash
avenue, has left for Sloux City, Iowa,
to spend her vacation and will re-
tain her home. Mrs. Charles Augustus Blanford,
Louisville, Ky. is in the city the
guest of Mrs. Robert A. Williams,
Mrs. I. A. Barnill and Mrs. S. P.
Jones, 4826 Calumet avenue, ent-
tained with a dinner party in honor
of Mrs. Robert A. Williams, the
Patterson of Kansai City, Mo. who
is en route home from Cleveland,
Ohio. he attended the R. M. C.
Leonard Bonderant, Cairo, Ile. rec-
tained the guest of Dr. and Mrs. W.
T. Bowden, 19 West 31st street.
Mrs. Amie Martin, Berkeley, Cal.
Mrs. Dennis E. Robertson, 2766 Grand beaver.
Mrs. B. F. Ramsey, 422 East 41st street is visiting in Columbus, Ohio.
Evening Club Hears Pastor in Vice Talk
Dr. John H. Williamson, $10,000 a year law enforcement officer under Mayor Thompson, told a large audience Sunday night at the Wendell Phillips high school, 35th street and Prairie avenue, that in order to drive through the city as a whole, the police department must be "cleaned up from the inside." We have a change in the practice and policy of law enforcement as administered by the present chief of police we will make no improvement and accomplish very little. Monitoring as a conscious stumbling block in the path to this program has been a challenge, "passing the buck" had become an established motto with the organization's support for support. The church came in at this point for a scathing denunciation. We have received little if any encouragement from the church," he said. "It was negligent during the campaign, during this campaign against vices. The biggest vice lord in the Second ward is a well known banker and a former police officer in Chicago church, and who I know he is."
He impressed his audience with the intriguing mate, graft, has been organized institution in this city for over 40 years, financially supported by souls, funds, and had reached such proportions that every walk of political life, not excluding the judiciary, Dr. William Lampson, has been the source of graft that the judicial system be freed from politics.
Adelbert H. Roberts, state representative, who introduced the speaker, pointed out the fact that within two blocks of Wendell Phillips cemetery, the graft were running wide open with solicitors on the streets. He called the attention of Dr. Williamson to several such cases in the cemetery's café, located in the Second ward.
Turning to the speaker he said: "Dr. Williamson, the Negro suffers a domestic vice. These places tonight are crowded with white men and women who come from other parts of the degraded and demoralize our section."
In answer to this Dr. Williamson asserted that he would either make good as law enforcement or tell the public what he was doing.
The meeting was held under the
Evening club, of which Harvey A
Watkins is chairman. *Pamphlets
by Dr. Williams*'s work were distributed.
"Y" WORKERS SPEND DAY AT "HOUSE IN THE WOODS"
Directed by Miss Brooks of Hyde Park a galaxy of musical and literary artists, the closing event in the summer of Sundays is filled with sketches that have enjoyed much vogue at the Washah Y. M. C. A. during the past season. Mr. Carter introduced the group to Delphine Evans; duet, Mr. Cruzz and Dr. Thomas; solo, Mrs. Eleanor Gaines; rouding, Miss Elsie Von Krause; original piano composition, Miss Mao Barret of St. Louis; solo, Dr. Riley Thomas; violin selection, William Jones; reading, Mrs. Cora Hobson; solo, Mrs. Gustava McCurdy.
The Wabash avenue department is initiating a new movement among college Young Men's Christian association in planning for Sunday a department retreat at the House in the western university settlement house in the forest preserves will be the scene of an all-day conference on the program, and problems of the department in group meetings. A dinner will follow and after dinner a period of devotionals followed by addresses from the Chicago association; Mr. Parker of the general office and President Burt of the Y. M. C. A. college. More than 58 committees and a score of secretaries and committeemen from Gary and Evanston are expected to make the trip, leaving the Y. M. C. a building on Wabash avenue at 9:30 Sunday morning.
CHOIR MUSICALE SUNDAY
The Metropolitan Community center choir will present Miss Thelma Oglesteine Simons, piano solos and orchestra, and Miss Martha of Music! Mme. Bertha Tyreco, soprano solist and an artist pupil of Herman Devine, will perform exclusively of government employees, under the direction of Prof. E. O. Tyre, playing some of their famous selections, of the Chicago Chorus, of the Chicago, Prof. Robt. H. Jordan is manager. The celebrated choir under the direction of Mr. Wing will sing the following choruses: "About the Clad Tidings," "Hallenga Chorus," "Indian Street Song," account of the large crowds that attend these muscles I. A. Wattkins, chairman of the Sunday Evening club is preparing to take care of the crowd. D. Cook will welcome the crowd.
Ann Brown Dist.
The funeral of Mrs. Anna Brown, the wife of Lillian, on Sept. 27, 19:30 a.m. at the undertaking establishment of Kersey, McGowan and Morsall, 2051 Indiana avenue the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. Hamilton. Mme. Lillian Eve returned to the cemetery on Sept. 27, 19:30 a.m. Mrs. A. Wilberforce Williams and her niece, Miss Elizabeth Noely, have returned from their vacation at Idlewild, where they were the guests of D. H. Williams, Oatmeal cottage.
Miss Della Travis, Los Angeles, Cal., after spending a week in the Bronx, went to New Bedford, Mass., to visit her sister, C. Cole of Los Angeles, mother of Mme. Florence Cole Talbert, is the guest of Mrs. I. N. Dunlain while in the city. She is in home life spending the summer at Eagle.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
ETHEL GAVIN
Home for Girls
have charge of the program to be held and Wabash avenue, on Thursday the Jellie Johnson Home for Working campain avenue. There will be radio classes Lo D. Bond, soprano, and Hazel
MUSIC WORLD
DUGLAS HOLT
Julia Johnson Home for Girls
Mrs. Camille Cohen Jones will have charge of the program to be held at St. Mark's church, 50th street and Wabash avenue, on Thursday evening, Oct. 13, for the benefit of the Julia Johnson Home for Working Girls and Women, 48th street and Champaign avenue. There will be radio notes, and the soloists are to be Misses Lo D. Bond, soprano, and Hazel Whitman.
NEWS OF THE MUSIC WORLD BY NORA DOUGLAS HOLT
later, phrasing, which embraces crescendo, forte, pianissimo and dolce tone, should be heard and felt. A worthy example was Novin's Narcissus, himself following the mythological lad as he wandered dissonately in search of beauty to compare. Three numbers on the Sunday program invite special attention: Bambooka, by Colbyrider Gosnell; Pigmae, by Cole Toubert; Brush, and the overture to Rienst, by Wagner. The Lambda chapter of the Delta Pigmae, by Cole Toubert, soprano, in reel at Abraham Lincoln center Wednesday evening, Sept. 25, the proceeds of the Oceola Adams, president; Vivian E. Mason, secretary; Thelma O. Simons, corresponding secretary; the students of studio at her home, $120 Indiana avenue. She received her musical education at the Normal Leavitt, who was a pupil of Emil Fur of Berlin.
The Harmony club held their meeting at the Mussel Lake Langley avenue. Next meeting will be held at the residence of Mrs. Jessie Neath. The Perry avenue. Mrs. Ludia Post. The Langley club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Ludia Post. 302 Indiana avenue. The lightful luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Malone of St. George, were the guests of the Poro club Monday evening at their regular meeting (following officers were elected: Mrs. Juliet Phillips, president; Mrs. Marianne Turner, secretary; Mrs. Sena Turner, secretary; Mrs. Pearl Johnson, assistant secretary; Mrs. J. Anderson, chaplain. The Pioneer Lodge of Theophany was the clubhouse, 239 Walsh avenue. the clubhouse, 239 Walsh avenue. The Willing workers' club entered presidents Mrs. Eileff Oult, who has returned from Butler, Fa., where she spent the Boosters' club meets every Thursday evening at Bells hotel, 152 Park avenue. William Bell is presided by the Cherokee Social and Literary club will meet Friday evening at the club. Mrs. Eileff Oult, 125 East 1st street, apartment 4
The Bon Vivant met at Thursday at the home of James Wilson, Jr. 422 East Church Street. Next meeting will be held at the residence of Jack Fehr, 14 East 21st street.
Following a summer vacation, the following night at the residence of William P. Johnson, 2228 Giles avenue, the residence of Earl Miller, 6100 Walsh avenue, Saturday evening. The club will meet last 22d street, Saturday evening. Last 22d street, Saturday evening. Officers Saturday. They were installed Friday by Mine Dorea Hensley. The new officers are Mine Dorea Hensley, David Scott, vice-president; Louise Smith, corresponding secretary; Eda Graham, crtie, and Elina Davis, sergeant-at-arms. A program was rented. The Y. M. L. I. Charity club will meet this week at the residence of Mrs. Germina Johnson, 2141 State street.
Mrs. Julia A. Jackson, general secretary, has returned from her vacation much improved by the rest while away.
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
APPELICATION
A knowledge of music, either by actual study or by a general conception of the fine arts, know that the symphony is the high point of musical expression. Even representing as it does the profound lathers of master workmen, creators and interpreters, it required for them a special understanding of mental energy as does calculating the Einstein theories, understanding the philosophies of a composer. In all motion there is sound, even if it is incalculable, and man since time began is so accustomed to sound and sensitivity to it is instinctive. There is a far among the musically gifted of higher music because of non-appealation, but this reticence can be overcome by seeking the best in music and persistently patronize.
To my knowledge, and I inquire every year, there have been beautiful Chicago symphony concerts in the past five years, and if price as well as a general non-understanding of such music-loving public may well turn to the Sunday morning concerts at the Chicago theater, where one sees a general non-understanding of such musical numbers, many of which appear on the Chicago symphony program. Last Sunday morning morning concerts of Wotton's Farewell and Magic Fire scene from Die Walkreu, Wagner: Narcissus, Kevin, Devin, and the unfinished who love and would understand good music, it is well to know that general composition for the unfamiliar element of the subject, development and a finale. It is difficult at first to know when the introduction is varied by assigning it to different instruments or facets of music in many compositions the subject is repeated many times colorfully variegated by assigning it to different instruments or facets of music in many compositions from tone color to tone color just as the eye views a sunset, recognizing and delicuously playing the colors of gold, blue, orange and purple.
Then, too, most programs contain a description of each number, another way to promote apposition of good music. As for the fine points which one must observe sooner or
eddings
M'GREGOR-MARTIN
Miss Zenobia McGregor and Henry L. Martin were married secretly Sept. 11 at Trinity Baptist church by the
Rey v. Haskins,
graduate to the
Wendell Phillips
high school
united from the
Flower Tech in
course, and is
the daughter
of Mr. and
Mrs. and
berry, 419 East
33d street, Mr.
Martin is a well
The bride is a graduate for Woodland Phillips high school and also graduated from Flower Tech in a secretarial course, and is the dean of Mrs. and Mrs. Fred Fortinberry, 419 East Mrs. Martin is a well-tailor. Both the young people are well known and are friends in the younger social set.
JOHNSON-PALMER
Miss Irene G. Johnson, the charming Y. W. C. A. secretary of Oakland, Calif., and Dr. Henry S. Palmer, the secretary of Santa Barbara, Saturday, Sept. 16, at high noon at the Episcopal church at Evanson II. The ceremony was read by her colleague and Brown The bride was called by Mrs. Mrs. Ellas Jones, Pittsburgh, Pa., as matron of honor, and Little Irene Garland as flower girl and Richard Lee best man to the groom. The ceremony an elaborate six-course luncheon was served at the home of William Lee, oldest brother. The bridal couple left the city Saturday at 3 p. m. for their wedding at 257 Multhery street, Newark.
STREET-M'LEMORE
Gary, Ind. Sept. 22—Tuesday, Sept. 27. The reception of Lee McLemores was married at the residence of the Rev. W. T. Whittier, pastor of the church, after the ceremony they married to Chicago and were entertained at dinner, and L. E. Orvin, 3218 Gleave Avenue.
BROOKS·BENTLY
Mr. and Mrs. John Brooks, 2022
South Park avenue, announce the
marriage of their daughter, Murion,
to Thomas Bently, Sept. 18.
YOUNG-MILLER
Mrs. Susie Jones Miller, Chicago
Missouri, died on September 14,
gusta, Ga. Monday, Sept. 14. At the
residence of Mr. and Mrs. Grand
Gardner, Muskegon. Mich. At home
at 4761 Champlin area, Chicago.
TAYLOR-KING
Eastlake, Illinois. Tuesday,
Sept. 12, was the date of a pretty
wedding at Jenkins Baptist church
when Mrs. Anna Taylor became the
mother of Rev. C. A Harvey officiating.
OWSLEY-KENNEDY
Mrs. Anna Price Owley, 3356 Washah avenue, and Willis Kennedy were married Sept. 5 by the Rev Martin.
Y. W. G. A.
Riding Behind a Bewhiskered Old Motorman
Being an Observation on How He Aids the Helpless Traveling Public
Being an Observation on How He Aids the Helpless Traveling Public
By ROGER DIDIER
That "plain living and high thinking" one hears so much talk about with those who live "in the house, on the side of the roof" then, say, with veteran employees who work in car workshops their ordinary handling of gross grumbling trollies and the public, do quirks extra effort to imagine your "Fare, there!" conductor or your little girl into condition of senile serenity. But "1057" is different. He is a motorman. He is one of the few motorists become conscious of the fact that if it is not necessary to throw male and female straplungers about to the laps of strangers who are sitting "1057" either has a different kind of voice or he is a different kind of a
On Indiana Line
Running His Car
Unconciously he presses his foot to the gong, warning pedestrians and traffic, and applies the "jilice". There is no jerk. There are no spurts nor plishes at a gradually accelerating velocity. At a certain distance from the next corner the power is turned off and the car will stop. It never misses the mark. When he turns to open the door, you'll find that "1657" has an eye that's clear and calm and that there is something in the expression of his emotion. A session of good methods and quality. If you ride on "1657" car you'll enjoy it. He seems to have devoted a lot to good motions. Whether or not you are sure of what his philosophy is, you cannot doubt that the old man has his opinions about the world and will not sink it is a pretty relatable old place.
EMANIPATION PROGRAMS AT SOUTH PARK CHURCH
Monday evening will mark the beginning of a series of night celebrations at South Park church, christened the South Park church, commemorative of emancipation, the accepted date of which is Sept. 22.
The exercises are scheduled to start on Monday and will be accompanied at the night nights. Major Stokes of the Eighth Illinois Infantry will speak on Monday and will be accompanied at the night nights of the regiment. The entire George L. Giles post of the American legion is to be present, and their commander, the Eighth Infantry, will present them. Hon. Adelbert Roberts will deliver the emancipation address. The Eighth Infantry orchestra, with music directing, will render a musical program.
Tuesday evening auxiliaries of the church and women's clubs will have B. Mason' will deliver the principal address. Other speeches are to be made by Miss Pauline Lee of the church and others. South Park choir will provide the music. Professional and business men will hold the boards of Douglas speaking and Prof. Morris handling the music. Thursday and Friday nights are scheduled by the director, arranged the series of entertainments.
UNIV MUSIC CARNIVAL
Tickets for the antum carnival which will be held at the University of Chicago, going like hot cakes, and no wonder the price for the three days' season ticket is only 40 cents. Monday evening, Oct. 17, the university and prizes awarded to the one wearing the most grotesque costume. Tuesday evening will be devoted to festivities several times, including bringing their little ones to this unique affair. Favors will be given. Wednesday night will be known as surprise parties, so things in store for the friends of the institution who will be present that they will be tooth to leave when the event concludes. Admission for children, 10 cents.
The Chicago University of Music has on its faculty not only the best music majors in the city, but also these instructors are constantly devising ways and means for elevating the group with which they are conceived and involved for the school which is defined to be the musical center of the country. Miss Pauline James Lee, president, is forging a partnership with such a capable and loyal staff. Don't forget the carnival and bring your friends with you.—Adv.
**engements**
**ROBINSON-WILKINS**
Rev. and Mrs. John W. Robinson.
213 East 50th street, announce the en-
gagement of theiraughter Loyale
Beatrice, to J. Ernest Wilkins, attorney-at-law.
Rooms To Rent - Idlewild Hotel,
50 East 33d st. $4 and $5 per week
HAIR GROWN IN THREE MONTHS
A. B. STIEFEL, President EDWIN STIEFEL, Secretary
50,000 SATISFACTORY CREDIT ACCOUNTS
OUR RECORD AND RECOMMENDATION
WE'LL SAVE YOU MONEY!
State St. Furniture Co., Inc.
3131-33-35 STATE STREET
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WE OWN AND OPERATE OUR OWN PLANTS
EXPERT CLEANERS
OF LADIES' AND GENTS' GARMENTS, RUGS
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Office 316-18 East Thirty-fifth Street
AUTO SERVICE
PHONE DOUGLAS 3274
Institutional A. M. E. church, 2852 W. Avenue, Sunday school, 9:20 a.m. m. sermon by the pastor, 11 a.m. m. sutle; pastor—Sunday school, 9:20 a.m. m. sermon by the pastor, 11 a.m. m. sutle; pastor—Sunday school, 9:20 a.m. m. Christian Endeavor, and at 7:30 p. m. sermon by the pastor.
St. Paul C. M. E. church, 4644 Blessed Bishop J. A. Hamlet, Jackson, Tenn. preached Sunday morning, J. A. Hamlet, Jackson, Tenn. preached Sunday morning, J. A. Hamlet, Jackson, Tenn. preached Sunday night by the Progressive club. the pastor will fill the pulpit Sunday morning.
Institutional A. M. E. church, 58th street and Wabash Avenue, Rev. Thomas E. Reach, pastor—Services at 11 a.m. m. sermon by the pastor.
Garters Temple C. M. E. church, 121 and Champaign avenue, Rev. James A. Williams, Sunday school, 11 a.m. Sunday, At 7:30, the choir renders its monthly program, Blessed Bishop J. A. Hamlet, Jackson, Tenn. The Rev. Jim Mims, Bullook preached in the evening. the pastor will fill the pulpit.
Institutional A. M. E. church, 1418 W. Avenue—Sermon and service at 11 a.m. by Dr. Saduf of India, Lahore. the pastor will Sunday and Wednesday at $ p. m.
International Baptist church, 114
Baptist Church, 114
pastor—The pastor preached Sunday
morning, and Rev. E. H. Fletcher,
an account of the funeral of Dr. E. H.
Gibbs, the Convention of America, Sunday
afternoon, the Rev. G. W. Baber of the
his chair and congregation. All are
to hear the Rev. Baber and
big chapel.
GLOSS-O—A MARVELOUS DISCOVERY THAT GROWS HAIR IN THREE MONTHS
Gloss-O will positively promote the appearance of the hair, provided it is used according to directions. It has been found that all hair is properly dried, falling hair, litching scalp, etc. must succumb and have been completely dried. As a hair dressing, Gloss-O is undoubtedly unexcelled. It makes the hair look healthy and straightening the hair it has no equal. Gloss-O a three months' worth of hair. On receipt of P. O. Money order (personal checks not accepted), any additional payment to your address on Parcel Post.
RETAIL PRICE LIST
Olsen-D.....50c; postage..50c extra
Olsen-D.....50c; postage..50c
Yekraw and Yakower.....50c
Yekraw and Yakower.....50c
PAGE FIVE
Otherwise
less Mysteria
sound sense and discretion falling in love, though you may be a man in many ways, but the fact that you are only a child, you may look as though she had an idea of adopting a child to keep her son loved one could not be the exception to the rule, still. I do say that the little fellow and run away to some nice, sweet girl around your own age, who is better able to make you happy.
Dear Princess: I know you can help little fatherless baby girl of three months and as I have been to very few places in my life, I am not a misfortune. The man says he loves me and dares me to marry some one. What must I do, Jean-Claude, France.
Mrs.
Camille Cohen Jones
Teacher of
FRENCH
SPANISH
PIANO
VOICE
4504 ST. LAWRENCE AVE.
Kenwood 5530-J
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8101 Mt. S. Calico
JOHN WILLIAM HENRY
“Strut Miss Lizzie” on Third Week;
“Plantation Days” on Final at
Avenue; Vaudeville at Grand
and Monogram
contemplated tour of the larger citics
he engagement ends on Sunday
night, Sept. 23.
THE GRAND
A fine bill of six acts opened to
good business here on Slonday night.
Esther Bigeou ts the featured attrac-
Mon and the clever young lady. pre-
sents about 2 minutes of as attrac
‘ive work ay hag been seen on a local
Mage in a ong time. She has de~
eloped. into a comedienne of the
Tnest sort and her turn created
Splendid Impression. Dividing honors
Sith. Alley Bigeou ts the famous mo-
mologist, oots Hepes, who can al-
Says Ue depended upon to deliver
Timely goods in laughable packages.
ots sfoge nothing but original song
ulmbers, based on current events and
conditions, and as a consequence BIS
‘work is a hew! from start to finish,
Tie had them going trom start to fla
ish on opening night and continues
along that line. The Musical. Good
fetter present a nifty) singing and
Tnusieal net in which they use one
Bt the very: latest. chime-x3lophones,
Minon which both are more than ordi-
farily proficient. “White und. Foster,
a couple of good singers and clever
Gancera again demonstrate the fact
that the success.of an act ts up to the
Tuterial used. These boys have fine
Sbillty. along” the lines mentioned:
‘they lack a proper routine of talk,
however. Jn that uscd by them they
Teter to “odors to such an ‘extent
That they lose all ‘appeal with those
who enjoy clean entertainment. Tt is
a noxtous line of talk and the sooner
The act sccures the services of some
‘bne who knows how to arrange proper
{material the sooner they can. hope
Yor advancement, as they certains
hye ‘talented. Clover Billie Young
Rings severui: topical songs and a
parode, hesides doing a recitation
Min fine effect, and the bill ts com-
pleted with futterbeana and. Susie
Ths comedy singing. talking and
dancing turn, Susie’ sings original
fonge swith fine effect and, Iutter~
deans is funny despite the fact that
he puts on a rong with 2 disgusting)y
Tiuhy chorus which appeals only t0
thors who have the faculty of cx
trncting hilarity out of smut: A fine
Hilt is announced for next week.
THE MONOGRAM
An excellent bill fs playing to Rood
houses here this Week. ‘The acts Nre-
fented include, Siae” Kemp, inher
Ainging and talking single: Willams
Brown, in'a nifty singing, talking
fed dancing turn: Fox & Yank, a
Glover pair, Introducing the world’s
Greatest one-lerged dancing marvel,
Gnd Madame. iruce and her new
Jariner, Skinner, ina fine. singing.
Ena talking turn. It is a. well put
Torether bill and will continue un-
Changed until the final “cureain on
Funaiy Wiehe:
COY COGITATES
ereatest graft, that I know of It the
Reheat wher: “Ever seen one? sure
sanrhaceMlentytot wien, Phe aheet
Miler manda’ a Specialty of the smaller
aise” Hehigatn Conder rm mage
Eine neaualiuhe ested, athe fr
Pitan and” knowledge” whicn' tla
feimiernal sagaaine wit tmpare to the
conte lotta take Sumer "Glaus ive
aie Job andes, io varming he
tiacttina’ ts dnted tne: eaael ante 1018
EAPC" the cane ies worth: a sear
Lut to advertise {t, you only pay $I
for’ ake “itst year!” Phuc” fest than
Proms a pattth Wout are guaran:
ikea aebte ie every: month Fou
Soh he thtrited! GheTuallae tha tet
Eocelnt in petra, and that's: ail SA
Foed whiter should got at fea 20 aie
Eegbalonn adage Enae's 900" clear
Framerate “iron cand “any tarmer
Per ane att ees aoe nd
Nho will tretvask your "ere you. In
THe ora Ware RERY avers one tate
tha Winder “Vex? He hen stows
30 Mhapatine with the President ef
ie RSE eile signature and
IT the wih hunie or Washington,
ong with a'eroup of senators, Who Ars
tehting tee the Warts Phe “boakaet™
Pe Wrew take ashtar goer to print she
aresing had tor pouIkies work, Aer
Sateine the dahacrintion sou give, the
samen” aac why ole Srurunce
sl recdhve ume “paper weekly or
Sony fal A Ford use should
Sy aol $00 a ans Several others t
|won't mention—haven't space. Espe~
Sane Rowe T ike io"Vexpiain the
field Sf'thort change” done to" “yo
Tice iOtioTs Pieaksre to compare
INS ties Qf yeuerany. with” the fates
erties Slo Meatter wnat a caer pear
Sse ay vase ther ae aiterent and
Tee proper’ resulen these nave to he.
Pre taba Ge Sesterans hah Aocan
ate eet She mney amd tet whe sae
ME S6beiiites ut the aire of toaay
Bre'getung cleancr, whore it please
tee Sethce ate ‘chwle tami, "our
Unbetter and wife, “Aisie should serve
SAG educational exhibition nnd-at the
Stine fine’ provige wholorome: recrene
TEES UBC gT gee and "eonceseian
Hitira be ‘censored, beiore they" wore
Fete esta abe aee deat. ans
TaSokeae owes. but wi gin a Bee
Fe ee Teme aabit oF eehidetce Sn
Bho Thar ofthe” farmers and ner
PiSledge Ghat the main mirpote of the
We "ieStne development Of nericblears
ESE other wists interests. “onan a
Batt eround: tends ty draw an ee
rte which doors net, Ae Ste she t=
Bae Pde aerientoralexmihfion.
Baten Yana” otfenme: rage tations:
tae? and “wastesnme—nuccess.
(Xeat week: Our Negro Free Acts at
she Fale shave east and how tg" net
the Fs ‘coy
ci f
39 Ye PHONOGRAPH
‘a 2 RECORDS
SAE RY New Ratenree Goagy Sart t
SSN, ee ea! But | Hate to Go
Bese. Rie (ern Bice NVocai
pean hee Ae 4p e007: Longing For You Blues
Hae pee ‘Sweet Badly of Mine—
a BeMme 1c Wess Mediey—Fox Trot
kent oe Cae Cooling My Puppieo—
rae AS ime © 50004 Vocal
ea: | fe {ROIS Meron To
a) ge: BA Serle far details sad cntalege
\ CHAPPELLE & _ STINNETTE
>. PHONOGRAPH RECORD 70.
: ee
THE GLOBE THEATER
SEATING 1,000
NOW PLAYING VAUDEVILLE
CAN USE ANYTHING FROM
-A GOOD SINGLE TO “SHUFFLE ALONG”
PAGE 81x
Creamer & Layton’s “Strut Miss
Lizzie” opened its third week at the
‘Ruditevtum theater 10 a capacity’ and
enthusiastic audt-
wnce on Sunday
hight. ‘Tho show
hun created 2 real
sensation in Chi-
tugo and the
giant theater is
wold eat at
practically every
performance. This
bn as it should be,
un the enguge-
ment in a limited
cine and fall ud-
vantage should be
taken of thix
thence ty see the
Siriek™ which
made Broadway
.
Fe
ES a
Leaks
ae
ae
4 aga
Grey
Serty Uagesce
autice, and which was proctatmed by
the New Yark press and is being
termed by the local papers “the best
musical comedy revue of the sea-
son." There are no idle moments in
the two anda half hours required
by the big troupe of principals and
the ammense chorus 10 show thelr
wares: the 1th Regiment band of
New York City shows why it car-
ries the tide of “The Iuee's Best
Hand." and the “Strut Mixs Lizzie”
anchestra, under the direction of the
famous Chicago composer and musi-
cian, Joe Jordan, with ita equully
famous violin viriuoso, Willie Tyler,
in indisputably the classiest agere-
gation that éver sat in a locul pit
It dw a production with which to con-
jure, ané the manner in which the
ticket buxers pack and jam the home
‘of “opera” is the best recomninda-
tion possible that the offering is just
what the people want. To fee it Is
A real satisfaction, und to miss it
would be a misfortune.
THE AVENUE
“Plantation Days” started its final
week at the Avenue on Monday night
and that popular houxs was packed
to the doors. This offering is prov-
ing to be the Dest drawing curd seen
in-a South Side theater In seasons
and it certainly deserves every bit of
attention a is getting. There never
has Deen a nifler FRY Of artints
apsenibled and the selection of both
the principals and the chorus was
Anne with infinite ski, There isa
World af talent rolled up in this at-
Traction, and speed and. clussy” en
Yertainmient are the mutural result
The shew carries a remarkable
amount of the most diversitied sort
of work ind surprise after surprise
th the way of unlouked for numbers
and dancing of anusual interest keep
the audiences “sitting tight” Elgar's
orchestra hun been added for this,
the final week, and it is understood
that that splendid aggrecation will
remain 2% 2 permanent feature on a
‘And I said last week that I was Ro~
andtn a Sou the aiference between
Mo ‘hinds of FAIS, ae fave seen
= ten em cone:
tom tom gaat,
By TT Renton ot
oy Re he
eee
ae a
dm pay BEE tle ithe
7 RS RS Ta
Xe 23 ghat dnaaclally
mS aE
am morality is over-
Pp wraith, = Ge
© fi ise Soe, Bet
By fier! fr ine Nerro
BSE P25. Maoist
(gl erty
‘Cov Herndon ‘erooked carnivals,
oe
“ip
for the xake of thinking they save
imines, when in reality the fair should
fe" given to show our achievements
dat’ others may profit by them, and
Ja 'guin money should be the lous con
Narration, compared with whalesoma
iimmements, Advertisements have been
irmdcasted’ “The Greatest Nexto Falr
jn the World." Ax youenter the fal
Eraunds you ‘are srected: “Richt over
Fis side, folks. have here ten beau-
tial girie sho dance like onl the Sul-
tan of Turkey likex it.” A few more
Femarke and the ladies are informed to
Mireet their attention to another show,
ne the girl show i strictly for men.
Mchere they shake it "up and. shimmy
like Jelly on a_platter, and, oh, Raw
seunt they are drensed. Ax they’ come
Sut thelr first show is branded a5 a
fake; their attention is called. to. the
fumes of chance, where they win dollx
Sngvouher’ articien, and there, eve 3
Bi ghost of & chance for any one who
Tiayn them. 1 will be willing to waxer
There Inut one wheel in 80 operated
ain the square. How are they operated:
T'witt tell you, and how, to detect one:
Watch “the gameKeeper'a hand. when
surung the “spindle,” especially when
there 4s no one playing, when he spins
Ie show the crowd Row easy it is 10
Min the high prizes, ‘You will notice
Nim give & backward (reverne) turn be-
fore bringing it to spin—he fs setting Ic
to win, Other spindle wheels are. so
arranged that by" the operator simply
ania out aralnes the table where the
wheel 13 operat cat iho, stopped
Me eit, others work electrically, ‘while
‘thers “are worked selth a. lever’ ar-
yangement, ‘controlled by pushing
Foncealod button that raises and lowers
the celluloid pointer or feather or ar-
‘Tow. “Space will not permit me to men-
Ton the several others. “While the
THE fUIeCAGO DEFENDER ~ : SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
b. W. GRIFFITH'S
“ORPHANS OF THE STORM f
Adapted from "The Two Orphans"
se By Arrangement with Kate Claxton
Henrietta Glrard..sc-sesresesceseeereseseseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesghillllan Gish
Loulse seocrsascsssyecvecsetsnvenentorseseuevcoeucvevonctzees -Borthy, Gish
Ghevaller’ dé" Vaudray..0c1c000c00 122000 Noseph_ Senilaraut
Gount de Linieres.<?-.s.cvsvsesevosssssesesesosovevesesogencesFFanig Loe
Gountess. de Linierés...c.csscscccc0s02 22ST Gathignine” Emmett
Mother Frochatd..-....s.ssisssssovsssvsvssassesnseseses>tueitle La Verne
Dacques Frochard...cvcssvcssssvsesesesesesesesesesesesesng,Sheldon Lewis
Marguis_ de. Preste.......-csissszeseteseteresesecesesecess Morgan Wallace
Pierre. Frochard:.,.2-0.s:suisitissensseeseeeseoeseneseeseogs brake Pugila
Pa ence ibalonoonon anne ata Hale
jacques Forget:Noi....sssccccsculsscc ew deste King
Banter son nte ntsc iccscssvsscusssvossesssecusesosevesesegeas Mante. BIVE
Robesplerze 122000, [00 IIIININEIIN Sidney” Herbert
King Loule XVio.2IIIII Ne tee Kolmert
Thet Oector.. vss csssosesosssene INN ENEE EE Adeiphe Cestina
Slater Genevieve... colececescscscescoreceueeveseboncenarcenseesH@ate BPUCE
EAC a ergy i repahe ne tng mee at
wince test nth hte tae ety he ie Ey
By Thomas Harris aco. had alsearded th
Feend ‘Tonge Te stare with this | teteks om the main str
Wen einen hag been greats Tucked | Rouncer wit annoane
Se asics ie tne bese are aot [ollmar, circus woul
Yo, the doors, DiNS This seaxon” hax | Aharn. and the, outee
Tag Ereae Lae come at the, mata | theater wan: NaCked
quan’ Brat or Tanminst ates taned | Ma ataran: Wo
LU Sos whieh. is gutte a | Seaton URLT 3 BoM
a etr there wre about $00 Col: | five at 12:30, We pot
Sere Loe THES Fane Ene house | Got un ak $90 and |
See na ee Hyuk utiouts Ss “seats | Windows and theee
was el ena refuce to sell those to | es muctio jun the
Betas ana in hie’ reason for not | RHINE our breakfast
CSE el otu was that some Cul: | V9, FenOrt to tHe. ihe
He een te eee ce went torn enone | 11°48 wo hit she. etre
SFr ey M0, Feae AMEE Laughed so toun | oF the circus came
Am he Same neue it they aeourd ot | and met Mr. Hockwa
that, they, of0e8 Torcany’ inore if ther | Georeias, to. the shew
£o Sas ntsad by ine Colored peo- | ADM had a wonder |
hist Sughine auc tous. Noam og Teac | he, She ny dee
Ble JRUERINE, Ut ptm there. to Brooke: | flue show and there
Hhay? We weene eoanowen eave and | bere, of Gollmar Tre
fold. Me UBimar arom eiccun;, and | clent-pleco band, and
date! Ye Galler ge etarted wetwen | mate! amd Was on
there, fe where, Ihe fae teas” We iece | om the big, tos | The
me Georgits jean ami took the rerular | sincere and dancers
Boe eee ee at as In town he= | of pen. whlch you kt
PRD Geer ns, Crewene was late arriy | NUE ANOW Over
We eee circus, ited we went straigne | one ot the members,
IFW RSNS put on the old reas | unable to work the.
Loe a Pees wide open, “The | place was. taken Vy
an ery Rifeads nut out the report | (8 alse a very. nice Wo
HER ae yeh Rilo to rarada | iREION Was Fomored |
ra ey eda arrival.’ “ene word | car, an sie repr
Oa AEECUNE OF IG ot that the Genr= | when they pulled 0
SRE Son Se sole Samm veold inthe | Well, ax this Netter
Fe ee eee cane tO paraile. at | ffeil cut tt snort 3
stegets, and £0, Seb fo %nen” Sire Mack | (alk about the, hoxs,
Tae, SRA TRS the comter of the bund {£9 tell,” Reeards to
Sal cele an Tanmeancement that the | the olf game,
A aout give. one show at the "Fours tru
ThonGre mae ment starting a S13 and Bi
Tents ae tcoult eive one stow. AVhen —
Pe anSS Rtot Hievant picker up the| —Clareneo Mf. Jones
teoaan tne earning sirued tow |archestray ave, fun
que and the corres Sirs en | eee tee Chloe
= WEEK STARTING =
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th
20 MINUTES:
INHELL |
| SID KIRKPATRICK as SATAN
LAURA BOWMAN as HISS SOCIETY
TIM OWSLEY as GREEN
(GRAND. THEATER
THE SUNSET CAFE
315-317 E, 35TH ST., COR. OF CALUMET
BEGINNING WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 20, AT 9:30 P.M.
.. A SPANISH NOVELTY
“ON THE AMAZON”
i meng RR EEE rH
FRANKIE JAXON
CARROL DICKERSON'S CELEBRATED ORCHESTRA
SPECIAL DANCE NUMBERS BY FRANKIE JAXON
we had dincarded the reds and came
Mack on the mam street the clreus an-
houncer was aanouneine that the great
Golimar ‘circus would parade at 1:30
Sharp. and the outeome was Cnat, the
Theater was packed. “The neat stand
Sane Macon. "We. walled” around the
Ration until 3 a.m. for a {rain that was
flue ae. 12:80." We ot ta hed at 4 a.m.
dot Up at 9:90 and looked om of the
Mindow and there was tho ime, cir
Tus mutting up. the cook tent. After
geiting AU breakfast wo were ordered
fe report to the theater gt 11:30, At
Tia Wwe ble the streets. ‘The manager
OF tha ‘elreus came over to. the band
And. met Mir. Heckwala and invited the
Roepas Yo"the show, so we all went
fiat had a wandertal time. We enjoyed
the show very much. We went in the
sive show and there we met the mem
Gers ‘of Gollmar Tiros.” Dixie, ‘minstrel
Cight-pieco Vand and four ladies, The
iminairel band was one of the best seen
tn ihe lig lots, The eitis are all good
STagare avid datheers an ork wt JO
oc pen, which seu Know is, required t0
fue a show over. atiss Washington,
tne et the members, took sick and wax
Mnatie to work the night show and her
place wan taken We iiss Weriang, who
Is aizo a very nice worker. Mise Wash-
ington wax femoved from the Tot to the
Cae ant was reported to be. better
Shen they pulled out at’ 1:30 a, tn.
Well ax this letter: is all circus done
Tasiit ene Mt short and mext week will
falle about the Hors, ag T have plenty
fo tell. Reeards to all In and out of
the old game.
"Fours truly,
THOMAS HARRIS.
es
Charenes M. Jones and his wonder
orchestra, are featired at the Moulin
flouce cate. Chicago, Til.
* f3 38 Ri.
jg ¥ :
* BED 1 fh ;
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“OH MAMIE!”
*P’ve Got th ie Smith
T’ve Got the Mamie Smi
. Blues”
Ts HERE! Mamie's own true blues hit. Just cast
your eyes on the famous words of the song and
then go get it on the OKeh Record No. 4658—quick
while your dealer still has it in stock.
Words and Music by Mamie Smith & Milo Rega
“Oh Mamie! “I’ve Got the Mamie Smith Blues”
hate myself Oh yes I do .
‘That why Trave about me
Tunow Tee good what do T care
Modesty nett helped me (ita how)
Vedvecdon rolling xy epee ‘
My shape’s Divite Tadnie
Fey ine cal ting for when Fog
‘AN indtasore oot quit
tien Pa cu pou toeve hed
Tye Jost discovered a blues
CHORUS
T'vo got the Mamle Smith Blues ®
‘Thoseloving Mamie Mamie Marte Smith Blaes
Hor when I ting tase WesWa-Wabeeh soo
‘My heait keeps drifting along to where I belong :
Aaa when] Rear that Seon |
‘That OKeh record play “I want my Daddy Blues” |
‘aetophony Bivese il me oie bls |
“Tiwates Josey Kiss” |
When Maaies Jase Hounde stat playin? |
‘That trombone's a hit
Sliding ‘round a bit .
Keeps me a-swayio”
Round that melody
Pike e Bee ao Bacio
Don’t ya feel blue
*Cause lots of girls wish they were Mamie Smith too
Thava why fen gled ve Got ex |
Know Ive Gor in |
Te Gor the Mamie Smith Blues |
Copyright, 1922. F. Wallace Ree
Ask your neighborhood dealer for a complete list of Mamie
‘Smith Och Records, "Youmey not have thom all
Mamie Smith Sings Only For
ORES: |
GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
(25 West 45th Street, New York, N.Y.
sz, 100s aanwavnee |
Bat din tur Compeer- Sat nee: |
Shia Ge Mat Gomrnny. ZirgspuacH |
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3806 3 Jemerson Are. Teamapeae ‘Beat “Compang, |
£ CHICAGO ‘1403 “Wylie Ave. i
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Ssie'E" gate pasate eee, OW. Oho oe |
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47 E, Sist St. * - S ip MASVIRTE, ‘TENN. |
‘DerRorr esi ee |
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He te Si, Pee |
Magee tle Hour, fos. Eamesteoe es dine
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sae iain 5:\ eens emma 71s eee
SES GI EE a aI See
eS
ORPHANS OF
~ THE STORM
What is rated the most important
motion pleture deal of the season 1s
the contract just consummated by the
States and Owt theaters obtaining
the first, showing of the big D. W,
Grimtth film, “Orphans of the Storm."
