Chicago Defender
Saturday, November 3, 1923
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
REAL ESTATE DEALER TRAPPED WITH ANOTHER MAN'S WIFE
THE WEEKLY NEWS
MISS BEATRICE KING
New York beauty, known all over the Bee King, whose love Dr. U. Gonrad Vincent is alleged to have sought. Miss King lives Mrs. Sadie Dorsette Tandy, and when she tor's attentions, Miss King claims that he remarks about the parentage of little 3 Tandy, Jr. This caused Mrs. Tandy, three to enter suit against the doctor, and New shocked, many prominent names being dra
AFRICAN TOURIST HEAD LANDS IN
New York beauty, known all over the country as Miss Bee King, whose love Dr. U. Gonrad Vincent, a married man, is alleged to have sought. Miss King lives at the home of Mrs. Sadie Dorsette Tandy, and when she refused the doctor's attentions, Miss King claims that he made defamatory remarks about the parentage of little 3-year-old Vertner Tandy, Jr. This caused Mrs. Tandy, through her lawyers, to enter suit against the doctor, and New York society is shocked, many prominent names being dragged into the case.
AFRICAN TOURIST CO. HEAD LANDS IN COURT
New York, Nov. 2—William York,
40, of Montgomery Junction, N. J., organizer of the African Tourist company, a new steamship venture that had as its purpose the transportation of passengers and freight to Liberia, has been arrested and asked into court on the charge of obtaining money under false The company has declared bail and rupt and none of the creditors have received any of their money back. York, who was a lieutenant during the war, was sent to a few months ago with the idea of founding the African Tourist Co. Some business men were interested and offices were set up in New York company then advertised its sailing date and began selling passages. More than $5,000 was collected from stockholders and prospective passengers, and passed and nothing was heard of the Tourist company's boat. Then Miss Priella St. John, an evangelist, and Louis Matthews, $127 Amtv Ave. Howe, 322 Ile Ave. Long Island City, appalled to the long district attorney. Assistant District Attorney Abraham Harris, after giving evidence against him, court where Magistrate Norris fixed his bail at $1,000. Upon questioning, York admitted competition with the company, but challenged the charge. According to his testimony, $4,000 was given to a broker to negoti-
MAN WOUND CHOP SUE
MAN WOUNDED AFTER CHOP SUEY ARGUMENT
Charlie Lee, a Chinaman, owns a cloak shop restaurant at 544 E. 47th St. His wife is a white woman who was taken to a hospital, suffering with a scab wound indicated when she was struck over the head with a claw by Ferris Thompson, 35, a decorator and patron in the restaurant. He had ordered sub-gum cloak, but chow mein was brought him instead by Mrs. Lee, who waited on him. Lee refused to change the order. Thompson ar-
all over the country as Miss Amrad Vincent, a married man, Miss King lives at the home of and when she refused the doc- imins that he made defamatory of little 3-year-old Vertner Tandy, through her lawyers, or, and New York society is being dragged into the case.
JRIST CO.
DS IN COURT
state for a strangship, but the money had not been returned, nor had the lead been required.
When the crash came, York applied to the Pennsylvania Railroad company for work and was placed in charge of an employment camp.
Milk Bottle Is Used as Weapon in Street Scrap
Muffled and swathed in bandages so that they looked like twin sisters, Mrs. Rosie Kelly, 24, 456 E. 46th St. and Mrs. Eunna Landry, 24, 2615 Walash Ave. appeared before Judge George B. Holmes to thrash out their troubles.
The women had been arrested in front of their place of employment, Mrs. Walash Ave. the Sergeant Charles Kelly as they were engaged in a hand-to-hand light, using a knife and a milk bottle as their weapons.
The police differed to such a degree, that Judge Holmes acted upon the advice of Attorney William B. Borton, that both had been punished sufficiently, and they were discharged.
ED AFTER Y ARGUMENT
sued and blamed Mrs. Lee. She answered by hitting him with her first. He picked up a chair and knocked her unconscious.
Muffled. Charlie chased him down 47th St. with a revolver, firing he ran. The Chinaman sent five bullets at Thompson. One took effect. Thompson stopped after he was under arrest.
The police arrested Charlie Lee and Thompson was taken to the South Side hospital. His wound was not severe. Lee was released on $1,000 bond.
THE Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
High School Girl Cuts Father When He Objects to Late Hours
KILLS
HUSBAND LEADS THE DETECTIVES WHO FIND NUDE WIFE WITH MAN
New York, Nov. 2.—The apartment of Mrs. Beulah Dart, 412 St. Nicholas Ave. was raided Tuesday morning by detectives from the Boulin Detective agency who allege they found Mrs. Dart and R. S. Morgan, a prominent real estate dealer with offices at 2160 Seventh Ave., in bed together nude about 1:30 in the morning. The raid caused considerable excitement in this exclusive neighborhood which faces St. Nicholas park. The detectives, accompanied by Henry Dart, the long woman parked in the street to gain entrance. It is also claimed that Dart administered a good beating to Morgan during the raid, blacking the real estate man's eyes in 1917 at Summerville, S. C., and moved to this city shortly afterward. Mr. Dart is bitter for Mr. Hungerford, millionaire copper and brass king, at the country town of Briarcliffe, near Summerville, New York. The couple rented an apartment at the present address in October of last year but when Dart called there to see her on Nov. 17, 1922, he says he was told that Morgan and that Morgan ran and hid in the dining room while his wife closed the door and requested him not to enter the same room. He left Morgan and that Morgan ran and hid in the dining room while his wife closed the door and requested him not to enter the same room. He left Morgan, according to his story. Dart also claims that Morgan took Mrs. Dart on motor trips in a big sedan to Pennsylvania. New Jersey to morally state that on Oct. 16 morally state that Mr. Morgan and Philadelphia did not return until the following Monday. He claims the couple stopped at the Roadside hotel.
HURLS JAR THAT CUTS FATHER
Miss Amanda Lee. 18-year-old high school student, living at 5025 Dearborn St. hurried a jar of money to purchase while Mrs. Lee, the mother and wife, held the father, Wille Lee, who had started to attempt to make the young girl a full hour of the night. This was at 8 o'clock. He had on numbers of occasions complained about the lateness of her bedtime, warned her that she had to obey as long as she stalled there. Lee called a taxable cab and rushed to the hospital, where the deep rash in his right temple, which ruptured a blood vessel, was dressed. Amanda fleed after hitting her fathers home, after an hour at the hospital, he found his wife had left also. She returned Monday only to hear her mother have left me, and neither of you can come back now—not just now.
Lee is a deacon in St. Mary's A. M. E. church, but did not attend Sunday.
15-YEAR-OLD GIRLS STORY CAUSES POLICE TO HOLD MAN
The testimony of a 15-year-old girl, Mary Watts, 3467 Avenue Ave., just here from Mobile, Ala., caused officers Graham and Howland to place James Street, the arrest, and charge him with pandering. Pullman claims that he runs a restaurant at this place, but the officers stated that when the place was seized, one girl's foot was found in the harder. Mary stated that Pullman forced her to solitize men, and kept her money for his own use. Mrs. Alice was charged of the case while the story of the girl is being investigated.
INNOCENT
Dart has started suit for divorce in the Supreme court and contemplates filing a suit against Morgan for the alienation of his wife's affections, and the time associated with the Rev. W. W. Brown of the Metropolitan Baptist church in a real estate company. Later he associated himself with a new company. It is strongly rumored that Morgan is living in the house in which the Darts live and that is how he became acquainted with the young woman. Morgan is married, although it is difficult to tell, with his wife who is sick in bed at her home. 178 W. 1337 St. and who it is said is suing him for a divorce.
DYING MAN ACCUSES STEPSON
Robert F. Long, 42 years old, 4610 Dearborn St. was found dying in an alley at 1620 Dearborn St. shortly after 8 clock Thursday evening. Neighbors in the vicinity heard three shot fired and saw Long fail, mortally wounded. When the Third district police arrived on the scene, Long told them that Oleh Smith shot him. He died a few minutes later and was taken to Williamson morgue, 5121 State St.
Further investigation by the police revealed that the accused man, whose right name is Osbon Smith, was Long's stepon. Smith was arrested a few hours later at his home, 14 E. 57th pl., and is said by the police to have confessed shooting his stepfather. Smith's mother, Mrs. Ida Long, and two other brothers, Martin Long, and his mother, Mary Long, and two of her sons live at 3395 Wabash Ave. She has been living there since her separation from her husband in February, while he continued to live with his mother, Osbon Smith, at the Dearborn St. address.
Long was shot following a telephone conversation with some one whom he agreed to meet at 46th and his subsequent minutes later she was told of his death.
Mrs. Higginbotham admitted that there had been trouble between her son, his wife and his stepchild, who had been accused of shielding the accused sister of her son and told the police she didn't know any "Oleh" Smith. Her calm indifference and her reluctance to aid them on edge.
"Sure, I knew just who they meant as soon as they said 'Ole Smith.' It was him, and I told him, 'I tell 'em. Let them find him. He may be innocent, and I sympathize with him, anyway,' said the dead man's mother. The story of Lone's frequent visits to his wife at the Wabash Ave. address and of his threats to kill her wife with their other two stepsons, with their help from police custody Monday night. A week before he was slain, they said, Long came to his wife's home and took his stepson to his mother's home. His mother and little daughter folled his attempt to chy her then by calling the police. Tom Tillman, 44, who rented the house at 3308 Wabash Ave. jointly with Mrs. Long. On the night he appalled, the police came by fear. His wife asked for Tillman. Tillman fed up the stairs and dropped dead from his apartment by fear. His body was taken to Cyrus morgue. 1621 S. State St. The inquest into Long's death will be conducted at the Third district police station. His accused age is 26 years old.
A FEW OF 'EM STILL LEFT
THE MEMORIAL CEREMONY OF THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN, N.Y.
COLONEL (?) HOWARD DIVINITY
First class "Uncle Tom" ex-save-
92 years old, carried to the American
Legion convention held recently in
San Francisco, Cal., by the Hazel-
hurst (Mlss.) post. Here Col. Divi-
nity proceeded to allow himself to
be styled as the "Champion Chicken
Thief of the Confederate Army" and
is object of ridicule and hilarity
among a low class of white people.
We wears a brass tag around his
neck which says: "If lost, return to
WILLIE HAD MANIA FOR AUTO RIDING
Joyriding by day in a car which was not his own and parking in an alley at night were the most interesting events in the life of Willie Williams. 2322 Vernon Ave., according to his own statement.
Willie also confessed that he and several others had acquired a habit of stopping at all parked cars to see if the engine had been left running. It this was so, it was an easy matter to make off with the car.
Sergeants Stephens and Arnold noticed Willie when he, alighted from the stolen car at 31st and State St. Willie and the car's appearance were not the same as when he was not moving. He said that he had taken the car when the engine was left running.
The car had been stolen from Mrs. Amy Rhind. 2384 Prairie Ave. Willie Williams, 2322 Vernon Ave., 2000 honds by Judge Geo. B. Holmes.
ENT
M STILL LEFT
any point in Mississippi and he'll get home from there." He was the subject of disgust to people of Color who were regular delegates to the region convention. Divinity claims he has 147 grandchildren, 16 children and has had five wives. His present wife is 70 years old, the other still in the family of the still child. The grim reaper will soon end their worries as well as stop them from worrying us.
FATIMA AND VIRGIE ARE JES' PINCHED
The neighbors knew him as Frank Pierce, others called him Frank Brown, but the calling cards that he pessed out to his intimate friends here the name of Virginia Dare, 3401 Dearborn St.
His particular pal, who is white, was known as Frank Beech Sullivan but when he called over the telephone he always said: "This is Fatima, who is speaking."
When two young white boys alighted from a Michigan train, they told Sercantis Lannon and Doyle that their names were Frank Owkey and John Parks, and that they were here on the train. Juvenile Officer Michael Kelley surprised the boys who were being entertained by Virginia and Fatima. Virginia was fined $25 and costs and sequestered to 30 days in the hospital, while Fatima was fined $200 and costs.
PRICE TEN CENTS
Police Take 5 in Raid on House; One a Minister
Baltimore, Md., Nov. 2.—Just what the Reverend Charles Carter, assistant pastor in a church in the northeast section of this city and living at 208 Twenty-third St. thought was "a nice little club" is hard to learn. That is what the parson told the judge after the police had raided 510 Biddle St., west, following numerous complaints from neighbors. Miss Gertrude Thomas, Mrs. Bertha Brown, Mrs. Leslie Bratton and Edward Robinson were also guests of "the club."
Just what the reverend was doing talking to one of the "girls" on the second floor couldn't be learned, but he told the judge, however, that he had come down the street to buy a pair of shoes and while standing in front of the house one of the young ladies invited him to come in. Naturally thinking it was a lodge meeting place or clubhouse he accepted the invitation and hadn't been there long before the police arrived. He was given the benefit of the doubt and was let off by the judge. The others were fined from $5 to $25.
JEALOUS, CRAZED WIFE PLUNGES KNIFE INTO BODY OF HER VICTIM
USES POTATO MASHER TO ROB LONE WOMAN
A 20-year-old girl was the innocent victim of an infuriated woman's frenzied jealousy Wednesday night and was stabbed to death without having been given a chance to protect herself from the murderous assault of the woman.
The attack was so vicious and the knife was imbedded so deeply in the victim's back that her assailant was unable to pull it out after the third deadly stroke had been wielded.
Without an attempt of a semblance of regret, Mrs. Estella Edwards, 3115 LaSalle St., confessed to Capt. Charles Larkin, commanding the St. Clark St. police station, that she had plunged the blade into the back of her sister, Archer Ave., when she found her conversing with Horace Edwards, her husband.
Mrs. Edwards told the officers that she lived at the LaSalle St. address, which she was separated, roomed with her sister, Mrs. Fannie Clay, 1905 Dearborn St.
During evening she left her home about 10 o'clock and went to the home of her sister. As she neared the entrance of the building she saw her husband and the girl going toward Archer Ave. They were laughing and
Followed Couple
"I followed them," she declared,
"and when my husband saw me he ran. When I asked the girl what she was doing, she was startled, but answered, but started in the same direction that my husband had taken. I stabbed her, then stabbed
WOMAN BIT HAND OF ANOTHER
It required the efforts of three sergeants of police, German, McGulre and J. J. McFarland. The police who was eager to shoplifting in a loop department store. The woman, who enjoys several aliases, stated that she lived at 5732 Indiana Ave. and that her name was Mrs. Bertha Coin. The police know her best as Edna McCray. It is alleged that she stole two valuable dresses. They were so sheer that she placed one in each stockings When detected in the act by Miss Margaret Flaherty, a store detective, she fought like a tigeress to get away. Miss Flaherty was bitten no the hand and held a release her hold. The sergeants ran to her assistance. The woman threw the store into an uprora, when she was chased from the tenth to the sixth floor before she was recaptured. Her case was continued until Nov. 1.
USES POTAT TO ROB L
New York, Nov. 2.—Armed with a wooden potato masher as a weapon, a robber who lurked about the dark corners of 140th St. and Edgecombe Ave. pouenced upon Mamie Mamble Bremen of 316 W. 142d St. as she was returning home and, after assailing her, took her hand bag, containing
Mise Bremen's screams attracted a mall truck driver who was at work at
her again, but the third time I could not pull the knife out.
"The girl then ran across the street. We walked home. I home. I asked her why did she allow another woman to come there and see my husband. I always carried the knife for my husband, as he had threatened me, and I intended to get him before he got to Larkin interrupted her story to Inquire if the girl had struck her or in any way manifested a desire to quarrel with her when she overtook her. No, I should say not; I did not give her a chance," answered Mrs. Edwards.
Willie Clay, the brother-in-law of Mary Clay, told the Young girl was in their home that evening for the first time. He added that Estella had come there after the stabbing and had declared: "Horace got away, but I got the woman. I am going to wait here now to cxt his husband."
Knife in Back
Fire Routs New Yorkers at Midnight
New York, Nov. 2.—Daniel Young, 48, was burned seriously Friday night when the apartment house in which he lived at 203 W. 14th St. was almost totally destroyed by fire. He was rushed to the Harlem hospital, where his condition is said to be dangerous.
The fire started at midnight and was well under way before firemen could reach the scene, and nearly a hundred tenants, scantily clad, were routed from the building. One family later jumped on the top floor and was rescued through the heroic work of the fire-fighters.
Loss through fire and water will amount to thousands, according to authorities.
O MASHER
ONE WOMAN
the postoffice on 140th St. a few hundred yards away. The robber struck at the girl the second time and started to run. Several passersby joined in the chase, led by the truck driver, and captured him at 141st St. and St. James English, 19, 433 W. 36th St. The wooden potato masher was thrown into a vacant lot during the chase, but was recovered. He was
BOSTON PAPER'S
QUERY: 'DO YOU
KNOW DEFENDER'
Eastern Journalist Is Worried Over Policy of Paper in Demand for Justice
On the editorial page of this paper appears an editorial from the Boston Herald which asks its readers this question: "What would you call Chicago Defender?" Judging from the sentiments expressed by the writer of that editorial he does not seem to understand much about it. He is a woman and would much prefer to person to enlighten his readers. Read it for yourself and see, whether this judgment is correct. Being a news reporter, he judge something of the commuter standing and rating of the Defender by its advertisements and the quality of its make-up. We can guarantee that the Defender is a Bace paper that looked so much like a regular newspaper. He seems to be concerned because he regards our news as propaganda which will breed hatred. He should be surprised if this paper should become a factor in affairs.
---
A Factor in Affairs
We know that we are a factor in affairs which concern our people. A factor in affairs which concern our world and by a million people is a factor anywhere, and so far this editorial writer is right. And why are we right? We are right only what we know to be for the good of the Race, but what the Race knows to be good and right for itself. More are right and just. If the Boston Herald thinks that this is apt to be that it is published in the wrong place. It ought to move from the home and birthplace of right and justice to the Boston common, so rich in the memory of man for what it stands for justice and freedom. If it is breeding trouble to demand of the country for which we have rights, it is being teased by the Constitution and to all other citizens; and breeding trouble to cry out at the injustices of white people who have the power to help us and yet either use it to crush us or teach us to watch the other fellow dislike us.
If it is breeding trouble to tell the world how the white South raps our women makes slaves out of our women who makes our men with lilch and litch;
Want Fair Play
If it is breeding trouble to demand for these poor, abused men and women, we must bar of justice by a fair jury in a state in which they cannot vote for a judge, in which they cannot nage a boat, in which they cannot give our children a chance of ordinary good jobs which are now held to be jobs only for white men. If it is breeding trouble to ask that the taxes we pay be given to us for the care of those of below-social and underprivileged by thieving politicians against whom we cannot vote, we must trouble to ask that black slaves be counted as good as white when training and character worth are the same and equal.
Then we want to say that we are willing to bear the charge of trouble-makers. We have given for years the right to give to its readers—the news that is true and told to them. We give editorial opinion from the penns of the last student among us from the Michigan and Chicago universities. We cannot help it if the white man record will not stand the light of truth. The facts are not of our choice. They speak for themself.
James C. Jeffery was born in Chicago in 1922. He attended college in Edward T. Virginia, Jeffery he prepared for college in Chicago in 1942. He attended university in 1989 and Harvard Law school in 1992. He is a senior member of Clark, engaged in the general practice of bank building in the First National Bank building in the First National Bank association for the Chicago Board of Trade, board of officers of the Chicago Bar association, 1921-22. He is a member of Bag association, a government committee Chicago Bar association, permissive association, and has been member of association, and has been member of association. He was president of the Vale club of Chicago, 1921-22, and president of the James C. Jeffery foundation. He endorsed prominent commercial states for apportionment to interstate Commerce commission by President original organizers of the Four-Minute State throughout the State and served as the Four-Minute men for the state of Illinois of the same organization. Nobody doing war work made more
Mr. Jeffrey is a member of the follo-
wship of the University club, Raguet club,
club Law club, Chicago Literary club,
Golf club, Chicago Club, also a member
of the Illinois State Bar association and Ameri-
can Bar association.
Mr. Jeffrey is from one of the pioneer
chicago families. His father, Mr.
Jeffrey, was a lawyer. In 1855, Mr.
Jeffrey's father was for many
years connected with the Illinois Con-
tinent. Mr. Jeffrey's father was president of it. Edward T. Jeffrey (Mr. Jeffrey's father) was sent
to the University to be the father of
a report on the Paris expedition
with a view to securing the
city. He was presented with a mea-
sure of the City of Chicago. In this he was
successful and was presented with a mea-
sure of the World's Columbian exposition calling
him "the father of the World's Columbian
exposition."
Even if you have about decided
that you are destined to have those
plumets, blotches, bumps, cexema-
sure, etc., the rest of your life
will be surprised that you are mis-
taken if you will simply begin using
the wonderful Black and White
tumors.
Black and White Ointment is now selling at the tremendous rate of 1000 a year. Any dealer can supply you. Be sure you get Black and White Ointment. The people are depending on to get rid of their skin troubles and worries. The 50c size contains three sizes much as the liberal 25c size-Adv.
SPREAD OUT. DOCTORS
ROLAND HAYES QUIETS MOB SUNDAY SCHOOL WORKERS TO IN PRAGUE DURING RECITAL MEET IN CINGINNATI 1924
The Chicago Defender is for the doctors. It is time that the doctors should also be are for themselves—Chicago doctors.
The doctors are crowding themselves and the people. Also, the people are talking. The Second and third wards are asking for elbow room.
The healing art should draw no line and the doctor should spread his knowledge and the people. Not among "Colored people." Not all the people. Take a peep at conitions in Chicago. Before long the present rate of "settlement" will be practicing on themselves.
One-half, perhaps two-thirds of the doctors live in the Second and Third wards. We need a large number of physicians. But our people are found in these wards, maybe, but doctors skilled in the great profession of medicine should step out into the broad fields of com-
Esth Chicago ward, including the Gold Coast, should have from one to two No Colored people are found, gon hang on your shingle, doctor; take your chance, not as a Colored doctor, but as a native businessman, who knows his business, who is not afraid to try luck among any Americans. Thousands of native and foreign businessmen clash over other practitioners of the science of medicine, but they are not looking up Colored doctors in "Colored" account of race. Many fall down because of a lack of knowledge or inattention to the duties of the great business skill and knowledge. With doctor the score counts; only results tell. Colored doctors, and learn through experience, while the outside world learns of you and yours through contact.
Prague, Czecko-Slovakia, Nov. 2.—A unique race riot was taught and waged by the students when they were appalled when Roland Hayes an American, and reputed to be one of the leading tenors of this age, had unwittingly caused at one of his performances at the City hall. It was at the seated hall that the ball was filled to capacity with enthusiastic Czech patrols. The curtain had just gone and a team of commuters announced that the selection named on the program Hayes would sing a "Nero spiritual." This group and seemed to call for a violent outburst from the Czech patrols in the front row, who started the cry: "We are not a guague." This shout was taken up by others in the audience until a boy present seemed to have the many races present and all began to clamor for preference. This smilingly advanced to the front of the stage and announced in English that the program would continue as scheduled. Their money back at the box office. Discriminated Czechs and others who felt that their race was being slightly abused immediately and the recital proceeded.
* IADVERTISEMENT.1
LOUIS J. BEHAN
Forty-seven years old; attended pule
and high schools and one-year classi
cate course at the University of Den-
Chicago in 1955; employed as报
记者 on the news station and Chicago
Chronicle, while working at the
Citizen Collec
one year was stee
grapher and
followed T. Noo
man and Victor
Kitton
grapher and
head clerk for
A. M. master in chan
C. C. court.
licensed by Illinois Su-
Louis J. Bhan
Louia J. Behan
KING SOLOMON WAS A NEGRO
JESUS WAS A NEGRO
*Written by Biblio History, Author, Rev. Jan. W. Week*
"The book entitled "The Black Man was the Father of Civilization" shows
GENERAL NEWS
be ailing, but they are not sick enough to need all the Colored doctors to attend. Spread out doctors; the quicker the better. Do many of the doctors attended the sessions of the American Institute of Surgeons? This reporter attended two sessions and saw only one Colored doctor. Very bad record, it would seem, to the people. A convention of eminent surgeons of America, whose on and move by, should have engaged the attention of every first-class doctor in Chicago. It should have been done. Daniel Hale Williams is honored in this country because he is honorable as a man and as a physician and surgeon not on his color. So must all doctors travel. Other professions are based opinion; not so with the profession of a surgeon. A doctor alone is the standard in medicine.
Doctors, read more and run less. Doctors, note that the surgeon has a without a "ball." Colored doctors "socialize" too much and study too little. A condition been "colored." Colored doctors have a failure without a "ball." Doctors should meet to exchange views, opinions and results of a study. Exchange empty pleasanties with ladies of excursion and ambitions or glances with blank stares of sad and disheartened Doctors, hold yourself together and let the exharettes loose. A people's home. Another thought on the doctors automobilizing their way through an unfriendly world: Send your patients the pharmacists, from Stoball and Hudson straight through. If you know your stuff your drug store will back you up. Doctors, spread out, and be careful that you don't lose the responsibility. You are the pride of a race.
Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 2. —Yielding to the pressure of the tremendous vote favor, the Sunday school school city as the place for holding the 1924 session which will be the nineteenth city over such cities as Washington, Detroit, Cleveland, Galveston, Tex.; Laurel, Miss.; Jacksonville, Fla., and Dayton, Ohio, for meeting according to Henry Boyd, secretary, are June 11 to 16. The congress secretary further states the official board to meet will be president of the national Baptist convention he expected that a call for the official board to meeting will be greeted by a press, so that not only will the Sunday school forces be gathered here at the time, but the personnel of the official board will be invited to the convention (unincorporated) will be here. It is also understood that the secretary of the Baptist Ministers' Alliance and the president, who were in attendance at the Ohio state conference, the fact known there that Cincinnati was in the race and that they received the moral support of the Baptists in their annual session at
From now on this city will be looking forward to the coming of the biggest host of Sunday school work in the United States. The organization of the city into the various committees is to begin at once.
LINDSAY, ONCE PROMINENT IN POLITICAL LIFE, TO TRAVEL
ADVERTISMENT.1
WELLS M. COOK
BORN: 1121015
schole. Koe college,
from which he was
graduated in 1877.
He was born in bea
been in bea
Fellow third edition
Streams of
Streams of
PETER H. BURGESS
separate judicial ballot, Judge Cook was an important witness before the Rave constituency reservation. He should have the support of every member of the Rave, and he will be with his family as 5541 Waltham Ave. The Chicago harbor association pays of him: $10,000 for qualified and has given universal satisfaction as Judge. He should be re-elected."
revention of complete jails.
Vote to re-identify Cook Nom. 6. 1923.
ROBIS THE PROPRIETOR
Philadelphia, Nov. 21—Charles Perkins
London, Nov. 21—John Washington's restaurant
and ordered breakfast Saturday.
After eating he went behind the
counter, took the proprietor's pocket-
knife, and fled. Washington was in the
kitchen at the time, but gave chase,
calling a policeman. Perkins was
caught and locked up.
FACE BUTCHERED UP
A man, known only as Dan, is being
pought by the police in connection with
the robbery. Ellis Ave., a baffit, Ridgeway was
cut all over the face by the man when
at 4:44 1145 Ellis Ave.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
ITALIANS MAKE NO DIFFERENCE IN ARMY RANKS
---
Colorphobia Unknown Amöng
Italy's Defenders Under
Premier Mussolini
Readers of the daily newspapers were no doubt greatly impressed by the bomb attacks at Turin, Italy, a few days ago, when half a dozen grenades in the hands of menhes of the Armenian military display at the stadium in the presence of Premier Mussolini. The report states that the hands of soldiers blown to pieces and that the "right hand of Lieutenant Albergo, a Negro was amputated on the spot." He outraged a "viva" to Premier Mussolini as the operation was in progress.
No Prejudice
The attention of readers of this newspaper is drawn to the fact, oft repeated in these columns, that menhes in the inuries of foreign countries. Men are recognized as men and when they are utilized for the defense of women and children, they are being made into groups carrying what we know in American as the "Jim Crow" stigma. The bravery of menhes in the face of a situation which certainly must have carried a vast amount of suffering, is not surprising and importance to be used as the "punch" part of the Press report.
"I want to say a special word about them. They have been doing xenomian service and their members have been spreading the word about this canine signatures. I think churches, too, have been responding valiantly and have been churches on Sunday, Nov. 11, Houston Martyrs' day, will make an impact. They should be remembered that Nov. 11 also Armistice day, the day that marked the end of the great war, and the softball played such an important part."
America is the only place where Jim Crowism is allowed to prevail in this particular line. "There is no reason that we should think but a dark regiment, regardless of the fact that we are real Americans. "Mixed" groups are unknown in the United States, which the United States has patrolled, at home or abroad, our records compare more than favorably with those made by the police. "The police are right and there is but little doubt that the Italian have had many chances to note the extreme bravery and fortitude which the police are able to "darker" conquer's mütter.
WATCHMAN FINED FOR
WATCHING MAN WITH LOVE
HITTING MAN WITH CLUB
Lynbrook, L. Nov. 2-Arthur L. Flourney, 16 Colonial Ave. Freeport, Long Island railroad crossing watchman, before Justice Edward T. Neu on Wednesday to a charge of assaulting Dominick Dalto, an Italian, with a Sunday, Oct. 20, Flourney warned a white youth about leaining on the railroad to raise them. Dalto overheard film and later in the day unbranded Flourney for his language to the lad. The lad was none of his business and when he did not heed, proceeded to heat him. Justice Neu told the watchman that while he was undoubtedly aggrieved over the remarks addressed to him the punishment, and fined him $20.
Hear Mine. Florence Cole-Tahir, Race's foremost sorpoany, in recital at Olvet Baptist church, Friday evening, Jr. Admission 20 cents—Ads.
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---
PETER HENRY
24th to Get Freedom by Signatures
24th to Get Freedom by Signatures
New York, Nov. 2.—The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is saying that the campaign for the freeing of the 54 members of the 24th infantry all imprisoned in Leavenworth, Washington, has received the 100,000 signatures with which we hope to go before President Coolidge, asking him to pardon the 44 members of the 24th infantry, "and Mr. Johnson, secretary of the association, "but we might have a considerable number above that, that we would like to send the news in the country but has spread the news of this campaign to free the Houston martyrs. Churches and fraternities are being obtained by the thousands everywhere. One Colored man in this city took petitions in the city, although those petitions have not yet come in, we are informed that high officers of the Standard Oil company have signed
MUST LET HUSBAND ALONE
A first flight was engaged in by Mira
Barbara Johnson, 11 W. 11th St.
Over the affections of the former's hus-
band, the first flight was for Miss
Johnson was instructed by judge
Bernard Bentley under a judge's
bond, to let Danny alone.
TO NIGHT
Tomorrow
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MOST OF OUR WOMEN AND GIRLS ARE GUILTY OF VERY SERIOUS HABIT
Women Now Depend on St. Joseph's G.F.P. To Restore Their Vitality
GENERAL NEWS
MOST OF
AND GI
OF VE
DAYSOF HEALTHDAWN FOR M'GEHEE LADY
Well-Known Woman Was Almost a Wreck From Pain, Soreness, Backaches and Headaches; Was Able to Be Up Only Part of Her Time; She Was So Weak, Nervous and Run-Down.
"I was only able to be up part of my time and never felt well; I was so weak, nervous and run-down from soreness and pains low down in my left groin," says Mrs. V. Johnson, well-known lady of the Race in McGehee, Ark. "The doctors and everybody said it was caused by a laceration at childbirth, and instead of getting better I got worse every day in spite of what I did to help myself.
"I cramped so at my ..... and got so sick every time that it weakened me terribly, and I felt depressed all the time. I felt like nothing was going to do me any good, until I started using St. Joseph's G. F. P. because it seemed to be helping so many other women who were suffering like I was.
"Six bottles of this wonderful medicine certainly made a surprising difference in my looks and feelings. I don't feel like the same woman. I enjoy my meals, sleep well at night, my nerves are steady, my side is well, and I never have a pain or ache any more. Everybody says I look ten per cent better.
"I am recommending St. Joseph's G. F. P. to every woman I hear complain of having 'female trouble,' because I want them to learn about it. It has the power to overcome and stamp out that dreaded malady of women. All there is to do is to keep on taking G. F. P. and the day of health will dawn."
If your drugist hasn't got St. Joseph's G. F. P. send to Battler's Pharmacy, Memphis, Tennessee, for a bottle.
BEST KNOWN WOMEN OF THE RACE TELL OF RESULTS FROM G.F.P.
Say Never Before Have They Known Anything Which So Quickly Overcomes So Called "Female Troubles."
It is very doubtful if anything has ever been received by our women with such white-open arms, so F. G. P. is not only the one who has and there is only one thing which can be responsible for this popular approval, and that is, G. F. P. is said to have a special aptitude for the elimination of the mysterious and dreaded midnight—from which so many girls and women of the Race have been exposed, what was causing all their trouble. The representative of the discoverers of St. Josephs G. F. P. predicted that women would overcome serious obstacles in the management of their generative organs, attained by pain and extreme discomfort, nervousness, headaches, cramps,ritable disposition, melancholy and depression which causes such sufferers to really feel that life is hardly worth living because it seems to them that they have no further hope of getting well
To such women St. Joseph's G. F. P. comes as a ray of sunshine out of a dreary, clouded sky, and the prediction that in a few years the country catches the female generative organs, and its accompanying misery and suffering, will be a thing of the past; it last being proved a joyful truth to thousands of women who had long shaggy and almost ready to give up.
If your druggist hasn't got St. Joseph's G. F. P., send $1 to Hattler's Pharmacy, Memphis, Tenn., for a bottle.
Women
St. J
G
Astonishing Growth of Mysterious Malady Among Women of the Race Leads to Discovery of Almost Unbelievable Conditions They Endure.
Almost all mankind is a slave to habit. Habits formed in youth often continue through life to old age. Habit regulates our dress, customs and manners and ways of living, and even changes the appearance and health of people. The brawny arms and deep chest of the blacksmith as well as the flabby muscles and weak lungs of the average office worker are results of habits of occupation.
There are habits of dress, eating, sleeping, cleanliness, work and play; but the most important habit of all, in its bearing on the future success and happiness of men and women, is the habit of health. No other culture is worth while if we do not have physical culture.
Good health is often the result of good habits in all the other branches of human activity. Bad health frequently results from bad habits of eating, sleeping, work or play.
Even suffering and pain can become a habit. The thousands of our women who suffer from headaches, backaches, pains in the sides, cramping and nausea month in and month out, taking their pain as a matter of course, are witnesses to the truth of this assertion.
That all this endurance of pain is no longer unavoidable but is now only a matter of habit with some is simply demonstrated by the thousands of women who are now regaining their former health and strength, with an abundance of energy, vitality and youthful buoyancy through the consistent use of St. Joseph's G. F. P., the phenomenal medicine now being introduced with such astonishing success to the girls and women of the Race.
"It was mainly through their efforts to break this age-long habit of suffering among women," says the representative of the discoverers of G. F. P., "that we were enabled, after many years of tireless search, to trace the cause of nine-tenths of all so-called 'female disorders' to the terrible and merciless enemy—Catarrh of the Generative Organs, and to provide a quick and easy means of rescuing women from the clutches of this demon.
"The undisputed superiority of St. Joseph's G. F. P., as a method of relief from Catarrh of the Generative Organs, and as a means of restoring health and vitality, with plenty of youthful buoyancy to women, is the most convincing evidence of the success of our efforts."
The thousands of women of the Race who are becoming miracles of restored health, happiness, energy, strength and vitality every day through the use of this marvelous medicine, show how quickly this great discovery is changing the habits of a nation.
Just as the first step is necessary for a traveler to start in the direction of your destination, the first step required is any sick or unwell woman who would break the habit of pain and suffering and be restored to health, strength and vitality. You must be by a medicine unless you use it.
If your druggist hasn't got St. Joseph's G. F. P., send $1 to Battlefly's Pharmacy, Memphis, Tenn., for a prescription.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1929
---
WHOLE NEIGHBORHOOD ASTONISHED BY UNUSUAL CASE OF MRS. WILBERT
Attractive Young Girl of the Race Was So Weak and Nervous She Couldn't Take Any Interest in Her Friends or Her School Work; She Was Being Dragged Down and Embarrassed by Irregularity, Headaches, Dizziness and Awful Pains in Her Sides.
"For the longest time my daughter suffered agony from terrible headaches, dizzy spells, awful pains in her sides and a dull, heavy feeling," says Mrs. Ella Wilbert, well known and highly respected member of the Race, who lives at 122 W. Ninth St., in Little Rock, Ark. "Her . . . never had been regular, but she was always worse when the time for them came around. She was awfully nervous and was hardly able to drag herself around. She was always worse when the condition, she couldn't seem to take any interest in her friends or her school work; just sit around the house nearly all sat and looked miserable and depressed."
"Some friends told me what a wonderful medicine St. Joseph's G. F. P. is for girls in her condition, and I brought it and started her to taking it. "The whole neighborhood was surprised, made up of girls in her right. Before she had finished the first bottle you could see a remarkable change in her. She had more life, her cheeks began to lighten, and her skin was right. Now she is perfectly regular, and never has any more trouble with those terrible headaches, dizzy spells and tremors, and she is as well and strong as any girl in the crowd she runs around with. "St. Joseph's G. F. P. is a wonderful medicine from the way it is helping my girl, and I wish I could tell every mother of the whole Race who has experienced a daughter about our experience with it. If your drugist hasn't got St. Joseph's G. F. P., send $1 to Battler's Pharmacy, Memphis, Tenn., for a
POPULAR LITTLE ROCK
WOMAN VICTIM OF
PECULIAR ATTACK
POPULAR LITTLE ROCK
WOMAN VICTIM OF
PECULIAR ATTACK
She Was in a Miserable Condition; Back Hurt Her So Bad She Couldn't Sleep; She Had No Appetite and Suffered Torture From Bearing Down Pains and an Awful Soreness in Her Sides; Tried All Sorts of Things in a Frantic Effort to Get Rid of Her Trouble, But Nothing Helped Her Until She Started Using St. Joseph's G. F. P.
"No one who hasn't been through the same sort of, an experience, can understand how much I suffered from irregularity, terrible handwriting and injuries in my sides," says Mrs. Martha Bailey, a very popular lady of the Race, who lives at 3212 Gaines Ave. in Little Rock, Arkansas, and is a woman. It was all I could do to hold my head up at times, and I never could get enough sleep or eat enough to keep up my strength. I could think of, but it looked like nothing was going to help me, and I was just about ready to give up all hope of getting well when a friend, Joseph G. S. to me, recommended St. Joseph's G. F. to me.
"She was so enthusiastic about it that she persuaded me to take it and make a different woman out of me, both in looks and feelings. My friends are amazed to see how much better you are than your younger than I did a few weeks ago. I am perfectly regular now, and don't have any more backaches or G. F. P. is a blessing to wear, slack girds and women, and I want to tell everyone about it, so that they will know what to do in case they have trouble I had for so long a time. If your druggist hasn't got St. Joseph's G. F. P. send 11 to Battler's Pharmacy, Memphis, Tenn., for a
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
SPEAKER URGES MISSOURIANS TO COME TOGETHER
L. Hollingsworth Wood Tells
St. Louis Audience White
Man's Influence Wanes
St. Louis, Mo. Nov. 2.—"The worst feature of the grave situation of the so-called Negro problem is that the Negro faith fails." John Hollingsworth, declared in *Hollingsworth Wood* (white) of New York City in an address before members of the fashionable White City club here last Mr. Wood is president of the National Urban league, an organization in which men and women of both races meet for the discussion of problems passionate way he referred to recent incidents in St. Louis as being sufficient grounds for racial conflicts. He discussed the questions that our club works, the intimation of our people through the vaccination grusade and the decision of the courts in the matter of Race men and women in our problems tending toward race flats and certain racial antagonism.
How to Face Situation
He made a hold and common-sense plea for our Race, pointing out that the only two possible solutions of the problem of destruction are also intelligent co-operation of the white and black races.
He emphasized the thought that "Negroes are more and more doubling the willingness of the white man or woman to attack Negroes a basic part of our civilization."
Wood paid many glowing tributes to the patriotism and the gentle spirit of our Race. He urged his white brothel to become better acquainted with dark men with whom they come in contact.
"How many of you have been inside the Colored Y. M. C. A?" How many of you say more than "Hello, Jim to the Negroes who serve you" to the intelligent Negroes" he urged.
Makes Issue Acute
The present migration from the South, which makes the problem especially acute here and in all our areas, was not only the lure of the better wage scales but to get away from lynching in the South, and because of the better educational advantages of the plucky and adventurous who are coming, he said. "I was wood warned that any laborer should with the closing of a few factories, in view of the heavy influx, set off the fuse of an explosion. Under such circumstances he continued, the realization of the need for laborers and homes would he brought home to the union laborer and might lead him to think that he should take the matter into his hands to rid the community of
Doubts White Man
According to Wood, the most important thing to do right away is to attempt to restore the faith of our people in the white race. The president termed as a fundamental attack on the standards of American democracy, which was formulated, presumably, to protect the weak; and the minority, Negro, ever since he was brought to America against his will, has always bent his efforts and thoughts to the solving of the problem of racial adjustment". Wood said one-tenth as hard, the problem would have been solved. We have done no thinking at all—only some pretty poor acting. We should we be asking the Negro to be a super-Christian?" he queried. "And yet the remarkable thing is that he is. "I beg of you," the speaker said in conclusion, "to get together the most people and to make them a part of your basic civilization. Necro constitute one-tenth of the population of the United States, and the solution of the racial problem is a family affair the intelligent thought of all citizens."
JUMPS FROM AUTO
Mrs. Lucile Love, 22, 5312 Michigan Ave. was carried to Provident hospital suffering with injuries she received when she jumped out of an auto accident was sidelined. She refused to state why she made a leap from the machine.
ATTEMPTS SUICIDE
While despondent, Mrs. Mary Baker, a 20-year-old nurse at the 3413 Glenn Hospital, was drinking a quantity of lysol. She was rushed to the hospital and is reported out of danger. Baker and is reported out of danger.
KEEP TOO MUCH TO THEMSELVES
Many men and women of middle age feel that they have never had a sense of humor, and they make the same themselves. But the main reason for it usually is that they let such things as pimples, rash, "breaking out," crusty, tatter, slick, on their face, bark, hangs on, or is not wanted around and they keep to themselves too much. You can get just as much out of life as anyone. All you need is confidence in yourself, which you get from your friends, and those skin troubles, if you just use the wonderful Black and White Ointment. It is economically priced, in generous packages. All dealers have it. The 50* size contains three times as much as the 35* size. Adr.
J.
VOTE FOR
MARCHEL ANAGH
Rebublican Candidate
JUDITH BURKE
Has Been All Faithful for
the Nation
ELECTION NOVEMBER 6, 1988
Lawyer Advised Man Who Faces Gallows Wrong
St. Louis, Mo. Nov. 2—James B. Williams, 23, is today facing death on the gallows because his lawyer talked too much. It is claimed that he killed James Puckett on June 5 in a quarrel over a woman. When the case was called to trial Judge Calhoun in the criminal court of a trial or a sentence of life imprisonment if he pleaded guilty, doing away with the necessity of a trial. "You do it," whispered Williams' attorney, Ignatius Page. "The worst you can get is a life sentence, as they never sentence anybody to death." Williams took the刑. The jury found him guilty. The verdict was death on the gallows.
Jilted Mrs. Tut While in Mourning
Jilted Mrs. Tut While in Mourning
Can you picture Mrs. King Tut walling and grieving and calling in countess handmaidens who help her hew the pillows on her bed, not stopping the padlock on old Tuts tomb? Can you? Well, you've got a lot of imagination. Listen to the facts of the story. Breasted of the University of Chicago, who was present when Tut was taken out for inspection in Luxor, Egypt. Of Breasted, who read the writing on the wall and other places, spread the scandal recently before 2,000, including tacitly money from the bank. Breasted away Tut. Must Tut emissary gifts to the king of the Hittites, 1,400 miles away, and beseeched him to send his sons to marry the Meanwhile Tuts soul was being prepared for burial.
But the king had other ideas about his sons, who filled her bed.
Mrs. Tut, mourning at last, died
an ordinary unmarried citizen.
Prof. Brested also found the first astronomical instrument made by King, Tut. I was examining the tomb a life-sized statue of Tut winked at me," he said. "I was started. Examination showed, however, that the substance used for the eye, similar to tinglass, was detached and sus- tained by a cobweb. The draft made it appear to wink. I was re- relieved."
BIOGRAPHY OF JOHN P. McGOORTY
John P. McGooory was born at Conneaut Ohio, but resided in Chicago and College Law in 1892, and received a degree of L. Lk. Lake Forest University, 1893. He was a house of the legislature; was re-elected in 1898; was again elected to the legislature in 1896; was chosen Democratic leader of the house in the 43rd general assembly. He was elected judge of the Circuit Court in 1915. In 1914, while chief justice of the Circuit
JOHN P. MCGORTY
court, he had much to do with the adoption of the present plan of organization of Cook county. In the same year he was appointed by the Surgeon court of Illinois as appellate judge of the Circuit court, and was appointed years. Upon his resignation from the Circuit court bench in 1920 the judges of the Circuit court, at a meeting held in our college, adjudged following resolution: "Our colleague, Hon. John by McGregor, has been assigned judge of the Circuit court of Cook county, Illinois, in which court he sat for court, hereby express to him not only our admiration for his distinguished judicial service, accomplished with parity, but our sincere regret at parting with him and our fervent hope that at success and at no distant day return to the bench he so graciously adorned. Thomas Taylor, Jesse Holdom Frank Johnston, David F. Matechell Donald L. Mervill Hugo M. Friend Donald L. Mervill George F. Russ Harry B. Miller Charles A. Will
Thomas Taylor
Frank Johnston,
Donald L. Morrill
Harry B. Miller
Harry B. Miller
Javid M. Brothers
Freddie R. De
Freddie R. De
Jesse A. Baldwin
Jesse A. Wilson
S. Wilson
M. Torriss
tieries M. Thomson
"
Thomas G. Windsor Charles M. Thom-
George Kersten
"His record in the legislature was com-
petech. The Chicago Bar association's
committee on candidates said of Judge
Bernard M. Cohen, "While on the bench he was affable.
"While on the bench he was affable, courteous and generally well liked by his colleagues, preceding his re-election in 1915 Judge McGloory received the second nomination for the position of Judge McGloory at all times has been closely identified with civic affairs. He was mended by the citizens' committee to the managing committee for the mayoralty nomination preceding the recent election. The following editorial, entitled, "Judge McGloory's settlement," appended to the Chicago Evening Post cover, 6, 1200. "The retirement of Judge McGloory from the county court will be widely recognized. The judge has won the esteem of his colleagues, of the legal profession and of the judiciary. His ability as a jurist and his fine qualities of heart and brain, which his retirement is not occasioned by any lessening of vigor. We wish the state could offer men of his type sufficient openness to seek larger emoluments in private practice. Too high a price cannot be paid for character and capacity on the bench."
We are glad Judge McGoory is going to remain Chicago and I have the public spirit and ability in those cities which are the common duties of citizenship. I am the common duty of citizenship of the Chicago Bar Association and the Illinois Lawyers' association by a vote of about four to one.
Keep your lawns clean. Have the children remove new newspapers from in front of your advertising a clean, fine character.
Physician Held With White Man Following Death
Murfreshore, Tenn., Nov. 2—Dr. J. H. Lemore, physician, inducted with Neville Sanford, a white farmer, for murder in conspiracy with the wife of Sanford's wife, went on trial here last week. Although the husband and the physician were named in the same indictments, Dr. Lemore is being tried first. We agree that Mrs. Sanford's death was due to an illegal operation performed by the physician with the convivence of her husband. Following the arrest of her husband, the wife of safeceping and hold there until the intense feeling here subsided.
Finds Lost Sister Thru "Billikens"
Finds Lost Sister Thru "Billikens"
That the Bud Billiken club, popularly known as the "Defender Junior," is serving other purposes besides the baseballpy, was disclosed recently when a man came into the office to say that it was through the Billiken club that he located his sister whom he met in Chicago, whereabouts were unknown to him. The man was Robert H. Hayes, 3763 Rhodes Ave., Chicago, and the sister Jacobs, 771 Shawmut Ave., Boston. According to Mr. Hayes, he had been separated from his sister ten years ago when he left the family in Chicago to attend college, since that time he had attempted to communicate with her, but she, with her family, had also left Memphis and it was as if the air had swallowed
Then, one day recently, he was reading the Defender, and after he had finished with all the adult news, decided to look at the news by and for children. The first thing to greet Roberta Jacobs, the daughter of his lost sister, and the girl who was named for him. Roberta had won first prize in a Billiken drawing contest, hence the conspicuous display of his name. Since that time Robert Hayes has been in communication with his sister and niece, and is now contemplating a trip to Boston.
FORMER UNWED CHORUS STAR ABOUT TO BECOME MOTHER
New York, New. 2.-Pretty Miss Rosetta Melone, who, it is said, at one time was one of the most charming show, is about to become a mother, and charges Henry Clendening, 40. 53 West, 135th St. with being the father of her unborn child. Clendening, it is well known about what was arrested Saturday on a warrant issued by Judge Salmon on special sessions, charging him with the offense. It is alleged Clendening, in relationship with Miss Melone, his only dealings with her being in a business way.
ACUSED OF ROBBERY
Upon the testimony of Bernard Zelior, a Yellow chauffeur, Mrs. Marilyn, the grand jury under $1,000 bonds. Zelior stated that she, in company with two men, held him up and robbed him of $18. /
STABBED BY SWEETHEART
Mrs. Hynes, 40, 423 State St. and Frank Hynes resulted in Mrs. Hynes receiving a knife wound in the back and hip. It is alameda Hynes is a sweetheart of Mrs. Long.
PETER H.
JUDGE HOWARD HAYES
Republican Candidate for
JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT
11TH NAME ON BALLOT
WHAT THE NEW
WILL COST
If you now pay $50 a year
increased 20 cents.
If you now pay $100 a year
increased 40 cents.
The voting of this small tax w
effect in any way upon the s
tion.
Children admitted free at all
Adults admitted free at least three
including Sundays and all holidays.
This is to be a barless Zoo, where animals will
natural quarters on a tract of 172 acres in the
Bookfield and Riverside.
VOTE "YES" ELECTION DAY
THE NEW ZOO
OST YOU
50 a year, it will be
100 a year, it will be
small tax will have no
upon the school situa-
free at all times.
least three days a week,
all holidays.
are animals will be kept in large,
2 acres in the Forest Preserve at
TION DAY, NOV. 6th
WHAT THE NEW ZOO WILL COST YOU
If you now pay $50 a year, it will be increased 20 cents.
If you now pay $100 a year, it will be increased 40 cents.
The voting of this small tax will have no effect in any way upon the school situation.
Children admitted free at all times.
Adults admitted free at least three days a week, including Sundays and all holidays.
This is to be a barless Zoo, where animals will be kept in large, natural quarters on a tract of 172 acres in the Forest Preserve at Bookfield and Riverside.
VOTE "YES" ELECTION DAY, NOV. 6th
For the adoption of an act to authorize the Commissioners of the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, Illinois, to establish and maintain a zoological park and to levy and collect a tax to pay the cost thereof.
---
GENERAL NEWS
SOUTHERNER IS FEELING LOSS OF WORK ANIMAL
Writer Says Exodus Takes Favorite Question From Cornfield Politicians
Washington, D. C., Nov. 2.—The National Republican, organ of the Republican party, of which George B. Lockwood is editor, is out in an inspired article on Southern methods to obstacle migration. Shorn of prejudice, as this editorial surely is, it reflects a judicial attitude that renders it a classic. Its caption, "Let the Negro Go Where He Can Do Best," is quite as generous as the text itself. The solution of the South's much exploited 'Negro problem' is being reached in the migration of the Negro to portions of the country where he can get better wages, better opportunity, better treatment, and no Negro question seems plain enough—but some way the South doesn't seem to be satisfied with this simple settlement of the matter. In several of the Southern states it takes a crime to induce a Negro to migrate to a place in which his new lives, unless an almost prohibitive license fee has been paid. Negro emigration is looked on with no favor in most Southern communities. The reason is evident in increased farms and rising labor prices.
"If the South is not to be populated of its Colored population the Southerner must begin to regard the Negro as a little something more than a slave and enter under which the Negro is held in practical peonage and where his chance of getting justice in any dispute with a white man is nil, must be made to be more industrious, honest, self-respecting black man. Lynching on suspicion or for the purpose of 'showing the nigger his plage' must cease. The nigger question should have to drop out of the school and become a professional Democratic politicians.
"Otherwise the Negro ought to get out of the South and he should be encouraged to do so for the good of both races. The reduction of Negro and white black blood, will insure better treatment for the Negro who remains in the South. The Negro, like every other citizen, has the right to improve his economic condition wherethere is possible or him to do so in that condition, but only hope of a better status. Social equality is out of the question, political equality is some distance off, but economic equality and equality before the law is the birthright of all people, a child born under the American flag, regardless of race, color or previous condition of servitude."
GONGREGATIONAL CHURCHES TO MEET AT CHARLESTON, S. C
GONGREGATIONAL CHURCHES TO MEET AT CHARLESTON, S. C
Charleston, S. C. Nov. 2.—The annual convention of the Congregational churches will hold its 33d session with the Plymouth church of Charleston, Rev. C. S. Lobdietter pastor. This great gathering of ministers and laymen from all sections of Georgia and South Carolina is looked forward to by the denominational and inspiration in the advance of Congregationalism for the coming year. Dr. Alfred Lawless, Jr., and Rev. J. J. Thomas, superintendent and assistant pastor of southern denominational work, will present as well as representatives from the national office. The program for the convention will cover near, every angle of church churches and their communities of which are common to every community, are handled by experts in simple terms, thus making them practical for the small churches and their communities. The gathering is more than an ordinary convention, it is equivalent in some respects to an institute for the teaching of church and community work from the standpoint of Congregationalism, especially to both ministers and laymen.
The growth of the general convention of Georgia and South Carolina is a gauge by which each church in jurisdiction is measured once a year.
RIVERWOOD RESORT
For the past two Sundays, Oct. 21 and 28, large crowds have been visiting the resort. Automobile parties came one after the other and many of the tourists impressed to note how well the preparation is going. Be sure to follow the most desirable huts are like wildfire—Ady.
FORTY CLUB MEETS
The Forty club members were added to the assistant corporation counsel their regular monthly meeting, Saturday club. He talked about the club. His talk was one of the most interesting made this fall. Benjamin William Haynes, program committee.
THE OHICAGO DEFENDER
ACCOUNT OF POPPERY
POLICE CALLED TO SETTLE ROW BETWEEN WOMEN
Mrs. O'Keefe's Crude'Manners Starts Quarrel on Crowded Car; Friend Loses Hair
Mrs. Ruth Jackson, 27 years old, 4534 Calmet Ave. a school teacher, demonstrated her ability to teach less children when it becomes necessary.
Mrs. Jackson believed it was necessary recently when she resented an insult offered her by Mrs. Margaret when the two were entering a Southside "I" train at Randolph and Wells Sts. The crowd was pushing to board the train. Mrs. O'Keefe resented the insult when the two were shoved her. The latter asked why. "I should have known better than to argue with a black ape like you." returned Mrs. O'Keefe. With her was a white man, a police officer, who lives at 111 E47th St. 47th St. "I'm too much of a lady to call you an ape," said Mrs. Jackson. That woman was a police officer, who apart by a policeman Mrs. Jackson left it and came down to the street. Then both women attacked Mrs. Jackson. She clinched with Mrs. Jackson and shoved her apart by a policeman Mrs. Jackson held a handful of Mrs. Wilkins' hair. The women had Mrs. Jackson arrested and she was booked on a dis
A half dozen witnesses, all white, testified against Mrs. Jackson before Judge Joseph Burke of the Englewood court. All of them declared that Mrs. Burke was J. A. Winters, pastor of the People's church, testified in behalf of the former and said Mrs. Jackson did not strike first. Rev. H. E. Stewart, former pastor of Quinn chapel, was a accused girl and said she was a team member in the Sunday school of his church.
"I believe that the whole affair grew out of this girl being called a barrish name by this woman. The Judge Burke Mrs. Jackson was represented by Attorney Lewis E. Johnson.
DIES SUODENLY
While riding on a cow wagon of the
John A. Johnson 5025 Lafayette Ave.
William Barrett. 5205 Deerhill St.
John A. Johnson 5025 Lafayette Ave.
William Barrett. 5205 Deerhill St.
died was caused by heart disease.
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Separated Man and Wife; Shot by the Husband
Separated Man and Wife; Shot by the Husband
Ensley, Ala., Nov. 2—Solomon Scales of Docena, Ala., was shot and instantly killed by Jonathan Bentley at 9:37 a.m. at West 27th St. Sunday afternoon. The shooting occurred, according to witnesses, after Scales, who was assaulted at his apartment between Kelly and his wife, gone to Kelly's home and provoked a quarrel with him. The Bentley and Murphy of the Ensley detective force, who arrested Kelly, disclosed that Scales came to Kelly's residence and after arguing with him for a fight, fired at Kelly, inflicting a flesh wound in the left thigh. Kelly picked up a shotgun and fired at Scales received the entire charge. He's right breast and died instantly.
4 Assaulted Causelessly, They Claim
4 Assaulted Causelessly, They Claim
The complaints are becoming more numerous every day of people stating that they have been assaulted by persons unknown to them. The Chicago police are unable to determine whether they are protecting the names of their assaultors or whether they are really in earnest about the crime. Sidney Dickson, 33, 1115 West 109th St, stated that he was struck in the eye when he was assaulted by two unknown men at 33d and State Street. Roosevelt Bowen, 20, 3129 Ellis Ave. complained that during an argument with an unknown man at 30th St. and Ellis Ave. over a woman named on the back of the neck and scalp. Lawrence Haker, 17, 3148 Ellis Ave. told the police that after attending a party at 51st St. he was on the back of an unknown boy after he had hidden his hostess good night. While quarrelling over a woman whose name he did not know, Wiley Waghe, 2725 Wabash St. stated that he was stabbed in the back by an unknown man.
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GENERAL NEWS
RESCUE WOMAN WHO TOOK LEAP IN CHILLY LAKE
Strong Waves Wash Would-Be Suicide to Shore; Blames Unhappy Married Life
Mys. Ella Johnson, 35, 620 East 41st St., slipped out the back way of her home, went east on 40th St. and threw herself into the lake in an attempt to end her life at 10:30 o'clock
But the lake didn't want Mrs. Johnson and its waves dashed her right back on the beach. Her act of hurrying back to the house, 3150 Ellis Ave., and William Brown, 3155 Giles Ave., who were at work nearby. They hurried to the woman and questioned her. She oled die because her husband had left her. She was prevented from throwing herself in front of a freight train and said she didn't care whether it ran over her or Mrs. Johnson was taken back to the East 41st St. address, where it was learned that she had been acting queerly and that she—Manning—was afraid to be alone with her.
The woman's room was engaged for her by her son, Alfred Miller, who said that she had relatives living on the West Side at 1741 Auton Ave. Miller said his stepfather did not leave his mother, but she worried herself into a nervous wreck because she didn't like the house they were living in and her husband refused to
To satisfy his mother Miller engaged a room for her on the South side at 520 East 41st St. Following her attempt to drown herself in the lake Mrs. Johnson was taken to the hospital and held for observation.
SHOT IN ARM
Trouble occurred between John Winstley, 27, 52 W, 30th St., and William St., 27, 52 W, 30th St., and William St. Harper used his gun and shot Winstley in the arm. Both men were arrested by Officers Stephens and Arnstein.
Hear Mme. Florence Cole-Talbert, Race's foremost son-in-law, and Bayer's baron, Friday evening, Nov. 16. Management George R. Garner, Jr. Admission 50 cents.—Adv.
PAGE THREE
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CALL KENWOOD 0455
5121-5123-5125 South State Street
Notary Public. Chicago, III.
VOTE FOR
JUDGE
HOSEA W. WELLS
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
FOR
JUDGE OF THE
SUPERIOR COURT
ENDORSED BY CHICAGO
BAR ASSN. AND LAWYERS'
ASSOCIATION
9TH NAME ON BALLOT
ELECTION TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 8, 1923
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SINGER SEWING MACHINES
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2220 S. State St. Victory 0420
Spanish war veterans, headed by
the Jona ‘Tanner camp No, 1.
United Spant™ avar Veterans, and
GAT veterans stayed a mam-
moth pageant and ball in the Eizhth
Fertment armory “Monday evening.
‘This ha waa ie commemoration [of
10 twenty-fifth anniversary of the
Spanish-American war. ‘The armory
‘was resplendent in the brizht blue
Uniforma reminiscent of the days
‘when America Went to Cuba to free
am oppresved people: Then there were
many olive drab uniforms akuong the
throng recalting the days, not so tons:
ago, when men again’ went forth to
‘Many cuerts of honor were present
and the hour of midnicnt had rolled
around hefore the proram was com-
pleted and the floor cleared for danc-
ing and the erand march. On a plat-
form near the east wall of the audl-
forlum guests were Introfuced by
Wm. H.’Montgomery, who acted a3
toastmaster for the occasion.
“Among those who made short talks
weere Hon. Adelbert 11. Roberts and
‘Alderman “Boh™ Jackson. Others
erg introduced wha acknowiedzed
by Hsing and bowing to the audi-
ence. Musle was furnished by the
famcoun Elenth Regiment band under
{he direction of Lieut. James B.
Tucker.
a
The Board of Education of the City
of Chicago has made st ponsible for
the voters to give their own decision
ae to whether ther want more and
berter-schoole The president of the
Foard “of Education states” that
‘whereas tn 1912 the cost of an cle-
memtary school building ran about
$5.10 per room today it costa about
$22,000 per room, "He furthey states
that we have 52.242 half day’ pupils,
71.406 pupils a portables und 2.224
rotary. pupils,
He asks that the voters approve
an increane in the tax rate of one=
fourth of ove per cent in order that
necessary buflding may be started at
once to relieve the increasing con-
gestion. ‘The school population in-
Greases at the rate of 50 pupils a
aay. Race voters ought to study this
situation carefully. The schools in
Our neighborhoods for the most part
ure old and out of date.
‘We need new echools as badly t¢
‘not worse in this district than in any’
other part of the city. if the Board
fof Education does not have the funds
‘at fis command to meet the demand
there je little need of our making a
demand, but when ‘they bave the
funds they have no excuse for not
giving the children in this dlatric:
hat they need and ought to have
Ofhand there scemn to be no good
Fearon why we should not supper!
and vote for this measure. Unless
ft be on the ground that the tax rate
4m already too hich. That _may be
true but so ly the erime rate and
the delinguency rate and all the other
rates that reftcct bad conditions. in
the schools and in the community.
A3 long as we contribute to the schoo!
population is ts up to ua to intellt-
ently study sctool problems and:
Support measures looking tw ghelr
reasonable solution.
‘We know too weil from experience
in the South what the lack of schools
meane and there {a no necd of letting
ourselves suffer from that same need
{na northern c.ty when the proper
‘ake OF thea atten ein acaceas:
WOODLEIGH APARTMENTS
cae at tis ise stoi, tating
Sth Sos ee tt tall
sia Shere te ae es ey ae
pricba tiara hci
Ear sects steroage saa
Be Sse Raat A
Seas ae Parte
Rok oma
sated abies aod 2%
wriey Gomme testa
Hie err is crore iw ond
fe Ba ere. ett
ope asus ace tn se
Sain ace
Bene ae Ek ran ore a
frames me meee Shere
Mrs. Wricht has maintained the lu.Jd-
tee oem cea tee
Be tas besicteame tn
Sh aie Ii 2 perimaea,
soins rie ote grea ener:
Son eee rence
ce sie Sonne cove ean ma
See eth tes,
NURSES GRADUATE
snestans eniteg On tase te
oR rnin a tos
ag iag oegene Ping sea
Se it es creer
Se eered a, cea
eoteatie Gee caer ees
Simerre st Jouhe mls fm she
Sep eee oe ae ese
Seperate
Hlth Be cart
Aare sae eis ease
Poor ania emia
oe in ot gat Re Gre
og nw ae end ahe ree
Oe peace ees te
Se eee nya cmc mean
Base oe ates eee
so Se ita gee, ee
Sree Fea, nse see
Bar eae Cait deer eaee
ae Sa Bae ae tat
Be ert SibeaAT oat oe ee
Sessa
a
Samed Wissingham. _ well-known
front eater on the corner of 32th Se
Sor dete ce Be meth nt see
ee ore re ete er ees
Besa cit te ier te oh
oe ga ee
aoe ae ee
Se
New Jeweuny 6HOP
13, Socket ents to teen a
sf Se deter" Sich expenses
porate areca
Been ser aeeh tana a
Sees aie thy goa shen,
PR eg TS
Sine abe, Fincence ‘Geb tathert
ee areas eee
Be Snares le re
et
See Boe s oor te
: -
Fine Features. Don't Count
A tor of ei mare ever 22
she RES AF ea
Eoce, Ree Ba Oe,
TP See at bee
PRS re ee ne taee tos tar
ie su pore seas Ge
ee ee ce
These thinrs are no lonrer to be
eoeel. “heer Ceeete tore
Pa ree
seats oe ete, Se? Seve, ot
St ee
SoS ee ee See
eves Oe ee talk
ok a
Be ee tad ee nee
me te Sac ete,
a
ea gear ek ate omnes
ge ag
Bias Ghat weidnee tos Woo oa
Snes Ft Sect as mitre Be
contains three times a
er Ae lop tie
Pe ods
6 rT |
3 a TG ae
-MUSIC NOTES
By MAUDE ROBERTS-GEORGE
Tie recital of Sites sande 3 Stray”
nor ianint aa teacher in the Cat
“ge-fantor chet ot Stn, wa ers
mbcessful and deserves special men-
Ghote fact ee the prow
ones on dat The singe ani
Ie eat SNES Mee
RR corn, area of
Shee" corte, estoy of
coe hic, Seats SES hat
che Satin tte a
og cia eid neh th al
ERUPT orantges akc
ieee
Si Sot a caren utes
Skamania, he" stale eet
ROG Sra et
PGi ay alam Sa
ReGen Nye CER cele
vir Biel cheba and es
Taunt ES Sik Senna ach
fer" ge yaya, with oriilance ang with
Sri ta chee at te
Feitog aetng"itltionn Nc
aah Ge sir aor wae te
seine Geese ate Ma
SEES aud APS RT
PESTS Soe A oe
Heenan
Sipe ya glee
AR Wegnsedae inary ate
cree gE eat ng onde
IE Loe Tele ag s
ES Toi elie ot
caidas? dof Mone
SHEP Ngua te Sonate
MEST MAM th eee Bona
Srtahas Re Ararat Se? pom
AESpot ea an oot Opes
pert ertne Pao
ERE, Gra gcteath Sey abe
appearing at. the Brilliant ballroom.
OSGRERSL i Bed nie
Baant
SHR mene lig, gnomes re
ea Sette at
igen Pea as,
ep atbnd te mabe ti Boat
esbnd eat cite erat a
HOURS Sorrento
Be ne che fete cae
Eide ine. lant of internation
ean: tt ene
Tec Zr aoa
aot seule anf Rents, Me
dis oSeg oa Bake
BSNGAL S* Sicgot ahha
asters or te neces te oes
. JADVERTISEMENT.1
Judze dovenh B. David, who tea can-
abide" dereth Beton te We 'Sapstto
Suara sat ‘on tie bat aver Reve
oar Bai Stace “aE sat elect
Bune Wik te ava vacines and wa
tn dune dim Novuatbcr wat, for the
Feit eter ig See Burin pe ert
A aa ts sat mini Inthe
ei ag hs ie Pod
Reencere ay Cae
eae dete: Spee
i Sanaa or
Beet, Nae poe
of wee
pare are
|e c sane. Ne
‘JUDGE JOSEPH 8. DAVID
Gace nhac ae cae
Rue cel tanta ae
ose ang eile or
Sos oi cates
a eer ae
Tai Wane
the "gccond “trial. $f “Carl Wanders’,
Sista Meters sae
Sih ke Gala
Se eae ee &
ae areas kere
fetion and hat {wae fs duty {0 sen
er erat, eee
Se Seer
Ee ota cesar
iene eae aes
Stone Ata eae Seat
Sie, ste ae Gea
ers ode andrea
fea ariarenae cares ee
Ee ech fama, ee
a ey sar ae a
ae eae ie Se oe
aided by sudge David.
Hae Oa Alar ae
Eee Ge ieee
Be Seri karate da
Heeare siesta ae
cai Sean, ee
Eee ie ihe Pate Ws creas
ine’ dhfeago Dare ansoriation
JACOB MOONEY FOMAN CIES
BGR MRONGY LOMA, cher,
obeiten haat gee Saat
Soria. tote ha ars Sh
rr maar Kat Ac
Sia aan A
Sheu iarcaet jest
a art Ge erie eae
once Soda art a
Shashi
Testes ot detrn. Teg.
ita edamame Iee-
Tents Lath tL ea
Beanie enetaraiawte
ET Ne wl.
wo Big ARE USE a,
site catia eta
Seren baer atta
Soe Ge tanch ner eae
tier Bpaeiatana Besa
Be hee set lt
ies toe eee nee ae
i oe ae ae ornnaeoa
Urreaghout die ste of
aah Real Styles ‘
i> Real Values Sy)
ese Use Friendly Credit S|
eee finest guatity, the ‘best fix and the, Wf |
a, Hes Code vow tar be in atte, Vox, dowt
| EREGAR need ready cash. "NO RED TAPE. q
t ae Terns as Low 2s 31 a Weck | { RE
ee | WENS | mews curs | ir
Be i ge DRESSES ‘OVERCOATS S|
D1 eae !
Br wih, 828 | Eel" $25: |
at ma aanigiony Hes
ine en EOE a Fl |
4B) oe FOXowm (raz
f 220 fo. Stare Srmeey |_ $8750 _|
a eae ee a REE a ee eae
HARDING MAKES
CALUMET AN ALLEY
Property: owners on Calumet Ave
hetween 35th and 33d Sts. organized
themselves Into. the Calumet Im-
provement club and held tholr first
ras meeting last ‘Thursday evening
at the residence of Mrs. Cooper, 3422
Calumet Ave. Although this grown
of taxpaxers’ assembled under the
Fulse of a club it was, tn truth, nn
fndienation meeting, cated for the
rurrese of protesting the action of
ex-City Comptroller Georze Hardline
In having two houses that had been
faclnt South Park Ave. hacked over
to Calumet so as to face the new
Grand Blvd. when the widening, now
under In. progress, has bren’ com-
Bieted, "As these houses now stand
thelr hacks face the houses on the
west side of Calumet. Fences have
heen hullt on the enst aldo of Caln-
me}. thus converting. the street Inte
‘The club, all of whose members are
vitally interested fn the situation
Wrought about by the South Park
commissioners tn widening tho street
met with the object of ascertainine
ff there. ts some possible way In
which they ean stop, this activity: of
Mr Harding im removing his howses
to Calumet and In so doins. accord
Inc to the opinion of Geo. W: Griffin
4814 Calumet, causing the Calumet
Ave, nroperty to depreciate in value,
With a view to ettine expert tera
advices on the aubject Attorney Wen-
Aell Green was acked to male a talk
the result of which a committee waa
formed to present a petition to Mr.
Harding. Members of the committee
are Attorney Green, Georze Griffin
and M. J. Brownlee. ‘These men were
authorized to walt upon Mr. Hard
Ing hefore the nest meeting, which
fe to he he'd at the reaidence of Dr.
Tact, 406 Calumet Ave. ‘Thursday
‘enenias
BUSINESS AMEN GIVE EAR TO
ADDRESS BY JESSE THOMAS
At he rorular meeting of the A.
BGs ems aun at ee
ont aia, Saar Mae
Seritas Se BEN clade
Be ae tgeee® me
Se es Sec ae walls ane
arose et Uae
Ae "eaten Sates DORE Ss
scheme "athe, ee oes
Eesha The eal et etn Mi
Sauce ees ce es
terete te ne ts te Sota Me
Sele & ata ul
SEE tea made avery tn
See eataarine hy Be
ee ee
ois eens mee Oe
RAPES ON. oa
SP Eas Oe er
ree
Se wink awe ie
Peetning, “ine hey hn en
Be ne A MON BS
Tetslty hay bat ies int
pera coe a eames
oe colette da tae anaes
ioe sae wean Fite
Pita ee See a
eer
JHWES W. BREEN
a eapertonoa:: especially commennd
and’ experience : eepecially "commen
them ‘for a place on the bench fs
James W, Breen, candidate on the Re:
iabligan ueket eee
in am active career of over 26 years
aulthe Chldago al Skin Breen Yi deine
Shatrated, th a. hiatked ucgeec. hi
felends potnt ott, Mle fineet for the
‘Rr Breen was born in Chleago 60
gears age and has lived here ever since
Hig ackdeme ‘dueation ‘was obtained
{nine public schools and’ the Chicagu
‘Aclehagi, cere he completed the
figh school and unlversity” preparators
Course: ‘This was. supplemented. by. A
Sixvyear course in coilege studies undee
Sullles ‘at ‘the Chlesso ‘College of Lax
Gan Sdctartment of ‘Lake. Forest gals
vou pianist Ge Chise Rene
Set" sintee tien he ns’ ven conting:
oinis, in aetive gractice in Doth state
End redeeat courts,
‘From. 1001 to 1811 he wag assistant
city ‘prosecutor and. trom T51S 10,1953
fray Keniane corporation counsel. He
Untered the corporation covers office
SMfourin necistants but his wide ails
Bhd emeiency” soon, cauted Bie prom:
tion forabe tmportane postion oF Ars
‘Hevis'a member of the Chleago Dar
association, Lawyers: association ef Ll
fois, Hi-noie State Bar association and
American Miar association.
sing Chicago ar aueocation aald
"ye" professional expertence han ¢x-
grees ae eee Sete
cg for" the office. of fudge 0
Be'Superion court” of Cook” county."
‘Rivertheement.
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Frava ‘package, fe hot rated we,
Gisdiy Fefund Sour'money. "2s cents
Package, bad ony” at (Besrht: Brus
wigs Indiana Aves Chicago, ML
Co, 3459 India
MYSTERIOUSLY INJURED.
_The police Of the Third district fount
Erwin Owens, 19, 4333 State St. bine
on the street {nan unconselous ‘condi
tlen. “Fils shoulder wan dislocated and
he hada ‘bullet Wound tn the back:
Hee wns carried to the county hospital
hut he claims that he does not know
bow haven bebared.
JHE CHICAGO DEFENDER
One of the most serious automobile
aceldents of the year happened Sat-
Urday at the corner of 22d St. and
Wabash Ave. when an automobile
truck skidded and ran Into a number
‘of persone standing waiting for the
car.
‘One woman was killed outright,
anda man was 90 entangled between
fone of the wheels of the truck and
its body that the fire department had
to.be called to extricate the man.
‘Mrs. Emma Field, 20, 2222 State
St. suffered various Injuries, and Tze
Bowman, 18, 3756 Rhodes Ave. also
waiting for a car, was Internally In-
Jured.
‘Other persons suffering from auto-
mobile accidents during the week are
‘Abraham Gibbons, 24, 1953 South
Park Ave; John Day, 18, 12 E. 13th
‘St: Joho’ Wright. 21, 4046, Grand
Biya. ‘Mra, Marlo Overly, 23, 3400
Prairie ‘Ave: Clarence Selverton, 7,
3665 Wabash Axe.
‘Misa Anna Alexander, 17, 3812 In~
Alana Ave.; William MeCoy, 48, 3446
Praltle Ave: Mrs. Margerie Thorn-
ton, 22, 4239 St, Lawrence Ave.: G. 0.
Darden. 35, and Mrs. Cornelia Dar-
den, 29; 4050 Indiana Ave; William
Sones, 32, 4050 Indiana Ave.
‘Chester Clark, 4, $436 Giles Ave.
Mrs. Nettle Harvey, 50, 4239 Langley
Aves Will Lovie, 50, “4443, Calumet
‘Ave Julla MeCrackin, 3, $29 Bryant
Avei Mra, Maggle Triggle, 25, 4338
Calumet Ave; Nathaniel Cole, 30,
Zea" State St. and Willian
Thomas 63. 1807 State St.
$100,000 REALTY DEAL MADE
-NSOUTH SIDE BY CHAMIICN
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Stattorlom vot the
SSS succor im ot te
Behool, at whien
ev. Harvey fime’'be“rnevey
sit be. aasioted
by Dr. W. D, Cook” pastor ‘of the
Rercopoutay, Community Genter: Dr.
Tamer Ac Wintera” pastor of the Pra:
Hrecaivo” Community’ Center, nd “Dr.
Kignea a; Howling., Ssaistant pastor
and alrcioe’ of the afetropellan "Come
munity" Center
After eervicés the membership will
march to the jot at Sid's and Wabeah
Bees where’ the Sround=breaion very
fects he commictes, at which time
3d. memer ani iend wil be fe
Slahed with’ ‘spade and Wil partici-
Bae io tip, brekinn oF the freon,
Bversone ia aa ‘puretiase
Eroundcbreaking ticket at the sury_ of
Hand the amen of those, who. cone
EEOC Si fe meen Ingo ana el
wen incatly" framed, and" Nang von the
wWallaof the new hutlding of the Cos-
Tezatitan ‘Communi canter,
Sindy, axering at Zao in the audl:
torium of the Jota. B. Forron sched)
ife'progesm ‘wil he vider the auspices
$f the SGenmopoiltan. "Sonday Eventne
forum’ andthe princlnal speaker (ot
he evening wilt be the Hon G. We. P.
Browns on of our leading nttarnees at
ihe ime naan gutstanding eitizen,
in addition a, the adress 1a, G. Am
route Mt eine ilolet for the ve
ing, Sresit music hehe Conmo-
Hian communlis” mammoth helt
PepORTaGn welll start promt tt ¥:%0
pin Giine eaehy it you want to get
B cea De Ww! Bite, chalresan
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GEORGE £. GORMAN'S LEGAL
AGILITY PARISED BY CROWE
dearey Gorm cnntiints te
se caretance one caalaee
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ect ote ata Ne
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GORGE E. GORMAN
shop investigation, which resulted. in
Urifing’ the Tueket shops. gue of Ne
cago gnd in the. Indiewment of 2 num-
Fer? of “bucketeers; the Logan “S.,atc
TSmicfallure. the Lelghton Stount ‘case
aig) the arental school insite:
le also. conducted the billing erat:
tnteselgation, whieh covered. a perlot
ff Ti months, petore a eeegat san
fury ani which? resuitedin-tte (ndlet-
Ince ana convietion of 43 extortionists
Mimbers andeterroriats,
“Phe inwentization whieh he conducted
Into the sisiadlons. of thin weer se tee
ihe resulted Jn. the indictment of ii
defendants "und ‘all were cmvicted,
[iste are the. frst convicuons ever
Troctired in Winols for violations of the
oie adaition Wo the tnveatgatto
in Adaitign to the tnventigations con-
ageted by him, he has. tried number
Sfimporgaat criminal eases and secured
the "conviction of. woman. buciness
gent charged with eonaniracy, this be-
Mee the ‘only. conection afer acorn
Iukiness agent ever procured fn this
ee
Sareea aa
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VoTE FoR
WILLIAM J, LINDSAY
sie at 2a Gut
Estate Co, one of
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aetna
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LEAVES FOR SOUTH
GENERAL NEWS:
———_ Sere
5
St. Mary’s Church
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ase suey ag atmrectay 26 8%
Mary A.M. yg *Ghureh, Kew David
UREA a pieude bation i wet
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FERS a8 GRE, ta Case
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Bea sad eter Sen Beale Seat
mena, hair th gle ani
Bet A (eat tng #8 eucaten
Serene ree mag inten he
soit in ae Seay ata Tay ae
Ne tk eaereee Son
Basie oni aaa ae
Fa Aig
Shae Nei ath, UP cet
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musicale next Sundty, "iSnounced &
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Biudr Seat esas,
Belcan dati
Beate ainda 8
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sa uaa tate et Sa
Cela ela ten i
annivaig + jOLeW Le:
Bist Catan Tans Sie
Sea Maat pale
Heavy ‘Thompson, S76t Grove Ave.
the hgiana af Airs. Jesyte ‘Thompson,
Mins buried by Renee Williamson, to
Rndertakor at i218. ‘Rexte Se Me.
‘thomnson was a member of the K. of
feand the Foval Chele of Frients of
the World. The Rev. Mir, Polk preached
he sermon.
ew
ine eae aten lanai:
Oflerrs, fizakam and Howland
awooned dawn, won the home og sles.
Hora Terris, 207%, Lasalle St. where
Uhey found” a. private dice game in
oneation, Ors! Terria was. fined S10
nd ‘costs, wr te each of the Inmates
Orewa fine of $5.
THROWS-WIFE OUT WINDOW
Folio ine an argument, drs. Loutia
Wetern! Bi Stanwell st, Veag sont. to
Nee drain when the was thrown out of
acwin-ow at her home by her Wus! and
Bolte, Wetter, Oot. Rex Wataon
Qved Satunvay at the county hospital
Ged waturiey at the coun
On Tuesday night, Oct. 39, friends
of Br. Le Ke Wiliams tendered hits
3 namauet to commemorate his clec-
ion to. the presidency. of the Bap-
Ust national ‘convention. Many. din-
[tinguished visitors trom out of town
‘were in attendance. Rev. Mt. Bran-
ham was toastmaster.. Many local
notables were In attendance and se¥-
tral very brilliant addresaes were
tmade. “Afr, and. Aira. George, Garner
furnished the musie.
Swdce Josenm Davis was amons
the gueate aud: wa introduced and
Fave'a fine specimen of an address
That dtd’ not ‘pmack ‘of polities. nnd
Aid not feature any of his great serv
foes "to humanity: He. was. highly
complimentary of Dr 1K, Witt
Tigmno, the guest of honor” and dvve't
with some force. upon the duty of
Tie Protestant, eburelres. vo combat
the hooded enemies of government
‘tho fare caresing on thelr pernicious
sind. ‘Insidious propaganda. in the
fame of Telision’ “Phe ayslence ap-
Tiauied vigorously during the ad-
Breas amd “the. vociferous greeting
fiven him as he rose to. speak gave
Evident of the creat favar in which
hhe-is hela all over the South Side
‘Dr Willams wan prevented by bie
cols with @ magnificent basket of
chevsantherauma. George Gatner
‘nde the resentation. Silas Plsher
Syughter ot = popular former Danton
fretented the Pastor with 65 pleces
Of sliver: ‘Dr, Willlama’ addceso in
fesponse was both touching and el0-
Fresno
FLORISTS UEGED TO SENO IN
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St. Monica’s Church
28th and Dearborn Streets
November 4 to 11, 1923
Troy Bring ot 9 oath
EVERYBODY INVITED BY
REV. JOHN. HANDLY, G8,
oH ays Chara (reeds Chimes
Solemn, Orang foetty, fev
(Fig Mime ih sey oe
cA Seeee alto cry te
| Sc Se cs
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SERMON TOPICS
Pee eee ORE
Ga BEE be REE ey PS
SE UP EA FEE BOLL mcke
brag Rane OP eae
male
QUESTION BOX
adkgn ge arte ab pure te
Seater ORE BES |
VOTE FOR
JUDGE OSCAR HEBEL
e
RePUsLican ‘
CANDIDATE
JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT
FOR RE-ELETION
ELECTION NOV. 6, 1923
9,
Paul’s Fur Shop
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
‘$2.N. STATE 8T.
wae
$195 Laskin Seal
Gotts neenesess, S9Qed0
Se Sa tac ein
ores
$175 Laskin Sea) ‘1
festa $07.00
er Sy Sacoome
meek
$155 Northern
‘Seal: Coats ..... $77.50
ee goes wea Wi
$225, Northern
Searcons =. $145
pavleenon ema teatird
Bete
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Furniture At Half Price
aie, A tal,
: wre SETA TERMS ;
Rad
sumer yt ae
niture:; 4-rooms complete. $325.
qi toes oma
Reel om Berane nd, Str-
ONE OF THE MOST STARTLING PRODUCTIONS EVER STAGED—REAL TRUTHS STRIPPED TO A NAKED AND INTERESTING SHOWING PERFECTLY ENACTED BY THE POPULAR STARS ANDREW S. BISHOP and CLEO DESMOND
Supported by a Great Cast, Including SIDNEY KIRKPATRICK, LAURA BOWMAN, WM. "BABE" TOWNSEND, LAWRENCE CHENAULT, ARTHUR RAY, ISABEL JACKSON, ELEANOR WILSON, and Others
EVERY NIGHT AT 8:30
MATINEES SATURDAYS AT 2:30
SUNDAYS, 6:30 and 9:00 P. M.
GRAND THEATER
3110 STATE ST.—VICTORY 0056
ALL SEATS RES
BOX OFFICE OPEN DAIL
Drama at Grand and Avenue; Excellent Bill at the Monogram
a certain sum of money or its equivalent. Of course if you were without the number of cheeks needed for a smile, you would have possessed a bewitching daughter of tender age, be tolerated, apart from your offspring, though, for a time at 20 years. King Ben posed to a favored member of Bent's household, which was made up of young virgin girls ranging in age from 12 to 20 years. King Ben posed to a young girl of the light of God, without sin. "I can do no wrong and whatsoever I bid you do, respond without question, doubt or thought," he told these infant innocents. Hundreds of girls became mothers, yet they were but children themselves. To safeguard his own integrity, marriages. When the fact came to his notice that a certain number of girls were possessed of the seed of life King Ben immortalized, he hurriedly heading the boys and girls together, performed a group marriage. These are but a few of the many dastardly cases suffered by the children in "The House of David" at Benton Harbor.
Channing Pollock's great play, "The Sign on the Door," is the initial offering of the dramatic group headed by the famous Alice Mitchell at the University of Chicago. The performance drew a house which numbered close to capacity and the auditors were generous in the amount of applause accorded the histrionic offender. The Sunday night audiences at the Avenue have always been conservative, but this particular one showed a world of warmth, and its justice to the audience was evident in everything along that line was merited. Miss Mitchell, of course, is the
a Liston
IME BLUES"
wilder hit!
hirpin' 'em in vaudeville,
across her first big blues
One Of These
Virginia List
sings "BEDTIME BLUES
—a wonderful hit!
YOU'VE heard her chirpin' em in vau
now hear her put across her first bi
for OKeh Records.
Try Any One Of These
YOUVE heard her chirpin' em in vaudeville, now hear her put across her first big blues for OKeh Records.
6 BEST SELLERS
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©G.P. CORP.
PAGE SIX
Over 1,000 potential ratrons were turned away at the Grand theater on Sunday night, at which time the faces of the sensational drama, "The Moth House of Moths," were painted by the populer Lafette Players headed by Andrew N. Bibhop and the director of the offering is an unusual one and the troy is carried back to the successful finish by a selectively selected cast. The work of the high standard Tony Langston
A. B.
---
THE AVENUE
REVIEW
DANCING DEVILS
Danced Dancers and Songs
Miles Away
American Roof
New York—A colored mixed quartet of dancers and singers in an ordinary room, with a new and unusual anything new. The dancing runs mostly to "hook" and Russian stealing, like a dance from a ballroom, fashion, with an "all-dancing" flair.
One of the girls sings a pop song, following with a dance that messes less
All-Hussian sleeping at the finish with much baskinghollow, completed a very ordinary dancing opener of decidedly small-time caliber.
Con In "Variety."
THE MONOGRAM
By Bob Hayes
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
SUNDAY,
RAYET
IN THE SENSATIONAL
VES
VER STAGED—R
W S. BISH
BOWMAN, WM. "BABE" TOW
AND T
3110 STATE ST.—VICTORY 0056
'MEN IN THE RAW'
A Hard-Riding, Swift-Moving Drama of the West
"Men in the Raw" Jack Hoxley's new Universal starring vehicle, replete with sensations, thrills and daring stunts, stars in the States theater on Sunday. It is a hard riding, swift moving drama of the West, the local being a Sierra plateau, and the action of the drains of the river. A sensational light under water between Hoxley and Tex Parker is one of the outstanding thrills of the play, its rescue of Margaret the infuriated steer, is another exciting episode. Hoxley, in a daring leap from horseback, "builds" the steer. There is a thrilling plunge over a cliff and remarkable feats of horrorship.
A big cast supports the cowboy star. Marine vertebrate Clinton plays the shark, Sid Jordan, the Parker, Sid Jordan, Tom Kerrick, M. Morris Foster and William A. Lowery are seen, as well as a score of the shark, Sid Jordan. The story deals with a modern Munchausen of the range, whose stories, told in camp, form the first part of the picture. Then follows a scene in which the hero, battles to save the girl in the story. A daring chase over the plains, the thrilling water battles, the shark marking the cave mark the high spots in the story. Throughout the thrills runs an intensive romance. The story was adapted from a recent magazine tale by W. Bort Foster. George Marshall directed the play.
HARVEY'S MINSTRELS
By BILLY PIERCE
The executive staff includes John R. Hewlett, business manager; Jesse G. J. Morgan, stuge-manager; Harry Fiddler, assistant manager; John R. Hewlett, Austin, hand director; George Easley, orchestra director, and Curly Johnson, under the direction of C. J. Smith
HONEST TO GOODNESS
SHOW AT THE PALACE
And just what the daily Qly paper says here. Their sentiments are the same: pleasure of playing, and we are doing nothing but turn-away business through these old fields, with lots of return and enjoyment. We are well and happy. This week finds us at the Orpheum theater, Parsons, Kan., and week Oct. 23 at Landers Orpheum, Springfield. MG for for people with an honest mind by a man with an honest mind for the people. "GANG."
Mattie Dorsey is located at the Glenwood inn, Kenna. W. Va., and would like to have a letter from her friends. Williams are playing the week at the Lincoln theater, Kansas City, Missouri.
PHOENIX THEATER
3104 STATE STREET
SELECTED PHOTOPLAYS
CHANGED DAILY
Continuous, 2:45 p. m. to Midnight
Benjamin Turner, Musical Director.
Washed Air Ventilation
NOVEMBER
BETTE
DOMESTIC DRAMA
GO
REAL TRUTHS STR
HOP and
INSEND, LAWRENCE CHENAU
THEAT
The Weeks Movies
**STATES—Houndill.** The Bargain,
the tide of Cameo Kirly. The Vermilion
and the Raw. Jack Hoxey in
Men in the Raw.
**PHOENIX—West in East. Children of
the City.** Lights, Lights, Lights,
Lights, Salony Jane. Sunday,
a great special feature.
**LINGOLN—Ruth of the Range. Rose-
ing of the Silent Command. Alaskan Night
Wind. Pea Te Poil, Devil's Fortress,
and Bounty of Luck Jack and
Bounty of Paradise.
**VENCOME—Three days each to
The Last Man and Where the North
Sunday. Wandering Daughters.
**OWL—Four days of Merry Go Round
and two of Zaza. Sunday. Cameo
ATLAS—Onen on Saturday and
Sundays only with feature pictures
and high-class vaudeville.
**CHECKFORD—Three days each of
The Common Law and Zaza. Sunday,
Desire.
AN EDITORIAL
The following unusual letter appeared in the Deloitte (Minn.) Sunday Journal of Glenn Shumlin and Hikke "Shute Alonso" company. It was forwarded by J. W. Mokley, a member of the Shute line-up, who was at an office manager's desk at the company's employees. Ten" and later associated with Leroy J. Randall, Percy Colson and R. M. Conner, the net being known as "The Tiger." The letter reads, "Now with the 'gid show' Ready."
DECENCY VINDICATED
"Producers of modern musical comedy, might learn a lesson from their dark-skinned brothers." Duluth witnessed a musical revue in which the lead singer of Negroes, it was composed by Negroes, staged by Negroes, and every other character and of the orchestra was a Negro. The lesson which these Negroes on the value of spontaneity, although they demonstrated that most effectively, musical entertainment should have life, color, rhythm, "class" and "pup," all of which they did prove to producers whose skins don't happen to be black that is most evident in the musical entertainment of revues without one suggestive line or joke and without the faintest high of the voice, with white skirts will tell you that the public wants smut, might thank our dark-skinned entertainers for proving that is a lie and that good taste and decency can be enlightened on better than an equal footing."
SOME DRUMMER
Patrons at the Avenue theater are being treated to a display of sensational Alice Caloway-Thompson, is a member of the Avenue orchestra and the manner in which she does her stuff on the dozen chairs she has set up for her equipment is getting her a world of applause. She has a solo which actually stops the tempo, and the intolerant young lady is demonstrating that when it comes to delivering the goods in this show, she is in Chicago or elsewhere. She was formerly a member of the Indies' orchestra at the Lafayette theater. New York local and is a member of the Chicago local.
JAW FIXED AGAIN
Monroe Tabor of the sterling team of Tabor & Green dropped into the office last week while the Old Roll Top Desk Man was in New York, and when he left he had "placed" the look of our favorite smokes with the manning editor for our personal. Old Non is a whang and he better does things by halves. The net is splitting the week between the Majestic theater, Cedar Rapids, and the Orpheum theater. Sloux City, Iowa.
GRAND A
CALUMET AVENUE
Chicago's Most Ex
In now open for the cew who appreciate the be class entertainment.
AMERICA'S GRE
Most select entertainer under C the personal supervision of Music by CARL DICKERSON
DANCING ON THE W
GRAND AUTO INN
CALUMET AVENUE AND 35TH STREET
Chicago's Most Exquisite Restaurant
Is now open for the edification of Chicagoans
who appreciate the best in cuisine and high-
class entertainment. Finest meals prepared by
AMERICA'S GREATEST CHEFS
Most reflect entertaining under
the personal supervision of CLARENCE E. MUSE
Music by CARL DICKERSON'S SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA
DANCING ON THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL DANCE FLOOR
Everybody Welcome
GRAND AUTO INN SAM RIFAS, Director
KOPPIN THEATER
"THE HOUSE OF GOOD SHOWS ALL OF THE TIME"
E. B. DUDLEY, Manager
530 GRATIOT AVE. DETROIT, MICH.
LARGE OR SMALL ACTS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
SEND IN YOUR OPEN TIME—WE BOOK ACCORDING TO REPUTATION AND RECORD
YOU ARE NOT TOO BIG FOR US IF YOU CAN DELIVER THE GOODS
STAGE
"ZAZA"
For the second week of Abbie Mitchell's dramatic engagement at the Avenue she will present David Reislece "Zaza." This wonderful love story, shot through with pathos and comedy, was first told with Mrs. Leslie Carter in the title role. Since then it has rarely been seen because it has been almost impossible to find an artist who could portray the wonderful things that happen.
The play was chosen by Miss Mitchell and was chosen reason, and she has long wished to present it. When you see it you will understand why. Zaza was a valueville performer in a then-renowned play, and before none of them was able to touch her heart. She accepted their flowers and their supporters and said goodbye to her friend came to her dressing room and brought with him a man named Bernard DuFrene. The honor of meeting Zaza did not impress Dufrene hardly budded. Out of pure pluque Zaza attempted to win this man and to make him dance attendance like all the others. How she accomplished it is shown early in the story.
Later Dutrene is called away on a business trip to another city and Zaza discovers that his wife is pregnant with his wife and daughter. Filled with rage and tigerlike jealousy Zaza visits his home, intending to fight it out to a marriage. But the wife of Xipe. Dutrene is not at home when Zaza arrives; there is plenty of time to inspect the beautiful surroundings Dutrene is visiting. Dutrene can contact them with her own humble dwelling. Everything about the place speaks of the presence of a cultured, refined woman, to mania as this dawns upon her.
At the moment when Zaza is almost ready to scream with hate and laugh, she is sweet little girl, innocent as a budding rose. It is Dufrene's daughter, and her efforts to entertain Zaza are so sweet that her rage departs and she becomes frightened, who arrived during the interview with the child, she leaves the house helplessly. When Dufrene learns from Zaza's lips that she has done the right thing, she enacts. Both their hearts are breaking, but neither will give in to the other, and so the battle races until the breaking point is reached, the end he hopes for and Zaza continuing her histrionic career. Years pass, Dufrene returns—alone—and they meet outside a theater, where she is the brightest star in the theatrical world, her name is blazoned in electric lights and her fame as a great actress is on everybody's tongue. He, too, has prospered in the theater, two of these two and the daughter左
Miss Mitchell has never and a part so wonderfully suited to her extraordinary abilities as an emotional actress, the fact that she is David Fellasco for Mrs. Leslie Carter is assurance of the part's emotional value, and it is confidently expected that Miss Mitchell's interpretation will fully equal the original. An elegant woman, she is by Miss Mitchell's staff under the direction of Mr. Lando, and it is believed that the patrons of the Avenue have in store the greatest performance every given by the wonder woman, Abbie Mitchell. The parson occurs at 6:30 Sunday evening.
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT
NG"
ESTING SHOWING
N, and Others
S RESERVED
PEN DAILY AT ONE
THAT BINDS
RIS' GREATEST STORY
ALL SEATS RESERVED BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY AT ONE
The TIETHAT BINDS
CHAS. K. HARRIS' GREATEST STORY
DIRECTED BY
JOSEPH, LEVER
A POWERFUL
HEART INTER
STORY WITH
MYSTER
AND
SUSPEN
A Drama of O
ered Lives and
Emotions.
MYSTERY
AND
SUSPENSE
and Thrilling as an Adventure. You Have Been Waiting For. and WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5-6-7 HAMMOND'S DOME
Clean as a Spring Wind. The Very Picture You Have.
MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
HAMMOND
VENDY
STATE STREET—
REAL-DOWN
YOU'RE ALWAYS MESSIN'
Victor Record 10083, Sung by Lizzie Miller.
Low-Down Papa
Victor Record 10137, Sung by Rena Henderson.
Keep Yourself Together
(MAMA'S GOT HER EYES ON)
Victor Record 10138, Sung by Lizzie Miller.
Black Man( Be on Yo')
Brunswick Record 2456, Sung by Lizzie Miller.
30 CENTS A COPY OR SING
RECORDS 75c, ROLLS $
SPENCER WILLIAMS
1547 Broadway, Room 504
Publishers of Spencer Willis
SING 'EM.
WHILE
JAZZ H
"LIZA JACKSON
THAN
Broadway's Biggest
"IF ANYBODY
MAMA" (A
Another, right here
"ALABA
Say, boys, bear Ribes
"I DON'T LET
Here's a tip, try
wrong.
"BUGLE BLUES" (The O
You Have Heart It, Wanted In
Played by the Jazz House)
"MEMPHIS T
Original Down Home Shout.
"DECEITFU
Better Than Crazy Blues.