‘Through an arrangement mado r6-
cently. thts spectacular Interpretation
or “fhe "Two Orphans," releasec
through United Artists’ corporation
exclusive frst run [s insured at these
houses. The engagement will be for
@ full pertod of a1x days, the date of
the premiere being set for Monday,
Sept. 25. It is sald that thero wa:
considerable competition for this plc-
lure here, in spite of its magnitude
whieh restricts It -to_ tho accommo:
Gation of only tho more important
houses,
“Orphans of the Storm” ts the intes
trlumph of the genlus who produceé
the series of master films which in-
@ided such successes as “Intoter-
ance.” “Broken Blossoms" and “Way
Down East.”
Ita metropolitan debut In the house
reserved for GriMth premieres wa:
the hollday. event of the New. York
theater world, Sinee then a Griffith
presentation has heen arranged fo
progressively In other iunportant den-
ters of the country, and the nicture f
hyoked ag strictly “big time” prop-
qsition, The reception’ given it tr
Voston, Clovelund, Detrolt, " Vitts-
burgh and other large cities has vecr
ain echo of the praise won by it i
Neve Fork, We P
“Orphans of the Storm” is D..W
Guimth's biggest. “Tt ly tho mos
brilliant xpeetacle ever produced it
Ameriea, and that leaves nothing t
ihe said.” Based on tho stirring melo.
drama, “The ‘Two Orphans.” with
record of a half century's success, the
Griffith film utitizes every bit of ara:
tnatle ‘aetion in it and displays.
Against titanle background of ac
tion and atmorphere of the perlod—
the French revolution. _‘Thex., have
hailed “Orphans of the Storm” as 1
moving store, swift Inaction, won:
[term in historic interest, and file
with a ninsterly: senso of suspens
aint climax. From an inspection 0
Mie plete ane would moro thar
share the enthusiasm of the critles
Not only: has a great, spectacula
unilertaking heen ‘accomplished in the
new Gritith fim, but It is played )
A notable cast.” For the first time
Since “Hearts of the World”. the tw
Gish sisters are In one film, as the
two orphans,
Other players mfe sensatlonall
magnetic. Joseph Schildkraut, stat
‘Of the stage succes, “Lillom,” Monte
fey SOA So eT REO PR
Bare nisd oo
REAPS tee dag of i OF BE
ASAT, Tre.tuy ath Ow Nex
Fighting Mad. Sunday, The Hate
Pegi ali tees a
Sehr eu Sita Slay, Bi
Pe se Stal Take tutor
ESCO Buta, Paes Bet
Sith are Bua, ats Gta anee
Saab Shey tee BSar Bey
see
Sosa aij sich or
ance PONE This dare ct of
greta os eae obit oa
SR. Sear here angen
sioner Kear Hear Ang tte
eg, auabet agit” on
Hostaeen
rl ee
SO wena, mae
melange A. tomate Sette
Es cetie la heats oP mee eek
Blue, Frank Losee, Sheldon Lewis,
blue, Fame Lowe elton, Canis
a ie gee
Heng cae ee thet Cea le
Manse festa ote Poa
see oar Oates eae
ine rerenons see Gee ah
sree, ee eee
ih ot oat aPSTES sreaiaciy
seeaneeaeen teeny antes neste
in oh Orem et the Gee
ihe pian oo Ont, ener
seooprmonte Fe he rie
jcal migement
at amigement
Oliver White, who went to Taw-
| PAUL & STONE'S: |...
| ar 6THE
| Peto MIDNIGHT
Ele) Ale,
A |e .
Be a ee ee
HAMMOND'S
VENDOME
STATE cTREET—ane BLOCK
eoeccereoseresiorcoooosooocooeoeoooooooeeseeeeees:
} MON., TUES. AND WED., SEPT. 25, 26 AND 27 |
| THE STORY OF A MAN |
:
| WHO :
| DIDN'T COME BACK |
A_REAL SCREEN MASTERPIECE
: AS GREAT AMONG PICTURES AS 4
; THE PLAY IS AMONG PLAYS :
AMAZING : : : IRRESISTIBLE : :: ROMANTIC |
: ree .
GUY BATES POST23_
fa tho world-famous drama that comes le im
enti win elgg ‘power -~ SG 5 :
» ARN), | Wee Sey Gain / ibe
CNW Md a ‘i 4 ™
Pease veo) as
ee oe <) au
ee he Sy Eee eee
ag EARLY EVERY MORN
eey and (14118-t0-inch, 8c)
po Saw LONESOME MONDAY
Paes MORNING BLUES
oe hi
Qe y
“<> ETA MOONEY
EXCLUSIVE BLACK SWAN ARTIST
HAVE YOUR DEALER PLAY THESE
sores Love pays Henderson's ance Orch.
Teo. {Sav 1T WHILE DANCING Henderson’e Dance Orch.
wa agst BECAUSE YOU'RE YOU Georgia Harvey
Mas AST ARON CoN aN TSLANS OF Love eee Haney,
18048 § DRINK TO ME ONLY WITH THINE EYES Lorenzo Wells
Téo {WHEN ‘YOU AND I WERE YOUNG, MAGGIE
Herbert Black
Go into business for yourself. Sell Black Swan Records
Agents and Dealers Wanted Everywhere
PACE PHONGGRAPH CORPORATION
2289 Tth Ave. W. Y. C,
rr
r. ©. B. A.
crater Oren’ ein Anecitin)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES and THEATER MANAGERS
T. Oo. B. A.
RL eee |
—————————————————————
oo
i VISIT POPULAR Ss
489 E. 31st St. Chicago's Largest Dance Hall
ance To THE MUSIC OF
JOE OLIVER’S CREOLE JAZZ BAND
JUST BAGH FROW A GREAT YEAR ON THE COAST
ENTERTAINERS REFRESHMENTS
SS
OWL @ THEATER
MUSIC BY THE BEST ORCHESTRA EVER ASSEMBLED
CLARENCE LEE, Dieior
THE MOST POPULAR THEATER ON THE SOUTH SIDE
ICKFORD THEATER
35th Street and Michigan Avenue
PICKFORD SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Selected Photoplays of Class
0. C, HAMMOND OWRD VENDOME THEATERS
VENDOME THEATER
aus49 STATE STREET
1500 Comfortable Seats Mammoth Pipe Organ
ERSKINE TATE'S SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
‘The most unique cabaret entertain-
ment of the fall season was staged
at the Sunset cafe on Wednesday
night with reai galety. The whirlwind
troupe of superh performers under
the personal direction of Clarence E-
Muse, are looking forward to an-
Other’ success in their new offering,
“On the Amazon." ‘This ts a Spaa-
Ish revelry. sparkling In ‘color and
tropical imusic, ‘The management
pointy with pride to the fact that
Frankie Jaxon of the Paradise
gardens, Atlantic City, has been en-
gaged to star in this production, — It
ts said by most eritice of the East
that he ts one of the greatest enter-
talners in the business, and when we
Fecall such celebrities as Strappy
Jones, Lovie ‘Taylor, Mable ‘Turner.
Eana Richardson, Eva Rocheav, Leon
Diggs, Marion -Tastor, Ollie ‘Hick-
man, J. Lewis Johnson and others
now playing at the Sunset, tt 1 a
Fuarantee that nothing but the best
{is offered In this rendezvous of pleas
tre. -Soloueners will find the new re—
Yue, "On the Amazon.” so. jammed
Tail of Tive-vire entertainment that
thev will hardiy have time to give
Attention to. anything but pleasur—
able listenlag if they want to “get all
‘of the show." - Bill George, the popu=
Jar manarer, greets nightly the mut~
titude of patrons with a smile that
Beings fem back
SS
John Gertrule's | Dixte Flyers are
‘plasing the South ‘They had = fine en
faced Bh gpg nti AMA ay
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
"O
TH
Susp
SE
THE FAMOUS FEAST
WOMEN. THE GREAT
FOUNTAIN OF WINE.
SCENE EVER PRODUC
COST MORE THAN AN
ATTRACTIONS ON THE
SHOWN ONLY. A. FEW
WONDER WORK. THE
MORE SPLENDOR. THE
PRINCESS MARY'S WE
SE
FAY M
Star of "The
AND ALSO OF ZIEGF
WITH BEAUTIFUL GIRL
DANCE EVER STAGE
THE CARMAGNOLE"—W
WITHOUT LAW AND
HE PLEASED. REVEL
WAITED SIX YEARS TO
ENTER MOTION PICTURES
The W spe
"ORPHANS OF THE STORM"
SEE
FEAST SCENE
THE GREAT DANCE
WINE. MOST
PRODUCED.
THAN ANY THRILL
ON THE STAGE.
A. FEW MINUTE
K. THE SCENE
DOOR. THAN WA
RY'S WEDDING.
SEE
BY MARY
The Velvety
ZIEGFELD FOR
FUL GIRLS IN
STAGED—THE
HOLE"—WHEN A
W AND EVERY
REVELRY—MARY
THE FAMOUS FEAST SCENE.. BEAUTIFUL WOMEN. THE GREAT DANCE. GIRLS IN FOUNTAIN OF WINE. MOST MAGNIFICENT SCENE EVER PRODUCED. THIS SCENE COST MORE THAN ANY THREE DRAMATIC ATTRACTIONS ON THE STAGE, AND IT IS SHOWN ONLY A FEW MINUTES IN THIS WONDER WORK. THE SCENES AT COURT. MORE SPLENDOR THAN WAS SHOWN AT PRINCESS MARY'S WEDDING.
Star of "The Velvet Lady" AND ALSO OF ZIEGFELD FOLLIES FAME, WITH BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN THE WILDEST DANCE EVER STAGED—THE "DANCE OF THE CARMAGNOLE"—WHEN ALL PARIS WAS WITHOUT LAW AND EVERYONE DID AS HE PLEASED. REVELRY—MADNESS.
Richard Walton Tully's First Production to Be "The Masquerader," Starring Guy Bates Post
So much has been written about methods of motion picture production that the case of Richard Walton Tully deserves particular mention, chiefly by contrasting this eminent producer whose efforts in the amusement field have brought out such successes of the legitimate stage as "The Masquerader," "The Bird of Paradise," "The Rose of the lanceo" and "Omar the Tentmaker," has waited exactly a half dozen of years before putting his ambition of entering the silent drama into accomplishment. The delay, he declares, was due to his desire to gain an accurate insight into the methods that could best insure the production of satisfactory pictures.
Mr. Tully's offering is "The Masquerade," which will be the attraction, released by First National, at the Vendome theater next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Guy Bates Post, who has been identified with most of Mr. Tully's stage triumphs, and who has for three years played the title role in the stage version of part in the picture, taking the double role of John Chilcote, M. P., and John Loder.
Mr. Tully has chosen his cast with the same deliberation that marked his entrance into the film producing industry. Ruth Sinclair plays a feminine lead opposite George while the other members are Edward M. Hunt, Neil McMahon Standing, Lawson Hunt, Marcia Manson, Barbara Tennant and Kenneth Gibson. James Young directed this picture.
Ida Cox is playing the week at Beaumont, Texas, with fine success.
Albe
Ex
Param
ALBERTA HUNTER.
America's Supreme
Blues Singer-Actor of
Chicago's Dreamland
No. 12005—DOW
GON
LY
No. 12006—THOSE JAZZIN' BABY BLUES
I'M GOING AWAY TO WEAR
Albert
No. 12001—DON'T PAY ME—
DADDY BLUES
No. 12002 HE MAN BE YOUR MAN
Alberta
Exclusively
Paramount
18005—DOWN HEART
GONNA HAVE
LEAVE YOU
BABY BLUES—
TO WEAR YOU OFF
Alberta Hunter.
Alberta Hunter
Exclusively Sings for
Paramount Records
ALBERTA HUNTER.
America's Supreme Blues Singer—Idol of Chicago's Dreamland
No. 12005—DOWN HEARTED BLUES—Alberta Hunter
GONNA HAVE YOU. AIN'T GONNA LEAVE YOU ALONE—Alberta Hunter
No. 12006—THOSE JAZZIN' BABY BLUES—I'M GOING AWAY TO WEAR YOU OFF MY MIND—
Alberta Hunter, with Eubie Blake at piano
Alberta Hunter
Alberta Hunter
No. 12001—DON'T PAN ME—BADDY BLUES
Alberta Hunter
Alberta Hunter
No. 20108—HE MAY BE YOUR MAN—I'VE GOT THE WONDER WHERE HE WENT BLUES—
Lucille Hegamin's Greatest Record
No. 20161—SEND BACK MY HONEY MAN—I'VE GOT YOU TOO MY PUPPIES NOW—
Lucille Hegamin
Lucille Hegamin
No. 20022—BANDANNA DAYS
If YOU'VE NEVER BEEN VAMPED BY A BROWN SHIN, YOU'VE NEVER BEEN VAMPED AT ALL—
Lucille Hegamin
Lucille Hegamin
No. 12003—HARD WINNIE BLUES—JOHN MENRY BLUES—
Harlem Harmony Kings
Harlem Harmony Kings
No. 20181—THOSE LONGING FOR YOU BLUES—LONESOME NAMA BLUES—
Original Memphis Blues Band
Original Memphis Blues Band
No. 20142—DON'T PAN ME—I'M GOING AWAY TO WEAR YOU OFF MY MIND—
Original Memphis Five
Original Memphis Five
No. 20145—NOT LIPS—YOU CAN HAVE HIM. I DON'T WANT HIM—
Specht's Society Orchestra
Specht's Society Orchestra
If your dealer can't supply you, write to us. Got our complete catalog. FREEL. Mention your dealer's name.
Dealers and Agents Wanted Everywhere
THE NEW YORK RECORDING LAB-ORATORIES, INC., Port Washington, Wis.
Paramount
---
The World's Most Costly and Greatest Entertainment
Clap on those ear bobbles, as we are about to broadcast. At you: Helen Davenport, Eddie Lemons, Gant and Perkins, Josie Nelson, Whirley Wiggins, Zackaria White, Irma L. Harson, Clifton Boyd, Reuben Washington, Alex Smith, Gertrude Rainey, Charles J. Harris, Andrew James, Charles J. Harris, Andrew James, Caldwell, Beatrice Creighton, Earl Granstaff, John Mitchell, Wm. May, Robert Green, Sam Short, Hattie Young, Wm. Hahn, Albert McFarland, May Brown Allen, Robert Neloms, Pugh and Huff, Virginia Liston, Luretta Wooden, Johnson Trio, Lizzie Miles, Bennie Spencer, Vola McKay, Roy White, Mae Olden, Gladys Robertson, Catherine Patterson, J. C. Brien, Grace Rise, Leroy Allen, F. Brennan, Erica Woodson, Mamie Bell Tutt, Oliver Brodle, Evelyn White, Bud Harris, Watt and Willis, Charles McCray, Mrs. C. E. McKane, T. Wallace, Allie Lemons, Josie Nelson, Hunt Tutt
Slim Jim Austin, with the Harvey minstrels, sends in a very interesting letter. In it he says that business is great all along the line and that the show is meeting with financial as well as artistic success. They have a 15-piece band and orchestra and an all-star line-up which includes, among others, Ross and Jackson, Tall Talker James' Crosby, Johnny Wood, a great corps of end men, Edwards and Edwards, with their fine wire walking novelty and himself. The show plays Sarnia Sept. 25, Stratford, 26; London, 27 and 28; Kitchener, 29 and 30, all in Ontario, Canada, with the week of Oct. 2 in Toronto.
The Jones-Patterson Co. is playing Jacksonville. The line-up has Catherine Datterson, Datterson, Kathryn Smith, Janny Coroll, Fred Henderson, Billy Jones, James Zillner, Happy Bolton and chorus.
MAIL RADIO
SLIM WRITES
---
Actual Reproductions at Enormous Cost of the Palace of Versailles in the Days of the Most Extravagant Government the World Ever Knew
OWING TO THE IMMENSE PRICE OF RENTAL ADMISSION WILL BE: ADULTS 30c, 3c TAX; TOTAL 33c. CHILDREN, MATINEE ONLY, 10c. 6 DAYS—AT EACH OF THESE THEATERS—6 DAYS MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPT. 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30
STATES THEATER 3507 STATE STREET
Walker Thompson, Popular Star, Dies After Long Illness
Walker Thompson, well known actor and moving picture star, died in Chicago, on Tuesday, Sept. 19, after an illness which lasted well over a year. He was born in Lexington, Ky., 34 years ago, and started in the show business at an early age. Aside from his work in vaudeville as a member of the teams of Simms and Thompson and Cross and Thompson, he took a prominent part as a leading man in several of the Lafayette Players companies, attaining a splendid reputation through his work as a dramatic actor, his greatest character being that of the dope friend in the sensational drama, "The Divorce Question," which followers of the drama will no doubt remember. Mr. Thompson is survived by his mother, a resident of Frankford, Ky., and his widow, formerly Miss Alice Calloway, well known in musical circles, being a trap drummer and a member of the Chicago local of the Federation of Musicians, living at 3300 Khodes avenue. He was a Mason in good standing, being a member of Hiram Lodge No. 4, New York City. His company with the moving picture industry included leads with both the Michaux and Reo) Productions corporation, as well as with several productions made by smaller companies. Undertaker Trable, 3006 Cottage Grove avenue, has charge of the remains and the funeral will be held on Friday, Sept. 22, at 1 o'clock p.m., the services taking place at Pilgrim's Baptist church, 33d street and Indiana avenue.
The Famous Georgia Minstrels playing through Missouri, are working the seven days of the present week at Jefferson City, Sedalia, Booneville Columbia, Nevada, Springfield and Joplin,
ACTOR DEAD
THE KOPPIN
Motion Picture News
By D. Ireland Thomas.
Mr. Alexander Sample, 2001 Hutchins street, Houston, Texas, will open a motion picture theater very soon.
He will be presenting a friend asking me about the market value of a film showing the funeral of the late Rev. Dr. E. C. Morris at Helena, Ark.
I answered the telegram giving my opinion as requested. To explain what this nature can only be used in Negro News Reels, I referred the inquirer to Leigh Whipner, who might use same in his news reels. This film could also be used by traveling exhibitors who show great man, the denomination he headed was always bitter against motion pictures and theaters and it is my candid opinion that as much as the church people love the deceased they would not go into a theater. We need to be shown in churches and to be inserted in the Negro News Reels. I might also add that no film company will purchase any Negro news subjects as they will whites. The photographers that are stationed around Waco will be used to even make a photo of a representative Negro delegation that called to the President, claiming that they could not sell them. Here is a great chance for a Negro photographer as the Negro newspapers, especially the newspaper will always pay for such photographs.
Mr. Charles A. Isabell of New Rochelle, N. Y., has just completed a scenario, entitled The Telegram andaman and hawaiian, Mr. Isabell was very good. Mr. Isabell asked that no mention he made of his effort, but I am violating the request as the work is too good to keep from the readers of this column. Mr. Baccus, Box 506, Paris, Texas, wants to exchange his two-reel feature, "Cotton Patch to Congress," for any good two-reel Race film. Wise Guy from Indiana writes the book, "The Indian is shot in a movie play the wound always proves fatal? And why, when the hero is shot, it is always a harmless flesh wound? Why is there always, always, drawn in the library? Do people keep pistols in library tables in real life? Why is there always a pistol handy in the desk drawer at the office?" Answer: Prof. C. E. Hawk writes that he is playing the theaters while his assistant, Prof. Arthur Metts is playing the churches in the Palmetto state. He says that all mail will reach him if he were home at 172 Gray street, Ala., Ga.
Prof. A. D. Hankins, traveling exhibitor, says that he is doing a good business through Virginia, with West Virginia, to follow. The Knicker is now cashier at Lincoln theater at Nashville, Tennessee. Little Miss Lillie Miee living of Dunbar theater, Savannah, Ga., states that she has not been able to get her vacation yet, but expects to soon. Big rejoicing in Memphis, Tenn., among friends, they are all received an increase in pay. Mr. J. J. Robinson, manager of the new Reel Productions at Dallas, Texas, announces that he is already doing a nice business in his territory. Daddy Adkins of the cerun theater, he looks after the cash while his two sons stand up behind his battery of motiongraph machines. It is mighty hard to beat this family combination.
Ignorant, St. Paul, Minn. —The cast of "The Call of His People" is G. Edward Brown, Edna Morton, Perey Verwayen, James Stevens, Mercedes Gilbert, Lawrence Chenault and Mace Kemp. They were adapted from the book "The Man Who Would Be White," by Aubrey Bowser, who is a Harvard graduate. Both Edna Morton and Perey Verwayen are married. Address all mail to me to Blijon theater, Nashville, Tenn.
TOURISTS
Laura and Sidney Kirkpatrick were in Chicago last week, having motored from their home in Indianapolis, Ind., to while place they returned on Friday. They were accompanied by Cusin Ernest Kirk, expert driver and mechanician. The Kirkpatricks will get busy soon, after a lengthy rest.
Vola Roberts, with the Drake-Walker Players, is getting hers at 200 Tremont street, Boston, Mass.
TOURISTS
4653 STATE STREET
Mamie Smith, most famous woman singer of the Race, and national favorite, has entered a new field of endeavor and now blossoms forth with her first original composition written and sung by herself, entitled "The Mamie Smith Rhues." Mamie Smith, who is now on vaudeville tour, plans to feature her own song on this tour. It is a most unique song from a number of standpoints. First of all, because it represents Mamie Smith's initial effort as a composer; secondly, because she is one of a very few women of the Race who have ever written a song for publication; and last, not least, Mamie sings it herself.
Miss Smith, who records exclusively for Okeb records, has recorded her song, "The Mamie Smith Blues," and from advice from the manufacturer it promises to be a nationally popular blues. When interviewed recently Miss Smith declared that she had received such a volume of correspondence from all over the country praising her efforts and her record to write the song which would be truly a personal effort and into which she could put all her own inimitable personality.
The words of the chorus, printed herewith by special permission from Mamie Smith, will give our readers an idea of the pop that Mamie has put across in her first and only original blues number:
I've got the Mamie Smith Blues.
Those loving Mamie Smith Blues;
For now I sing that Wa-WaWabah
song.
My heart keeps drifting along to where
I belong.
And when near that Okch
That man's record play "I Want My
Daddy Blues."
"Saxophony Blues" thrill me with bliss,
"Want a Jazzy Klas"
What sounds around start playin'
that trombone's a bit
Sliding 'round a bit
Keeps me a-swayin'
"Bunna that, maddy"
Like a bat, so mamie.
Don't ya feel blue.
"Cause lots of girls wish they were
Mamie Smith, too.
That man's bat that I've got 'em,
Know I've got 'em,
I've got the Mamie Smith Blues.
Washington, D. C.—"Follow Me." L. M. Welingarden's great musical comedy, headed by Billy Higgins and Clifford Ross and supported by as fine a cast of principals and as capable and nitty a chorus as ever was seen in this burg, have been held at the Howard theater for an extended engagement and is taxing that handsome theater to capacity at every performance. The show is a knockout and is easily the best seen here in the past three years.
CALLERS
Like a couple rays of sunshine came Joe Jordan, the famous composer and director of the "Strut Mus Lizzie" company, and William H. Taylor, pianist with the same aggregation, on Monday morning. Joe presented the Old Roll Top Desk Man with a fine photo of himself and Willie Tyler, who is also with the "Liz" trick and who at one time toured with Josephus as Jordan & Tyler, one of the best musical novelties in vaudeville.
An invitation to the reception marking the opening of the fall term of the Sinclairhe White Murdock violin classes, whose studio is located at 290 East 45th street, Los Angeles, Cal., arrived at the Old Roll Top Desk on Monday. The term opens on September 27 and continues until June 23. The violin class is expected to know that Sinclairhe White Murdock, who is a Windy City product, is having fine success in the California city.
MAMIE SMITH
GOING GREAT
CALLERS
TERM OPENS
A letter arrived early in the week from New York city, sent by the famous little comedian, Hammert Harrington, who is making a great name for himself with the big attraction of the month on Broadway, "Minsky Bros. Burlesque," playing an indefinite engagement at the Park Music hall on 59th street. Hammert was to have made it to Chicago as featured comedian with the "Strut Miss Lizzie" company, but couldn't wiggle off his contract with the New York attraction. The press notices he is getting in the Metropolitan dailies are flattering, though justified. Mall will reach him at 144 West 133d street apartment 2, New York city.
FO
AUDIT
CON
THE RAGING SUCCE
DIRECT F
CR
IN AMERICA
"STRU
WITH FAMOUS
COMPANY OF 125, IN
GULFPORT & B
GE
NIGHTS AND SATURDAY
NIGHTS AND SATURDAY MAT. 50c TO $2.00. WEDNESDAY MAT. 50c TO $1.50 MAIL ORDERS NOW
ATLAS THEATER
4711-17 B. State St., East Side Street
THE PLACE TO SEE
"REAL" PICTURES
ALL THE TIME
Hear the Famous Atlas Orchestra
HAMTREE
WITH NO LAW TO STOP YOU WHAT WOULD YOU DO TONIGHT?
WITH NO LAW TO STOP YOU WHAT WOULD YOU DO TONIGHT?
One man stole her . . . and kissed her . . . and fell—amid wine and revelry and dancing . . .
Another kissed her . . . handsomest man of millions . . . and was driven from the city . . .
The third man kissed her—Danton, a nation's hero . . . and they threatened his life!
Love! Laughter! Madness without limit . . .
Would you have withstood it?
MOST HEART-TOUCHING, INTENSE CLIMAX AT END OF THE FIRST PART— STOPS YOUR BREATH
THE GREAT RIDE TO THE RESCUE AT CLIMAX OF LAST ACT
Erle, Pa., Sept. 20.—Lulu Coates and Crackerjacks, one of the most sensational turns seen here in seasons, is featured on a fine bill at the Palace. The entire show is a splendid one, there being three novelty acts which are far above the average
KLEIN BACK
Martin Klein, the well known booking agent, has returned from a quick trip to Chattanooga. Tenn, where he made arrangements to act as representative of the T. O. B. A. in the Middle West, with headquarters in Chicago, his office being at 4634 St. Lawrence avenue. He has severed connections with the "opposition" circuit.
FURTH BIG WEET
ORIUM
SUN
Mats
AGRESS ST. AND WABASH
ESS AND FAD OF NEW
FROM TIMES SQUARE THEATER,
CREAMER & LAYT
GREATEST COLORED MU
T MISS
15TH REGIMENT "HELL F
INCLUDING
BROWN
50 FA
T YOUR SEATS IN ADVANC
MAT. 50c TO $2.00. WEDNES
MAIL ORDERS NOW
CONGRESS ST. AND WABASH AVE.
PHOENIX THEATER
3104 STATE STREET
SELECTED PHOTOPLAYS
CHANGED DAILY
Continuous, 2:45 p. m. to Midnight
Benjamin Turner, Musical Director
Washed Air Ventilation
PAGE SEVEN
TO STOP YOU
WHOULD YOU
NIGHT?
banks . . . riches in
or with your
wishes? . . .
what quiver and jump
day! . . .
artest city . . . and the
everyone doing what he or
such dancing!
such drinking!
but there was also
beautiful—but there were
more beautiful.
y!
country . . . came pretty
brimming with sweet-
ister . . . for all the
and kissed her . . . and
jewelry and dancing . . .
handsomest man of
driven from the city . . .
her—Danton, a nation's
reatened his life!
ness without limit . . .
thstood it?
NING, INTENSE CLIMAX
THE FIRST PART—
FOR BREATH
EE
TO THE RESCUE AT
LAST ACT
FOURTH WEEK
"Strut Miss Lazzie" will begin its fourth big week at the Auditorium theater on Sunday night. There is no abatement of attendance at the mammoth theater where this wonderful attraction is holding forth and it is not a certainty that the engagement will not be extended for a short period. However, if the reader has not seen this show, get busy, for you can never tell just what might happen. If you should miss it you will never forgive yourself; if you have seen it-you will certainly want to do so again. Get busy.
MORE STAGE—NEXT PAGE
EK
GINNING
day, Sept. 24
Wed. & Sat.
AVE.
PHILLY NOTES
Well. Urexident, General and Com-
pundrr-wechiet of the Swivel, Chale
asthe Gage! atten “tas ate
soma ue fat
ee
&, {ee
PES RRA Nine neabing short
eS fe « Nalco
i FOR |S at! 8 il
Fe ON carions point ‘thas
Be tee Sonstte
Am | ne ha
eC iin aM
BI a tied tal fa
yr. ai oie tae en
bes SE ne ee te
RP Pi ainces tote
SE ee en the nts
SAA OH frendaner ut bath
eaten, Sad
wziny” —_ [the srening showy,
5 y
oP
Pep
ieee == | ine dteeting eawen.
sziouy” —_|the exeming shown
me ee aa
tne cag cs ea
aioe te Sip tan tee meena
Beri atte See
area muses Sena e
Rete ote tate eee
SER ar aoe oe oe
Sin tee teal Steel af at lt
Soak ete mera ge rhe
SRE. te ehenenne ont
Oe eae a as casa
nek Mais ea. nah MT
be ete meer, Set San
Eoghan hatte tae
Roche eaten ees Be
Pah Naa ee see
sec eter ean aetecrenat
2k SRY at ALP eae see
ab tl aie olen td
teal ret a tek Salant cnt ga
ory Hevea aiet Seaton
ioe tac action thet
Sea aie tna teed eee
real ants ae nha te
Behtara aohnatene Mittin
Eanes ter eee oe
Eig See a aie ae ah
SO Bins aah tenn
sey, Dee eet Gere
Sen ae eaneeaee aera
inetd "cae ge
Sabaeate teste Ora atgey a
APuamhae eae deta
ie ARR iat aheceee Be.
2B Getta tee tes oe
in eetuutie ser thee Te
SOR eal ae teal
Partie Sateen en We es
ace Seat erate
oe
See dee eater ere
seiterttahet tee. ane, te
ian ersiene ie Same
Tear Wat tey cee arth
Teriadhtitammaes Sram
Er ite tere cr ieee
His erties ae bet ahaa
Pinar ecrtetme tats aes
Leeds careree daar y
Bette bance aa Rh at
Ain Car area
ihe aris he eae AO
3 iainaikt Guan T eta ae
Tee Rest Sead Maa
CTs tatal ieniee tie oma ee
gusts wend Saree
He ee RERE im te ea
feet aha Ee tr aha:
weeny, odes ie cae ae
Herma ee ees
Ear tinsel
TAGS Pale dae
Eamets ater tna tac
Sinai tate teat cane
TEs asain Stee
ips oateney See tera
HeFhage eats Salic aR
Us or cane.
Sit NE wen te “he. Onta
tee Ny Hae age ORE
ari i Mean ear So
Tint ne Eb ceetaa
see tie eee, Sema
sie Nias Beth Sahat
Phin EM PROP ae han
arse tila ieee ae
eesti a te 5 Mae
Ta haat Rl ty “pant
Hecate ee inaeet, Bias
He Seb ie es ana fame
Hime aba geen ta a
Bei cane “Siete agen
ieee tale Sati See
ger Reyer,” Ga
ie vie admeer a
Te eetitta aol ance
Oe A SBE not
neice set ie Rie SATE
ae eg ree
Etceatheted nthe
fe te an aah titties
ie Res ete rane, SSL
Hees ay ree Petes, Nat
ne freee tats tates at
Spa nan nectar
iors ear sree
Lang Societe oT le
irr’ sae tera ates
Frat Mata Watadh Saas
eh atte Ay ST
Bt fey Berek
Bon bare thetet Panera
Rehaae 2Mats" ate ca iy
EOP aed ane SP es
Sioned teri mets ae
Scene teeny Sat
Sat oe a, See
ie seb since Sosa aa
ib akes Ete weinngl, Tile Ric
ee eer eee Tee
iret eat a Ss aia TH
ier iatetecer iia one
feet anaes ane, ee
Sener iat Say Wald cies
Heer Se ne cane cee
SESE etn eae Ue ee
Taree gee ere
TRG TU Silat € Sitdeattey 3
Seine Geen fact tne
Sees a Ser dette ae
mer ththd at Saree ger
Tega aie anh eanat ha
Be ahthcdtnde eutte Baete
ai eae Sh TN a
Set Sena cre cate, Tae
Soe, a tale a:
ies chaos ees SE
eer tart Sted teins 25
naan a :
Baits Seam gene. there
weal mament Sairege se ehrast
2 See tie aim ae
Be cae aaa Sarat it
See greeny eee tae
Seat ine aed eee
ithe duet ge ern ae
riley gosine. He esate Be
et Hane came NAR onc
fog Ee cata A
fete, Bande malice ie
bg gk yee a
ag cee ee]
ii aa, arora ane ae
Fes RPh alt ata
Ema nt ase SAE Bns
eal
aT ra sai take oS
rece a ae Ai at
eS AM ee ern
Seth erent nie eae
rathek Sonica eat et
He Se Sa eal
see ath anna aeaetat
TE ed ie lta Sa ee
EN pehta Rate! Ne ae cae
CR eth eel
Seen, eee Set
Heat Sale we rata
<a ibe Sey et ewe
TEL a aera WR
Meret aaa a
Eerie ae seen ane
Sel artin date athe int SE
Hove ke Stating Sate ete
Peat MA han
Plone SAS then
Rigs Meson clang
eas ea ott
See ad ARS ee nas
See ad oe wee
seit Tanna
Fee le RAT eumce tor te Seon
Se aig ont
four, cee HOUR”
ae
THE STANDARD
» pranged tes Penn ata mi
|, Philadelphia, Pa. Sept. 21—-a pill
alt ot big time torne is drawing fn
set He ea recman See
Be eone ues Greate
Sileren tae tua bene ae
Bee aoe ee ren
Soret cess ial oud
Beeb Meet wae ae
Bie bee pet tne”
5 Sere, teed a
for, Bead Hen Seat
Beige Hae Hen es
2 eng ROE PRN vane
se Seeee aa aah
haa ae ae ea
Sp Pane ae tte
Be re ote le
"Kar. chumiey wouchsafen the nin:
uae Sn
Rath ee AES ct
CED Sth Panes
small delivered 10 @40
‘Additional Stage=
COAST DOPE
46%, 19 tn the field for. 9, senor sonentst.
Beer, Se Se Sel ea orn
Bea CN Ee
Leo Railey. of the song-writing tearn
og uae: ike ane ar ie
0 EE Se EL Re
Dace ta State tres
Hany tee Wa aie rise
See afi hh Wteaat at at
ia abe lle Sickert at
Hac ea
Velen Sa aaa hatind
erected Pee, es
EAM areca a aes
eat thar a te
Res Tadat tine tee ae
TAINS ate aa aa
Be Pile git Roan wich
i earl Mata et the
Niger toe seu Reha a
Teaser imctevig Meas ak
Re Tinted ane
els irtes EA a tite
SER sae eate our
Se mera sa, Seat
Be edie Ba ole
Meath Sate 5 Mt den at
iu SAGE D2 dont a th
Ja smile “on his face.
Sates tet fon a at
TMA ee he aa
Rye Settee gar eae es:
REIN im te Riza hc
Chasis A Riemer gee
TEGhah & Beene aus
Sh Bee Bacar ieee
Si Pa et ah te
to Nhe tra glts in enaras tone
Healet ann chee Sas
Hea SOP BRE Pn
Bee atePy Bey SE:
pecoiaiie Bette tal det
Peo antenna in Eats: Would
ey AUS OREN a hand
Ae oun aaa aca et
Sage at SSR Se
eabrencaarce es Sutil fant
Serta AME Gade
Benetien cat Snr fenton
ERE oer On Caw aon ae
ibe: Soll, Ses oa
eats Pile Ste ce kt
SRA eS te
‘Come on Ee 7
“Teint SensSaley aad Rngiag
peated ta he RENE
Ba ce tO Tae aa? tate
Sr eee a Beenie
Beit he RE ce Md ach ae
Seer wall aa ats
Semin SANE PRR cea
adie Hm hee Head aed
PSO eas Slag
gay Weatded. Bore
Be Siaheoe Nand thine ee te
Fa eda” Grape, eaTee
fein isthe iat hea nade te
natives like it Mrs.’ Carrie Lowery
meena Gio Mts Gane ea
Feces iia ie &
Se ar ula nist oie
iat nn ake Se
EReeT Th ETE Me ae
Tae Re ecithe Me Sede:
Bei neal ate hay
see oats itty, (Be
ae, Ue ae tial the
SEE ol i as data
GEMS RST! at ee Mtge
Hare atk Tagua aes
Iie Wed" ber ceed ae
Bier Wh init eu, Bes
Bie oat Rat eat RG
ae gates ede! Sys
Bs Gok ae in a ce
dereddts ie terme Shy ase
acs cb ‘ah gates Aataeet
ES GF 1 OA ant
ect Mondint aes ind
fio rt ae Sue et
ap ets a ape” Sins
oe outa Sage 32a
Eiege cle ae tae
Jamey ames winntan, Wathen, Shae
ns aa ad Be
Sha Satis ME Ace tat
ang, Pitas ttly ite aly “Sa
Ban Patetact Mad ats Bae
Bey rae athe Mah ae
Hele dette HaneR, Palme
SERAE SOP ands Suara
SSP Meher an tie eterna
Ia tha aNnl aside
tends oF ish AR outer et
Waaee GR ates, aia
Sar GEM amet a ee
aa SR Saeed eee
EE och ang ett at wet
HEED LIME" GO wad Sonate
Tg, Pept Nog the aan se
aati Tent nm ake a Fae
iat tne be hare faa
ite ar is Mange dae Soanet
Seiad nets
Sere hahaa at
Bers os Pal Mn are sae
ero Sons
Sioa next week, Tor.
italiane: max rceKrn,
ENE, AM UI
atte Sot EARS SEE an
ait, South
1 NOTE OR TWO €<—
he Herrelees, a cea) clever nels are
gehen ae
Hit BG ESE ae me cst bn
Ey area
Be TEN. cm ey, te
eee aa ho eS
meni teed Bt he
Bae th Boa a lanes
Be dss the
FR sana Rs Fie co, ae
Re HSiatcG nc Re
ital Gerais bn
Re nalanatamtsa. ana
ipa dita wes hoa otc
catenin Et eh
ete MAC sO
BEES AIPORT hn o'r ies
a
Rie Wecare was cad hum to At
fara, Shea aa
He "anion, Gaur ee
aries gee ee fers
odie Siar af eaccer ae
sites Reels Gel See
ietitanas Re hee, a te
Fete Sora pa ae
ee inate
arise ae Siar ET,
ae A
ome eae eres
Sedna at Sane ch yt
received inte ust week. =
Bc AE ne. oatates
See as, Pear
Bogner aati he FO kate
Agena nash eG Ae
ee rt oe At
Sar in ie nd
Sepecioheer a (Peace et
ati Ratan aren,
to follow, wens
“1 Than th eing comeiin
Greenville, Miss. iain
Pr Re ee
ae heb ert al Re ae
cea sere ane
Elie Sonn and Bate Teno de
Hh mrs hing to alae te
SLL Ses
[TSENG _Memanatonre Co. having fin
oie
wees of Sept. I od
Found~Al, Fields.
om ante Ve found, Me
Ta ER saggy
ae. 4 was, seanetng at
ep kes eta ae
nD ts
eA a at hanee
a eS
a ee
Se ed
ee baat
\ PATE. a gesort pear
heen looking | far
Wietas ‘tor, month
Past Sunday mish
“ag sanidlnge t
te corner of 12th
and “Central ave:
un. “talking. to
sume’ friends, when
T'notleed a. car £0
hg Ttinaughe t reee
oenlend Hani
ear and trailed
iim. Tater fauna
Bim it Wagetde
Park, resort pear
are “whens Sune
day dancing is the
main attraction,
Hacly to eceched
“Ragtime” willy
ee
Rad been thers only. short time when
eo atte an eee ee
a ee
Ue UNE DRE Pm Bele
a Al ee ind te, won
Eve os Bene reg es
Redhat Sr sagt tats
Ts he ata? eels
poets ee See, oy Bas, oe
Feet ad aa net Sette,
elec ae ont nag a
Bis ig tee gee res
ng allar er ig a ge
abe Pan ac aie, See ce
Se. Peer ae te est
Bie Lat Lee
Ee Eee cette atte
Se Hee a il Wank
Beek Bat eae hrtake ANS Ned
me, what ¢ wax all about and I ex-
Imgurat® ft azcai Bisa Sadr Se
ete A iustlsaess pete grr
Leen res ar tesiataes cm
TE Bid ages lt
Hae ae hate Aa
Pea ye ean at eee at
eeymeer mee ane ee eee
Rite nat hee alta ee
Ret cnr enemas
Teed onda aes ae
ect teaide habeas ac ae
se te ee ae a
rae asa EEL
ig ig gig ir
Bee laste Cedy al eto
Seay ascent aime Geng OG cope
See nae Ste hes
ees, Laces cette ct
Recess “tien fare Sue Seay
ere aera, oe
SaaS
ees cee Maks chee
Saeed tate ter en neal
acre eM ae Ss
oe Sateen ee
Be seeatee cull conte eaten
INTE, EME ae
2 Re Maas Tel
Be coe te SE aes
eat hee aha dl fetus
Bet RL Tat ces antes, omen
sen upteas cotee™ RBs
ee ee weet ore oes
PE cee Ee se se0 ae
pau ade anata fhe Pal
Fascea Pelee al? Se
aces’ ote Sehane ieaee
Reels lhe MRR CODA
Feear as tg RePEc aee hee at
Hee SAS Ge Gea tee We Ged
ileum 27a Gane
Echt ie pea eres
Be tear 32 pee one eae
oes eed etme ae
TEARS E TE pont te ha
ine, Better and, better all the time 1
Be ter oh Retr ae at
Be Fee (StS tow tncoara
ood het Hee 3 Nae SPREE
Falifornia last week and carried with
ioeeie Be ote ae ae
Sop cop civneer witvan Secs
, ssatoraly, ‘Wayside park has closed
cae oes”
ye THe OSORIO scone. comme
; Manhattan Pures, under the man-
aecment of DE. Btawre, are play:
BES" third weou of 2 four weake
‘fuement at the Paik dhester, Balan
‘oun
Gietin & Jenking, making a sreat it
onthe egcum Time, are Pablo Go
Sha So Witaineg: Sita
Siarelton “Wisthiem.” me One-atan
can? at the vale, dhcaey Sem
fights. Salt. "Send rome.