SUNG BY ETHEL RIDLEY—C
Published
Perry Bradford M
1547 BROADWAY, N
PICKFORD
35th Street and Mid
PICKFORD ORCH
Selected Photop
O. C. HAMMOND
Clean as a Spring Wind. Thrilling as an Adventure. The Very Picture You Have Been Waiting For.
MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5-6-7
HAMMOND'S
VENDOME
STATE STREET—31st BLOCK
SING 'EM, ETHEL
---
THE MONOGRAM
3453 SOUTH STATE STREET
CHICAGO HOLDERS OF
T. O. B. A.
FRANCHISE
GOOD SHOWS ALL THE TIME
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1923
DIRECTED BY
JOSEPH, LEVERING
A POWERFUL
HEART INTEREST
STORY WITH
A Drama of Checkered Lives and Mixed Emotions.
THE
AVENUE
THEATER
3110 INDIANA AVENUE
BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY
AT 3 P. M.
PHONE
VICTORY 1097
14151—YOU CAN'T DO WHAT MY LAST MAN DID
(Sung by Ethel Waters)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1928
THE
AVEN
THEA
3110 INDIANA A
BOX OFFICE OPER
AT 3 P. M
PHONE
VICTORY
"WHY WIVES
GO WRONG"
What promises to be one of the greatest of all shows in the repertoire of the Lafayette Players who are having such fine success at the show this week, for a week's showing on Sunday evening next with a 6:30 clock performance. As a matter of course the popular stars, Andrew S. Bishop and Ceco Desmond, will handle the stellar act by the cream of the group. "Why Wives Go Wrong?" is the title of the offering and as the name suggests it has to do with the domestic relations between married people. In the story it is shown the manner in which the cream, about through the marries
minded wife and the nur-
row-minded inclinations of an intol-
er
canklust and whose measure of success leads him to show a lack of consideration bordering upon actual contempt for his better half. The man is a natural way that, until the very end, an amicable arrangement seems impossible. The manner in which it is done, however, furnishes a sensual charged with high lights and surprises. Don't fail to see this great play.
T O B A BOOKINGS
Chicago, Ill.—The following is the list of bookings for the week of Oct. 25:
Oscar & Williams, Jessie Love, Seals & Freeman & Freeman, Lincoln theater, Kansas City; Pal Williams & Company, Booker Washington theater, St. Louis; second edition of the Larry Townsend Lincoln theater, Tennessee; Donnelly, Louisville & Lanny, Mack & Mack, Roosevelt theater, Cindman; Johnson & Koehler Knickerbocker Girls, Washington theater, Indianapolis; Joachs Joy Mack, Lincoln theater, Diksan girls, Dunlair theater, Columbus; Jennings & Aldrich; Johnny Woods & Little Henry, Columbus Jackson Trio and Bessie Smith & Company, Scott and Jack Wigzins' Ten Dancing Pools, Globe theater, Cleveland; Joseph Jones' Syncopated Synconators, Grand Central theater, Cleveland; Derrick & Scott Waters & Company, Star theater Pittsburgh—Martin Klein.
DIXIE KIDS
"Original Dixie Kids," a fine novelty turn in which three human-minded cabinies are used, played the first half of the game, and a banded incarnate, cagey, and patched innert favor. It is understood that a list of engagements is being laid out for the turn, which carries a large amount of merit. It is the first date played by the act on the Western Vaudeville time.
Broscoe & Mitchell's Radio Girls are playing the week at the Liberty theater, Galveston, Texas. Vernon is getting his this week at the Grand Central theater, Cleveland, Ohio.
PAUL & STONE
STATES
THE
HOME of
# GREAT
FEATURES
CONTINUOUS
2PM to MIDNIGHT
3507
S. STATE
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
Black Swa
14151—YOU CAN'T DO WHAT
14127—MY MAN ROCKS
ROLL
14129—THE WICKED FIVE
Inquire at Your Dealer
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
Black
Phonog
2289 Seve
New
Motion Picture News
BY D. IRELAND THOMAS
Handsome B. Harry Mitchell is still
breaking hearts at the Grand theater,
West Pointe Beach, Fl.
Cincinnati, Ohio
A.
"The Dungeon" played Lincoln at Charles-ton last Monday and Tuesday to a good business, in spite of the extremely cold weather. Mellvin Small, the relief pianist at Lincoln at Charles-ton, S. C. left for Tuskegee Institute. Ala. to finish his Bachelor's. Several young ladies and hysteries and one attempted, suicide by taking a bottle of brewing machine. D. Ireland Thomas oll. Competition is keen in Tampa, Fla., since the New Central theater is open for business. Charles, S. C., is to have another face theater by the first of the year. Prof. A. J. Metts of S12 N. Pleasant S. C. has varieties that he is getting along very fast, with his theater that he is erecting.
Miss Lois Goodwin, the popular and efficient cashier at Lincoln theater, S. C., is on the slick list this week. Every theater in Charleston, S. C., except the Lincoln will be closed for a period six sleeps long, the camp of the Jamaica Hall Sunday. There is talk of another Race theater at Shreveport, La. They all come and they all go at Bacumount, Texas, except our friend, A. A. Case of a family affair, which is all business. The two sons stand behind the machines and they give good props to the business end. It is a great sight to see how the father and the sons get along together. They each get a salary and
Jerry Miller of Atlanta, Ga., wants to know just, why our people will go around the alley and climb a high flight to see a picture and vaudeville show, in preference to going into their own theater. he says: "Here we have the Auditorium theater, which is owned and operated by the company, pictures worth the while. They have good crowds sometimes, but they never have the crowds that they should have. What is the matter?" I do not know. What is the matter? It is a case of cheesiness, where I am told that they can go to Loews theater and see five vaudeville acts and program of pictures for only 15 cents. There, Atlanta is not the only city where it is going on. I am unable to give the reason or to offer a remedy for the same, as requested by Mr. Miller. The best clars are always delittoed to be jim crowed. Address all letters to me at Lincoln theater, Charleston, S.C.
"I AM THE FOOL"
When some people speak of my art, as a rule,
They say, 'He's an artist of the old world.'
Some say I can't win 'cause age is against me;
But I listen to none, save the voice within me.
Some say I'm a fool and I never will do it.
And if live long enough I certainly will kill it.
They know all about just what I am doing.
But it's only the envy within them a dwelling.
The wise ones all say I never deceive 'em.
But I am the fool who won't believe the good that I do is never in writing.
But I am a fool that keeps right on fighting.
If I look at me I try tomorrow;
Though a failure may mean weeks of sorrow;
But I toil with a courage that will enable me.
They can say what they please, I war to the finish.
They praise my success, when it I don't need.
'Cause I am a fool that will always succeed.
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
WEEK STARTING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4th
NOT A MOVING PICTURE
MOTHER LOVE IS THEME
OF MYSTERY MELODRAMA
Popular Cast of Film Players in "The Tie That Binds"
The love of a father and mother for a child, keeping the two together despite temptations that come thick and fast in their lives, is the central theme or "The Tie That Binds" promised by the Vendome theater company on June 25, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 5, 6 and 7, as the feature attraction of the bill.
This story will awaken interest through the fact that its author is Charles K. Harris, the world-famous music composer, who has to his credit such song successes as "After the Bass" Dreams the News to the Bass" Dreams by the Wayside" "Hello Central, Give Me Heaven," and others.
The story has a double triangle twist to it. Daniel Kenyon, a millionaire toy manufacturer, wants to Marry Mary Ellen Grey, his pretty employee. She accepts, instead, Daniel Kenyon, and both are forced to leave work. But Kenyon cannot forget Mary, despite the fact that she is now a mother. Meanwhile, he wins the affections of Flora Foster, the daughter of his night watchman. When Mary returns to the toy maker's employ after two years' absence, both David and Herman are forced to stop at nothing. A climax of whirlwind proportion and a mystery shooting in which two persons point empty revolvers at the millionaire, who drops dead, follow from this situation.
The cast is composed of Barbara Freda Anderson at Married Mary Grey, Walter Anderson at Married Winston, Haynond Hatton, William P. Carleton, Robert Edenon, Julia Swayne Gordon, Marlon Swayne, Eileen Shannon.
JOE SIMMS
Our old friend Joe Simms is making the hit of his long and checkered career as one of the principal comedians of *Shuffle Along*. Just take a peek at what the Duluth (Minn.) News-Trilune, a big Oaf daily, had to say about him. The show, playing in the Cox theater, the university entrance at the Cox theater, Cincinnati, Ohio. Joe's cut also appeared with the article: "Joe Simms, who takes the part of Sam Peckey in *Shuffle Along* and who after his defeat becomes chief of police, is one of the principals in the original *Shuffle Along* company. Simms, who plays Sam hits to his credit. If the World is Round It 'Crooked,' 'Aim It' a Shame' and others.
Joe Simms was in Duluth in 1919 with the band in vaudeville with Warfield. He is considered a notable addition to the world's greatest musical comedy this season, mastering the character of Sam Peckey. The *Jazabo Express*, by Lew Payton and Joe Simms, is a bit of real fun, while one of the hits of the show is 'If You've Never Been Shuffle Along.' By Joe Simms and the Hirthown farms.
"While he was playing here a special dinner was served to Mr. Simms and the company by Luther Dawson of bulb old friend of the popular camelian."
A NOTE OR TWO
"The Devil's Protege" is the name of a production being arranged by Harrison Jackson, whose address is $24 W. Walnut, St., Louisville, KY.
Durrah & Gentry are playing the week at the Star theater, Pittsburgh. Jimmie Howell and Little Bits Turner had a great week at the Davis theater, Pittsburgh. Pa., and knocked them out. Kevin Theater, Knighthill, Ohio.
"Mean, Triflin' Daddy" is the title of a new song published by Oldham, Mooro & Harriss, 110 Koontz Aye, Muncie, Ind. for the asking. It is some number. Ernest Sessions, stute manager of the Lyric, New Orleans, La., said in a very interesting week, but it came from publication. Soils & Seals, making them like it all along the line, are at the Lincoln theater, Kansas City, Mo. Brown & Minnie Hicks, Midget Flacher, Viola Guest, Ruby Lee Green, Maggle Campbell, Louise McDonald, George Byrle, Herbert Fright and Erik, playing with Johnlee Lee Long show, playing the week at the Dunbar theater, Columbus, Ohio.
Shuffle Along Four are at the Harris
Melissa & Philea are at the Cross Keys
Melinda & Tade are at the Cross Keys theater. Philadelphia, Pa.
Clifford & Bailey are at the Capitol theater, New Britain, Conn.
Winfred & Brown are at the Lyceum theater, Canton, Ohio.
Jussta playing the week at Keith's Fordham, New York City.
Jussta Marshall company is playing the week at the Biljou theater, Bangor, Me.
Deloach & Corbin are at the State-
Congress theater, Chicago, Ill.
"Ida" was sung with fine results by Filly E. Jones at the Lyrie theater, Naomi & Brazilian Nuts are at the Cosmos theater, Washington, D. C.
STAGE
ARTISTS OF OLD DAYS USED CLEAN MATERIAL
By "GANG"
Well, I am going to prove to the managers as well as the actor that the days and all refinement have passed and all the art will all disappear to the same. The artist's names that are used knew nothing of a Colored house in order to complete a comment or the benefit of those that are interested in Colored vaudeville the talent is compared yesterday and that the women you read before you read too far. When Colored vaudeville made its first debut it was not patronized by many women; the women who read before you read too far would openly declare that Colored vaudeville shows were indecent and of a low, demoralizing nature and untrue at the time I am referring to. Never have I known performers of the old-time vaudeville to use tainted mothers, sisters or daughters to hear. And I never witnessed such immoral actions on the old stage stage as we vaudeville stages today.
I herewith give a list of artists taken from memory, some have passed to the museum and gay and these artists who entertained the public with clean, wholesome material were: Smart and Williams, Nell Moore, Bobby Kemp, Avery Bellay, Marsh Craig, Jolly John Larking, Deas, Reed and Deas, Harry Kraton, S. H. Dudley, Matt Marshall, Intush, Joe and Saddle Britton, McCarver Bros, Bert Grant, Cook and Stevens, King and Gee, Fannie Wilson, Irving Jones, Ertellsw and Baldwin, Dean Lucas, John Rucker, Tom Logan, Housey Bros, Simpson and Pittman, John Cooper and a most of others that space does not permit me to meet them yesterday and still have a memory that serves us, but anyone who saw these performers doing their stunts in those and their performances were strictly clean. Could anyone class the above performers as purveyors of putrid puns or fifth furnishers who are not strictly no
Then along came "Colored" theaters and gave birth to high-class vaudeville. (Get this high class.) But vaudeville and gave birth to a school entertainment compared to much of our so-called vaudeville of today. fully aware that the theater deserves bears and heaps of credit for the stand taken to refine vaudeville. S. H. Pudley deserves a large slice of it also. He deserves such blue and off-color songs, jokes and dialogs as they permit to be used in their theaters today. It cannot be that they know all of us, although scores on all sides for tolerating such practice. My column for people with an honest mind, by a man who knows all of us, can route over the Gus Sun time with the biggest of all little movies. Drake-Walker's Bommy Girls and Jazz band. This week, Lander's Orpheum, Springfield, Mo.
Grace Williams's getting hors at 3501 Walgish Ave. Chicago, Ill.
Long Lonnie Matlock is managing the Evans theater at Warren, Arkansas, where he plays musicians, etc. Immediately, he writes that the house will be booked by the T. O. B. A. Jules McIntosh and the Jules McIntosh are playing the week at Dreamland theater, Tulsa, Okla. Raymond Jefferson is getting his this week at Grand Central theater, Chisholm, Okla.
The Bolssey DeLogege company is playing the first of a two weeks' engagement at the Strand theater, Jacksonville, Fla.
Fulton Alexander and wife are sojourning at the Park theater, Dallas, for the evening of decking the pigskin in the orchestra nlt.
Edmona Henderson, getting on fine, is playing the week at the Frolic theater, Fourth Avenue, Saginaw, Mich. No, Prelynn, gether thing happened; false alarms.
Cisco of the Musical Magpies writes that the bunch are engaged in and about Cleveland, Ohio, for the next season. Powell and Porter say that their will reach them if addressed to 520 Carlisle Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio.
Powell and bugle imitator, who is in business in Cleveland, Ohio, will leave soon for the East to take a couple of weeks' rest.
Jerry Mills has been on the course for some time, as on his merry way back to Chicago.
Mitchell & Harris, playing in and around New York city are getting
Eddie Heywood, the sensational bines pianist, played for several recording for Charles Anderson on Okeh records last week. And Eva Overstreet are living at their flat, 531 S. 11th St. Philadelphia, Pa. Eva says, *Goberta Hudson*, write. Eddie Heywood, with Huntington's minstrels, is traveling through the state of Arkansas, according to a letter received last week.
Eddie Heywood, with Nay Brothers show, writes that mall will reach him and the bunch at 2433 Franklin St. Omaha, Neb.
Frank Kirk, featured with Gus Hill's Playhouse, sees song, which is playing the present week split between two Canadian towns.
Dixiana Review is the name of the playhouse, see song, which is playing the present week the Dunbar theater. Columbus, Ohio.
Lee & Bright's *Victoria Players* are on the third, the three weeks' end. The Grand Theater, West Palm Beach, Fla.
Charles Fat Hayden is playing the final of a two weeks' engagement at the Lift the Music Smith, Notooma, Ind., Lincoln Motion Picture Co., Central Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
(Additional Notes on Page 8)
"YES. WE HAVE·HITS"
VISIT BEAUTIFUL
Dreamland Cafe
500 SEATS
J. H. CARLIS, Manager
3520 S. STATE ST.
20 PEOPLE ALL STAR REVIEW 20 PEOPLE
SPECIAL FEATURES EVERY THURSDAY AFTERNOON
OLLIE POWERS' HARMONY BAND
PERFECT SERVICE AMERICAN AND
CHINESE MEALS
ENTERTAINER CAFE
FALL SEASON NOW ON
BIG MUSICAL AND DANCING REVIEW
"ODDS and ENDS"
By FRANKIE JAXON and His A LA CARTE ARTISTS
BEST MUSIC IN CHICAGO
BY
SAMMY STEWART and His "KNIGHTS OF SYNCOPATION"
William Fox Picture, featuring Hope Hampton, Has The Theme Involving Honor of the Home
"Does It Pay?" comes to the States theater next Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 5 and 6. Produced by Fox Film Corporation, the picture is filled with drama that will interest the spectator who recognizes the importance of the social question involved, and will prove excellent entertainment for all. Honor and truth and the sanctity of the home are dealt with frankly, and the characters that tend to destroy the peace and quiet of family life are held up in their true light. The folly of a man expecting to find happiness when he discards the wife and mother, who has always remained faithful to her duties, and installs an unprincipled young woman in her place, is the theme of "Does It Pay?" The number of such cases in the United States has been known through the daily papers, men prominent in the financial world being in
The story told in the screen is not only timely but presents its subject with telling force. The author of the story is Beatrice Dovskie, and the direction has been in charge of Charles Horan. Many of the scenes take place in unusual handsome interiors. The New York home of the author yields to the wishes of his new wife and finds himself plunged into the dissipations of a set of wasters, is one of the number.
NEW HOUSE
LETTERS
Dear Sir: Having letter in the issue of Oct. 12, I would like to tell you more of Detroit Shannon's orchestra. This orchestra is one of the best over traveled on the A. & H. Tour, and we want to tell this orchestra. I hope that they will continue to play vaudeville, as I'm sure that they will sure land on the big time. It is said out here that they will organize another orchestra. I hope he'll be successful, and I am sure they'll be a riot. Out here they were rated a 100 per cent bunch of musician and join the jobs in Frisco, but Mr. Shannon decided to wait until their next tour west. Well, here is luck to Mr. Shannon and his orchestra. Yours truly.
Eldorado, Ark.
Dear Tony: Just a few lines to set you show how I am doing and doing well. Glad to say we were entertained last week at Fort Smith, Ark. by the Georgia Ministrel company. They have a nice.
(Continued on page 8)
2 SHOWS
SUNDAY
NOVEMBER 4th
—AT—
6:30 and 9 P. M.
PRICES:
Main Floor - - - 75 Cents
Balcony - - - 55 Cents
TAX INCLUDED
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Directory of Record Dealers
BUY OKeh Records from your local music shop or mall your order to the dealer nearest you.
Space under this heading is limited to one inch. Write TONY LANGSTON, ADV. DEPT. of the Chicago Defender, for full information as to listing.
Little Rock, Ark. Pfeilers Complete Stock of OKeh Race Records
T. O. B. A.
(Theater Owners' Booking Association)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES and THEATER MANAGERS
Communicate with the
T. O. B. A.
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SAM K. REEVIN, Manager, Suite 642-8-4 Volunteer Life Blvd., chattanooga, 1ann.
S. H. DUDLEY, 123 Second Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
MARTIN KLEIN, 642-8 St. Lawrence Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
HAMMOND & SONS
VENDOME THEATER
3143-40 STATE STREET
1500 Comfortable Seats Mammoth Pipe Organ
ERSKINE TATE'S SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Continuous, 2 to Midnight
REAL REAL FEATURES
POPULAR PRICES
FINEST THEATER IN CHICAGO
Atlanta, Ga.
WE FILL MAIL ORDERS
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47 E. Stats Street
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Hear those Peppy
Southerners Sing
"Sad Blues"
By the Norfolk Jazz Quartette
REAL old-time Blues by those wonderful boys from the Sunny South! Tears and laughter—joy and sorrow. And how those Norfolk boys can sing! Hear their newest Paramount Record —"Sad Blues"—and you'll say "No wonder they're famous".
Snappy,New Songs and Dances-Just Out!
12054—Sad Blues and Stop That Band—Sung by Norfolk Jazz Quartette.
12032—Raise R-u-k-u-s Tonight and Ain't It a Shame—Sung by Norfolk Jazz Quartette.
12035—Father, Prepare Me and My Lord's Gonna Move This Wicked Race—Sung by Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12044—Graveyard Dream Blues and Weary Way Blues—Sung by Ida Cox with piano acc.
12020—You Can Have My Man and Bleeding Hearted Blues—Sung by Alberta Hunter with Orch. acc.
12017—Chirpin' the Blues and Someone Else Will Take Your Place—Sung by Alberta Hunter, Piano acc. by Fletcher Henderson.
No. 12053 Any Woman's Blues and Blue Monday Blues—Sung by Ida Cox, piano accompaniment by Lovie Austin
12043—Mistreated Blues and I'm Going Away—Sung by Alberta Hunter, piano acc. by Fletcher Henderson
12045—Bama Bound Blues and Lovin' is the Thing I'm Wild About—Sung by Ida Cox, piano acc. by Lovie Austin.
Earn Money! It's easy to sell these great song women are making more money than ever before by taking orders from friends and neighbors for Paramount Records. You, too, develop a profitable business of your own. Start out. It's easy, pleasant work—full or part time. There are thousands of opening times, where we have no dealers. Write for agent's perquisite noise.
Send No Money! Clip this ad and take it to your line Paramount Records, order direct from factory. Recorded by C, O, D, 756 each, postage prepaid. Write for free catalog of all Paramount Records. Prompt Shipment—24-hour service.
THE NEW YORK RECORDING LABORATORIES
12 PARAMOUNT BLDG.
PORT WASHINGTON, WIS.
Paramount Records
PAGE EIGHT
SALEM SEZ
Dear Gen. Tony, 'New or old'
opportunities, we are looking
up to you. A full house of
circumstances. A full house.
ing performance,
say the majority of those present
the crowd greets nightly, with
a Friday, Friday midnight and Satu-
rday, Friday midnight or mime-
ner for mime-
ner recommendation for a show
in the attendance. Concens-
sion announcements. North
Aint's South. "A con-
tinuation, unu-
nusually, funny, beau-
tiful, with appro-
priate preseen
and the majority of the present audience of those present attended the crowds grew nightly, with 10,000 people on Friday midnight and Saturday afternoon for mancees. There is no bet before a show than an increase in attendance. Consensus of opinion produced by the Portrait Almnt South, a pleasing entrance, and a dog-breaking show in before playtime city time is called in the theatrical paranormal genre. We annually given our first night performance either Washington, D. C. or Philadelphia. We also a new theater performance have always enjoyed seeing the opening performances, never failing to pack out a general interest in general ascertained fair play.
S. T. Whitney
Some Harlemites presented the face that we opened in New York without a mask, a fully illuminated, nily funny, beautifully costumed, and pretty scenery.
The show was written for entertainment and the audience was intended. There is no reference to the races and nothing but interesting, amusing and also somewhat disconcerting to no one. The competition was presented in the show. Some note that it is in favor of bringing the North. If speaking of missing an abundance of watermelons, being farful of the cold weather and the high tents, of missing the comforts can be construed as promulganda. Jackson's Three-In-One dramatic, operatic and vaudouville constellation first appeared in the questions are argued. They are going into a strange land and will be their friends are fearful of the conditions and the members of the constellation are severely hazy by Alabama. They can be natural that they should be glad to get back home. "North Ain't South" can be enjoyed by all, regardless of race, nationality or previous condition.
The chorus is unusually good to look at. Hillman's original creations, it is a feast for the yes. The cast is well-lit, laughing hats and joviality the character of "Suds" with a doily that is "Crispy Krinkles" was a pleasant surprise with the Lafayette audiences. Miss Marion Harrison, as "Sadie" and sang, and the hearts of all Holmenkirk who saw the show, Jesse Shippe, May Kemp and vintage. Fanny Wilson, Lottie Harries, Largime Larsine, Joe Larsell and Jemile while the singing of Paul Hassle quite wood deserves great commendation for the excellent musical score he has telegrams of congratulation and encouragement were received from nearly all clubs, also from Friends and well-known from them. Such credit cannot be given to John T. Gibson for funnelling the enchantingcourageous and-in-selving theatrical promoters in the country. He has done street managers in New York city, your friend in Jersey, activities and successes should not be spoken of in terms of the deserves to rank with the best.
Dear Gen. Tony: "The melancholy days days," the meadows, brown and scar, hold little of beauty for the jodkook he spends all his money on his骇喧 for its redemption. The
Hear those
Southerners Si
By the No
REAL old-time Bl
South! Tears a
Norfolk boys can si
—“Sad Blues”—and
Snappy, New
12054—Sad Blues and St
12032—Raise R-u-k-u-s T
12035—Father, Prepare
Sung by Norfolk I
12044—Graveyard Dream
12020—You Can Have M
with Orch. acc.
12017—Chirpin' the Blues
Hunter, Piano acc.
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12043—Mistreated Blues
by Fletcher Henderson
12045—Bama Bound Blues
piano acc. by Lovie
Earn Money! It's easy to success. H
women are making money every
from friends and neighbors for Paramo
can develop a profitable business of you
people and need—further part of
of openings in localities where we have
agent's propotion now.
THE NEW YORK
12 PARAMOUNT BLDG.
Paramo
Ida Cox's Greatest Record
Send No Money Clip this ad and take it to your
account. Send No Money Clip to the Incumbent
Paramount Records, order direct from factory. Records are
mailed C. O. D. 1752, each postage prepaid. Write for free
from Paramount Records. Prompt Shipping—4-
hour service.
"YAWNING" SAX.
Clever Orchestra Leader Devilves New Novel idea for Bands
Ted Weems, leader of Weems Bro. and the inventor of a "vawning," saxophone, which promises to revolutionize the music. Weems hit on the idea while playing under the management of Paul Stern. Weems is also the inventor the other week. One night, while playing with Alexander playing, "vawning," published by Irving Berlin, Inc., the choreographed into his mind like an inspiration. There is a part of the "vawning" "saxophone." By a certain manipulation of the saxophone, Weems was able to produce an instant favor with the dance crowd and that is catching on like wildlife—Heil.
borrow trees, stretching gaunt arms to remind of the empty coal hin. The wild seas, in triangular formation, snake incessantly, and request of waged days and misspent salary. Happy is the girls' need and request of waged days, but a rounded contract for 30 weeks over the big time. For such, the chill Noel neither doth the frost that rushes the pumpkin make him to shiver, seek the tranquility of the hot dog vender, but woe unto him who has wasted his days and quaintance of the hot dog vender, "card" trying draw out against four secs. endeavoring to guess the correct number of drinks he drinks in a bottle at six bites a throw, table cover charges one legged, bronze trolleys trifle the fantastic toe to the intoxicating syncope of unto such, for verily their days shall be dark, their stomachs empty, their shoes old and worn, their clothes like clothes, like
We received many letters from the students of our rehearsal; some are lost and many are still unanswered. We crave a tandem for our delinquency. We will be at John T. Gibson's beautiful Dunham Plaza, Pa. If you will write again, we promise to answer. We rejoice to learn from the students who recovering from his serious operation. We are thankful that the God of life will lengthen his days, and may he employ them even more diligently and with care. We owe you a letter, old top, and will answer as soon as we learn your next steps to your successful run at the hospital.
OKEH BY SARA
The latest Oken Race record to be re-recorded is the famous monk's mantin. On one side of the record Sara sobs "A Green Monk," the bluest thing ever written. Sara comi- oed the song herself, and she sings the bluest monk's mean blues number. And who could sing Sara's song better than the green monk? The hear Sara explain all about the green gal- resist if it can you. It's one of the most absolutely blue blings ever pulled. On the other side Sara has sunscreen you've heard Sara maze these mourn- ful strains you really never heard the monk. In both songs Sara is accompanied by a new and re-markable gang of jazz musicians as well as Williams Harmonizing Four.
MORTON & BROWN
The team of Morton & Brown were callers on Tuesday and both were look-alike. They were all wearing everything. Leroy was at one time a partner of Arthur Allen of the presentent partner in one of those fast-walking moving pictures with class skicking out all over the hat. The team have a world of pictures. He had a time season in the Middle West.
WEDDED
George Brown, formerly of Mace & King of the "North" and of the "South" company, now playing in Philadelphia, were married a short time ago, according to a report current in the East.
Joe Miller, the little man with the old horn, is at home for the winter and the spring at 100 Knox St., Tallahassee, alabama.
STAGE
COAST DOPE
COAST DOPE
Dear Tony: While time permits it I am sure you will be on the coast. First I want to tell you about the trip to Oakland and the excursion carried by the Merry Whirl Soon of Los Angeles. We pulled out of Los Angeles on October 28, at 6 a.m., with three large lightweight capacity, taking the coast route to San Diego living in Oakland at 2 n. m. on Friday, Oakland at 2 n. m. on Saturday, parade was held at 3 p. m. in Oakland. "Ragtime" Billy Tucker
with the motor boat excursion carried by the special club of Los Angeles. We pulled out on Thursday, Oct. 13, at 6 a.m. with the seating buses filled with capacity, liking the San Francisco, arriving at 2 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 19. The grand opening at 5 p.m. in Oakland, led by "your truly ruckus" by a owner of the famous Tennessee music store in Oakland and has a jazz band, the "Major DeLux" of Oakland. After the parade was over, Mossy had a dinner writer of some of the Hollywood manSIONs) in honor of the writer, which included the Sunnyland Jazz band with their guests and a few personal friends
At 7 p. m. the doors of the Oakland Arena are closed, and the largest crowd ever before assembled in the history of Oakland. It is time to forget the Merry Whirl Social club and the brand of music that the Sunnyland dancers were known for much for the dancers, they were the dumbest set of humans that ever trod on the stage. They were so soddbum that they were unable to learn a new dance that was being introduced to them. The dancers that they are now doing is a Briggs and Herman Higs went along as entertainers and held tight to the entertainers by the entertainers from Los Angeles.
“Frisoe” Nick was on hand and did a dance to be a riot. He worked provoked the T. and D. theater in Oakland, but the Fahconel and Marco Revue to speed a few hours with the “gang” from his among those present to make welcome to the bunch. She is formerly one of the Revue. “Struttin Along,” and inform the writer that she is about to frame a saw Lawrence (Flying) Ford, an-Along.” He recently underwent an operation but is fast improving. He has his music shop, but in my estimation he should be holding down one of the bright spots in somebody’s revue or ack.
Nettie Brooks, another retired perennial, also attended a special, lovingly married and settled splendidly, having married and settled in Oakland. She with her "gene" came to the winters hotel at 4 locker in the owing to the tireome trip we had to take to Oakland. She said for we know there would have been a barrel of night at 11:55, after a wonderful trip would come off. Though I think that the next one will be in Chicago at the Whirl Social club has engaged that as a grand May ball on the 1st day of May, I am bidding you your entertainers and jazz band are bringing you the most beautiful "gene" of regular folks from sunny Chicago to one more real town when he will be back to the beautiful contest to decide the most beautiful girl of Los Angeles to come to Chicago, the winner to be crowned the winner of the Los Angeles contest will be given a free trip to Chicago with all
Mitchell's Revue opened at the New York Public Library. They made such a spirited and unearned that I had to hold them over and both shows were sold out on the following night. Pascals Mitchell in Eddie and Corrine Anderson. Vicki Warner, Katherine Reese, Jessica Denney. They have one of the fastest and tenors of any stage in Los Angeles with a regular Me time production. They are consider myself extremely fortunate to have the opportunity to play the Dunbar and pack
J
Glenn and Jenkins are on next to me, and I can see them from what I hear they are a riot. I haven't had a chance to see them yet, but I will watch them before they get out of town.
Best wishes to all friends. So long Tony. Your pal.
MAIL RADIO
AT DREAMLAND
Dreamland cafe has changed hands
enfield enfield been colonized by its new
manager, J. H. Carls, who has been
timented and has been colonized by its new
certainty for some time. He has
enraged S. H. Dudley, Jr., and the late-
known caterer, Filly Ledwid, will put on a series of reviews of class and
knowledge that starts on the night of Wednesday. Nov.
16, 2014, includes beauty chorus of
16 selected singing and dancing girls,
the band, the music, and the music
furnish the music, and no money will
be spent in assembling a great group
of musicians. The usual policy regarding the Thursday afternoon matinees will be matinee
LETTERS
(Continued from page 7)
clean show. They are still talking
"Long Lost Mama" and of how Tommy
Harris told his baby, Toot-Toot
Harris the same cast of people.
Tom Meridith & Meridith, Johnson & John-
lin (back-chuck). Bit Harris, Nen Wil-
lson (back-chuck). Bit Harris, Nen Wil-
son for this time. Will write you again
next week. From JOHN PENNY,
Of C. R. Leggette's shows.
Sanetl-Spirulus, De Cuba.
Dear Gen. Tony: We are just about
we have had a wonderful time down
here. We will finish at the Cantolio
on S. America for New York, where
B. Burtton. All the boys are having
a good time and send best regards to
health and says, "Look out, Gen.
Tony, I will be as fat as you if it is
a good time and success to all the show world.
Gonzell White's Jazzers.
Sherlie H. Dudley III, 1 year old, in attendance at his initial birthday party, held on Oct. 26. We were out of town and there she was. H. Dudley, Jr., and his big net worth, Pantages time, starting Dec. 1. It is understood that the turn has contracted. Jachet King, who has been ill for some time at home, would like to hear from Annie Grusen and Travis Tucker. She and Chrysie Price writes that he and his bride have finished a honeymoon in Ohio where mall will reach them if addressed to Leon Long and his Rufus show can be reached care of general delivery, Bobble Grant, the impersonator, is getting his job. Ed Mojos write
Grace Howell telegraph has been forced to take a long rest and as a consequence joined again and are playing many engagements in and around New York. 185th St. Fred W. Longshaw tells the world to address it at 1910 Lydia Ave. Kitty Tarker has ordered hers sent to Henry I. Dixon, writing from 914 Vina St. Kansas City. Mo. states that he grit again in the near future. Stemmons & Stemmons have sent wristbands of Bowman's Cotton Biossoms Co. Huntington, Va. the picture in room 26. Hotel Dumbar, St. Louis. Mo. care of the Grand theater, Muskogee. Okla. Jackie Mabley is making them like it at the ayette theater, New York city. Follow Me is playing the first of a series of movies he has ordered at the ayette theater, New York city. Evyn Carrett has ordered us to come to 1665 Carslie Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio. Jackie Bradley is receiving hers at 2020 Kater St. Philadelphia, PA.
Boots Hope is doing his lying this
Frolic theater, Birling-
ng Ala.
Lassies Brown, with the Alabama minstrels, had his sent to Little Rock. Anna M. Fritz has mentioned the fact that 3253 Centennial Ala. High, Ogle.
Rucker & Perrin are playing the week
of the Tontague theater, Seattle,
Wash.
Wilson & Wilson, with Gentleman Michael San Francisco and Oakland, Cal. Joyner & Foster, making a coast trip. Joyner & Foster, with Finder, Ohio, Canada, Canada, and Billings, Mont. Smith & Troy are playing the presidents, the present half at Pine Bluff, Ark. Billy Cumbery and Daisy Martin, with his Columbia wheel, are hitting them a ramp at the Gaynes theater, St. Louis, Mo. Georgia Minutes are at the Pantages theater, Folsom, Ohio. Folsom, Ohio, with our old friend, Doe Dilhr, are playing the week Easten & Stewart, with a big wheel barricade show, are playing the Howe theater, Boston, Mass. Send route card. Foworth & Frances, at it, with their friend, Doe Dilhr, are playing the week St. theater, Minnesota, Minn. Henry Gang lines, with the Bomber, with their friend, Doe Dilhr, are playing the Orpheum theater, Springfield, Mo. Brown & Singleton, with their own callsers last week. Johnny Hudgins, featured with Town and City, the Columbia theater, New York city. Harvey's Great Minstrel, after a trip to New York city, are hitting a series of night stands through New York city.
Wilson & Wilson, with gentleman
Wilson, and gentleman between
San Francisco and Oakland, the
Dixie Four are among the Golden Gate
Campbell's minstrels are playing
Campbell's minstrels are playing
kann, Ark, and Marshall, Longview
and Center, Texas, this week.
Along No. 2, No. 3 are married at Sacramento
Along No. 2, No. 3 are married at Sacramento
was Thomas Garden McGee, Md, 3251
I. St., Sacramento.
Sacramento is a letter from
Youngstown, Ohio, and says that the
special children's matinee last week
and Frank Kirk cleaned up. Old Frank
Joe Russell & Lilian are playing the
present half at the Keith Prospect, New
Day School. David has ordered the
Door Key Sincleton has ordered his
Greenwallow Bay, Salt-
Yes. We Have Made Progress
TALK all you may of the good old days, but, measured in terms of actual facts the present is the high spot of Negro theatricals. Envy, emotion, excitement, the Negro artist is in the glory and glory and financial favor. There are more Negro publishing houses in the field than ever before in the history of the business, the advertising blitz that are now the most successful, the harbinger, they are receiving their share of the business in their field of endeavor. Record manufacturers are employing more Negro artists at recording studios more accompanists and arrangers of the Race working for these artists in presenting to a bigger public more compositions, of the Race than ever before. More Negro publications are obtaining more display advertising from these amusement surveyors than has ever been submitted to them from any known previous source. Burlesque companies, a great group of the Negro woman artists, are closely closed to the Negro woman artists was an unheard of possibility, today employ more than a hundred performers of the Race. In fact, more nearly two hundred, the Negro musicians and actors. Once we had just Williams and Walker's show. This season we have in the studio Blake and Blacks "Shuffle Along" company, the new Miller & Lyle production, Eddie Hunter and "How Come" show, the *Fantastical Days* company, which recently opened in Chicago, as did Izzy Dinke and Walker went over the Gus Sun circuit with such satisfaction to the management that they have return contracts, and the Sunburn troupe has been contracted for the same time. We have also been tasked to play the Colored theaters, including the holdovers from last season. The percentage of failures among these "th" producers has been less than ever before. The average of layoffs and lost time has been measur-
the development of a following for the drama in the South, with the consequent enlargement of the field for talent of that type, is an important step in the development of Howard university students who believed in themselves and their people, pioneered for the Bishop-Desmond players in this and success. Now distinguishing the financial failure of the Ethiopian Art players their appearance in downtown New York may be scored as an advance. Colored vauldeele acts have had 'tryouts for the big time than heretofore. True, more failed to make the grudge than ever before, but they had their chance, which means a lot, and some won the prize. They graduated from "the jig time" to "three-a-day", which means much. Sixty-three Colored fals, most of which are working in unison of the common good of all, and all of which are now known to the world, is a distinct gain in a field that has been hitherto hidden in obscurity. Four Nero carnival companies organized. One failed before playing, and the other succeeded. One played six dates and expired, and one has made the season, with a dozen dates yet to play. This tells a great story when one realizes that, since there was little thought of even one such combination. Real estate men begging for the addresses of performers, and insurance agents specializing in theatrical business, is abundant proof of the success of these businesses. Yes, we are progressing today—J. A. Jackson, in "Bilboard".
STAGE
JOHNNY HUDGINS
One of the most successful of pres-
sions "The Strutting Pool," who is featured
in the movie, is Johnny's daughter, dala,
one of the best shows on the timelog.
This is Johnny's eighth year in burles-
ing.
JOHNNY HUDGINS
long period have been uniformly suc-
cured. The band will hit all over the big circuit. Watch for
friends. Now playing Columbia the-
tails. Casino, Brooklyn, N. X.
Cinema, theater.
ABRIE RADIATES
Miss Abbie Mitchell, the famous star at the Avenue theater, broadcasted late at the Avenue theater, broadcasted late. The numbers were "Deep River" and "Legend," and "Exhilaration," by Will Marion and "Exhilaration," by Will Marion. The great work by Alston Burleigh, son of the great work by Alston Burleigh, son of the great work by Alston Burleigh, and a member of the great work by Alston Burleigh company.
GOING GOOD
A fine letter arrived from Spokane, a city in the western United States, popular comedian. He is going along in his comedy routine with the notices at all stunts. The Spokesman reported that the comedian, of Medellín in a recent Sunday edition,
THE DEMONS
Dewey Weinglass and his Dancing Demons, featured with the Happy Days company on the Columbia wheel, are here to greet you at the Gayetty theater, Boston, Mass.
SAM SAYS IT
Dear General: Just come to the let you know how things are going in the Buckeye capepit. I will meet you in my theatre, the Dunbar last spring. I am proud to say that I have always known that has never known a precedent. The house is booked by the T. O. B. A. spring shows nightly and a Sunday matinee. Our Saturday night rambles never fall on report against me in the management and also serves capably at the piano, violins, viola, and J. H. K. Rutledge, drums, bass, missile, and the "O'Reliable would need be if we were off the man for that week. We best wishes to The Old Roll Top, I am.
A careless trade when young folks play;
A curse, when passed to well deceit.
An empty show in fashion's game;
A curse, when passed to well deceit.
A potent draught the gods doth use
To bashful fish and swain contuse.
A priceless joy we fail would keep.
A priceless joy we fail would keep.
Transmitting godl life to gold.
A klass—the gods cannot expound.
A profound, unfound.
The kies, dear heart. I give to three
Prelates-lives my mystery;
A curse, when passed to well deceit.
Watts & Drake are splitting, the week between Serafina and Chatham, Canada, and are doing great. The act is playing out of the Gas Sun office.
Satan" are touring the eastern seaboard. This week, Charleston, Va., will host a tour of the city, a fine week at the Standard theater, Philadelphia, Pa.
All correspondence must reach the O. R. T. Desk no later than Tuesday to insure-publication.
One Dollar a Week will Dress You
Buy on Credit
The Union Credit Clothing House, established in the 3rd floor at 208 S. Wabash, on the Adams and Wabash D. Station. All L.L.P. stores there come in to see us.
Plain and Fur Trimmed COATS $35
Our stock is most com- postive in bundles, at the latest jelly and glitter. Fabrics are of the finest. Other Coats at $40 and $45
Dresses, $25
Silk and cloth. In the newest shades and outfits these dresses and pay just $1 a week. Others at $30 and $35
Men's O'coats, $45
Heavy weight, warm and comfortable overcoats in all these colors and sizes. The coat is insignificant in a wreck. Others at $50 and $55
Men's Suits, $35
1 and 2 pants models. Others at $40 and $45
UNION CREDIT CLOTHING HOUSE
208 S. WABASH AVE.
3rd FLOOR
OPEN TUESDAY EVENINGS
THE GEORGIAS
Friend Tony: After week in Kansas City, we have hung here for another week, and it looks like a big point of view. I was very happy my day was delayed, but the time between Kansas City was so short we had no time of day. Kansas City was one joyful date. Everything they could make it to Son Shaw opened his home to Mrs. T. and Mrs. Harris and my self and a nice time to enjoy. For Week in Kansas City the company also gave a nice party for me.
Thos. Harris
THOMAS HARRIS.
Andy Bryant, manager of the Jubilee
quartet, writes that the his four had a
didactic tone. For the four, he says,
NOVEMBER 3, 1923
To the Public:
To the Public:
First—
We thank you for your loyalty and patronage for the past three months
Owing to the great demand for the service of Your Cab Company As it is the policy of the company to give what you so rightly deserve
Service
We are having installed a telephone switchboard with enough incoming lines that you may call the service of
Your Cab
Without delay. Not being able to give that service under the old number—Victory 9292—in the future when in need of a cab
Call Victory 3804
STANDARD RATES
YOUR CAB CO.
WALTER H. LEE, President
MARGUERITA
NIGHT
AT THE
Avenue Theater
3110 INDIANA AVENUE
Great Midnight Show
FOLLOWING REGULAR SHOW
SUNDAY NIGHT, NOV. 11
At Barular Prices
A SPLENDID BILL OF ALL STAR ARTISTS
INCLUING
BILLY KIRKPICK & BOWMAN
MARGARITA & BARRISON
DAVIS & NICARVER
CLEO DESMON
ALLEN & STOKES
DIXIE KIRK
MARGARITA WARD
ANDREW S. BISHOP
J. LAWRENCE
BABE TOWNSE
ARTHUR RAY-
GULFPORT &
HUGH BUCHAN
HARRISON EMANUEL
JOE JORDAN
BOBBIE HARDING & BOYS
AND OTHERS
Doya Penton's Orchestra
Dave Peyton's Orchestra
NOTE-Entire Affair Under Personal
Mission of Marguerita Park the
Marguerita Manufacturing Company.
Trust Us
and Well
TRUST
You
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
WOULDN'T SELL HIS STORE, IS RUN FROM TOWN
Mississippi Whites Open Fire
On Pressing Club Owner
Who Angered Rival
Oftimes readers of the Chicago
Defender view with a suspicious mind
the various stories appearing in this
publication regarding the treatment
and women of our people in the South. Almost every day
letters pour into this office describing
some deplorable act committed
against women of the Race.
The information is carefully worked into a news item, with much minor description deleted. The following
narratives of a recent
nurse in Bude, Miss.
"Everybody, Colored, here is selling out what they have and leaving homes. We had a case of 'night riding' here some two months ago and since then the people are buying the Roxie lodge of the K. K. K. a few months ago and since then there have seen some new grocery stores and pressing shops of our own up until a few weeks ago, and next except one lunch stand. There seems to have been made an agreement among the white people to close the store that we were in a kind of business.
Had Good Business
"R. R. Pool of Brookhaven came out here about two months ago and opened and formerly run by Clarence Burckley, now in Chicago, and was doing a fine business. There is Mr. Pool's success began cutting into this white presser's business among the Colored people. The team at Mr. Pool's offered to buy Mr. Pool out. Mr. Pool refused to sell. The white presser went away and he opened a pool. He also offered to get any results as far as getting Mr. Pool to sell. Just after Mr. Pool had closed and was on his way home in company with two friends he met three cars filled with white men with one of the cars called to Mr. Pool and told him that he had some mother to get to. Mr. Pool unsuspecting, put upon the running board of one of the cars and went back
"At this juncture the occupants of the car have just matured on life. After having been gramped by one of the occupants of the car, the Car was stopped and the driver jumped out and aimed to assist in getting Mr. Pool into the car with his hands. He got into the getting loose and would no doubt have made a safe getaway but for the driver, who was presumed him and corroded him in back of the lot of the pressing show. This had the effect of making him to come out in a direction very near when some of the raiders were standing above some of the car lights showed him up.
S'-ot In Head
1
Stripped of Clothes
"Mr. Pool was then stripped of the clothes that he had on and a suit of overalls put on him and a box car after being given $10 to pay any doctor bill that he might have to pay and $6 to pay his railroad fare and workman passing the car standing on a riding the next morning heard Mr. Pool's errands and opened the car and the driver condition he took him out and placed him on a train that passes Roxie early in the morning for Brooklyn.
EMANUEL ELLER
The Republican party has honored itself by receiving the award of the merit dates for the Superior court Municipal Judge Emanuel Filler. Emanuel Filler was for six years one of the chief assistant corporation counsellors of the City of Chicago, where he was engaged in difficult litigation before the Applate and Supreme courts of this state and where he received the appro-
Two years ago he was elected in the 2012 election to the House of Commons and where he was made a noteworthy record. He is known for his leadership, fearlessness, broad common sense and importance. He is a civil servant in the City of London and good citizens, a guardian of party politics, should rally to his support on issues and elect him to the Superior Court.
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.
STILL FIGHTING TO OPPRESS YOU
Contrasts: Comfort In South; A Vision Of Conditions North
Mazy a colored man, comfortably housed and happy in the South, now is being made to listen to the honesty words of the labor routine from the North. Here is a picture of a man in a rocking chair, reading a newspaper, with a dog sitting beside him.
Things must be in a bad way down in Bogalusa and in Louisiana. When a white man begins to spend his money on you to convince you of something for your own good, look at the people you give advice if it does not cost him anything or if he stands to make you pay. If you are in months ago the Southern white man was telling the white people in the North that you did not own any land, you were too lazy and shiffless and good-for-nothing generally to ever own one like it. Our benefit he takes a picture of the best home he knows and wants to tell the world that all the people in the South Dixon line. Now we know that a great many do live in homes as fine and finer than the one in this picture and around you and see how many of your friends in the South you can meet on this side as this. If they do it is in the middle of a great plantation.
Sheik Annoyed Loop Shoppers by Sweet Talk
A sheik dressed as a Spanish torseur was arrested by Sergeant John Scott, a woman in a Loan department store. He at first claimed to speak no English, but when taken to the detention room, he was granted by Sergeant John Scott, who cried: "Why hello, Buddle." Buddle told him he was arrested. He was fined $10 and costa. He stated that his name was Romano Muylindora and he haled from Milwaukee.
Mr. Pool's home has to pass through Bude to get to Brool. He states that he was so afraid that he would be detected on the train in Milwaukee. He pressed through safety.
"The whirlpipes no doubt thought he was dead or would die very soon after he was born and did not have any idea that he would pass through on the train he was on and I pen hearing that Mr. Pool had succeeded in resting home they went to his house at Brookhaven and Mr. Pool let it be known that he recovered nearly everyone in the car. The car with which he was transported from and to the different places during the journey of its perishment, located on the sheriff'sNothing has been done about it as far as anyone can see, since that own property here are not and leaving as fast as they can. "I am reporting this as I have known, being in the main direct from the lion of Mr. Pool himself."
The name of the writer has been withheld.
MINISTERS REFUTE
In defense of African Methodist Dr. Harvey, he said that the swearing clergies made by the Rev. Mr. Harvey are false in their entirety, because he was not elected to this general conference of the A. M. E. church, because he would not have left the decease he would not have left the connection. But Rev. Harvey mainstreet that this was not why he resigned.
MUSICAL EXPOSITION
TOY JOY COMPANY
We thank the public for your liberal
support. We made and sold many pretty
paper dresses and paper rags. Our
dresses are a real hit with the ladies. Come on
and parties. Don't forget the number:
26215 Cottage Grove Ave. phone 412-345-6780
and toys for the holidays. Toy joy
toys for girls and boys—
dress-up fun!
GENERAL NEWS
IGHTING TO OPEN
In South; A Vision Of
happy in the South, now is being made to listen to the honored wives of anything it means that this southern colored farmer is to turn
WHITE EDITORS ON PROBLEM OF RACE IN SOUTH
Constructive News Favored by Journalists at Meet in Virginia; Fifty Sign
Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 2. - Editors of leading daily papers in six of the top five newspapers asked a similar statement asking for mutual helpfulness and co-operation between the races in the South, for the rights of our people, for equality before the law, and for the abatement of mob violence. The paper was drafted in Atlanta, where it has been shared personally by more than 50 other editors of leading callies, in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Louisiana. Practically every plan to "omit it was presented readily attached his name. It is believed there represents the attitude of the Southern press as a whole.
EVANSTON NEWS
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY
Chandler, Okla. Nov. 2—Saturday afternoon, Oct. 17, 2014. Mrs. L. Sawner, principal of Doughlass school, celebrated their 500th anniversary, Mrs. L. L. Sawner, principal of Doughlass school, assisted by by Mrs. Nydia Williams, cateress, and chance of the affair, cream colored charmesse gown trimmed in velvet velvet and lace; the groom and from its center was hung wedding bells. Several gold pieces were given and from its center was another valuable presents. Nearly 100 greats were present. Several embroidered represented Newkirk, Pleicham and Arkansas City, both races. Mr. and Mrs. Williams, in Kay county who own a farm. They have lived in this community for the past 35 years and have the honor and respect of all who know them.
MEDICINE SALESMAN FINED
Bride, Pride, 4652 State St., a patent medicine salesman, was arrested at 7:17 p.m. South Chicago, who caught him selling forbidden articles to men on the street, Joseph Burke 60 and Jesse Burke 40, the Englewood court Friday morning.
LOT2 LOTS LOTS CHEAP
LOTS, LOTS, LOTS CHEAP!
LOTS, LOTS, LOTS CHEAP!
For 30 days season, all day Sun-
sun, Jalley Realty Co. 2655 State St. St.
Jalley Realty Co. 2655 State St. Sunday-
phone 212-555-4200
2655-4200
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
PRESS YOU
Of Conditions North
Records of the labor recruiter from the North. Here is a draft out to the adjutant of his stock tamper.
little later than they were in catching your train from the South. They may know the customs of the country a little better than newer residents, but they are absolutely better yourself because they know that only as you advance can they advance. They are no such thing as a Northern or Race, generally speaking. All thinking Race men know that the destiny of one is bound to be in the North. No white man divide your strength by telling you that one Race man does not need to be born in one state of county and he in another. In all probability if you talk to him long enough, then you will be born in one state of county and he in the North. The white man knows that he can make a victory for himself, his victory is for a house divided against; itself cannot bind the result of any determined group or race your own thinking. Then act.
Vault Clerk Is Arrested When Bonds Disappear
Washington, Nov. 2—Emmis B. Smith, 3518 Sherman Ave. N. Washington, D.C. Wavett clerk in the court recently on a charge of having embazeded $4,160 in second Liberty under a $1,000 bond pounding a hearing before a United States court. The theft with which he committed more than four years ago and the trail, according to secret service operatives who have been on the case in the treasury department for 15 years, Smith denied all accusations in connection with the Attorney William L. Houston. Smith is an ex-service man, having been the Mexican border in 1816 and was a second lieutenant with the A. E. F. in France.
APPFILATE COURT JUDGES
THIRTEEN CLUB DANCE
The Thirteen club, now famous for its unique parties, scored again Monterey, Queens and dance at St. Elizabeth hall, 41st and Wahash Ave. It could have resisted the Russian Cossacks, Japanese, Spanish, colonial Chinese, Turks, Arabs and others. William Kelly, president of the club, ably assisted by his co-workers, spared no valins in make-up. The club's active, more than 300 guests were present and danced, until "Three o'clock were in abundance.
"SHE'S A GOOD LOOKING GIRL!"
You "can't expect people to say that about you as long as your appartment keeps keeping your skin free from pimples, rash, "breaking out" and eczema. You may feel like you have no hope of getting rid of these things, but you should not give up because you need to pay the price to thousands of people every day that they can depend on it to keep their skin clear, smooth and healthy. Black and White Ointment is economically priced, in liberal packages. The 50c size contains three times as much ointment as 250c size. All dealers have it—Adv.
JAMES F. FARDY
Democratic Candidate for
JUDGE OF SUPERIOR COURT
107 YEAR OLD IN TEXAS
WASHINGTON, N.J.
Election, November 6, 1920
SCHOOL BROKEN UP; PRESIDENT CAUSED STRIKE
Demand for College Man to Train Student-Body Ends in Wholesale Walkout
Tallahassee, Fla., Nov. 2.—The Florida A&M Airculational and Mechanical College held a meeting after holding the hopes of our people and after building up for a period of 30 or more years. The imminent blundering of a president who, it is claimed, is inefficient, and the antimony of the white people of Florida in the state of Florida Race in the state. The Florida A. M. college is the only school supplying education of our people under the constitution, which declares that "equal provision must be made" for all students in the three institutions for higher learning for whites. The institution was headed by Prof. Nathan B. Howard, a professor of mathematics which time he consistently stood out for higher education against untold outlays. His successor was W. H. Howard, a man who Prof. Young and brought to the school 22 years later. The people believe, alledged in his removal,
The students this year discovered that he was not qualified to be head teacher, but had been trained at a normal school and held no degrees. They struck against him for regulations which would interfere with their studies and which would require the rating of the college. The student board of control asking his removal and struck on Oct. 8 by refusing to attend until Wednesday, when the president offered the students "an invitation" and ultimately accepted this, but that afternoon the president caused to be published in a student's wanted servants to clean their rooms." This answered them and them in a bad light before the white people and government officials, and further, it was untrue. They resisted nightly Dural hall, a building used by college classes and housing the libraries, was burned to the ground.
There were some rumors about that the students were going to students away. The president took this opportunity to appeal to the city citizens and had guarded the school buildings and protected lives and property. The white guards, however, were of the convict breed and girls, were subjected to their insults and they stood in the doorway. The students to leave their rooms. They even interfered with their personal liberties. One student was fired at the door. The students were arrested. The disusted students attempted to leave, but guards the station and would not allow them.
Teacher Driven Awak
Horner Thomas, dean of the college department, received a note summoned by the school with 60 more students to hear with the stellar students by Saturdays night. He was forced to walk to the train out of the station in order to get away. Several of the students train out of the station on Thursday of the week following. Out of an enrollment of 225 there remain 50 students in the future is doomed if the present head is retained by the board of control. The presence of the students is doomed if the presence of the quards and declare there was a reign of terror for them with white men standing over it. It is known to the people of the state that there is opposition to the presence has been for some time. The dismissal of Mr. Young was an indulgence, Mr. Howard is "persona non grata" to our people, although he white people. No action has been taken by the board of control on the stand for over 50 years is now practically broken up.
BEREAN CHOIR CONCERT
PRIVATE TUTORING
CENTRAL CREDIT CLOTHING COMPANY
110 SOUTH STATE, 4th FLOOR
Entrance to Lobby
Orpheum Movie Theater
Pay a Little Each Week
Your Credit Is Good Here
Smart and stylish
COATS and
DRESSES
It is so easy under our Plan to wear the very finest and smartest Fall and Winter Coats and Dresses. No hurry about paying the bill—just pay a little each week. We have a large assortment to select from—all styles and patterns. And YOU HARDLY REALIZE THE COST!
Credit Terms That Are Really Easy
No unnecessary questions are asked. You have your choice of our wonderful attire—designed by Coat or Dress take it home and then pay a little each week. NO RED TAPE—NO EMBARRASSMENT.
Men's Suits and Overcoats on Credit
We have Suits and Overcoats for men and young men. Extra material, pattern and style. Dress up—look prosperous. Pay a little each week.
OPEN EVENINGS, TILL 9 O'CLOCK
Students Strike
GENERAL NEWS
Live Chickens Stolen to Pay High Room Rent
The cackling of chickens aroused the attention of Officers Farrell and Sullivan when Peter Glenn, 3233 Indiana Ave., and Cliffin Thomas, 4233 Wabash Ave, passed five chickens in their home. Five chickens under their costs. They told Judge George B. Holmes that they had stolen the chicken. "I will arrange a way so that you will have it after this," answered the court. Each was sentenced to five days of correction and fined $100 and costs.
Two Die as Auto Plunges Into Ditch
Hartford, Mich., Nov. 2,—"Death Pass," a stretch of gravel and ditches, just off the end of the Hartford pavement at the outskirts of the city, claimed two more victims when a lily touring car bearing a party of baseball fans from Chicago to Chicago to their homes in Detroit, overturned. The car contained three men, two of whom were almost miraculously escaped without the slightest injury. The dead men are George Lumpkin, 38, Smith, 62, 1434 Beenau St. Detroit. The third member of the party who survived the attack at television, 20, 574 Reagan St. Detroit.
According to information given the Hartford authorities by Stevenson of a Bulkek sedan that started out from Chicago with the party, but went off distance ahead, the car was traveling at the rate of 35 or 40 miles an hour when the end of the pavement was struck, and the car struck the dirt road it swerved so violently that Stevenson, who was driving down, the Bulkek struck the dirt road it swerved completely around and turned upside down. Lumpkin pulled a fracture from which he died before aid could reach him, and Smith died from injury. He was pinned under one of the cushions and gasoline was running over him, and rescuers hit him lifeless body. Al Louis, who was riding in the Bulkek with Oliver Harvey, proprietor of the store, became hysterical when he returned to the scene of the accident. He explained that he had been hit by the Bulkek and entered the Bulkek a short time previous to the mishap, because he was the owner of the Falege and had been associated with Lumpkin for the accident, the proprietor of the Biltmore Taxi line, 2005 St. Antoine St. Detroit.
MEXICO
THE LAND OF OPPORTUNITY
Now is the time, Mr. Race man. The tropical gardens on the southeast coast of Mexico offer a lot of agricultural oil fields in the world, where you can eat oanges, bananas, and a thousand other products from your own farm the year round. Where you can get well on climate and not medicine; there cotton, sugar cane, a farm of cotton on earth; where freedom, health and wealth await.
Send 2 cent stamper for free booklet on Mexico and how to purchase at the Monterrey Montemore, Montemore, president, Mayflower Mexico Colonization办, 324 Reserve Bank bldg., Kansas City, Mo.—Adv.
Hear Mme. Florence Cole-Talbert, president of Olivet Baptist church, Friday evening, Mr. Jr. Admister 60 cents—Adv.
83
VOTE FOR
MARTIN J. ISAACS
Democratic Candidate for
JUDGE OF SUPERIOR COURT
The Chicago Bar association says Mr
Isaacs is well qualified.
DREW PISTOL ON WOMAN AS
CARD SHUFFLE LOOKED SHAKY
Jimmie Hill. 22, 5705 State St. was a visitor at the home of Mrs. Cone. He was a third party was present and a social card game was suggested. The third party was present and a social card game was suggested. The after seventh grounds had been played it came to Mrs. Holmes' turn to make a bad deal, making a bad deal, Mrs. Holmes denied it and ordered Hill to leave. Mrs. Holmes said, "You're our" Hill said, and she drew a revolver. The other man took the gun from him. The police were summoned and the man was fined $100 and costs by Judge Burke of the Englewood court Fri. the day his denial that he had a gun.
ANNUAL HARVEST DAY
The third annual celebration of the third anniversary of the holdtied Thursday, Nov. 8, in the new home, 4430 Vincentnes Ave. This event is in Day." To this end the public is asked to form a fund to help formulating or cash, all of which will be used to support friends and friends are urged to make the donations on the "Inventray day" and meet with the organizers. Any co-operation and suggestions toward improvement will be welcomed.
Celebrate 30th ANNIVERSARY
Tuesday, Oct. 20, marked the twentieth milestones in the wedded life of South Shore Drive, Mr. Librarian, Lincoln State bank, 5120 S. State St.
New
QUALITY
You'll get stylish
quality and
money too.
Mason's Libr
for your n
No Red Tape
Terms as
$1 a W
Men's Suits
Every popular
material. We
overcoat
perfect wom
manship as
as
FURS
2 L. Soul Coats,
guaranteed for one
year against rips
or breaks. As low
as
$125
Women's
Featuring the
models and
excellent ma
As low as
Suits, Wr
tiful models as
wanted fabric
Credit at
CASH
IN STORE
PRICES
W.E.M.
16-18 W.
Open Satu
CAPITAL
AND
SUPPLUS
$125,000
BINGA ST
STATE STREET AND
ESTABLISHED 11/09-Incorporated
Protects the Race
THE latest service of the
of vital importance to
great nation. We are
people and no other people are
of us are constantly in dam
money unwisely. Precauti
secured upon only the re
information.
New Low Price
QUALITY CLOSE
You'll get style, you'll get
quality and you'll save
money too! If you use
Mason's Liberal Terms
for your new clothes.
No Red Tape.
Terms as Little as
$1 a Week
Men's Suits & O'coats
Every popular style and
material. Warm, heavy
overcoats; suits of
perfect work-
manship as low as
$25
Women's Dresses
Featuring the new, long line
models and slim line stouts.
Exquisite materials. $15
Suits, Wraps & Coats
All in a beautiful
templates in all the
wanted fabrics. Low as
$35
W.E. MASON
16-18 W.Washington St.
Open Saturday evenings
BINGA STATE BANK
STATE STREET AND 36th PLACE, CHICAGO
is the Race and Com-
est service of the BINGA STATE
importance to the Race anywher.
We are no wiser than any
other people are wiser than we
instantly in danger of investing
seless. Precaution is a necessity
on only the most extensive a
Mason's LIBRARY ZONE
Say "Charge It"
New Low Prices on QUALITY CLOTHES
You'll get style, you'll get quality and you'll save money, too, if you use Mason's Liberal Terms for your new clothes. No Red Tape.
Terms as Little as $1 a Week
Men's Suits & O'coats
Every popular style and material. Warm, heavy overcoat as a suit of perfect workmanship as low $25 as
FURS
2 In Seal Coats, guaranteed for one year against rips or breaks. As low as $125
Women's Dresses
Featuring the new, long line models and slim line suits. Exquisite materials. $15
As low as
Suits, Wraps & Coats
Plain and fur trimmed. Beautiful women all like wanted fabrics. Low as $35
Credit on cash
Stamp PRICES
W.E. MASON
16-18 W.Washington, St.
Open Saturday evenings
Exclusive
but not
Expensive
Protects the Race and Community
THE latest service of the BINGA STATE BANK is of vital importance to the Race anywhere in our great nation. We are no wiser than any other people and no other people are wiser than we are; and all of us are constantly in danger of investing hard-earned money unwisely. Precaution is a necessity and can be secured upon only the most extensive and reliable information.
THE BINGA STATE BANK as a financial institution has both insight into and knowledge of worthy investments can and is relied upon to assist all who will be protected from fraudulent operators and malicious funders. That extent it is affiliated with a commercial investigation department to investigate and to furnish best information available which it believes to be consistent with respect to correspondence. That service is free and it is the duty of all who learn of this to take advantage of such an unusual opportunity.
If you live in the BINGA STATE BANK community call us or visit our institution and become one of us. If you live in some other city or community, write us and we will investigate and to furnish best information available which it believes to be consistent with respect to correspondence. That we exist to serve you, protect you and yours and to develop your
MAKE IT YOUR BANK
BINGA ST
Affiliated Member Chicago
AUGUST GUE
WE OWN AND OPERATE
EXPERT
OF LADIES' AND GEN
CARPETS AND
Office 316-18 East
AUTO SERVICE
A STATE B
Member Chicago Clearing House A
ST GUENTHER &
OWN AND OPERATE OUR OWN PL
EXPERT CLEANERS
ES' AND GENTS' GARMENT
CARPETS AND DRAPERIES
Office 316-18 East Thirty-fifth St
CE PHQNE 0
BINGA STATE BANK
Affiliated Member Chicago Clearing House Association.
AUGUST GUENTHER & SON
WE OWN AND OPERATE OUR OWN PLANTS
EXPERT CLEANERS
OF LADIES' AND GENTS' GARMENTS, RUGS
CARPETS AND DRAPERIES
Office 316-18 East Thirty-fifth Street
AUTO SERVICE PHQNE DOUGLAS 3274
STA-STRATE
New LIQUID Preparation
Stubbed
WITHOUT I
Absolutely will NOT DISCO
Sold by Leading Druggists
Order today. Send $1.00 or pay p
STA-STRAT
508 South Dearborn St., R
ANNOUN
WATCH FOR THE
A-1 MILLIN
Opening With a Full Line of
Assortments U
D Preparation for Straighten
Stubborn Hair
NOUT HOT CO.
Will NOT DISCOLOR or INJURE
druggists. Write for A
and $1.00 or pay postman $1.00 plus po-
LA-STRATE SALES
earborn St., Room 330.
NOUNCEMENT
ATCH FOR THE OPENING OF O
MILLINERY STO
a Full Line of French Model H
assortments Under the Name of
New LIQUID Preparation for Straightening Harsh,
Stubborn Hair
WITHOUT HOT COMBS
Absolutely will NOT DISCOLOR or INJURE hair or scalp
Sold by Leading Druggists. Write for AGENTS' offer
Order today. Send $1.00 or pay postman $3.00 plus postage on delivery
STA-STRATE SALES CO.
508 South Dearborn St., Room 330.
Chicago, Ill.
444
GRADUATE CORNELL COLLEGE AND NORTHWESTERN UNI-
On the munition bench for 17 years.
During race slots sat at Hyde Park
station and was started by whitehodiums
from "Back of the Yards" district;
demanded that police be allowed to do so
charged with a few exceptions all Colour
rioters.
All citizens been fair, believing that all
citizens, regardless of race or color,
should be extended every right guaranteed.
ELECTION NOV. 6TH, 1923
Say "Charge It"
Low Prices on
CLOTHES
you'll get
if you use
general Terms
new clothes.
Little as
Week
& O'coats
for style and
armm, heavy
suits of
k- $25
now
Dresses
new, long line
lim line stout.
materials. $15
& Coats
visited. Beauty
all the Low as
$35
ASON@
Washington St.
day evenings
Exclusive
but not
Expensive
STATE BANK
36th PLACE, CHICAGO
under State supervision 12:30
TOTAL
ASSETS
OVER
$1,000,000
e and Community
The BINGA STATE BANK is
the Race anywhere in our
wiser than any other peo-
wiser than we are; and all
anger of investing hard-earned
on a necessity and can be
most extensive and reliable
service is free and it is the duty of all who learn of this to take advantage of such an unusual opportunity. If you live in the BINGA BINGA community on or visit this remarkable institution and become one of us, if you live in some other city, you can become as much a part of us as correspondence can make one. We exist to serve you, protect you and yours and to develop yours.
STATE BANK
Clearing House Association.
ANTHER & SON
STATE OUR OWN PLANTS
CLEANERS
ENTS' GARMENTS, RUGS
AND DRAPERIES
Thirty-fifth Street
PHQNE DOUGLAS 3274
for Straightening Harsh,
brown Hair
HOT COMBS
COLOR or INJURE hair or scalp
Write for AGENTS' offer
lastman $1.00 plus postage on delivery
E SALES CO.
room 330. Chicago, Ill.
NCEMENT
OPENING OF OUR
EVERY STORE
French Model Hats and Other
under the Name of
PAGE NINE
PAU E TEN
FAMOUS OAKWOODS
GEMETERY DRAWS
THE COLOR LINE
"For Caucasians Only," Reads Notices Sent Out to the Undertakers of Chicago
Undertakers throughout Chicago were served with notices Tuesday morning by registered mail to the effect that after Nov. 1, this year, lots for burial purposes in Oak Woods cemetery, located at 1035 East 67th St., would be added to members of the Caucasian race only. The announcement came from the board of directors of the cemetery association and reads as follows:
"Resolved. That on and after the first day of November, A. D. 1923, the dead and graves in the cemetery will be added to members of the Caucasian race only."
This information came as no surprise to the occasion to do business with the Oak Woods officials, and some declared while the cemetery had not officially opened to business with the people, it had assumed an indifferent attitude bordering old settlers who now have family lots in the cemetery will not be prohibited but instead be placed under the old contract, to purchase additional ground. The association directed the pass by the association directors conflicts with the Illinois civil rights bill is a Attorney's interview by a Chicago Defender reporter are divided in opinion. Some contend that a resolution to the original charter as granted by the state to the extent of denying the original charter as granted Others declare the supreme court has handed down a decision in which a hold loss according to its own dictates. It is expected that the Chicago Understanders association on the South Side will make a test case in order to determine their legal rights in the matter.
Reports were first circulated that taking a measure to make a "dilute white" ground by compiling relatives' names into a database to name the bodies and remove them to another place. This, however, has according to latest information.
Wife Is Killed by Husband, Who Escapes
PETER B.
JOHN C. MARSHALL
JOHN C. MARSHALL
Is now operating a modern real estate office and handles all A-1 property. Mr. Marshall says, "Quality and service in modern real estate." Mr. Marshall Ave, will be his specialty. The Defender advertising solicitor interviewed Mr. Marshall about his grand opening, which according to Mr. Marshall, will be Nov. 12 at 4311 Michigan Ave. A sales force of 10 able agents will be in the market for bargains see Mr. Marshall first. Phone Atlantic 2333, 4591, 1917.
JUDGE
HUGO PAM
OF THE SUPERIOR COURT
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
FOR RE-ELECTION
1
FOURTH NAME ON THE BALLOT
ELECTION, TUESDAY,
NOVEMBER 6, 1923
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
SURPRISED ON ANIVERSARY
Sunday by a few friends at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Beecher Todd, and Mrs. and Mrs. Beecher Todd, the versary of their marriage and the birthday of Mrs. Riley Jones, 445 Inverness, for the refreshments were served by the hostess.
HAS 12-INCH CUT
During a fight between Scotty Alley and the 3618 Michigan Ave., Alkens recorded cuts across the palm of his hand. Hillman was arrested by Officers Stafford and the police remaining in hiding for a few days.
SENT TO PSYCHOPATHIC HOSPITAL
Holly, 30, 3921 Frank St.; Cordy Hylle, 30, 3941 Blind Blvd.; George Field, 50, 4722 Indiana Ave., were sent to the 47, 3222 Indiana Ave., were sent to the observation observation regarding their sanity.
CALLLED A DRAW
Jealousy over an unknown man
was the cause of the murder.
Either Full-tail, 21, 2004. Strand,
Susan. Dearborn St. Miss pullett was
cut on the back of her wrist. We were arrested
by McFerrard and the police of
them was find $25 and costs by
Judge George J. Hume.
As a result of a jouisous quarrel
between him and his wife, Ada Lou-
sanne, he was arrested to the hospital suffering with a
hump. His condition is difficult.
THE BROWNS FALL OUT
UNKNOWN NAME IN JURY
UNKNOWN NAME IN JURY
医院 with a fractured knee. He is
hospitalized with a fractured knee. He is
State St. car at Van Duren St. as, he
are anxious to locate his rela-
pion are anxious to locate his rela-
pion
FIGHT OVER WEE
The wife of David Pitman, 23, 1176
State St., was the cause of an argument
between Pitman and Stell. The
State St. pitman was stabbed by Sell.
Pitman was stabbed by Sell.
IMAGES PACK
William Norwalk 44, 71 F. 45th St. was carried to the hospital suffering an injured leg and was taken off on the sidewalk at 45th St. and Cottage Grove Ave.
WIFE ASSAULTS MATE
---
SENTENCED TO PRISON
Mrs. Katherine St. was sentenced to the house of correction for 30 days and was sentenced to a prison term. H. Holmes James (Sina) Smith testified that she was visiting his wiveswoman, Ms. Kaina King, same address.
HELD ON GIRL'S STORY
Policeman灰 Wilson Glisson accused the Earl Carter, 26% Indian Ave. when she rentered the home in the home, and John Jurnett had taken ind-cent liberties with her. The court heard a hearing of their case Nov. 3.
CONFIDENCE GAME CHARGED
Henry A. Gordon, 415 F. 41st St. and John Jurnett, 3252 State St. and H. Terill, 3252 State St. and Wilf Lawson, 3252 Grand Rivet. A third game was given to Gordon claims that the men feared out of $1,000 in a shady real estate deal.
SPECIAL MEETING
There will be a special meeting of the client club Nov. 4, at 3 o'clock, 315 Rhodes Ave. Plans will be made for president; George Kibble, secretary.
HOLDS MEETING
Herbert council, No. I. A. K. U. & K. D.
hall on Monday evening, Oct. 29, at
which time members were made for
a meeting, and attended to Herbert
Officers council.
MRS. DUNMORE GOES HOME
Mrs. George Dummore, who had a
successful operation at Provident hospital,
has returned to her home, 6446 Cham-
ney.
TO PRISON FOR LIFE
TO PRISON FOR LIFE
Before being released to Jesus, Grover pleaded guilty to the murder of a friend, Andy, and was sentenced during a holiday staged by Grover at the former home, 3644 E. 10th Street, sentenced to the penitentiary for life.
CHARITY DINNER SUCCESS
The Social Settlement club served the public with dinner at the home of Mrs. J. C. Brown on Oct. 25, for the benefit of dependent children.
The dinner was a success in
KILLED PICKING COAL
CELEBRATE ANNIVERSAR
Monday evening, Oct. 18, Mr. and Mrs. P. Matthews, 4332 Wylde Ave. and Mrs. P. Matthews, 4332 Wylde Ave. Many beautiful presents were received. Cards and dancing were the features. Hear Me, Florence Colle-Talbert, Race's foremost soprano, in recital at Oliver Bunting church, Friday evening. Race's foremost soprano, Jr. Admission 50 cents—Adv.
WAS RAVING BEAUTY IN HER YOUTH
A heartwarming and yet interesting thing happened in a down town store when a middle aged lady got into a loud argument, "I should be saying," she kept saying, "I have tried all those other things but I know from what that is, that it is Black and White Ointment which gets rid of these pimples, that it is pretty as any girl when I was young, but I got careless and now I am in the house, many people are now insisting on Black and White Ointment to get rid of pimples, and wormworm, "breaking out," etc., because they see and hear of the thousands of other women who are in more economical, too. The 50c size contains three times as much as the liberal 25c size. All deshers have
GENERAL NEWS
SICK LIST
Mrs. Robert Morris and daughter,
Mrs. Robert Morris and daughter,
their 30m, 852 St. Laurence Ave.
is quite a large house.
The addresses of Miss Julia Brown, 2711 Whisbush Ave. will regret to learn of
A. J. Iwokowski 6415 Champlain Ave. is able to be out again after being confined to his home several days with a lame foot.
Mrs. O'Xell, 4422 Vincennes Ave., is
confined, to her home as a result of a
street accident.
VISITS BROTHER
Robert Lark, Bishir and Desirborn Stars, Robert Lark, Bishir and Desirborn Stars, and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clement Benton, 1420 W. 109th M., Marion, Missouri, presents at this time were Meadams Amelia and Emma Warfield Messrs. Richard and George Warfield
TOURING THE STATE
Col. John R. Marshall, probation officer of the state, has been jury appointed the sting as the result of the many cases in which the state's vice-president of the Illinois State bank
WOMAN FREED
Miss Marie Haines, 3721 Langley Ave. who shot and fatally wounded her coworker, Elizabeth Sibley, 31 years old, Sept. 12, was shot Wednesday by a coroner's jury at the county morgue. Stieled Sept. 12.
**GUILTY OF ASSAULT**
A jury in the criminal court of Judge Robert Brown, 21, 318 Wabash Ave. guilty of assault with a deadly weapon and murder in the months before the house of correction. Brown was charged by Sergeant Scott, Middleton, Smith and Sibley. Sergeant Henry Hartig, a street car conductor, with a knife, the conductor after filing his trade on the car.
USES ROCK AS WEAPON
During a fight between Gene Harris 25, 2005 Calmet Ave, and Sam White 25, 2005 Calmet Ave, the wrestler was wired. Wing had used a rock as a weapon and burned Harris' head.
BEATEN BY DOOPERS
After taking his money from him, Hilyard had a fight with Hylden, an 250-year-old Ace, averaging 100 points into unconsciousness. Hylden was unable to give a good description of the fight.
STANLEY FOR REFRESH
ANNOKED WOMAN
The appeal for protection made by the judge was denied. The cause of Officer Sutton to plea Alfred McCormick was denied. He was fine $2. Miss Bower choked that he bannied her while she was pregnant.
ORGANIZE NEW CLUB
DORESTERS FIRED
COFFFFE GOES EAST
"Coffee, hot coffee," cried Roy Kival, 31. 41. A.E. Austin Ave., as he posted on Facebook, the suspicions of Officer Edward Marzak when he saw so many persons approach Kival. Upon investigation it was found that he shined. He was found $190 and costs.
STARRED IN ARGUMENT
During an argument at 3213 Cottage Grove Ave., between Albert Edmondson, st. 310, st. 331, st. 331 and Johnnie Jack Jackson, st. 331. Edmondson was stabbed by Jackson.
STEALS EUR FROM AUTO
AUTO
Office Killer Michael Mazon leaves Gorman, 17, 2017 Vernon Ave, and Gorman, 17, 2017 Gorman Ave, where they were trying to dispose of a aigen fur caps. The cense had been taken from the room. The Indian Ave, when left there by the owner, Mrs. J. C. Daniels.
OES TO BAILEY'S HALL
The Knots of Friendship lodge has been moved to the Indian Ave, for future meetings on the first Friday and third Thursday night of each month.
OHIOANS HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Allen, formerly of Columbus, Ohio, have moved to the Columbus, Ohio, house, stopping temporarily with their daughter, a son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Allen.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
HELD FOR ABSON
GETS LODGE BOOK
SPLITS EAR OPEN
Officers Cotra and McCulley, assigned
to the 271st Stn. and Walsallshire,
arrived at 271st Stn. and Walsallshire
in progress at 271st Walsham Avo.
Officers Roberts, assigned to the
271st Stn. Mrs Roberts, assigned
to the street with Scott Roberts,
her husband. The officers saved her from further
PHOTOGRAPHY
Suffering with derauned mumps, Mira Suffering with derauned mumps, Mira William, Wilson 20, 424, 929e William, Steven, and Joseph, and served to the psychiatric hospital to be kept under observa-
TO TOUR ANSWER
M. T. Halley, 455 State St. is preparing to make a trip which will cover the state of Michigan.
S. Bend, Jun., Oct. 12—D. D. is here stopping at $2.5 N. Harrison farm, where he will conduct a business in Limon, Ohio.
The Wabash Ave. department of the Chicago Y. M. C. A. was given a big vote of confidence in the course of its work. A total membership, well over 2,000 mark, was chalked up on the scores of men and boys who enlisted to work in the city. A colleague with other branches of the Chicago association in a big celebration to celebrate the drive. When the city-wide scores were announced, it featured a third in point of success among the 10 department and at the dinner was honored at the Central depot and of the Elektra Baptist Church. At the 12 best membership of the 10 department and at the dinner was honored at the Pollock land was second in the Wabash group of member workers.
The first big event planned for the morning of Nov. 1, by M. A. J. of Y. A. C. A. will be an "Every Jemian" event at W. A. C. A. on Saturday, Nov. 19, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The boys in the membership packed the Wednesday night, but for real fun and excitement, the girls in the seniors Saturday night of my week promises to college anything the "Twins" will offer. The Sunday Afternoon Men's club held a special event for the Smith of the divinity school of Chicopee on Saturday, Nov. 19, at clock. Dr. Smith is a recognized leader of thought in the field of the divinity school, and he will upon the subject, "The Foundations of very significant address, special music address, Sunday's occasion," a gift of four discussions of this very vital subject, addressed by young men at the Wabash branch.
WEST SIDE NEWS
By J. Wesley Jones
Eighth Regiment Notes
FREE LECTURES
A series of free lectures on travel
still and moving pictures, will be given
at the Feld museum, Grant park and
still and moving pictures, will be given
at the month of November. The attention
of parents is called to the series of free
movies, which will be given on the same dates at 10:30 a.m. at which time still and moving pictures also will be shown. The public invited.
Mrs. Bailey Is in Peck o' Trouble
When the case of Bailey v. Bailey was called before Judge Thomas J. Lynch in the circuit court Mrs. Hattie Bailey, 707 East 40th St., through which she questioned that Fred Bailey, who occupies the first apartment of the same building, be sent to the county jail for his failure to pay alimony and to sue the bank. Bailey, Judge Lynch after hearing testimony of the plaintiff asked Attorney Richie Burkowski, representing the fending bank, to say that Westbrooks explained to the court that Hattie has two other husbands living it is only fair that the three husbands be closed even between three husbands. According to the attorney's state Bench in Cleveland, Ohio, several years before Fred met her, and that a thorough search of state records revealed that Fred Bailey had been granted. It was also alleged that Jattle and Fred Bailey lived together in Cleveland, but Bailey deserted her husband and went to live in the East. The couple married Mrs. Bassey of East Liberty, In., while the couple were even alleged that he received a letter from his wife's Eastern husband him during his trial results if he did not accept the letter.
At the close of the testimony Judge Lynch ordered Mrs. Balloy to answer charges filed in a cross-hill, and to produce his wife's other husband.
URBAN LEAGUE NEWS SERVICE
But the recent history of the Mary Church is more encouraging. Mary presets to work among our own congregations, and presets to work among our own positive instructions for the ordination of priests to the church. In Mississippi the priestly instances hearing out the calls are the deadliest in Mississippi. The first priestly instruction to train priests and the first secretary to train priests and the first toward the Cardinal Gibbs Institute for similar purposes is read in the fall of 1834. Wise recognition this fall of 1834 of these bright signs of the times may be cited in conclusion, the clear statement of the General Council, and the resolution that this conference puts on record its unqualified condemnation of that evil spirit of worship. The clear statement of violence and persecution designed to violate mankind in acts of violence and persecution designed to violate our own human beings' rights any of our fellow human beings' rights to our church participation in these internal committees which standishing which is the only way out of the clash of diverse race and conflict.
SHOT WRONG MAN
Norfolk, Ya. Nov. 2, 2-Luhan Bowen, niklas Kred, is being held in a courtroom with feloniously shooting of Ashley Edwards. 500 Sheriff's Office deputies are assisting Ashley宝雅. When questioned by the police she declared that she did not shoot at the Walt Disney Skinner. 232 Neshan St., whon she said she was her own awards was shot through the right arm.
COL JENKINS SCORES
BETHESDA MUSICALE
Sunday evening, 4 at 7:30
6:00 p.m. The second of their series
the second of their series
first Sunday musicals. The following
first Sunday musicals. The following
burton, tenor; Marcy Stewart Joyner,
rederer, Leon Smith, Vollinist. Special
music is invited. The music loving
music is invited.
HOLD DUR ENDS IN MURDER
Canton, N. Y., Nov. 2, John-Williams, 22, is held in the county jail after he is alleged to have shot with a pistol Raymond Lavack, 21. Lavack it is alleged that Williams held up an automobile containing Lavack and William, who are couple near Mascara into Sunday night. Williams was captured early Monday morning by a police seven miles east of the highway with the girl.
OLD CITIZEN DIES
Fitzgerald, Ga., Oct. 30—Mrs. Dolly
Brown, the wife of the late
of this city for 23 years, died at her
home Thursday in 1923. She is
Susan Harrel and Mrs. Georgia Woods of this city, who married her
Harrel and Mrs. Georgia Woods of this city, who married her
Ga.; Calvin Thompson and Dock
Brown; Robert Johnson and
Robinah Johnson of Moundtea, Ga.
CLARA SIMS CONVALESCING
St. Louis, Mo, Nov. 23—Mas Clara St. B. Sime, who formerly conducted a beach concert here for several months, ill at the home of her sister, 4211A Cook Ave., is convalescing from an operation.
CLASSIFIED
Mobile Passes Anti-Klan Law to Halt Parade
Mobile, Ala., Nov. 2—The city commission of Mobile recently passed a resolution in which it stated that it was opposed to any such office. This resolution, Introduced by Commissioner Crawford, seconded by Commissioner Adelson, was introduced in answer to published advertisements that the K. K. R. commission city on Dec. 4. The resolution makes it行使 for the city in public places and on the streets, except during March Gras and carriage stops, or otherwise disgusting themselves.
STATE BAPTISTS RAISE LARGE
SUM FOR EDUCATIONAL WORK
Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 2- The general Baptist state convention of the state of Indiana met at the University of Chicago on Nov. 28, inclusive. Rev. Charles Johnson is pastor. The meeting was one of the greatest that the local Baptist. The convention raised more than $1,500 for missionary work and the main features of the occasion was the promotion of the 1808 Columbia Ave. This institution is looked forward to as being the pride of the Baptists of the Middle
The Women's auxiliary and all other auxiliaries co-op-operates this project proper support. Dr. M. V. Holden, president of the Baptist College, will make sure to make the work just what it ought to be. Mrs. Wila Peters, executive of the Baptist College, Dr. B. J. F, Wetrock was prime mover of the project for the Indiana Baptist college. The convention was called to order by Gary. The convention theme was "The Uplifted Christ". First, missionary leaders, the special sermons for the convention were preached by W. Portis, W. Portis, A. J. Allen, D. J. Wrenro and A. W. Betty. The annual thursed the entire convention. In the midst of applause he was elected by acclamation to the other officers follows:
W. S. Frazier, East Chicago, vice president; C. H. Johnson, Indiana, president; D. H. Holmes, Indiana, treasurer; Rev. J. D. Wrenroe, Lafayette, secretary; Rev. J. D. Wrenroe, Indianapolis, missionary; Rev. J. Holmes, chairman of missionary board; Rev. B. J. B. Cabroth, M. V. Holden, chairman of executive board; Mrs. Jessie Evans, Bloomington, president of the organization selected. By motion the committee from the general conference was appointed to work with the betterment of the Baptists of Indiana. The convention closed Sunday afternoon after the most successful meeting of its history. It adjourned to meet with the Shiloh Baptist Fort Wayne, Rev. T. S. Sims pastor.
PHI BETA SIGMA HOLDS ITS FIRST FRATERNITY SESSION
The initial meeting of the Nu chapter, Phi Beta Sigma fraternity, for the ensuing scholastic year was held at the Wahab Ave. Y, M. C. A. Sunday, Oct. 28. The meeting opened with an informal address by Breathe, outlining the program of the chapter for the ensuing year, Mr. Smith showed his spiellid adaptability as he describes his duties incumbent upon him.
The election of officers was as follows: E. Smith, president; Dr. Dr. William J. Dudley, general secretary; Dr. William J. Dudley, financial secretary; Linnarcar H. Bryant, financial secretary; William Jones, chaplain. The newly elected officers are men of no member organization. H. Bryant, with support of such individuals that Phi Beta Sigma fraternity has made much progress in so short a period of time, a manifestation of the most profound interest on the part of each member organization, that is bidding farewell to be foremost among those of the West. Each person who has been involved in body protection was debated in the most systematic and logical manner, and when the few discrepancies that occurred there was concerted action for support. Important letters were presented for the body's consideration, the more important being relative to the Douglas Scholarship. A large number of attention of every face parent, as the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity has been the face men to launch a campaign to raise a fund in order that the information be shared to the faults of an education.
The fundamental principle of this fraternity is "Culture for Service and Service to the Community." It is upon such a principle that institutions are built and governments are founded; they should pervade the whole of civilized life.
Woodard, Photographer
Woodard, the photographer whose photographs have been taken at Mt. St. and who has opened a studio at 111 W. St. Mt. announces that he will continue to stand, to take care of the giving trade, for which a trade, for which a trade, for which a trade, have been made. Woodard would create a name for himself in the manner in which Kansas city is growing in a fine indulgence of the people of the Western town ap- tost. In photography, a studio is managed in Dewey, Woodard. W. E. Woodard both of whom are of practical experience and they are being able assisted in Chicago, become so well
PETER B.
"Woodardized" that nothing but the name of patronizing any other studio, and as a consequence from this date forward Woodard should be a very busy man. Engagements can be made in advance either by mail or telephone.
Credit where it is due. When you have a question, please mention the Chicago Defender.
Form Body of Teachers and Parents
AGREEABLE WHITE MAN TOOK BOTH MONEY AND CLOTHES
Springfield, Mass., Nov. 2, Henry Warmstey of Windsor Center is now a much saddler but wiser person. He placed too much trust in one of his fellow men recently and as a result he did not expect to get back nothing of the money he lost in the deal and does not expect to get back. He met an agreeable white man and went to room with him at 125 and was fully and placed them in a chair, and according to his habit at home, and re-arranged his clothes, he awoke at his regular hour he found that his roommate had departed, and so had his clothes as well as $28 in his pocket. He was unable to locate the clothes.
LOST RELATIVES
[ADVERTISEMENTS]
THOMAS HAYDEN, ALISIS "SPEED BALL"
Ballistics, first heard in Columbia
and then in New York, he is
arrogant knowing his whispers, highly
proud his mother at 608 K. Madison St.
and 1200 W. 12th Street.
CARD OF THANKS
[ADVERTISEMENTS]
(ADVERTISMENTS)
IN MEMORIAM
In losing memory of our loss and later, Lutia Finch was sent away one year ago today, Oct. 22, 1922. "Mildly unloved and slightly ill-tolerated," Mother, father and sister,
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
NOTICE
ADVERTISMENTS MUST BE IN BY
IN OUTLOOK
TO INSURE INSERTION IN THE
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OF THE
CHICAGO DEFENDER
Get Your Ads in Early-Ity Pays
UNDERTAKERS
KERSEY, McGOWAN
& MORSELL
Undertakers
3515 Indiana Ave
OFFICE PHONE: 802-6255
CALHOUN & SCOTT
UNDERTAKERS
Chapel Free
Lady Assistant
451 East 351ST STREET
OFFICE PHONE: 802-6100
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
Housekeeping Rooms
Two beautiful front rooms; furnished for
housekeeping; married only; reasable:
4017 Grand Bldd. Thirl Floor
PRAIRIE AVE. 4035- Two NEATLY FURNISHED
rooms; married only; reasable: 4015 Floor
area. 4315 Shrub. Meen Floor.
EAST 351ST STREET. FURNISHED FOR
housekeeping; married only; reasable: 4015
after a rain on Sundays.
GILLS AVL, 490- FURN, ROOMS KITCHEN
floor 2, private family; only 1
people.
ST LAWRENCE AVL, 490, UST APT.
floor 2, private family; only 1
people. Roomed 2024.
PLAIRIE AVE. 434, 435, APT. 3- FURNISHED
room for couple.
E. 437 ST. 321, 432, NEATLY FURN.
front room; large single, modern, 313, 314.
INDAYE AVE. 432, 433, APT. 2- FURNISHED
room.
E. 437 ST. 353, NEATLY FURN. FRONT
room; large preferred, modern, garages.
DREST 367, 445- FURNISHED ROOMS.
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 475, 471, INT FL.
room; call servants after 6. Ken. 322.
PLAIRIE AVE. 432, 433, FURNISHED
room with without board.
E. 437 FL. 421, NEATLY FURNISHED
room, steam, electric. Remnond 314.
FURNISHED OR UNFURNISH. FRONT ROOM.
room; large single, modern, 313, 314.
INDAYE AVE. 436, 437, APT. 3- NEATLY
furnished room; modern.
compute. call Recorded 2346.
4. EAST 197, 508-LARGE FRONT ROOM
litterature. 101, (ultima) 2148.
VINCENNES AVENUE. 126, (ultima) 2148.
2. 1 person. litterature. 101, 2363.
HILEN AVENUE. 2363-LARGE FRONT ROOM
for rest.
LARGE FRONT ROOM FOR COUPLE, CALY
excellent, Douglas NC46
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER'S 123
FURNIGHED ROOMS FOR RENT
seg poy apgeon
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CLASSIFIED
HERR WANTED
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FURNISHED FLATS FOR RENT
‘THE WOODLEIGH
$807 GRAND BLVD.
‘ OFFERS FOR NOV. 1ST
attmetively fernished eom-toom aperimcote,
same Sr, ee ae
tite cern eteeaea Seta
bac fs Gai Rete
Sate “oe Se Sa eS
= THE “CHICAGO DEFENDER, . |= —_CLASSIFIED
AsroMeviLes FoR. sabe: AGENTS WANTED * PERSONAL |
>, 1921 OAKLAND SEDAN
eteheas crete ute EM ter:
Foot bomrers“wotomcter. wheel ‘oeks shan
py Sa iargine ms Bete Ww ale
DODGE 1919 TOURING
\ swontertat condition. car for etery var
ee Create Ss AS a
HUDSON SPORT, 1921
Seer rons art
he ce “tates
314, SF Tox
ones Schage sol Preotage
4654 W. MADISON ST.
Pwonr AES 3101
‘MOON
Sram goat pert aish tenes, elie
Se iste eee
Ee oa Say ete ase! _
sont BES Sate rt
Fyprani peamesre jeer par PEG
sot iat, Yor’aed Weer exa'Ue Sopebt
Hoa "Sae Wathe se ee BOE
Sito Rite arts Gaeta bias” Som
Poesy ANE SU, ee
Gt od Fen oa vie Gone ie fat
Beerod Sp hiss aay nie. He
Setter ie Cohn aie
eae ot
Pease wane’ riieet vigeent coaltan
gS REE RN CA Wate Bee
Sere sens tees 1S onan FONDITON
a Re eee ne re
t 2,
Lyon & Healy’s
‘Bargains in
Genuine, Used
Read thie tit of wondertut
Sahteer Uprignt und Conse
Yunis retvced tor te
caoccup. ele ent! tee
focany and cak cabinets, some
Ucontinued modete An
Suaranteed playing. condtton.
siete: eal Eee tes tow
11 $150 $ 97.50
i 225 ‘116.50
16. 250 125.00
16 Elec. 290 165.00
lv 350 175.00
* 100 150 112.50
110 225 135.00
120 275- 137.50
120 Elec: 350 175.00
130 390 175.00
Easy Terms
fee sper ee oe te
i re
Clip and Mail
wae ofS
eee re nc eet
| ePrice
Lyon & Healy
‘Wabash - Avenue at _Jackson
=—“sisiness cranees ——
aay BUSINESS CHANCES —_
loca eing ge fer sre
ache ee Sat
Tater Tindarnss dant knot hve a, bealge
ic da deni. eats
Sehnert ited
eAt.om) in tank carne $8 Yer Fear. what
Wat ACE Sor tad
Berrie, ates pie tl
BE et hae ae fa
Heir ae ep
fron ieneme. yon wich to promote, tome t
eee era ees
5 Sees, Se Sete
ia ae
SORE MRA
DIT pisrercrgis WaNTEn—FISh
TE fo oebetwagen torte
este, vie Rocka
Hearth, Ge mdariceeet
i hated atin ett
iiontnaencrtaaet, ies
esos cheats, HO bor Sin Fie Wane
ium —VEATEN INCOME Fai SHOE
Se Te ee a, ae
Tesi Maas at ahaha
ae Wi, ae eee
Eo Tite Gi, ats a of
Sane eed f
BEL Pac ear
irreaest Harem Be
Reine ones 35
<a aE
apg, SSS WED Ge aes
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Se ae Pry ae a
inti omy oe
petit Satis at i.
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Prem meine
FESS Sr SAE EAST wy
Lara a” SUE OO FaE
Paaatens errr am
mia eee aon Bat TAT
Tag aN a Sa os SO
“FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS.