Year wou 2°Co, area hit, at ane
Tia esters Birvaingoam, Aka as
TraGreat mnazieal turn.
‘Sinise Puswell and Dike Thomas
are TSIEe the week at the. Bowdotn
BRve eater, Boston Mass. "Send
Poate
"AIG, Fields Minguele, Naving_ foe
yatta Tena the tne are pay"
Tare rgliwdag wie week: Ashevile
Wianton Sulem and Greensbore, S.C:
dus Banlle dnd Lynchburg, a. Doc
fain inthe jead.
euiuletoe Hares and his Tigh Siep-
ees are haying ‘St Petersburg,
Ui were! :
adie Groen, featused with the Town
srait Goa Shiubere unit ie at the Sau.
Tae Aibamss theaters Aihang. S$"
“Sontal whee Sager eats
with Gimme’ Conor's’ Review, on the
EaaghE™Njeot Sve “St Pitboreh
Feet wee
“angee Hating, featured. clown on
ee See eons Wee
Meu. ee the Colombia theater, Sew
on £4
Blech 'S Bailes, the Gold Dust Ser-
cqatind Sana iting ng Rogk “be
ee ee
She Busine Wimar. tes.
MGyewaer ® Reece umd te Whirling
vq elated withthe Sain, ly
Woition huricuate snow, ‘are plaing
ns nen at the Bones theater, rook
Ration & Brown are spllting the
weet eee ie Tinerly ales
Hane Se” ani whe Reve se:
Take Ran
“Fie il stecabe oorgia. Troula-
stout ate tenseling theepst the Hate of
SOF Ranta a aed eee
Mlurintote ed enor os tse hak
“Te Rinfen and hin Cenae Review age
[aimee Rantan tte Se at
BAT Sod eee
nnaving Mnf making, hem, ke
tuna ne Gir te Goethe
tet heaton
TNO G Sadey are plasing. the
pe tik oem te eo
“ine Dixie Four are harmeniaine
sheate Chemen olfain,
Vanek ones are ay Reith theater
pordangs ste
Fhe Kenoriiton Four are at the Cav
nel" aneaters seenton XS
Skotneg Thomay’eieat imusical act
“A Medan” Gockaale ts tasieg ths
ae ete, SE
ae Hlastimend: JahnetnSea hin eveat
riitcat turns “Sencopadlon nee “at
TenPoh, theater. Seranton, "Pa.
‘Bolanies BAN Moincon” the’ world’s
greatest fing fz raving’ the weak at
Bis "Vaace theater, Siwaules, Wik,
Stacon & Walley are at the Boulevard
thagtors wt orig
Channa’ Re Stisnctic. are atthe
rage Wentnr ications $0
Groet R Facksons ate Yeaiveed wiih
Haters crater Sinstris Co. how
rchddieiek & Tavtor are nlasing_ the
coresent half at the “orhwealm theater
Benes,
Teese crumiey arent the Tan:
take tnmen Bm
oa Fainieg ha ster
sunt dee a tie eitand theaters Hotes
Pa: Sent
Bache Mesow well onen at he
jgcantont theater, Pastels ier a. tn
Gietnede fuverg” Bove eas ht well
[ Hevch him wt fet wane sarees. Note
NS ag
te lin igen Uae all wil
Sigh wR ine Sicten aerate
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
ven ae
He Brat oe Re Ga
Berit ilatate Rhee?
SPAS coed Ae at
SrGecLMERon-wicur mmo
vem Tong gm alan Bt
Eh tit ik ete dear
is an pine Se a
feat Sa rae Sean ead
Sa he ede ad ia tear
Rechte eae amnee, Sede
Eee Sheri fie at
Kees Shy nthe hae
Pane, ES rot epee Se
TEP OPE iran a
Sennen anette wal
Ferra egestas
Beer cheat Reet See abracin
Scie delaras Rae
Stet dc
te
OUPRANK E BALD, |
FRANK E. BALD,
‘tne Fumoug Cartoon,
Gincinnadl, blo,
_ Erlend Tony: Oid ier | have realy
Get ite toe Sou oh the ‘knlekerbocker
Fius"storkings Below the. knees and
Tatent heanier hooise™ lnveltios where
hey" ure being worn, 1 is aera rud
ee hte that, word riot, "Til say irs
Featly "gods 1 ust iy ‘ine band,
TSU WHI ydnltethuaiy, Bho et
Oe tuo. vata "Is Serge daeicing come
rot of ten ‘nstruments, wah tah
for tars drum, washboard. for snare
drum nda wing wrecrumment 0 tne
[Gned around my" head and: necie ena t
Sorelle play the vuitee gn harmony:
Brag oldtngr t ve tg ring the
ubile good ane nets ater, and that
Meatufer®fivuttin Chicago soon.
specify yours
GARNEre Waktsinotox,
‘Suen
St, Louts, sto.
Dear Tony: 1 wish $05.2 ahoft Sco
in'thgr Worl Greatest weekly fo tn
ene of img trends, Ineand_ out’ of
© profersion. aa to my whereabouts.
Pien'at home ta St. "Doula and have
heen for neverat eara. No, T have not
uit dhe, show gare Set, Wit: Race had
Sait fesuth for‘tome thine sedan ae=
Silent te Sean ayo whan lone two
fingers ‘om ing ight hands Tam hime
Protiag ~ heat now. so ‘xan
Friends to know (2 Friend “tons.
Thay he 'n_ atranger” to you, but Tam
et avatrangre fo the dot "bisinese
Irvine taweled for ever 36 Seats, ook
for me (o oron fn at the Old Toil Pop
Bout’ Goceamer. “4 "Niuty® nope, me
Health wilt permit_me to fet back ‘gh
thetgoed by? apeing lve my regard
10° the “etentier une: Cais mynd
Ffiente Joe Simms and” Blanch Cinter
Sndvihe profession in Rencrak. Beg to
Femaln’ sours, Yor better caualgrabes,
‘3Epwakt ‘Hust,
HE37 Cook, avent.
St Louis, Sio.
Dayton, ODf0.
Dear Pal Tony: ust A Fon en
tent’ yegtnenth feos Austin and Der
nies. Sorty wie we" did "nat Ree a
hance to see you Wefore leaving. “Wall
pul Sce\are headed cust, and this was
Bar drSt‘stopt “thts Sa the second dime
SE played ere Us” your. he rat
lime” was ath, "Fs Reith. We ‘re
Sut doing prowty good. By We way,
Fonyt°we, Were’ obit to: the ‘National
fplltirs” hognftal today'"to.aee Charles
Bnei dra’he has tnorgying. ingly
/mention in the dear ola Defender that
fii of our sew paging. here please
fo,cut, fo" see: hime ef in the" tain
RSopitan “rourcm ward, and” would” be
Nery. glad to oe" er “hear from thers
at ang times Web, ‘Tons: we wil one
Eegtgt in eolisdciphins at the Seana
Sarde which ip summe suing irons here.
Lang, ive the ‘ela Detender.
| trom AUSTIN and DE LANGE.
‘Columbus, Onio
| ¥riend ‘Tony: Your letter at hand
ania gaunt T iis Meased to hear front
Sou, “Wail, old’ pal, oming to the wone
rior success of oir shows an artiats
ihe past season ‘we. are Regine to
Tif ule real commercial Geman for high
Cinas'orchestras and. inosiclans. "The
fast week has found us inca very peeue
HIS situations owing to. the fact" tht
tee fave bogkings for all four ort
Chestras, and “masiching. "We ‘are In
feed of high clasx musiclann. Sammy
Stewart's, orchestra tas gone t@"De-
Toit, Mien, this taking Seith jim 10
Sf our heat ‘monicions’ Sur Sasyns.
Ste “Greneara iy enwaged for" theta:
son at tne Fort “Steuben ‘notch steu-
Tenviile, Gnine "Our famous. Melony
Uno crehesu ig baying at the Look
gut house, Cineinnath, Ole, "Our De
ike Ofenedara he ae the Witiowe, Oak
mong, as Our Harmonic orchestra is
Hi the, Coow Counts fair. Wheeling. We
Vas Msp Fou sre tee hive taced” thé
told out slgn om the Goor of our bureas
stteet peealet this to bo a great Sear
Torfigh Slams Sopro munca
"At the Sinureas theater we tre fore
unite” ‘enowaly to have, that “hitense
Reart arumay “spitsre™ the theme. of
thie picture ip one thax uman ature
Sill Rigg. lowes With” this” ieture
Bathe May alsa ‘hanson In fers And
judging from the attendance of the
three days that thes apyeured here the
Bietare made iulte’ an mpresson,
At the iiartman ‘thester we have
w-the ‘lint Bivorcement which 1s
the dramacle, weneation of wo" eontine
nis nd te fount to be an extremely
SMa, Minely Serie plage, Sarnirahy
Acted ty the distinguished ‘Eqgtish ace
ion allan Pollock's his can
"A “the” Lyceum they offeranother
sshendlf’ musical butlceaus Shows The
Soe Hine, Teview The production
v's musical entire’ on the present day
tance erase. with magnificent contumes
Ste he: hooie fa" brimul ar eh ‘and
brisinal come, Lewin P. Beppe, barie
one soto of Pittsburgh: pave a very
bleasing reeital atthe” Chamber ot
Gommerce’ Stontay. cvening, We. had
fhe extreme pleasure ot his personal
fh at he ome of or musical waren
10 Bilt” lodge of thie city gave an
other one of thelr successful dancer eh
‘Miesaay’ evening. at the Memoriai hail
‘The famous Fike Marching sium, which
ean, led ta, victory. by Capiain’ Henry
V2he ind “Licutenunt 1. Parley! at the
Tnteting ot the Bragh lodge which, met
Wn'Nowae 27s few wecks ager hae
Iieen ingormed hy the “seertiarg. Ae.
Fakta "OF" the evant lodge hat they
Ane threat winners of the, fat reise
This prize way awarded to them at the
Grand lodges bat there ‘seemed to he
Enme_misonderstanding. “Oh Bike ses
scited
Si Clowl of Fort Wayne, tn. is in
the aie "hire Cloud fa the ‘comnmnset
SE chat hopultie Waltz Mt "Somenime:”
Hotwae's eaiter at or sites Singers
crentsra of Zancai "Oho, mare
Sheela trp. toc Columias an anak the:
Soult ay for Sie Downed and te thee
Have, Barve thet wil on he
Nenra fewnns Airs Thutuil a ranise frome
‘linet Swings." Obie, wean a ati at
tion omen Vie, hax thn. making of 3
Serdbrter musicians Fin Weg at
Spe Edn bnnancemeny Settee” oat
Sauredas’ eoemings “Sent se a retin
oie water's racttom a omnet
In homor of the “opening "nt his. mie
Meal’ stuate. at Gre Base Cone street
he Ehaperans “are: atea, Tame, IE
Wieope Me Tena itn, Mea gm
Parlor, “Weg. ‘Sherman iregore, tee.
Etoreso. Smithy Mrs, Howard Geant
Bre pace Hinshex dara” Stisees
Bisa “Wrsmeaom Soom inimerman:
Sra Tugel "starte. atiegenbetharm,
Maite Hughie and Anne el
"Sol tehite and Me famous ban
will tay for the fall racen Ropes? Pat
fe adiois for: the occasion, “S¥y Iatest
Nace eomositlon entities” aie Grses
Piura" a"proving “to be quite: a nit
Thave somtraets from ‘Avo recording
Companies to record ho Sime ‘ink the
Sain'eovies are not off the frens"ax ek
Sis neie halind °eneited’ “Beyond ihe
Nini Clouds There's Alsaye Siorenine
ipa ieem necented ine the Wiimerk Po.
RE'Now "yore City for nublteatlon My
tarincr ant shall cour to Pitcehurst
Tile" steel 'in_interest' or our saestest
Hodge ant, Wiliams. tees et
Sue Stanpy Sis orehenes at Seeber!
OH, is. ere men mane hy
Raisin bye nie’ a To oF NSS alt
fame Teonk out Grant. “Civ me asans
ieeemgttn, Om
er Nera. proprietor of one of our
potttiar pooltonmm Has weedy Sf ete
Foctlon For the sain af Soh ins Se
he Iletshtord hte Sir. ‘Norte Sot
Progressive taunest than ei kee
Seer tine eh one hag aa and, enews
ceaseeeaeaaaaabaaasaaasenaaanssssssocsssseeesesesesasaeneaeeecessseeeedassnesessgssssseeseeteeeeees:
SSIES TESST TTS TST SSS SESE Sse ESTES
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THE
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Bt] Worip's MS i(GReatest [aso] WEEKLY by
| i
THE MOST WIDELY READ NEWSPAPER IN THE HISTORY .
; OF THE RACE'S JOURNALISM WILL MAIL TO YOU :
his Greatest of. All klies and
”
6G :
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i THE PRIZE NOVEL BY THE CELEBRATED RACE AUTHOR 3
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RENE MARAN ;
: : 3
:
i
THE BOOK WHICH WON FOR ITS WRITER “THE PRIX GONCOURT," 3
: < THE MOST SOUGHT FOR HONOR IN FRENCH LITERATURE 3
3
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d e 3
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THE REGULAR YEARLY RATE FOR 3 00 3
‘ ‘THE CHICAGO DEFENDER IS - - ° 3
THE REGULAR RETAIL PRICE OF 1 715 3
: “BATOULA” IS - - - - - + + ‘ 2
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: 4.75 a
; TOTAL FOR THE TWO - - - = - $ % 3
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> has here depicted a new world, not a fancy. world, but a world of solid reality, with new people, new customs, 3
; a beautiful mythology of their own—a people who love primitively, marry primitively,. and hunt big $
; wild game not for pleasure alone, but as the lion and the tiger hunt—in order to get food. 3
‘ “BATOULA" is the Iliad of the African Negro. But it is the Iliad of a people who live in our own day. - 3
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; POPOOO OOS OO OOOO SOSELES ESSE EEO HES OLOSOFOL SD OL EL SOO ESI OPE EPIL DSTPL OLED LOR ILPOLEOP POL OOD
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; “This story of primitive love and hate is developed amid striking “A tale so strange, so powerful, so- 3
: scenes of native life in central Africa. There is a description of a unusual, that there is small difficulty ;
; great native dance which reveals Rene Maran as having a remarkable in seeing why the ten members of the >
: lund of original and first-hand pnowiesys of the Negroes of whom he Academie Goncourt awarded it their 3
: writes..-He draws pictures of the African wilderness, creates an _— prize. There is no gainsaying the, 3
} -_atmospliere’ of ‘vast spaces; and silence and mystery which recall curious vividness with which the
By “Gang
Cleveland, Olio. A" performer. isa
subject which hax Geen lasing on me
Rind for somo considerable time, and t
fave been asked uy managers, an wll
ag performers, (o comment on the sub-
Hach ay well Ax give the correct mean-
thee, “Of course. the desniuon of the
word performer ag Webster terms tt 13:
Gnerwho performs: an actor. But after
earetally comeidering. dhe. sect. and
sitiitully aalyring the noun performer.
Thar coma Xo th ‘coneluniun hat
performer ls a persistent and tenacious
Sora hk paren, moaty ynedeated
ine into “fWva. elective Rroups:
Ramelys. Excellent, very goods fae:
poh, interior. “To make avsuccesstul
oer. mer ie veauirea fest of ail, worn
THIS OFFER
1S NECESSARILY
A LIMITED. ONE,
SO GET BUSY AT ONCE.
3 You CANNOT AFFORD
i TO OVERLOOK IT i
;
3
3
sees es seeeeeesasseess esses:
* \ “
En ee nN ee ee ee
FILL OUT THE FOLLOWING BLANK, ‘WRITING NAME
_ AND ADDRESS PLAINLY
To the Chicago Defender, Chicago, III. :
Enclosed find Money Order for $3.75 in payment for
one year’s subscription and one copy of the great book
“Batoula.” 4
Street 0... eee ede cece ec eecceee cde r nc cewecccceccseccees
POWa cre htei eu Seaesmsntas -Staber toes sccevs
Soares See te retin and caret Oe
careful, study of human nature, nd
Sati, A Fy Siete alia set
Ses ShasiPUe ata mt Soe Be 8
Sauer Wibaaah ate L's gett
BaigrUis teatenaahe abate
that appear to dengte an artist, second:
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Maesteg uk, Meet a Ba
Bement, Aulersat ais cent
Before they class saul all alle. regard~
man's eyesight you are Cwored, al-
though fe haa built maratces trom the
Se sau Wl Sepang smiph you have
heen ‘classed am a servant by tho mane
ager, (but. this iy absaiutely wrong. A
Servant is ‘a person that performs” sn
Sikiled lator, here talent ts not needed.
the one'tig: mistake in performer's
life, and ‘expecially. the ones that ‘Unis
Cover’ the ‘Colored inenters, ant that %
this “Wie tips. hig mit’ that ‘he.
Broke and in’ destitute ‘conuition too
uch. and of course when an aigent Or
Manage realises Sour ‘condition | he
Offers yon anything: any kind of a sal
Sry and, treats you yrith any kind of
age ‘and Yeellnga to keep you lowered,
Gnd Until the performer anus ont ex:
Ketly what his toaition ts ina theater
iihu what an tinportamt (etor Re Is tn a
Tanager tifer and, that he lp. fealty
Reeded by hin the geoner you will ne
Grease your salary. "Fo be Independent,
broke or hungry. inthe show. gwue
Minkes 8 pettormer or rare tility”
"hen Naor hing. ier Ave too
many eneious ant ety Sealine. pers
Tirmeranin out’ Sehivot tiving: "too
many Saonete ‘oma. butt in Shut
Rag that the managers are fait gr
ing away fron that iterate lanorant
clement of “Uncle Toms.” that ia, what
eremant of Duarte Tone | inet 1%, amat
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23,: 1922
eee
tps cnt upon chem and ey on
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HENRY “GANG” ES.
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ADDITIONAL NOTES
Amantie Richart, ited a as:
aes eaten Bat os ee
Wier dantean ek Fat
Tht Oey Soe es an exces
a ear at See soa ea
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NEW YORK CITY=BROOKLYN=LONG ISLAND
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1822
SMALL RAGE RIOT IN CITY HALTED BY POLICE ACTION
A mob of nearly 200 Race men and whites engaged in a derided pitched North and Tenth avenues, early last Sunday morning in which several of the men were known to be of the more seriously injured and were removed to the hospital. 61st street, was returning home in a talkah with two women when the mob entered the building of the cathouse by a mob of white men and learnt. Their condition, however, is not serious. 252 West 41st street, and Margaree Dew Witt, 153 Minta place.
Fight Follows Intrusion
Sends Riot Call
The rot call was sent to the West 47th street station and stationed in the corner, rushed to the scene. When the police arrived and attacked the molon masse, singing the hymn "O Come, Come," the police arrested. In a second, however, the rain of missiles from the rooftops started to rain. A detail to clear the housetops. Recently there has been an additional attack on the block due to the gradual driving out of the white tenants. Inspector Donohue, who was stationed in the section, has had additional detective assigned there for a week. As the attack continued, he has tripped the guard and policemen will jurlor in jails. William Lannigan, 18, both white, were held in $1,000 ball in the West Side concession. He was hit by Charles Gardener, who was attacked while returning home from downtown in a taciturn with two wives.
**ALL ABARD AT LAFAVETTE**
**Beginning Monday, Sept. 25,** the faxette, will put on something entirely new for the rot call. **All Abard:** a musical with a skill will be the attraction.
**Features of the production will be** a roaring of the sailors' bows by 40 sailors, a Hawaiian moonlight scene and 20 crepes dressed in the latest crochet sombrilla; 10. K. Jungh. Also, the Armada and Henry Williams will be accompanied by Broadway colorists, will positively appear at the midnight show Friday.
---
MANHATTAN DEATHS
Brooklyn Deaths
William Roach, 71, 82 Fleet street; Mary
William Roach, 71, 82 Fleet street; Mary
45, 249 gates avenue; Sidney Kidney, 25,
419 gates avenue; Mildred Johnson, 17, 160 Tulip
River, 25, 160 Tulip River; Tulip River,
Tulip River, 25, 160 Pennsylvania avenue;
Mary Treater, 25, 245 Gates avenue;
Mary Treater, 25, 245 Gates avenue;
Sidney Kidney, 25, 245 Gates avenue;
Sidney Kidney, 25, 245 Gates avenue;
MAKE YOURSELF
MORE ATTRACTIVE
NEW YORK SOCIETY NOTES
The Rev. Oden of Plymouth Congregational church, Washington, was a guest last week of Mr. and Mrs. John Turner, 11 West 53rd street.
Sammy Blake, 234 West 53rd street, a defender newbie, spent his summer vacation in Abbey Park. He returned in time for school.
Yonkers, N. Y. Sept. 22—Miss Alma H. Hoppe of H. Kellogg, where she only daughter of A. A. Thornton left Thursday for Syracuse, where she has enrolled as a student at Syracuse university. Miss. Thornton has just completed a pre-media
Miss Thornton
course at Hunter College, graduating there with an A. B. degree. She now works in a case, where a complete course will be pursued. The young lady, who is a graduate, will be the younger society follows, will be greatly missed by her large circle of friends.
WINS LINCOLN "U" SCHOLARSHIP.
An evening of real enjoyment was witnessed by thousands of the elite of the University given by the *Lincoln University club at the University*. The feature of the evening was the presentation of a scholarship which Lincoln university, as the young man showing the much-brave promise as a student, much credit is due his president, Travis Freeman, for the creditable work accomplished.
**MANY ON G. O. D. P. TICKET**
Mary K. Waters, a student men and women are running on the Republican ticket for the office of county clerk Charles H. Waters, Henry R. Newle, James E. W. Warner, Exeter Stockett, Chester A. Oliver, Mrs. Jennie Trice, O. D. Williams, Leroy H. Howard, Harry N. Howard. They are to be voted for at the primaries Tuesday
ATTEND ARTISTS! EXHIBIT
ATTEND ARTISTS EXHIBITION
of the country have attended the
exhibition by our artists now being held
in the gallery. Those who have not attended still have two weeks in which to do so. Inter-
action with the exhibition. Art classes from the metropolitan dailies have commented
favourably upon the show.
Carl Scott, young poet of Chicago, is
preparing to return to New York City
with his book, *Inevitable*.
Mrs. Milimani Harris of 127 West 11st street, who recently returned from Childcare Point, entertained at her residence last week Mrs. Maude Ferguson, Mrs. Ella Miller, Mrs. Mileser, Mrs. Ella Lawson and Mrs. Hillie Williams, 27 West 125 street, who spent two weeks in Baltimore and Washington, returned Saturday.
BOY HURT BY AUTO IN
RESTRICTED DISTRICT
Maryland, 11 days away, is closed to day traffic for the purpose of providing a safe and secure avenue. Seven avenues, is closed to day traffic for the purpose of providing a safe and secure avenue. Harry Franklin, 11 years old, of 44, was driving automobile as he was running across an 300-foot clock tower at 10 a.m. He was taken to the hospital suffering from a broken leg. Juries and later removed to his home.
STOWAWAY MAKES ESCAPE.
Pierce Rowe Ileana, ranging in age by the crew of the St. Kirchner staircase, docked at Pier No. 2, Kirk Water, to the foot of San Juan. Tortoise last week the captain ordered them locked up in the staircase. The few hours later it was found that the captain ordered them locked up in the staircase by means of a rope. Police of the Butter street station sent out a call to the police. The police will be deported as undesirable.
MRS. YOUNG DIES
Mrs. Sadie Young, known in this book as the Saratoga hospital, the Saratoga hospital, Narragua Springs, N. Y. from a complication of a broken leg. At 85th Street, that city, was 25 years of age and was a Harvard university student in the Saratoga hospital. ADVENTISTS OPEN ACADEMY The Seventh Day Adventist church, of which the Rev. J. K. Humphrey is the pastor, is located at the corner of 132th street and Seventh Street. Old Libya living in came, famous in the days of Buckner, will open this month. An academy will open this month.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
FINO PASTOR'S SON DEAD
OF HEART DISEASE ON ROOF
FINO PASTOR'S SON DEAD
OF HEART DISEASE ON ROOF
H. Wallace, 49 West 135th street
and 136th street, the building in which he lived, had Sunday afternoon, whereupon he munched on a meal, Fulton, 24, of 223 Clinton Street, District 1, his sister, Mrs. Emma Jones of 50 West 135th street, and is the son of the Pine street, Baltimore, 30. After the Harlem hospital, detectives who were assigned to the case asserted there was no evidence of the body. The body was taken to the morgue.
BROOKLYN HAPPENINGS
BROOKLYN HAPPENINGS
J. S. Tibbs, proprietor of the American Tuscaloise Pallon, 1953 Pullen street, made a hurried trip to Allanby last Thursday on business.
The Saturday Night club of East New York has increased its membership and preparation for the strenuous fall and winter competition. William A. Searman Sr. have moved from 235 Fifth Avenue, Henry I. Taylor, Sr. the financial director of 1811 Fulton street in Astoria, East New York.
WALKER ASSN. ELECTS OFFICERS
Mandane C.ane, J. Walker's association
of officers last Sunday at the
election of officers last Sunday at
the re-elected president: Texte Walker
e-president: Ada Walker, financier
secretary: J. M. Moser, secretary:
M. J. Moser, treasurer:
Estelle Finney, chancellor: Mrs. King
consecutive (tine) Mrs. Rangeland has
consecutive (tine) Mrs. Rangeland has
stands ahead of any other in charity
work. During 1822 the club has given
meritorious work Mrs. Lella Walker
Wilson recently presented the club with
PLAN EXPOSITION
The Association of Trade and Commerce plans for a business expedition to helium in farmland and women are asked to co-operate and place their business in the air and ability to be producers and sellers. The association also offers two years, owns its home and its membership compares many of its partners' purposes is to establish commercial relations among business lines and to promote business opportunities by gaining the confidence of the public.
GETS POLITICAL JOB
Harry "Kid" Griffin, one of the best-known political leaders in a very responsive position in the internal revenue service, in the internal revenue service, in the internal revenue service, is the captain of his election district and one recommender directly leader, David B. Costina.
TO REPRESENT DEMOCRATS
Consultor job title: Commissioner Henderson have been elected to represent the Pacifcats democratic state of the Democratic state he held October 18 at Syracuse.
The oath that recently interviewed him in reference to an unpopular vote will shortly be established here. It will be a branch of the mayor's committee on unemployment.
---
X W C A VISITORS
HURT IN EIGHT
Henry Jackson, 42, of 251 West 11th
street, was taken in from Ernest
lippeen hospital, where he was
taken into a hospital, with a
possible fracture of the skull, re-
sulting in a hospitalization.
He was named Marvel in a halfway at 251
11th street. His condition is
serious.
WHEN IN NEW YORK
VISIT
CHICAGO DEFENDER'S
NEW YORK OFFICE.
2352 SEVENTH AVE.
AUDUBON 0831
CITY BRIEFS
Mrs. Kila Stubnau, 212 West 140th street, is sick at her home.
Miss Ursula Allan, 21 West $21th street is taking a special course in beauty culture at Ettel's Beauty Salon, 202. She is also the woman her propped 17th album Beauty spring.
Parents of the Raymond Mitchell, a woman who was forced to call the doctor Friday because of his illness, the sensibility of several stalkers last Saturday after an unknown youngster on police patrol was arrested on 16th Street and Seventh Avenue when attempting to latch onto one of the stalkers' bodies. The suspect, who survived and missing his body he collapsed, was following the following machine: 124 West 12th Street, was restrained at the hospital has been taken into custody and face arrest during an altercation with Virgo's wife of the same address. After home, he was been seriously beaten and suffering from lacerations of face, neck and lower back. Loox Avenue made a complaint last Friday against Chance McKenna, from an altercation. Keen was arrested and James Finfield gave a box party at the house. Those in the party include Ms. Maria Porgesman, Mrs. Pila Craig Smith, Ms. Katherine Morgan and Archie Morgan, the daughter of Mrs. Rosie Chessman, 72 West 12th Street, left Monday for Hampiinstitute, Hampi, Va., to further pursue her.
Send to our New York office, 2323 Seventh Avenue, 10th Flr, 1001 W. 42nd St. visitors and all news of interest. Pickens, former dean of Morgan college addressed a large body of representative citizens on Friday, a Friday night, Mr. Pickens spoke at on床 on the fourth social hour followed the meeting. The social hour followed the meeting. Enrollment was made Sunday by Mr. Brooks that St. Mark's M. E. church erects a break ground for its new building.
Yorkville Notes
Prof. L. F. Dyer, organist of Mount Olive Hill, died on August 6, 2015, grandson of Mount Olive church churche; Mrs Olive Hopkins and Mr. Juliet with her husband, Dr. Robert, grazed at the New Jerusalem Baptist Church in Charleston, South Carolina. Mrs. Charles Davis, 5th Third division, died suddenly on April 16, night. Mrs. Davis, 5th Third street, has returned from a trip to New York City, where she and the 5th street, is home from the hospice. The 5th street, is home from the hospice. Mrs. Davis is poisoning. Mrs. Jones of Hot Springs is visiting her sister, Mrs. Curtington, for the last 6 months. Mrs. Curtington, Fast 6th Street, Fast 6th Street, September 6.
BALTIMORE MAN HERE
S. I. Burton, prominent business man of the city, visited this city last week in the interest of his department store, which he owns, Mr. Burton visited the Defender
SOUTHERN COLLEGE STUDENT
SAVES TWO FROM DROWNING
When two men were observed elmering
from the river, south of Osining, by members
of the river's board, passengers whined at
week, passengers of Norfolk, heath
Robert Williams of Norfolk, heath
Robert Williams of Norfolk, heath
Commanderaging a life host from the
Ibert Fulton with two other men,
Williams was at once confronted by
a strong tide, but it soon gave way
rather than the pair in a five minutes' race. He raced the pair in a five minutes' race, who was a passenger on the steamer, said it was wonderful to see how law enforcement, for the other men who were the drawing men become friskened and scared of the river. The life saver is a college student.
AT HOTEL OLCA
CONFERENCE
CHURCH ASKS ASSISTANCE
Upton, N. Y., Sept. 27, St. Paul,
Missouri. 200 new offices constructed at 112 churches
and new buildings incl cost $247 million.
Deposits are being made on mortgage of $2,000 is carried on the
NISS COLEMAN IN CITY
Miss George A. Columbo, president, president, vice president, and chief executive, Inc. of Washington, B. C., and her assistant executive, Miss Debbie B. Collins, president, president, and chief executive, the past week on business.
That the American boy and girl should be raised in a rudely whether work at or not.
LAFAY
7th AVENUE AT
132nd STREET
WEEK OF SEE
SEE
The Storm in Mid Ocean.
The Journey of the Magpie.
Sultan of Turkey with His
Marmen.
The Cables in the Beautiful
Parian Gown.
The Moonlight, and
Hear in Magic Holiday.
The Show with More Parties
Than All Other Shows Com-
bined.
DINK STEWART,
ANNA COOK ON DANKEY,
E. RUCK,
CLEO MITCHELL,
RONALD RAMSELL,
JOSEPHINE LEGOLY,
JOHN SCHNEIDER,
JOE CARGHEE,
HENRY WILLIAMS
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT
Personal Appearance of
MATINEE EVERY DAY AT 2:15
HAWAIIAN HAIR GRO
Trade Mark Reg
Founded 1018
(£2.00 Capital)
BUILT O
By MADAM T.
Hair grooming preparations of HIGHEST QUAR-
far advanced. Instructions to apply given
Write for terms. Diplomas given. Two months
Address all mail to MADAM T. G. BRAM
OAKLAND,
LAFAYETTE
7th AVENUE AT
132nd STREET
THEATER
DIRECTION OF
COLEMAN BROS.
WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 25th
ARTHUR H. HYLTON, PROP.
1734 W. SEVENTH STREET
PHONE LAKESIDE. 5105
THE CLASS A HABERD
the best. Noted for reliance
THE CLASS A.HABERDASHERY-Ratiod amongst the best. Noted for reliable goods at right prices.
---
AT THE DE YAN
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Mount Version: N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. George Akton, South
Portland, Ore., will be in attendance
election convention in Newark, N.
and Mrs. Addison Turner, Mr. and
Mrs. Addison Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
Washington, P. C. Mrs. C. Swain, Miss
Mildred Doyton and Mrs. Doyton
Mildred Doyton and Mrs. Doyton
Forest farms, Greenwood Lake, N.
Y., last week. Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson
left Saturday for Puritam, N. C., to take
MILK TRUCK INJURES GIRL.
Muriel Jackson, 11 years old, of 52
West 12th Street, died after
two arms fractures, caused by
being run over by a milk truck
at 12:58 last Friday, morning.
YETTE
WATER DIRECTION OF
COLEMAN BROS.
SEPTEMBER 25th
Mrs. AL K. DOW presents
AT LAST
"ALL ABOARD"
Something New in Musical Comedy
with
MILLY MILLS
(Jack Johnson's Side Kick)
—PRANCING PONIES—30
—DANCING FOOLS—15
HT SHOW FRIDAY
WEBER & FIELDS
BIG VAUDEVILLE CONCERT SUNDAY
POWER CORPORATION
C. S. Pat. Oz.
IN MERIT
Incorp. 1922
($15,000)
G. BRAMLETTE
LITTY. Results certain. Method of treatment
through small. Agents wanted everywhere.
a treatment for total deal anywhere for $1.50.
LITTE. 125 W. 19th St., Indianapolis, Ind.
CALIFORNIA
ASHERY—Ratod amongst
able goods at right prices.
Yonkers, N. Y.
Jamaica. N. Y.
PAGE NINE
---
Highland Falls N. Y
Glen Cove, N. Y.
Miss Brisbane has returned after a 12-year absence. Miss Mary Hart, formerly of Glen Cove, returned to the night. The reception was at the home of her brother, Kirsten Hart, Glen Cove. Force Friday and a little big baby Force Friday and a little big baby the undersheriff department of Nassau has young son, Mother and baby are doing nicely. Miss Mary Armenstone returned to the city. Graves has returned home after a 12-year absence. In New York City and Glen Cove.
SILK SHIRTS $2.49
SILK SHIRTS $2.49
Made of blighty lime
Made of wavy lime
Made with wavy lime
wavy lime, made from
mixed lime, made from
double ruff lime, made from
double ruff lime, made from
sliced lime, made from
NO MONEY
addresses. When shipped
man's address. $2.40
man's postage. $2.40
fraction guaranteed.
SPECIAL
BROCADED ART FIBRE SILK
SHIRTS. $319.19 for $850
Personal t-shirt. Personal t-shirt
year-end discount.
ELM SHIRT CO.
ELM SHIRT CO.
HOTEL OLGA
695 Lenox Ave. Cor. 145th St.
New York City
A select transient and family
hotel, with all modern con-
veniences—steam heat, elec-
tric light, running hot and
cold water in each room, with
reasonable rates.
ED. H. WILSON, Proprietor
Phone Moraleighsid 0001
ROSETTA HOUSE
ROOM AND BOARD
SANITARY AND EFFICIENT
SERVICE GUARANTEED
Transient and permanent rooms
for respectable people only
MRS. R. HENRY, Prop.
227 W. 19TH ST., NEW YORK
Near 71st and subway
Out-of-Town People Preferred
NA GA YA MA'S
Beauty Culture School
229 West 139th street, New York
Teleboee Abubon 100JI
Preparing inaugural of man-
ufacturing of cosmetics, such as
cold cream, bleaching cream, face
powder, beverage containers,
eats. Write or call for par-
ticipants, times, Wednesday or
Friday, from 2 to 10 p.m.
BARGAIN
Closing an estate—We are selling
our property. We are offering
New Jersey it $30 an hour, payable
and monthly. Write
for map to
E. Oliver to
church St.
New York City
REAL HOMEMADE CANDY
Made on the Premises
490 LENOX AVE.
Oce. Flight Up
Irene Irena-Blackstone
Reporter
Tcl. Harlan 8120
FOR SALE
Five-story triple flat; three 1-bedroom apartments to a door; all improvements. Possession can be on all floors. Phone 516-252-3533. Phone 410. Phone Loonne 53533-833-8.
CUBANS DROP
FINAL GAME 10
AM. GIANTS, 4-3
Tue Foster's Amertean Giants
eee Ame, Bat
Ss Mae Saf asta’
Sue are S's wera
Sette Fa ete 9 beds with
SUS eae
RE ea era ens
Seal Cae ie ia he ie
Sess aoe al ee
SEERA Cet IR eh rs
Sees Gane Ms tala
SE as eae
SEUND Rendered cde
Soe Saree HEN hue Se
DSRS pel tl
est nnn
pam MERE tes
seek Ee eet ate
dbahont Genie ate
ng Ean Armen
sears ata
Eats Sh atc Bae ed
ESCs ae a
Serie Sad eae he ote
ud eat tae ait
ie ae ca Ae,
ae, aaa ge Mo
Serer cae ee
SEE be St
io Mineman eo
“ee tee
ieee eae”
ieee seatioas e
Cteange Monin nate ay Witbaane!