TORTS Ei pakleaeceae SOR
os, & eres
SS an a aa z
PEGA has ane OE
TaeER SOE ANY BIST Wan ToT
ee ee a
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aT Re aT
3220 Vin" itee, Amanie Balle, 306 Cra
Fou “sian thaglng BE :
SUR nicer aS ror a
oe LPC ee
oS eS aoe:
AGENTS WANTED
AGENTS
28 cen Bay Par a
hae REL PLE &
EDU, fone beweat owes ankdne. Dropou!
ee
an sgt nat ety 8
ER Se Bees
SLR
Ce ee
ag Rdrtetines Use aoia ty walt te every rate
eens ae SEA a a
EP Be ee aac tea
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Seer eee
‘tiabliched boulsesa, a
oe ee
Piatt bet oentahay aet e
‘row thea aa eelt'an theese, sco" ACTO:
See tiete ettte hee o,
- SELL TAILORING
DURING.SPARE TIME
MAKE, $10 DAILY
unr witha aes ana
ear BRE EAE OING COn
too rie Seen tht Ste Sew ort
MET aT i Gcie, EE e
meaty Ioremes” Agdcene the Reco-tate tr
Sota Te fi
SALESMEN
ng mae, S18 eget, Zou spare
adeesttons Pare ga aee es
Weegee Bor eanee suis
Beets ees epae
HES, Sarl oathas tot ce
SH eMrn
ete are,
7 us SOONERS, oe
Fag AEE eh caer Seay
seein eers ee
loferenees nl tant peepation pauls, Por
eee et eters
ahs IE Solas
RR eS RTE
=e ae Lees
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Ex Wercan ie hee
ER eress “eee
Eh ric ali, Ge Sees
Ea ee Cee Poa
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re eke Weipa ete
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KGENRO REIL Fancy pox Penrose
can Tan Fae Be, eae
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Hire” Agect ly Cov ns 2, Sou Reni
A, See
ena he oie oie ee
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fete eee
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pas Sete Taam “ime
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Gr A, ORME HEIST BTS
dt Ee oe TE a
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Rae ge ORS
soot aC Seti
Ei Penn ner Pintsboreh. Pe. bon
TEs ee, Woes ae
Sali eee aaa ae es
‘inumper, 968310 WW. Stontee at, Chica. tt
Ueatal "Dactuare, aed eosoetien Itswole
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Le see 2
partner aeete te See
Ben ae
Soe TE
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Feet er ese tera
bade & Ekae, ie, on BO
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ogi se edt eater aan be eee
gitar iis tree
St_Keppian & Adler Acency._ ae
Fee" ionmene sitet we ron
anor eotinae A ES
Ecce cmaneermcer
a
ESCA DETTE
lan in 8 Wooder, Get our free saraple care,
arp ine weir, Gat ote vy teen cate
FERSONAL
Ae Siena, be, cree
Bera Hs torts Be as
Hadeetncen aoe we wil site gon a tee cory
a ee
Ses ate laced th Gad Pa
Hier ead ethan
| ~ STOP
Pate lta souretten, ter
eee Seat nee oe
Bie ter that etry Sent colby" kite
Feaebay tet eee lee
The edo cDeealt Sees fice fenton ere
eat a
Pelt eed Wiien Mop chase sour whats
See Mee mest com dala 0
Se Tine ees ate
DR. NATHANSON’S:
PRESCRIPTION 5000
RPS dra ate
owas Yeeingr stone ts brat tarkacbee
Sp hee ee ee
TR dee tee ap ale eolage Fe pet nthe
Rite Sg Tou eat ees
VICTORY DRUG STORE
3859 South State St., Chicago
Blvd. 6422
STRANGE POWER!
oft eaiai eatehhcs shee’
Sie Gee daar fee, te Yae
soa tae ede tet tae
ede ener ert
Bap ees eee’ ee cea
Sor eee
Sees an i
Sores Mitta atte
Eanes eae den cme
ea ie"t Saat tad Rtn
Set Be aha ot
Rah
GRACE GRAY DE LONG
Cesar oaaners ONS
GooD
teen HE RBS
eevisiny suis —ugrie spans
SETS SREY HEE I
cotta en ana oa oe
Beieiie® eace et hd ane
Vena eta Tg iY Sle
EGE emia, Geena fate scr
Le ree ai ieee
FREE .
arash we rete peta
eT? Sine al a
Saris ean needa de
SETH RURE At "loge te
Soa ei inert
TSOi COTEAUE GHOVE AVES
BELOW PAR FROM STUB-
BORN BLOOD.DISEASES?
senmont uy, a, et, si
art 2s eae
ea panes monies So oe
ee Ms pene
Bate ata, Chicaco. TM. trertoa Bile.)
se Sas mT ase btn,
naa ene
eee a ea Coie
ean ee shore eae
Pe Mertiore, Sos Es 30th St. St apt 3
Fan tata
Ae a tote eect
obi Rac ge fea ear
Hie liomtate etnies crass
ouE, anecnn Uo CN
seh See no apeiae
soe Uae Sear
EanG re SEE
gree ee
arr ee re al
sear eee ot
reo ee eee
Ce eae Pate aa
ATO TTT LF OT
ees wer ae
een aero eee
FS :
evan = _ era
ero Reale eo
Mie, Sew Fortes y ft
Serer AT TE
oats Serena Oey
ToL eee Hernan
SS sieeecaneous
Se
Ter a Se
eee ere crn ae
to rae as ae rene a
Be eae RTS he
and comantsslon. . =
Le ee tat ha a
sia tee ovine nae Bi
Fetal ee Satis ede
mire ¢
ee He Bawa mmsn ear
MBAR A SHASKIAS, REAL EXTATE.
‘WANTED—FOR CASH
cub NAEE SEA, gucgemoss
up WaghCoEs GENTE BASE 2
A. E. AVERY
ao Peter einesoe
WHY BE LONELY?
ett Sr ee oa sans
Barri ce ee abies ee
Peretti Ca RES cin ui
‘BUILDING PLANS
Rr
recut SEATS" noon
i st
LEE Sone Ras
EVERYWHERE CONTRACT FOI 4 STAMUS
2 $5 PER 1,000
ancoise REEREN ost
LATER! OO
ag Gans aa eC Te
Tee ee eee
St Gece Tae aa
Tie, SESTOVE RATIPNAL DETREI
eae as es
gab rere cat
Sr cath tae
TR Gae hoes Ga ees
te ee
Siete nil Santie et
SURE ae eek aT
TU et aN Hae oT TEE
nan taers fete Sees te
Geeaeceaee Teen AAO TERRE
ee eee gee a ee
Sige ms)
soi ee
HOTELS
U. S. HOTEL
1 Meni poe ree
SUITE TEE ET
Sassi in owen
* "Sew aRrixoTos Norse
MERE
Nogus By Pay On WEEK, URLA-¢ NOTEI
aah Ge Ba on
ra dat =
INGTRUGTION
SEE oe TONE ORE
crea eemi ns
Bi hee Gana ae ©
eal iaceges ees oe
ares RTM TET
‘Reronss, earll “poms tee touooe ties
menial :
‘SUMMER REORTS
totam, PEACE Sita oe
aie emer eee
fete tor gale, Jadee, ik Bary, tealtor,
| REAL ESTATE FOR CALE
‘ FOR SALE
ogoost, uousr aionERs —at_axp
"IY LOE aM IT tate
nao uous, = scr er—srEsx
| Hee uoush, ae area
Se nis. Bhs Tar at
soRoos torse—TTIai MEAT, eLACTRIC
aan anes ea Bea Guat
: Ih Aree
rengoxe nocse, ae Brock. anemgAx
*ngoxe norae, Zu ioe: SEMAN
| aa ES. ata
arian. wr suGMiegs, 623 Raoul:
TE, WEARS SBR a
noni socse, TEs reainin ATRc
BRO OnE LEME PS
Ores. opens aati, stock em
Fa SRE ATTA
rseran, sooes, arn, AND PRAIRIE
SAT Ml Th.
pesnonse soneps Wiss, RCS (Ae
pBGE SSRs! ut amt ome
tontar wciLDie Emir 7 Hoos eLags,
Re er
See Greta nies Seed ge
| Stee ee bee Tat ee
| Beas SALE Se BE
a
erlat uc “Woe, raost, 748
BES carat atest ee
| Fama uae eae
1 ore and, have, eaciasine sgeocy. toe be
eect ter arcen, Sees Oe dts
STE Shea ee at
aay Sai ea aetna
SS APS aS
hee at erate
_ a
| FOR SAtG BARGAINS
vaspaee af en ocanons
gas: Soee, aemrtd.tes, Me™ Bee
aon eas ae ee
ieee ee ee ee
LARGE ATE, Sie ab SES ious,
—
ee
“ASG athe Bi Tr MRE
oASELES 8 sn ern or-amce
vigcpsegy CETL Re ox azar
oe a
MHMEG WET, SE BSUS
Uhrowchoat, Pree 317.0: east $5,000"
PRES ie tte he a
Fore 308000: gaan Suan
Bese
spas, ares Men, gerne
BA kana ee Ter ey
Be pe ed Pe
ne es Bee
Gee. Ma Noe ae
SiH Set rat
i ieteaet Re
sae Bie GA Sre on
YOUR LAST CHANCE
AT TWIN CITIES
'To Buy Property Near Ford’s
Gigantic Automobile and
Chemical Plants
sSESOWEe WOT cats ORER®
EW ZWO-ACRD THACTS LEFT AT
ore ae
Tees 8 era, Ne
FARM LAND, $45 PER ACKE. ”
You ieromuatind
Smith, James, Russell & Co.
ss 6. State FE emteao, tet:
even BEATE RE VUE Ce
pe eT ee ae Gas
se ete ante Bete
Stereo ee ene cee
Bx abe rae Seem ome
HES Sere I es oMen Wage
Hor Soetnet oe, ee
Ba RE Teves aces, es
at ta ia a ee
EBs, el et te ant ae
Saiteer Seen Gite terse
eevee nei tear tt Reon, PE
farts Se ea
fe es ee a a
EL ES run adi week
SLR rolal Shae eee fe oad tens:
BAe else Fe ha ite
PESTS ae eee Coe
So hare ee eee
Fe eee ;
Soe a TT a
when soe oeE tag 4 toe or emall sat
See beat
Be. roe het tae babe
rr Sun a eer pee
SF eee er! arene
G2 Ue edness Sat
HoSinc What esnant te Tale tnt ea sears
Rares cre "ae eee
$e iS teat nea” ee ome
BAMaeae ten feet
ROWAMD'S. SUANKEIX REAL, ESTATE
EOWA FOPTAGE GAME ATE
8-ROOM HOUSE, $4,200
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
42000, FEAGR. 70, Ue
Seat ietoat tenon Mort of a lots
aS Seat cher sme cial tes
ris it abate io
ae en ne Se
MATTHEWS REALTY CO.
St wlumeoue Roe
SESE A
PEATE or, SOE
PE aoe fae ch igh a0 we
DE A eh vance ave
Eales i Vea Glee ov
SERUPIRER inuse: Wirt wHGIs,, WARD.
ob RENAE "BSE Bae:
PELAT ast BLOCK OS PRAIRIE AVE. 1
a
Bact 8. Se ken Rese Salk Oeéctos Bide,
git. Room Su. Overton Bide,
i WHEN LEAVING
ANY PART OF THE WORLD
rouse Peace
RAT STEN,
TE Ree RS
'WOLREL s Fo is Wools
Ber Wes
nonin Hitiae Fino,
ERTS Cate ape.
ER RR Se
HISPSBGEG te
| Smo EST
wg mg BUTE AEE EC: WE oe
TEESE Seay act ack, lies Boy
We HAVE FOR BALE
fg gui itd ba,
SPA Rat carta
EAST Ae Gn Sige face
Silie in. Grerioa Diuges Met S State Se!
HESS. Fs epee fa
Seeger ee Tee ee
oo ef RO Sn Sa
eve. Oakland cana 4
Cra teag S sale tig, Wie cea
see eal tmeeee e e
Mine ant Satie eat OS
inner aed end ol lent Puma,
aoe
Pan dies, $e ating,
iE eaten ee
Bicirears «a0. "Cwmpten, Aie8 State se"
Fae sae TgEE # HOD or are
oe SE Ne tar alae
sere Wer bale PEE
Foe Shea IRS A
weer eS AC Te
Key “ave. indi Eaactey er. Porters:
Geis tye oe No" Take oe
sen gt rae Se ees
ag eae Ath lil Sl
ea gor SrAERS SOHO THEE
pa ey
own Buse oc
PAGE’ ELEVEN
SS
REAL ESTATE FOR ‘SALE.
HOBES & GRUBB
“a STH ES Raaeranm ones
10cses
4698 ST, LAWRANCH AVE —6-ROOM BRICK
a rt cra TO RSE
PP the ae. sh orm Boe
tak Gorm rice’ song: 31.800 came. 9
Se TE naar ae
CHAMPLAISO ACE xm, con sr.—T-B003,
ener ee $a or G1 S00 cae
ERS SE ee ate
Biles eae ‘eat, oak Gours, Peice W100;
oR arp cee ap enoos
coe CEB Be nue,
Rg My
Sach aeidaee
ae
emu x02 POT hace areas
is cn eat oe
sOHIE FI, SC VINCENNES AVENST mus
Se Cee ee BS
REMADE, moose
Reet
THREE PLATS
Sawn ee, eT ese
CALCUSE SVEN ST sr. —en0 tes.
Se eae ees Bis
sivthvenexce are, se ore ep—8z8
RAAVARACE 206. Br STS SEES
‘Brice $9,000; ‘$2,500 cund. — a
ie
ee asses Aveeno ONCE,
Eintto: $008 cust
eee he: os, Sy ectes
RRO SRE EE ee pera
Reick, @tat, € rooms each. Pelee SOO:
eae, oa caw eps
Beige cea, koamd each. Price 63.5002
st dEBice see, me. ry ev-nere
for EEANE: SEOUL Sa
a ee SE
a
pies a ae as Fees
310.009 ash. co -
wpe Te, oye cea er
an “eorecas” feotat™ over $3000. BTS
sPOeate? TE ar ara we
‘Saat madera: ieatal $5.90; 410/00 caak
Seat teas oe, waren
‘Ghote Petce $55,000; $10,000 canbe
OUR BUYERS NEVER FAIL
ee ge TE ae
ean’ pha ane ae oe
Seater et on ee cae
Seatac Sa, cee es
ete ces Sten pee
Fe cire de Gem, Set vee
Frias kee ea, Seca
Betta pert ieee oot
Beers Grea a eee
Me Mt
Senay movie
poe rs
eee eee
ee eee ee
mane ROIs lets aay <
‘HOUSES
ae re
Sena ee each
eae teed ae
Ca See, MA il ee
2 FLATS
Sass ans, Sek Bas te, Nk ig
Rags Aga a at.
Sebo tors acme aes
3 FLATS
28h fades Sa aware
eta E ote ane ae
Mtg. 41,00 areas Hoon Seekers lesley
MORGAN PARK
-enoot erScatows, sss
RESIDENCE, ASP RCMINESS LOTR,
Easy Terms
FAULKNER & COOK
Tse VINCENNES ROAD
4810 ant Catumet, same fret enw £10209
4b aod Caiowet, eed, iekescere 33,000
| FAULKNER & COOK
3605 State Street
Bcrony tay sel srw
Fig, ES ESTiee, WexCre TENCE
apt: terres Or cava: 2S) dowa SiO asthe
Beked ta tar eit Sets
eS
Stegtaet Piette baat Wik Te ebngs
eee
Sn Ganthed, {S05 or rie Wee aoe
SHOR con ten Cataaa nh SE
FRET ar tpt DEKRtoRS sr Fae
‘Wine duis “den ties Sherpas
a2i23 foams “Beds ie "Hd Sows
Gare, Wie Bata ia ee, SB
ESS TOE PTY EET:
tail raters ree $28 tal res Ee
Fintan a Cac Seb ole Ee
WANTEDSEOT SIOWGAN-PARE BEE
Ge ee bat ret eit wneraes fo Ce
Eas see
$500" cash wilt buy. Donglan SRS
LICENSED ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTOR
coxstRUCTION REPAIRING
Wi Fexande
Ler us Give YOU an estneaTR
arp tore Fog or Peace
SERRE IR OR Page
Beri clon? Went
er nideealp ens
HOMER R. LEWIS’
Building Contractor
coe aE ea ae nts
PTA FRE
a eed
ERP A
ii ee
toe ree eg
DRAYING AND HAULING
CG & D. MOTOR SERVICH
Expressing and Moving. Your
‘Trunks Moved, 90c Each.
Why Pay More?
5015 South State Streat
Phone Kenwood 4046,
We doen care
a Stall
HAIRDRESSING
aE
Sam
(AIT S Sap Rents Woues Sas.
GSES paces
Sere eae a eS
LEE SR ererew
aR
TERS ee eS
See eee ea es
Ge debra be x Giese
eee
eae Tea a
Ser anes Lg ESAS
Sos Sees
prove Fow Sate
PRCT
oY
eae nek Pale ae
FR Petree
ise HQ. S52 J black pts coat, wlee 42 $10.
pee iecgt tena rake an
Sep mane ee Toe
Sp See eRe
Cece Se RSS
For _site=cabies SER AND, WOOL
tee een Se
nae aig Ste
oe Pe ee
ee vais Bake
= GanERaS AND KODAES—
ed
SL Sus eres eee
Co... Kulak Headquarters, 100 N, Dearboro
GRID FANS EYE BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON GAMES
---
PAGE TWELVE
WILBERFORCE IN WASHINGTON FOR HOWARD BATTLE
Westerners Invade the Capital for Intersection Clash; Outcome Watched With Interest
Washington, Nov. 1. -The first big
intersectional contest. East vs West,
will be staged at the American league
park tomorrow
afternoon when a Wilberforce
university eleven of Will伯force.
Ohio, faces the two rival
university eleven of this city in a
battle for foot-
ball game. The game will
attract the attention of football
the throughout the country who
are anxious to
get a line on
the field or
"Builders" for
the coming "annual
classic"
which will be
staged at Philadelphia
deelphin this year.
McGhee
(Wilberforce)
McGheo
(Wilberforce)
Howard surprised the loyal followers of the blue and white by stopping the thunderous rush from Atlanta, Ga., holding them solemn while Peyton went over in the second quarter for a touchdown and Dwayne Johnson doneshed drop kicked a field goal later in the same quarter and then Howard was content not to open up the scouts from both Lincoln and Wilberforce. Howard was outweighed. While Howard was busy trimming Morsehouse Wilberforce was having an come-from-behind time. The Roger Williams university of Nashville threw the ball to the tune of $5 to $0. Wilberforce has a finished team and Dwayne Johnson Huff, a former student at Hyde Park, Chicago, got the Cleveland high school flash, and Spriggs will be the newest, as the fans from Ohio are anxious to figure out how he will stand in their
Conten
(Howard)
how the Force boys
will stand in their
game Thanksgiving day at Columbus
the Detroit Tigers and the West Virginia College Institute
eleven from Institute, W. Va.
PAINE COLLEGE, 50; BATESBURG, 6.
August, Ga., Oct. 22.—In their first
game of the season the Paine College
Sweepers administered an overwhelming
Daline gridron. The first touchdown
came after three minutes of play.
Eight touchdowns and two points after
the game were scored, making a total
50-0 score.
COMMONWEALTH-PERTH AMBOSY
New York, Nov. 2.—Mekedon brothers
have engaged the famous Perth Am-
bosy municipal team Sunday night at the
Commonwealth carline. They met many
time last season and there will be a
between them. It should be a good game.
$50 TREATMENTS $12.50
FOR
---
All this month I will treat all afflicted patients who call, for a reduced pro-
All this month I care
for $25.00 for any sunny
festival meal or $50.00 for
sunny visitors. I am
giving. subway
situations or water
advantage of this
festival. I am
advantage of this
once. Remember. I give
you $25.00 as
attention as
if you pay $25.00
for your life work.
The beating of
my life work. I
know that I will
be best treatment
in medical
education.
PETER H.
Don't wait until the first few days,
they'll be back. You'll be able to
face once you have your consulting
trains or your consulting
trains are with you. You
have 9:45 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Wed-
nesday; 9:45 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Sunday; 9 to 1. Dr. H. C. MARTIN
237 W. MADISON STREET
CORNELIAS, FLORIDA
CHICAGO, ILL.
A.
Commonwealth "5" va. Perth Amboy
CHAMPIONS OF NEW JERSEY
PRELIMINARY
St. Joseph's Institute Deaf Mutes vs.
Coriandrs
MUSIC BY CLEVELAND JONES
Admission 75c, including War Tax
YE BAL
REEN
ES OLD
ASPARAGUS
N'M IN
ARGUMENT.
YES AFTER
I DON'T
LIED =>
ROGER WILLIAM
ON BY WILLI
BUNGLETON GREEN
HERE COMES OLD REVEREND ASPARAGUS NOW I KNOW I'M IN FOR A BIG ARGUMENT. HE'S ALWAYS AFTER ME BECAUSE I DON'T GET MARRIED
WELL, GOOD MORNING MR. GREEN! I'M CERTAINLY GLAD TO SEE YOU, BUT I'M SORRY TO SAY I'VE BEEN HEARING SOME DAD REPORTS ABOUT YOU — WHY DON'T YOU SETTLE DOWN AND TAKE YOURSELF A WIFE?
WHY IS IT. SO HARD TO DO, MY DEAR MR. GREEN?
THAT'S RATHER HARD TO DO, REVEREND—
I DON'T KNOW WHOSE WIFE TO TAKE—
HERE COMES OLD
REVEREND ASPARAGUS
NOW I KNOW I'M IN
FOR A BIG ARGUMENT
—HE'S ALWAYS AFTER
ME BECAUSE I DON'T
GET MARRIED—
Wilberforce, Ohio, Oct. 27. —Wilberforce university trumpeted over Roger Williams university ofash-ton and the gold on Wilberforce's field. The gold and green eleven romped at will with forward passes, end runs and through the bewildered Roger Williams line. The gold and two passes for points and two passes for points.
Wilmerie scored four touchdowns and two kicks for points in the first quarter and one kick for point in the third quarter and three touchdowns and two passes for points in the fourth quarter. Wilmerie also after a series of line plunges Stout shipped through center for a touchdown. Hurd kicked goal. The soviets scored 15 yards from Lewis and ran 15 yards for the touchdown. Stout kicked goal. The third score came after a series of long runs when Wilmerie went over from the 5-yard line. Willette failed to kick goal. The fourth score came as a series of long runs when Wilmerie ran 20 yards for the touchdown. Fields kicked goal. The sixth score came in the third quarter when Springs scored and ran 20 yards for the touchdown. Fields kicked goal. The sixth score was made in the fourth quarter when Huff carried the ball over after a series of long runs and ran the extra point. The seventh score came from a 50-yard pass from Stout to Johnson and a 15-yard sprint for the extra point. Sedwick accounted for the last score by intercepting a forward pass and running 40 yards to Sedwick, for the extra point.
Only in the first quarter did Roser Williams have a chance to score. That opportunity came when Stout after making an end run of 12 yards
GUNN'S TOE GET
7-6 WIN FRO
GUNN'S TOE GETS HAMPTON 7-6 WIN FROM VA. NORMAL
By P. BERNARD YOUNG
Hampton, Va., Oct. 31. By winning
from Virginia Normal and
Industrial Institute Hampton upheck
Hampton, Va.
ning from Virginia
dustrial institute
the tradition that
the tradition that
games on Arm-
strong field. This
hard-won victory
of the games
games won on
this field up to
seven, three this
four last year.
Hampton kicked to
L. V. Larson
line. L. V. Larson
Petersburg advanced
the ball to
the 15-yard
gained a first
down and the
Hampton line
then kicked to
then kicked to
Hampton's 15-yard line. Both teams struggled in midfield until Virginia Normal received a kick on her 46-yard line. She scored a touchdown, the first of the game. Capt. Coleman of the Hampton team was in every play and materially cut down the Virginia Normal. Coleman ripped the ball over for his team's only score. The try for extra point failed. Far from being discouraged, Hampton opened up her great aerial attack. Williams, Jacobs, Hargrove and Gunn pulled the line for a first down. Virginia for a touchdown. It came as a result of a perfect pass from Hargrove to the great little end. Jimmie
TUSKEGEE-13
ST.NORMAL-6
Birmingham, Ala., Oct. 27—Tuskegee plunged and clawed their way into the Nike Tigers on Paterson field. Both teams used straight football laces to recover a Tuskegee fumble in Johnson's latter's 15-yard line in the first quarter. Moore added six yards and Tuskegee kicked out of off-side. A touchdown seemed sure, but the heavy Tuskegee line braced and took the ball back to the field of bounds on his 18-yard line. The ball see-sawed back and forth when Tuskegee kicked out of a quick rush sent the ball behind him. Normal taking it on Tuskegee's 5-yard line, downhill, but Moore missed goal. The quarter ended when N. Cooley intercepted Tuskegee's only pass in the first half on Normal's 26-yard line.
Tuskegee tied Normal in the second quarter. Smith's touchdown in the third quarter won the game for Tuskegee.
LINE-UP
Tuskegee-13
Baldwin
Carlton
Carlton
Brown
McConnell
Jefferson
Fritz
Damby
R.T.
Balding
Bailey
Glinne
Wooten
R.T.
Bible
Smith
Moore
Substitutions: Tuskegee-Jennings for Williams and William Cooley for William Joyner for Wooten, R.S. for Smith, State Normal-Baskey for Hall, Eriecee for Fritz, William Cooley for Ballet, Levee for Moore.
WOMAN MATCHMAKER AT
GOLDEN GATE A. C. BOUTS
Philadelphia. Nov. 2—On Oct. 15 at
matchmaker, Wilbur Cohen and Edi
Covington fought a hot fight. Cohen
hopelessly beaten up to the sixth
round came back and out for sessions.
Jerry Hayes of this city and Johnny
Gordon of the other two came to
the edge. Hayes won. Johnny Griffin
of Chester and Young Jack Dillon
rounds with odds even. Thandy Vance
of New York and Levi Levi. Both, both
up, put a rattling good bout, so much
better than the other two again.
Several other good bouts were
on the card. This card was for the
home at Sharon Hill.
LLOYD, FREE AGENT, IS
At Havana, Oct. 22 ..... RHE.
Platanus ... 3.000 0 200 0 -0 3
Batteries: Mirbel and Baschf,
Palmerc, Morris and Lingle, Perez.
At Havana, Oct. 21 ..... RHE.
Platanus ... 3.000 0 0 120 -0 12
Batteries: Ryan, Pelitt and Lingle;
Levis, Luque, Mirbel and Baschf.
At Havana, Oct. 20 ..... RHE.
Platanus ... 3.000 0 7 000 -0 3 5
Batteries: Luque and Baschf,
Palmerc, Morris and Perez, Lingle.
WINS A U WALK
New York, Nov. 3,—Philip Granville, the colors of the Hamilton T. M. C. A. of Canada, won the seventh walk over Willie Plant, the titleholder, and 12 Dam park Saturday. His victory came after eight months of training.
GEORGE MOORE ON TRIP
New York, Nov. 2- George P. Moore, boxing promoter, who was partly responsible for the appointment of a man to the boxing commission, attained the boxing commission, visited Philadelphia, Baltimore and other boxing centers last week in the interest of the future of all boys of Color in the game.
Skin Malady on Decline
Skin Malady on Decline
Ever since the perfection and introduction in this country of the wonderful skin specialists say that such troubles as plumps, bumps, bumps, tatter, eczema, "breaking out", etc. are becoming ever more frequent. The White Ointment has made it possible for millions of people to get the benefit of clearing disfigured skin, and making it smooth and good to look at. Dealers say it is selling faster, as they have ever handled, and they attribute this popularity to the low prices at which it is sold, as well as its dependability. The size of these times as much as the 25s-Adm.
ROGER WILLIAMS TRAMPLED ON BY WILBERFORCE, 53-0
SPORTS
BY R. BERNARD YOUNG
GURD
DAUSE LOSES DECISION
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
TIMORE
Under
WELL, GOOD MORNING MR. GREEN!
I'M CERTAINLY GLAD TO SEE
YOU, BUT I'M SORRY TO SAY I'VE
BEEN HEARING SOME BAD REPORTS
ABOUT YOU = WHY DON'T YOU
SETTLE DOWN
AND TAKE
YOURSELF A
WIFE?
IS TRAMPLED
BERFORCE, 53-0
lost the ball on a fumble on Wilberforce's 20-yard line. Roger Williams was the only player to gain, only to lose on downs. They led Wilberforce in playing for the downs, and covering two fumbles and keeping Wilberforce on the defensive. Roger Williams was sorely disappointed. Wilberforce's splendidly finished team, good in all-round play, worked to its limit a consistent line plunging stop the onrush. The gold and green offense was based almost entirely on Wilberforce's play. As in all of this season's games, Wilberforce did not have any star player, but a team of star players and complete backfields of the same caliber.
TS HAMPTON
OM VA. NORMAL
Jones. Jacobs kicked the extra point. The referee had not blown his whistle and the ball was brought back and then Gunn kicked for the extra and winning point. Both teams fought, but to no avail, to score in the last two periods. The game ended with Hamilton in possession of the
The playing of Capt. T. T. Coleman at tackle was a feature of the game, and he cut down Virginia Normal's gains. He is showing all-American skills, and he holds down this position. Jacobs Hargrove, Williams, Gunn, Hardwick, Coleman at guard, and Jones at center, both won the victory. Every man who was in the game did a great deal to defend her only defeat last year. Brown and Baker were the most consistent gainers for Virginia Normal. Coach Dennis Jaske star, has developed a strong, aggressive team at Petersburg.
THOMPSON MONDAY NIGHT
Newark, N. J., Nov. 2—The leading race boxing promoter, Nat Fann Winn, of the N.Y.C. Sportsmen's club, has been instrumental in arranging an all-star card for Monday night at the First Regiment Sportsmen's club. Thompson of Boston in a 12-round bout in the main go. In the semi-final Silent will try out the fatie ability Kid ito team, who recently knocked out Jim Holiday.
JONES A. C. NOTES
Original Lee Anderson, who has been Northfolk, Tiger Flowers and other good boys; Jack Burk (white); Lou Boyr, Thomas Dorsey, Kid Austin, Memphis, Thomas Dorsey, Kid Austin, Memphis, Guss Harris, David H. Welman, Brown, Kid Mack, Oscar Battistone, Wright, Manfred Tobasco, Booker Wilson, Harold Sampson and other coaches are training at the Johns Hopkins C 2819 State St Open day and night.
RESUME 369TH SHOWS
New York, Nov. 3, —Boxing will be held at the gymnasium and fany temporary armory Friday night. Kid Rish and Bobby Rishon are scheduled for 15 sessions. This will be the first show staged at the armory since last spring. Jack Coleman is the matchmaker.
CAVANAH AND WILSON DRAW
Battling Cavanah and Roughouse Wilson went eight rounds to a draw in the first round, then mer slowing up in the last few rounds. Mexican Kid was the garnish of the boxers on the card, knocking his opponent down six times for the count of nine.
LANE COLLEGE, 10: M. J. C. D.
The Musselman Industrial college foot to
the Mississippi River. White, the
White, the Lane halfback, was the star
bright of the fighting for the victoria.
Washington, Oct 28. — Howard's
Albany and the American League park
Washington, O
Michigan, O
Alabama at the Am
10 to 10. The victory
over More-
land and another win
and her goal uncro-
sed in the
g a m e is
played
```markdown
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During the first
kicked out of
danger most of
agh by. Howard's
left back and
off to sloppyage
ST. PAUL 55; LIVINGSTONE 0,
Lawrenceville, Va. Oct. 62. The St.
Paul school swamped Livingstone col-
lege 0, in their annual clash
here today. 0.
RISDON BEATS MELITO
New York. Oct. 25.—Bobble Ridson, flyweight, defeated Joe Melo, white, in eight sessions at the 102d Medical Army. Ridson led in six of the rounds.
LINCOLN TRIUMPHS OVER WEST VA. INSTITUTE, 7-0
CLEM JOHNSON BEATEN IN LOGAN QUITS PHILLIPS HI MINNESOTA'S 1ST MIXED BOUT AS PARKER WINS. 12 TO 0
SPORTS
WASHING
WHY IS IT, SO
RD TO DO, MY
R MR. GREEN?
I DON'T KN
WHOSE WIFE
TO TAKE-
LINCOLN TRIUMP
WEST VA.
Charleston, W. Va., Oct. 27—Re-
ceiving of whom were white, West Virginia
of whom were
Collegiate institute
went down to
defeat before
Lincoln in
Chester, Pa. 7
to 0, on Ladley
field. Fighting
vallantly in the
trials to overcome
the leal.
Institute failed.
PETER
Many prominent pectators were including Governor Morgan and his secret lieutenant, Jessie Slivan, both of whom sat on Institute's awarded hard for them to the score. The mayor of the city and the city officials were also out to see the "Jass" Byrd, hero of the Lincoln-Howard game of last Thanksgiving, was a hero again today along with the team supported by a heavy, smooth working line. Captain Cardwell, former high school star of East high school, though not as fast as the two Lincoln men, stood out with Eaves as institute's best player, matched on the offensive, but on the defensive the Lincoln eleven had an edge and Morgan left off to Eaves, who ran the ball back to Eaves, who ran the procession towards the Lincoln goal which sets its adherents wild with joy. Eaves smashed Lincoln's line for gains until
CLEM JOHNSON BEATEN IN MINNESOTA'S 1ST MIXED BOUNT
BY HAMLET B. ROWE
Kenwood Armory, Minneapolis, Minn.
Officer Johnson, of the New York, was stopped tonight by
the first mixed bout since boxing was legalized in this state in 1915.
He entered the ring first and seemed fat
around the waltiness; Johnson, who
later and appeared in fine condition, but
his subsequent efforts were not in keeping
with his intended first round there.
He ended the first round there
was never any doubt as to the final
Herman Takes Lead
Herman near the end of the first round hit Johnson on the jaw, knocked him came to Clem's relief. From that time on Herman punished Johnson throughout the fight Johnson seemed dazed and in not seem to be prepared to take the content to take all Herman gave without attempting to take the fourth round, when he carried the fight to Herman for a short time, whatever may be said about Johnson as a fighter, no one can question his courage and stamina. In the second round Johnson was sent to the canvas, and Joshua asked him to wait for nine. Another hard right knocked Johnson into the knee that him thought. From that time on it was just a question how long Johnson could eighth round, when Herman sent in a barrage of rights to Johnson's head and defend him from downward blows.
Referee Jimmy Potts, seeing Johnson was helpless, stopped the fight. After the fight ended, Potts told the soldier that he had injured in the fight broke a rift that he had injured in New York while training for the fight. From there, he continued to not raise his hands to strike a blow without suffering until agony. Cleen wants another chance with Herman.
Match Result of Injunction
This show, which was given by the athletic Association of denverphiladelphia in president and Billy B. Hoke matchmaker, and Billy B. Hoke matchmaker, season as well as the first mixed bolt since Minneapolis legalized boxing, between Negroes and whites were prohibited in this state by a ruling of the W. Bardwell permanently restrained the W. Bardwell permanently restrained the White-sided license to any athletic association or boxing club to hold a contest in Minnesota, was eliminated. Rule between Negroes and white persons, otherwise known as mixed bouts, are strictly
Through their attorney, W. D. Scott, John Dickerson, J. Dickerson, and the injunction. They were given the moral and financial support of the following citizens: Kumpus Arche Watkins, Surg' Durant, J. A. Jefferson, Pete Crosby, deceased; Summer Smith, D. Minneapolis Messenger, and Attorney Francis.
A large but orderly crowd witnessed a large crowd who one need experience any qualia over mixed matches in Minnesota.
**TAYLOR AND GOULD DRAW**
Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 3, Sandy Taylor of the 39th Infantry and William Gould at the 47th Regiment armory Oct. 23. Gould started in whirling fashion and had the better of the remaining rounds and was easily entitled to the verdict. The mound bury Billy Brown (white) boxed a draw. It was the real bout of the evening for action.
A. & T. 36; ST. AUGUSTINE, 0 Greenbush, 0 Boyd dish for a touchdown, was one of the features of the 36 to 0 victory of North Carolina Agrifield and Training school over St. Augustine.
1
the ten-yard line was reached. Here he passed over the Loaons when a forward pass over the line on the fourth down line ball went the Loaons when a forward pass over the line on the fourth down line Taylor and Brown hit the institute line for heavy gains and the ball was worked on the midfield. Institute staff broke out and returned the punt after a couple of attempts. One of these runs the end of the first quarter and ran 55 yards before being intercepted. On the first play to start the second quarter, Johnson was stopped without touchdown of the game. Crudum kicked goal. The ball was in Institute's possession. Institute opened up in the second half and tried forward passes, two of which turned up. Turner that was good for 20 yards and Gough to Preston was good for 50 yards. Goodman and Taylor pulling the oval out of the air. The institute Byrd got out to Institute's 15-yard line. Lee went for 60 yards, this time making a 65-yard run was short. Institute took the ball on the 20-yard line and by repeated gains into Lincoln's territory. The line-up:
Dwight Phillips' honeys for a B division football championship faded Satellite chained its second defeat of the season, 12 to 0, at the hands of the Miami team. Walt the rain left the field so slippery that him footing with the complete plays, he played a leading part in Phillips' defeat. The ends were weak, the tackling was too high, they were too weak, and the interference was poor. This can only be attributed to their lack of experience. In the last half Phillips prevented the Parkers from getting near the school spirit shown by the Phillips 160 Phillips students attended the Parker game. One of the greatest sportsmanship shown by Art Langan, quanterack for Phillips, who quilted the game. This is the second time he has done this, the first being in the Gustav, McCarthy and Sink carried Williams, Turner and Chaline starred for Phillips. The South Side boys will turn Saturday in the last game of the season.
LINE UP
Parker 12
Baser 12
Van Peterson 12
L. E. Turner 12
Thomas 12
G..... Rainey, Bell
H..... Honner, Patrick
E..... Smith
R..... Barber
E..... Logan, Smith
H..... Burton, Henderson
E..... Orzo, Court
W..... Stink, Reform-
St. John, (A, O. A.)
Kunne ..... L
Kunne ..... L
White ..... L
Sink ..... L
Qau ..... L
Qau ..... L
Qau (Capt.) ..... L
McCarthy ..... L
Touchdowns ..... Gust
HAIR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY
HAIR
GROOM
TRADE MARK 45.5
KeepsHair
Combed
A few cents buys jar of "Hair-Groom" at any drug store, which makes a woolbomb. unruly or unshaved. comb hair style. combed all day in any style you like.
BATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
---
HAMPTON FACES LINCOLN ON NOV. 3 IN BALTIMORE
Hampton
J. Hampton
J. Ruffin
J. Greary
Craig
T. J. Coleman
T. J. Coleman
J. Coleman
J. Jones
J. Cardozo
Gardner
Gunn
Jacobs
Baltimore, Md., Nov. 21—Hampton meets in the supreme test for gridiron honors tomorrow at the Maryland baseball park. We will them out of the running for the intercollegiate championship. Most of the critics are against Hampton has a strong eleven, Jacobs and Gunn are good kickers and twice this season Hampton has won by touchdowns to kick goals after touchdowns.
Neither team, however, is thought to have shown its full strength so far this season. The institute game will be the first time this season to extend itself. No one knows what Coach Young has up his sleeve and no one knows what idea that the followers of the game believe that they are asleep. Far from it. Hampton has exerted just enough strength to win each game and has been able to win for the future. The Seasiders seem to have been able to score when scores were needed and once they waited until the final two minutes of those great eleventh hour wins. Saturday's game should be different. Both teams are expected to go on a road trip to Lancaster, Bird and Whistlard Johnson, while the Lincoln eleven will find the whole Hampton machine one well balanced squad. Weights and two elevenes will be about even.
Both Hampton and Lincoln are pointing not only for tomorrow's at Harvard. The Washington school with the addition of Sam Peyton of Chicago expects to trim Hampton at age 18. The school will for the "annual classic" with a firm determination to victory back to Washington. The Hampton-Lincoln school will be the first time in its history. Most of the visitors will will attend the Willforce-Howard game, including the team, will come over to see the struggle.
WILEY X 201 TEXAS
Marshall, Tex. Oct. 27- Wiley college defended the football eleven of the Dallas high school star, scored the first touchdown down for the Texas college eleven came in the second quarter when Baker hit a third down after a long run by Redwine.
Texas College—5 LINK-UP
Wiley—38
A. Brown, L. T. R. Brown
Banks, L. T. R. Thomas
Mallack, L. T. R. Bargeld
Mallack, L. T. R. Bargeld
Samuels, R. T. M. Browne
Samuels, R. T. M. Browne
Relumlee, R. T. Walker
Raker, + P. R. Taylor
Raker, + P. R. Taylor
Fattion, Q. R. Orange
Substitutions: Wiley—Iwans for Latt. Orange, Tahir for Morris, Hills for Gillen-Orange, Tahir for Morris, Hills for Gillen-Orange, Texas College—Food for Baker, Baker for Harris, Harris for Wilson, Reference-Cornerhead, Northwestern.
Head line-num—Tolson (Lincoln).
Gibbs HI. 61, ROSS HI. 6
Paris, Tex. 7, Harris—Gibbons high school city college at Jones park here Fri. 10am
Texas college down after third consecutive game for Gibbons this season.
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THIS NEWSPAPER CONSISTS OF TWO SECTIONS-BE SURE YOU GET BOTH OF THEM
"You are a part of us," the South, home of spelled, determined, self-willed men, said to Roosevelt, "how can you help matters down there." Then, as he informed Clark Howell, he would do, he sent William D. Crum's name back to the Senate.
Oct. 27 was 65th birthday of Theodore Roosevelt. Dead almost five years already, he ought to be living, as men see men, not, however, as God keeps his Judgement. Could you be where he would be where Coolidge is—in the White House.
You couldn't imagine Roosevelt permitting a Race of 10,000,000 native Americans to be outlawed. In a government he would could you. He would, as he gave proof he knew life, that such a condition would meet the government further up the road. Putting the Negro out of America is like putting the less than a month before he died Roosevelt told this writer he kept the Negro on his heart. Where he kept you you now keep him. He seemed to say: "As long hopes on the Negro I'll not deny him the light of hope."
"All men up, not some down," he wrote when you were up for consideration, hope that you would be able to help him, will conclude that Roosevelt was right and lift the ban on you by those afraid of history.
Ruth, if she could had have, looked down the "lane of time," as orators say, would have added: "And what man should be a slave to the earth, and to the lorals will consider how one race, dissimilar to another race in origin, elements, ancestral forms and shapes, completely lost, on another race and, here and there, the plan, on the plan." Mr. Farnold says that woman's suffrage, instead of elevating the moral standard, will lower it. That is what she says, on morals, and so forth, are about to sink still lower.
that she should be forgiven where man is forgiven."
Thus goes the world. The ladies say, according to the book "Beyond the law," have as much right to bear children "beyond the law" as the gentlemen have to beget them, law or no law.
Somebody asked Mr. Farmlor if he thought things in his mind would hit the United States. "It can't be surprised to see it START in America—in some parts of America." "Some parts of America" know all about that, Mr. Farmlor. "In forty years ladies lost little, often gained much, in grown up women with motherhood when once begun."
Some begin her eye on human laws and in her code the word "illegitimate" doesn't occur. Society falls hack when Nature speaks.
Ladies, read, reflect. You are about to break up somebody who returns to remarry. Mr. Farmlor opened a discussion that only ladies can close.
SENATOR UNDERWOOD, Alabama's candidate for the Democratic nomination for the presidency, makes the statement, "Underwood knows his business in other Tenn.
THE WORLD BEFORE YOUR EYES
INVISIBLE EMPIRE AT HARVARD
Boston, Mass. Nov. 2—Harrard university is again in the limelight. Harvard, the symbol of true democracy, the same Harvard that at one time mined dermitory to a student because of his color, and a short while later underwent a change of heart and attitude. The dermitory episode, which took place more than a year ago, brought in new opinions, both favorable and unfavorable, were passed freely. It aroused in some people the knowledge that it would make a mistake; in others it showed great possibilities for implanting in one of the greatest organizations of the most prominent organizations ever conceived. At present the Ku Klux Klan is yelling out the rest of those most closely concerned.
For more than a year members of the Rumors organization have been in Boston. But they have gone about their work quietly, handling the rumors. They have heard the months have passed, the rumblings have become louder until at least the day of the attack on their of their strength in the City of Culture. Rumors are rife of a Naiwan attack, and the Rumors self. Notwithstanding the fact that efforts to prove or disprove the rumors have become more and more persistent.
Officials of the university have recidivism have recently been held, but many Klaven has been organized, although not Seymour. Klaven has been organized, although not Seymour. The university has admitted that he knew of several cases where men had been apprehended and then them to become members of the Invisible Empire. Just what attitude the university has taken to not been disclossor Matthew Luce, a regent of the Institute, charge of student affairs, declared recently that the Klaven would remain under the ban on the campus members are filed with the registrar.
Kamelia at Badcliff
Along with the excitement over a Harvard chapter of the Ku Klux Klan, we have been completed for the establishment of a Klamura at Radcliffe. When this information was brought to the Comstock, who has been president of the women's institution less than two weeks, she would not commit to the organization. "What the facts are I don't know, but if such an organization was formed, we must first making a thorough examination. I feel that each case of the sort must be examined on its own and should not be premedited."
While Dean Chester N. Greenough and other high officials of Harvard University have said one way or another, some of the students are more easily approached, and their names expressed desire that their names be expressed. Opinion seems to predominate among the students that the Kluxans have been a major force in Harvard Crismon recently published an article on the Klaven in which he wrote that the time had come to stand out in the open and fight the organiza- tion. "Whether or not the policy of the university in decreeing non-discrimination is an open question," says the platform bearing on the subject is well known, and what part of it the Harvard branch stands for may only be known. It is certain that the decision of last spring was a signal for violent demonstrations in meetings of the Har-
Bruce Case
It might be well at this point to review the case of last spring that called for such demonstrations from a man named Conklek Bruce, son of a Harvard man and grandson of one of America's greatest statesmen from a region on a freshman dormitory and was refused because of this color. Later the board of trustees reversed the decision and descendant of James Russell Lowell, concurring, but with the remark that he did not believe that white boys room with him, or eat with him if they did not desire to do so. At once a howl of protest went Harvard who did not care to see Harvard adhere to her policy of fairness even partly. And the Ku Klux Klan imbued its hooded ideas, Harvard, evidently, has again done to sleep.
Boston Doctor Passes Test in Toronto, Can.
Toronto, Canada, Nov. 2.—Dr. Urlah N. Murray of Boston was invited to attend at the recent examination held for certificates granted to the city. Dr. Murray came out second to the highest honor and by virtue of examination is entitled to practice anywhere in the British empire. He is a graduate of Loyola university. He is a Harvard school of public health.
RECOVER STOLEN FURS
Washington, Nov. 2.—Furra valued Washington, the police and detectives who said they found them at 1222 First St. S. W. Washington, and no charges have been placed against them. The furra belong to John C. Murphy and John Cassin, itinerant.
THE WEEK
By Roscoe Simmons
[Copyright Chicago Defender by R. S. Abbott Publishing Company. All rights reserved.]
JAN SMUTS, South African premier, and much of a talker, is making speeches in London. The Saxon is a democratic convention. Texas cuts ing for votes neither party goes to America while Smuts keeps the home fires burning and administrates because the Dutch take the race on top the world over fight to hold its position.
How would you like to see Mr
Lessons learned from watching may enable you to reach the top, not to push anybody else, over, but that all may be on top together. There is room at the top.
Smuts holds on to the League of Nations. That is like believing that the dead under your eye will get up out of the coffin by simply saying: "You should not die; you are dead and you will stop if you die." All the death is heavy, sure.
The South African premier had a big hand in writing the League of Nations, almost as big as the League of Nations. "We believed what they wrote. Clemenceau and Lloyd George SIGNED what Smuts and Wilson wrote to hurry up other matters." Smuts said: "It is curious that we pay statement for what they say, not for what they do; and judge of them from what they do, not from what they say, another for practice."
A short history in those words of the League of Nations knew the world court. Keep an eye on world matters.
You are not asked to say much, but when the guns go off you are asked to DO much.
A sentence from Smuts' London speech will make your blood boil, but keep cool. Said Smuts: "We are on European soil; again they come to war against Europeans."
For Smuts, ruling South Africa, with an iron hand, and showing what Great Britain will do when she has the underhold, has managed to hold off "African soil" and known how to do in the horrific experience is the best together.
Do you not think that very fine? Fine, not only because he was a president, but because TRUE. The president, but because TRUE. "Johnson's" is good description of the second American—incoln being the first—but keep in mind that he was WHOLE as Amer-
I ADIES, this is simply awful. John Jeffrey Farnold, as he sailed for me. He gives the white ladies thought. That means colored ladies also, for "Whither thou goes I will go" is motto of ladies of Color for ladies of no
You are profuse in sympathy, so prepare. "If you are profuse in sympathy, we prepare now." To whom did Shakespeare hand those words, to Robert West, English authoress, casting a sad eye at 200,000 more ladies than men, confesses confusion. "I don't believe polygamy to be the remedy," she said, "one wife is a man is married to more than one wife under the law. Two or three wives outside the law doesn't have any man, but ladies think that an improvement on polygamy. Ladies, this writer wants you to read Mr. Farmlor for yourself." "Woman suffrage is growing in England, women are growing more powerful. I look for them to understand the standard of morals and substitute a single standard.
"By that I mean that woman will set up a code that she should be forniven where man is forniven."
oosevelt is among great memories:
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Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
a Democratic convention.Texas cuts a big figure. Looking for votes neither party goes to Texas, Republicans because they know you can't get blood out of Texas, Democrats because the Dutch always wasta time taking Holland. How would you like to see Mr. Underwood in the White House? Hardly probable that you will listen to him, but thinking about it may brighten up your mind. Appears as if the Alabama favorite son plans to make a sectional fight. "We want to see the South," Democrat Gel that they ought to get something for keeping breath in the body of their party. Without the "Solid South" you would have a solid South, of course, of course, why there is a "Solid South," and how it came about. Go back to the 40s, when the slavery question was the big issue. Self-protection made the South "solid." Tradition kicked in. Read Underwater's ultimatum:
"The time has come for the South to share in the honors of the Democratic party. The time has come for the president to nominate the candidate of our party.
"I want the nomination, of course, but if I am not selected let us be sure that whoever he is, he will be a Justice."
Painless enough for any man to understand, is it not? This last Southern man elected from the South takes you back to the days of Polk. Mr. Wilson, Virginian by birth, is credited to New Jersey, though he heats up to the South. He is also a candidate positions to the South—Gregory, Burleson and Daniels. Two of them, Daniels and Burleson, went in with him, and he is a candidate. McDougon Georgian by birth, may get the honor as "a Southern man," though he doesn't talk on much that. No Southern man, not even so able a man as Senator Underwood, will get the nomination. All to lose and all to win. He is a phy. Taggart, Brennan, their friends and allies, look at him from a state that refuses the ballot to NATIVE Americans. More than Senator Underwood are hard to find, but he is tagged with the disfranchising law. Chickens come home to roost and whatever goes over a hog's mouth. The next president will come from Illinois or Massachusetts. He will be a Republican. Sixteen years more before he is elected. By that time maybe Colored Americans can vote. Otherwise a Northern Democrat again.