Ce RE Mtauers rice wud woreda
Ext
Tie tr Merit. Lesons Folie wut te Des |
Beet eae
Sent Inn
Corans— Todteer threw ot Beda:
Rodrinuer wax ot when Willem ged |
cre lags aa “tide “es
siete SME Late chet
Sia aah tia wes
Be Sach fecha A ae
Tn male sod safely and Catviner 10 |
Sure, Lavaie ste thind. | Martarelet |
saat cert int a,
xian SRE gat
ae Ba ee Mea
ein etnias Hit es
Sage Saat ditt ea a
Powe. oat tte Latter strongest ete: Tall
Ninth Inning ;
ia ne rs
conn koson
Rn Na
seen EET ganar EEE:
fhe, Tide Witeta soot
Gee Hee pd
ii ft liBima 1d
ee ee eerar st
TERR amine eh Willan, Pa hase
ie atau 2 vg wehanwerth, oie ean
CEE aad
ABOUT THE UMPIRES
{_ABOUT TH wis |
Lite ne ners *
To the Sporting Ealtor,
Dear Sirs Tewelte this te intorm
Sow that we fates vere minty unt
fire ins Tas Angeles lie OuZHL to
inks send angwhens He te 2 Colored
fad saaned WW. Gilly)” Doualdson.
Titty ues tesenin the temeee abort tour
seary during which time Thue (re
Auentiy seen him ia action,
During te winter season Mere
many "oy “the ig Teast, eine
do Taw Angeles A weietione ot Them
rave teen seenistennied te form 4 tear
Dad Hg a cetien 9) siemies with he
hast Colored nine thar cat Gwe mus
tore. In mont of lene contests th
Ualored ‘teann fae teen, pucecnt,
Fhe dente umpire system ie ued:
Topaidsan usvally officiating with «
hie umpire These games srw
bretiy bis etowds and the Rumen ace
torkers.
T have watched Donsldson closely
in many of these tlte and townd him
45 be alert, impartial ant fonslows. 1
Tove seldom seen Nira razzed Tor ques-
Yonable decisions and this te one of
The crucial tests af a goed umpire.
Wwe expect to have another winter
league session here this coming De-
Sember between the beet white and
Gotored clubs that can he Rutten to-
Semher. “Among the whiter Wille
Roland Trish Mouset, Johnny Raw
Hings. Tueekel, Carey. Lan Tue andl
such nigh clase players from the Wks
Jeaguen,” Donaldson has alrvady been
tneaged ay one of the arhiters Jt
Jouke lke a hanner season at the
siresent time.
Reativettully youre,
‘ED OMALLEY,
Los Ameoles, Thnes Sporting Staff.
HAMPTON WINS FOR A. B. c.
Indianapolis. Tod, Sent. =. ~The De-
toa Stave hina 70" the Indiana.
Wee. Monday, Ato. the laral ety
Michig sehe, Sistine “picker. Wivon:
Miura The core Us shninse:
Ronn
ROR Cover WET OR OES
fom a Tap aa gan Se
Walterice—abiie and Easter: Wiles
‘eon
BUNGLETON GREEN
THAT Big POLICEMAN HAS BEEN
Gf Fosoune we aur Dam iwanent) = | Ae
FLIB} Pome AMVTHING THAT I Know! OF —§ *~ Ua.
wae [SAM IMAGINE WIN We MEEPS)
Iron reat ete oe
o—< ao
mR se
— eee
Hen a .
: ee gf na
OS Cy ak
Much has been suid regarding the
fuiure prospects of the Negro. Na-
Honul Wague, Much is to Le said
The league in here to stay, Eck:
Sear certain thinks bob up hit cause
Changes to be made the Sear follow
ine. This year the rulroud strike
iaude 1 necesary to witch AMES,
to even prevent the schedule, ax first
proposed. from being curried aut. The
Tana have much tw learn recording
the Yeaxue und the workings of the
sane, 1 shall from time to time ene
Hahten them. First, if there is to be
st heugnn the fang ust cane ty: the
Fence of those who have started the
Movement, Nothing ean be run sic
cessfully without a firm finuneist
Waekings ‘There must be eight clubs
representing eight cities in a leugue.
‘Phe Cubang Rave operated ae w
Teague elub because of the fact that
there has. been one etty short. Ti
121 the Cubans represented Cinein-
hath, “The 198 seatun WHE see elkle
CiWus representing eleht cities. ac~
Nonding to the present plans. There
ine four clubs ih the lone, namely,
the Chicago American Glaurts, the
Kimsag City ¢Sfo.) Monarchs, the De-
trot Stara of Detroit, Mich. and the
SC Louie Stars, that’ are oir a pay=
ing asia, elube with enough nan
thi) ticking Te cover Ieesex caused
gy umes eunceled on acecunt of beet
weather, ete. There are three clubs,
the Colsins excluded, that are on the
brink of financial distress, Te Jt pose
siblo that the great national pastime
Among our people ie te go under for
the want. of lnanelal tueking? Ys
Fe‘fuoabte at this day and Uine that
Fo.000 taxsetal tune of the datker hue
SHIT sit ldly: by and allow some white
hun with money te ‘Sweep in and
gather it the franchises. of these
SWuvs or pice clubs in cities where
There re! none ow and i Years to
rome rea the harvest?
Tean remember the time when the
folks tn Chicazo could have bought
the present _xraunds of dhe American
Slants for $43,000 leas than the own-
era want for them todas. “There were
men here with te meey then, There
ure men today with enough money
To plice the Teague where It should
he.” ‘There are mnongh fans At $2
apiece to take aver the Zur clubs.
We wit heat nore of this in the nex
future, “This is the fst warning
It ix stronsly: rumored with a quite
likely’ possibiis that John Connors
win! have a chil, i the league Best
Sear, operating ont. of Clneinnat,
Connors” men Would prove a draveing
card after that memorable 20-inning
Eaine in Chicago ugulnst Tube Fos
tere men.
‘Think it over and don't say. ten
years (rom now what we sbould hnye
few Hace The issue at stake is
Shatt the Negro National leagito re
fn in the hands of our own, people
or shall the other races plan, fuance
and “reap the promis of our pleas
Ures? We should tke a look at the
toting picture house situation in
several of our large cities for an ex-
Ample. ‘Think It uver. Think it over
seriously.
RUBE TAKES REVENGE
The American Giants tost uhree ont
of four games to Kanste Clix, lest
An exhibition aime to the Pdntiae
Gluy of Pantie, TL, ‘Thursday ant
Same Thome. tube Fuster win dia-
Busted, Sus he: “You can tell the
fane that T have tuken revenge en
“LITTLE BILL” KEAN WINS
bate, Rp, See Siew,
Reding, hittie RM Rea of Moward
PGP at OM cham rane a
Se Gea auido teat
Biche ohio ea gnats
eee Barrie eA. Clement. te
Ciena he inca
srt aS cn
ie amt Peet ala a
sedan Caan atee hee
Hiebert Wi Rena
BEER ae Seti ura
Sear Reon et a
iar esata ans tn
ira aot are ae
idee ate eum
rere ark
mecha we Pe
erie REM Sata ee ae
iScnt oases cee ab
ipo ae eas Std
teeth ita ste ing Bon
Hea ea tint ed een
Uses tl ci ark tae
rears Staten Hee aed
Te RP ett
Be mares eres ea
Tue ta Honea ger
tne Chestnut streot Uranen Ve MG Aw
eee Nat dln i
eee ea atin:
aery._ Kuirldge. the “Thisd avenue
Lary, Eeiridge, ‘the vente
Eeneation™ middleweleht boxer. “meets
Kid Slonumn ‘atthe Fifteenth Mestinent
Armors. New “Fark Clie. tonight (Prt
dark, vin bit professional” debut,
Hsirlage ‘sdministetrd a saund thrash:
fag toe Canne Feencr ‘went. ae the
RE yank Welodrenie. “Sept, 13. and
Sent thrountt “the ‘nals. on” ‘Thursday
night fa ciimax to fim ‘amateur cx
Tost. ‘nsing experts claim that Carrs
is" the. moat, likely” fooklng, prospect
ih te clase that has worked is way
Up atnong. the “Sime pures™ In years
AMATEURS TURN PROS
New. York. Sept. 22.—Since tarry
Eatridge, middleweleht boxer of the St.
Christopher club. cuened_-neafessional
Heat coh ca org gf tho! chs tat
Mowers, Edmund Riley. a feathers
Neight boxer. ant Leroy” Powell. a is
Solem. "have clone the, same. Withur
Gonen ie likely to be aigong’ the ror
Inthe ‘near future All three. boss
Nave heen topnmiehers in thrit reser:
Hive clams for several Sears in the A.
ASUS ranks,
EDWARDS TAKING REST
New York. Sept s2—vaniy File
waren he Wace! Coast antain, we
fas one through. a strenuous, losin
Stoo JMnen comune ti te
SGrotogn Springa and bake George,
Bassler. here Ne conten
jiking, “hehins. ete, "returning here
piking. Henin ie
eee
Annual Tennis Tournament of
Chicago Won by Atlanta |
University Student
cence a
A tee Ba ae a
SIG BESS Ses
ME tke “ter and
SC Sey wee a
jis thom, of Dougine:
ARN, Mall, wins ia
She at nat
vn, ee
M.H.Go = ciuinpion fsa]
ey
era Intelcullegiate champion. In the
Shh "tna Sohmen,” 15
{Buen geet. him sn svat
Furst iran cemtveotng
sr tt: Sands Seats ta
Sch Tintat Mcharal oe
Se Sis Wie en Be
Toainiian St Yad Cab es St
Aare t “Sieh, eae BS te
dauphin his se ax wel a ae
soured nec tne ame
Sane R Ges he ego
Seto of te ea Se a
thangs eine iene. awe te
SORES AP ese over No
Sian intereting mater seatared
natant” Some that miei eee
ue tonsionsa etn ater
neon nie hack Sane water
Satta Sa ane hc ee
LAME ASN: tte he senate
‘Stee ong tia and ve cal thew
IO de al eat atc ath
iets Sere Netty the
‘infrared ow
cxeth e W salt, She Styne
Sitka loom’ and exer. oht Bae
erat acon ane
inna va ele
RST EE wit resent =
song un aiaennise or Ee Mee
vero plan nan Sa
12 ths Nani fe a:
Sheth Sable tt te te
Sete Ht et tne Fae
Beni, ae tint even toh
iat etic it he eae
erate SE, ater fami
ane eat naea ay G2 Auer
Sa Beth et Se &
Seis Peete aera
GE, 1" SEM Rae sia defeat, South,
rel MOU™BER, tang tg
‘She's ne od aft
Bika Pee Rae
sORUay URE ae ara
Tae ite oe ace tr
GIRLS IN TRACK MEET
New York, Sept. 22—Iatnge crowds
tune) aut te awhnese he tiret track
Lind Well geet ever held heen tor
Women on Suturdar, Sept 16, at the
College or the Che of Neve Vor
Sadiain, 332th street and Convent
avenue.” More than 209 girls from the
Ieading high schools and clubs in New
York. Hrookisa, Phitzelphie and
Connecticut took part in the mine fea
tures conducted thy t= Metropolitan
Nimateur Athlete union. ‘The 100
Yard dush and the Sf-yard dash had
the Largest umber of entrants,
Sven gneitinrs of our group partict=
parted Ion taled 10 care away any
first wuee honors, “Mrs, Elise Conlek
or the Drees A. © iinsived sevend 49
the Tigh Wead ot toe IMMexea dash,
Winners “ime was 12" s+conds.
Gladys dacksun wae first In the sith
Wat of tive sate event Tn the 30=
Sard dash Mies Helena hater, ishua
Tete Ny 0%. Keons, teen the iourth
fhrat. The" eighth heat wars Yea Dy
Mies Ghidee Taekson. Mes, Conlek
Ale featured in the 880-ard walk,
Sominz ta fuurth,
DANNY EOWAROS LOSES:
ASTER SDs es tb ens. Bes
ward the, Pacihe soast tantam, bog
Te Wham cerns. Atsetin at the end a
YE Iivieve Vounda ut battling. sts the
Tanunda A tonight About 6.085
izaaie were Dresant. Hveards weighed
Wig‘and Saran 13.
Tooth toss touche about even for she
farm thine rounds. Bawarde, eho has
ineen Sieke war appatentiy not iimsel(
Seche id “not Wn ln his” weut fant
Ste” Bitwards fame out ip the fourth
Sein ane took the found eal
Taarein, “The ith seston wat ait even
Snes Martin, Wok “te abstr and Sev"
cmth rounds by" 9, shule
‘Danny came tuck “ntrone Inthe
sight season and teat “Sfnrtin ares
tie tng ‘with severe’ body. yamnchien, A
Piguet Monies sean mone
Aout over Sartin’s eight eye A Euan
tioer Martin's left eve. Was opened te
the six round.” Sfaftin took the tenth
veneer fine st3ie, beating awards
to'hin, punches In” most of the ex-
Taneen
Phe eleventh session wax a hot ane
for Hou "bapn Wie cane over, Marais
Seon ower hot Feowened and “he was
Rmcaine tke a ‘pig a the tell, “Danae
durboned ‘Murthy in the eleventh ‘ronmd
2nd “took, ‘tive ead. "startin. took the
ORS shiek kak ve tac eter on eee,
a MOST Gov AMAT FROM) “ 5
sewer) = ra Wt THAT TIME, BUT HERE KE T4Otg.
of —§ +> LG2. |] (COMES RONNME ARCUID THE mg aaa
cvs) = Commer AFTER ME<GUESS Donk
(HAVE To Dow Tne) od :
RUNNING Too ———— ay” SG 7
. al
erm
ea rie
o>, ee &
ed i Senne YS
Oooem fe ay
See Ge:
a Sa a
Ta BASH
-A l eee
FAY SAYS
SS
‘ein aa ee ike Kadestigs Ghai dis: ole aan
AMATEURS TURN PROS
EDWARDS TAKING REST
THE CHICAGO. DEFENDER
—Then the Truck Drove Off
TAKE ACTIVE PART IN FIRST AMATUER TRACK MEET FOR GIRLS
Ly oe
ak. aareen Rr aemerrvecolcnen ee east] Er "he aman Ye Bales
Re BO THR ea ene Bana ie pate Hie rea a Bane
2 ee eee
eee eee ete er oe
era. CMe
BA ART ee te a a Be 6
poe 7 DS) he
moh Pe
BS Baad. tise ig SUN Ge Sirah Ome a, areas ere ers ea
BORE OSM EC emier Ae Sgt OL sf we RMR A peg
sa ee Seen |
Members of two New York girls’ athletic clubs entered in the Metropolitan A. A. U-
games Saturday. Reading from left to right: Gladys Jackson, Estelle Richardson, Sadie
Williams, Sarah Pollard, Blsie Conick (members of the Deers A. C.), June Bird, Helena
Eliasen, Mildred Cornelius, Corriene Mason and Lillian Dobson. The last five named are
raemnbern of the Bios Ball. 1
‘the American Giants for their poor
Showing atid have huuked the Petrol
Binericun Teanue -clniy to. tia th
Giants in Chleato at the 39th strest
park on Oct. Zand S. My men say
ey cam play ball and 1 want tose
He they cane Taaid to Me. Foster:
Mphe tune will Weleoite. tho series,
‘thes believe In Sour men and wil
‘be out In fall force t root for thent.”
eee
MUST HAVE IT IN THEM
‘The first call for football eands-
dates tig been gent Out. AC Nuris
coins coileges sand universities we tid
AChumiber of our boys why have made
Hood it high school athteues. They
Witt sit tdi by" and watch thelr white
brothers perform. while the best they
can do is to Mun Che. mnoleskins ot
the serub teams. Why? "Prejudiced
coaches.” sly. most of the’ people.
SNot always.” say’ the wise ones. We
who have been inside, the gates at
secret prigtlee know. There are Ux
reasons. We always know that the
Ourker Wrother muse Iw at least 30
percent beter than the white
Grotter before he ean got. recogni
Von. But If he has “the guts” and
will go out with that fea in bis head
he will make the team. The biggest
thing that has kept Til off is hus
Xcholuship atanding. Fouehe was r=
hind. in hie studies and. ce a reeuit
falled to get his letter "CO" at Chicago
TU. Lknow w number of cases where
students didn't want ( come out ree~
Slurig and stand the grind nd knocks
MC the practice, but wore always on
hand when the big games came’ aff
dnd wondered why they graced the
sine lnew-and “never ot a chance.”
ake Fritz Pollard when he went
to Brown. Te ripped up the varsity
Tine and ran rings around ther unit
the coaches were forced to take him
off the scrubs and second eleven ind
lve him a regular berth, | Fritz will
Tell You today the coaches weren't
oveninsiove to give hin a sult when
ther frst saw him. Little fellow like
he. was coming out for the eleven
looked absurd, But ther didn't know.
Me kept corning out and his persist:
‘Not only foothall wut other
branches are affected. You must be
seen, ami seen often. With hundreds
Of canildates out vou arn one insig-
Riveane gure. There is a buy
Michigan, ‘Ttidolph Ash, who is. 50-
Ing to mnake the Varsity baseball teat
hext year. Sounds fanny, doesn't 17
Bur hel make te because Michicatt
hnsn't a Helder who ean feid, ehrow
Gnd hit Whe Ash. They have: cout
kive his a chance. “Took ini, two
Fears to prove It'to them. Tal:
Huthard, the broad jumper. Hell
make his “M." too. Ue his salreuds
freeived his freshman numerals
“TeeS" and ote ext Het he warked like
the deuce for them. ‘There sire some
boss in several colleges in the North
sho wil grace the side lines this sear
hecuuse thes refused to co out with
the freshinan teams and work against
the varsity fast sear. The caches
Know. what those who worked ent
do. Ther haven'e the dam ty fool
with uneertiin quantities. That kint
Gf work is for the aheehra teachers.
Those who enter this vcr shontl
take advantaze of mistakes of others
before them. Yeu hive ne chamer
AU Prineston wr Vale. bunt at Sera
Chee, Pittsburg, Penn Sti, Waste.
Ington and deft, “Harcard, Brows,
Dartmouth, Coluiabie and hundreds
ac other universities of learning the
oe eae coun ume wis tn te
Tae Standing
Cucans ns easecsseecee 19 30.388
se STOEL
ae st. crawt unpeRL, 14: WHE: LQ:
S Bets Nios ss oy
{Ws STANDING eRe” Anse ; 2
LOSE THAT OABM Police MAN: =
Coates Peg TANK OF
OE Nt
S RS Seay
PM CRS
RR OP Lo)
nat ge coe
A
NEW ORLEANS — feetgor
‘| PLAY AME!
Perhaps the
store ae the
RETURNS FOR | cui
‘| ote thet Be
i Rimerican te
NDAY GAME) Zc
SU i) re ee
news of the 9:
—__— t] by Rube Fost
“| Fekinde or
Crescent Stars Play Chicago the eSnds mn
for the box 0
Giants During Absence — ; Stinday, by tom
of American Giants \ will be followe:
Greeting god uh “as tea
tts Ms Fee al tetas
weiaatt coseneunsen cf shee
ees
5
RUNNING DESPITE-BIE ODDS
gilsbuan ata ahem anita ie:
ullerson can charm Seren win
Bier that cling ies bee
SERA Non Hina ie
Sate dele at Omthee ate
ie ea ier Kanes arta tae
Teed ammeter es
iaSeiPa Bat ng
Saree te Be
Tink. $F toe. 6 TER
Tie ii as, wet: Soe ie
BACHARACHS WIN, 4 TO 3
hGnatis teersep etna teas
eats eee aa ote Hate
Hot Se Ca eat
Se ite vais Brae Si est
sera cae? a ot the
fo snr ng sone, te he
oaks Naa AN A
Stare! See eee
EF Rae othe aah
Eurnmerea Rng ay kel
Se Hetinaas ome ty eon
aiataaae ie SU haces
Hela LF Bienes
Le remands car ae
RES ie ale atthe
Se ihe a erode ak
Ta LPO Lie
: Pik s 8 4 a gis oe eg
: , =e
aya! 2 p_— 2se
Pa vf? 2° >
sO Matar fg
ety aan fe -ey
com Se. arp gS
(9) 1 eS
@ Z
me
= s CORA Tv
ee aa EES LE.
oi, eee -
Bae SF
eS
ee
fi |
DETROIT AMERICANS TO
PLAY AMERICAN GIANTS WENTRIES FOR
| gore "far he "Ehicage Gastbal
Br wil'bo puted gn Ot, Fonds
bg ae Ag age
femgean tse Som
Saree AMen Sete
Bae aati ate Sein
Sprachen sh. etnies
Erhindse spread roptty throug
fer Bs aati ah the pias
ee ten tee Make net
Sos icon ae eee
i Sting ee oni Sey to ee,
plied a
SR lig Resi: ail
Sou ek "US lebened, ae te
Eres ated feet ahd
Gan Borhtpe the foes tender at
tee eit eae ence
Be caer elas welts
Beat
GOURDIN RETAINS TITLE If
HATIONAL AAU, PENTATHLON
Hoston, Sent, 23.—Fdwin 0. (Sed)
Gourdin,” “‘forier Harvard” brond
Summper sand holder of the sworld record
Of 23 feet and 3 inchew for the run-
hing broad Jump, won the National A.
AG. “pentathion at ‘Teel lett hens
Shmrddy afternoon, “Gourdin, who
won the event In New York a year
Ryo whth total of 13 pointy, scored
10 pointy “Saturday, accounting. for
first niuees in the broad Jump and 200
theter rucn, second in te disci and
the Jacella “and forth inthe. 1.300
ineter runs
Second to Gourdin was A. f. Plan-
sky of the Vere. Marquette I. of C.
4 Boston all-around athlete, who wil
lay football ae Georgetown this fal
‘Gourdin cleared 23 feet and 2 inches
facthe Jump and won the 200 meter
run tn 23 seconds, te the. 1.300 meter
Face, which was won. handily by
Pianeky, Gondrin hud io sprint, to
wat another Colored athiete, Harley,
2 Boston seliot buy. (or fonrih place,
‘whieh enabled him to shade Plansky
ier'one point for tho day's total. The
ent war held in confuretion with i
inandicap meet under the auspices of
the B.A. A. for the benedt- of Use
Paygroind and Heereation asvecla-
tion ‘of “Ameren,
“The pentathton summaries:
_BivAh FUMIE, 0. Goorin angen 2
AExE Sora: 13 cer tHe’ incbens ‘James ts
Slomedun yh con's Woeness fe xine:
BASES tater, er tectowe, Hae
SOSIGTER RENE, 0, Ceara. A. J.
eae ae hrenee os. tinny, fh. &
Hotekiond, EO Natremsan. “Weal aoe
tes cco NAS: conn, SS
Weta si 8 emia 29 0 oa
“ 2MCELIS nats, 17 feet toch Goa
Pete a meeres ee
BUSCUR—E Amivomman 306, feet, 10
instrsc Ee 8, aut NS tor ay ata
IBep Tian, 10a Wee's fortoes by Tote:
Hee aE Rett Satie Se, taastr A
HESS nena no Slee fet 18 aches
Too Mistbite-A. 3. Manske, th. Mote
HEB, atte uae a
fplonies 32 grevads, & minutes 15 rewnie
Bienes ST YE souae Smlautee So 8
asiuutes SES regyads, 5 mint
NEW YORK COMMISSION AFTER
wet
New York, Sept, 2% —Atter Pancho
vis’ Uective victory ‘over Jonnns
UME at "Ebhece eld” roots ast
treek, “the state ‘autiede “eommistion
Senta ‘message. tor the. tiie, Pilipinn,
Sho ie Maw the mew ywelghnt chum:
non, ‘reminding: inn af tire tack. that
Tnufin' Russells the. Philadelphia. Ay
Meleht, had roviousty” woted n forfel
we g2 200 to meek DUNE. nd that thes
iiad feactved "word. frony Teuscell that
Sime’ shuld now be directed toned
im ERG)" eke /cammisaion’s “me
Rage ended witht “figve 30m any ai
Ser to make to this?
make to er
MARY ENTER MARATHON.
New York, Sept. 22—A marathon
raves in Which many of gue prominent
Sthicaee seit cormpets, willbe held Ces
inmates "ae. anise
Mune 11 Paolo, an allan Rewspaper
‘The race ‘wit stare at the New York
Velodrome, 225th street and Broadway,
cee eel oh eae Hone
IN THE SQUARED GIRGLE
BB aaes vurivones ur. Say
cet Soe
ENTRIES FOR
THE: DEFENDER
GAMES COME:IN
Grand Crossing Playground Is
First With Blanks; Doolittle
and “Y"" Slow.to Answer
Entries tor the Chicago Defender
track meet. wilt clove Wednesday
aight at the Chitao Defender olles.
Muh to the surpise of those connect:
ed with the workings of the games
the Y. ML G. A, entries have failed to
pit 15 an wppearance. Om the other
hand, the Piigrim ‘Baptist churel was
the tiest blank recelved, Arthur ars
hard entering in the malie run and the
ss0-yard run. ‘The Pilgrim ‘chured
aizo has a team in the mile relay.
Grand Crossing playground has ea-
tered a man Ia the sevior Nigh and
hroad Jump and a youth im the taters
mediate running high and. broad
jump.
Playground Instructor Lucas of the
Doollttie. school came. throurty this
week with an announcement that hls
entries would be in before Saturday
srith a team of aeurly 25, Dooltte
is out'to capture the meet in alt divt-
sions: “Among. the Known’ athletes
who are to be entered are W. W.
Watson in the Intermetiate hucdles,
high Jump and dashes and Willlam
Davina in the same events, with the
broad jump added. Roosevele Purttos
wil cater in the’ senior dashes, and
broad jump.
So far no girls’ teams have been
entered, but there Is another week to
zo. Remetnber the date of the elos-
ing of the entries, niso the date of the
mect and the place, Armour square
hth street. and Shield avenue, Sat-
eee Gane WA SL AEte tae
New York, Sept, 22—-Dan stuart
pattie Sibae Bor Gamay, See
Wat Sle host eke Wiceete
elite! etal sgn Stet
SENATE Mato te
Atel Ha toe” ading Se We
Sin that oe a SeSund go,
se arma Tak sarc eaine
er etree ane oe array
Fa tnd toa eo Son
SuQH dreading" 2 seocate
“th atta baleen Ri Bie
aod Sung ick Jobason‘in mbt
Re cond wa dee hada de
ela "Ws can he bl Bou
Ean SB Soke ate tet
Hondo ne A6 "elin he
Biget were ont sean’ one snd
Se Seta ie teeta
NCAR fad ht auc Sn
Won Ga SeceaMae i aes a
{ela fe Seni Ts ehh ea
tee Sadat tate un, "ve tes foes
"ab relininriedna he Segund
SNE PR Pe eae
ane,
rap gegoNs wanmies.
So Mech aate cern 8"
chi hill i Me
cinch rater arta
Roce sea ae, Sh Se
rte tlt duet tier
a
Saath alae Path ae
Jockey sMOoT WinheR.
Pee ee he
poet Be Tobia rl inat
het ait olga hemes
Rong CE ets anasne rhe
Te ales Oi Pea
fie At Baga ia aes Cy Ue
Bape Ree Etnies ae
ieerdingc depth ke ht
Se aes se ee
five years, 9 J. HL Let
The ving power of tinery Me Oie. is
abOUE to ring? no end Of Hegrtuent aut
the weight wt a heavyweight. Here=
Lofore ‘a. heavyweights. out has, ren
from 120 up. There have been ‘as ELAN
good men around the Tie weight a3 there
Tiave wen tncthe 190,. "There was noth
{he salt Augut the wagne of ren unt
the Carpentisr and Dempous ahs tn
Jersey cits. Jim. Corbett Tet, ot 3
holler abent carpentier ‘being’ the tee
Bote tities mar pat him our of the
Tiet's took ower the small, men who
haves mudes famec Joke. Heenan
Welhed ist Jona” Morrissey. Tat:
Weoree Grater. ind: nari Sfitehell
Hoy Tow teste, T0kr Sam tcige™
ford, 0:. dor Wolcott, tia: fad Ste
Mor. web gi co on othe the Woe
ehh ta’ Suliean, 2002 Peter Jackson:
Bin yen 3 Sietin, BG: amen arnt
Kame Jeffries, 210;"Jiuek, dchnson:
280; esa Willard. 230. danke Demoers.
T68; larry. Willa, 210,” There are, many
other aries witich “cou be ‘aad ce
the above in Hent ‘and, Reavy. The
iighe “morn more. than held their own.
Is Sal igi when i ig tman stands af
don Sosa ite atan kane is tek
ats but tet the Wig man win, up Fors che
Sapa ene ea a at, Wii
joo Ligand wtrwng—Aghts foul because
fhe nas iearnédsothe new tricks in tt:
Tings refuses. to carry the tube Alon
ineeight or ten roumig. “Wil, warnel
fis. teayon about “earrving men alo.
He gavin tad tn Fhitadetphian foun
Around with Sam McVer. hin. never
fought oa the eecace it Be could frame
fe The one isle that’ yut Colorel
Hencger on the ha Hed tas hei rath
iy iove ‘setstons Jegt Clarke and. Sant
Lahgtord affair in Milwaukee setded
Hce ‘boxcts tn chat elty for atl sme,
en to yeind up matters hangtent a
Edm Meter deen in indiana,’ Wilts Ie
a drawing cand heeauine he oes 4M (0
Sine The juiule doves, wingers: The
ress can siy achat Tt may about Wit:
This that and ‘the other, He can, draw
le tangent pate of Any” boxer tetas oF
apy other day. fio matter who he mevit
Tie wari gete'® Rood scricecup Ima
Pence Highs falay Wis wea Remnsce
Could pity 1,000,000 people into any
ftena I vig enough’ to tok steht at
Sond ag €2 5 head. Sinise more do dark
Kearns Sand. Dempsey: wane for, iter
Fervices?” Whate more, they. wontd cet
Hwo-thirds ‘of the money. win oF lose.
The trouble is only Gne-that Wiis,
| FOSTERS PLAY
"INDIANAPOLIS
"5 GAME SERIES
aetna
Indianapolis. Ind. Sept. 22—The
Amorican Giants of Chicago will open
tip. vesgame series here Sunday
with’ the. Indianapolis A. f, Cos at
Washington Dark,” will be tho Rese
upearanee of the Chicago cin in this
crv this season, A record crowd 1
expected.
Fang from nearby cities have an
nounced thelr intention of areltg
most of the games and this city ts
reaping to take cure of the visitors
The ‘gamiesetsecen the tea. clubs
tere ‘have always been NoUy CoB
tested.
‘The Giants come with the Teague
cace in thelr gran and it ty the alot
of Ben ‘Tayien leader of the lacal
cinb, to pull Foiter's crew out of fest
nace. With Jeiferies, Mahoney: Roos
and. itampton. twirling. i tip-top
form and with Charleston and
Mackey batting again as im the frst
buart-of the season, It is likely some
surprives have beea ‘sneung?
‘The Giants fient_ hard. with their
tek" to the wall and the. Chicos
inne who have astemmied here anent
of the club aro wagering that Taube
Foster will ‘win the. series. whne
aithers are content to et that the
iocal clu will win ‘only. one game.
‘Png teams will ine up ax fellows:
Mises Games "© 8? 3 NS
gant uit
Merete 2m, EBtatin.
ieee | Bes
Weitfeme: oo Riana. 30.
ier, Erg:
Bese, Wee
Wie Walton, SeaeTe Hannon
hapng. 8 time “Este soar
DETROIT VEST. Louis
St. Pout. Mow Sept. 22—The De
trolt Stars "arrived here tonight and
Jnl open 4 Ave-game sertes with the
Eu Louis “Stars. tomorrow. Detroit
ie'mey" can beat ‘the, local clu has
& splendid enance of Anisnings recon
inthe Nexro. ‘National Tease. racr
Holland will twirl the opener Against
Holland wit twirt-
DETROIT TAKES OPENER, 1-0,
TIES A.B. 0.5 1N SECOND 2-2
Indianapalis Ind, Sent 22—The A
ap SAAmPANS ara gene ats agasie®
EoGe MRSS 2
Mecha sunt to6 "te
PET Bie soloed stint wich se
called Sethe" tat ofthe seat n-
Sta ast of i's Sete os
TOTSe. Tease Sa Cobper hea
SE AGT thee atts OURS Sighee
Sah meee ache, ate
Sai ltieg fl penea well he
$n eae
Fame. sist Game
ae ee
nace! inns
gael 35 tame, 2 tt
Sloat 102 UREN fia
Satie, $0 'G Asem. Ft
He PEG det
teak iti dieses 22!
oes 2 | SR 1853
mau 2 1 ahr
oats. 36 Hl toate 3s BEF
~*Batied for Egriestoa ta tbe cinch
LETT Tit
eet Sao, ee ta
Charlestes, Bares on dalle—OG Cooper. 2: wt?
Broo, Paka Beto
ein te:
A Bi Corvvensenennee® 9 OR 1 1 Ont
truss 8326 a Boe
“litters ita aed’ Wgr'eston? Wotisot wo
white!
LINCOLN A. G. IN FIRST PRACTICE
‘The Lincoin A.C. will prevent the
moat, formiantio” foowball, steven. this
ing naw wen ia reevne Sears, acon
tng to the plank mespped QUE AE A tmpet=
ing late Tuesday eeviings Viectl ties
ite was elected captain. Word has been
received ae Heute ld ha Sne
fo, play with a white cub in Miveauien
Wifistn Bostorms “wilt” manage and
Faance: the site nam, effort fo ee
Chicago ‘a, Gratwetuss eleven of colo,
Dre ilals, Parker, noted conference
atiitete and former star of Hyde. Pare
TiN roach the shuai. which started
nmactive Thursday might.” Sts. Hotton
fan four games scheduled gut of town,
Tid seit sive the Routh Sie plenty ot
time to see la bors im avtlom.
ak 4p Guunien Rittane
East) New | Vor. | Sept. 22.—The
Cubame and" Kusieios shared honors
Sundag Ina. dountocheaier waged in
Dexter park, first ceore. > 10 0. in furor
ce the Cubans. and in the Inst games
{RS eavor of the usheeicke te
Sorry {Taninas! hie
Wuhtoe etrcceseeed 900.0000 102 Ih oT
Teatecles 8900080050 St
Teiiein=—ca “sod Permaoioes” Reteher
sewed gate Rue
cana To pepe eo ome eT
CRANE sso2s-e.-o BO RSC CCR I= FE
Se See Stee
hans OANA EGMaAnOS QUANT
erin ab oS ir otern ee
obaee chee ie ng
Stodrae gt the same.” Tag" eiwaree
Peete a cod
on naaee aoe” eatecnat
pos 6¢ rotate Cresttment. "Prem bus
Ee Scania tea Pe ates
frog ike aay i wane ae
socteaeaeashy Wea uae
rSonhea ee ks Sate ines
Fee gaa Re Gahan
fewing, poldke where Game und Glxon
et PE dan, Gee
nthe te eeataae® ae
SRR Hare geet,
rece Blaine him the Iron tad and Be
feeb ates dal TSE
toro magerem ices Be
Rees: envarda ip a boxer and ‘Dlxor
ion ghar bhaateta ati
sae aa eathe ease
Ge oot RSE nas
FPS Bilt ad oat
octets Srbtett Bld eece
Ene adel fat ae Sie cates
wa, Genrer ace ae
i, uch agty Saint ite
Sia ette peed,
SLUT aat oP atti eae
Hirt then, tae
ecey fs ue ea es
SEPHa, Les sthaneatstn ate
Here laa Seren
rae ea ear eee
foul une A Siu Shee eb ate
ech aia e nue ae ik
get
et feat Setae tt a oh
them every nlht inthe weeks for Bee
Haft ig QP scien aaae
Tiny oct, agit or hadon
aes oho cabins gt nee
erin aenatat Reaniaeks
eg ag Sed
AN AD ON THIS PAGE .WILL_REACH MORE THAN i E 1 x = IF YOU WISH TO’ BUY, SELL OR TRADE ANYTHING,
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“ ec s
PF] naranine im modern novsen 2.3, 6.12, 18 apart.
SFE FMR | ent Hovaines: ai nora of the city: "good
2% ‘On tng Goltre geod lecation: ost trabeportts
ss ion: $1,000 with make Hret cash pasiorat on a
. ‘comfortamle hoine Yor sins and fang. Rnance
- dealn, write fire insurance: mortgages bousht,
er Bee] na told. ‘See me before Sou bur
oa a H. A. WATKINS,
3510 INDIANA AVE. CHICAGO, ILL:
BM PHONE DOUGLAS 1714.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
IN MEMORIAM
ee
In toxing memory of-our” member.
sulle BURR OA ature Te
Be cps,
Sue ene
mae are of
ri re
watts aca ch Se bl
eee reas ata
ig a
than aa nem ofr An
ad teeienepait
Be es
“Gone, hut shall never he forgotten”
[ag RS EE
ERS Na ce
Skis oes
vig iing memes NS
268 RE TPL ine
SAREE GS te
RUSS ate ed ae!
SAE EERSTE camry
~ * “Shicare. in,
in mene of ae timed ote
gree cua on
nother: rs, Katie 8, 'ractor, sister:
HOW TO WRITE
wt RTE te Sith parton ey
SR i gece a See
iba acai eae Te
Hit Ghas RSE Pca
Be Sten ea eS
Shes Bier. eae
Amir Sais “He as 2
SPEC ea,
———
Catherine Hoya, eldest, sister. whe
ed at ibewm ianding, Lan and Aled
Ahore "om 28aq, cantierine hed
ANRS tes tisie ama, doe Stile, Bi
ERs names be nat known. Pull
teed. mas “oumgere ister, whe alsa
eed a lia “Larne ta, ae
Be ete alii gtk ne ght "ime
hate Raine Viner Mew: aly nthe
Sur Winnie, Novas wchone second ise
etna wus Sim ‘Leila? bmi iter,
Sthinie Hees nares trae caper a
Sun acura af sexs pie mat
2S Famaing. one ave, Menesiney
Chae Rarore ane. mtormadion yea. to
Shtrenihome at Felatives to Hox 2. Chile
Sau Regent
ARTHUR JAMES JACKSON,
swift relative ot Artur dames ack:
ean hota in Renean Clty, Me, March
SEMSERE Lnutred the aetvice “of the
Ried imine’ dloine car departimene May
ECHAESSE A 2d tn the wry Aus
Feie"hna’aica. while an Whe service
Lindy” Sominunteaye with A.B Box
Exess etenaer¥ reparcane interes
games T WALKER,
Want tq inne the enerenbeats. of
Semen Waller. et Neata of i Chie
Sano" Tig sinter eiute Rear Jones
Shs" ute Weise Weaaiand ayenne,
Seddate Cyt aan ix Nery and wane
Ee hear trem bien
steamer sm enim
Aasane Imawinn ihe wheres at im
AWE Soane Coline tga Wear of in
Aineeseta, Toone ame Bias. com
Jnmestes win Susan, Calling. Faxene
Seen ah uaa eter snd” hs ha
‘Meena "mimsonary tn Africa
ALERED TAYLOR
Anyone furgwina she wrieceabouts of
Aner ion E lekeamed. tor
AunC or'aluen, met egene Meane natty
[iehvirar anc aR fastee, ioe War
Ja sence sew Forteseity. Tastor
braneeated in atetnt 3915.
LLEWELLYN, SMITH,
Any stemiler oh tne Mtontic: Soctal
ah hea en aber
Jeera, Sie Reanteecaltton’ note
2Einne! Creat 280.
aS acy
Want i knew whereabouts of my
gamer ima th, Yon howe of Ge
SET Rima anal ute" bremer
Sea aghast: ine
Sonaths Sisio, ae
canren = cnanaM
anon Wareinesine watsanats of
carrer Bart Seating at, alt is
Seton thee Medians: teriner
EUR yAroes stnae Cis: Towne
HERB SECRET BOOK
iow tanaka, medicines for al
ait ie raat tte ong hark
Parra ee
Feo enabeenas Oia hae
Piano, VIOLIN. vOICe,
1 wo eNO XE gone wept de
lat tat lt
Yarietast compari Assiriontn Art
Mami atadhe tak Raw Suth street
iene 220"and fine Aas.