THE Klan is at Harvard." you exclaim as you read
the book. "The highest place the Klan can go is to Harvard. Don't get excited over the Klan.
at Harvard or anywhere else." We will laugh the Klan to death." Harvard students say.
Hardly that easy, but one breath from the memory of
Robert Gould Shaw will smother the Klan to death.
Albert Bushnell will smother the Klan to death; either they will
break it up or it will break them down.
Albert Bushnell Hart, who likes history, will welcome
the Klan to Harvard. That is about all. Don't worry about
the Klan to Harvard. Keep the children in school, pray, and FIGHT.
CHICAGO, ILL., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
Underwood's Defy Klan at Harvard
RAILROADS' CENTENNIAL IS PLANNED
Centennial celebrations of the beginning of railroad transportation are under consideration both in this country and in England. Conning and his team, creatively developed electric traction seem to be putting-us on the threshold of an even greater transportation revolution that wrought by the steam locomotive itself. The kind suggested would be very interesting.
Looking backward over a century of railroad growth naturally raises speculative queries as to what an engineer could have fielded of Industry. Indeed, without projecting ourselves into the future as far as a century, and assuming we were 50 years, it is easily within the possibility that persons living in 1973 will have removed from the present day in the matter of passenger and freight trains, and removed from the days when pygmy steam engines with upright boilers drew strings of little vehicles over the tracks, with the not uncommon incident of "snake heads" as our forefathers jocosely called floors when the iron transpair worked loose from the wooden stringer and floors when the iron transpair caught it and thrust it upward.
The First Railroad
Both in this country and for England the natal year of the first railway mine. It depends on just what is meant by the first railroad. As far as mounted on a short road constructed by Beammont at Newcastle-on-Tyne colliery as England's first railroad. Four-wheeled carts were drawn by horses with iron rails is that of Whitehaven. England, built in 1738. The first English iron railroad of any kind was built in Whitehaven iron works. It was built in 1786. The rails were of cast iron, 5 feet 4 inches heavy wooden rails. This was simply the old "strap rail" used in days of live railroad building in this country.
It was not until 11 years after George Stephenson, the locomotive maker of England's first real railroad, which ran from Stockton to Darlington, England's first railroad year after next, 1255, has been fixed upon tentatively for the celebration of the railroad centennial anniversary. The year 1256 will be the hundredth American railroad—that projected in 1825 by Gridley Bryant at Quincy, Ohio, and Col. T. H. Porkins the following year. It was four miles long and two miles wide, with water "strap rail" truck with wrought iron plates three inches wide and a quarter of an inch thick. It was built half water. This precursor of our present 232,844 railroad mileage had an invention of Gridley Bryant.
Early Railroading
But the real starting point of railroad evolution, in this country, is the first steam locomotive ever constructed in California. Peter Cooper built the first steam locomotive ever constructed in California, in what constitutes that the Maryland legislature granted the first charter ever issued to the company in the State. That company was Marcellus 1827, and it was the germ from which it grew the present Baltimore & K. In May of that year America's second railroad was opened. It ran from the Lehigh river to the Lehigh river. Including turnouts and branches it was 18 miles tall in 1827, which would seem to be as near as the real natal year of American railroads as can be found in the United States. Canal company sent Horatio Allen to England to buy three of Stephenson's locomotives. He have matured, it seems to be about decided that 1925 shall be the year of England's railroad. And 1927 that of the United States. With its more favorable geography, the largest railroad centers in the world, Chicago would seem to be an appropriate place for the American railroad. The grounds Baltimore has claims for the distinction not lightly to be ignored.
Laborer Found Guilty of 2nd Degree Murder
Hackensack, N. J., Nov. 2.—Ezal Robertson, brickyard 'kaborer, of New Orleans, guilty of murder in the second degree last week. Robertson killed John Barrae a few weeks ago in a death row. Miss Ann B. Hogan, 23-year-old white girl of Jersey City defends her client's case. She said to have fone a long way in saving her client's life. She was known lawyers after her plea to the jury.
CELLEBRATE 25TH INVENIARY
Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Bowman,
4848 Calumet Ave, celebrated their twenty-fifth wedding, anniversary by their family of two sons and a daughter and a host of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Bowman men in the city and the family is well known in New Orleans, where they made their home before com
Have You Met Them?
Five states are represented. The girls shown are: At left 44th St. Bayonne, N.J.; below St., Middletown, O.; at right Ashland Ave., Memphis, Tenn.; Lonbard St., Philadelphia, P. Brown, 3344 Wabash Ave., Ch.
Brazilians Girl Teacher of W.
Most people know how obnoxious foreign countries in the way in which race prejudice. The people of Brazil this line with white Americans from their country with protests of friends and Race hatred in their hearts. We are accounts direct from the Brazilian Baptist preacher who went to Brazil this great people are from color coats and date white clothes. The W. powerful force for molding public us here in the United States an accruing of Brazilians on this question of.
LET US LEARN HOW TO
[From Rio-Jornal da
THE FILM MAKES A SUCCESS OF THE FILM "THE FILM MAKES A SUCCESS OF THE FILM "
Five states are represented in the above galaxy of beauty. The girls shown are: At left (top), Fern C. Cobbs, 68 W. 44th St., Bayonne, N. J.; below, Mattie Robinson, 126 E. 10th St., Middletown, O.; at right (top), Nettie B. Dawes, 302 Ashland Ave., Memphis, Tenn.; below, Fannie Unity, 1819 Lombard St., Philadelphia, Pa.; at bottom, Marie Wilkes-Bowen, 3344 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill.
Brazilians Give Lesson to Teacher of White Supremacy
LET US LEARN HOW TO TREAT THESE PEOPLE
(From Biological date August 14, 1923)
Brazil is a country of negroes, cynics and pligs.
Strangers who come to Rio always have two things to say to Brazilians: ful in the world, and second, that we are more progressive than Argentina. Our foreigners, such common people, remarks raise the our esteem. We know, however, that in their innermost thoughts they opinion, that is that our city, with its mixed population, lacks all of the qualities. Nor could it be otherwise. Everyone is familiar with the conceit of the Anglo-Saxon, who believes that most intelligent in the world just because they have a white skin, big ground on which they tread, to a good digestion and to a dissimulatior regarding the opinion they form of a people who have a little dark skin. Preoccupied with outside appearances, people are, they classify as inferiority certain points which we cherish as our best qualities.
Mr. Frank M. Purser, professor in the Baptist college in this capital, and Mr. John M. Purser, professor in a North American magazine entitled "Home and Foreign," which he as the organizer of the Baptist Sunday School board, an article, or something bearing that name, has absurdly stated that he came to this country to heal his hunger, and that he is not very well satisfied with the work he did, but to him by the people who in his mind are very inferior. The Baptist college functions in the education of the college of liberality of our laws, as it is a religious educational institution where children learn a few elementary科学 subjects, and the list of strenuous strenues of the Protestant religion which we do not want and for which they teach regarding the Holy Trinity to the polygamy of the Mormons. Mr. Purser classifies his observation says in the beginning of his article:
"From personal observation I know something about Braun needs, Uplifting Uplifting, purity, want, misery, physical suffering, sin, all of which is found in Rio de Janeiro, the main cities and to possess the most beautiful natural harbor in the world."
He further states: "you can accuse the climate, if you wish, or anything else, but Brazilians take three months to tell you that you have something to do with the ten acts will be performed" TO
He further states:
MORROW" and the tenth time it will be done in a few hours, but never before. We are very unclean, as may be seen by the following: Dirty streets, dirty houses, dirty hearts. We are even cynics. "INDIFFERENCE: One may readily observe the body approached, from the layman in the streets to the majority of people holding government positions. This is what always regarding our habits of courtesy." COURTSEY: You can say what you want, the great courtesy of Brazilians. Some missionaries even say Brazilians are naturally more courteous than Americans. Brazilians doubt.
Says
Brazilians
Deceitful
about that, but it is a different courtesy. They smile, bibble and skype you. They are the centage of the inhabitants of the country are eaten up by yeneal diseases, you may well judge what kills them. "As a good Christian from North America hates the Negro, for that reason he hates everything that is black," Dr. T. B. says that the victims of the Caesars, which race dominated the Baptist church in Rio also descendants of a mixture of races, including those of very black blood, they are far from being civilized." In order that no one may think there is no pity in the heart of what this country has to say of our children.
"CHILDREN: Nude children run through the streets exposing their numerous contagious diseases, but they expose their souls to the blindness and hearing to the cold winds of insecurity. Brothers and sisters, if God put any pity in your soul, come to the children in this great Latin American city." Editor's note: "The nonsense is laughable, as Brazilians in Rio spend thousands of dollars for American nurses, who live in comfort in the best hotels of the city." Mr. Pursuer closes his article by making Americans to come to this country, fortuitously in the Tijuca teaching absurdities to the children. If any of them have fact that some Brazilian fathers put the education of 'their children in the (Continued on page 14, column 1)
A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME
WEEKS HAS REBUTTAL TO MAKE
Boston, Mass., Nov. 2.—In a personal letter to William Monroe Trottie, a former retainer of war and former senator from this state, recites the allegation that he acted out of revenge for the death of his mentor of C. Bascom Slemp of Virginia, a nationally known "illy white." Mr. Weeks letter came after publication in the Chicago Defender of an article accusing him of giving the defense to the hands of voters of our Race when he sought re-election to the states senate. In retribution to his accusation, Mr. Weeks says as follows:
Outlines Position
"The article which you attach to your letter of recent date, as not written in the foundation. I have no prejudice against your Race, as I have demonstrably against them and against them the fact that I was defeated for re-election to the United States, and the reason to know that they did not support me. Even if that had been a contempt for myself if I thought it would affect my actions as secretary or vice. "No general statements made in other parts of the article are without any support from the Lieutenant Flipper, who, I understand, has been doing very good work in the government, guilty of the conduct which caused his dismissal from the service has taken in his case. There was no doubt about the soundness of the reason for his elimination from the
The charge placed against Mr. Weeks in the Flipper incident was written to the military committee recommending the defeat of the bill for the relief of Lieut. Henry O. C. affaires always, as a courtesy forwards such measures to the war department, for recommendation, and for the charge that Mr. Weeks took advantage of the reference to make an unwarranted attack on Lieutenant Flipper going outside the record to
The Sherrill Case
The re-appointment of Col. C. O. Sherrill, a North Carolina, as aid to the chief executive came through Mr. Weekk, it is alleged.
Colonel Sherrill on numerous occasions has gone out on his duties to the place, and in two memorable events carried out his practices. He provided separate training for the college service celebration in honor of Abraham Lincoln, and the egg roiling at the college Weeks, while disclining responsibility as ranger, in the advisory capacity to the "resident is the company he keeps." Republicans hold.
Riot Victim Fed Through Tube Lives
Jamala, N. Y., Nov. 2, —Obie Brellsford, 35, 329 Union Hall St., one block west of the Propect and South Sts. three weeks ago, and who physicians thought would be forced through a tube in Mary Immaculate hospital. Brellsford was shot through the tube and the bullet, ranging downward, perforated the esophagus and lodged in the skin. It was removed by slight incision. Because of Brellsford's broken jaw he had to be performed esophagus he cannot swallow. It was found that the food, which was stuck in his neck forced its way out through the hole in his neck made by the bullet and the patient would it would do the patient any good, but kept the wound open, preventing it from causing damage. He could necessary to devise a method of feeding Brellsford without sending the food through his mouth or
Dr. George K. Menyen, head of the surgical staff, performed upon patients known as enterostomy. As a result of it he now has a rubber tube leading into his small intestine. Four ounces of food is poured into the tube and goes directly to the intestine with cophagus or even the stomach. He is fed with peptonized foods that do not require passage through the intestine in the intestines. Under the system of feeding Brellaford is already gaining strength and is now considered to have a fair chance of recovery.
LAYING CORNERSTONE
Jamalca, N. Y. Nov. 2.—The cornerstone laying ceremony for the building on Grand Ave. near North First St. on the Rev. William S. McKinney, priest of the Episcopal Church, afternoon before a large gathering. The Right Rev. Frederick Burges, bishop of the Episcopal Church, among the speakers were Former County Judge Burt G. Crawford, pastor of Flush and Senator William J. Tully.
WHITE ELKS EXPEL KLUXERS
*Atlantic City, N. J. Nov. 2.—A resolution authorizing the expulsion of members of the Klu Klu Khan Church, by the Atlantic City lodge of Elks No. 276 (white, according to reverend Robert A. Browne, the first action of the kind to be taken by a fraternal organization. Lodge regulations may become wider.
PAGE FOURTEEN
BRAZILIANS GIVE LESSON TO
WHITE SUPREMACY TEACHER
[Cont. from 1st page, this section.]
hands of men whose minds are polished against ua.
August 25, 2017 An echo of the call to the Brazilian nation made in July 2016
hands to the Brasília
area reached the Brazilian Chamber of
Commerce and Metello Junior, one of the most brilliant
ornaters in the Chamber of
Commerce, the Federal District
of Rio de Janeiro.
Legislators
Zillian Chamber of
Deputies pep up
the nation
Take Up
the most brilliant
ornators in the Cham-
ber, pep up
the Federal District
of Rio de Janeiro
made the following speech in the
Chamber:
"Mr. President: One of the best
newspapers of our capital city, the
newspaper of Rio de Janeiro,
well-known journalists, Mr. Georgino
Avello, Mr. Ivo Arruda, and Mr.
Arginipo Nazareth, made public in
the newspaper that a foreigner who
came to our country to teach our
city was about the hospice,
its environment, all for our good
faith, and our kindness, by
sending to his country, the United
and worst possible terms of our country
and our people.
In an later editions this newspaper
which they were able to secure, the
result of which was that the entire
student in the eden
met in meeting in the square, sent a message to the President of the Republic reading as follows:
our dada Silva, President of the
republic. The students of the different universities represented by the technical and high school of this capita-patent at the award-of-
Students Answer Detractor
fones and low insults made against our country, its people, and even its leaders. In response to the position of teacher, appeal to your patriotism in requesting you to be a ungrateful foreigner who abused in the lowest manner the honor and dignity of the people, be immediately applied from the army. The rotten mud thrown in our faces by this ungrateful man from the army cannot reach us. However, it is fitting that he receive the just punishment which he deserves, in order to make him a professor, Mr. President, to a professor in the Baptist College, Mr. Frank M. Kern, can call it by that name) for an American magazine entitled "Donate and defend the colonies against Brazil and its people. Among other rude remarks, he called Brazil the city that you must obtain complete details of the matter we are taking to Rio-Jersey and defend the Rio-Jersey in which this insulting article was published. Because of these infamous insults against the people of the schools in this country justly revolted in a protest in defense of the school's authority and impelled by the sacred fire of patriotism, come to you to request the immediate expulsion of the ungrateful foreigner of Brazil, its people, and its officials.
"Our revolt, Mr. President, is not against the American nation to which that unjustified ignorant infidelity belongs. It is only against that ungrateful foreigner who repaid the Vim, Vigor and Vitality in "African Bark"
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generous hospitality offered him in our country by insulting us in the most infamous terms. Draft a country of west, peaceful life, in order to
is must, in order to be able to occupy the place among nations the education educates our society the school of patriotism. Very well. Mr. Wilson who so rudely insulted us in by reason of
his profession, in charge of forming the character of hundreds of Brazilian children of today are the Brazilian of tomorrow. Will not that foreigner, the student, surd ideas into the minds of our school pupils when he humiliates us in our classrooms, will not that we expect this ungrateful foreigner to receive any violent punishment for your country. We know your deep patriotism and confidently expect that our aspirations to have this freedom from the country will be fulfilled. "Trusting that our request will receive acceptance with the pride which the Brazilian young men have in their country we are." Metello Junior; "Mr. President, if it were not for the fact that this audacious adventurer has been sentenced to death, the defendant would not do deserve any consideration. However, as he is a professor of the mentality of Brazil of the future, it is only just that the government in this Republic attend to the needs of its dents, and remove them from our midst." Lindolpho Pessoa; "I believe that in a case like this it would be better to submit this Mr. Purser to a no doubt examinable, as he is no doubt dubious."
Mr. Metelho Junior: "It is true that we wore glenners, but it is also true that they have lived outside of this country; they have little or no influence with the oldglenns. Mr. Lindolph Pessoa: "The grave part about it is that this man is a teacher. Mr. Camilo Prates: "The college is doing very well in protesting against the oldglenns. Mr. Lindolph Pessoa: "But first we should submit this man to a memorial examination. Mr. Lindolph Junior: "Mr. President; I have just learned that this adversely dismissed by the university where he was a teacher, government that he was going to leave tomorrow — probably
Professor Soon Dismissed
to return to this country in the future and teach the same thing again Mr. Lindholphe Pessoa: "We must know whether or not the Baptist college still exists, and Junior "Well, he was dismissed, because if he were not, he might get a good licking. You know, he came angered they do not pay much attention to the expulsion laws, but use a stick." (Laughter). I believe that I am doing my duty by bringing to your attention the just claim of the Brazilian people, and I trust that the patriotic enough to apply in this case Article 1. 0 of Statute No. 1641, which provides that the Chamber authorizes the newspaper who come here only to write against us. This man did more harm to the African nation than the whole nation, our race and our institutions. Now, Mr. President, I ask only that this protest, the African nation, that the government apply the expulsion law in the case of this foreigner. law in the case of Brazil should such terms of other peoples, God have pity on him. For this reason the government will only be doing its duty to man from our land." (Anlumeis).
A large group of Brazilian students went to the Baptist college the fol-
putting college the day after the day when the protest was published, and protested to the director, who stated that their protest was in order to reach the president of Brazil and America.
College Students Rebel
icans, were frank in condeining the act of baptism in the Baptist college refused to go to their school rooms and joined with the students of other colleges. There were big demonstrations, public speeches, etc. The students of the institution against Mr. Pursur, who left the room crying and saying that he was not a student. This demonstration in the Baptist college ended at 2 a. m. Mr. Pursur was asked to teach the teachers. He left the capital and went to Santos to take leave. Mr. Pursur was made by Mr. Botel Nogueira, professor in the Normal Preparatory School degree). As soon as the incident became known all of the students of the capital protested well as all of the publications in the city.
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Hai
An article in Rio-Journal of Aug. 18 is practically a repetition of the above: "Mr. Pursuer tried to justify himself in the presence of the other professors of the University of the Baptist college, by stating that his reason said that he was vowed that foreigners had always spoken so loudly that he wished to point
Press Voices Indignation
out the bad points also. This was
many dellies, "things like, Brazil."
In the newspaper A Run of Rio were printed comments of the same "Mr. Purser was expelled from the college where he was teaching by the well as Brazilian. He was forced to march in a line of members of the hymn. Mr. Purser requested permission to justify himself, which was denied. He was sent to the members of the college. The national anthem was sung, in which he joined, and he gave all kinds of exclamations for what he had written. He was confronted with the original and with the written comments of the institutional members of the institution spoke, condemning his action." He was filled with protests from commercial associations, students, from all classes, people and from every state. It ended.
"The Federation of Colored Men, I test against the infamous words of the evangelist Purser against Brazil This Federation was particularly interested in most insulting terms. We are pleased to see that the whole nation protested Brazilian population in Colored has never been a discredit, and we wish to test these tests you have received. In the name of the Federation of Colored Men, I am, etc. Jayne Baptist Camarage, and the Rio-Journal of Aug. 24. Among the many letters received, they print following from Mr. Durval Mendenga.
Dear Editor: *C* *C* *C* *My thought is that Mr. Purser came here to make sure he did not find everyone with open arms to receive his religion he empowers, and everything that is ours. He called us Negroes, pigs and cynies. It is not my intention to dispute his views, but I have too much respect for others and do not give a crook like him the lessee he deserves. Negroes are hospitalized and do not look at physical beauties but rather at moral ones—a thing he does not have said what he did, especially when he is making his living among the poor. Our best mental specialist, Dr. Jutkhol Morelra, Yours truly, Durval Morelra. *C* *C* *C* *The newspaper Vanguardia of Rio de Janeiro, after discussing the incident, referred particularly to the message of a group of students to the President of the newspaper Vanguardia of Rio de Janeiro of Aug. 24 also made particular reference to the same message. In the edition of Aug. 24 of the newspaper Vanguardia of Rio de Janeiro, were printed similar comments with particular reference to the protest made by the president. The message was reproduced.
The newspaper A Patria of Aug. 38, handled the incident in the same manner. In discussing this same incident, he said that the largest and oldest juniors in Rio de Janeiro, stated: "one of the men's insults was more ridiculous than insulting, i.e. his calling the Brahmin feeling of antagonism of North American people has resulted in protests in the world." In pages in the
"One of this more ridiculous
Journal Chides U. S.
its recent articles Le Tempus, of Paris says. "In restaurants, hotels, and everywhere, there is an invasion of Americans who wish to take advantage of their exchange privileges to enable their country and its historical places; they come here and visit us as every turn tests and measures taken by the government against these foreigners who are American men and women who speed our institutions and our laws. Everyone knows the aversion which the Colored men had to man the maned man. They forget, however, that these Colored men were at their side during the World War, and that their slainness. Everyone admits the bruery shown by these Colored men; and that their aversion for them, to a point where they forget their duty when they are in the hospital or when they are them in the most hospitable manner. If anyone visits the United
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
States, he has to submit to the pro-
cedures of the government of that country, but
the Americans do not expect to re-
ceive the government of other countries
which they visit.
"The comments of the 'French
country' with Mr. Purser very well, princi-
plyly with reference to the Negroes to
whom our country owes a great
foreigner to come here and try to
convect us to his religion, and besides
oblige nous prejudices, insult the
whole nation. This class of people
will attack us, and the former emplo-
sions continue to destroy that true superlor-
ity of our country, Brazil, which is in
vance and happier than the former
country in the North.
"In newspaper, the former of
August 27, telegrams many comments on
the incident, telegrams received from
every part of the country, associac-
tizations of every description. At a
meeting of the students' club, the
organization, among other things, suid-
The newspaper O'Braile of August 25 issued some subject with similar comments. The Rio-Journal of August 28 made further comments* regarding the matter. The Rio-Journal of August 21 published all parts of the country regarding the incident, among them a long one signed by the President. Thus the demen- which the principal points are given below: "That infamous Professor Pineau wrote at the end of N.
groves. Let us then see how the news meet the Negro. Protestants, America, alarmed at the race made by the Carthusler religion in the South,
the little headway they are making among their own people, turn their backs on Brazil. In accordance with the latest reports there are in the United States more than sixty million people who have not been baptized. Of these sixty million there are about eleven who have not been baptized, descended from slaves imported into the country to do the work of the whites. Very well. These Protestant preachers, instead of being the souls of their countrymen, come to Brazil to seduce the Brazilians who already have a religion which they claim that every person should interpret the Bible according to his own beliefs. Neither are they consistent, as they do not admit the opinion of people whose ideas are different from their own. We must much effort to put our souls in heaven? Our well known journalist, Michel de laqueur, states: "Sure we are methodical, based on the Catholic religion, which predominates throughout Brazil, but in religious beliefs he is not added to the other factors of discord. However we are drifting to that point as we grow and grow. We can say without exaggeration that the North American people have his heavens as the very best, and adds that the best way to get there is by buying products from 'the United States' to 'to-date'. He further states:
Color Has No Bearing in Brazil
literated and entered in the national assessee, was given the rights of a man and of a woman looked upon as a social cancer, as is the States, nor was he claused as a dangerous animal. Brazil has treated it as Colored by their intelligence were an aid to the nation, found the road open to the highest positions in the respectable to shoulder with the respectable Negro, whether in politics, in the navy, arts, sciences and literature, or in the supreme direction of the nation and in the religious posts, high
"In Brazil Color is not of purmount importance. It is ability, manners, integrity and merit. This is as it should be, as there is no race prejudice against it. We strive to teach to the North American people who have no religion to respect the Colored people as well as for the whites, and that He stands with open arms ready to receive all the points in the letter, which is very low.
Flays Hypocrisy of North
Color Has No Bearing in Brazil
Billitens, now that most of last week's edition was on the origin of Halloween and the happenings of that
Hilliams, now
willing to
welcome Halloween and the
dead, we
again, we settle
down to honesty
you like it a lot
my way? Did you
have a good time
between a c a m s?
between a c a m s?
tell me or not
tell me that I may
T
This week we
winner of the
short story
to publish the
winner's name
account of the
New Members
Mark Stephenson 118
Chicago, IL
Chicago, IL
Kaster, Amel Warner
Ingolino, DJ
Ingolino, DJ
Bishop 120 Highland
Pittsburgh
Indianapolis,
Elizabeth Park (43)
Bernard Memphis,
Memphis, Tenn.
Beachah Green (9)
Freeman, Ks.
Freeman, Ks.
617) 511 Common
New Orleans,
New Orleans,
Richard Christman
(10) 16 S. Wen-
tchell, Wash.
Washley Foster
(10) 16 S. Wen-
tchell
Ave. Wen-
tchell, Wash.
Wilson Johnson (18)
Wilson Johnson (18)
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pierce G. Lee (9)
Pierce G. Lee (9)
Avenue N, 7
Avenue N, 7
Ole River Wren (18)
Route I, Box 12,
Box 12
Maynard Reed (16)
Maynard Reed (16)
Raton Rue, La.
Raton Rue, La.
Saule Whidbill (16)
Memphis, Tenn.
Memphis, Tenn.
G27 Pearl St.
Baton Rue, La.
Baton Rue, La.
2127 N. 5th Ave.
2127 N. 5th Ave.
Maria Roberts (12)
Maria Roberts (12)
G14 Pearl St.
G14 Pearl St.
Miss Johnson M. Ruck
Miss Johnson M. Ruck
522 Barre St.,
Buffalo, NY
Hertzert, Anderson
Hertzert, Anderson
Hertzert, Anderson
Ave. Ave.
G. G. Lindner (49)
G. G. Lindner (49)
Proficient, L. I.
Proficient, L. I.
220 Indian Ave.,
Chicago, IL
Chicago, IL
Route 4,
Route 4,
553 W. 12th Pl.
150 W. 12th Pl.
Corcoran House (16)
Preston Hall, W.
Veronica Branson (15)
Brandon K., W.
Providence, K. W.
Providence, K. W.
Norton 210, N. 210
Avenue, N. 210
Ghanaia, N. 210
4222 Fountain, N. 4222
Fountain, N. 4222
Virginia Adley (18)
Virginia Adley (18)
Haytol, M.
Defender Junior CHILDREN'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER
Short StorieS$
ANNA McINTOSH WINS HONORS IN STORY CONTEST
NOTICE
The last Saturday of each month will the same time. We broke all records
in that event, writing a story.
The last Saturday of each month will be known as Short Story day. On that day, stories that come into my office and to the best one, not exceeding 200 words, will be given a dollar. You are at liberty to write about any subject that you desire. No copyrighted stories will be taken or republished in some other periodical, appeared in some other periodical.
At last safe in bed, heed, sleep was imminent. The frilling, sleepy would not let them breathe, irritating reading would not let them counted reading, but that was out of the way. He was out of the room, seated hours, some one mounted the Mr. and Mrs. Smith, ignoring all rules, dress we take down the steps to them.
PRIZE STORY
I am a period Pearl. Something has been brewed
between me and you. What happens? What you talk
about. What happens? What you talk
Pearl and I had just settled down to watch the game. I had not parents before this claim to day to visit them. I always could impress them by being always kind and patient. I never neglected an employee, but I just paid them a little. I also paid the young my brother that much earlier in the evening, we turned to Pearl.
there, yelled both of us. We were so angry that but did not say anything, added Pearl, "what are you what or whom it is that frightened you, girl." We did as blinding, before lions—open, tag, tap, and then opened, tap, and there seeked the warmth of the inside was a little
Outside the winds were howling and the wind was blowing, would bang close or something peculiar in a while the quick, steady step. Once in a while the quick, steady step passes by on our way up the hill, by the lake, by the living where we sat, the fire was glowing where we sat, the fire was glowing where we sat, the fire was glowing light. The regular clerk of us were there the only sound of bats of us were there the only sound of thunder but of what? Listen and thunder but of what?
Our hearts were heavy. One of God's own creatures, and I loved him far more than I could free its life. Never again did we think of such an ghost. I saw the Man and the Male. One day a traveler walked down a dusty country road read upon a farmer the man became indignant and addressed the farmer thirsty: "The usher of humankind must be a farmer, a farmer who lute so ferociously. If I had you in the city I would have you arrested."
My brother, Theodore, was once in England and when he first returned home he told us many ghost tales. Yet, we tell him, yet we spend many sleepless nights. One story was of a guard who had killed his death his friends and delibuted in playing tricks upon him. After his death, he comrades, but in strange manners. To present any such fantasies as I shall soon relate, I shall not repent his manners.
"But he won't work." protested the man, who I to get my hay in for the day.
"No, that is not it." answered the man, who to handle the animal. Just step aside a moment, will you, and I will show him. He then stepped up to the mule and sat at the same time saying: "Come, nice, pretty mule, and pull the load for the horse." And saw the man around, saw that it was his master talking to him, promptly kicked the man.
"What did I tell you," said the fat-faced
some more.—Ecother Tibua, 144 hill St.
New York.
THE PRIZE WINNER
# THE PRIZE WINNER
The HOME BANK
St. Louis, Philadelphia, Pa. has been selected
to compete in the 2013 Mechanic
Story contest, which started Saturday,
Sept. 20. Every week hereafter, to the
winning team, you will receive one
word or less, a prize of one ($1) dollar
will be awarded. You may write on
the back of the envelope.
"I'm tired, Ann. let's go to bed." said I. All right; we have to get up early in time for church anyway. I study my Sunday school lesson. I must get up early to finish it," said Pearl. Of these two mischief makers: There would not have been any such tranquility had Mr. and Mrs. Smith been
The above story is without doubt the best story that we have received for a book. We can write a good story and would like to win a dollar start writing today.
Pearl was putting the lights out as we
taped the camera. The camera was tap-
tap, tap, tap—who-oh-who—and sev.
HOW TO MAKE
BiRTHDAYS
Birthday greetings, dear Billkens!
I'll be here last month? Well, to all of you who
please sit down and drop these 100 per
Billkens a kiss on their cheer on birthday
forge.
1 tension joon
almond extract
1 quart carbon-
ated water.
1 cup grated pineapple
1 cup tea infusion
2 cups water
Prince Alexander.
Boston, MA.
Nanukyu, Ohio.
Walter Schr.
Alma Uni.
Alma Uni.
St. N. W.
Washington, D. C.
Washington, D. C.
Beverly Mount. N. C.
Cover the cherries with the water and chill them for about 20 minutes. Dried cherries are reduced to a pulp. Strain to remove any remaining water. Cook for about ten minutes. Cool and chill the cherries. Add salt and extract. Place on live to chill and freeze. Drain and sufficient cold water make a thick paste. In a punch bowl with a block of ice.
Nov. 34
Hilda Johnson,
N. O. Tulli St.,
Pitland, N. J.
Houry Hall, N.
Burry 41.
Russian Salad
Mix one cup each old cooked carrot cubes and potato cubes, one cup cold beans and beans and marinate with French dressing. Arrange on lettuce leaves in four rows with mayonnaise dressing. Garnish two sesame seeds with sunflower seeds with lily-shaped white of hard boiled eggs and one sesame seeds with lily-shaped forced through a strainer. Put small sprigs of parsley or chrysanthemus in the Maker. Gen Del, Pensacola, Fla.
Arendell, Miss.
100, 11th St.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
100, 11th St.
General Electric,
General Electric,
Curtiss-Jackson,
6202 Iola Avenue,
Bendigo, Bendigo,
Bendigo, Bendigo,
Compton, Compton
Nov. 4th
Sweetbread Salad
Vale Arlec,
Buffalo 2,
Coffey Perry,
Kentucky,
Kutcher Police,
Vale
Vale W. De Lace,
Birmingham,
Birmingham, Ala.
1212 Christman St.
1212 Christman St.
Marinate a pair of **cooked** sweetbreads with French dressing: chill, whip, and mix in the cream and mayonnaise **dressing**, whitened with whipped cream. Arrange in a salad dish. Surround with slices of sweetbread. Place on the French dressing. On the tomato plate slices of sweetbread, capped with stars. 40th St. Suite 5, Cleveland, Ohio.
Sweet Salad Dressing
Sweet Salad Dressing
1 cup fruit juice (juiceple, peach or pear, with a little lemon or orange)
1/4 cup cream
1 cup heavy cream
HUMOR
Mix fruit juices, add sugar, and eggs. Mix in the batter until thick. Remove from heat and add to cones. Cut before baking. Cover with plastic wrap. Lillian-Puller Box, 41 Putney, Chelsea.—Lillian-Puller Box, 41 Putney, Chelsea.
Mother: "Love, why don't you eat your sandwich?"
Billiken Loveday Johnson: "I'm waiting for this mustard to cool."
Many a Mias
POEMS
Viola Wright: "What does a telephone operator wear while working?" Edna King: "Ear muffs."
A. Fair Division
Father: "Margaret, when you divide
didn’t help, did you give your
sister three?"
sister three.
Dillen Margaret Clarke: "No, dad
I thought I couldn't divide them evenly,
so I ate one before I divided them."
Wood and Stone
Once there were two men talking on the corner. One was Mr. Wood and the other was talking a young lady came down the street toward them. Stone turned to Wood and Wood turned to Stone. Both turned to Rubber--Mary Clarke.
I watched him dance
Across the green—
The friend
That ever was seen.
But when I cried,
I turned to you with "you"
He turned to a Niel
And awoke to me
And awoke to me
100 per cent Billiken.
Teacher:
"Well, Meirola, what does your mother use to catch mice?"
Billiken Georgia McCoy: "A rat trap."
Suspended Pending
Impached Stopping
Impacted Short-circulated
Incription Ambassador
Ancient Arbitrage
Denounce Commissioner
Denounce Poor Negotiations
Reparations
Are You a Hearty Eater?
Is fat so matter?
Mother: Dorie Camburg: "Walt, mother, I eat fast to keep from eating slow."
Bulletknife Armor Armorn 607 K.
Stick hat. Danville, lt. on the stick hat. Remember that means a lime
A *Bright Pupil*
Teacher: "What is a pyramid?"
Billiken Helen Webb: "A person
who wanders from place to place."
JOIN THE BUD BILLIKEN CLUB
Every boy and girl reader of this october is eligible to member-
ment the application today. The application today is ma-
nualized on Monday, October 10th.
HOME
PLAY
WORK
STUDIO
Attention! Attention, boys and girls.
malted, today it affords me the
malted, today it affords me the
is introduced of madness. It is introduced of pleasure to introduce of the Bud Billiken club Mia who hails from Mia who hails from Miss Redmond, whose address is with her than six months, and we can with whom she is a true likeness. In a recent letter recent likeness he stated that
ure to introduce
the Bid Bill
clubs of the Bid
Bill clubs
who halls from
Redmond,
who halls from
Mias Redmond,
whose address
is W. W. Redmond,
who has been a
affiliate
welcomer
lub for more
greetings
and we can without
fear say that
the Bid Bill
and loyal Bill
receive
letter, receipt
from her
every week she
goes out and
brings greetings
to all the Billkins,
but never received
seeing her photo you will drop this 100
per cent Billkin a line or two. Don't
make the Billkin gay." All right—mail,
mail, mail, mail, mail.
Mias Redmond
has been a
business
greetings
to all the Billkins,
but never received
seeing her photo you will drop this 100
per cent Billkin a line or two. Don't
make the Billkin gay." All right—mail,
mail, mail, mail, mail.
Maryland Billkins Entertain
Dear Bid: Our vacation has just
ended. We have had a most glorious time. School
has started and you know what that
A. Lonesome Girl
Dear Bud Bliken: Here comes a
storm. You're the most sure you have received letters
most sure you have received letters
to her, myopic and sending this letter
hope will be received. I want to be a
friend to you, tell me the Billiken to write me as
tell all the Billiken to write me as
Stykes. It 4. Box 22. Giddings, Texas
Mary's Mail Heavy
Dear Bud: How are you at this time I do hope that this will find you in a long time since last I wrote you. I long time since I last wrote you. I will use time as I promise never to do it again. Mail, mail has been flowing into my extended life the last few weeks to such an extent that I am forced to ask the billikenmen all Quiet. I send you some good things for the club in a few days, so be on guard. "Shoes on your feet" you in a short while. Thus truly, Mary S. Dursey, 52 Barre St., Baltimore, Md.
COSSIP
There are approximately 400,000 Billiken members. Our club has increased by two or more members we see for the last two weeks us grow.
Billiken Willa Davis, 1327 Forrest St. Bethesda, Md. We have been added to 100 per cent list. I want all the Billikens to write him.
Marion H. Cantlo, 923 N. 12th St. Marion is a boy and has been on the to stop address him as Miss Marion. Marion is a boy and has been on the to stop address him as Miss Marion. Please see that this error is corrected.
Joy Wyte, Box 340, Greenville, Texas.
I write letters to other Billikens, but has not written them since their time to treat. "Billikens, I want you to forget the letter-writing motto:
**Questions**
1. What tree can eat of food?
2. Which is the oldest tree in the world?
3. What tree should grow in the sea?
4. What tree should always be found in couples?
**Answers**
1. The parrot-try.
2. The elder tree.
3. A crash-apple tree.
4. The palm tree (palp) tree.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
SIKI KISSES THE WRONG
MAN; RUNS TO THE POLICE
BROOKLYN NOTES
Mary, Mrs. Bruton of Ironton, Pa., gave a special welcome to Mrs. M. B. H. Roddell, a propertyark W. M. Mirex, and the Thanksgiving offerings by chasers at Nazarene International church, Troy. The jubilee reunion social of Nazarene Wednesday evening. The firing squad reunion, guests. Among the special attractions were pictures, music, games, refreshments.
Wesley Banks, alleged to have enabled a student to take instruction on March 12, 1918, in front of 157 Prine St., pleaded not guilty when he was charged with assault. Banks' Thursday on a charge of murder. Banks gave his address as Dept. 10, where he was held without bail in trial.
MANHATTAN MARRIAGES
Frank Brown, 25, 2231 Seventh Away, and Althea Butler, 25, 1931 Third Away, and Evelyn Frostes, 25, 113 W 12th St, and Lizzie McGee, 25, 104 W 12th St, and Saskie Klimbach, 26, 104 W 12th St, and Martin Holloway, 45, 14 W 14th St; Henry Langley, 25, 4 W 12th St, Herbell Rolland, 25, 106 W 14th St, and Julia Story, 25, 106 W 14th St, and Famille Brown, 45, 246 W 12th St, and Famille Brown, 45, 246 W 12th St, and Rosalina Ferry, 44, 107 W 10th St.
BROOKLYN LICENSES
BROOKLYN DEATHS
Hartlett Martin, 57, 220 Washington
Av. James Davenport, 76, 1998 Dum
Av. James Davenport, 76, 1998 Dum
Bilham M. Miller, 56, 121 N. Oxford St;
George Washington, 61, 161 S. Second
Av. George Washington, 61, 161 S.
N. Gorona Av. Coruna, L. I.
Nettie Chase, Florentine Tintle, Tessie
Green, Baby Cox, Little Bite, for
Apartments, 1671 Broadway—Adv.
IGNORANCE EXCUSES NO ONE
IGNORANCE EXCUSES NO ONE
If you haven't learned about Black and White dentistry, which is doing such almost miraculous things for people who had tried many things in desperation, you can learn about blondes, bumps, eczema, 'breaking out', etc., your friends, and your family. You can learn you for still having these ugly things all over your face neck, arms or hands. Two million packages of Black and White Ointment are being used a year, which just proves the durability with the people whose skin it has cleared up. You can supply you. So there is no excuse to keep being bothered with your skin troubles, as much as the Zinc size-Adv.
NEW YORK SOCIETY NOTES
POLICE COURT NEWS
NEW YORK PAGE
The Rev. and Mrs. S. M. Johnson of
Boston, Mass., and the Rev. and Mrs. Monterey and
daughter and son, Mrs. Monterey and
Sr. Monterey, will remain several weeks
in the University of St. Brasília.
They will remain several weeks
in the Lincoln Memorial Memorial
pastor of the Lincoln Memorial Con-
gressional Congregation in Chicago, called at
Defender of the Faith. They will come
out home from the National Council
held in Springfield, Mass. The Rev.
and Mrs. Monterey, the Rev. and Mrs.
Rodrigo, the Rev. and Mrs. C. Gorman,
the Rev. and Mrs.
James H. Turner, 21, a laborer, 42 E. Washington, of violating the Solvian law which will be imposed by Justice R. H. Herman and Justice C. E. Cial Sessions. It cost Carrie Thompson, 19, 207 W. St. Louis, two and two books from the counter- Aug. 20. She pleaded guilty to the charge when arraigned in Speical Sessions. When Mrs. Ester Giles, 121 W. 137 St., St. Louis, did not believe her husband, Percy, some address, intended to assault her, the Ronald dismissed the complaint. James J. Grass, 102 W. 125th St., were arraigned by Cole Carpenter and Ohio Railroad, at Pler. 125th St., charged with stealing They denied the charge, Magistrate Cahl in Tombs court, in Speical Sessions. Arraigned before Magistrate Ronald James, John Rames, 261 W. 162
St. Charles Grant, 22, and his brother, Thomas Grant, 23, and their brother, John Grant, were held in $1,500 bail for a further hounding. He was robbed of a diamond gun and gold watch valued in all $1,000. Bid during a bargaining attempt at their home at 120 W. 127th St., was arrested and charged with felonious assault. 25, 60, W. 126th St., was arrested and charged with felonious assault. 26, 60, W. 126th St., was arrested and charged with violating the Volunteer law in care at 60 Lenox Ave. Henry Robinson, 42, W. 125th St., Lenox Ave., was arrested Thursday, charged with having 12 half-pint bottles of wine in care at 60 Lenox Ave. Henry Robinson, 42, W. 125th St., Lenox Ave., was arrested Thursday, charged with having 12 half-pint bottles of wine in care at 60 Lenox Ave. George Henry, 29, 307 Lenox Ave., was taken into custody Thursday, charged with violating the Volunteer law.
Mary Fields, 23, 38 W. 130th St. arrested by agents of the Store's Mutual NEW LAMP BURNS 94% AIR BEATS ELECTRIC OR GAS A new oil lamp that gives an amazingly brilliant, soft, white light, even been tested by the U. S. government and 33 leading universities and found to be it burns without odor, smoke or noise—no pumping up. In simple, clean, safe. Burns 94 per cent air and 5 per cent water. The inventor, E. G. Johnson, 609 W Lake St. Chicago, Ill. is offering to burn any kind of fire or even to give one FREE to the first user in each locality who will help burn it for full particulars. Also ask him to explain how you can get the agency, and without experience, money
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Berkeley, 256 W. 10th St., just three weeks Joe H. Key of Pittsburgh, who attended the world series last Sunday evening at the palatial home of 51 Pfish Ave. White Plains. Having been the recipient of many awards, evening was spent at the Halloween hall given Tuesday evening the monarchian orchestra of which Henry Yancey is leader. The music was by a berry of pretty girls, J. H. Saddberry, M. H. W. 135d st., was manager. The Racquet club gave their seminaling, Nov. 2 at Laurel Garden and was largely attended. The irresistible happy guests enjoyed a delightful evening club. Keeve Reeves secretary; Earl Reeves, treasurer, and B. Finch chairman of the social committees.
Invitations have been circulated announcing the approaching meeting of the John Francis Johnson of this city on Wednesday evening. Nov. 5, at the home of
Mrs. Alice Carter of Washington, D. C.
W. Williams, 227 W. 1420 S., who has been very ill.
Miss Florence Sparrow, 299 North
Park Ave. and Simile Wills, 2
Sunnyside Ave. Everett, Mass. . Are
villaging Mrs. Mae Santee,
Clement Gordon, 26, 47 W. 135th St.
time ago charging him with being the father of a male child born to Miss
W. 135th St. W. 175th St. in May of this year.
Silney Haynes, 22, a storekeeper, 20
charge of criminally received stolen articles. Arranged before Judge Man-
nuel, charged with not guilty to the indictment and was released in $2,000 bill pending trial.
Florence Denkins, 55, W. 135th St., on
Mrs. Mattie Goldman, 38, a hot on
2127 Madison Ave. was held, in $600
arranged before Magistrate Norris in
Harlem court on a charge of assault.
James Smith. 31. 116 W. 129th St.
Charged with a charge of
violating the Volstead act.
Charged with forcing entrance to the
St. Michael building and stalling two suits and an over-
staircase. Charged with a charge of
Thursday of Paul Maxwell. 23, 144 W.
130th St. Maxwell had pawned the
David Johnson ticket and the two suits were recovered.
For having a revolver in his pocket
was arrested Thursday, 17, 405 St.
Nicholas Merrill. 44, 248 W. 129th St.
was arrested Thursday, charged with
violating the Volstead act.
For having policy allow in his possession was the cause of the arrest of
Green, 115 W. 129th St. on
Thursday.
John Hurrel. 46, 72 W. 112d St. was
(Continued on page 16)
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
News matter for this page should be in our office not later than first Monday in midterm for the fall semester in issue. Address, 2325 Seward Ave.
FOLKS PACK KISMET TEMPLE;
HEAR EQUAL RIGHTS DELEGATE
Kismet temple, Herkimer St. near New York, Sunday afternoon in a mass meeting to hear the Rev. Dr. Harten, pastor of the church, who delivered the principal address to his recent visit as spokeswoman of the principal address relative to his recent visit as spokeswoman of the principal address House on Oct. 6, that was received by President Coolidge. Dr. Harten, who is the first man of our group to get the President to speak to us, will assume the role of the teachet he will assume towards us since he has taken the chair, delivered a speech, and has been against boys at West Point and the navy, release of the members of the Navy against boys at West Point and the navy, release of the members of the Navy against boys at West Point and the navy, furthering the consideration Dr. Harten further warned the Presidents of his seemingly quiet attitude toward them; that they had lost faith in the elections in Chicago and New York, where the Democrats were successful.
40 THE NORTHEAST 2014
A CORRECTION
An article that appeared in the Police Journal relative to Mrs. Fainnie, B. Knight, 213 W. 14th St., which stated that she was 22 years old, W. 10th St., because she re-raised after the couple had quaded a wild night of cabercing, had been proven to be a good foundation. Mrs. Knight was unaffected by her 88-year-old aunt, Mrs. Knight is one of this social work worker, known to be glad to make this correction as it is proven to positively attack any individual's good character.
MISS CHATMAN IN REGITAL MISS CHATMAN IN REGITAL missa sorpoina, gave her first recital at Rosie Handkins, flutist, accompanied several of her numbers, with Miss Corra Chatman's program included Handela's compositions by Lutinstein, Korsakow, Mozart, David, several of Burleigh's voices, the New York Herald, says the New York Herald, ready to give a finished vocal performance. Her voice possesses several agreeable qualities she sang to advantage, especially in those numbers calling for a marked
QUEST OF UKRAIAN CHORUS
music at Hampton Institute, was in the city last week at the performance of the Ukrainian chorus, which gave a performance at Hampton Institute last year. The Ukrainian chorus came to this country in 1915 and was at Hampton Institute last year. "Listen to the Lambs by Prof. B. Kochbeats," one of the three American composers, "the Old Fools at Home" by Foster Kochbeats and "Susanna" by Foster Kochbeats.
---
Mrs. Addie Hunton Floyd, N. A. A. C. P. Field worker, well known for her vanancement of the faces, will speak at the association service November 4, 2014. Evening World, editorial staff, will speak at Ashland Pl. Nov. 5, New gymnasium students will come in formation openings with the coming of Miss Eileen Rimke, Metropolitan physical classes at Ashland Pl. on Tuesday and Thursday.
MASQUERADE PARTY
BOY KILLED ON BIRTHDAY
Johnnie, 5 years old and the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Osie St. when he attempted id jump on the runway at the airport, by Peter Burney, 40, 59, W. 131 St. He slipped and fell the rear wheel passed and the youngest charge was arrested on a technical charge of homicide.
WOMAN FOUND UNCONSCIOUS :
Mv. Wvlan Ferguson. 206 W. 151 W.
doorway of her apartment Thursday
guison claimed that when she opened
guison told us that she was
'he selling and struck her on the head
THOUSANDS KILLED
Statistics show that thousands of people are killed every year from injuries resulting from impurities of the blood. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that "GENUINE YOUNGS" 338," the medicine with the root beer effect, feeds your blood, thereby relieving Rheumatism and all other diseases usually arising from impurities in the blood. Sixty cents and one dollar bottles. If your druggist hasn't it, order direct from the laboratory, Norfolk, Va.
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NEW YORK CITY BRIEFS
At a recent meeting of the lawyers formed, at which time the three Race candidates running for office in the district, the Shieldman, the Dorset. The candidates are the Hon. Shieldman, the Hon. John William Smith for the board of addermen, 21st district, the Hon. John William Smith for the board of addermen, 21st district, the Hon. John William Smith for the board of addermen from the 19th district. Sunday at Mother A. M. E. Zion church, the Rev. J. W. Brown, with the women on one side and the men on the other. The effort was for the building fund women won. The Four Court church, preached by Mother A. M. E. Zion church last Sunday evening. A teacher's training class was recently organized at Mother A. M. E. Zion church, preached by the City Mission society will be the Bazaar week is in progress at Grace Congregational church of Harlem, the city was Missionary society; Tuesday, Ladies M. E. Tuesday, Pastor's society; Wednesday, School-Unity club will be Friday-Unity club for the board of education, will lecture at the W. 135th St. library, this Saturday—Egypt and Mesopotamia. The culture history of the earliest people.