‘CARD OF THANKS
TaN
sane iimity ot Set, te Babble. 140
Sie AHN Sh Neha ete
SOVetdeng Homi afer up ilnen
Bt cor enh, PARR ty iene eae
iikitelnantiot thee Resse’ daring
Lape er th er
1 oP iad ton fotze Se 2, OF
fee" Sua, Yor Mele promt aver
See ae Sa canta Et tment
Bia ungnene en TE prewar "pat
HE hate nite: inert "sna enns
Auton ele Merensernent and 3
BleMS oy ‘nihnbsninns Sa tn
fiers sed Cea the a tet
Uy acta seine. sltbete option
ME Sea" ama
We, dese. tp thAW gue many lend
toh fade idea nd erful to
ane Re ee te Sole
EGY sN"hingtiewrey and We ot
PONE E Gen ver hele persica and
the Avuien luli the. death of ‘ur
sett ed atta Rae Se SNE
Binaig' a oe Rapes fancin
Female. “He” katie ete. darter
Sneed ant Wwaier tame eta
Maother: Mary’ Th. Hirenks. sere.
wean! Ae eee aaa!
ag Lee pemnaiee anil. eevee ae
sausnn Keare jumtoices New York
Beagle Unter Su Comers
tna Oe, Siar” yan, ei
SGP nea! ana’ camliarye with a AL
Se Be "aa
‘htite Saghe que. Por further fntor=
Shine este allege 8 Sate
Axium oS ‘
BEG PARDON
swenie Yor i2im Sher Ca hee" erred hg
Npihetehete Maite toe Pull
TAGE SHIN ‘GaP The
Shiny ena? Hecate. Bent. Sew
2 Git, 8, MENG
wy te wre of Chures, Onent
TE aGA Eset van” omleed fad Re
By i -
RETURNS FROM IDLEWILD
veld bar uae eeurned Sin od eres
jer, ule Wiace. Sten, iwvadreg ES
Bie A sri ot
Toi inte each’ wel The oll maze
Pee ate Seger Wel
daha Nhe oitstaiste ath
Weil be leased ‘and ‘under thelr contra
By" ate cha'ot aii atsan Asa Wane
Men, bee ei, wo
Thad ane EE Kutt at aches
Baskatheranc ete seats Sr et
eats ara htt tale el
ect Po fy te Soma
see hat iat fe Sen:
feaegP Ay at dee int trate
Fou’ nare to chuna fapidoe n
The Gran Sine hiamees coingtng
Take fhe ee winetan si Lake
Haron at sola and fag ite, Ut
Hee spat ri ta
HE ect he ‘uid Senter voude ratees
etr'atélewiig. and. ection “az, here
For tatty ok Sace Wed oe one ef
Fe Seyi nde i
Eni tte hate ataed the
Stet seeing ad that tunes
ASKS HUNTS "the eet
Sat ee Gel cee ee
ae ner ae a
er ted thaee wis cltiae i
Tooele ROG a per meh:
ete a RG Oe
Bes oe cel Ea
crore, Aantaee At att ek
Haul be Mina tt ak
ie Pah ce te
Pega hier 3
Rive. ints, ells, leit cae
nels itll seh SF well Rat, SE
Ra schtete, Sieh Srna’ west bet
Betetoenet.
"TENSHUNS
TEACHERS, STUDENTS,
roe HASHES, STURT.
aces HEN sched ne Raia
ERS gts mere a
Kreations att." yaces we
Write Ticmge Ce S24 tase Sct street,
Baise eh es date.
White and bck. men mart tenen
to Work onde inerrant
$2 Rahn" usone an South Arm:
Jt fs done in Fourone,
‘THE DEATH LIST
EF ied acter ee oe
Se ae Re
Ee 2k Sree
Eee deat ee ab ting fare
Se, Rep is a Hitt
Soares tae
Sea See
Heheot a “hae ae Mo
Bean ere ee
Se net Ua a ae a
SR ares
Rass eae
Bieta, ine MEW nae’ Swi 36, Pe
Ba and Ba ete Se be
Bho A credit iate
ie rebaen eee
= UNDERTAKERS
KERSRY, McGOWAN
& MORSELL
Undertakers,
3515 Indiana Avenue
QPrICE SHON note. 88
ee
ARE YOU'SICK OR AILING?
A MINT TO THE WISE:
FINLEY'S REMEDY NO. 16
HERB MEDICINE.
post He Ea TOE ae OF
ine
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|
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BARNES SALES AGENCY,
Sonik oucaen
INSTRUCTION
LEARN BEADING
Senet, oP oe
Se oe
pacts: « Mente
MRS. DELLA YEAGER,
move nts BE ay
‘Ete INstiitcriox—s0ass Wie Thar
edtietied Hbfoei eae ree 2
Sint Rieeeh ae tenho ae
A A ER een nwailt
IS ore
See eae et
Glee Dente eee en hs eer
CONTRACTORS AND” BUILDERS
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Contractor and. Builder,
Pe eres tees
oe Siar ae
EAs aired aS
Lost AND FOUND
TARR Sh Mai ATE
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WITH EXPERIENCE AS
MACHINIST HELPERS,
BOILERMAKER HELPERS,
BLACKSMITH HELPERS
IN RAILROAD SHOPS
AND ROUNDHOUSES
WHO ARE CAPABLE
OF PERFORMING
"MACHINIST,
BOILERMAKER,
AND
BLACKSMITH WORK
CAN SECURE
PERMANENT POSITIONS
7 AT
70 CENTS PER HOUR,
WITH
TIME AND ONE-HALF TIME
FOR OVERTIME
FOR PARTICULARS
ADDRESS
Big Four Railroad
505. MAJESTIC BUILDING,
INDIANAPOLIS, IND..
SETA alga go eae
WASTE Taisen
weet icles i
Sree e oe we
WA, Meta cages eH
rie, en Ae Se
ge MAR lea
fie ta ih
Manson See a a
a arenes FPR
eae Teta Os
eee
eeu aa
Mean ee FART AN Tie
eae, aces eee
WARTHDOAT ONCE, T-ASE FLEAS:
ont, tata
Seer haere RITE a
TSE” PRO A A
MES rae
Seep eer
PERSONAL =
nat sient nena bait sess.
eae Woon eta “cm seen tics.
Hitcher teh sta tetiad
Siciateints, hose Sue evi ey
See gee
wien W."RINLEY CO.
smceoprase gy ve.
BOS gaa eee wage
sectors Se ree
eee ee
HE ee a dot atl
Joeecaateat an eer eg ant ve
ee rer eee tire et
Bice Premcths
Dreier heck ee
Fiona tin "eto ou ‘ew faruiibat
et cent certs oo Sa
Fo AS ERT bi Lox,
seks etoiin, a
Goop Y
seer HERBS
Meh dam te Cogan, Aan 308 Er eu
Eitabab Teall stecsting, Sean Seats bake
ESSERE Pie Tiirttone wihcnce Sas,
Shoe See :
"ddes Winxen,
pp AUGUST WIXKER,
____HAIRDRESSING
EXTRAORDINARY OFFER
a Biaceockse fine
MAGNOLIA SYSTEM
OF HAIRDRESSING
wins Re ait ro asbaeergn Stare
‘BY MAIL FOR $10
rm nates hie, wos s3ctean
"We Givi YOU A DIPLOMA
SUSIE Bato Aas
iotied treserrn ne
THE MAGNOLIA MFG. CO.,
TEEarEoe GRO nv on!
Bieter oat
ORESSMAKING
oie a eres
ee oe aoe
ons a ms
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
EXP. POWER SEWING
vol SAGES anGr ae
Meo ratte vets aaa te 308
SOL Ieetite gs aha" opeute
Jrocer into mene "Ayyh meyer wor
SICK SHADE MARERS—
Spt Sa emrsiewa: tgety
Feet ct ie a a
Sivtieay ves Swe. eS" oa
Ee Sa enue oe Tae
Stage ble WES Tnctacag: soe Tore
SESE hrc Be
WASTED -eSiRITES I OhERATIRS OS
Tee ey
EEA ei rac a
Se A Siler eM eae
Unit Tor oe Stamm Ca Merb
dks a ETE ET
HAE ESE ld ay
Saas Ge MEE Te
SERS era sesh a ite
llc “nie gee race
a ae
chit. 8 indians ave. 34 Sear. 4
ne eS
A Nattate nti che fr ee me
SITUATIONS waNTED—FEMALE
tf Geet” ot wks nae Deo
Frias can ET OT
aisha woth peters, omc ak
Tae WASTE” eee wall iia
HELE WANTED
ACE ae FEMALE —
SRERQUL TE RS oe
ie Ae ORE AR Th
HAUG a sliding ate
a vd” ane aT eResesT Ra
BIS Sol BRL
28 Pac See aA TAS
BS US ay
Rati WHE AE, each ad
Ry heres ate AND PEACE Me
Bak OEY silt dle ea te
__APPLY BY MAIL ONLY.
Bn NAG NTE DEG
‘evant: short tate rade work reinmen ew
gS sere nan Sah a
wsueeseany_ Rat spre tefl Soc
EKGENTS WANTED
AGE ie Ala Men Val Giese le
AGE The Bed hae eee
Se eee in ets See
SiS ARI women cane Tae WS FavoR
ea cere Pola
Serene bare et
HET ae: Micmac ye
Slams Remmeenc om
fetta ie perpen tt See” meer
SO nts Sos ca ieee
Seok Ra ee ae Tbs ee
je eennceray eieerecac ars
Be Meet
Sieve steer eae
actos cet onan ra
SNe ne eer at
eet ieee satactaaent te es iat week
Hepat foam” OT OBE
SUEROE ware al pats Ode
Sepa Sern aire
Witt uth inae
EARS HOHE ERAN TT
eset can Sa lt
Ce
SGRN TS) PEA Horie: SUT A PMS
ree ban ae areata ete
iroctions. oer iectsity “Coe bee Fs
BER? at ae ete Re
‘utaiinge from iltmettateeeatsiox Set Gor
sine fh Mien Enace a
He, eka ea
ste ty oar atte
SS Se earthen hone
eR aL
lee aad UM Re Ghat ea
HERE! iia Grr tnd
See ete are
Si aes SE
Sous rasael Figo SLOSS
sate Sea ae Ts. ihe, ee
Higa REE ENTE CHESTS
geet ete SP ae
RGR SERS AT Faw DAT:
Saas tga ee
ad Senses i
SRS See = a aT
TUNG, Rave, a CATS
aR OR oe cat
SRegacncic as iansisi wenn ORRE
ee ee a, Be
CHEAP sis RUC sts ae
Pe BEE wes
~ HOTELS
aon Ft AES
Fe BN a
ay
—=SSUNMER RESORTS
aso
fh Soe Sine ay
Sf ietlsna sve. Ateoue ong. Te
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR. RENT
ss. Ibias AVENUE
wus E5 RUE Mecue
hots cua SS
se RDN NRE
hone Braet 08
BERS. P. FRANKLIN, Prop.
BEAUTIFUL Cont WARM
FURNISHED ROOMS
tects Llane, Gans Gaaary Kitchens
Seige ann ieee
ane ae With, Gaz Sone
REM AMET go Pa teas
Lo Suis Vines and” elevated.
FEROS. AraiaHENTS.
arses "TA al a,
sata PE A bt
YOR Ste runs, ROOMS FOR coUPres
of tare aetna
3 nts Oe ‘
Sy Eat dt Na ing ae a
ect Sa, sgt
Sais paRN SNE toa FORTE
MODIS AVE avid, WWE PEA EUS.
OOS ANE af Sie bel Go
tien. Doorlan 2855. bead it
SRST AEs aie ee ea
pth SR
WBNS ea ea, Aer eon
FeAni sis a0 PIE CIS L
eae inh Se ete ale te
Biaxy Rin, soa Tae PESSIN
‘ke with eine fain. at arse eof
an ee dean
Hae Me oe a HSS
tebe ae sah ee
FeReiate ati a ETE
Tadaies ener anit sls" oie roto
Picci ae
Senne esp aa a
biti? i Get Bin Be See 8
FRR AR TIS OMI
Fi Ee adits Fe
einatig ae bape Be as mab
Resnend eeerrgeee
sng ey Sane ee
‘Ean Sr, Se, TUAFEHS. WAN FoR
ites, Ce oan ae
Pee inact ton
Suan AO ee TTS
TuTaeY WRIST APNE WIR
LAU SESS naa acta to
Taine yee or AEE
FATT, un ¥ Rie PCRS A:
sani, ae ies A
Fate ee ee
STR ae ed a
ASE te hereey err
CALEMET AVE. 4S. Ter” APT. PERN,
SN att clea
‘rae ee nai eon, lie
Egy ona eT
Scawnne te aa Ba
efor tee era, ES
Heme he ae A re SS
Baa a cal ater oor
ae Aare anaes
Se pte Bene Re Ba
Eo iawnctee ig coe ane REE
1 een cones
Se ae ee oe
smote at Risseses
Fiuisrena ie PAPE ESTING
a Rael RRs
po Se
sora ta mn
a le i i
hase We Se AEST
aah nty Sekar dette Wo
San ERIE TORT,
Te eet aT
Tas tiene ae
Sigeeste peices Sv APRN
tam nee Be at an
SN the wedlvaty! all emnerniaetn
FERS ROOM COR To oS
Migr eek, Toake atid Pelee. E
ae eae
Signage Ag eA PORS
nqueme Ses Ses aE re
SEU ate ie SDAP
Ta Na ad aud ea aD
Fae rade Rae aka
THES AVE, 400—ONF, HOTEN, ONE NIN,
eet OR ee
TRESS Ea Wa
TAGES, oie it, a
Saco. tor sage ur onble: pate howe
Syma Starks een
EE eases get
eT Fe a NRT Fon: OTR
Ewen ST iS
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
ARE, YOU fOOKINT FOR | NIGR_ Roh
wae Sade Shea
Se ees tat en
TSA AS Ger So PLO,
SHE ir inate feaivoer teat
bere Msveniceeh romain ferraceingh O82
Sites euapeiaae ee eee
TE Ea yee wena: muah etcetera
sit Rune Sindee (Ear wia one
Gutiabr Stak." Mew Caroett REE
ip Tog MN TOM 79 CICA ee ES
wemarnec* es le eh ae
Winter eth, Saas He
Taras APT, TI a eta
Se air Sata ei
sired aumento
ae ae arin FORT
ue etaealt tear darn ealt ate |
wee comaer ake cn
cor (em mote ‘ream sie
terme oiler recente “
Huang AVE NETO FS,
NAOAS Ain Sige eal Sige
sel AS, athe "tt eae
Heat Sit oti
WANANH AVE, SRSOTANGR, NEATLY
ant Ae, Spee See
oa ata attic sc” Se
Ea? ac ck eee ina
ees art io
UO Neate eae a
cee aR Sut,
gnc net, at ie ne Se
tiie We ATT
aig." Ber teen Yor erate o
som na ett, 4
Earle ange sa eee
syne Sra Bt mt ER," Hs, Se
ESET in, hE APH“ A S
siertmagrtat Yes et, He) "He
Higa See emer, Se
Veerige OTe ces teen pee
aiais rage SEES
sea ie ate Sete
ET" Seta ks a
ene eta ee
een ay se, an ARR SSESHS
Wegener t ake
Et RR, Soe Abr ADO:
cn Hea uns ad tal ena.
Def fete, Ceetan
‘Ear at eet
eid: mone hew aeel tyres Maen
Saket we Soar SaTE
eel at al we Bate A
Vipin ar AU
sinatra ration ve
set fee nh Pega a.
Faas Avie we 2p AH.
SIS ed Nina tie “Hetine
Tite, Re Sod ated pale eat bd
eee Sencar i
Tiwi is SpctaNaT WENO
nit BGP io sa
FINCESSIS UOTE APT ROME TRETCTE
SESS onl Sane nate Fe a
AAI WEA STOO AT
AINE foe ion aoplest Nea, eesti
RS ee nant
Fier tsi SEER SS
EAT PE, 135 20 ALT NICEEY FCI,
ane tan Water 2.
Rye Ati fo APA,
Eine Sis, an TR FERS STEAM
lish Sih cotaiare a
WiRMEAT Aer, pee RETA
Tham om fee an i wi: eter
FEN Ae wea ArESP en
SRE Av, TVET RMN A
en ae ene Rear ae
Rew Avie, esse Sh ART OPH,
EMMA, Sx abt Soha
ASE ie Sew Ho FANT
item. eaten Keewes Ste.
pais wie ake ar ATH RL
aoe grok boat, bey_ Satara Deed. SO
Eger ves Te SFUNSETI Ho FH
Tema APE, a ap FEST
| Pier en feral BN
Sage ars a, FIRB, NNN PENT
Tawarnrve seks, Ag, tee aE ACHS,
arts alee
Fagan gers ae UR HS
FRRSOS SUE, Soe Sh PLOT SET
"ius rome lanl Bee
igs ae, See ywe ERE
‘seit matees sirom fomeker 5 St §
eam ie ai aoa eae EHO
tame ie tts Wes
aaa es ae
| SS
sRur EE Rei Sale FCRS WoO HOD:
ae ai Se ene
THEATRE Ape SSO NT
EEE AE aie eee!
FEAT ACE, Fy, Te
FR iAWHENCE AVE, ae, oA
ee
-aisestae Vier, So NOES SUSET
FSMRS ATE SS Ae HON.
ree BON REN TEA
a Sti eke OOo
TREE AVE, oR 20 PLOT, NEB
Sear ets PUENTE FURY IT
ee ee ms
UNFURNISHED ROOMS:
nr ener ae eet
FRoxt wenROON FO QuiET—MAEMED
oi iete tn, Meet
2 ae Cees
TR OSTCRS, of PCRS. RGR IATL,
TR tabled Se
a
VERNON AVE, Ai ap Biro, U8
er Neat oP Seat a
Peas Ae oes ate
Se ee ar eee
stats FOR RENT
FOR RENT—
‘excel Stn a “foot as
ESthe “hw. “icing” au ia cers SS
SOUTH SIDE REALTY CO.
ETF SIDE REALTS 00
wnswoon dec" Ticrony on.
maleate
i Siiney ane. aR TAT A
Seats Sear aaa
IRE ates nt ow Caltater Seebeus
OE
ee aR
Feuiaig ates gyn goas ey
FLATS WANTED |
RAH gE kn Wine WANT EATS
wiht ae nd Wai ar ach
WAST # on @ hoo womens FIAT AES
SASL HCRMUMAR UT
ROOMS WANTED ___
Oe ete atte I ea
pe foe pear ie a oe
poe ea
TaRTog TaN ESPTRN BN yn
Peugeot ober yee
FRR Te an ME era
SRS aN HIE
Tea Ea TE
eter tete cneitent Gagieneed 2
corm GLATS FOR SALES
SERN eee ie as
er chair,
OFFICES FOR RENT
DESK ROOM.
Large, light, airy office.
Phone and’ information
cservice included.
3439 Indiana ave.
Douglas 2024. =
ROOM ANO BOARD
Saya wk Nae gen
carr ts See es
ADOPTION
TESS R ater woe aia
Sape vA BO SE
BUSINESS CHANCES
Rape esnih peavey TE
fae oie Ge oe pa
We eed outer ooo
Se Mabe ramen cate
Sata te ites aoe
Ee iheare ecw, eek
RTA
ang Wg EO ree
Jacedt"te ona try We meine” Wats quick
Ae eRei tone Faltsaey a, ope he
SOE ca ae een aet
AGRO eins EAE
Heer eure nti es
Eee
meme oe tae ©
ter en, eee ee
Neate eerie ee
ee iene
ear ae es
acting eta a ante
Fan” SALE DELINTERSEN AND GO:
ee Te
Ena a REE
oak Ee bee Tete
are RR aR AT
FEET aft Gas Gace,
ences mane ner aes Tie
HTC MAUI S1OH AND _FOOT
area errr
Tee ates ae
a Seer
Die eatin erent
a eee eee
St eae etn te SU, Win ints
Feeere ceases werk
ant Cea a aerate
FERSITCRE, TANO. GEb, DAVENTORT
ae eS ee
A ee :
oa ea
ree
Pei Saree pe a e
Se og oat, Se
ERE EES GT ae
Dae ys ai lee
eee ay nas a
ee aa: et ‘
‘AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
Geers
Boa: one Whaaln Se ge nae, Pe
Ear eine eat AS
ae r|
ee ae
forehead
Se ee =
ease ae
ae ators
a
WANTEO—ItiSOELLANEOUS
seater cet lt
CLOTHING FOR SALE
FoR SALE WEACHIPEL, cUON SENT
PSE MATP eS sea
PAGE ELEVEN
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
HOBBS & GRUBB,
se Ean oS xemooD Snoem,
‘ics
rourpereue {6 ingors om sate
ear ei aor ata he a oer
WE inese aves wroste
Sat hehe SE NCEE ESE
Sear rt es,tem cates
sic SPe acca hee a
tour, 60 ana
ony or agp BRR Bede ea
eiaiiie ne he coterie
dricin ata wen aoe Ps
disse WES exer tee ft,
ee “adi, boone set trims Friee Bees
HB RGcme ave ctnane, er
HERD NR s cece
ete Soe aeran! ae
ene trees ge piet eee
Ee Rn METRY aR
ge xx, TRENT, cre
2 alot
oGiS Rs rams 968 —soe tmate
seas cnet 2m ra
EEaebdherhue 7S
striate
seaggnun, oug Toran a9
aa ists ea sal
Kine Rta, Wag"cnmc. et EN
PRS TRIER GE ce oe, ate
2 RS NIE eae SSS
see atiar is Ave tees ne
EBs. Teortete NOEL nota
2g Ei ae toe mer gos
| Tiental Rin. Paice S50) FiO" cass
OUR BUYERS NEVER FANS
“AREER ARIST ag wwe
ERR yatcn wt te ed th
SEES Se Fou ont chm wah th
“efit emirage gh carergree See
RUNS Tas tt
PoE cane ot
wate ed OS pn pot, vor
os een var em tant G30 od
Seg ee
Ser eate ial ce eects
aime “Fa awe eee MEH
C. Lb. McKENZIE
ARAL BSTATE €O.,
sere
“PARAL LANDS “AND
RESORT LOTS
Seater enters
Sheet or aah etic et eas Se
ere fot sites
OOS REAL ESTATE”
emestS He Finca
| Eek aang Bie feet
Bichue't Getteanns “reser,
: SIMONS & PANNELL,
Paver 1 eeTMMeY AT
7 FOR SALE OR RENT
ARICK HOUSE, ASTH PL,
SE ar eae ete
SANE LSE OCS Ae
Hees, Seay einer ett Yo Seals
Baer eta, "iaricanatls ea
Ce Cee we cama We
aie Saab ViNeeses VEE SE AE Gait
Fiae"eaiagonnee Pang BS Se
nel aenecae pee
end ameeermeed
Sia mand NE Figg ERT
cake net Rate Sareea
sca Set ae re bt
SLL IM lore eaa
ite taatch, EE sete
Figeher me sri ton ots
et sions ak ark se Ee
WenG AS WARK Lots AT Law PRICE:
SIRE AN, VARA Los ay) LS PRICES
CASH. OR CREDIT;
SEER Ua GRE
Boos Sore WE ce
tnt (9 vive YOrTAN esrnare,
entrtinaRaiingsaatesnce,
CHESTER A. WICKS,
ERD recta iwrnee
oe. sm. _— 3k LoD ave
7. MEN?
© SRE RARNS ue
MAGIC. SHAVING POWDER
sie A Gia alate
cine SAE SED ince a Raat
Bre eit ter ee
Soe ener emcee
WILSON FINLEY COMPANY,
GOOD LUCK GLASS FRES
Solar te eies See eet
Tina ubete fa'the tome ory toe fear
SPOT hae cancers ore:
sow, Caan :
A Ene
SED oF hse
A. E. AVERY,
FRESH COCOANUT OIL
ecusaaigine meee
bP PRE EE i ae
bg AEE Pte
WaRHETOE To eUINCRINE FOR AST
Serie eet ae Tea
Ele eae ee
weber ome
Tas as a aE RT
Le Eun
epg a” wath
dn 3 8 THE ? :
nen Hl
PART TWO @ ica I 04 a iefender Features and Correspondence
- Es|_wortps PMifakrarest eso weexny Py
WORLD TOPICS IN BRIEF ~ CHICAGO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23,. 1922 ‘e STORIES INTERESTINGLY TOLD
Cloudbursts ‘| [SS] THE WEEK [I Girl Drives | Long Hair Advocates | Long Walks
Are Created | Automobile | = | to Gountry
; A Resolution Just a Policeman Cuban Affairs va! oe oN 4 1
: Near Earth’ Missouri Votes Maud Wood Park Texas Speaks Over Sahara y (ae oa ey \ y sommt®) Schools En
|| Alabama G. O. P. McIntyre Abroad Mandate Seekers |i. 3 (a ia a | -
Thunder Storms Unable By Roscoe Simmons———________ISixty-Mile Sand Storm cm eee Attett, Several States Provic
y to Gens Rives | sxaiva ane pens nor steered Cored pone but mae te weer ie ped aaex vene.| Onableto Check Her | [fe SAR MMgrese/@§\\ Miss Ruby A xing,| Busses That Carry
or Mountains | Lieu Sied"aSts‘ettendece|sorSaeura renesepoceatse [she an’ oe' Tearetting'on'tre| Passenger Bus | fgg aeeces | vo came forvard| Boys and Girls
‘Terrific thunderstorms, hailstorms
cloudbursts and “rwisters” that ofter
Sweep paths of death and destruc:
tion in’ the summer months—where
to they came from and how are they
Tormed?
“They originate where they end—
at the xurface Of the earth.” sas
Popular Sclence Mtanthls, deseribin;
the selentitie explanation for varlou:
Ispes of severe summer storms.
“The sun warms the earth, whicl
i turn heats. the lower air. This
Surm, Inoist air, because it 4 light:
wr than the aie above. rises in cur-
rents. Axcending. it expands as th
pressure of the surrounding air di:
Ininithes sind conls into water vapor
Mhut accuinulutes in clouds ans
floats in the air like fog. buoyed Uy
Wy rising air currents beneath.
Hailstorms
“Hallstorms are simply thunder:
storms in which the vertical air cur-
rents within the storm cloud are of
Unusua) magnitude. Hail falls only
in connection with thunderstorms
Muthstones are formed when rain:
dropa are carried by the vertical cur-
Tents up inte the region of fecezin:
temperatures.
“Ax noon as the frozen drops drif"
out of the area of strong updraft
Ther fal back into the region ol
Uguia drops where thes tyrone
coated With a thin. film of water
Tu they are again caueht in the
updraft and urain carried into the
region of now and fee where th
new cnating is congealed. This mic:
hayen several times, producing
hallstones of various sizes and strur-
ture. Finally, however, they become
too urge to he sustained by we
Ascending currents, whereupon thes
fall to earth.
“somatimes the ‘hailxtones, when
hroken through the center. show
plaints the serie« of concentric shetts
Thout y squall aucleus formed in the
murmner dexeribed.
SCloudbursia are simply heat thun.
derstorms in which the rainfall {
unusually great, Heat thunderstorms
ire those caused hy the rising, ¢ool-
ing and condensation of large musscs
Me surm, malt alr, As condensa-
tian continues the cloud hecomes
larger und larger, finally becomnine
a thunderstorm. ‘The drops of wa-
ter within the cloud also grow lare-
frand larger until finally they. be-
Some too large to tm sustained by
the. upward currents, whereupon
precipftution begins.
Rivers Block Them
“one Interesting, but ns yet unex
plained, fact, 4m the movement of
Thunderstorms is that they are un-
ane to cross large rivers, In xan
casen this prahably accounts for the
Sainfall rraching elondburst proper'-
Hons. The storm, rrctehine the Fiv-
or, 38 stopped and held stationary
for x time, #0 that the unusually
heavy rate of rainfall usually pres
ent near the front of the storm is
Santinued aver the same territorr
for much longer time than usunl,
Sometimes large mountains cause
The storms 10 Ftand still, thus creat
ing cloudburats.
“The tarnade annears to be caused
hy an anusually violent development
Af upward alr movements in acu
Snulocnimbur ar storm cloud, This
upward rushing ef warm alr under
certain canditions may become
Strong enourh te farm a whirl ‘or
eddy within the cloud, Thin sur
Shin. When ones setup within, the
Saud, readily extends downward.
“the eentrifucal force af ‘the
whisling air creates atthe center 2
yarflal vacuum in whieh some of the
Inalsture tn the air condenses, farm=
Tne » funnel ehaped elead”
Save Woman
From Burial
In Open Sea
Yenoigees idan wis 1460.
aakeerares aboard 8 er ch
dei ret ce are vores
Seg ot 0 Neca ern ee
eae Sees se Car we oe
pete, Se casa” be ‘ine Anetor
Sones, cetera ot NS Aitced
eg ees
saree he ned eens eases:
ae ae let ibe bur
set crebeny, ts POPS aera ee
Mg oe oes Sie
fed die Societe ee. patoenats
rermdotan net caused ihe Deena
ees cos eee reas aitnee
pened bie th SPS thats
ct SAS Met cients, Cae
pelage gegen ape rer
Re irig are re Er
stand ale AID Soca et ana
a Sh Hi, See ed eee ee
Eel eee ae ed:
ey bette clement obra
ee ie ea kerteads ited
ty ose ere ett OS Son cane
ee secrement of ara ‘cone
Ss tee aes AG Sale
sk Fa ee as
(ae MET, SE Ng eras
ou t8 he sulenleg of a al
adele, he Miss at Sc rae
See eet tote That be oeld
seaeet le ames that ie see
But an the nIP te thei yelsee ia
BES ar Saorcltathe” Re teas
Ete eee
~eamship and will be shipped to Chi-
i
For many Geneavens Ons of sas
most striking features of life in Con-
Sumntinople to the tourists hes been
the Kreut tribes of dogs allowed to
fun at large in the city. ‘They are
constant menos, but the natives
have religious scruples against 1dM-
tng them. Whea the young Turks
came into power some time ago, one
of the evidences of thelr progressive
Spirit was the slaughtering of thou-
funds of Wieso untmals, Because of
The sympathy of the natives for the
Soge they have been ‘allowed to run
undisturbed and now the streets are
again filled with these animals, There
is aguin an agitation for getting rid
‘of these animals, but it is bard to
take any pronress because of the at-
‘utude of the natives.
ee _
‘The promotioh of Colored men in
the police department as sergeants
and ‘captains for bravery and effi-
‘Sfency on the same basis as those
cic <> oan, .
A Resolution Just a Policeman Cuban
Missouri Votes Maud Wood Park Texas §
Alabama G. O. P. McIntyre Abroad Mandat
fale Salat te al ata ty tcc
Li'rou stand’ ‘anows Independence
| —~ courage, bravers. You can't be
‘beholden to anybody Hf You expect te
be heard, have weight.
‘Alno, prepare for setbacks,
‘Take the Protestant Episcopal con-
vention new in session in Portland.
Away out West, If your memory i
short you can go back to what this
writer put before you last week about
‘that convention,
‘You wwere told of to Black men.
| both Wishops of a church In which
[their parents could not even hold
| membership.
I 'These men, you will recall, walked
|in the procession of the elect, having
‘name and authority—ané this but 60
|short, bitter years after Appomattox!
| When you have nothing else to do
jsit down and balance the meres of
|God against your ignorance, fmpure
thoughts, envyings, jealousies, Tazi-
[newa, vain Tmwginines.
"Then get up and hustle while you
jcun. Hustle for your children
("Your attention will be called to the
| gpiscopal convention once or twice
Ithis week: onee for the stand taken
vaguinst the Ku Klux Klan: perhaps
jlo for meddling with France in
‘Africa.
seas introduced in the house of den-
ties by the Tex, Dr. C. B, Wilmer.
[Dr. Wilmer is Atlanta's first citizen.
He is reetor of the largest chureh
there.
| Colored Atlanta looks to him for
Haefense and fellowship. When this
[wcriter spoke recently in Auanta Tir
Wilmer sat with the mayor on the
plutform. He believer in the gospel
fhe reaches. “B. J. Davia approver
him. You know the great Davis,
Tee
‘The Wilmer resolution can't stop
‘the Klan: certainly not. but it shows
the courage of the church, | The
church, you know, always lags behind
‘reat questions.
Don't confuse Christianity with
“the “church.” There ig. but one
Christianity, but if you believe the
preachers the tree bears & theusand
fruits,
Spo you believe this? Surely not.
‘One tree: one frult: so. sald Jesus.
© Georgia quickly answered Dr. Wil-
mer.
NTwo days after he introduced his
resolution against the organization
born in hig clty, Hardwick, antt-klun
governor, waa swept out of office,
ana with, him every anti-klan in
offce.
‘Along: with: Hardwick went Mayor
Kes, candidate for Congress to suc
ceed Elder Upshaw preacher Ku
ux,
Keep your eyes open: read the
vupers, think, talk Tess: also Usten.
If you listes you will hear wings
of war in the @lstance. They are
preparing to moet the klan further
‘Meanwhile, pray for our white peo-
ple. Fou may not be uble to help
them, but mayhe you can call the
Lord's attention to their condition,
We knows them: He alone.
oc
RE you kecning up with the
A. ‘Missours constitutional conven-
tion? You ought to.
However. the Missourl- Colored
newsnaners have but Tittle about st.
nd the Ansociated Press gives it the
Ro-by altogether.
Missouri wus ence the pivot af the
nation. Even now it cuts quite @
figure. ‘The political ers ow is. “AS
oes Maine so zoea the Union.”
“That fx not true, of course, but you
hour it Just the same.
‘So years ago, back in the ‘40s, the
ery Wan “Aa Kora AIGROUF 80 5908
Savers." That ery was about true.
Henry Clay. the Virginian who made
Kentucky famous, sald he hud settled
the slavery question in his Missouri
‘compromise. :
““put you know that he but onened
it, Tntit rerently AMissourl wan the
fourth state—St. Louis the fourth
city.
St. Louix Colored people are all
wool and yard wide,
A Colored man. B. ¥. Bowles, 18
nieinber of the Constitutional Con-
Sention in session at Jefferson City.
‘That in pretty good for Missouri.
although Kansas City ought to have
2 man there also.
In getting up the conatitution of
Tilnols two Colored men were mem-
here. ‘They have O. Kd that instru
ment. That 's why all Colored Ii
nuix will vote for it Dec. 12
1f Morris and Cary are satisfied
eversthing all right,
‘Sh it will be with the Missourt con
siuution. If Bowles comes out and
saya he is satisfied, Missouri Colored
People will fect that matters are
about ag geod as they ean expect
under the cireumstances.
There in but one Tlinols. God
rules ft: Lincoin rests within Its
bosom,
A fow aise back some fastidious
ladien and gentlemen brought before
the Missouri convention a. provision
for literacy test. for voters. You
know what that means, of course.
Tt means that before a citizen may
vote he must do lot of reading and
writing and “sausfs" some election
oficial that he is up on the law and
ie prophets. |
Promptiy. overwhelmingly. the
dolexates voted the proposition down.
Towlex made a speech against It.
Howles was right.
Let Missouri unite and thank
Bowles, Address him, Jefferson City.
Mo, care the Capitol. Progress,
Just a Policeman
Maud Wood Park
McIntyre Abroad
=e fesnos Gio
eater by BG. Adder Fulilshing Company,
re-enslaved Colored people, but madi
our South a byword: place of strife
of bad blend. IM feoling.
‘Three cheers for the Missouri Con:
stitutional Convention. It put man:
hood above grammar.
~e
HE Alabama Republican sta
[convention meets in ieming
hain: puts a full slate in the
Geld; fights out a factional difference
aya goes home to walt forthe feder
pit to he cut.
©. D. Street is nominated for Zov-
crnor.
Tf such « thing Is possible, Boke:
T, Washington must have) turne¢
over in his grave during the speech
of Pope M. Long; retiring state chalr-
man of Aisbama Republicans: clos¢
friend to our great President, Mr
Barding.
Listen to Mr. Long:
“1 stand on my record as chair
man. I am satisfied with what |
have been able to do. You know
how hard 1 have worked to. make
the Republican party in Alabama a
white man’s party.
“Look, gentlemen. Here we have
a convention in which there is not
a Negro sitting as a delegate.”
‘The Birmingham press report
that when Mr. Long boasted his de:
feat of Colored Republicans “the ap:
plause was loud and long.” The news
must have made our great President
sick. 7
Not long ago Colored men wer
men in Alabama. They retired from
the fleld only recently. And. ther
only Because the Tepublican nations’
vommittee said Colored man is al
right when voting in Ohio, but ali
wrong when living in Alabina,
Under MeKinley Colored-men het
nigh flee in Alabama. Thes con-
inued under Roosevelt. You know
what Mr. Taft did 10 you. of course.
Born und raised in Cincinnati, Mr
Taft hud all the ailments that £0
mong with a man neither sick no
vel, Ohio politiclans posing as
‘stutesmen” have ruined Colored
peaple.
‘John C. Leftwich, now a citizen of
Oklahoma, and H, ¥. Cashin were re-
seivers of the lund offices at Mont-
comers and Huntsville. respectively,
appointment of McKinley. or
athe of Hanna. Lefuwich was sue-
ceded hy Nathan H. Alexander, un-
cnown generally, but a strong, bril-
fant man. Booker T. counted on
sim.
eee.
In came J. 0. Thompson, backed
Booker T. Washington. As
Roosevelt representative Mr. Thomp-
jon made caure with Colored people.
He had been postmaster at Tuskegee.
His secretary was a Colored mum,
5. W. A. Johnston, now business
agent at Tuskegee.
‘James T. Peterson, Mobile capital-
al, held down the First district. W.
r. Chambliss took charge of the Fifth
ind Dr. U. G. Mason came up to
Shicago from the state at larre.
‘All ix now changed. You sit by
snd sco It done. Tou wee your na-
fonal committce indorse distran-
‘hisement. and turn your brothers
ut of thelr house. You sce your
sreat President, Mr. Harding, honor
hose who dishonor you.
In order to get rid of you the na-
jonal committee cuts down Southern
epresentation in the natlunal con-
vention. ‘Tears and cloquence of
ineoln Johnson are laughed at.
No wonder Mr. Long. is “happy.”
He Ig not alone in his joy, would you
ink?
‘Alabama Colored people will knock
nthe door just the same, Mr,
Adama. Get ready.
UST A POLICEMAN. you will
ay.
ser of Warren, ‘Ohio, is something
nore than that. Blake lives in a
peautiful cottage, on the outskirts of
he clty. He drives a Packard Spe-
fal.
You know, of course, that the
packarda live in Warren. Detrott is
(te of thelr wonderful factory, but
he Packards all live in Warren,
vpleul elty of American refinement,
veulth, cultivation.
‘William Blake, Colored, is chief tu
he chief of police.
Not long ago a Greek killed a Col-
yred man and shot. down an ex-
rolleeman. Said the city to Blake:
Find the murderer: co. Ret. him.”
‘Over 6,000 miles Hake traveled.
fe found his inn, brought him hack.
ror the first time In half a century
, murderer got the gallows in Trum-
jul county. The mayor, MeBride,
oved by the poor. told this writer
hat Blake was as intelligent an oM-
er ax Ohio had.
Sime’ months back the federal
rts “frumed” Blake on the easlest
harge—whisky. Over to Youngs-
own ther took him.
Gillon, chief of police, said to
Blake: | “Tell. me. Bill, did you do
nis?” Blake replied: “If Thad done
LT teh YOU. No, 1 didn't do it.”
‘The whole of Warren, the chief, the
mayor, the commissioner of public
afety and high citizens, went to
Foungatown.
‘The trial; the evidence, the argu-
nents, ete. You know lawsuits,
“T can't hold this man,” said the
commissioner. “The evidence is too
onflicting. Moreover, all the first-
lass people of Warren say they don't
lieve the.churge.”
Public opinion is everything. Win
L wherever you can.
Gillen—Irish and as true as Irish
isually are—Warren chief, was first
o grab Blake's hand.
“Go get your uniform, Bill” he
aid.
All through eastern Ohio and west~
jern Pennsylvania the name of Blake
is a household word. Richest people
of rich Warren-unite in saying that
he fs the goods.
‘Again this writer tells you that if
you are all right the American white
man will say so. In some places and
sections he may be slow and stub-
born, but he will come around.
Don't fret him: humor him along.