While descending the subway staircase, he stopped for a nursing, Miss Bessie Jones, 25, 482 Lenox Ave. accidentally slipped and fell. Damaged by falls from contusions of both hips and abrasions attempting to run across Lenox Ave., at 328 St. Night, Tuesday night, at 328 St. Night, Tuesday night, at a taxicab and was badly injured. An officer banded him by Dr. Barson. He suffered from cuts about the face and head and arm. He was owned by the Penn corporation. At 328 St. Night, in a pluffed condition on Tuesday night was Ostrs Roos, 35, 302 Lenox Ave. from alcoholism. Roos was a victim of alcoholism. Turner of Huram hospital and removed thereto in an ambulance. A walk and striking his head there. A walk and striking his head there. The scalp of Henry Becket, 61, 3127 Wilk Ave. Bronx. Tuesday night, at 328 St. Night, Tuesday night and the force of the fall cut a long suffering from pneumonia. Mrs. Mary Shepard, 60, 67 W. 1338 St. was at attention from her home to Harlem hospital on Tuesday. In an alleged attempt to commit suicide Tuesday morning, Alex Brayer, 60, 67 W. 1338 St. threatened with a razor. The cause of the attack was attended by Dr. Jones. He was attended by Dr. Jones.
The 26th annual business show was held on Saturday, March 13, at the Armstrong armory. Large numbers of our group attended the entire week. The 26th annual business show was held on Saturday, March 13, at the Armstrong hospital Wednesday because of the staffing. Walter Blackstone, 38, 227 W. 135th St. is confined to his home suffering Thomas Littlejohn, 60, 462 Seventh Avenue was taken from 135th St. and Lever Street to the Armstrong hospital for observation. It is thought Miss Edith Jackson, 21, 2100 Fifth Ave, was taken to Harlem hospital Baby William Garrett, $ months old. 117 W. 131st St. died early Thursday pleubulous about the death, the child having died from natural causes. 247 W. 135th St. was removed from her home Thursday to Harlem hospital because
Miss Margaret Giddens, 20. 126 W. down and body injury. Stupid knotchew on automobile at 1354 St. and Seventh contusions and abrasions of the body. During an alteration Thursday, on the right arm, cut on the right arm by Adam Johnson, Charles Carter, 216 W. 140th St. in hospital suffering from pneumonia.
NEW YORK PAGE
meeting was addressed by Assemblyman Robert B. Tennant, senator of Washington Heights, ex-Alderman George W. Harris, Clerk of the Senate, summer Summers and Counselor John B. Counsellor
HARLEM Y. M. C. A
DeWitt Clinton will again line up on Saturday, Nov. 3. The "V" erased from his jersey on Saturday, Jr. vs. St. Jude Jrs. Rendalls vs. St. Walker and Walker Limited vs. St. Jude Jrs.
LAFAY
7th AVENUE AT
132nd STREET
THEATRE
PHONE MORE
NOVEMBER 5
I. M. WEINGARDEN'S SE
"FOLLO
WITH THE KIN
BILLY HIGGINS AR
Surrounded by a Selected Cast
Julia Moody, Alice Gorgas, Su
Gonn, Elvira Johnson.
50—Dixie Land Do
Tons of Gorgeous Wardrobe—T
Matinee: Tuesday, Thursday, S
Vaudeville and Pictures
PRICES 30
LAFAYETTE
AT THEATER DIRECTION OF COLEMAN BROS.
PHONE MORNINGSIDE 1311
NOVEMBER 5—LAST WEEK
WEINGARDEN'S SENSATIONAL PRODUCTION
"FOLLOW ME"
WITH THE KINGS OF COMEDY
BILLY HIGGINS AND CLIFFORD ROSS
Ed by a Selected Cast, Including Ernest R. Whitman,
Boozy, Alice Gorgas, Susie Sutton, Valada Snow, William
ann, Elvira Johnson, "THE FOLLOW ME FOUR"
Dixie Land Dolls and Dandies—50
Gorgeous Wardrobe—Two Big Acts—19 Mammoth Scenes
Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Midnight Show Friday
Vaudeville and Pictures Sunday, 2:30 to 11:00
PRICES 30c AND 50c
LAFAYETTE
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NOVEMBER 5- LAST WEEK I. M. WEINGARDEN'S SENSATIONAL PRODUCTION "FOLLOW ME"
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PRO SYSTEM USED
EXPERT OPERATORS—5
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e. Gladys Anderson and Miss Anna King. Proprietors
ASS MEETING
By Hall, Friday Evening, Nov., 2, 8 P. M.
D STATES SENATOR ROYAL S. COPELAND
—AND—
New York's Newest and Best
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Mice, Glads Anderson and Miss King. Proprietors
MASS MEETING Liberty Hall, Friday Evening, Nov.,2, 8 P.M.
UNITED STATES SENATOR ROYAL S. COPELAND
—AND—
ACTING MAYOR MURRAY HULBERT
WILL POSITIVELY SPEAK
DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SEE AND HEAR
THE FOLLOWING CANDIDATES
For Justice of Supreme Court
JEREMIAH T. MAHONEY
SJOEPH M. TROSKAUER
SALVATORE A. COTILLO
CHARLES D. DONOHUE
PHOENIX INGRAM
EDWARD J. GLENNON
AARON J. LEVY
For Assembly
JOHN P. NUGENT
MARTIN J. HEALY
JAMES MALLE
HENRI W. SHIELDS
JOSEPH A. GAVAGAN
For Alderman
JOHN B. HENRICH
JOHN WILLIAM SMITH
Civil Service Commissioner Ferdinand Q. Morton Will Presid
MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SEE AND HEAR
THE FOLLOWING CANDIDATES
For Justice of Supreme Court
H T. MAHONEY
LORE A. COTILLO
INGRAM
JOSEPH M. TROSKAUER
CHARLES D. DONOHUE
EDWARD J. GLENNON
AARON J. LEVY
For Assembly
NUGENT
W. SHIELDS
MARTIN J. HEALY
JOSEPH A. GAVAGAN
For Alderman
HENRICH
Service Commissioner Fordinand Q. Morton Will Preside
DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SEE AND HEAR
THE FOLLOWING CANDIDATES
For Justice of Supreme Court
JEREMIAH T. MAHONEY
SALVATORE A. COTILLO
PHOENIX INGRAM
JOSEPH M. TROSKAUER
CHARLES D. DONOHUE
EDWARD J. GLENNON
JOHN B. HENRICH
Gill Service Commissioner Fordiniani
Morton Will Preside
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FINLEY WILSON GUEST OF
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The Hon. J. Finley Wilson, grand
daughter of the guest Sunday of Imperial lodge,
No. 127. A monarch parure with
grand Daughter Ruler Laura E.
Grand Daughter Ruler Laura E.
house he was guest during his stay
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Monarch lodge home, where he was met by a
monarch, Ruler Hudson Oliver of Monarch
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of 12th St. and Seventh Ave.
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PAGE FIFTEEN
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1823
Masonic Musings
Most Worshipful Grand Master Heese H. Mitchell and the officers of the most reputable lodges of visitation to the 16 subordinate lodges on Nov. 1. I bedding with him running through the entire month, winding up with Corinthian lodges. No, he is not the grand master to make visits at the same time to the nine subordinate lodges in the Eastern Star, which will be the occasion of the annual visitation of the Eastern Star, and will be related to these chanters. It is the plan to make the visits the decision to extend his fellowships to the membership, who have made them upon his support of the New Temple project. Grand Master Mitchell and his administration has been poised making in the history of the fraternity a fellowship, which has been absent on so many occasions. On the temple site at the corner of 10th and U. St. N. W., and a whole—generally referred to as such—there has arisen a partially committed, will stand as a monument to the untiring efforts of Grand Master Father and foremost and foremost made possible a wonderful achievement, common to all.
Bandall Junior High
The Travel club of the geography school visited the nearby national campus this week to secure material as a resource for the monthly national curriculum powers of observation. The trip was conducted by Miss S. I. Quandt. The George Washington located under the supervision of the visiting faculty for a fruitful discussion, profitable for purposes of English comprehension, travel. The History club, under direct supervision, hold an entertainment. All of the English sections, which are now under direction, have well formed library clubs. It has also held a student body cent of the student body has books from the public libraries of the city, several of the wide awake sections of the university, and various parts of the government will be exemplified by such students as have commissaries and other public officials.
Miner Normal
Changes in the faculty of the Mice Normal school, incident to the inauguration of the schools, have been announced. The Normal school suffers a distinct loss of faculty in the department of psychology in this institution, to the position of executive secretary of the school, upon request of the measurements, under the direction of John S. Sullivan, supra citation of the induction. Miss Johnson will be filled temporarily by Miss ladder, William N. Williams, K. Clark university, and J. C. O'Neen, of hearing a lecture given by J. C. O'Neen. The Water Supply at the District of Columbia. The senior class has been organized into a social efficiency
Personal Profferings
WHEN IN WASHINGTON
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New Jersey Ave. at D, N. W.
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North furnished room at reasonable rate.
D. GRENFLEASE, Pron
U.S. CAPITOL
Junior Jottings
Monteclair, N. J. is in well represented
Miss Dorothy Burnett, Miss Marion
Miss Dorothy Burnett, Miss Marion
calculates of the class of 22 from the
Monteclair high school, Miss Mary
calculates of the class of 22 and 21 respectively,
calculates of the class of 22 and 21 respectively,
Miss Goode and Miss Burnett are men.
STATE NEWS
Church Chantings
Organization Offerings
Deanwood-Glendale
Mrs. Ellia Bostic fell from the steps of Mr. Dodd's last week and received a letter from her parents, who is now under the doctor's care. A grand concert was rendered last week by the Center. F. Stewart was the direction of Mrs. I. L. F. Stewart. Miss A. Cordova is spending a few weeks Cordova, Miss Carle Williams spent the week-end with her parents in Laurel, Md. Mrs. Cordova is attending her friends at dinner Sunday of least
Makes Cold Chills Come
Makes Cold Chills Come
Folks simply can't help /showing that plimpy, blotchy or rough faces make them less attractive much less associate and become intimate with people who are so careless about their appearance as to lose their destiny. No wonder it seems like "cold chills" run down their backs. Not long ago black and White Ointment was introduced in this country tp remove such a disgustful rid of them is responsible for its instant popularity and tremendous demand. You can quickly rid of them. Your dealers has it and supply you. It is economically priced, in liberal packages. The 50c is the cheapest, as much as the 25c size.-Adv.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Whitelow Hotel Arrivals
Railroad Rollings
Sick List
Marriages
Deaths of the Week
IOWA
DES MOINES, IOWA
Mrs. C. A. Adams is improving great
bread for the hunter is able to be
bout again. Mrs. T. Turner will be
Miller, Mrs. Mayes and James Williams
Miller, Mrs. Mayes and James Williams
Couch left for Allenbrough to work
in the glue factory. Mrs. Henry Max-
man, the mother of the daughter of
her daughter Mary, Mrs. Mary Finley
entertained at her residence, 1342
Ferguson and son Robert, who leave
for California in a few weeks.
Mrs. Pergerson and son Robert, who
leave for California in a few weeks.
Dodge, who she will spend the winter.
DUBUQUE IOWA
KEOKUK JOWA
FT. MADISON, IOWA
The Rev. Mr. Smith is carrying on a syle of meetings at the Second Baptist church.
Child-birth
Here is a wonderful message to all expectant mothers!
When the Little One arrives, you can see that, moment, move, free
can have that mo
from suffering than you
have perhaps imagined,
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has shown the way. It
dured the great remedy,
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PENNSYLVANIA
Every Man Who Has Lost the Vital Force of Youth May Be Restored
Scientist Makes Wonderful Discovery—Says No Man Under 100 Years Should Feel Old
HAIR GROWN IN CURET MONTHS
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Fortune Telling by carc or ground in a dull parime compared with the sensation of Crystal Gasting. If you are the least bit parchie (and whistle!) if you can "cause" things that you can get either, nor hear if you can "cause" things that you cannot get either. A pleasant friend, or important fact-if you worry about your future or part in town, entertaining others in a new and dramatic manner and adding to your special Crystal Gasting Guests' undefy! For only $3 I will send you the easy instructions in this ancient Hilda art, together with the Crystal Gasting Guests' "Your Friend" and "Spirit Friends", the same as used by professional seers for Glaivrance, Second Sight, Head ode pampus and pay balance.
STATE NEWS
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Elect Officers
Every Man Who Has I
Force of Youth Man
Scientist Makes Wonderful Discovery
100 Years Should Be
A new discovery has to have been made by a scientific study of Serbian mountain people, who scientists say live long enough. This discovery should make it years to lives of people in all parts of the world. Mountain people are strength, youthful, vigor, grace and appetite agree that there is a secret of health and vigor lies in the internal grids so we know of these grids are stimulated and kept in normal activity, man might live worn-out feeling, weakness, nervous debility, shallow complexion, loss of appetite, scrawny neck, restlessness at night, pain, headache, mutanchy, despondent send you mail
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entertained by the Republican Women's City organization.
PITTSBURGH PA
The annual state Baptist convention tabernacle. The Rev. J. H. Dwelle of Philadelphia presiding. Among the visitors are A. Overton, Mrs. Lavina Black, Mrs. A. Overton, Mrs. Lavina Black, Mrs. Robert Kinney and numerous others of Philadelphia. The Rev. Carey M. Chapman church was a visitor in the city last summer. A. Overton, Mrs. Robert Kinney and装ied ill in Detroit, where she is staying temporarily. Ms. Albera Gaul is wife of the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaul, who were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaul, who were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaul, who have returned. Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Willie Barkesale of Pittsburgh were invited. Willie Barkesale of Pittsburgh were invited. Mr. and Mrs. Carrington St., North Side, Mrs. Martha Jackson also entertained Mrs. Martha Jackson, GIS Perry St. is visiting her father in Charleston, W.
CLAIRTON, PA
William Grissett, accompanied by
Lewis Alexander of Clairton, Pa.,
are on a visit to California, and are the
masters and Mrs. James Randall
of Los Angeles.
MT UNION BA
Services were well attended at Mr. Hope Epstein's conference at both services. The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Sprogrogs, Mrs. and Mr. Robert King, for Pittsburgh where they attended the state convention. Mr. and Mrs. Sprogrogs, relatives here, have returned to Bethlehem. Ma. Mr. and Mrs. Robert King, Ma. Mr. and Mrs. Robert King, their future home.
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PAGE EIGHTEEN
QUND THE A
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Fe See Bale Eee
cia EEA St Suns “Bie
Sirota Wiace 20 ste aa
SHEE! BF Askaee Sk: Mit He
Busers P wermart Sas Bee
Sev EMnatt age sab beet
Bele ts ans PF aa See
BeestelSt Re Ge he Miadaoe Se
Seis Stier ins ete ae? Se
Wate diate HSE Ae:
Rahetesa wines: Digest Se
SE Sane an Piet at Spr
Ris Gitta te tee home fog 8
sata ein te clase hia lee
SIGE AOR Piasittate and wank
iene er ee ay,
Tar'S, ‘Gidae Ot de We. Spnahed Se
Ere cat ct ores
earning aehte’ he" ae Sole
SANG, SP Balas act eee
Shed Se Semis arte Bein
Stee DNs, Pee atta aoe
Setar ont 5 ease at
EONS Cerne” SO fable dots
SS of SAN"S. Sitecatsel” oes
Faeate sien thene: prearat were
Site Cormelin Robineon: Mies Sosepyins
Bien ise etal George Lie
HES ts ras at
Greotyn, Syn ae
“iLeague of Women
the serch of let, whch, bas now
cite serie GE Sh, Male hae 2
Rigatie Ser eat coats,
Pee eh Three aed Ropers:
EFTanaee CheTHat cot ele aks
Sodatiins Piast Sonata tea ee
Se op te Sai eles hae
Seek OS" Shseyanle"eeetng., se
ERSt Fat pinnae hanced
Beeeiar nets ach a ite, Sa
Tapia Mie net wight
LMT alee" Sina eat
Ser hs Soni Seneealige gs
Se iateanon fru fee ie
Seceeremen a EA aay eee
SORT coir ie alte Te dla
Feerehsee tt tan ‘Ge ends
SSE Wats teen Cape
Seahtatate Wieteor or pee vase
Bowtie Wi rMathdae se sot
Be rate lice oat help oe Sone
aa ae fate
Seecter ce & ERE urhsted
TERE pa taaimne ct ee abet
Heres Peataton of eameats
SR Siva eat, Seep
Was Shateeting Seonldwige ateention.
Hat shinny ate ate" oman are
10s eed cotati tree Stare
Satosry wie copter one eS
ER caealie ac fae eh"
Distret Manager Viste
3, Le Ge Cumin canted
maakt, Git Be ceterT esas
pastes, hate Ratan te
Bee tite in onesie ae at
TALS aa Peta Bereta Tee
Sear Mtns sue ERR
See ag Dotan MS enetiing SS Sapa
aS ewe ete cline i Cneale
Beets seu ecera aetna
ite Ghote “ota Sede
aioe Sages Hae Fmt
SSR he the ieee Rinna Pat
Bema Nate, Mis « eaeboe' st
Bebe eel gn te cononiaty
ES ISS Leama Seen eae
‘Berean th Rene of We hot wont
4 BHPH oY Ratan ed tae ae
Hic tMudeta sient on the Bars
BESS CS hore pent Maes
SEngarOnans "Sek "Sead, Gene
SE Be Sint Rie be ete
Herne AP aeara liu,” recht
Rear ten esse dntat, Manne
Hen SPR? iat nye
Holace “ana cnestnst, "Ene following
See an GAS aed" woxton We
Rina Menta hota
$Erto victory tor Darmouthe EA.
Ee Feo, sar aeen Woneey
KURA atin Se
ee Peer de wimaciens Bal and
Sey. creitee tee ve Sk Re
ae ata cris WE dance ou
‘oan Ais Sasi potas ane
SESS ED seuoe Satta ts
He SS Suhail Sa elt
Seber ceterares Gots aeet
Seth taGoay teens ie etre
Have net age? dome Chek tne =
Hecker as Bam ane ead,
RES SC heMELA SeaR Se
SEaMe DY Aiforie Teo ales
injure, ‘lier condition ts net conela=
Beste
Mupiat Ties
‘The folowing marrage of the pant
eck ere performed tye marrying
Peg Oe Beanie WSs
Bess nae atte
ERE Sita Statin or He ena
$5 SMa Demeey tg
Bee nese ls Haier Packer
TRS Prdesig and Baa Bowe
Fe eg Lee Bate or
Feces, Mi deceit
BS asia Me Seba iis
BaP eee, one ate ae
Ind Takdduet of ane Bich cohtscting
Bei ttc aad acl os
EBs ang ye, Unendey ved
fe ort owe Allen Ania Pina of Provis
on i a
oe err tgs i
Soe re eae mec a
stasis wenn
srr ara ae a
ae renee
ene anc coe
Sear ena ae Sew
Swain soe erage
So carina ae
oa onde egepcs
sees tear mer ae ae
beso Aner See
icine due eet
teak ees gatas ag AS
Hea encase aga Be
inden ttle ae ea
in adore eer ce
Bro eae eatie tee?
qoLsie Cherateal Co
‘ RIMENTING!
STOP EXPERIMENTING!
THE WORLD’S “FUL : ‘0’
POSITIVELY GROWS HAIR AND CURES DISEASED SCALPS. “FLU”
VICTIMS’ HAIR RESTORED. AGENTS REAPING A HARVEST. WRITE
{nthe aredt baltle for supremacy in life one's nugcess Wes In arriving at a conclusion an to
the courre, Sou wit pura, and then with & grim determination stick: fo {hat Course, and
you siwaye win,"It (s but Ratural, az we ko thfourh hic (a desire the heat” When in need You
pnt the eet oct, the est dents The gat, Sapna che beat lie, et "Then why So
Schle, hesitate, experiment, fore timer money And patience when'yoa wiah to grow your hale with
felieve wnat Four pen betgld and Sou, cam go,and nee in peraon. ts hundeean are dole ly
"Pulte ia Just as sure to grow hair as fhe sun is to shine. STOP! THINK? "ENEN SCY!
= (RETAIL PRICED Write for particulars. #158 outae
Fulto Halr Food (asubie wtrenath-onssesseeesenssno60e | wilathee Jour tn wositeon Send
BUG Hite Fog, (Bday SS cevnecatceit2c220988 | Money Ordee."Send stamps for res
Filo Pressing OW sccccccccscccccscsozssssasaosaisss BBs | gqqq ASTONISHING OFFEREL
Te keopa the Scalp healthy. free fonm dandrut tickenn, | “fare Tea’ cree 2%, S308, (tee, tle
iver color and promotes an suunsant growth of bain, | atuauons Noe’te comeeus" Ck ioe
Sne'sbe bor coavincen: be extra for ovtage sore
Did “Flu” leave your Scalp dry and your hair thin? IF SO, send-for “FULTO
. DOUBLE STRENGTH," 60c, and have it restored ~ ~ .
Diplomas given. A thorough course by mail. Terms reasonable
Address MRS. E. G. FULTON
4808 Prairie Ave., Apt. 2 Phone Oakland (2439 - CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Servlet She ereemeny wees pees
Scher paregnages "hee. “Slate ngeln
SSecg as, Creemaia aod Jaen D. Fer
Er testa Ties nea
aa
wrt tatonng BRR a une fe
Eee eee pces eee
Eile Jotmvon, ic ‘Seaver we, tonnes:
Pk ee ee
3 Bate ne oer oe
BS Paice ere ge
Ee ee re eae
Sic: opie uta, Sheba
fae ais oe
Gebred Soouciaee "SS Sisies “Sean
Fev coe oe oe
See eo cee
Bebe ere Sats
toph White of St. Germain St. Shee
eee oe, oe
BS, Soaies Saati ois
RehascPetursed co the city from a e-
Sieur mea Eo Sar
Tob Seneat 6S Afos 8 er
Ee coe ce ene eae
Pee octet tree
fee ences ae ce
ies eos aoe
Si a oy ae fei
cea al ire ot
Clay “of 3035 Tremont’ St. has returned
sere da aaah ae
Ey menor 3) eevtok
iia wuneieea Gin pee
in the city: “Walle here vhe'ts the yuest
Sean getieesaes ogee
Se ar ce ene ae
SES ae
Fecidence of the president. Sire, We
See
‘TEXAS:
ympanicd by Tok Thomas and stastcr
SgBa be Ton ttoman and, Mieke
see e a Pam a
Per get it
See iE GPa, ie
SS Searches oe
Se it cerine ue
Sheer y ad ye
Be tated he Gt at
Hauer ameg, Be Si
Se oe eae ee
Seat “Be, Re
See. oa Seer ee
Set Hi dati eee
eae ac aint Rae
ees Be wate we
Wiehtower.’ 3. E.: Superintendent’ De.
Sg ae EEE Hi
etc eae itata ates
Seeehy rig ar Soe
RENTER OTE aa
| enownsrase.-rex.
Bo OI a Sota
adit eta i, cate
ieee ee ara aes
jander of that city, Mra. St. A. Tai
Bae ee Hae
EAD Aa Fair ignds
ee a
Bat ac einal"s Sens
Soren: erage, Suse
Hie S.MeL ete
See eal
Reese Tek wae we
Ae iia Waar
Bk St pte
eich es uae
ae reat Gr Mabatte
tn the ly in the Interest of Scharey
Sean eSutee of at chy. Sess
fompantel “De. Holigan: here.” ‘They
soe the guesie of Dees JE Dickow
BUG. Gladeer and’ AE rose the
Ree BH yseion seat to hates
Ee bunoet Sie Samen Ranen of San
Satoohe' ts in Whe clty'oh buninegs and
aeseetiae ctisute? sea fiends. Br
RU Ei une et enters Coley to
Teen Montimtaer” ofthe, SAmelten
Wetinen Tetured af Sn! Cana Ht
Bara Seta Satie St
Siem Sieddle Traversn of Denver: Coo:
iin he city Niating Pensa
Frnt Sted Sneed mages Ate
(epee austin on Uuninead” Sire sent
Hier ant fateae the one 3
kcotard'ar Dalian ereachea af 1 art
ei Sorta tent Ales tone
fend ot Fe Warth was Suiting fel
fices Shel fitends here recently.”
CANADA
ee
Pett, Heteve of Joris, Bik. racers
RoR DAU Rie bathee Willa tied tn
Sei Ni abe repatae
Fohnmons who’ arrived “Thuredaye Oct
ieee Sse pa
Reraete es gerne
Ee omer £ erie
Beaten: oe ee
Her Slee SEE U Si
Serra reais ee ae
Bihar ee hr ses
er Oe ekaae oe
ee aren
Se ae ee eee
Meal Rak, ie
Gis gee ae 7
Rinttn ‘arrived tm the city Friday. O°C
Brearislae Sno ene tts ie
Bee eal as Stes
Be oie atin et ont
re drm Be ie got ore
Hao air He die
Hatt bee ary of ee aed
Seer Ea a
a re
Etbaae danas
Mra ern ae
Buda cabin ait Mat
Soh ee eee
Pade Pah nett, Oe
it Be ‘at she Ue oftes 8 ate
Aratont Chester McGee: ralltny Pert
Sipe see Sian
Searle degen caters
SN me emir kn ak
Ties ons train about a month ago.
Pee ae a eae Pak
Be Ane a a a
Raavetgonnne Mack) was scen tn the
Aerts
NEBRASKA
| omaniwee
5c gun ERs ce
wits tine Goh ftw cee
nae Aree gee ene
Recetas Peart
Petender office.
TENNESSEE
Pee TT Ra eR Te TE a ee OTR RTE Te ae Ne
NOW READY (einstisceiiies
: TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS =
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: | eign ||beemiaaraee BOR AGUVEA ittiate
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: | RS spree rs iets tortor rt New it Monch ‘Subreriber :
: | RRR IeicleLSELG! 6 Months’ Subscription,$175
| ee hueeee HS recunsarmar so yaaa of
: | Bieter |lboe ESeeGEceD|) of povoten oy gues er Sieg
: | ee (oeeRIBN S| ber will be used. E
- ADDRESS ORDBNS, LETTERS ere, 10 =
: CIRCULATION DEPT., CHICAGO DEFENDER :
« . 3435 INDIANA AVE,, CHICAGO, ILL. - z
enEUOODENDGGTUNORECNENOASSEUUNETHSUUDOSENATYONNTDORNDDPVAENTLDSUOPOELEEDOOROEEREDONETERODRERECETECOTEYOADAVERETERAESTROEDREEONERRoPSpHaUErDROnORTE
STATE NEWS
CLARKSVILLE. TENN.
hit Droter: Wayman Goodell. ia Poston |
RE Raney Mabden ot St: Loutn Sto
in'vtetine relatives and ttende a oo
ete Tee Ses or Bntte, e
Ieuan ex Gentine Mende hare.
Seiten! ican eetelven hereof te
gyri a? a 7Sipsuna sin tas, and
Si athehe taaen ox Ashes, Se
dorm og thischor Sir, Salle Wsgh=
HE Sas sth hacer. nth Se
BSW Boot Stores, fee arent 2 few
outs ines ety Sumas, "Segdaisen
Bhasin ass aah eet PN
import Hoyal- Tenn, ‘Fhe Pearl High
{Guest Youu sen ot Sasheiie Tent,
aeveetch*tnar Sh cam of ea
ping’ac the amie park, Senp:33.8
Sie elle niet nnd aranne Howe
Soro gully marsiedstnursany venta
AeGhethome OF Toe urge parents
nea" asuphiere te Polen em:
he Rex, eowle Grena rx tm: Tor
fet Siempbine arse Sonia, Dine te
fremaing "2 few Nweekn "in Aahevite,
Bel S arn Suarinen any Buchanah
of Sashntte” Team motored to ny
Ses tate ‘the ekene hee UE
iitin Gna ene Wick Brings Sig JS
uitean of Nentwille spent Priday” 1s
ARUP CI et ues Rae toate
Beer Adan ue The tear igh wee.
Fic athleaienaraelation of art” Heh
Eohariee i cama
Senteg at tne Od Fellows Hin “The
ROSE. "henton of Prenton, Tear
Chere og le" afodac Shiva, atte
Shores, Miek Giara Moberts eft Friday
Srening io join her groans Wk.
Roe. fe dere, tnd, "Phe" als tos
Ro Wedresane evening with oy Lee
ESGeersom in Solege St
UNION CITY. TENN:
oi a
dulce a gucress, “the Rov, Me. Sete
aes, fat orca. ise Matte Green
Se"Faaleiie No ee iteu nee meter
gaara ica Mee rege
{lng fia mother, Sieg. Pacona "Saors,
MISE Pate Witiame™ weet, wher
Bea uM ee haene"on Ss Clover led
Wa BEM Gieen and ates
Eee MCA tt wo Ue
fo sisit his daventer, Cnarien Stark
Sint hme afte, Chey
Gir Se Ntehatte nw returned fram,
Helis Rack er aise to frente he
ERY Fe Needung's “meeting baw
UisSea Mier severah week fie ee,
Siete Sate te send rity
Bexcheree has retursed to South Bend
Beesnt Phghtner hue returned from the
Ror
1S memenis, rew:
‘The are Ginnast conferaice of the
arabada, eatee
Mesa leh Bet 6, was Bee
a er ae ae eats
Shien US as coverime <Alabamay
Sting Pemméese “Carolinas at
hehe Prasrreran ches, Sie nena
Fie sOce ie tere Sere severat
he, Annual creron” was heenciied 1
Bee re ee Rates h, Te of Sere,
Cohiegs Figen enn. it” wa
area tGegmeea hie ite “eet, eat
Bg ree aan
Ryne, Atanas schon, "Sire Me
Rosat circle of Friends of the Wotld
facet fer sacatlon Ia Chiongo. Stes
ile BS dnt Mies Hretene Sorte nes
Ha “tie eit afe sane loned
Pile nummer eehoek atlas Satie Dare
Hy hans io Neoketle tm Neenah
srnnlgges of the Sunday schon) wich
12 Sepatied ig ne Ge ssa hee
Inte ‘renidence, 2208. bitin Ste The
$BeingPenles Concteratanay ela wit
fice Hitiloweee gant, ie Cone
Heeatlonel aroreh Weedawia Del, Jk
BevHoR Sime of Ciaran Mion:
fra Wa, the ity seecntlye The Hine
i gee da See oe atae
Eaulenal ehurai, Der" Atraiam Lenin
Bebtond, racer. ‘cin “Kele a iting
Sista hn. Rag fried 4 the cle
Sir Gnas of MeGen AM, Baw oe
Site mie hee eee
‘Maw Sofie Datrll nas gone to Xash~
ile to “become "an "emnlovee "ot tae
Hunaay? ethoot guttlaning Urata’ the
Sted’ of Fenneazce of tht Presterian
hired RRS Cocerigg “Absa
Miset-vipl Carolinas and Virginia. held
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
terlan church, 715 Leach PL. Oct. 18.
Rees Med de Bein Stina
Sea Sakon Mretset preaas
ie "ine Rey c ‘wll pet
lon and pnstor of Sit. Oliver ehureh, of
Sete sta" sty ntdaaing he
Sa Sirs "i. ete. ‘deratted this life
Ge HE atau, Sonar Pa
SURG HSS Wek Moen jnecngaes
ie a with Souroken oe Ste
ME Wien! the graneartinny at
Wot hae Sere’ 1 ctite teptnd
or vacation Sirs Lae tere and Sil
Sloeed ahtiescnsat Sco has
fone. to eneago on Inginean. Tae
Ube" Enuren, Sout Mtermpnilye gave. 3
Fee ne Sirens Butea nn
Sak a8 Tella” Hae wate
SF Mion Hea a Sete anita eden
HUY We wecic at Ghe Etat bape
etna Ueto
HEL SWWin Seat ie Shetor' ae
Ev: alrTaobete wn f-teted peas
Min w. Ste Edwards announced the
Beattice te shee Overton of Sit. Vers
Pon tie Sua" Shwards entertained "g
FEE: etonan ae fen tee tet homes he
Soret Rete IS ea PRIS
teMSrTnteteting ela amare he 3
iver clan"E. church Sunny evening.
NEWBERN, TENN?
ire, savannan stegutchen as’ re
ica {Re Moneta fanart xe
Site edie "ee" dade seth "Hee
Malhee Stat nfhnaiy. Meche Sie
Sie Raaroe Head ot Sagianns
AML, Wn Femina ita of "Sarde:
Aha. woe cal home’ en ‘ero nf
Teerieale fete atic “Sate
Rie het estar el Sam
fone: cig were" Bueatt of sire, Sai
setrareEa “eemte tor tele “homme it
A Sonne” Senne, Mewar ett
Peretakea Shan sai Slee at
roepaid Ang Soe fe Says
sa ashe denny eee
aieat Ae SiO Sr “rose ire
Terme Saute taming cereus
TE nisin” a charen tat
1 3E Mhnon"ay Slatin i the, guste
a John Smith. Cawrence Harnett aed
foneeburmnces at were gwen ot W.
eset
eine Jeu
Gehan Sa Rea Sr
Bent practi
saith Se My a
Hottie Won Se Bata
Biota ar andes Naess
sean eet ie
ear ea OMe
SFP TMi iat a
Si tonsherae Sa
Sea ea hate se
Serta eal ea ote
ecb ae Et one
Bev al otal Rta
EE fee oe so na
Bee eine See ait
iii tite: JPR Ri i
Bay Siete, caeritiie e
Ho lteter, "en, See Fpl
Mena Macy ie Satheate
inten, vinited. hls mother. ste. Startin
ie, tales once, Ra
Ber Berita Set
near ai atthgec ft
TEE HRM OEE Beatty a
Fa, al oad Ne ain,
SGA Fen conn Crier
Stare i, Hea
Seana Tar coats an ee
And. two heathers. to. mourn her. lose
ee i 2
po mee pee rl
Ea ee a
Sage se
Boo eee «|
<tr.
soc RECA |
Bo eS
2) ora eres
oo > eens
po ee a a
ees
eee
eee ener
Cae ee
eS Rey vii
Bier eee
Teepe C, M, E. church, the Rev, &
Totnaea® sticia ing tee fear
Re ee oe, oe
nt peeck pee
Sate ead sa
Se tds bend oval
i See ee
Bnei in tp Mis
Riche aio fae ie hate
Mee ea aes
ei gah eae
ee i ar ie
Pei ee eee
ie tae eS eh Raat
WaSeSwreek, “Sire” Del Whitlam fe re.
Exar iar Seaman
Siebe ge earn ae
728 ‘Mr, Parks. 3trs, Emma Dell Yar-
ec ae Sh Pe Sh
Bote Ge dna ©
ea canteens fe
Pauper circa A
ae
Sainge Carag ithe has hess for
statins are cane ee
Serer een
Biomater tees eas
Sages each ra
cline San tea eee ae
foegtce Sater ie Mate
Sue eee
Bhs Sittin ries Se Se
tee th a
Pont ae
mt PNT oF En
Be ree sae oe Se
ie Gig Gener Sere
Sarteties eae ee
She thy ae ee
eng stn euranay Oe
Viseels and “Siisy. Florence Rates of
Ree cay Sara
af Central Clty. Key., and. sites Emmis
seen Ges fo eal is Pa
ean Se he
Mery. | ie. and. Mrs. Calvia Tipton.
eal Se Saag, “acta
Seale Si conan
sige toate Wee
poe cea tee te See Soe
Set acer a eevee
Se he Sa eater
See iO ce aoe ae
NEW JERSEY
JERSEY ‘CITY, M3 :
aoe IE Ne iy enter.
nee ANE tl all hot ot
ag Saas sent
Soan”No, Ta, ‘Kmertean” wscian” wit
Rous gece wetlne at hears
ea flaps (or ie Noga arte. ge
Peptton and ane el ie ey Te
EMIS tutions Reoraclon of ets
Son" Canie nee WA Roth ou oe:
IRE soit econ ne ane ys ee
BS cen aE Bae Avel‘om Srodas
Sechines Mote et Shieh ie th en
SearatS Neti goahiene ae te
Qe cents even Fegatead vs
eons 5 ee eh ge
fore git Waivers “i aus ieee Ave
Mon at Colmmbta halt Neve Be
ABaby in Your Hame
entities Ere
UNL Sie tlt slime
atta Wis ties canes “Ate
Bratt indss ROOST lite Sl
Erp te ett hata te he
eat teat acs St te
Se eee eee ere
MEE tei’ a bee Ree tate te koe
Whar 'stertst ie ani why’ noald tee
Sent oe a Be
Eniice,"in's pals enceiwres. te meals fart
Waters Bayig seo rame star to" Be
Hi MBH puis tole alilge Haas, SE
OKLAHOMA
* ‘Those enjoying life's riches made it
in OIL.
‘The greatest oil wells in America
‘were discovered on land owned by
Negroes.
We have producing oil properties. |
We have stood the test five years.
i Come in on the ground floor. Grow |
4 with us. A few shares left at $1.00. q
} oocToTre gat TiS coupon repay —=—=— =
| Tworto wonDER OIL AND GAs co.
| Line aan oe '
fj Kaneae City, Mo, '
es Pind enclosed $eeececeoo full paymart fOr eeccsesose t
{. anacoft your company ai $1.00 por share: z 1
jt '
| neeeanannanascnananannannnn mena
Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower
Ce geen Bcd oe eee ee
i to grow long, soft and healthy,
AUC Ah =A combination of dried and poo
YG ela dered seed, Just clean your scalp and
4 (iy Gi} plant the sced often by rubbing the
tektites watch
ot ese wa
Peas m= ee gow, ieee mystery
eet ce 35 ce
BEER An old‘taahioned, true and honest
W pean oh hair grower. Try it Ladies, let us
Y AN pa send yea a full six months treatment
VASSAR Hal Sed sw powertl sims
[iiceess excites the scalp to anew
CANTEENS esitny ction. Kits dandratf and
gus ile 4 tetter the very first treatment stops
FPR I) ih Soecthreaes & ove
a)! ae. is ins
| SROURRGAC ine ile "compound ‘as the: ox
| Bue Tas NS Sopemens of the ‘Medical Profession
| SRE 3 The wae, Gay An
SpaipicreigDroeegeand on a head’ that had been bald ten
| Acceubribe!Gma Sf Beton Seqrs. We can prove it
AT YOUR DRUGGIST
‘OR Direct FRoM . Queens Mail Order House!
P.O. B.O. JAMAICA, N. Y.|
| See
Bats
gs, MY STO
Ph ged secon oc ca aren Tene aS eas ee,
eH Gof wearer in lors, Susinein, qannen, ALL. Unieratsage, Gress
AK Pee ee
fa Sad Ss ALSO!
FREE! : goin
saargseas at teat kena
SEND ‘NO. MONEY Q3iig\@?)
ND uate ee RRR |
MYSTO CO. Ss oa |
tose, aunty Depa tne New York, Cty Lai |
Nex , LOOK, MEN! P=")
> Ff] save sone ano pounce vem. | et |
Ree taro soar ane,comnns a: |
ob at Sette sings | Cg
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MICHIGAN STATE NEWS
PAGE TWENTY MICHIGA
DETROIT NEWS
By HENRY D. GARNETT
637 E. Adams Ave.
Phone Cherry 2740
Club Meetings
The Parisian Art club opened its season at the residence of, Mrs. Thomas M. Baldwin, 34th St. Thursday, Oct. 11, when plans for the current season begin. Membership is limited to 12 plan members; a active season under the leadership of the artistic director; a meeting every Thursday from 1:30 to 3:30.
IMPORTANT
FREE
This coupon is worth
50c on any purchase
of $3 or more on or
before November 15.
LADIES' DRESSES...$3.75 up
LADIES' COATS.....12.75 up
LADIES' SKIRTS.....4.98 up
(All Wool)
Complete line of ladies' furnishings,
Lingerie, Corsets,
Children and Infants'
Wear. Complete line of
Hosiery, Underwear,
Sweaters and
Gloves. Come in—
Let's get acquainted.
THE FAMILY STORE
THIS COUPON WORTH $1
GRAND
FALL OPENING
FOR THE
ST. LOUIS HIGH
GRADE TAILORS
653 GRATIOT ST.
High Grade Suits and Overcoats Made Direct for Your Measure
AND UP
Don't Forget the Number
653 Gratiot St.
Bring In Your Friends and Get a
Square Deal
MELROSE
TEA ROOM
1905 BRUSH STREET
CHERRY 4848
Detroit's Most Fashionable Dining Room
Phone Cherry 1207. Lady Assistant
Bruce R. Etter
UNDERTAKER
Office and Chapel, 2535 St.
Antoine St. at Adelaide
Cherry 3845 Office Hours 9 to 7
Sundays by Appointment
Wm. H. Lawson
Michigan's Foremost Colored
Optometrist and Optician
Eight Years' Experience
Kyeen Krambed Glasses Fitted
Office: 558 Gratist Ave., Second Floor
Res.: 6425 Flirwood Ave. Garfield 6442-J
THE HENSON CORSET SHOP
Room 6-588 Gratiot Street-Upstairs Designers and Makers of High Grade Corsets, Brasieres, Girdles and Surgical Belts
We Specialize in Abnormal Sizes. You Are Invited to Call and Inspect Our Models
T. J. & I. B. HENSON, Owners
We cut, trim and make anything you want. We make from your pattern. Expert tailors for Ladies and Gents. Five-day service. We make in our own shop.
A REAL DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED BY EXPERTS POLITE, SNAPPY SERVICE OPEN ALL NIGHT
Everything is lying put in readiness for the trip. He will be given under the auspices of the Frances Harper针 at Turner's hall on Sherman St. near Russell Thursday morning. He will be given the assistance it will feature the Hackley quartet and some of Detroit's most popular bands, types of all nations. Committee: Maddes Darnie Curtis, curtis; chairman: Camille Robinson; vice president: Josephson; floors: Catherine Pace; president: Cecil Robins, vice president; Laura Smith, treasurer; Elizabeth Riley, chairman, financial secretary; Josephine Vincent, treasurer; Elizabeth Riley, chairman, financial secretary; Josephine Washington was in the city last Friday the guest of his brother, Tom Herbert, M. Herbert is an old employee of the U. S. custom department.
Wedding Celebration
Mr. and Mrs. Wedding anniversary celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary Oct. 11 at their home on Stanford Ave. at the University of California, looked lively today as 25 years ago, looked very pleased and happily. Nelson's father, Prof. T. C. Baxter, and others, Many presicents are the proud parents of five children who were all busy making Pearl Teeters accompanied by Mrs. A. Abington returned home after a pleasant visit. While in St. Louis they were guests of Mrs. Walter Robinsonii 319 West St. While in St. Louis they were guests of Mrs. Walter Robinsonii 319 West St. They were guests of Mrs. Henry Teeters, sister-in-law, while in Chil-
HUDSON AND ESSEX MOTOR CARS
KILGUS BROS.
2457 St. Antolna. Cad 5829
THE H
CORSET
Room 6—588 Grat
Designers and Makers of H
Girdles and S
We Specialize in Abn
Invited to Call and
Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
T. J. & I. B. HE
HARRY
Fine Cut Raz
FALL S
Suits and Overc
We cut, trim and make au-
from your pattern. Expert
Five-day service. We make f
ALL WORK
2330 Orleans St., South of G
A REAL DR
PRESCRIPTION
BY EX
POLITE, SNAT
OPEN AL
GOREY
Why no
WOLFE & I
STATIONERS-OFF
1430 Griswold St.
STATE NEWS
Grand Reception
An elaborate showcased in honor of Miss Oelia Williams was given at the home of Wm. Connolly and his sister Ruby.
TENSON
T SHOP
Not Street—Upstairs
High Grade Corsets, Brasieres,
Surgical Belts
Normal Sizes. You Are
Inspect Our Models
Phone Cherry 3345
TENSON, Owners
TERRY
Private Tailoring
STYLES
Boats $22.50 Up
Nothing you want. We make tailors for Ladies and Gents,
in our own shop.
GUARANTEED
RUG STORE
ONS FILLED
PERTS
HAPPY SERVICE
L NIGHT
COR. GRATIOT
AND ANTOINE
EGGERT CO.
ICE OUTFITTERS
Cherry 2451
At the Churches
Scott's M. E. church, under the exertion of the master pastor, S. E. Bryant, pastor S. M. E. church has just paid the last penny of money in the months. Three hundred dollars surplus remains in the treasury. They are the family apartment building. At a recent election the officers and trustees of the church were turned as chairman of the church. Turned was elected chairman of the Rev. Joseph Gomez. pastor. The text is found, John 1.3-verse 5. Subheading ministers usually dwell upon the importance of the angle that. "Whereas the power to restore or to even give light to the church is surplus, Gomez referred to the angle of the church and spiritual attitude in the matter.
Church Worker Dies
Mrs. Maria Tolliver, 64, a zealous worker and one of the pioneers of the church, was born at her home, 2348 E. Lafayette St. in St. Louis. She brought the Calvary Baptist church from a store front to one of the largest and most prominent churches in the city. The funeral was held from the church Wednesday, Oct. 24, at 2 p. m. Mrs. Tolliver, the mother of three sons and 11 grandchildren, lost in a plane crash. Zion church chr. S. Samuel, presiding bishop of the district, was present and offered confidence and love. At 2 p. m. m. Respasm and his choral sang beautifully.
Hotel Tanzy: Earl Tanks, Cincinnati, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Bledsoe, Winston, D. C. John Adams, Soo, Mich. Nassan B. Lucas, Birmingham, Mich. Mrs. Fred Hayes, Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. E. J.ott, Washington, D. C. Mrs. F. Thompson, Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. E. J.ott, Washington, D. C. Mrs. F. Thompson, Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. E. J.ott, Washington, D. C. Mrs. F. Thompson, Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. and Mrs. Griffin, Cleveland, Ohio; M. J. McNickens, Port Huron, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Thomas,
RATES: $1.00 PER DAY AND UP
867-78 SAN ANTOINE ST.
Phone Clifford 6737-B Detroit, Mich.
B. W. Yanry Proul, Mts. Stah J. Goodan,
Matton d'Charge
Cadillac 1894 610. Montcalm, at Antine
EAGLE CARTAGE
WE MOVE EVERYTHING
Furniture, Pianos, Commercial and
Household Goods—Large Van by
Load or Hour—Storage, Grating,
Packing and Shipping
MOVING AND EXPRESSING
Estimates Free—A. L. Greenfield, Mgr.
Clifford 3803-W
THE LIBERTY TAILORING CO.
W. T. Hardy, the Practical Tailor
SUITS MADE TO ORDER
Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing and
Dyeing
WORK ALLED FOR AND DELIVERED
2001 St. Antoine St., Detroit, Mich.
Office Phone Clifford 2928-M
T. W. TAYLOR CO.
HUMAN HAIR GOODS
Toilet Articles, Straightening
Combs, etc.
2115 St. Aristotle St. Detroit, Michigan
[Name]
Hotel Dupont: W. Evans, St. Paul,
Milwaukee, am. M. McKinley, ind.
Indiana, ind. M. Mrs. A., L. Price,
Newark, N. J.; Walter Robinson, Grand
Rapids, Mich. O. L. M. Langerman, m.
Vanos, Columbus, Ohio; and M. Mrs.
Vanos, Columbus, Ohio; and M. Mrs.
Vanos, Columbus, Ohio; and M. Mrs.
McCoy, Baltimore, MD.; Floence Pinley,
Elsie Benson, New York City; Mrs.
Mrs. Press Bastie, Lockinhan, N. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo, C. Bennett, C. Bennett,
and Mrs. Win. Smith, Toledo Ohio; St
Parker, Athens, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Bryant, Nashville, Tennessee; Frank
J. Jackson, Worcester, Mass.; Mr. and
Buffalo, Buffalo, Buffalo; Tom Kelley, Tom Kelley, and wife
Ernest Lee and family, Chicago; A. L.
Price, Newark, N. J.; Lamar Clemens,
Theo, Spoerling, Toledo, Ohio
KALAMAZOO, MICH.
KALEIDA
The N. A. A. C. G. entered 36 guests at a luncheon Tuesday evening, hosting a Campbell of Lansing and Rev. Arthur Gratine of Canada were guests. William Laura Fraizer, a daughter, Floridia F. Fraizer, and one sister, Ella of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Runn, who have moved to Grand Rapids, Mr. and Mrs. George Leite of this city, have moved to Grand Rapids, Mr. and Mrs. T. Turner poured to Chesapeake last Sunday, where they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard.
FLINT, MICH.
The MICH. students were colonized at Quinn church M. E. church Wednesday, Oct. 24. Those attending Miss Mendez of Chicago, Miss Allen and Mrs. E. Johnson of this city. A daughter, dames Bernard, Butler on Sunday evening, Oct. 21, at the home and groom-to-be, Miss Tholm Siest and Chris Lee. Covers were laid for the Johnson gave a big party at the Taylor dining room Monday evening, Oct. 17. Sold for $120. For L. Q. L. Thompson, 3633 Michigan Ave. has been appointed a Dancer in Flint. Don't fail to get your copy.
BATTLE CREEK, MICH.
Mr. Corrye of Chicago, B. L. Bryant of Detroit and Mr. Campbell of Lansing attended the stag given at the K. of P. hall. Mr. Campbell a nstag supper Saturday night at the K. of P. hall. The supper given by success, Mrs. Martina Marshall is at home suffering with a severe cold. Almost Monday, Mrs. M. Marshall spent the week-end with her mother and rela- tioned Spalato in Clifford Marshall on the slack list.