“That is my father,” sald Blake to
Cuban Affairs
Texas Speaks
Mandate Seekers
and tlk to his son on how to ge
slong’
Honor thy siother and father, sa
une erent Bechet you da tong tk
Pps
Wher Blake went on the force al
tne wile poopie Igugoed and hick
on
Tovcl hin now and you have so
gain Wore’ A rolceentin
much you tape The Diane: ered
trkee history tor So
Willan Mae Jom m_pollerna:
ne Seaton.
ister MAUD Woop rail, Wi
Glteas oF the tand, president of th
dae el emerges
sar tra one te oan ae
“The man or woman,” says Sistei
Parks “who fale to vote tna tn
Pocehes balers Mule tote
othons
| re militant leader f tho pon
[women is worked uh douse
| Shnis"Armerieuna prelate the bat
[fou “rertapa sou wil Tike to foe
ter enter
‘Thin writer will give you, then, a
ara
Shack tiie vah a Sonica 6
> cintton. ‘Mon end womee whe
Sal net ste are sity che
aa tar delay ancseteeot toe oe
Sealy te Uven shcices ae at
Sack Ur the cote ot ete
a caine ine ont bao
moe oa oes See
Soh, ene, anya ees
Sctrotierethe'rule of in ears
‘ent many by the selfish few.”
‘The great aire. Park fs not eles
at ge be Ge eee
Perhaps she will be Interested
taarn "teat sttions "ae erate
Nocinsas et ceers sapsyoor aise
Miowrl os tat on aiceeen oe tees
olor in many ataten of the Unions
Tine after time thi writer haa tld
semis ssse the lndlox” Suen th
die Sorin and Sout, Watch th
fenibe Gales of tee Sawrey hee
eporanee of. potcal creations
[Watch the Colored ludies as they
emerge Into political tight.
npn elther ease, watch the ladles.
sani aati oh br aaa aoe
tions are decided with one-third”of
‘the population denied the vote. Who
Neepe them fom rating? Phat sth
pation ene as oh aoe
| This writer wit tus the blamé
where it belongs.
|. ‘This one-third of our population fs
liegt trom vasng. from tlktog a hand
Inthe pane oc goverment Ro ene
ieates. Why nite tates?
Seeaaie alee iedle ron th
courier
i Chicaro thes run it with guns
and uors” Eisowhere ‘thay ran
ith ecules dance bestuf tye and
Secec tale Money tale put toe ith
seine aon
sire: Tork, hu tro lets the masa
wrwcran tit aiasoet tae nates
citer busiest ue kecp aantew
ten aidioens Creth sone are ars
Dy you wet anion ao, ates Part
surety sou 8.
ae
6. Mets TYRE, bury commen:
OAs
*" You knew Metniyre, suroly.
For thors cing tershere he rte
e eseecliues ant genio ae er
Fore
iferd,ou See tiuati Sin
n't is bury We tis oess
Seetuody, A oeutl in crise found i
eee hae
ana’ Stetnare on Colored pent
tn Paris
“rhe American Negro gots to the
bent cehet a Bates aes AL
Conv the amartedt deseed couple
Brtke Sing rooms woe'a eects
a's tertole companion’ They
weit een creas sotaen Hi
is a jazz band feader and she is
i Je in a muvee reece.
Sere seaplane in evening
Sauce Urey" mrasaiven sa chalet
tables as the white couples.”
‘This alght atered Str Mentyre to
tng dente
Solem Aimericand aro treated
wore tn Pact, pectic *Gelees
[Pronchioen made ft nosalgle. For Re
See aeeecean | eotiae ot te
Toorant tind white posple, nave
Pies’ to turn une French tee Gol
oon eae
SRARIRE doling” they have. been
told
renchimen ihink Americans ers
anette ta che oie a tee
seers Teens at or moore
clothes for one of-her greatest sol-
Glersa Proven’ eased! bod, con
quero Aislera” for’ tne inate
Son.
eineyid_ teckel’ wa see’ we
american Setve dining the best
ee erase ine me nore te
fatale eote” nantes. ne Sotck "ew
Sauls rode’ Ameria Cara hows
Ui eversthing woutd have been 0.
Tinie writer wishes that Sie. Ste
antgre and his Kind mise be received
rang to the homes of 2 few is
Bheea ee canue
ecthey enlght lorn a thing or twa
hoe oe ne down ore clone Seat
hein bateard Latoche Talent hel
Sisinivee
ee we weep ane Ht wink wan
said a few days ago by Battling Siki,
St royal Seneyat blood, Evencieman
Sino weil ght Carpentier Sept 0 fo
Fetech ects cod thie
Said sikt Yo a blusteting American
ie
aT don't see why Dempaty should
bar mo because, you'ees AM
ber mm because. veil ane /1 AM
Girl Drives
Automobile
Over Sahara
Sixty-Mile Sand Storm
Unableto Check Her
Passenger Bus
During the war the lady driver of
the military’ motor ambulance was
| familiar tigure both aL home and be-
Hing: the tines.” whough. many have
Row returned to more orthodox Dur
iauits, some adventurous spirits re
SUL cob. found “pfotiog, wehicles
ler conditions which carry a spice
se adventure. oe
An Intercating instance of this ts
iat Algiers, Where an ex-ambulance
Jindy” driver” frequently delves tho
jeter couch, hich cans certs to
Yon Saad, in the Petit Sahara des-
jert. ‘This excursion Is. arranged. by
[the Anglo-American, garage of Tel
emis: Algiers, and i proving very
[pepuiar with” the British, American
Jini rene) "visitors staying at als
islets during the season. ‘The vehicle
isa “Commer car running on large
pneumatle tires. “The body" is of the
‘open touring coach tspe with arm
ehalr seats.” ‘That the fair driver ts
able to start the engine and make
necessary adjustments or running Te-
Dales, speaks Well for the vehicle and
Tor the proticlency” of the lady. "A
correspondent who recently made tie
t2ip weltes, according to the Binpire
Man .
“Leaving Algiers just before 9
‘clock in’ tho morning ‘the weather
Fesembled that of a hot summer duy
in'England: “hater in the veason the
intense heat 19 100 oppressive for_the
conifort of a Europea. Our route
included “sixteen miles continuous
climb to the Sakamody pasa, whlch
is the ‘highest point of Foudway. in
he Littie Atlas mountains, It being
4000 fect above ‘sea level: seventy
Tiles trom ‘Algiers tne desert village
Dr Amuule ‘wus reuched and lunch
Was served, “after i tivo hours’ 12:1
the journey was resumed and. it. ts
worth noting that even on the stech~
est mountuln roads, with the exce)-
tion et negotiating elarp balrpte
Dents, we did mot atop below second
speed:
“Bon Saada was reached at 7:45 in
tho ovening, so that, allowing for the
Stop for lurch, about nine hours’ was
faxen to cover the 130 miles distance.
Phe noxt day we spent at the beay-
tun ‘oasis ta the desert. taking the
‘opportunity fo observe the habits and
customs of the natives who displayed
the “utmost Interest {athe motor
coach.
“Our return to Algters on the third
Jday was marked by a adden and re~
Marhable change i the climatic con-
ditions. Crossing the desert a fear-
ful sandstorm took pince. ‘The wind
attained a velocity. of sixty miles an
tour driving before It great. banks
fof vind which darkened ‘the alr and
Denetrated Into everything. sharp
Particles stinging “our "faces and
Rearly blinding us At Iast seo com~
monced the neeent of the mountains.
Teaving. the desert and the sand-
Morm “behind, our ‘trusty vehicle
‘Elfmibea into. tho clouds which cor
fred. tho plountain tops and. passed
through torrents ot rain, ‘whlch pro-
Mded"a.strilting contrast, to our ex
perlence in the desert. We were glad
Yo rench Algiers. again, though even
on the worst portion of the route the
CEnicle was most comfortable for rid=
Ing and It-was a pleacure and Inter-
ting experience to observe the re-
inble service whieh a Gritish built
motor coach. will exhibit under va-
Hleds and what must often be excen-
tonaily trying, conditions”
Apes Are the
in Old Siam
tie people ot Bini 'ar6 very fond
‘of keeping monkeys of various kinds
Soe reese senard Sebantan
AS Bete aa
Bi atectoeecansclation
cha bei etes eta eau
Tae mean eipent’ ose’
same rarvaabie ings, teau tho
Ieotkesa tan de ta tert menor. Tn
Se eee See a
Bier ae eats Terme nese
beragia ieee tag tlle
ee i ares
Or om ees
Rae See Ss sibs
Pee Seer nate uae a
Spee'Ts Gent the boing Steins
Metal eteate erthane to to te
eae ge ae a
Bat ptcee Ce money handed. to
eat sk ceaatay teas
ee at ee i
Bee seats eit geo he ous
Hea tte eionis Soe out anal eb
see oe ee we thetpoand maine
Pca ner
TRL eas pae ate ike buslaee
tithe nctitas perso hes svar Pa
ee Se De ee tee
tan" ha toma mores Crown te: Tad
Je tebe wey safaus te
in" ewt tet Scotates es’ ainad
Mae ore ou sate aeekl oflee The
ie atec"thita about ue aialr i
re ae eee te
acne ors aces MS ce
Gown ittalt aie ta ontcoeccle
aa ie ae ae ee es
Bimal ag naan a rac ot
Taare th Pan money Ra ne
po
fs hopeless to pase the coln where
Near. thé Yukon horder, in a val-
{leg In far northern British Columbia,
a mining engineer has discovered the
remains” of mastodons that once
foamed northern Canada, This val-
Jey Jn north and west of the head-
wwhtery of the Findlay river and Is
hot marked on the maps. Footprints
‘of a three-toed animul are Imprinted
in the sandstone, The hones are not
fosailized but are in an excellent
state of preservation. Only dox
teams are used {n that section and
{t requires 2 year to make the Jour-
ney
2 =
Certain railroad trains in Rumunta
are so crowded with the roving popu-
face that the conductors eutinot col-
leet fares. There are not enough
passenger. coaches to handle. tho
Throngs of people who want to travel
and the passengers are forced to ride
‘on the roofs, running bourds, bump-
ers and undertrucks of the coaches.
Fights. and ultercutions ‘and accl-
dents. fatal and otherwise, are of fre-
Pr casppsrtioadiceinoling
Long Hair Advocates
Ce
Cea xt
ho SN mm
(Ae Fae
oes Rite ae Attlett,
flee. ot RN :
ie Seamee See A Miss Ruby A King
are Grete \ who came forwar:
ES are. Seca to prove the
Ee RR athe Ce AN
feed P ios Ree falsity of the .
Pacer ime oe eK ee para 3
ag GY claim that
Bee 05s it
oles ee bobbed hair
Fema ees is more
Sees ae ge teal beautiful.
en ee
a tS at.
Gi pe ne: HTT
er ee ay A ;
ae ec
LIBRE in 4
ae kr aa
PE ws se ce
dee Recge 8
sulfite eo een es
Atright, - | Baa Meee aay
Miss Luweiss Leigh, age Di Selec tec are Ro
who is strongly moa erage = |
in favor of es eee ees
le ee pame 2
all girls wearing ae ee» ae 3
their hair long. ey dat 7
ax i aoe
angi We a A
Nee A
x eens
‘The young lady with the shorn locks really started something when
sho tried to conviice us that boUbed ‘ir adds to a gies beautye. Gin
Pachter enfin ete gp er mC
from ail over he coanngy re Seng note went Up and Gown
a ee ee eae ar ot tar eek
See en ne ee aie Seat are shown this week
giants RESTS ee eons ce meaner. aie ashore te we
REGUL A Hine, ames Hanates ese, Cae sea ete Gere
gue sever wow ae Ge lee fo separate hem Geom tele wea
Ma ofc at both the long-haired’ and babbed-hatred fete will be
puree tat
Se een eee a awontheart “with: bobbed: hair whoes beauty
a Ee ee ae a etans
Cera Rae Shocs SHAR saat SE Ste MSG eas to sou
een here at Me
ee RSE TASS nar lb: ene Congo Defender
Composer of Old Stable of
‘ . Pe
‘Humoresque Dan Paich Is
Artist at 14\ Now Cinders
The charm and fresh originality
of the musfe of Antonin Dvorak have
malo. him popular the world over.
Te there anvone who cannot recog
hize “tumoresque™? And what is
the. seeret of that fecling of "ut-
Homeness ‘and personal intimacy
hich comes at the mention of it?
Because he was born und lived
most of is carly life in a. secluded
tural “district in Bohemia, - whose
people ‘Wave become world’ famous
Mince aa the ‘Czechosiovaks. where
the laborers ing ue they work and
Mhtere the meavants are sald to dance
Ie feast forge different. folk-dances.
Deoraie beeamne vo steeped in the un-
even rhythms and the quaint melo-
dies anit with che vere spirit of thele
fusie that Tater study” of the mus-
era failed. to lmpress his style. to
ny great extent.
"Aithough he could sing and could
play. the violin, plano and organ
then he was 74, he twas 0 ramped
by poverty. that he never saw the
Stores or heard uns of the music of
The classlent composers until after
he was 2c ‘Then he had already
fione # conaiderable Amount of writ:
ing.” Instead of learning to. compose
istmost others have done, Uy suudle=
ing, the accented and conventional
forms and outlines as Standardized
ty the masters, he Dlundered along
Dy himself with a dosed. determi=
hation and 2 persistence which only
i peasant could maintain.
H'ean however, this very: frols-
tion ‘froin any music except. the
ances and songs of the people which
inthe ‘end proved to be Dvorak
Hood fortune. for he Kept his erigi-
Fallty. and worked. out his carece
Through the spontaneity of hie on
Wdeas.
— ee
BEAR,” WOOING
When 2 Afexicun younx tan seen
afar maiden whose looks appeal
to him-he follows her home to see
syhere she lives. Women are kept in
Becluston, and xo he cannot speak to
tho girl of his dreams or call_at her
house. He may “hacer el oso (play
the bear)—that 1%, he fs allowed by
custom to stand Deneuth the adored
one's window and pace back and
forth lke a bear in a cage.
‘Now comes the girl's turn, remarks
an exchange. Sufe behind her cur-
fain or in the darkness of her bul-
cons, she cun make up her eoquettish
fittle mind whether he Js the kind of
a bear she wants, If he is, she can
find a dozen Ways of encouraging
him; 4 smile, a wave of the hand, :t
suspicion of the blowing of a kiss are
enough to take the bear happy.
When she goes to mass or takes a
yralk on the plaza, the faithful bear
follows her, and although they can-
gt gxchinge,u word, thes ean find
happiness th 100K, -
‘Arrangements tor engagement
must be made with the father, and
then courtship may take place at
closer range. but always in presence
of the fatnily.
a Ne
It would pay a Jot ot us’ not to
know go much about the color of thls
‘or thot person. If the other fellow
does not know, as smurt as he thinks
‘he Is, then you do not know. Many a
good’ man and woman has lost a Job
ee account of your git tongue.
Old Stable of
Dan Paich Is
Now Cinders
‘St. Paul, Minn—Burning of the old
norte stable: om the cormer MW
Behave farm st Savages Minny mens
ireres‘with a Tony extinted ae $100.
Ob,"marked the. passing of = tan
mane familiar to scores of horsemen
Throughout ‘the’ United, ‘States and
Canada,
Originally ult in 1904 as a home
fof Ban" Caren, famous king o¢ the
facers the stable was eragually in
Erayea ‘ny slse sintit quarters were
Svallaple for 200 horses,
‘During the time Snvage operated
the arnt feom 200 to 290 hones were
Muntierea “there, “Including mung
Sorts champions,
“the structure Was of pecullar de:
sign and. covered four. acres “0
Sand." Sie’ wings suited, out from
The eénter’ building. which Wa
{opped By. huge: enpola,
‘Ono: of the features. was. a. halt
rile enclose) ence track around. the
Mabie: “he covered. track way well
lighted. with ‘more ‘than 3000" i.
owsy-an ie was thece that the lat
Se Savage trained Such ‘amous
ihorees as Dun Patch, ‘Minor Hele
George Cano. Reno Cin ant others
Se eRS ald ‘to hace een the. only
fone of tts Kind in the world and. at
{hieiea much attention from all see
Cans or the globe,
Sehusurious quartera were provided
by ies Savage for hig champions. 1
Was in this stable, that Dam. Patch
Mica July 24, Taae" june 32 hours be
fore the: death ot ME. Savage, it
owner
oNGMortly after Mr, Vuvage ded al
tne horses wore sold. at publle aue-
Hon, °Htecently: the siable had beer
tise to house 95 end of full-utooded
Holsteta eattlo, whch, with one, ex:
Caption, were seseued from the biaze
Michie" sata conve started. (rom
Spostancous combustion tn alfall
Spoctaneges come
USE COPPER TO
“The use of conner sulphate for the
disinfection of reservoirs ani the de=
‘struction of algue and noslous germs
in water has led co much discussion
fof the old iden thae copter is date
‘ferous “to “halth.. comments the
Wishington Stare An villelat of he
[department of agriculture maintains
‘thut a change has come over scien-
‘thie opinion on this subject. Strante
fs ie'may seem, he says, there fs not
an authentic. ease of copver yotson=
Ing ‘on record. either in this country
Or abroad, si he nds that toxicorey
gists and physiologists who have sUt-
fetentiy. studied. the subject agree
[that copper, a the amount used for
purineation ‘of water, i harmless. On
Recount of the many defects inthe
[practieal use ot tltradan plants he
‘Fegarda purification of water suppiles
byeopndr usw prefemtbie incthod, oF
Bt leaut, ag a safe ausilinry.
eS
Deer from the mountains recently
raided hay felds and gurdena in Sko-
ania counts Washington. "The hot
dry weather in the mountains cauwed
the Yeeding srounds to Ue deserted
fand the amimats swarmed to the val-
iurs for food. Entire crops were
nad be the davasien.
Long Walks
to Country
Schools End
Several States Provide
Busses That Carry
Boys and Girls
In the cattle raising states the
farmer’ ts Just’ beginnlog to crawl
from under the crushing load of debs
accumulated at the banks and other
reuie agencies In the last wo, Years
of droath amd talting prices. Bue he
aw road probtems i his educatioant
Syater thAe make improvement more
Dressing than it many” other states:
Gisiahora, Aitonesot and Towa, have
heen vonsolldating. hundreds of their
oral Senools of oe room tuto mod-
fs unlon vehoote ands aes tench-
ere. “The new schools bulle by twa
disictets in comopecation axe more
‘widely seattered than before.
‘The problem of transportation has
‘been forced on these states. Okla-
Noma‘ hunger for education ia: seen
Inthe carryiag o¢ 31000 pupils at
Dubllc expense.” Most of theve travel
eee Se eae A, Cette
Uy the communities involved: Lows
1g transporting 34,000 pupli, alinne-
jtotn 20,000. Ten othe staten are
‘carrying lesser numbers. ‘Tho South
Invested some of fts higher, cotton
[und tobacco earnings of the war pe-
fod “in consolidated” schools aaa
Transportation. North Carolina,
Georgia, Plorida, "Kentucky and
Texas have ‘bulle more that 1200
couvolldated schoots, and aro carey=
foe puplis to them
‘Such investments are among the
vest ever made.” ‘Thoy show the ur~
‘ivaiSot the. spirie of progcess tat
long ago guve America the teadersnip
Ja publle education. - School. house
Investments buve yielded returns a
tRouvandiola. “They. will-contiaus to
‘make a return in the maanood emt
omashood of the country.
i federal aid ip ceeded ‘anyenere
ft 1s im co-operation Arse of all with
this consoildatea school house. Ta =
perlod of necessary economy forced
bythe business depression of the Inst
Sar the nation must defer many fm=
provements and worthy enterprises.
But those. rural ‘uistriets “that are
taking saceitieey for the educational
future of thelr ehildcen aro pianeiage
the seed beds on which the ‘ations
inture depends.
‘The road that leads to the rurat
school i still the road ‘shend 23 Te
as been since ‘the settlement-of tho
colonies in America. It is creditable
fo the farmers o¢ the West and South
that they: have maintained this effort
Int period when agriculture haw sut=
foced “moro. than’ other industrs:
ESadea with dene through the macs
fapld deciine in prices of farm prod
{iets chan “ochee ‘comtmouities, they
have dome remarkably. well
‘our Western and Southern states
in’ spite. of the depression last. year
tides “Ss. ‘consolldated "schools ts
itoco. already erected. Bach new
Shoot meant the closing of some old
famohackie. structure. “poorly ven
{lated poorly. heated, Foughiy
Suipped, uncouth and, worse of all,
Fepeltent’to the capatie teacher, who
avotds fe.
Tmproved ronds widen the area that
can bo served by" one of the unton
SBhogis with the aid’ of the motor
Omnibus. One good road ‘often en=
Ghies the cunvoligation of two. dis-
ieiets that otherwise could nor be ef-
fected.
Teas that glve more ready acceva
to these scattered schools should re
Stave prionty of consideration is the
Soverament’s program of ald—Finan~
scree
Button Makers
Use Fish to
Grow Pearls
So anxious are the buttonmakers
to perpetuate tno supply of a mate™
Pamir ea see
sal inven Se th, Fae
{ie iy Natal Smoution Se
ing with the government fishertey
[bureau in efforts to propagate arti-
we eta trope ore
SS ate pee ae
eg oc Sat
regular business of rescuing ‘millions:
orien cesar male
stranded in drring-up pools by the
Sandal in depsey owt oy fe
Goat Stange ats
Esta a tl Late
ner, of ne ts oane fe,
Hote one may, See, Se
scl ith te oa pe
i of rain manatee Es
Seeder aaean SS
cing en tga nae
Darl ne Ofer on Nemes
sceen Serato te mrs
decboanied cota pope nate
feeay cre emt st from fan
Ietchiog tates at feme S
odes pene ter Pee
Seated wih simit hae lon
Bese, hee ee ae
ees aon te li of ates, Cy
igoeisiten See ee
Spat then. ues eho aes
oft deilommes ane, ee
eclecr ue at, her pie
ioe a
Mee trae ce ware thes
Se ecg Seen re ther,
suet te aks en
ae veal ce, ahs Milt
Soar ee ef ae
enna pena crepe he
sepa et Saas
teat
See
BROOKLYN HAS
Greenwood cemetery in Brooklyn,
comprising 473 acres, was opened in
1840, nd since that the more than,
300,600 burials have been made in te
ee control is vested in a beacd of
public trustent whe hace tor ler
Inaintenanee a fund uf nearly $1,006
000, sage. the Indianapolis News.
Among. the noted monuments . in
Greenwood cemetery are those erect~
ed in memory of Hornce Greeley,
Samex Gordon Bennett. ohn Mut-
thews, the Brown brothers, SP. i
Morse, Mary M. Danser. Charlotte
Cunda Capt. Cara and A. §, Serib-
ner. ‘The soldiers" monument, tho
Areinen's monument. the Brooklyn.
theater monument, the pilot monu-
ment and the hronze statue of. De-
Witt Clinton are also worthy of no=
tee.
Wherever there 19.2 civit. rights
law every _member of the Race should
take advantuge of that law and seg
that the state lives up to it and en=
forces it. Carry your cases to court
and stand‘on your rights.
The Composite Race
PAGE FOURTEEN
SYNOPSIS
One day Hannah faints on the bed. Her physician is called, who confides in the physician heimner that Hannah is about to become a mother. She is made to avoid scandal. It is thought that the child's father is Louise Kahn, Hannah off on a fake trip to Europe, another girl being sent in her home to be cared for in a city. She sends for him. He comes Association with him during six months causes her love for Hannah to increase her great ability. While her baby is growing closer to her arms, she is in the sunshine of Karl's love.
CHAPTER XL (Continued)
CHAPTER XI (Continued)
I week-events, which had brought them so much of joy and bliss, they had received a gift from her, but a day before his usual Saturnal visit, she received a gift with a look of anousid and sollicit concern, as if wondering, while she read the effect upon him. Read the letter:
Since it is but a matter of a few weeks when the inevitable will happen, I have loved in accordance with your determination to take its course, may I once more remind you of your father, Loulie Kahn, but by so do you only appease your father by marrying Loulie Kahn, but by so do you world a knowledge of the unfortunate contemptra which for so loved ones and the social set which hulled you its queen. Surely you and fulfill your promise. Society, everyone is artificially awaiving your journey, yourself a most faithful and reliable ally in this drama of real life. The Goldman girl ran in to her card from you (?), mulled from Bois de Bologne, stating that you have been the fewest days. So do not, I am a plead and of you, disappoint—
Athens-79-
Karl, after slowly reading the pathetic appeal and entreaty of Han-turbed and disquiled, knowing, however, he might excuse and ex-plan his situation that, after all, he was dis-accountable to it. Also that dis-accountable to him it seemed to him he could but a indrance to her, speaking happily to comply with her mother's expecta-tion. With her usual decisiveness, feeling that Karl) was right, she wrote to her mother—would keep her word.
.
---
You can have no idea how your
letter moved me when I read that you had no thought of marrying; that you have solemnly determined to miss, the happiness and pleasure God created us to enjoy; that you have a philosophy; the superlative of delight, that you can never know and remain in cellabry. You say in your letter that on the occasion of James' last visit he embraced and kissed you fervently, and Louise, which I am sure was reciprocated in your own feeling and should urge you to consider marriage. There are pleasures, sweet dearle, in married life, providing that all hypocricles are omitted, and the counterpart in a life of cellabry.
You remember, Louise, the old which who lived in Granstown, who had a marital pleasures and joy? Well everyone of which I have learned was true. The fact. Louise, that madness as madely as when I was unheralded in the world, tells the tale. No pettiness, but the interest. I have in you and my desire to have you seek your share, have ill—of the moral in life" must be my excuse.
Is it inherent apathy, my dear, or what is it, that causes you to oppose it, obstinate toward the goal, to play Venus to work yourself up to a state of Nirvana? How would you play Venus to a rum-suaked Adonix, in refusing to display toward him the least desire indicative of sex for the blandishness—if you will—and fondlings of the sterner sex for the blandishness—if you marry you would soon discover the secrets you so long have sought.
To remind you how匀 we both were: "Once upon a time, in our marriage you would soon come happenings of former days.
Prove to me that you do not re-
serve your name, uninteresting letter, by写
writing soon to your devoted and unchang-
ing wife. MRS. MARY GARLAND
By AL. Jackson
The Trend of the Races: By George I was reeled E. Haynes. Published jointly by of the b. Council of Women for Home. M. Missiones and Missionary的目的 that the t. fictional States and Canada, New York. induced w.
"Where is the affinity between Edith Harrison and Iris Ackins, the author of *S. Paul Ickle* critic, after a special interview with Miss Gale. "She says she has read all of the books she has read, continues Mr. Boyd, "and when she says it you can hear the word the overtone. Different in style, in subject matter and in treatment, one minor ground." Nevertheless, Miss Gale makes no attempt to conceal her admiration for Mrs. Wharton's book, "What a phenomenon the Moon," Mrs. Wharton's new novel, Miss Gale writes: "I spent a week What a phenomenon she is, and how much she has done and is doing for her writing say hands over a book."
LITERARY NOTES
THE months have come and down, and a few days prior to the end of the month, more a fashionable accommodation retreat to await the coming reunion with Louise Kahle her home was overrun with her many girl friends, the advice they felt in duty bound, to render to Hannah a young prospective mother, while the single girl she was expecting it should be a girl with blue or hazel eyes, or a brunette, that it would be expected that it would be who had expressed what it would be.
Among her many girl visitors was Miss Maude Greece, a recent graduate of the University of most intimate friends. Miss Greece who was a philomath and who never allowed an opportunity to acquire a central attendant at the graduating exercises of the Jeral academy, a Negro woman who served as the central attendant at the graduating relationship she related to Hannah the incident of a composition on Ethnology Augusta, Georgia, her theme being "Platonism." Her aim was to inspire racial pride in the breasts of the students thought-out paper, Hannah, also a revelation, and I enjoyed it very well. She achieved the achievements of the darker races, telling of the prominent part they had in the civilization was first the civilization was first stilled and nourished in the minds and visions of the Blacks of the United States, and formed the visible universe out of pre-existent amorphous matter, creating man from the dust of the earth, and through the dim and early centuries of antiquity and back again the present outstanding civilization. Her listeners, many of whom were extended and appalled, describe himself as wild, one could almost feel, he or she that they were witnessing the achievement of men and which to this day are the puzzle of the engineering genius of the earth. It was indeed a aplendid discourse, coming, as it was, from Black woman, representing and speaking to people that we white guard simply as servants; were born and intended to be inferior, nothing more or different, springing from the same culture as servants; they generic and native haunt.
I was reading as above the episode of the bracelet in the last pages. * * * You understand that I mean that the bracelet episode was a marvel, fictionally—the emotion which it was all that of the engrossed participant in lives which I have become."
* * *
The 31st printing of the House-hold edition of the "Poems of William Cullen Bryant" press this week by D. Appleton and Co. They also announce the 10th printing of the 65th print of the Cod Ballad. The 65th printing of Clara Weeka-Shaw's "Textbook of the Cod Ballad" by Molly Eliot Seawell's perennially popular story of the American naval hero Clara Weeka-Shaw, the Bryan-Davin debate, to double for the 36th printing of Joseph Le Conte's work, "Evolution in Its Origins," to double also announced by the Appleton.
It is nearly 25 years since Booth Tarkington first bured into literary carefree, the story of the debonair barber and the haughty young beauty of the Romance movement upon which this book is recorded, many of its comrade romances that sold in hundreds of thousands, this biltown story has weathered the reaction to the gloomiest of realism and grew out of a comedy, "The Kisses of Marjorie" that Tarkington had written for "John a Dream," a "precious" novel. As they lay on the ground, a fancy taste. He illustrated it with a set of pen drawings. As they lay on the ground, a fancy. A romance began to take shape about the penciled figures of the Major and Ensign Gay, a tale of an angel who grew into the story of Monsieur Beaucaire. For two years the manuscript turned to send it to a publisher. At that time Mr. Tarkington was writing for Richard Nansel and making a book about the actor. There was a goodly number of publishers' reprints slips in 1900 the manuscript of Monsieur Beaucaire found its way to McClure's. Since then Tarkington's art has reopened and deepened, but, Monsieur Beaucaire remains as perfect in its work that has left his pen.
Christopher Morley's "Shandygirl" (Doublepage, Page & Company) has spolls public library and is hoping that some one will avail himself of the book, a collection of the book-lookup for a rest. Its record during the last year is a strenuous work, and it is on a vacation joint at the 13th, August 29, September 21 and 30 and 11, April 7 and 12, 5, January 5, January 7 and 28, February 2 and 11, April 3, 14 and 29, June 3 and 28 and returned July 3, 2015. The book is a refreshing traveling companion, for "Shandygirl" is the name of a popup store offering a mixture of bitter ale and ringerbeer.
CHAPTER X1U
. . .
---
---
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
prone to disbelieve the extreme charges against the Colored man as a class; also"—
"Just a moment, Maud—and pardon my interruption," said Hannah, and resume carinessness, "You speak of the ignorance they have against my interruption, the lack of individual experience, but the lack of myself, I am no longer the ignorant, befuddled—for a purpose quite our own, and my opinions and visions elicited change, a shaking-up, an evangelization as it were, away and other that that taught me precisely the nature of our租ual group, our brothers, fathers and sweethearts. I have seen of the great times and works of Negro wisdom and genius, reaching from distant lands to the world where civilization had even reached the aheores of our own splendid land and Russian steppes on the east to the Atlantic on the west, was a howling wilderness inhabited by wild men and no more savage than themselves, for the possession of the land, and, anew, eye preaching it. I was thoughtful enough to secure a list of these great Blacks and their works, which I will present the purpose of your personal inspection, and, should you be so disposed, to submit them to the Women's club education and enlightenment."
"Why, Maud," asked Hannah, "vannot you understand why? The women must be constantly minding them of the intimate mates in the South, incident to their caralrion with—and generally to their misdiet; that's why, and mainly why? They desire to keep the gap between the white woman and the white woman knowing this is an age of reciprocity, the fear no doubt is gradually taken up by their sisters, wives and daughters, having their example as a guide and excuse, may do likewise; may, if we do, for as decades they have Negro women, not refuse, if so inclined, to meet their advance with encouragement out of wedlock, as the case may be. I would like to be free, Maud, upon justice with truth as a witness, to plead the cause of the Blacks of the South in equity, and at the same time, in the indication of the civilization's indignation the black and damnable unfairness, cruelty and injustice, they have for a half century of standing, and to 'the manner of standing, and from a purely human imposition, would, by our so-called "southern chivalry" (?) be enveloped in a pall of love, and from a sweet-faced daughter, who had the temerity to express himself and charged with caralrion desires for "Niggers." For instance, do not you recall the shameful and insulting treatment of young and sweet-faced daughter, who had the temerity to express himself and charged with unmercifully whipped. I don't know what you white women would not do if you could have your way of these damn Niggers! Beides—
"Pahaw." broke in Maud, inter-
ning with the light. Come quick and look, Hannah. It is not the Rosebond girl gallanting a group of other girls headed for here? you do that, although you would much like to have had you finish the other girls a chance for a chat; bye, bye, and God's blessings and joy. She kissed her lightly on her forehead, cre she passed from the room.
CHAPTER XIV
THE obstetrician in attendance,
including the matron and under
nurses of the fashionable
accompaniment, retreat, located
(To be continued)
Defender Junior CHILDREN'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER
SCHOOL
STUDY
SPORTS
Bud Says:
According to the letter, I have received, more and more, the Billikenmen are getting into school. Most of those who live states are already enrolled. The man living in the South have the Billikenmen writes to me in the South they do not have the age long in school that their girl friends have. In the North we kept in doors and stored for most of the year. In the Robt. Watkins (Bud Billiken) places, the term is
enrolled. The major
having in the South
have you to enter
within the South
write a memo to me
in the South they
have the same long term
in school that their
boy and girl friends have.
They love boys and girls
love boys and girls
love boys and girls
attaining for
most ten months
ROBT. WATKIN
South, in a few
Bud Billiken
places the term
in the same
of them the child
dren go from four to eight months.
Everything is so nice in the
South. There is so much sunshine
down to run through in the country and beauty
is getting impatient when they are forced to
Did you ask your teachers the question
that I asked you last week? What
there is something about a lot of the
there is something about a lot of
disaspatised when they shouldn't be.
have been thinking ever since I first ought not to have. You see, I try to do things I run across articles written by older folks about as young folks that start to walk with me last week. In a story with a saying that he thought our educational system was wrong and he went on with it, he told me that he thought the theory. I followed him pretty good and when I had finished the article I thought just the things that had probably been sometimes. So I shoved the entire matter away and when we grow up if there are young now to do anything about it, we will well and when we grow up if there are young now to do it right. We are going to content ourselves and get everything out of school that we can as things now
We are going to have some very good stories. The man has written a story for the Billikens. He is Bemile Goodwin, and in it he tells the story for P. et P. on the back page of the Dealer's catalog. You can get back there. I have read the story and it is good. You all must be able to be easy to read. I have not heard from many Billikens who had formed Billikens club in their town. You can be easy to now that school is started again. Each school oath to have a teacher and let us know what you are doing in your school. You can meet this week. All right. Billikens take care of your school next week when you begin from BUD.
Poems
The Four-Leaf Clover
As lucky as can be,
I look for search in the soft, thick
gran.
Where they hide and laugh at me!
I know that somewhere they beckon
if I could only see?
Oh! I want to be their clever lover!
Won't you bring good luck to me?
The New Moon
Ah, you moon, so young and fair,
Tanging in the sky, there—
Tanging of silver light
Shining in the starry night,
Waltzing with the moon,
To tell us of his love and care.
For love, for care, for beauty, light.
We thank thee, Father, morn and night.
Playmates
The waves are such good friends of
mine. We together bite o' times;
They knock me down; then just for fun
we walk around and then hide from me
And next they hide themselves from me
Among the big waves, they tumble back,
And from the sand, brush 'way my
And I just laugh and shout with glee
And I see we race and brush all day
And so we race and brush all day
Till mother calls us in from play,
My face was washed clean, my prayers all
I hear those friendly voices plain
And then I soak way down in bed,
And singly cover up my head,
And then I soak way down in bed,
Play all day and all night, too.
O T
This week, you will see I have journeyed up into Canada. Peruiana who called at my office to see me were not able to do so. You know there are areas, England and lots of other places, and pay howly. These Billiken in Canada can easily get the job. But Hud doesn't think so of them, but they family, aren't so? What city in Canada
Biddle
Alin Harrison, 223 Chestnut street, New York, to show that he is a member of the club and to show that he is a member of the club to be answered by Billiken. He is to answer two at moon and three in the eve of New Year.
He has told me the answer and says
he will publish it. He will answer
in I may publish it after awhile.
BIRTHDAY NOTICE
All Billkins must send me the
dates will be published so that
every other billkin may get cards
her birthday. Don't forget to send
her birthday. Don't forget to send
get it in the paper and have the
get it in the paper and have the
both boys and girls write to you in
Short Story
Sister and brother, hand in hand, start life
in one of the scars of
their death, and his
sister, Ruth.
orphans, whose par-
ties were long ago,
weeks ago in a rail-
way carriage.
A. B. B.
Elmer is 12 years while his sister is 10. They are coming to be together to pay their aunt and uncle, the Bertons. Almost all of a house," reclaimed the train sped by a mea 4.17 m on a platform on the banks of a small replied his sister with a sweet smile. Ruth had long brown curls that hung down her back almost as if she had about 12 came through the car with a basket of fruit and two apples, handling one of each to his sister. Elmer was the biggest for his sister. When any boy asked him why, he answered, "I will be bigger for his sister he would promptly reply. "Because she is a girl parted her sister turned to his sister said, "I pity that boy for he has to walk the way he and his sister would have to work to make their way in the
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER 11.
"Elsie" called Mr. Berton, "come
inside." Mr. Berton, "I will come,
I dish dressing I will" returned Elsie,
Mr. Berton. Mr. Berton molested the butter to
come there. When he came in, he
tried to get out of his car.
come there. When he came, Mr. Berton asked the bulber who took Eilmer's suitcase that had remained in the room. He turned to a small dinney room in the back of the house, and put it on a table, to a butter. After he left Eilmer looked around the room and said in a disapointed room like Mr. Berton stays in. "The room contains a table, like the one in the living room, one large bed with a the one in the bedroom, one sheet to lay on. In the corner was a wasahand. Ruth and Eilmer met Else who came trailing into the room dressed in a plaid dress and her feet. She nearly knotted Elmer over with surprise when she came and expected to meet a plaid dress, neat girl like his beloved sister. "And you want you children to go upstairs and play in the dress clothing." Mr. Berton.
"I have a pretty gingham dress." said Buth.
Ruth.
"That will never do," said Mrs. Bor-
"That will never do." said Mrs. Borton
to
Just then the bell rattle and the chill
into the second parlor.
The second parlor, it opened.
Mrylle says our group and girl's desire to be a jolly good girl and we are going to try to make those departmental Amphibians a jolly good girl and we are going to try to make those departmental Dear Bud: Here I am. I again. I'm coming up to the required standard by counting among those whom you conceive counted among those whom you conceive in school is here and I am hard at work again. I am a sophomore this year. I am a sophomore in apartment are nonpareil. Is there another drawing and painting in print? A Blinken Myrtle Stamfield, 1131 Court street, Vicksburg, Mls.
Buddie Gudel doesn't want to be a teacher. We want to be his only 17, but he is certainly making progress, but he looks out for others. Our Mr. Difler was telling me that he must keep him not long ago. Keep at it, Buddy. Say,住 Dold. Draught: It was not my mother. Our pardon my mistakes. Your compliment my pardon my mistakes. Your compliment a source of pleasure to me.
Many of my friends were delighted to be told that I should have sent it to the Negro World, Ha. Ha. The first membership is Beatrice Jefferson, 230 Tolaloa street, Beatrice Jefferson, 230 Tolaloa street, management at first, but I believe I will prove she will care every one I see nor any aligibles for the insane asylum, for I want you to be to you. Hope I don't seem geogiotic, but just a word about myself, I wish to bitter, medium, as per your choice, bitter, medium, as per your choice, but you truly trust, you might think you were in the "Valley of the Giants," Logan Gould, New Orleans, La.
This week's drawing, "Smiles," is by Miss Oile Oulie at Poorna ill. You have seen her here before, she draws well and she writes well. Below there is reproduced a poem that Miss Martin wrote. His title is
Smiles
When things are going wrong, all you are feeling below it. When the days all seem so long, and your friends are down on you. Just in smile.
When you're acting rather yellow
And you don't know what to do.
Think of the other fellow
Who's acting rather yellow.
Who was hit harder than you.
Judith.
When you fail to get a square deal
From one of your best friends.
Deal with it.
But try to make amends.
And use that smile.
If you haven't marked the mark
If your loss your chance in life.
When your whole life seems so dull
And try to smile.
OUE MARTIN:
Vocabulary Hints
Daniel Webster, the great orator,
he became a great man. Of course he
has meant a great man, of course in
meansings of words in order to be grate
or to be useful, but that knowledge
and ideas get us on in the world. I
words as they can. Some of the words
in the book over them and send in
the with meanings. Each week we will
write about the words of the past week and a new
words of the past week in a new
meansion over. Words for this week are
Billiken Wit
Indianapolis Pay
"I tell them, 'The old
friends are best after all, and I can
how?'"
"Where can you find a new friend
that you by you as long as the old ones have?"
Maybe it's "Under the new
friend to the watermason." "Have you seen
Miss Molly's dance?" "Done, then bent
over the washout once more." "No, am I, I am been in the wet, yet."
JOIN THE
BUD BILLIKEN CLUB
Every boy and girl reader of this
book will be encouraged to
Costs nothing to you - pay no
dues. Fill out and return the appl-
lain today and become a member
Application Blank for Membership
Bud Bililiken Club
I wish to become a member of The
Chicago Defender Bud Bililiken club
My name is
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
Billiken Studio
MISS RUTH HAIR
Mississippi seems the states in the Billiken clubs. Miss
to be leading all
to be leading all
hair of Jack-
hair of Jack-
subject of this
sketch's
sketch's
in Jackson. Down
there they have
written us that
we write us that
really humili-
ing
THE
MISSING
MEN
Part of her pet
tell you about that
great meet-and-greet
Billiken club
Billiken club
a few time.
Twenty-five parens
were present that
those that didn't
club joined. We are planning great
clubs for the future. I am sure that
we will have many wishes, but, as
all lust illikens do,"
You know you got a club in your town?
All boys and girls have a lot of spare
useful to do. They should find something
useful to do.
of the best ways is to get your club
will carry club reports in our library.
How to Make
How to Make
A Corn Stalk Fiddle
Plomer Soap
Save all the pieces of over-lift fat have enough to render into tallow, have enough to render into tallow, and have a quantity of tallow times and put into a large iron kettle. Have ready some lye made by letting of closely packed wood ashes. This lye of closely packed wood ashes. This lye of closely packed wood ashes. Before you are ready to make soap, have ready to test the lye to see if it is strong enough to test the lye and if it needs about one to four times for use. If it is too strong, add more. If it is too weak, let a little hot water have enough to add to the lye which you are using.
Cover well the pieces of tallow in the bowl. Wash the soap and water if it is all right, the soap will "come" in one half hour. Wash the "wet soap" and use be used for washing dishes and clothes, if you cook it a longer time, your soap will do. Do live you where you can get lots of bay berries? If you do, you can make a sauce to cook with and cook in water to get the tallow. Use this with the lye, and you will get a soap to be used on your hands and face.
Charm Ple
New Members
New Members
Here they are, fellow Hillkens. Boys are a gritty force, the ones that respond to and near and all will respond to their fellow members correspond with ERIE COOK, age 19
L. HARRIS, age 18
D. JEFFERSON, age 12
D. JEFFERSON, street, New Orleans, LA.
EMMA MAYER, age 14
Port Gibson, Miss.
P. O. Box, 12, Trenton, Penn.
L. R. JEFFERSON, age 15
JAMES LEE GARFIELD,
JAMES LEE GARFIELD,
avenue, 15
WILLIAM STARLE, age 15
2106 Juliette street, Dallas, Texas
2106 Juliette street, Dallas, Texas
2106 Juliette street, Dallas, Texas
RIGHT, age 15
2005 Cockburn, Dallas, Texas
LUCILLE WHITLEY, age 15
MISS LILLIAN AUSTIN, age 12
MISS LILLIAN AUSTIN, age 12
EIGHTH street, Clinton, Ind.
18TH street, Clinton, Ind.
13TH street, Greenport, N. T.
14TH street, Greenport, N. T.
SCOTTLEDA, Ga.
H. DAVIS,
MELVIN RUFF, age 16
MELVIN RUFF, age 16
Columbia, S. C.
GREACE WHITLEY, age 10
271 Chapel street, Norfolk, Va.
271 Chapel street, Norfolk, Va.
134s, Asper place, Evanston, Ill.
134s, Asper place, Evanston, Ill.
15s, LePorto, age 15
ARLEEN MCOV, age 14
ARLEEN MCOV, Long, Louis.
EMMA LEE MADSEN, age 15
EMMA LEE MADSEN, age 15
JAMES LEE MADSEN, Miss.
MISS LEE MADSEN, Miss.
161 Ourtland street, Tarrytown, N. T.
162 Ourtland street, Red Oak, Iowa
164 Grimes street, Red Oak, Iowa
AIR BAY, Gilson, Miss.
EUGNIA GOFF, age 13
JAMES GOFF, age 17
JAMES WILLE AUSTIN, age 1
WILLE AUSTIN, age 1
RUTH JONES, age 1, Chicago
RUTH JONES, age 1, Chicago
MARGARET JOHNSON, Marion, Ind.
MARGARET JOHNSON, Marion, Ind.
6520 Champaign avenue, Chicago
6520 Champaign avenue, Chicago
105 Arviston, Martinsville
105 Arviston, Martinsville
112 Mayo street, Richmond, Va.
112 Mayo street, Richmond, Va.
151 Kennith avenue, Shreveport, La.
ROBERTA GREEN
ROBERTA GREEN, Little Rock, Ark.
GERMIE BONDS
GERMIE BONDS, Little Rock, Ark.
WILLIAM SDION
WILLIAM SDION, Chamberland, Md.
GOLDEY TRUFF, 18
16 Chapel street, Atlanta, Ga.
16 Chapel street, Atlanta, Ga.
187 East 31st street, Cleveland, Ohio
187 East 31st street, Cleveland, Ohio
70 W Geranium street, Fitzgerald, Ohio
180 Hendra street, Detroit, Mich.
GENEVA BROWN, age 15
1054 W. Lynch street, Jackson .Miss.
Louisville, KY
306 Virginia avenue, Middleton, Ohio
SHAUNETT TEELLB, age 14
1054 W. Lynch street, Washington, O.K.
FLOSSI WILSON, age 11
1054 W. Lynch street, Washington, D. C.
EDDIE RAMSEY
Co. D. 24th inf. Columba, N. M. -
Co. D. 24th inf. Columba, N. M. -
Co. D. 24th inf. Columba, N. M.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
Bricks Were First Used for Writing
Babylonians Took Clay to Make All Their Records On
To all of us who only think about bricks as hard, heavy and generally red things, which one does not like to touch, we must be one’s hands so rough, it is surprising, indeed, to be told that bricks were not made of bricks, nowadays we use paper—nandily, for writing on. It is hard to believe it. Anything less like writing paper than bricks is quite true, only it takes us back such a long way, as regards time, that we get near to the beginning of the Christian Science Monitor writer.
No Tree No Stone
We must, in fact, go back to the period when people first began to want to live in dwellings that were permanent in some places, and who were from the weather and wild animals. These people were the Babylonians, but they were not timber was available, nor were there any stone quarries, within easy reach, and, of course, it was long before they and bring from another place the things they wanted. But there was a clear near them and they saw how they made bricks, and began to make bricks. The famous city of Babylon was built of bricks, and so was the Tower of Babylon. The city was all known how the children of Israel made bricks when they were captives in Egypt, although they had many of the pyramids are made partly of stone, partly of brick.
Used While Soft
Now, besides the desire for permanent houses in which to live, the Bahylonian also began to want to be able to place on rooftops of buildings that contain agreements made among themselves. The question was how to do it. They were not as fortunate as we are, who knew what things we want. So they wrote in bricks when they were soft or in a liquid state, and, after the sun had dried them the marks, of course, still remained on the material. It is believed that the earliest material on which letters were ever written was on brick. So we really ought to know what we do. Many of these inscribed tablets have been found in recent times by explorers who visited the Bahylonian district and from them we have learned a lot about the history of the Bahylonian age.
Documents in Brick
The Romans were great brick builders, too. Even when stone was abundant in the near neighborhood, it found easier to make them, and the Romans built stone and convey it to the spot where it was wanted. The Romans built extensively wherever they conquered, and they built historic documents, because so often they had on their date and the mark of their maker. One of the Roman leopards, the Roman in different parts of Germany, and we know a good deal about where they went and when they were in each place, from the earliest to the modern tiles in shape. The workers in England there are many remains of Roman buildings in different parts of Europe. Their bricks are much smoother than the bricks in the modern tiles in shape. The workers in England are taller tiers (we have all heard of Wat Tyler) were probably brick-builders, and the architecture in the England of medieval days are Hampton court and Lambeth palace, London.
Went to Jail to Keep Secret of Making Gold
Went to Jail to Keep Secret of Making Gold
Alexander Seton, a Scottish alchemist, was thrown into prison by his brother, who was the master of him the secret of the philosopher's stone. Seton refused to produce a fortune in transmuted gold which the dulcified asker of the alchemist told him not to obtain. When a fellow alchemist, Sendivogius, offered to help him escape in return to a secret information about a soldier Seton agreed. He regained his freedom, but, with the caution of the Seton, he refused to give it to Seton, so he gave Sendivogius an ounce of transmutation powder, it is recorded. This powder was used to such good effect that it was used to treat diseases and production of gold. But eventually the ounce was used up. Seton was dead by that time, and Seton his widow, hoping that the Seton had left her the secret of mixing the powder. If she knew, however, she never told her second husband.
Men who appear to the white race place a compulsive love of women because they look white and who make that same plea in societies and lodges to make committed light souls instead of white men as to Race's ambition.
DEVELOP YOUR POWER OF ACHIEVEMENT
Be a Doctor of Metaphysics
Unfold Your Psychic Powers.
Be a Psycho Analogist
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Know Thyself. Be the Master of Your Career. Learn to Use Your Forces. Open the Door of Your Mentorship. Remember, every man possesses a Spiritual Gift. We Show You How to Develop It. Master Applied Psychol-ogy. Open the Door of Your Conceilous and Sub-Conselous Mind Power. Don't be a mere mugshot slave for the professional operators. Why Not You? If you desire to better your position, become a professional Metaphysician at $7.50 to $100.00 per week. Now should be the opportune moment to "How to Become a Doctor of Metaphysics — Unfolding of Divine Power" the book is free to read. Reader of the White Institute of Sciences, $664-60 Monera & Venue, Los Angeles, California.
OUTCRY AGAINST THE "BLACK HORROR" AND AN URGENT APPEAL TO AMERICANS
In front of us lies a pamphlet of about a hundred pages entitled: *Coloured Pages of distress from German women* (published by H. R. Engelmann, Berlin). These represent the crimes committed by black and coloured men. Any one's blood must boll at the horrors committed on decembers in the past, reported in these pages in a cold matter-of-fact way. In them special emphasis is laid on the record would be far more numerous
The ancient Egyptians, it is said, were forbidden to eat of the onion, garlic or leek. The priests of Pelium record that the onion was barred from hunger and thirst, and hence was manifestly out of place in fasts and during religious ceremonies. It did not enjoy joy or to be tormented with hunger and thirst on days set aside for fasting. The Hebrews regarded the onion purify for its culinary value. The Greeks were fond of both onions and garlic. The Romans were drinking to increase thirst and enhance the pleasure of the cup. But in the palmy days of Rome they came largely the likeness of the rattle.
In the middle ages any well set table contained a plate of red onions, observes the Medical Record. The chief appeal of the diuretic and remedy for drops. This belief has persisted up to the present time, and it is somewhat strange that that kind of drug were pronounced the best remedy for drops. In 1668 Tracteur reported that a case of parenchybotes nephritis, with edema albuminuria, in a patient with mild kidney disease in ansaarase or both legs there had been a hydrothorax. The treatment had provoked a strong diuretis. In 1910 Mongoung says a still more prominent case of the life with ascites cleared up, after three days of onion eating, with a critical polyuria. Cruchet had seen a patient with drops recovering in 20 daily. In 1912 Dalce published his article on the "onion cure". He spoke of a case of a three-quart diuresis produced in a dorsal patient with Lacertc, to whom we are indebted for the preceding information, frequently witnessed the diuretic action in soldiers, notably in a Senegalese with sero-viruses, and drops due to nephritis.
'BLACK DEATH' IS SPREADING
SHORTHAND WILL
O.K.'D BY COURT
A will, written on a telegraph blank in shorthand, has been admitted to the court. Its validity being upheld by the probate court of England. It was written in meticulous writing as the quickest means of expressing his wishes regarding the disposition of his badly goods and his debts to his family. He had only a few hours to live.
Stiff Collars, Hard-Boiled Shirts, Cuffs Coming Back
than those officially reported which seems but natural as the feeling of fear from victim from denouncement, partly from fear of retaliation, for often denunciators have been punished for their crimes. Many millions are being paid by the French to suppress publication of these crimes and the German newspapers. The news paper is published in the occupied districts have been forbidden by the French to report crimes. In some places the papers were compelled to publish declarations according to which the black troops committed no assaults; it is a fact that black soldiers push white women from the footpaths assisting with the buttends of their wives. It is a fact that the French have started compulsory brothels with white girls in them for the use of prostitutes. It is a fact that the numbers of births (coloured bastards) is steadily increasing; they that parents, teachers, erogenes have been punished because they had forbidden to the girls in their intercourse with colored soldiers.
It is a fact that a nigger took part for months at the sittings of the Poor Land and expressed his scorn and contempt for the white accused;
It is a fact that a French officer to the Land and expressed his scorn and contempt for help, bawled out to her; These fellows have been away from home now for 25 years and must be specially kept on fair hair, (Dollice Court Sitting of 10. April 1520).
It is a fact that black soldiers are outraging boys and infect them with venom; they are specially kept on fair hair, (Dollice Court Sitting of 10. April 1520).
It is a fact that girls are seized, tied on seats or held by the black soldiers and then violated until they die.
It is a fact that mothers who run to help their ill-used children, have been simply shot down;
The women have been torn from their beds and that their fettered husbands had to look on whilst their wives were being outlawed.
It is a fact that up to the beginning of 1521 the following cases have been put on record by the police:
20 cases of accomplished rape
20 cases of sexual misdemeanor of various other kinds
20 cases of unnatural intercourse with
The French chauvinists are trying to hide these facts. Abroad the news of the French occupation of the Rhine long ago. These lies are spread so persistently, that America has repeatedly endorsed the troops had been withdrawn. All that has been done, is that on approach of the cold season and owing to the fact that the soldiers, part of them has been transferred to more southerly districts, but the French have not rolled again, their number keeps on increasing. France does not dream of withdrawing the black troops. On the other hand, the occupation of German territory
"Tis a painful duty to expose a far-reaching conspiracy against a American manhood. At the same time 'tis a stern satisfaction to bring American manhood face to face with the menacing facts, to bid them awake, show the mettle of their sires, spurn the tyrant's chain and all that sort of thing. Like most conspiracies this one aims to undermine the freedom of its victims. It is sardorit. It seeks to deprive the American male of his hard-won sloppiness. In a word, it aims to crib, coffin and confine him once and for all in the trammels of the presser."
The reformers have laid their plans nolessly and with great skill, declares a New York Sun writer, ussayfoo.com, but ussayfoo.com than these self-appointed missionaries have already done in their campaign to make the American look as if he it was a man who could have him back in board shirt fronts, stiffly hand sawing cuffs, wing collars, chest protecting ties and near-sear pearls before he knows what
Would End Sartorial Freedom?
But fortunately it is impossible to abolish all manly comfort at one fell swoop, and so the sartorial reformers will be able to "peaceful penetration." There will be an abundance of sport suits to paw over and try on when the stores at the first quirk of cold weather "warm" winter styles (designed a year ago). The sport suits will be there because the public demands 'em, must have 'em, insists on having 'em and collars, knitted ties and tread wets will be there for the same cogent reasons. But there will be other things, not so obvious, to reveal the passfyfoot mantle of the fashionable, silver tongued salesmen will try to enlist your interest in the "dressy" effect of stiff lissomed shirts, and you will be able to wear a coat of your new suit is of the type known as an "open faced vest," exposing an embarrassing expansion of shirt front.
Is the sawnie right? Would that the look neater if it were starched as and smooth as a tilt in the bathroom floor? Your collare bone aches at the prospect, but you wonder, "What is it?" and to wear it, and—the reformers have on you on the run.
And then-your tie. A string of knitted stuff really seems rather dinky, but it really looks out for, as it open faced vest. You agree with him. You would like to cover as much of unwanted shirt, hood as possible. You would like to be serious. And you probably end by buying the largest and latest chest
BE A DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
Investigate Chiropractic. Wonder-
demand for skilled practitioners greater
than ever before because Chiropractic
methods are no longer required.
Other methods have failed. Dr. F. H.
Rubel, D. C.
The Rubel College of Chiropractic
4041 Indiana Avenue, Chicago, IL.
Draxel 4922
CK HORROR" TO AMERICANS
by black troops a permanent institution by introducing compulsory mil- lion service in Africa and decreasing that out of the twelve year service two years have to be served in Europe, but of course not in France. The "Victor" Foch even called the blacks the strongest pillar of French power.
No age, no bodily condition gives immunity from the Black Horror. Pregnant women and even aged men are protected with special ways. "Could the walls of cells inhabited by raving maniacs speak of the psychic tortures endured by these victims," say the director of a lunatic hospital, "even the hardest heart would break."
Horse Be Forced U. S. F.
Machines Doi of Work; Run Build Trai
If all the farm boys a farms to work in the
"We had been in hopes" many German, women cry out in their disbelief, "we have known sufficiently to the world and that the world's conscience would bring forth assistance. But those in southeastern we find ourselves unnounced, ungovernment are lying and that not the white women have to be protected by the French Republic, but vice versa, the niggers from the island of Madagascar had to be protected by the white women on the Rhine. The same nigger who in France is only considered as a third-rate man and a dislike of discipline, is thus allowed to bear himself in the Rhineland as lord and victor. The French Government is thus adding cynical context to insult. In view of the barefaced scorn and compelled by the unspeakable disgrace heaped by the French on us, we must be a campaign with intellectual weapons. Millions of飞艇 must be sent out to England, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland and Italy, across the Ocean to North- and South-America, to Australia, in fact wherever white women are known to England and North-America.
Hard-Boiled
Buffs Coming Back
protectant at the haberdashery counter, a revival of the Cultus scarf of nouns and formal memory, with its great "apron" at one end.
Your father undoubtedly the older man, drawing your attention to its gorgeous coloring, begges you with a deft illustration of the different shades, and confidently he recommends the "once over" as the latest and smartest thing, when secured with a tasty skinkp.
An skinkp, of course—such a monumental tie absolutely demands a skinkp, however it may be tied. And thereby the labelades will be showcased full of pins at all prices. So all goes merry as a marriage bell, especially when he shows you something very new and smart at the time of colored skinkchiefs to match your tie.
And if you get that far you're very likely to match the handkerchiefs. They're coming in in the warmest hues and man-made colors, and the winter. For it seems that low shoes are becoming so popular for winter shoes that we are becoming a drug on the market.
Derby and Separate Pants
By the time you've dolled up to that little Mr. White Made Us, you feel that they can't make it hard that would be a reproach to the rest of your finery, and you'll find your own way to mislead solemnly of a derby. And if the passion for being "matty" really is your passion, you may, be wanting to blow yourself to "separate pants" of stripy stuff, with a dark coat and waistcoat, or formal revival straight from London.
But the battle don't won yet. The sport suit and its accessories will die hard, and much depends on which way the college boy jumps.
"Goes Over
the Top"
Straightens any head
destred, soft and pli
that will not wear
highly perfumed, so
It is a straightener
going easy for the
Looks better after ea
jar, enough to last fi
two together sent
"Goes Over the Top" MADAGASCO and Makes Your Hair Behave
Straightens any head of rigid, stubborn or harsh hair in 15 minutes. Makes the hair straight or wavy as desired, soft and pliable. Does not make the hair "Red," but makes a jet black "MALAGYA" finish that will not wear off, with only one application. Will last from 4 to 7 weeks. MADAGASCO is a highly perfumed, soft lathering cream. Easy to wash out, easy to spread. Makes a rich, foamy lather. It is a straightener, shampoo and dandruff remover. It does not gum or tangle the hair: makes going easy for the comb. Wash the hair any time without fear of it turning back to former state. Looks better after each washing. MADAGASCO is simply "different from the rest." Price $1.00 a large jar, enough to last from 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 G. C. O. D. Sent. All goods Sent immediately on Receipt of Order.
Dealers in Chicago and Elsewhere
Bokbal & Hudson, 200 E. 35th St.
Community Drug Store, 3708 Rhodes Ave.
Community Drug Store, 3708 Rhodes Ave.
Edwin R. Caldwell, 0010 State Ave.
Edwin R. Caldwell, 0010 State Ave.
Regal Pharmacy, 3101 Indiana Ave.
State St. Drug Co., N.E. Cor. 51st and Indiana
Shrimp Drug Co., N.E. Cor. 51st and Indiana
State St. Drug Co., N.E. Cor. 51st and Indiana
Mutual Drug Co., 2658 State St.
Sniffler Bros. Store, 3032 State St.
Sniffler Bros. Store, 3032 State St.
Schultz Pharmacy, 6665 State St.
State St. Drug Co., 3030 and State St.
State St. Drug Co., 3030 and State St.
Compton Pharmacy, 1500 E. Pershing Road
Gerald Pharmacy, 2604 State St.
I. R. Everitt Drug Store, N.E. Cor. 35th and Indiana
I. R. Everitt Drug Store, N.E. Cor. 35th and Indiana
I. J. Stubby Drug Store, 3756 Cottage Grove
I. J. Stubby Drug Store, 3756 Cottage Grove
M. Porter Drug Store, 3535 and Deanborn
M. Porter Drug Store, 3535 and Deanborn
Eagle Pharmacy, 1850 Broadway, Gary, Ind.
Eagle Pharmacy, 1850 Broadway, Gary, Ind.
Apollo Drug Co., 1858 Broadway, Gary, Ind.
Apollo Drug Co., 1858 Broadway, Gary, Ind.
Lapeth Drug Store, W. 8th Street, Darton, Ohio
Lapeth Drug Store, W. 8th Street, Darton, Ohio
Pembroke Powell, 81 Main Street, Fridford, Ohio
Pembroke Powell, 81 Main Street, Fridford, Ohio
G. W. Lacey, 119th Street, Grand Rapids, Mich.
O'NEALL
7
بھی 7
Horse Being Forced Off U. S. Farm
Machines Doing Mos of Work; Rural Lads Build Tractors
Machines Doing Mos of Work; Rural Lads Build Tractors
If all the farm boys are leaving the farms to work in the city factories, it may he they are doing so because the factories have to make so many machines and appliances for the farmers, observes the Literary Digest. Of course every one realizes that the American farmer is increasingly inventive genius, but for the first time, the National City bank of New York notes in its Trade Record, the 1920 patent on the number of automobiles, motor trucks, telephones and farm tractors in use on the farms of the country, and the patent on the "automobile into the house." These figures, it is remarked, indicate that the automobiles and telephones are the major factor in the economy, as well as a fort and convenience, but as an actual aid in business. The Trade Record sums up theensus figures as
Telephones
The number of telephones, by which the farmer may communicate with his local trade center or with his neighbors and markets for his products are determined, is officially stated at 2,498-483 in 1930, while another authority all the United States "without regard to ownership" at the end of 1930 at 13,411,373, which suggests that nearly one-fifth of the phones in the United States farm business service, while 38 per cent of the reporting farms were equipped with telephone service in 1930, automobile statistics are also extremely suggestive. They show the number of automobiles on farms in 1930 at 2,146,362, whole figures complied with Automobile Statistics in use in all the United States in 1930 at 7,904,004, suggesting that the farmers owned in that year considerably more automobiles than the rest of the country, to say nothing of the 13,000 motor trucks and 24,600 farm tractors reported in operation on the farms in 1920. Over 30 per cent of automobiles farm in 1920 utilized automobiles.
Three Times Value
Still another evidence of the disposition of the farmer to utilize machinery in increasing his business activities is found in the report of "farm implements and machinery" reported in 1920 was nearly three times as much as in 1910, five times as much as in 1915, and in 1890. The official valuation of farm implements and machinery in 1920 is $315,000,000 against $1,265,000,000 in 1910, $100,000,000 in 1900 and $494,000,000 in 1890. It is not surprising, then, in view of the increasing use by the farmer the increasing use of the telephone, the telephone, the automobile, the motor truck and the farm tractor, coupled with the enormous increase in machinery, to find that the census reports the value of horses on farms in 1920 only $173,200,000 against $1,783,200,000. A per cent in value of horses, while all other classes of farm animals increased in value in the same period.
Men Fight for Right to Wear Underskirts
Since Rumania wrested Transylvania from the Austrians efforts have been made to get the Transylvania to adopt a modern masculine attire. But they have resisted all attempts to deprive them of their hand emboldened weapons and emboldened coats, observes the New York Evening Post. They declare that trousers and coats are unisexly as well as unimpeded in unobstructed fashion, given not only the Rumania authorities that they will break no interference with their traditional habits of dress.
Since the fall of the Dalkans the rampant of the women is no less distinctive than that of the men. Well-to-do native girls wear garments made of solid gold coins over rich embroidered baskets and handed down to them as heirlooms from generation to generation, the number and weight of the gold pieces in their garments and the degree of opulence of the wearer and an ever-present incentive to the neighboring swains to marry her.
The abolition of discrimination in the American dollar when in the hands of the black man. Make everybody one hundred cents for everybody.
Community Drug Store. 3201 Rhodes Ave.
Edwin R. Caldwell. 3080 State St.
Edwin R. Caldwell. 3080 State St.
M. G. Mortier. 3810 State St.
B. J. Burke. 3810 State St.
J. Burke. 47th and Vincennes
Road. 3810 State St.
Grifford Pharmacy. S.E. Corp. 37th and Indiana
Thompson's Pharmacy. 710. E. Fremington
Road. 710. E. Fremington
State St. Drug Co. 38th and State St.
Drug Co. 38th and State St.
Gerald Pharmacy. 2644 State St.
THE ONLY STRAIGHT WAY
Dealers in Chicago and Elsewhere
CONNECTICUT
New England M. E. conference was held at Bethel A. M. E. church Thursday, April 11, 2014, at all news for the Defender at E. Blanois, 661 Main street, Samuel Washington of sick. Whit Gary Cary Washington of sick. Whit Gary Cary Washington of sick. Walter Dowd of Howard avenue has just returned from East Hampton. Walter Dowd of Howard avenue has just returned from East Hampton. Mrs. Cannady of Summer street has just returned from Boston. Mass. Miss Cannady of Summer street has teacher at Baurim school. The Messiah Baptist church held their reunion Washington and Boston were heard.
New Haven, Conn.
Hartford, Conn
M Laura, A. Meeks died here at the county poor farm Sept. 11, and was buried all the arrangements for the funeral. interment at Forestvale cemetery. Mr. Harold Hardin, a two famous church workers of St. James A. M. E. church, are carrying smiling children and two chicken suppers at the church. The district grand lodge, A. O. F. Columbus A. M. E. church, are of greatest sessions ever held in the Northwest at Billings Sept. 13, and in the South at Burlington and master, John Williams, P. N. F. and Norman Howard attended the district grand lodge and time. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McGinnis are sailing out and are going to Kauai to pick now and he hopes to regain his health by the change. Other Allen and F. A. McGinnis are sailing now and he hopes to regain his health by the change. Other Harold Hardin, A. M. E. church, are home again after a month's visit to Kauai to see you returned from a visit to the grand lodge of Missouri, held at St. Louis, and reported Sept. 15, after spending considerable time at Topela with her sons.
Missoula. Mont.
Harold Hardin, the 11-year son of Missoula and reported Sept. 15, after spending considerable time at Topela with her sons.
Missoula. Mont.
Harold Hardin, the 11-year son of Missoula and reported Sept. 15, after spending considerable time at Topela with her sons.
MONTANA
MINNESOTA
OKLAHOMA
Bolev, Okla.
MAKE PINE INTO
GOOD MAHOGANY
About 60 years ago 300 feudal lords were in possession of all the land of Japan. The abolition of the feudal lords themselves and of their selfs in possession. Now these land owners have quite farming themselves and are leading luxurious lives on them they exact from poor tenant farmers to toil day and night on the farms.
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PAGE FIFTEEN
ALL THIS MONTH I will treat all afflicted patients who coil, for a reduced professional fee of $12.50 for any single ailment.
All sufferers from chronic, ligating, stubborn diseases or weakness have the advantage of this liberal reduction in a member. I give you your own care and attention as if you no longer need $50 fee. I do no longer need of chronic, porous, blood, or chronic diseases in my body, would I not be able to benefit from the health of the people of this $37 W. Madison St., later on, I know that I can offer fair evidence that I am best treatment. Don't you think so? real enlightenment.
DR. H. O. MARTIN.
537 W. Madison St.,
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Administrated intravacuaries for blood clotting prescribe the practice of medevailing; disease be foreseen in the treatment; disease be foreseen in the treatment; certain method of treatment. I employ in my practice all the intravacuaries specific comedies and intravacuaries specific comedies and speed care of subfemale diseases. Join the crowd of grateful, satisfied patients who have been treated for a free, search organization.
$10 X-Ray Examination $1
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rentals only. Knee: 8 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Saturday.
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Your Health in Danger
VERMIN ARE DIRTY
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They carry plagues and infections of all kinds. One of the most valuable means of protecting our health is to exterminate pests, insects, mosquitoes, Moth Ants, Flies, Fleas, Lice and other pests.
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Compounded of a saint-patrick
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and we tell you how YOU can get this handmade Joyeau Jewel guaranteed. We sell it at the ABSOLUTELY FREE Remember, with our plan we can cost you $100.00. BONE SUPPLIER CO. 118 Nassau St. BETHEL R.T. CITY How to Get What You Want and Success and Hope are two wonderful hints. Tell how to gain money, health, happiness, success in love and marriage, business and other things of help Special Combination Offer The two wonderful little books, the Helping Hand Messages, a helping Hand Parchment Indian Temple Invite Binder with directions to the temple, a postcard to the post office. Your money returned it on satisfied. Send $1.12 for it at home. Send to 1000 N. Freemont Ave. Baltimore, MD. LEG SORES Healed by ANTI-FLAAMA—a soothing antiseptic Powder. Draw out powders, stop leaks, and write today, describing case, and get FREE Written copy. Ave. Kress City, Md. 188
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
not later than Monday morning of
each week. Copy received after that
and appear until the following
weeks.
By ALVIN D. SMITH
X W C A Gloss Work
Miss Frederica Brown, secretary of the Girl's work of the Y. W. C. A., and her installation will go to Franklin, Ind. next week; work conference will be held in May; year Miss Lacie Stokes and Miss Laura Jackson will receive university at Xenia, Ohio. Rice sample of studies at Xenia, Ohio. sample of studies at Indiana university. Miss Ruth Herb is attending Bradley University. Miss W. H. J. Thompson has returned after a visit to Kokomo, Ind. Miss Annette Palmer of Kokomo, Ind. passed through the city last week en route to Bradley Technical college. The Zeta Tau Delta Dangerous home in Redmond street last week
Births of the Week.
Marriages of the Week.
Marriages of the Week
Jefferson H. Yaughn and Posele Gougier, Taylor
Willie H. Yaughn and Posele Gougier,
Hines B. Board and Posele Gougier,
Buchanan and Nettle L. Qualls, John R. Nathan
Ellenine Gayler, Dave Clarke and
Nivehue Hughes, Leslie Gougier and
Hattle Walker, Leslie Gougier and
INDIANA THEATER
INDIANAPOLIS
GUY BATES POST IN
"THE MASQUERADER"
SUN., MAY 25, 2015, 25, 26
WWW.INDIANATHEATER.COM
---
Rowland, Willie Klimbrough and Reola Wenny, Jeanne Bounda and Hattie White, Robert Boudreau and White, Otto Richardson and Josephine E. Hawkinson, T. Clarke and Catherine E. Hawkinson. The American Legion Notes. represent the Y. M. C. A. post of the American Legion and its auxiliary at the state which will be held in Terre Haute, Indiana. I. Brown, Nose Adams, Richard Miller, Samuel Chubbun, Henry E. Dunn, James These ladies will represent These ladies will represent Mrs. E. Widg, digge, president, and
Good Morning. Judge.
Marlon Ind
Jeffersonville, Ind
Newcastle, Ind
Kokoma Ind
Connectville, Ind
castle, Mrs. Maa Robbins, Robbins
Deams, Walter and Horace Robbins,
Leslie Louise Warren, Mrs. Maa
Robbins, Warren, Leonard
Williams of Chicago was the guest of
friends here last week while on route
from Chicago, where he entered Purdue
university.
Fort Wayne, Ind
Mrs. Hattie Thompson returned to school on Monday, three weeks visiting at the home of her daughter Mrs. Katherine Sloss. Mrs. Sloss is a graduate of visit to her mother and sister. Miss Franklin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin, left last night for Stanton, Va. to visit relatives. She will spend the day at Washington, D.C. Open house, 425, North Caldwell street, had her door open. Dawney and Mrs. Russell Downey months visit with relatives. 3. J. Harper months visit with relatives. 4. J. Harper again after a spell of summer flu. James Jinkee has a bunga in Florida.
Fort Madison, Iowa
Mrs. Laura Foster, who has been very
Mrs. Cordella Hampton and Mrs. Ari-
bert McKenna, the President of
Sunday in Cauton, Mo., visiting
relatives and friends. The pro-
tection and celebration Sept. 22, Lawyer Woodson is to be one of the orators of the
Sioux City, Iowa
M. 4. Askew, grand master of the United Order of Bishops in Delaware, visited the session in Des Moines, Sept. 4-7. He was re-elected grand master and served the September, 1823, in Council Bluffs, Mo., until his death. Ohio to attend the B. M. C. stepping over in Chicago with his brother. Ellen was also given him in the trip to Cleveland.
CANADA
Edmonton, Canada
IOWA
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
THE PRAIRIE STATE
Springfield, 111.
M. L. King of indianapolis, Ind., is visiting his parents, Mrs. and Mrs. H. Calhyst, who has been an invalid for some time, confined in a hospital at St. John's Hospital, where funeral rites were said by the lay. G. Jones, at St. John's, Dairdage cemetery. S. Sapplington, North 14th street of the 5th, Massachusetts, died last week and was buried here by the 5th, Mr. Whitney of Chicago is here.
Urbana, Ill.
Alton, III.
Mrs. A. Cooperwood entertained Mrs. A. Cooperwood and Mrs. J. Jones of St. Louis, Mo., and Mrs. P. Curtis of Alton at 6 o'clock dinner or visiting friends who are visiting friends in Springfield which they will return to their home in Jacksonville, Miss. There was a conference with S. B. Jones and wife S. Sept. 14, Mrs. B. S. Jones and wife S. Sept. 14, William is teaching school in Carley this year. Miss Minna Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jackson are to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jackson are to Grove, Mo. Mrs. M. Curtis, 1191 Hitchcock avenue is the reporter for
Grand Shalo. Ill.
Parla. Ill.
Joppa. III.
The First Baptist church gave its annual rail run and spring 2013 service at St. W. K. Kernert, the pastor, filled the public room with music and flowers. The A. F. of L. Lunion gave a free dinner and a grand cake. Hazel Howell, the institute's chair, has returned. Jodie Kelly and daughter Lilian returned to their home in New Liberty, Mrs. Orsan Hay and mother Mrs. Miller, returned to St. Louis. Mrs. James Taylor
Mt. Vernon, Ill.
Claude Grooms, who has been visiti-
nated last week, forenamed Glenon Gibon-
y, returned last week. Forenamed Gibon-
y, forenamed Sunday for Chicago, William Thomas
M. Hill and Mary N. Carr mattered
Bishop, who has been in Hopkinsonville,
week. She was accompanied by her
week. She was accompanied by her
Arsene Plitt, who has been visiting
Louisville, Ky., for some time. re-
quarterly conference held Sunday at
Arsene Plitt. Sermons were presided by the
Antony Wooton has returned after a
visit in Clarksville, Tenn., and Louis-
ville.
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
shall return the office
not later than Monday
each week. Copy received after that
and appear until the following
week.
Quincy, Ill.
Garbendale Ill
Greely Wilson and family will move
to street, Mrs. Annie Wilson will attend
A. M. Is conference which convenes at
the University of Chicago to enter Howard
Murphyhorsboro at Wednesday. Mrs.
Murphyhorsboro will attend the
Lettle Creek University school at
the University of Chicago to enter
Lettle Creek University school at
the University of Chicago are guest
mrs. Jane Cregwoll. Misses Vivian
Johnson returned from Chicago. Ben Ian is
returned from Chicago. Ben Ian is
church was well attended. Murphyhorsboro
came over on a trolley. Old Saskatchewan
nourished Murphyhorsboro visitors Tuesday.
St Louis on a business trip. St Louis on a
business trip. Family visit the Sarafon farm. Mrs. Griffin is spending several days with
Wilson. Charlo Sparks is spending
Sarafon farm. Silma Simpson and Minnie Geerheart are in our mind to take care of Wilson. Rex Meyers and wife and Mediesa Ibey Baby Howes
families have returned from New Haven, Cana.
Lincoln III
Aureo !!
Hallidayshore, Ill.
Alfred Barton of Dauquoin, IL, staged a rally in his honor with Allister. The Rev. Parvis of Murphysboro preached at the Mount Zion Baptist Dick has returned home after spending a week with Fanny Johnson and Kate McCall were joined by Halliburysbury Saturday, Mar 18.
Champalon, Ill.
Jerseyville, Ill.
demic and sociological tests given for, and the other two, the Brenner entertained Alton friends last week during the Jersey county fair. Mr. Brenner, a former professor of Mr. and Mr. James Waddell just week. Miss Charlotte Evans, Chicago, Mrs. J. A. Evans, Merville Downing has been a guest of Mr. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Evans are guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Evans. Carl King, Acutum and Mr. Barney, Mr. W. J. King, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. King, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln, Mr. and mother, Mrs. Nancy Faye Mosby.
Rockford, Ill.
Clinton, III
The entertainment held at Mr. and Mrs. Blair, and the success. Evergreen Flemming spent the week end in Chicago. She drew, Sunday, and left for conference at Quiney, Mrs. Blair. She attended at O. E. S. held at Decatur last week, and much improved. Mrs. E. S. handled it better. Mrs. Violet Carter, who annual conference Monday. The colloop hall at conference Monday. The latter attended. Co-conviting the orchestra Blair was a Clinton visitor Sunday.
Galesburg, Ill.
Adolph Hamblin, instructor of biology and computer science, and Colleague institute, visited the Hive HIV club and made a very interesting enJOY for all. Rev. E. H. Gaiton left Tuesday afternoon for a few hours, Mrs. Susan Hazel is in our city for a few hours, with throat and head trouble. T. S. Fatton left Tuesday for Das Hosea, a storotyping machinery and get out the first paper manuscript for the storotyping Star.
Marion, III
LEARN
Laurenceville, III.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Nickels are the students of Gobbi School. Edwin Tarner came fuesday evening after her mother, Mrs. Martha Ill. Thursday afternoon, Mrs. Charles Ill. Thursday afternoon, Mrs. Charles Wednesday noon. Quite a number from here attended the fair at the stewardess of the St. James M. E. L. of O. F. half sat Tuesday evening. Sun. of O. F. half sat Tuesday evening. Sunday conference. He expects to leave Monday. Amara Poster and John Meeks will attend Sunday. Mrs. Ollia Heam and children Mrs. Ollia Heam and children Mrs. Glorence Adams, in the country
Coulterville, Ill.
Pontiac. III.
Attorney A. A. Loewry went to Chicago, where Jonah has entered the state normal college at Normal, Illinois. Sennik Kirk Delora Dengas waterbearer has returned from Chicago in a few months, expects to leave for Chicago in a few months. Jackson of Fairbury sent Sunday in Pontiac, Mr. and Mrs. Bynum of Mr. and Mrs. Babb, Frank Harmer of Mr. and Mrs. Babb, Frank Harmer of Mr. and Mrs. Babb, David a short business trip to Chicago.
Carrier Mills, Ill.
Bloomington, Ill.
Mrs. Harry Lewis of Evanston, Ill., will be joined by Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ray of West 10th street. There were about 16 Kappaappa apolls in our city last Sunday. The Kappaappa apolls in our city are 16 young ladies in our city attending Indiana university and a number of other colleges. The girls will be entertained Tuesday evening by Miss Alice B. Johnson of West 10th street.
PAGE SEVENTEEN
---
Beautiful Women YOU Can be Beautiful too.
Can be Beautiful too
Every one naturally wants to look their best—it makes others respect, admire and love you. You owe it to yourself and your friends to look your best at all times—and here are a few suggestions for whitening the completion, smoothing the hair and improving your looks generally.
TO WHITEN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your completion, Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitening Oil is perfectly safe and delightful to use. At your druggy or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c.
OILY, SHINY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS soon give way to a soft, velvety skin after using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitening Soap, which helps watch your skin improve. At your druggy or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each.
WRITE FOR
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TO SMOOTH THE HAIR and make it go, Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dresser will make your hair straight, easy to dress and promote its growth without hardening a second of hair. At your drugstore at most postpaid upon receipt of price, 20s
Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories
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Dr Fred Palmers
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MADAM IDA B. JEFFERSON. Evangelist
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SHORTHAND QUICKLY AT HOME A Standard $60 Mail Course for Only $5
Recognizing the educational value and money earning power of a teacher is important to their way in the world, we have made a special arrangement with the "National Institute of Shorthand to give Chicago Defender readers a correspondence."
1. The wonder manual, "McEwan's Easy Shorthand."
2. The "Key Reader."
3. The "Illegal Hand Dictionary."
4. The first letter of instruction.
5. The first mail, consisting of the correction of test exercises, unimited correspondence to help and advise until the system is mastered and the student passes the test.
6. Diploma, with final letter of advice, how to reach a speed of 300 words a minute, etc.
This course will be personally directed by Mr. Oliver McWen, the author of my master's thesis, perhaps the greatest living authority on shorthand.
I desire to assist them with this wonderful opportunity are requested to make application at once, enclosing a postoffice money order for 15. to
Chicago Defender, Shorthand Dept,
3435 Indiana Ave., Chicago, Ill.
WANT NICE, SLICK, STRAIGHT HAIR?
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YOUR HAIR FALLING
even statement of the possible result of the hair loss condition. Mrs. L. Selber also handed out other letters
looking. Correct the trouble if you want to grow a vine from a root that grows in the CALVACA METHOD of Hair Bar. Use the CALVACA METHOD of Hair Bar to cure and reinvent the roots of the vine.
DELAYS ARE ARGUMENT
Dudfurd, Duffurd, Hair, Hair
Dudfurd, Duffurd, Hair
Bair, Bairy, Hicky
Matted Hair, or
not neglect it. Try
to neglect it. Try
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PAGE EIGHTEEN
THE AUAKER CITY
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
at 10:00 a.m. on the first
of each week. Copy received after
time may not appear until the fol-
lowing day.
IFRUPTURED
Try This Free
Apply it to Any Rupture, Old or Recent, Large or Small, and You are on the Road That Has Convinced Thousands.
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Anyone ruptured, man, woman or child, will write at once to X. for a free trial of his wonderful stimulant, the need of support or, or, application is then done with free trial. Even if your rupture doesn't bother you what is the use of wearing supports at your feet, the run the risk of exergency and such rupture, the bind that has thrown the foot of men and women are daily running such risk just because their rupture is from getting around. Write at once for the need of thicks and has added in the cups of derful thicks and was as a man's write at once, using the coupon below:
Free for Rupture
W. S. Riley
615 Main St. St. Adams, N. F.
You may send me entirely free, eliminating application for Rupture.
Name .....
State .....
Address .....
Will give a good account of themselves. A number of our men, who are employed in the bureau of city property, made a raid on the cockroaches, who were swarming the mayor's office. They were of various sizes and colors. For many years they were taken up and even the brass rallings were taken down. The casualties among roaches was heavy, but they were not entirely routed during the first day. The fight will be kept up until they are entirely exterminating. The men, of whom they have been in Miss M. Scruggs, Miss A. Lockman, W. Scruggs and J. Handy of 2036 Turner street have returned home from Hopewell, Md., where they spent four days visiting friends. Miss Esther Butler of Washington, D.C., is in the city.
Hobinson has returned home from Brooklyn, N. J., where she spent the week-end visiting relatives. Mrs. J. Moore Smith, principal of the Northwestern Fashion academy, is spending a vacation of 2 days at the City of Washington. Miss Rebea and Rhoda Washington came home last week after spending the summer in Asbury Park, N. J. Deaths transpiring lately are Lee Johnson, Mattie Lomax, Mrs. Jeanette Stephens, William Simms, Mrs. Alice Hishlow, Mr. John Smith, Mr. John H. H. H. who lives at 1332 Lombard street, came home on Tuesday and found that $50 in cash that he forgot to take with him and some of his clothing was missing. He says he suspects a girl that used to run his腿 to the door. He was not who has disappeared. A warrant has been issued for her arrest.
Washington, Pa.
Word has been received from Stamford avenue in the Stamford hospital suffering from a broken leg sustained riding on the race track at Stamford on the race track at Wesley School, he just returned from his vacation to Morgan college, Burlington, Va., and other points south. He is the weekend visitor of Rev. Love, the pastor of the Church of Alice Hull. Avenue, where he will take his position as teacher and master of art at Washington University, where also have been treating treatments for her health. Mrs. Mary Crawford of Washington, D. C. is visiting Lymn avenue. Miss Lena Sanders has moved with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sanders, 105. Exeving street. Miss Hattie Star Temple. Adkay. Adkay will co-learn friends in Cleveland, Ohio. Rev. Love is very ill at Mall. Union, Pa. J. Dove is very ill at Mall. Union, Pa. J. Dove has donated $100 to the improvement fund of the St. Paul church and the expenses of painting the prophecy on Lincoln street owned by this church.
Cardinals Ba
Isaiah Washington and Miss Sarah Ann Barber were married Wednesday afternoon by the Rev. Robert O. Napper. George Hunter of Shippensburg died at the county home in Carlisle. His body was taken to Shippensburg for burial. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cuff of Lincoln Street gave their daughter, Sarah, a birthday party on Sept. 13. Raymond Wattle of Worcester, Mass. is the guest of his sister, Mrs. Gayle Hodge. Phillip Mackey was admitted to Carlisle hospital Monday for an operation. Mrs. Rosa Jackson and her friend, Mrs. Bell of York, and John Manning of Harrisburg are the house guests of Mrs. John Manning. Miss Hattie Adams of Hartford, Conn. was the weekend guest of Mrs. Sarah Newman. The Rev. William Peck celebrated a happy birthday last week. Mrs. Usta Lewis of New Brighton, Pa., also her daughter, Azalla, were summoned home because of the illness of her brother, Phillip Mackey, who was operated on in Carlisle hospital Tuesday, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Lavenger spent the weekend in Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnson of Pennsylvania street returned home after spending 10 days visiting friends in Atlantic City. John Lewis is attending the B. M. C. in Cleveland.
NEW JERSEY
Jersey City, NJ
ARKANSAS
Newport, Ark.
Picken Black left Thursday '18 to re-enroll at the University of Texas. R. T. Sceens left Monday for Argentina to be at the opening of Shorter university Monday from Omaha, Neb. Lawrence Monday from Omaha, Neb. Lawrence Houston, Texas, passed away Wednesday. The Rev. and Mrs. D. J. Johnson left Monday for the funeral of the late Rev. E. C. Sierlas. R. E. Wood, Detroit, Mich., arrived Monday from Detroit. Mr. Sierlas turned Monday from Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Oliver returned Monday to St. Louis.
AROUND THE HUB
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
not later than the morning of
each week. Copy received after that
may not appear until the fol-
lowing week.
Arrest David Tick
David Tiek of 70 West Lennox street was arrested by Police Officer Drumast, the first警员 in the last three days last Thursday for exposing and selling moonshine. When arrayed before Judge Haydon of the Roxbury court, Tiek pleaded not guilty and his case was continued until Sept. 27. Last week's arrivals at the Harrington Tolkien Manor house were: Mr. Edward Parrott of L.B. Y.U., Jr., Miss Marza and Mrs. A. I. Bell of Chicago, Ill.; Miss Blanche Taylor of Morristown, N.J.; Mrs. B. L. Meadows of Parkhurst, N.H.; Mrs. Martha Williams and the Misses Anna and Evelyn Williams of North Adams and Mrs. Maggie Wil-champ, Mrs. Mary M. C. W. and Mrs. Mary M. W. of Philadelphia left the city last Monday evening for her house. A few days before the house was opened, several week-by-week. Miss Anna Simms, formerly of 25 Holyoke street, has moved to Everett. Miss Simms will be married in two weeks. Mrs. Robertta H. West of 433 Columbus Avenue has returned to the city after a brief trip to Newport, R. I. She was accompanied by her little son, Annie, to the East Goode of Winnifar, S. C.; its spending a few weeks. She is a house guest of her brother, Eddie Goods, of 219 West Cannon street. Frank Mitchell, letter carrier, assigned to station A, south end, is now on his annual vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell will visit friends and relatives in Newark, N. J. Mr. Mitchell has been connected with the most effective department of 27 years old has the coveted record of never being late and never to receive a demarter or a reprimand.
Rumer Willama Marriage
Quatrevy Conference
Mrs. Margaret J. Knox of Shawmut avenue is visiting relatives and aunt, presiding elder of the N. E. conference of the quarterly conference for the year last Friday night at the Co. William A. Tayler of Wellington street has returned to the city from his annealing brown, former pastor of St. Mark's Congregational church at Auburn. Mr. E. McKinney church connection, made a brief visit to Mrs. F. D. Wilcoxen of New York City has returned to the city attending the convention of the Postmaster association of Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Wilson of 61 Charcedon street. Mrs. Aldina Haynes a few friends last Tuesday night at a birthday dance at West. Harold Martin coach at Virginia Union university, Champlain, where he spent, his summer vacation. Miss Cora McKinney a sports a few days in Newport, R. I. as the houseguest in street. Ms. Fiorece Johnson of Columbus avenue will leave in a few days where she will spend her two week vacation street left the city last week for New York City, where she will spend her friends and relatives. Mrs. Field will return to the city the next week for friends and relatives. Mrs. Field is now spending a few weeks with friends and relatives in Springfield street in Wellington street.
League of Women
The League of Women for community service began its series of lectures in connection with the exhibition of Race achievement on Thursday evening at the League house. An appreciative audience greeted the lecturer, George W. Forbes, librarian at the Boston Public Library for the past 25 years, and an authority on Negro history. The lecturer, "Early Negro History," was very instructive. The fruit and flower mission for this district of the city operated through the lecture closes its season Tuesday. The Saturday evening dances, which are so popular with the young people, opened the season Saturday, under the leadership of Mrs. W. E.
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Walker, Colonel E. B. Barco, grand chancellor of the K. of P., jurisdiction of Mass. and R. L. left the city last Monday for Springfield, where he will set up a subordinate lodge. From there he will go to Detroit, Mich., to assist the supreme grand chancellor in or, in case of any accident, to maintain a grand lodge in state of Michigan. Mrs. Carrie Walton of 46 Howard Street, Everett, accompanied by her, daughter, Yolanda, returned to their home last week from Woods Hole. Miss Lucille Scott of 80 Kendall street, and Miss Lois Gillespie of Nashville, was at a place where Mrs. M. was at work. From a delightful vacation spent in Woods Hole, Mrs. James Glover of Hyde Park returned to her home last Friday after a delightful vacation spent at Nantucket. Mrs. Glover was accompanied by her three sons.
North Cambridge
Mrs. John M. Fields of 64 Walden Street, Newjior, R. L. where she attended the session of Eastern Star, to which she was invited by the Austin of 16 Mead Street has returned her home when she was incarcerated after where she was imprisoned in 64 Kinnan street. Mr. Walden of 64 Walden street has returned to their homes from a mournful visit to the outside of 64 Walden street was called to the outside of her sister, who is not will not return to her home until the Annie King of Hibbing airport has returned to New York City, Lawrence Fields of Waden street, Defender news, has weeks stay at Camp Massajong, weeks stay at Camp Massajong, Troop 9 of the Boy Scouts. Mrs. Adolphus Do Brewer of Richhale avenue has weeks stay at her summer vacation.
Notice to Readers
Kindly send your social news notes to the local office of the Defender at 795 123 4567 or send your news wanted to sell the World's Greatest Weekly, apply any day at the office.
NORTH CAROLINA
The Halifax County Sunday School convention convened in Halifax and Mrs. Pelley Parker are spending the week at Portfolio, C. D. of the Eastern Stars, is attending the grand chapter in Durham where were out in their new car Sunday. The auxiliary of the Nueso River ascenders the First Baptist church, the Rev. J. R. Cole, pastor. Mr. and Mrs. James are visiting C. L. Lyon.
A delightful event in the past week was the morning party given by the John L. Lyette, New York street. Aside from the club members were Mesdames Hasson, Elder, Ghadden, Farris. Out-of-town guests: Mrs. Paul Tomlin, Richmond, Va.; Claud Howell, Winston-Salem, and the Misses Jennie and Rose Lee. The club members were: R. C. S. L. Lyette and wife of Union, S. C. spent several days in the city as the guest of Mrs. Daniels' parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Stilson, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Humphrey and children of Lexington are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson at the house of Gastonland. The Lott Carey Foreign Mission convention in Charlotte the past week. Miss Nannie Mac, Prison left Tuesday morning for Columbia, S. C., where she will attend school at Benedict College. Mrs. John Humphrey attended the group at the St. Paul Church last week. Mrs. Rose Lee Rhyme left Tuesday night for Philadelphia. Mrs. H. J. Erwin, Mrs. M. B. King and Mrs. John Wilson will leave Sunday on a short trip to Winston-Salem. The many friends of Mrs. D. J. Avery are glad to know that they will be present at the meeting. Miss Eula Means arrived from Pittsburgh, Pa., where she has spent the summer. Mrs. M. Holland and Mrs. J. W. Wilson will leave next Thursday for Asheville, Mrs. Chas. Smith is visiting friends in Charlotte. The Friday is at the same time with the St. Paul Baptist church. The Woman's Missionary will hold its meeting with the Felendashy Baptist church Sunday.
The opening up of all trades and trade unions to blacks as well as whites.
STOP EX
THE WORLD
8th WONDER
POSITIVELY GROWS HA
VICTIMS' HAIR RESTOR
In the great battle for supremacy the course you will pursue, and you always win. It is but nature want the best doctor, the best of fiction, the best experiment, the best living example such as 'Fulto believe what your eyes behold. 'Fulto' is just as sure to grow.
EXP
WORLD'S
UNDER I
GROWS HAIR
RESTORED.
he provides for supremacy in ill puture, and the
he is natural, a
experiment, long time,
such as "Fulto" before
eyes behold, and s
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 the course you will pursue, and then with a grim determination stick to that course, and you always win. It is but natural, as we go through life, to desire the best. When in need you want the best doctor, the best 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 a living example such as "Fulto" before you? There is no hearsay, no may be so. You can believe what your eyes behold, and you can go and see in person, as hundreds are doing dally, "Fulto" is just as sure to grow hair as the sun is to shine. STOP! THINK! THEN BUY!
(RETAIL PRICE)
Fulto Hair Food (double strength).....60c
Fulto Hair Food (plain).....50c
Fulto Temple Oll.....50c
Fulto Pressing Oll.....50c
It keeps the Scalp healthy, free from dandruff, thickens, gives color and promotes an abundant growth of hair. One 50c box convinces: 5c extra for postage.
Fulto Hair Food (double stream)
Fulto Hair Food (plain)
Fulto Temple Oil
Fulto Pressing Oil
It keeps the Scapula healthy, free
gives color and promotes an ab.
One $60 box convicts; $6 extra
Did "Flu" leave your scalp
DOUBLE S
Diplomas given. A
Address
4808 Prairie Ave., Apt. 2
double strength).....
lisen)n.
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DOUBLE STRE
ress M
e., Apt. 2
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DOUBLE STRENGTH: 60c, and it has restored
Diplomacy: good, and it is reasonable
Goldsboro, N. G.
Enfield, N. C
Gastonia, N. C.
By Katherine K. Lambert, the meeting was held Thursday at the Jefferson State University in the state were represented. It truly was a white Republican convention, as ex-chairman boasted of the fact that he out of the party and the Republicans of Alabama had made their organization tell his hearers there were on the out of the party and the Republicans of various districts, so present at this meeting, but were barred because of the funding of the Republican party. A large number of the funding means that he serves in this meeting are Dr. W. H. Mobile, Ala.; V. Cashin, Decatur, Ala.; Geo. Newmont, Montgomery, Ala.; Field's, U. G. Mason, Dr. W. E. Lacey, Attorneys; L. Chanbillis, J. Rush Bashaw, Dr. R. Anderson, P. F. Clark, R. A. Bountz, City, and Dr. Beblaw of Mobile, Ala.
Tuggle Institute opened its session with a special program Sunday. Over 800 students are enrolled this year. Several new teachers are engaged. Mrs. Hathley Holland Biddle of Detroit, Michigan is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Holland, Mrs. Sadle Diffay, and little girls. Fredrieu and Hattie are seriously ill from paternal poisoning produced from eating ice cream. Mr. Walter Chivers, Juvenile officer at the home on Avenue F South, left for New York City to take a post course in social science. A scholarship having been given him some four months ago, Mr. C. W. Hayes of Hopkinsville, Ky., a 1925 graduate of Flask University, is taking Mr. Chivers's place. Dr. J. M. Terrell of Houston, Texas, college was the guest of his son, Prof. W. T. Terrell, this week. Dr. Terrell was en route to Hot Springs, Ark. At the T. C. L. auditorium, Thursday evening, 80 teach-and-principle of the Colored schools of I. Company held their an-nual meeting. Mr. J. O. Oliver, Mr. J. West Hawkins and E. R. Johnson were among the speakers. Dr. J. Bargyh and A. M. Willis of the N. C. Insurance company, of which A. J. Topp is state manager, led the entro ordinary department last week with $20,000 of business. Monday $700 of straight life policies were collected. In August they wrote $42,000 new business.
Miss Mamie McCann of Chicago, Ill.
with Mr. and Mrs. Bud Fultz in the 4th
year, and Mr. and Mrs. Bud Fultz in the 4th
year.
RECEIVED.
He received a man of pro-
fession, a committee,
science in life,
M. Walker;
H. Walker;
He home for a
He rented
intentionally
Sadie
KING OF HAIR S
X-RAY HAIR SHINE-
Will straighten the most stubborn.
Absolutely Harm
Both Preparations, $
Special Prices to Barber, Hairdress-
ers, Agents and the Trade in Goods
AGENTS WANT
stillmore and
and is spending
the Ann Arbor,
high school,
and
avenue. Guest
Mess is
where she
will be,
whole, collect,
and Mrs.
Fenner,
enter-
ing enter-
ing with with
Conn. comm.
name and ad.
and is
will not be
will not be
Chicago, Ill.
weeks, visit
in 7th ave.
QUICK VACAY
Student-agents are making a clear pr
COLC
GIRLS' AND BOYS' UNI-
Every Race pride home boys this week
11 is being sold from ocean to ocean a
New before you forget this great seller
WILLIAM HENRY
$20 WYANDOTTE STREET
MENTING!
"ULTO"
ISEASED SCALPS. "FLU"
ING A HARVEST. WRITE
We are in at a conclusion as to
animation stick to that course, and
to desire the best. When in need you
the paint, we will do it. The only
when you wish to grow your hair, with
hearay, no may be so. You can
person, as hundreds are doing daily.
STOP! THINK! THEN BUT!
Write for particulars. $1.75 out of
will start, you in business. Send
Money Order. Send stamps for reply.
ASTONISHING OFFER!
Send money order for $3.00 (five dollars) and receive "Fulto" printed instructions how to correctly care for your hair.
ain? IF SO, send for "FULTO
have it restored
mail. Terms reasonable
E. FULTON
90 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
ALABAMA
nue. Mr. Hitt returned to: Chicago
Missouri. Mr. Wynn, Mr. Whitebear, 111
Walker street, returned from a four
week trip to the Gardens Avenue H.
Edward Wynn, 188 South Avenue H.
club Tuesday, to the Gardens
club Tuesday, to the Gardens
club Tuesday, to the Gardens
uncheon sets was inspected by Mrs.
Wynn, Mrs. Adams, Mrs. Brown,
made an insulating talk. Next meet
Brown, Mrs. Adams, Mrs. Brown,
was the guest of Dr. and Mr.
University, was the guest of Dr. and
Mr. Miss M. J. Rowe, secretary and treasurer,
from a vacation trip of several weeks.
Miss Anta Scott will have a position
in the industrial high school this year. She
will attend Industrial High School in
Olivetown in Charles street. Women's
union membershipion Union men will
be represented by Mrs. Charles street
Thursday. After business, 30 minutes
billed by Mrs. Mahala Morris.
Woodlawn. Ala.
The house opening at Mount Morish
Bereside Campbell, after two weeks
beside Campbell, after two weeks
home. Ms fraleja Jr. McMullen has re-
moved home after a very pleasant
hospital after a very pleasant
hospital.
LOUISIANA
Patterson, La.
Mrs. Lola Wrenn arrived Tuesday from Houston, Texas, and is the guest of her mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Wrenn. Miss Hazel Johnson left Tuesday for Southern university, Baton Rouge, La., in company with her brother, Harold Johnson, also a student. Those sick are: Beulah Figgin and William Harris. Mrs. Mary Schexnayder left Tuesday with her daughter, Velma Schexnayder, for Southern university, Baton Rouge, La. Reginald Almin also left for Southern university. Houston Dutton left Friday for Cleveland, Ohio. McKinley Harris left Sunday for New Orleans to attend school. Miss Maggie Johnson left Sunday for Alexandria, La.
Crowley, L.A.
The Rev R. C. McClendon, pastor of the ministerial institute in Tewksbury, Twelve Mater. Father Gudry is visiting relatives in Tewksbury, Miss. Bessie Heron, have returned from Tucson, Ala., and visited during the summer. Prof. Dan Iphone, who known as Rhone, who has been on forlough visiting his father and mother. Prof. the training camp at Camp Bennine, Georgia. Arthur obtained a returned passport and relatives. Miss Lillian Levelling in visiting her aunt, Mrs. Orilla Jack, White
FREEDMAN'S BILLIARD
Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 22—Look who is here, your old friend Matthew Subway billiards. You are invited to forget the number—Advertisement.
d If I Fail to Grow Hair Hair Root Hair Grower
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Hai
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IR SHINE—the finishing GLOSS
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SALES BRANCHES
Mrs. B. Jackson
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NHS WANTED EVERYWHERE
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g a clear profit of 75 cents on each when selling
LORED
Y'S UNITED STATES HISTORY
is this wonderful 25page book after once selling it to the ocean and from the Great Lakes to the Gulf.
great seller send $1.10 for aren't' book and terms.
HENRY HARRISON, JR.,
BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA
KING OF HAIR STRAIGHTENERS
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Will straighten their hair in five minutes.
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Student-agents are making a clear profit of 75 cents on each when selling
GIRLS' AND BOYS' UNITED STATES HISTORY
Every Race pride home buys this wonderful 264-page book after once seeing it.
Every Race pride home buys this wonderful 264-page book after once seeing it.
Now before you forget this great seller send $1.10 for agent's book and tarma.
THE MAYOR OF NEW YORK
MRS. E. G. FULTON
George S. Byrne.
8 W. 38th St.
Chicago. Ill.
L. G. W. Riley.
1317 Orleans St.
Detroit, Mich.
Don't carry chewing gum back of your ear. When you have used it once throw it away and avoid disease germs.
In a scientific vegetable compound of
potassium, magnesium, and several other positive herbs, there
are several Hair Grower known, actually
forcing hair to grow in more obese
people. Scalp Sore and Falling Hair.
Iching. Sore Scalp and Falling Hair.
Itching. It must not be put where
like magic. It must not be put where
hair. Lusftokes writes: "After having
used every known advertised
cuticle, I tried Hair Root Hair Grower
cuticle. My hair is 28 inches
month; my hair is 28 inches
believes every woman can grow her
hair to 2 inches a month by using
Hair Root Grower is 56c a box or
eight inches of everywhere. Make big profits.
and to my agency we send 31.00 and
receive supply. When sold return us
Add all mail and money orders to
Royal Chemical Company
JAMAICA, NEW YORK
( mention this paper )
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
Rheumatism
A Raremable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It
In the year of 1854 I was attacked by
Rheumatism and suffered an only three year,
risky recurrence after memory, but each
relief as I obtained who only temporary.
Rheumatism I found it regretted that once
completely and more a pitiful condition
has never recurred, but it has given it
to a person who were terribly affected,
even beetle, some of them severely
died young old, and the results are
the same as in my own case.
"I Had Sharp Pains Like Lightning
I want every sufferer from any form of muscular and submense swelling at the joint of my improved "Home Treatment" for its remarkable healing power. Don't send a coat; simply mail your name and address, and I will send it free to try. After you have used it, and it has broken itself to be that long-looked-for means of getting rid of such forms of themation, you may send the price of it. One Dollar, but understand I do not want your money unless you are perfectly satisfied to send it. Isn't that fair? Why suffer any longer when relief is thus offered you free? Isn't delay, Write today.
Mark II. Jackson, 268J Duration Bldg.
EVERY WOMAN WANTS A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR USE THE GUARANTEED HOR-TON-A HAIR
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HOR-TON-A Hair Grower grow this hair. Let it grow yours. We make everything you can make big money selling these wonderful preparations. Send $1.90 for a week's trial treatment.
Ladies learn the Hor-TON-a System
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100 free tuition. For diplomas awarded. For further particulars.
EVELYN HORTON MFG. CO.
Dept. A
St. Louis, Mo.
GUARANTEED OR MONEY BACK OFFER!
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Write name and address clearly.
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HOEGEMANN'S GEMICAL LABORATORIES
Box 25. Mail order Dept. Florence, Ala.
BEVERLY HILLS SEMINARY
FOR GIRLS
Day and
Boarding School
Camille Cohen Jones, Principal
Julia Johnson, Assistant Principal
All day kindergarten. Regular grammar
and expression are modern than
guages and expression are modern than
home environment; intellectual aptitude
works better problem.
For further information write
MKE. CAMILLE Cohen JONES.
Principal.
4808 6. L. Lawrence Ave. Mpt.
11th St.
Dear Lucky Star,
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Address LUCKY STAR CO. MO. 422
West Eat R. Cincinnati, Ohio.
What Is Home Without a Baby?
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THE NERVANO CO.
Dept. 102 Kansas City, Mo.
KNOXIT
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Unnatural and mucous discharges can be avoided by destroying the germs of infections diseases.
$1.10 at all druggists
GOITRE Pay When Well
I have an honest, proven remedy for your skin with once, reduces the enlargement, stone pain and dreadful and painful callous. Tell your friends about this. Write to: R. O. H. 107.307.137. Wash.
in each lovely to wear one of our beautiful, detailed white MEXICAN MOND rings and a representative. Mexican Diamond Import Co. HF, Las Cruces, N.M.
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Mexican Diamond Import Co. HF, Las Cruces, N.M.
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
UNDER THE CAPITOL DOME.
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
received at the office at 10 a.m.
each week. Copy received after that
time may not appear until the fol-
lowing day.
J. LE C. CHESTNUT.
1913 11th Street Northwest,
Phone North 571 J
Washington, D. C., Sept. 22, 2015—School breaks breaking attendance. Many institutions have portables are in use at Armstrong to allow the coverage of students. The portables were judged by Justice Stanford of the D. C. supreme court, a normal school, who some time ago named the following law teachers were benefited from Dunbar law, $2,220.5; Lucy E. Moyer as principal; and other normal school students as Wilkinson's assistant superintendent of Racial schools.
Personnel Changes
The following is a list of the principal personnel names charged by the board of directors.
Retirement—J. D. Jalitman, teacher, class 2. J. W. Brown, teacher, class 3. B. Lynn school; M. E. Green, teacher, class 2. Layne school; M. E. Green, teacher, class 2. Absence—J. B. Wilson, teacher, class 2. Garnett Tatterson, teacher, class 2. J. W. Brown, teacher, class 2. Smith, teacher, class 2. Bunnett school; S. W. Brown, teacher, class 6A, teacher, class 6B, teacher, class 2. Bunnett school; S. W. Brown, teacher, class 6A, teacher, class 6B, teacher, class 2. Bunnett school
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
Personal Profferings
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The hotel with the Hotelbell Atmosphere
New Jersey Ave. at D, N. W.
Five minutes' walk from Union Station.
Nestly furnished rooms at reasonable rate.
PHONE LINCOLN 6157
J. GREENLEASE, Prop.
Fourth street Northwest; Chase S. Hill, prominent attorney, and J. I. B. Kotler, prominent lawyer, and G. Todd Glallow, popular young teacher at the Dunbar high school, in back porch a splendid a splendid in St. Louis when she shipped the summer.
Terrell Away
Fcyca Return
Dr. and Mrs. Clifford Frye and two daughters, 1810th Street弟子. He joined the employable motor trip to Philadelphia and nearby points of interest. His career has been appearing in *Aphrodite* York after a 56 years' absence. He is visiting his mother at Missa Thomas and Isla Hunt, students at summer after attending at Front Royal, Va. Young students will be painfully injured week when his hand was caught in the wrist. Washington last Thursday to begin the year-long mission. Dr. J. Hunter Brooks, Howard graduate teacher in the Tyson Center, will teach in Washington that Thursday to resume her duties after spending his time in New York city and Miss Emma Henderson has gone to Sawanah with Miss Holmes to spend time in the university from a scaffolding at the university, training broken skis is rapidly rounding into shape. Thomas Island, Philadelphia, has come to Washington to make Whiffle, who is an employee of the Young, well known fraternity man connected with Trinity. Summer No. 4. R. of P. grand lodge, I. M. F. and K. of P. grand lodge, J. M. F. and K. of P. grand lodge, Maggie Wade, Priscilla Brooks, Estelle Wilder and Harrison and Clinton
Vacation in South:
Young A. Barnes, protege of Lawyer
School, after spending the summer in
school, after spending the summer in
Rudolf county, Maryland, in 1846, died
rudolf county, Maryland, in 1846, died
we leaving home and six children.
He was buried from the Union
for 40 years. We remember him for
40 years. McCormick, Donald
from Chessington, Maryland, are back
from Chessington, Maryland, are back
Brooklyn Lawn and Miss Mabel Brood
99 Floors avenue N. W. are back
R. L. Smothers, 800 Oregon Avenue
R. L. Smothers, 800 Oregon Avenue
Fallin, N. W. T. M. Nelson of the Cam-
pany at Chelsea, Ohio, as a delgate.
Organization Offerings.
The 12th street T. M. C. A. held a
beach Md. and back last week on
beach Md. and back last week on
their under the direction of the
Jazz Battle Royal.
A jazz battle royal was held last week between Sam Tayler's jazz bounds and the promoter, Goncaldo Whiteson, the seminal musician. The revue, playing at the Gazette theater last October, was supported by the strongphars. They were supported by the jazz group.
Church Chantings
Deanwood Doings
Southwest Section
Mixing Workera
One of the most striking instances of race perceptions of a white and work alongside his help is found in the drug arrest in Southwest. Mr. Chisley and son, prominent improvements for the fall and subsequent establishment, Richard Watt, veteran coal dealer, 25 years, veteran coal dealer, 25 years, working 20 men and 10 teams and is delivering an important strike, Mr. and Mrs. Adams have moved to the apartment in the Vineyard, Maryland avenue Southwest, man on the broadway between Washington and Chicago, dog breed, George Richardson, one time prescinct gation, died at his home on First street in the Southwest, where he was a universal favorite, Southwest, who has been very busy at contemplating a vacation in New York for two weeks, the color of the Metropolitan Wesleyan Zion musical program in connection with the rally to be held on the occasion, the obligato of Rossif's "Immanuel" choreal on that occasion, Rev. Gahs has gone to the Zion, Zion convention there, William Campbell, hustling to a casualty hospital with a dislocated shoulder, D street Southwest. He is soon to be back on his old route again.
Departmental Dope
Good Morning, Judge!
---
A MESSAGE—as True as It Is Brief
In Your Own Interest We Ask Your Consideration of the Following Testimonials From Men and Women in Several Different States
KUR-U, originally, was the prescription of a well known and reputable physician of the Great Northwest Country—the result of years of hard study and close application in a humane effort to make science yield its secrets for the benefit of humankind.
With the proper chemical combination in hand and the practical results evidenced, the discoverer of KUR-U felt that ALL sufferers from these universa complaints, RHEUMATISM, LUMBAGO AND NEURITIS, should be given the opportunity of securing the relief offered and testified to herein.
Since the American Trading Company has contracted to place a half million orders in as many homes in America. The price is Two Dollars ($2) per bottle. This is a month's treatment according to directions. The American Trading Company only entered this contract after months of experimentation, testing the merits of KUR-U.
Send your orders direct to the American Trading Company's Sales Director at 4830 Evans Ave., Chicago, Illinois. Accompany each order with a United States Money Order for $2.00, made payable to AMERICAN TRADING CO. and addressed to the foregoing address (4830 Evans Ave., Chicago, IL.). The treatment will be mailed you direct within seven days by the manufacturers.
We offer wonderful opportunities to make a steady year-round living to agents who are desirous of accepting county or parish agencies in all the different States of the United States
Address all orders and other communications to
SALES DIRECTOR, AMERICAN TRADING CO.
4830 EVANS AVENUE, CHICAGO, ILL.
Harry Lee, 181, 17th street N. W., has been arrested and charged with colliding as the result of operating an auto-armor unit. 69-year-old boy died last Monday night.
Fires at Husband
Ballroad Rolling.
DON'T ASK FOR HAIR GROWERS—THERE IS ONLY ONE. SAY
HAIR VIM
TRADE MARK
Theatrical Thoughts.
The Lincoln theater started a drive to build a new theater in the city, a record of 100000 paid attendance, a big thermometer in which the mercury is being used to keep the public cool, and a record of 100000 paid attendance by Andrew J. Thomas, manager, to the Lincoln Theater. The supreme attraction at the Lincoln has been called "dear friend." The Howard theater is now under the control of Robert D. Duncan, the director. He has secured the services of a new manager, a signed as manager of the Republic. A new stage was built last week, and on request the show was held over for another week, the Duncan was "The Silent Call" with the Duncan's band. The Hellenian polio dog, Strongbart. The Republic had for the outstanding actress in the play, In "The Man With Two Noses," in
Clark, New York City; Mrs. Lomax and fam
Ir. New York City; Rcv. P. F. Herod
Youngewyn, Ohio.
Deaths of the Week
Births of the Week
Marriages of the Week
NOTICE
all travelers who stop of Washington can secure the Defender in front of the Union station, just outside the main doors. Baldwin站, step out for a few minutes.
Employees of the bureau of enquiries and
printing who are interested in securing the
Defender should see Rev. E. J. Green.
Also give him your news.
Mrs. Claim Davis Shield, 1605 11th Street
Northeast is also ready to receive notes from
her friends and from Abbury church for the
Defender.
HER VIM
MADE MARK
IS ALL OVER THE WORLD
ONLY HAILS MONEY RETURNED
MONEY SELLING OVER
OR TERMS AND TERRITORY
OF QUEEN, CO.
Borg, D. C. N. Y. Office, 118 W. 150th, N. Y.
order when writing
as It Is Brief
Those suffering from Rheumatism, Lumbago or Neuritis have only to communicate with the undersigned and obtain relief of a permanent nature.
KUR-U has proved its ability to cure.
To Whom It May Concern:
For many years I have been a patient of the Whom-U doctor and no remedy or doctors have ever helped me until I took one month's treatment. I obtained immediate relief. To those who are suffering I recommend a trial.
Jno. M. Green.
West Virginia.
To Whom It May Concern:
I have suffered from nausea in my arms, shoulders, back and limbs for many years. I was tried did I receive lasting relief. To anyone afflicted with the disease I will remove the infliction.
Texas.
To Whom It May Concern:
I have been a sufferer from rheumatism and have tried every remedy recommended and well as spending money under doctor's care, until one day Kur-Ui was no faith. I condescended to give it a trial—willing to try anything before I was prevented from earning a livelihood. Two weeks after receiving Kur-Ui I was able to resume work.
I was not able to all those are suffering to do as I did. My happiness in being relieved and cured is not explainable.
Mrs. Anne L. Miller.
Chicago, Ill.
and living to agents who are desir-
rent States of the United States
tions to
N TRADING CO.
O, ILL.
PAGE NINETEEN
2.
Jas, N. Simms—Publisher.
SIMMS BLUE BOOK and National Negro Business and Professional Directory
—An Illustrated Directory—
Every business man, and woman.
Every professional man and woman.
Every college, its president and teachers.
Every public school principal and teachers.
Every bank and insurance building,
Every public building owned and
operated by our race should be repre-
sented by ELUE BOOK . . . DIRECTORY
Write for booklet—full information
P. S. We want a competent maid or woman in every city and town to represent us. Write for particulars.
ARE YOU
Sick or Ailing?
To the Sick and Ailing People:
To further acquaint you with our wonderful nature's, preventive and healing powers we will for forty-five days send by parcel post:
One bottle kidney medicine.....$1.50
One bottle liver and kidney pills.....$1.50
One bottle liver and kidney pills.....$1.50
Four bars dwarf elder vegetable.....$1.50
One jar Last Chance face bleach.....$2.50
Regular price.....$6.55
All of these Last Chance properties and healing properties will be sent to Camelia for $2.50. All our medicines are guaranteed and put under the care of the cut out mail to
Dept. D.
The Last Chance Medicine Co.
S. E. Stl. St. Chicago.
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The M&S Wonderful Discovery of the Age
It clears the hair of dandruff, stops itching, stops the hair from falling out of the hair, and puts new life into it. Every box fully guaranteed.
Reginald Crown Balm 55c. Shampoo July 21c. Shampoo August 21c. Reginald Tail Soap Bar, Special Grocery Store. Reginald Tail Soap Bar, Special Grocery Store.
You can take the Reginald Perfect System in Hair Dressing by mail. Write for Special Terms to Agents.
The Reginald Laboratory
Atlanta, Ga.
JOIN THE
SUPREME ROYAL GIRCLE
OF
FRIENDS OF THE WORLD
A Modern, Progressive Secret Fragrance with Insurance Benefits. Join in with the Association of Sick and Accident Benefit. $1.00 per Beautiful Marble Monument. For information address Dr. R. Williams, Supreme Attorney, 473 East Thirty-first Street, Chicago, or Wm. K. King, Supreme Attorney, 184 W. Winston Park, Chicago.
datas; regulates the liver, kidney, stomach
system. Writes for Free Trial Treatment.
Columbo Dropsy Bamsey Co., Upstate, N.Ca.
URINARY
obstructs, artures,
o urinary, diarrhea,
treated. No operatives.
treated. No operatives.
no pain-no danger-no datam-
tenance in plain doctor. Dr. A. Henderson,
192 Grand Ave., Kansas City Ms.
DO YOUR FEET SMELL
Or do you have body odor that is ob-
servable to people. NOSH mail. NOSH
number.