RIGHT IN THE FRONT LINE OF NEARLY EVERYTHING THAT IS WORTH-
WHILE IN DETROIT IS FOUND THE NAME OF:
See Our Funeral Home and Appointments!! 1391 Mullett Street, at Russell (Two Phone) Cadillac 5548
FLINT, MICH.
STATE NEWS
left for Chicago on Oct. 28. Proven McKey is in New York. Wm. Williams is on the supper at K. of P. hall on Oct. 28.
ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Dr. Easter, who spent 11 years in Alabama, attended the Second Baptist church recently. On Saturday evening the pastor wished him a unique dancing party. Mr. Smith and Mr. Goodie, both members of the church squad, were among the many guests.
PONTIAC, MICH.
LANSING MICH.
BENTON HARGOR, MICH.
The Rev. L. W. Steward prescheduled at Twin City Poro house last Sunday, August 16, where he visited her son, Earl, and his wife, Mrs. Dr. Burton was joined by his brother, Emmett Clanton, Chicago was a week-end guest of his brother, Ernest Clanton, and wife on John St. Martin's matrimonial. Mrs. Frank McGhee of Wima, Ark, came to join her husband in this city. James Bunk and family moved from Bond St. to Pearl Lake. Moore entertained the Second Bintist Sunday school at a Halloween party in the city. Steward's beaches of Arnett Channel gave a reception in honor of their past Mr. Simpson, last Monday night.
WARNING=! Get what you ask for—
When you ask for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations—be sure you get them. Don't let the clerk hand you the wrong package. Hundreds of people have been deceived—just because they failed to say Dr. FRED Palmer's. The original Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations have proven their merit and when you buy them you know you are getting the best. Insist on Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations—AND TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
Get Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations from your druggist
RETAILERS MAY OBTAIN DR. FRED PALMER'S SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS FROM ANY JOBBER
DR. FRED PALMER'S LABORATORIES ATLANTA, GA.
CONNECTICUT
ANSONIA CONN
New Lamp Invention Beats Electricity
New Lamp Invention Beats Electricity
Beautiful Lamp Gives 400 Candle Power For Less than $1/2 Cent-a Night
Any home may now have the benefits of a beautiful lamp, provided you pay through the remarkary invention in J. Davis, a Kansas City expert medic. This amazing invention called the Economy Lamp is beautifully designed to be a lamp that is no wick, chimney or order. It lights instantly and gives more light than 20. It is no wick, chimney or order. It lights candles at a cost of less than $2 cent a night. It is so simple a child can carry it anywhere. So proud is J. Davis of his invented Economy Lamp free to try to any reader of the Economy Lamp free to try to any reader of it. If you want plenty of soft, brilliant, healthful light you should accept this lamp. This lamp simply gelling your name and address to B. J. Davis. 133 Economy Bldg. a decent introductory offer is withdrawn.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1923
Frequent Headaches
"I suffered with chronic constipation that would bring on very severe headaches," says Mrs. Stephen H. Kincer, of R.F.D.I. Cripple Creek, Va. "I tried different medicines and did not get reid. The headaches became very frequent. I heard of Thedford's BLACK-DRAUGHT and took it for a headache, and the relief was very quick, and it kept go long before I had another headache. Now I just keep the Black-Draught, and don't let myself get in that condition."
Theford's Black-Draught (purely vegetable) has been found to retrieve constipation, and by stimulating the action of the liver, when its torpid, helps to drive many poisons out of your system. Biliousness, indigestion, headache, and similar woubles are often relieved in this way. It is the natural way. Be natural! Try Black-Draught.
Latest Jacquette
Style—
SILK Embroidered
PLEATED
Serge Dress
Trimmed Wits.
EGYPTIAN
PAISLEY
$379
C.O.D.
Lower price was
made for such style and
quality. See this
sent on approval.
Money back guarantee,
at the charming
Winter. Coupon for
exclusive from
the season. All the riche
sales are free this season. Harry
Cogin for the sensual
bargain.
Send No
Money
Price is from
free quality and
these longwear blies
serges to grace
all the women who
are embroidered with
the same beautiful
global design. Please
not be too worried.
It will not be too
warm. It will be
very nice.
Color
Mary Bliss
Dept. A.1511, 6618 South Halsted St., Chicago
YourLuckySign?
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Finish Silver Shank $4.50. Aluminum
Finish Silver Shank $4.50. (15% off
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Your Lucky Sign.
THIS FINE WALLET
Made of genuine pin seal leather
with place for bills, stamps, cards
identification cards, and greeting
graved in 23-k gold, all for $2.00.
Soil cash with order for this wonderful
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SID STEPNER
207 Amboy St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
30 DAYS FREE TRIAL
$10 Worth of Records FREE
THE NEW YORKER
LUCKY HORSE RING
Change Your Luck
The famous Keson Lucky Ring is the best way to celebrate your special day. Made of solid Gold and Silver, set in a beautiful silver band of good luck in business, love or friendship. (strip of paper around flower) and we promise to come pay the special price of $3.97. Were seven days and follow the seven rules when you come with us. (approx. 600 GSM) Dept. 19
179 W. Washington St. Chicago, IL
GENERAL LUSTERUS GEM SCARF FINS
5.95
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Compare your Keson Lucky Ring with our LUSTERUS GEM SCARF FINS and see how much your LUSTERUS GEM SCARF FINS are guaranteed to be as good as any other LUSTERUS GEM SCARF FINS.
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LUSTERUS GEM CO. Dept. 19 W. Washington St. R.C. City
THE BUCKEYE STATE
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
CLEVELAND NEWS
BY ALEXANDER O. TAYLOR'
Cleveland Office, 222 W. 96th St.
Cleveland, Ohio 44105.
Gleave and, Ohio, Nov. 22. - Mrs. E. H.
Hancock, with Mrs. A. L. Hancock,
delightful visit with Mrs. B. A. Luscox.
```markdown
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Club and Social News
The Ochid Needle club will meet with Mrs. P. C. Langer, 2245 E. 4th St. president. The Court of Sunshine club will meet with Mrs. Dolla Office, 2260 E. 4th St. books will be open to receive members. The Court of Sunshine club will meet with Mrs. Dolla Office, 2260 E. 4th St. books will be open to receive members. Day and Mrs. Dolla Office were in attendance at the home of Mrs. Adalah Johnson Friday afternoon, under the successors socially and financially. Community playhouse fund. First prize was won by Mrs. Florence Johnson; fourth, Mrs. Joseph Dolphin; Mrs. Marcia Needle club met with Mrs. Orr, 2260 E. 12th St. The meeting was quite interactive at the Christian Community center on Robinson, 2255 E. 10th St. Nov. 9, James Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harris and friends of his successors at Morehouse, enthusiastically of his many victories with the Morsehouse football daughter, Miss Restore, Peoria, Ill. He is having a medical, four-year term, and Howell bank, candidate for councilman in the Third district, were interested in attending Tuesday evening at the Community center, 2255 E. 4th St. a number of members and friends interested in a councilman evening at her home, mime sale. Councilman Fleming introduced a resolution to purchase $200,000 for the purchase of property necessary for the purchase of Carnegie Ave. E. 45th to 48th St.
Fleming for Council
This
Newspaper
Pays for
News Matter
OF RACIAL INTEREST
Authentic Reports of the
Activities of Our People in
ALABAMA. Paid for
at the Gaual Space Rates.
Address All Communica-
tions Directly to the
Chicago Defender
2426 Indiana Ave. Chicago, IL.
showing such a determined effort to reject Mr. Fleming on Nov. 6 that the contest in the Third district seems to just a primary.
Gossip, In, Political Circles
Gossip in Political Circles
On Attorney C. J. Agnew, Engineers building, for the six-year term candidate, he has been in his many dealings with our group, has proven most conscientious, jumps around minded and fair, he will make an exerted effort to keep thousands of dollars for our tax from insurance companies. Our group has been involved in four-year term municipal judiciary in the persons of Attorney Alexander H. Martin and our group in Dry Maintenance and are deserving and should be supported. Sir Martin has most especially been involved in other strong civic organizations. Our group has been the secretary of the Limpiey Committee, secretary of the C. Chauney, secretary of the Limpiey Committee, secretary of the Judge Fielder Sanders and the Rev. David R. Williams also our support, our Fourth district.
Murrell for Council
Among the Churches
Among the Churches
M. Zhizhen Rovh
H. M. Klineley occupied the public趴
tion of the National Council as Sørfield,
Mass. In which he reviewed the na-
tional church, consciously among Colo-
ral people. On his visit the women me-
tion at Pilgrim church, the Women's
night masters and meetings are crow-
ing the rain, the T. M. T. Class had a
bribe possessed this week. Wednesday
events to come at M Zion晨: Fleec-
tery; hasging Nov. 12 and 14, Phili-
thian class; "Colonial Days" concert in
bribe by Mrs Willis team Nov. 15. Th
T. T. Church and Community house
Monday night. The social revival
hayses have been continued in a
late date because of Mr. Dale Dale-
dard with the Donelson Ave. Christ-
mas Sunday last Sunday by Dr. Thi-
nardler on "Donelson Conditions."
Gesaldine Hotel Guests
Popular Ladies' Contest At the Grand Central theater, 38th and Central a popular ladies' contest
STATE NEWS
will be held, beginning Nov. 1, 1953.
The popular Alfina building allonment on
Willow Creek, C. at the new state roof
on Cleveland, the new state roof
choice Lifes $175 to $350 on easy month-
ly rent. The new state roof choice
third price, $25, and fourth prize,
Harris, manager of Grand Central
theater, or Walter L. Brown sales man-
ner, the Grand Central theater,
E. 30th St., Cleveland, Ohio—Advertisement
SPECIAL NOTICE
The Rev. Robert L. Bradby, Detroit,
Mich. will be the special dealer under
the auspices of the Cleveland branch of
the Cleveland church, 37th St. between Scovill and
N. 5, at O'clock sharp, evening,
Nov. 5 at
CINCINNATI NEWS
By L. Lloyd Stone
706 Mound St.
TBDY, OHIO
Richard Channel M. E. church enjoyed a large attendance Sunday, the day before an amphibian sermon. The Rev. M. Bradley of M. E. church the coming year. The Rev. M. Patterson, former pastor at the Zion Baptist church Sunday afternoon. A Womens day was observed at the Zion Baptist church Sunday afternoon. A Rev. M. Howard, pastor, preached his farewell sermon Sunday night. The Rev. M. Howard, pastor, preached a Womens day was a trotter visitor Sunday.
CANTON, OHIO
XENIA OHIO
OXFORD OHIO
Glen Beenstichen is still ill at his Hunt. He was taken to the Dayton State hospital for treatment. He was also sent to St. Mary Kate Hattie entertained the St. Mary Kate Hattie entertained the bishop's school mass meeting a bishop's church, and sent the churches of
FINDLAY, OHIO
Mrs. D. Green and son of Ft. Wayne,
Ind. were in the city visiting their
daughter Elder T. Woodson held quarterly
meetings on Sunday the 10th at the
section 11-9, Williams is still on the sled 2-L.
The daughter, Jill, died at section
11-9, Williams is still on the sled 2-L.
The daughter, Jill, died at section
11-9, Williams is still on the sled 2-L.
BIOUA OHIO
LEBANON OHIO
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO
Mrs. Earl Newtair entertained the members of the Golden Rock club at a luncheon in the nursery of the U. N. I. A. held an interesting meeting at the home of Mrs. Newtair on the honoring Ave. Zion church was filled to capacity recently when an chapelate society society. Mrs. William Ross of E. C. Newtair and Mrs. William Ross of E. C. business trip to Baltimore. Ad. and Mrs. Virtce Johnson of Urbana and Mrs. Chester Williams in Park Ave.
COLUMBUS, OHIO
Children Cry for
Hatcher's
CASTORIA
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of the
Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it
The Rev. G. L. Hicks, pastor of Trinity A.M. B.M., nowhere has hee with us for several years, has returned for another year. Carl H. Brown, prominent member of Trinity A.M. B.M., church.
Your Hair 'Can Be A Crown of Beauty
No longer need you wish for beauty, the unprecedented preparation has been discovered that quickly changes coarse, homely hair into long, lovely, silky locks, gives the hair a beautiful, soft sheen, and stops dandruff and itching scalp. This wonderful preparation is called
EXELENTO
QUININE POMADE
It has given thousands the beautiful hair for which they are so much admired.
Another great beauty help is ESSENTIAL FIER. A remarkable cream that quickly removes skin blemishes and clears up dark, sallow complexions. If your druggist cannot supply you, send 250 for genetically modified of either Pomade or Beautiful.
SUCCESS
GOOD LUCK
WONDERFUL
Do YOU Need Luck?
In business, love, marriage, althoose,
you need Luck. Why not let Lucky
Stars help you?
NOT A RING OR WORTHLESS TRINKET
From them—one or more—according to
their wishes. The ring is made by
Horta K. Dystellett, K.
Have found them all you are asked to
receive. All are made of polished
silver. Honors of obits may the say the
literal trial perage containing 20
large bars (100 Stars), 50. Sailor-
guardized or money back.
WANTED—If you want to make $5 to $25
years in your spare time
with the Lady Star Mr. Co. Dept.
Lady Star Mr. Co. Dept.
St. Chein-
mail, Ohio.
LEARN DRESSMAKING
DESIGNING. TAILORING.
and PATIENE CUTTING
New quail recipe for pearls to
paint in their enamees. Complete correspondence course.
Complete correspondence course.
Day and evening residence course.
VALENTINE DRINKS MAKING COLLEGE.
2007 Sea Point, H. I.
2007 Sea Point, Prideville.
NEWARK, OHIO
AGENES WAXED-If you
want to stay in your space
yourself in your space
Lady Bub Mm Co. Dept.
Lady Bub Mm Co. Dept.
Oblach, Oblach
DELLAIRE, OHIO
Mrs. Barto Syers has been confined
to her home by sickness. Mrs. Jane
tertained the Fridays
Innion, Pa
week.
Beauty in 30M
30Minutes!
Beauty in30Minutes!
e a Beautiful Your Life!
How to Have a Skin-All You
How to Have a Beautiful Skin-All Your Life!
By ELLEN OTIS
which he called TISSULAX. IT ENERGIZED THE TISSUES, EVACUATED THE PORES. In a small way he asked friends to try it. Results were delightful, bright texture. Lines and wrinkles vanished. Blackheads disappeared, littered with beautiful complexions, compound. Women who had depaired of beautiful complexions, too, found relief in it. Popularity, happiness and success were theirs.
What It Does
Simply put it on the face like a thick creamy lotion. Go about it with a spoon. Cover the skin responds. Dirt and impurities are drawn from the pores and absorbed by this new achievement.
GUARANTEE BACKED BY DEPOSIT
IN BINGA' STATE BANK
are requested to send $1.22 in advance.
to
feed
live
nive
lake
ako
ed.
Name
City
street
(Write plainty or use separate abbreviation of product.)
(Read for Agent's Profit Plan)
been in bringing beauty to people of dozen imitations have appeared almost you get TISSULAX, a regular $2.50 jar, $1.15 for everything when ordering.)
ULAX
consisting of Tissulax (clay), $1;
50c, Lincoln, Hair Pomade, 50c;
ic (plus soap), now on sale.
d). Agents and drug store corre-
vated. Write NOW to LINCOLN
50 W. Lake St, Chicago, Illinois
of SANIT-O-SLICKER
IR POMADE
ER holds good for either Men or Women
(So successful has TISSULAX been in bringing Razor hair to no less than a dozen imitations over-night. Always be sure you get TISSULA for only $1.00, plus postage, or $1.15 for every TISSULA
Our complete beauty set, consisting of Tissucreme (cold cream), 50c; Lincoln Lincoln Face Powder, 50c (plus post Entire set, $2.35 (postpaid). Agent's spondence, everywhere, invited. Writ LABORATORIES, Inc.,-3450 W. Lake
FREE A tube of SANI HAIR PO
(So successful has TISSULAX been in bringing beauty to people of the Race that no longer than a dozen imitations have appeared almost over-night. Always be sure you get TISSULAX, a regular $25 jar, for only $1.00, plus postage, or $1.15 for everything when ordering.)
TISSULAX
Our complete beauty set, consisting of Tissuak (clay), $1; Tissucream (cold cream), 50c; Lincoln Hair Pomade, 50c; Lincoln Face Powder, 50c (plus postage), on sale. Entire set, $2.35 (postpaid). Agents and drug store correspondence, everywhere, invited. Write NOW to LINCOLN LABORATORIES, Inc., 3450 W. Lake St, Chicago, Illinois
No man, woman or child can wear a hairbrush. Our curly, curly, sliky hair, crabby, bumpy hair, and thick hair can be treated with BLICKER HAIR BRONZE and you will be surprised and delighted to see how beautiful your hair can grow. Our beautiful hair can be grown in a manufactured only by us from specially prepared bent silk-tips, with silk hairbrush and firm handle. BlICKER hairbrushes and prevent scalp and hair diseases - they give great, charming and protective hair. We will treat your hair immediately after we will need ABSOLUTELY FREE a full tube of BlICKER Hair Bronzé to make one who owns a BlICKER Hair Bronzé.
SEND NO MONEY
Just mail us your name and address, then when postage
your order is paid, we will send you your gift
(Please print your name and address on it when
to avoid continuation.) We guarantee you absolute satisfaction
you may receive. Full descriptive circular
each set. Order at ctn.
THE SANITARY SLICKER CO.
Dept. 7-00 188 Fifth Ave. NEW YORK CITY
bien when postman delivers
their mail to the postal
desk or writes very clearly
on absolute satisfaction or
scriptive circular sent with
LICKER CO.,
NEW YORK CITY
Just mail us your name and address, then when portman calls your breath to you pay him only 8¢, and you get the package of flowers. We will send you flowers to avoid contusion. We guarantee you absolute satisfaction or payment. Full descriptive decrystal send with each order. Order at once.
THE SANITARY SLICKER CO₂,
Dept. 7-0D 128th Aim. NEW YORK CITY
STATE NEWS
has been appointed to a church in
Boston, Mass., to serve in the
ington St. is. ill. Mrs. Laura Allen is
seriously ill at the home of Mrs. Fred
Brown have moved to their new
home in the West Village to chillifoote recently, Mr. and
Mrs. F. Cunningham, the family
D. C. with friends, Mrs Julia Barnett
the city visiting relatives and friends.
Spread it on face—results attained in 30 minutes
BEAUTIFUL complexions are not a matter of luck. They are the result of care and thought. Few people did not practice a few simple things that they have learned to fulfill complexion, free of all pimples, wrinkles and black-heads, bright with color. It depends upon elimination of wate. Correct
apple. It depends
apple. Correct
and plenty of
drinking water
are very es-
sential and
important in the
treatment of the skin it
takes. It also provides
us with a wav-
erful delicate
freezing the
pores of waste
pores do not
function, they
become clogged
and plenty of drinking water are very important. Equally important is the treatment of the body itself. Nature provides us with various, dolcific systems of pores of waste matter. If the pores of the function, they become clogged in Blackheads gather, Pimples and eruptions result. So begin at the pores of their waste. Help them to work. Restore them to healthy body real beauty. Be advised to
A Gift of Nature
Nature in her wisdom has now provided a very sure remedy for clogged pores. She used it in Chicago chlamydia, seeking in her laboratory for a remedy especially adapted for his condition. English clay, when properly refined and prepared, had a smooth finish. Started, he investigated further. Success crowded his research. He organized a multidisciplinary substance.
THE ACTION of TISSULAX is
to be refunded when made by those
who may feel they have not ob-
served the instructions of uninterrupted use of TISSULAX.
But do not hesitate whether it will
SPECIAL
OFFER!
You take no risks.
You may have
your money in the bare cost
of getting it into
$2.50 jar for
$1.00
to be enable everyone to obtain
For the
Postage Doctor will
You may have
your first jar for
only one person
setting it into
your hands. This
is to enable you
one to obtain THE
present Doctor will
send a regular full
size $2.50 jar at laboratory cost.
This has been furnished down to
$1.00 (plus postage).
It will be at once. When
you receive your jar simply give
the malman this small sum.
It will be held as a deposit. Make
a deposit. It will be returned.
It does not have the stated results
your money will be returned.
How to Order
Send No Money now unless you expect to be out when the mailman calls. If
7
Every pimple point, black-head and spot of dirt gone
What It Does
TISSULA dry in 30 minutes.
Wash it away with cold water.
Look at the mirror and you will
see that your skin is very
every pimple, blackhead and spot
of irritating dirt—will be gone.
Your skin will have resumed its
natural color.
TISSULA every second day for the
first week. Then once a week.
Eventually you may not need it at
all, but it will certainly and
thinly correctly and in yours.
so enclose $31.15. This pay for
so enclose $31.15. This pay for
postpaid and with the same
money back guarantee. Beauty is
postpaid and with the same
money back guarantee. Beauty is
to you. Write today. Send post-
letter, or hand request blank
below.
CLIP AND MAIL
(F11)
MARR R. NUFF, F. G.
Lincoln Laboratory, Inc.
3400 L. Wake Street
Chicago, Illinois.
Please enclose the full star
price of freshly prepared Tuscaroo, for which
I service. LB. wr. will pay my portion.
I will pay my portion. I must in full if I keep the Tuscaroo. It is to be returned.
#
YourLuckySign?
THE LORD'S PRAYER
MYSTIC SERPENT
Grecian and Ring
no Lucky in Earth! Know the
wonderful qualities of this
beautiful ring! It came to
Ibansans while wearing
the ancient Ilhua Llanos from Ariz.
Test Ring. Made of
adventured, genuine ivory,
manufactured. D. both for $8. C.O.D.
150. 150. 150.
Co. 13 Park New,
New York
AGENTS: $8 a Day
Balloon conceived, glass enclosed, with a
glass ring. Made in New York. D. both for $8. C.O.D.
150. 150. 150.
Co. 13 Park New,
New York.
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MISSOURI
PAGE TWENTY·TWO
KANSAS CITY, MO.
FAYETTT. MO.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
CLINTON, MO.
A banquet and band concert was held Dr. L. H. Grant, district superintendent of the M. E. conference, Mr. and Mrs. Dr. L. H. Grant, district superintendent of the M. E. conference, Mr. and Mrs. authors here recently. Clas. Wilson entertained friends at his home in leave in a few days for Denver. While mother, the Ladies Alumni with Mrs. Florence Hughes, Mrs. C. C. Masson, honor of Andrew Swindell, Dr. Larkins was in Kansas City recently attending by Wilson's Famous orchestra, and a chicken dinner were held at the Baptist auditorium; the juvenile recruited services at Windsor last Sunday, at Windsor, Mrs. Charles Bradley and Mrs. Cotton Bradley of business were in the city last week or business
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Stomach Comfort for Good Eaters
Straightens stubborn or harsh hair in 15 minutes. Makes the hair straight, soft and pliable. Does not make the hair "Red," but makes a jet black finish that will not wear off. Will last from 4 to 7 weeks. MADAGASCO is a highly perfumed, soft lathering cream. It is a straightener, shampoo and dandruff remover. 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." NOIROL, a native perfumed black dressing. One order will last from six months to a year. Prices by mail, MADAGASCO, $1.10 large jar; Noir-Ol, 35c. The two sent anywhere postpaid for $1.45. Special prices to druggists and barbers. All goods sent immediately on receipt of order.
WRITE NAME AND ADDRESS PLAINLY NO PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED
O'NEALL CHEMICAL CO., 4553 Champlain Ave., Chicago, Ill.
STOBALL & HUDSON, Chicago Distributors
300 E. 35TH ST. PHONE DOUGLAS 1270
badge of her niece, Mrs. Lucille Jasper, her seriously ill brother, the children even given even the charity will be held at Labor temple on Nov. 16. Mrs. Lucille Jasper, A. d. club of Robert A. M. E. church met Wednesday night at 2437 Woodland Ave. met Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Wm. Alexander, 1707 E. home, 2429 Flor Ave. recently, Mrs. Anna I. Young, 2738 Highland Ave. to attend the bedside of her sister, Mrs. Walter Tailor, Mrs. Amia Tubberville Mrs. Mray Elmore, 1234 Michigan Ave. The Rev. Mr. Borden pastor of Amilica Richmond, Mo. to attend the annual conference. The Allen Christian Institute at Ward's Church church Sunday.
ST. JOSEPH. MO.
FULTON NO
VIRGINIA
NORFOLK, VA.
BAYER Genuine ASPIRIN
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions.
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Amphit is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monocurecidaster of Salicylaldea
PARIS STYLE WIDE SEAM SILK HOSIERY
ILLINOIS
JACKSONVILLE, ILL.
TEXAS
BRENHAM, TEXAS
Mrs. Louse Miller of Detroit, Mich., is hero visiting her uncle, Edwin Simons, Jack, Calif., who is here visiting her uncle, Robert Simons, of the absence of about 30 years, Mrs. Sarah Mitchell, wife of Allen Mitchell, died on Oct. 23, under the direction of the independent Baptist church and the remains were laid to rest Tuesday, Oct. 23, under the direction of the one of Brenham's musicians, is honoring the memory of the Stark World's famous circus in Madison, Ky., he found his father's whom he had never seen, R. J. Southall.
BAYER
AS
SAY "BAYER" when
Proved safe by millions and pro
Colds Headache Neu
Pain Toothache Neu
Accept only "Bayer" package which
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets—Also
Ambrin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacturer
1
A smart Chiffon stocking, 100 per cup PURE WIDE SEAM, fashioned points, high spiced heel, double sole, reinforced toe and heel.
"GOES OVER THE TOP" AND MA
MADAGA
(Copyright D. S. P
NATURE'S ON
horn or barsh hair in 15 minutes
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
A L A B A M A
MORE PEOPLE DIE
Manufactured only by Everitt Hygienic Laboratories Sold by EVERITT DRUG CO. 3459 Indiana Ave. Chicago, IL
SANA CUBA
Kidney and
Bladder Remedy
Contains Santal and Cubeb Oils,
Hexameth and Other Valuable
Ingredients.
CLEANSES BLOOD, ETC.
ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE
PARCEL POST PREPAID
PRICE $5.00 BOTTLE
C. B. GOREY
GADSDEN. ALA
ENSLEY, ALA.
FOR SALE ONLY BY
New York, Nov. 2. "It's too expensive to be a cop," said Patrol-Trooper John Brennan of West 30th St. station recently, as he turned in his shield and handed his reignation to the acting captain. Lynch, who was a member of the force, received $240 in debt. Unable to see how he could pay this and some minor bills which he had contracted, he decided to go back to his trade as a steam-
NEGRO DOLLS
WHY WASTE MY MONEY BUYING
THE GREAT BROWN,
"WALKING" AND "TALKING"
THAT YOU NEED, WITH THE REAL
DOLLS ON THE MARKET, DRESSED
IN RIALS WITH BEAUTIFUL BLACK HAIR.
U.WILL F.RROUDS TO TAKEN YOU I-GAN
CARRY
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. 22 INCHES HIGH—SIZE OF A REAL BABY
KEEP. THE KIDDIES CLEAN
WATERPROOF RUBBER APRONS
dirt and water. Made of pretty per-
pron. 85c each. No catalog for uprons.
accompany Each Order. Write Plainly
RIETY SALES CO.
Seventh Avenue, NEW YORK, N. Y.
ACH!
AT REALLY BLEACHES
AT STAYS ON
AT NEVER DIES
AT MAKE SMOOTH SKIN
STOP WASHING. KEEP. THE
WITH "KING TUT" WATERPROOF
Will protect their clothes from dirt and va-
cales and Cretonna. Price for apron. 35c each.
Postoffice Money Order Must Accompany E
NUTSHELL VARIETY
MAIL ORDER DEPT. G, 2484 Seventh Ave
BLEA
GET BLEACH THAT REALI
GET POWDER THAT STAYS
GET PERFUME THAT NEVER
GET CREAMS THAT MAKE
Will protect their clothes from dirt and water. Made of pretty Perlac and Cretaines. Price for apron, 35c each. No catalog for aprons.
Postoffice Money Order Must Accompany Each Order. Write Plainly NUTSHELL VARIETY SALES CO.
MAIL ORDER DEPT. G. 2484 Seventh Avenue, NEW YORK, N. Y.
GET BLEACH THAT REALLY BLEACHES
GET POWDER THAT STAYS ON
GET PERFUME THAT NEVER DIES
GET CREAMS THAT MAKE SMOOTH SKIN
MESSAGE to WOMEN:
And understands Her Need of Sympathy and Help
daily testify to the value of Mrs. Somers' popular
books, and to the special treatment with some of these special ailments of women.
TEN DAYS' TREATMENT
Summer Critique Remedy for yourself, in your home,
where you live. It is written and answered by a woman.
reported it satisfactory, and often superior to
old and young and does not interfere with daily
her is open, read, and answered by a woman.
MOUNT OLLE, N.C.
A Woman's Message
Only a Woman Known a Woman's Trials and Understands
That is why hundreds of women gladly testify to the
Opinion Home Treatment in relieving so much of the mis-
womankind FEATURE! If you are troubled with some of
SEND FOR A FREE TEN DAY
with descriptive literature. Text Mr. Semmens' Opinion
without the knowledge or aid of anyone. You can the
Rake. You can the vegetable tones and compounds. Used by old and young
work. Write in confidence, as your letter is opened,
A Woman's Message to Women:
STATE NEWS
GEORGIA SHERIFF FOILED IN ATTEMPT TO "KIDNAP"
Newark, N. J. Nov. 2,—Another attempt to spirit a man from New Jersey to work until killed by the plantation master's hash has been foliated by the quick action of Attorney William B. Brantley. The attorney represented Lockhart Drake, who had been arrested upon information given authorities here by the attorney, Joy Gn. He was charged with burglary and shooting with intent to kill. Nov. Sulzer of New Jersey had been wired by the N. A. A. C. P. to withhold "signing" extradition papers due to Georgia's omission do so, but in the meantime Attorney Brandon obtained release of Drake by court action, wining his concession that the arrest of Drake was illfated.
CHARGED WITH MURDER
BECOMING NOV. 2—Bert Russell, 32,
11½ Kendall St. was arranged in the
Roxbury court charged with murder
matters Russell shot his wife, Cornelia,
31, inflicting wounds in the
week later in the City hospital. After
the shooting he attempted suicide by
shooting himself just, above the
MADE PROPOSALS
Boston, Nov. 2.—Charged with making indicative proposes and advertisements unknown, was arrested at Washington and Arnold Patry,坐徒军 McMillan. The company was made by the defendant, ordinarily known in social circles here.
MOONSHINER CAUGHT
Boston, Nov. 2- The plea of scarcity
in the Northfield St. when he was
arranged in Roxbury court charged
the son of Northfield St. when he was
arranged in Roxbury court charged
the son of Northfield St. when he was
fined $100 and costs.
PATTI'S BRAZILIAN
Bleaching Cream, large...
Bleaching Cream, small...
Vanishing Cream...
Cold Cream...
Powder, "La Traviata" (3)
shades) .....
Perfume Special, large.
Perfume Special, small.
A. A. BROWN, Manager
PHONE KENWOOD 9538
4723 SAINT LAWRENCE AVENUE
CHICAGO, IL
TRADB MART
SAYS IT'S TOO EXPENSIVE TO BE POLICE; NOW STEAMFITTER
---
A patrolman in this city makes an average weekly wage of $37. His wages are suitably low, whereas as a steward he is suitably, even nifty, outfitted in a pair of cheap overalls. His wages at this trade are much higher, and told him his story: "TTD like to be a cop, but I'll have to save up my money first. Perhaps after I work at my trade for a year or two I come back for another six months."
DON'T CRITICIZE
BACKWARD FOLKS
Help them wherever you see that they are standing back, afraid to assist you, and feel sensitive about their pimply, red and rough face. People all over the country are prising the wonderful Black and White Ointment because it makes skin slim when everything else they tried did them no good. Tell your friends, who are strung out, to get Black and White Ointment from their dealer. They will be delighted to get Black and White Ointment from it. It is economically priced, in generous packages. The 50s size has three times as much as the 30s size—Award.
CHINA DOLLS THAT
COMPOSITION DOLL
STUFF IN THEM, TO
ARE THE PRETTIEST
HIGH-GRADE MATE.
This is the improving
child of the old-time
Bandana" and "Aunt
Jamma" style doll. Give
a doll to a child.
A doll that she can
take anywhere and
be proud of. Get quality
be seen to be appreciated.
Send for our
New Catalogue
Let us prove that we have the beet and cheapest dolls on the market.
ORDER NOW
and avoid the holiday
rush. Goods shipped
same day order received.
A Trial Order Will
Convince You
Dealers, get busy, and
for price list. Other
beautiful doilies, not
new stock fresh from
the factory to your door.
Make some little girl
happy by presenting her
P
AGENTS WANTED—Write.
Send Stamps for reply.
AGENTS OUTTIX.....$1.75
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1920
The alarm of expensive Pfizer Genie — the
company that makes the vaccine — might
mean that the real threat to your health
would never arise.
Women's Sizes, 32 to 48
Bust, Missse, 14 to 22
years
You have no idea how happy
you are to be in the thousands of chaming
wear this beautiful dress, and
what a beautifully grown it. If my
mother will know how proud you are,
will you know that you are truly
fashionable in the favorite
dress of the day. It has the new
bouquet of flowers over it, and the
beautiful delicate fabric in its quality
perfectly tailored. Tuxedo rolls
woulded vests, powdered wigs,
braddled girls from the walk-
ing suit. I belonged belly-
deep beyond desire, and
this point in
What Should I Charge You?
I know you would like to
a big city grow
going to ask you
cold and warm and
clinging style and
ace. But you shall
be able to work
material, work-
ing in it to my house. Not
alone, but in styles
of style
is only 42.23. It doesn't
never will know what a truly
you see it. You can see it.
And you may
promise to please you because my can any
day, because this offer won't be open long and I want
All Our Ladies
Elsewhere
Bust Sizes
W. J. K.
If you suffer with FEMALE TROUBLES, such as ARCHAINE PAINS, Pains in the lower part of the abdomen, back pain, backache, Whites, Painful or Irregular Periods, if you have that tired worn out, Accrued and run-down feeling so crumpled, it is important to see doctors and doctors, and even though you have been told that an operation was necessary YOU MAY BE MADE WELL AND STRONG MEN, your name and address to THE PELLO MEDICINE Co. Dept. *N* MEMPHIS TENN, today and they will send you a free booklet describing this wonderful new treatment that helps health and happiness to so many other women.
KINKY HAIR
KINKY HAIR
(3)
Hair Dressing
and a few probes
at the hairline, straight, straight and straight.
Quince Hair Dressing is an excellent
treatment that will allow
the hair to remain
dandruff, itching of
all skin, all scalp disorders.
Dressing and one bottle Hi-Ja Coconut Quinine
Shampoo.
Agents Wanted
Write for our
money making Plas
Hi-Ja Chemical Company
ATLANTA. :: GEORGIA
Great SECRETS
Routs, herbs
landstone magn-
netite sand,
lime stones, devil's
legacy,
ancient tallman
rings, maxter
knees, colomon,
lucky
charles, crystals, and stones, the wonderful low-wow secret of growing the hair, etc. White for secrets.
R. D. WESTER
Box 131 Montgomery, Ala.
FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE
DRIVE OFF COLD'S
GIVES STRENGTH TO REBUILD HEALTH
NO ALCOHOL - NO DRUGS
LEG SORES
GIVES STRENGTH TO REBUILD HEALTH
CARUABLE. If you suffer from Lepers
FREE a copy of my famous book that tells
you how to treat your skin by using my
remainable painless treatment.
It is different from anything you ever heard
SIMply send your name and address to Dr. H.
Kansas City, Mo.
FIT FREE TRIAL
If you have Epilepsy, Bite, Falling Sickness,
Convulsions—no matter how bad—write today
four years, 25 years, 50 years, 65 years, 75 years.
Give age and explain case.
DR. C. M. SIMPON CO.
1075 West 44th Street, Cleveland, Ohio
Guard Your Health
SAN YUKI
Allergy Unlimited Protection
PREVENTIVE FOR MEN
Large Tape 10x4 (£4) & 10x8 (£8)
Guard Your Health
SAN YUKI
Dent A.
Guard Your Health
Worst For Director
No Matter How Bad or Old the Jaws.
No Matter How Bad or Old the Jaws.
Dr. Kurt's Treatment used successfully for over 25 years in the most severe and chronic
Washington St. Room 493 Chicago, IL.
LADIES When in trouble you can
Sale and get in all
property cases. Not sold at drug stores. Do not
Work with children. Do not leave children in the
Address NAILS WILLOW ST. DISTRICT
INDIANA STATE NEWS
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1928
INDIANAPOLIS NEWS
By ALVIN D. SMITH
W. H. Crawford Here
at the Mt. Olive Baptist church on
next Monday night, eight of the
past week's apocryphal revival.
He will also show little sensory. It is
reported that Mr. Cawford interprets
the plays will be "Merchant of Venice",
"Romeo and Juliet", "Hamlet" and
"Twelfth Night". He will leave
than 30 churches before leaving the
city. Mr. Drusella Porter of Toledo,
work as industrial secretary of the
Young Women's Christian association.
Fitzhugh Student Stars
Plano Students Recital
Quits Annoying People
Girls and women of the most even disposition are required to reside alongside their bald heads, bold advances. But it is hardly explainable why these same rolls take on the bumps "breaking out," etc., which are even worse pests than that. And people quickly after first few applications of the wonderful Black and white champion of the cause are proving the champion of the cause and women wherever it is being introduced, grazing annoyances of pimps, rabbits, blotches, tether, ring-worm, eczema, some need treatment because they "can't afford it." The size size contains three times as much as the size size. All dealers have it. - Adv.
DONT BE BALDHEADED
ROSELEAN
Hair Preparations
Grow hair quickly on bald heads. Write them for particulars.
P
WE WANT MORE
RELIABLE AGENTS
MME. FLOYD
ROSELEAN' HAIR COLLEGE
889 Indiana Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
HILL BROOK
INDIANA THEATER
INDIANAPOLIS
Beginning Sunday, Nov. 4, for four Days
"THE GIRL
"THE GIRL WHO CAME BACK"
Kayyra Rye Race on Paths
Best!
INDIANAPOLIS CLASSIFIED
THE NEW KEROSENE LIGHT
We will send on trial three boxes of Island's Triangle Paste Pipe Folish, any color, Black tan, oxial or brown.
The Grand Western Barber Shop. Because for
the most part we don't have a client
meet. We get the top call. Call or write.
We're open 7 days a week.
WHO'S WHO IN INDIANA
Second of a series of articles on successful Hosiers, written by Alvin D. Smith.
JOHN F. JOHNSON
In this second article of the series on successful Hoosiers I did not pick a prescriber, physician, teacher or some
Barbera Meet
Medical Men Meet
The Ascetican Medical Society met in its usual monthly meeting at a paper, "The Importance of Sudden Severe Abdominal Pain," the discussion and others followed and discussed the paper at length. Dr. J. Ward read a communication from the members of the Ascetican Medical Society, who was a welcome visitor who heartily entered into the discussion of the immediate plans to effect a tr-State medical association to treat the emergencies were made at this meeting to entertain the Chicago doctor, Dr. E. D. Mozen, president of the Ascetican Medical Society introduced Dr. J. Ward, who in turn introduced Dr. Ioliettes and Turner the patient, who were engaged in talk and extended the Indiana physicians an invitation. After listeners, which were favorable, the chairman appointed Dr. J. Ward as committee to meet jointly with the committees to implement plans for the meeting of a tr-State medical mission were served.
Recital Given
Esther and Martha Dunlap, 1014
Elisabeth and Martha Dunlap, 1012
2122 W. 10th, boy; mother and Ethel
Cox, 841 W. Vermont, girl; John and
Ethel Cox, 841 W. Vermont, boy;
Lena Poindexter, 1623 Orange,
boy; Burke and Loubette Duvernoy,
boy; Loubette Duvernoy, boy;
Nettie Bracken, 2475 Bond, boy; George
and Leon Whitfield, 1253 Yundee, boy;
George Whitfield, 1253 Yundee, boy;
West, girl; James and Mary Hill, 1615
Norway, boy; Norman, boy; Rollie and
Lelasky, 1135 Yundeman, girl; William
Lasky, 1135 Yundeman, girl; William
Lasky, 1135 Yundeman, girl; Grady and Gaillie Runson, 1135
Maple, boy; George and Ellie Peters,
boy; Grady and Gaillie Runson, boy;
Cockrell, 614 Barnill, boy; Hamilton
and Beatrice Craig, 1607 Wade, girl;
HIGH POWER HAIR GROWER
STATE NEWS
James and Vada Crumbaugh, 2426 N. James
1235 W. Tenth, boy; Gwen and Rose
Young, 2222 Columbia, boy; John and
John and Elizabeth Porter, 34 W. 58th;
girl; Robert and Alice Anderson, 520
Milte, boy; Marie and Marie
Milte, 2347 Baltimore, boy.
Deaths
FOBT WAYNE, IND.
FOUNTAIN CITY, IND.
Frex Evans and family were dinner guests Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Oxton, nee Naia Thompson, from the home of her father, Charlie Thompson, at the home of her father, Charlie Thompson, reception gives for the new pastor, the Rev. Mr. Barton, at the church Friday.
RICHMOND, IND.
Miss Christine McBondell, 225 S. Ninth St., recently had as her guest husband White, mother of the Chicago, Mrs. Suele White, mother of the Ohio A.M.E. in Cincinnati Sunday, C. J. Scott and Fred McKinney to attend the regular meeting of the Shriners. A birthday dinner to attend the brown Monday night, Oct. 22 at home of her father, John Brown, 363 S. Ninth St., Cincinnati. Those present were: Mrs. Estella Carter, Mrs. Leon Harry, Mrs. Genevieve Jewrey, Irina Iroides, Ora Hopkins, Brown, Ivash Iroides, Charla Brown, Vish Iroides, Hultt. A party was given at the home of Geneva Dorsey, 1218 Sheridan St., spent in playing old-fashioned games and fortune telling. A two-course dinner entertained her Sunday school class with a delightful Halloween party at Oct. 25. The decorations throughout the house were decorated with two courses; lunch was served. A Halloween party was given by Marion Famling at his home on
LAFAYETTE, IND.
CONNEBSVILLE, IND.
Roy and Ernest Williams and Clarence Collins of Muncie, Ind., spent last week at the funeral services, Mr. and Mrs. Friest Jones and Mr. and Mrs. George Offord were Sunsun, Mrs. and Mrs. Carrie R. Green and Samuel Walker have returned home after attending church in Columbus, Ind., and Mrs. and Ericene Williams of Indianapolis were Sunsun, Mrs. and Mrs. Sunday, The Rev. and Mrs. Clarence Colleen, Mr. and Mrs. John Dawson, Mrs. and Mrs. Laura Ross spent Sunday in Indianapolis as the guests of the Rev. Mrs. Lula Ross spent Sunday in
SOUTH BEND, IND.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Givens of Poorza, IL, after motoring through Canada, said they would have decided to make North Rend their home. The two sons held a social session in honor of the treasurer, in a short speech, gave an account of what has been done. The treasurer, in a short speech, gave an account of what has been done.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
FRENCH LICK, IND.
The Lactea Doechna club was entered
N. Vandana St., with Misses
N. Vandana St., with Misses
hostesses. William Bucker and Miss
Odetta Johnson spent Sundays in Plein-
say were Sunday guests of Miss Mary
Misses Rath and Drulia Cairn bonded
sunday afternoon in Clinton. The Sun-
say sold a halloween social at the church
sold a halloween social at the church
Charles Boyes spent Sunday afternoon
Hendrix entertained Hocely Mileson
circle of the Second Church church on
resumed his work in Louisville, Ky.
JEFFERSONVILLE, IND
MISSISSIPPI
Mrs. Georgha Sheilad of St. Louis is here visiting relatives and friends, Mrs. Kate Sheilad visiting her mother, Mrs. Kiley, Mrs. Elzibeth Monroe has returned home to Cayo, Mrs. C. Griffin of Cayo was the guest of Mrs. Mary James last week and returned to St. Louis. Mrs. Izabella Sharn after spending a few weeks in St. Louis, Mrs. Josie Varrish of Birmingham was called to St. Louis for a brethren. Thomas Neely left for Stockville. Mrs. Sam Dunlap last week has returned from St. Louis has returned from St. Louis
KOKONO, IND.
LIBERTY, IND.
BRAZIL. IND.
MARION. IND.
BRAZIL, IND.
K A N S A
COFFEYVILLE KAN
POALA. KANS
Noble John Phelon is on the sick list. The Rev. M. Ware conducted a lecture, Mr. Green, former pastor of Second Baptist church here, passed through the church. Not in its regular session recently. The Rev. E. A. Gillmore, pastor of the church, passed through the city for a few days. Phoenix the turmoil, No. 5, at dorat Hall.
DOUGLAS, ARIZ
LOUISIANA
LOUISIANA
WINDOWS&GROUND
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Washington have recovered after three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson have been confined to bed with fever, but are rebounded after treatment at Masahi College Oct. 12, in interest of the Woodson of Union, of which he is formerly fitted to bed with fever. The grand mate at Twilight Baptist church was a member of El Dornido, Ark. was in town a few days last week. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Henry Brown of Monroe were in town.
NEW ORLEANS LA
Mrs. L. J. Rogers of this city, one of the many places she visited, has returned from a trip in the West, where she attended the university. While in Los Angeles she visited Catalina Island. From there she visited Catalina Island. From there she visited returning she visited friends in Chicago, home of the poet, Mr. and Mrs. Rogers, the parents of her many friends at Chicago.
NORTH CAROLINA
Services were filled at all the churches in the city, and the injured Saturday, is gradually improved. Injured Saturday, is gradually improved. Injured from Nysack, N. York, where she was born, to Harrison of Chicago spoke to the city's mayor.
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Judge William Harrison of Chicago was the guest of this city and spoke at a nightly Nov. 1, Rev. O. R. Gordon is pastor, Committee Kary Palm, Theos. Judge Harrison is pastor, N. Murroughs. The Rite Ridge Hospital gulf held its anniversary on Nov. 1, A. M. J. church. The Episcopal School rehearsed its Episcopal church Oct. 24 and 25. The students and teachers of the high school rendered the famous symphony concert and other attractions Nov. 1. Martin had charge of the program.
OGDEN, UTAH
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ARIZONA
NEVADA
UTAH
WYOMING
STATE NEWS
last week and was the guest of the Rev. J. A. Rucker. Sam Reaves and Rachel Shiffield were quietly married Friday. Oct. 26, at the home of the Oct. 26, at the home of the
TOBEKA KAN
INDEPENDENCE KAN
Mrs. Mary Polson and daughter, Mrs. May Thaina, who have been visiting the family for the past year, turned home to Freeman, Okla. Mrs. Tessie of Council Hills, Iowa, is married to Bill of Council Hills, Iowa, who has returned to the city after visiting William Hines. William Hines returned to the city after visiting Mrs. J. Claggett and Mrs. G. W. Cain and son Billie of Coffeeville were married to William Hines. Fatton has returned from a visit in Oklahoma to church surprised Mrs. and Mrs. F. Duffin with a big, miscellaneous shower. Mrs. Duffin is on Omaha. Mrs. and Mrs. Win. Jacobs enriched at their home a dinner party with Mrs. and Mrs. Gatewood. Mrs. O. Cole of Jackson. Mrs. Adams. Visiting her mother, Mrs. Adams.
The Tahoe中学 Missions Hospital
is located at 100 N. St. Mary's
N. Payne of Jefferson City, Mo.
who recently came from Indiana,
indicates they will open revival services
on Nov. 1.
CHAMPAIGN, ILL
ONARGA, ILL.
The Rev. Mr. Thomas of Champaign
Illinois and the Eminent Elmer of River Forest,
Ill., and Miss Mijhel Jones of this city
and the Eminent Elmer of River Forest,
at the home of the bride's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Jones. The Rev.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Jones. The Rev.
the ceremony. The bride and groom
left Sunday for their home in River
Illinois in the city. Horace Meredith and
a party of friends left Saturday for their
week at the home of the Mr. and Mrs.
J. C. Crane. Jim Jones and Barrie Sams
and spent a few days with relatives
PEORIA. ILL.
Mrs. Daly Holly and Charlie Maya
A. Scott, superintendent of the Bible
institute at Wellington of Mount Zion Baptist church for the next ten days. He
a banquet was given by the Lluc Club
Rev. Murrell of Quincy, il, was the
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ILLINOIS
JAMES BONDY
SALMON
B. GILLE
1890
ARKANSAS
NEWPORT, ARK.
T. A. Gillian left Thursday night for the Friday night for Charleston. Mo. Mrs. Donnie Ingram case, Pine Fluff, Ack, Mrs. Donnie Ingram, Pine Fluff, Ack, friends, Mrs. W. J. Eckman left Sunday for Little Rock, Prof. J. D. Brannon agent Monday here with friends, Mrs. C. W. Carter entertained the heroes, Mrs. C. W. Carter entertained the heroes, dinner, Mrs. Manu and Jesse Ridley, Tuckerman, Ark.机动, here Sunrise Sunday. Furniture was held Little Rock, Ark. Uncle Nahon Johnson died Sunday. Furniture was held Little Rock, Ark. Uncle Nahon Johnson died Sunday. Irwin Fulton died Sunday residence. The Rev. D. J. Johnson held Sunday residence. Irwin Fulton died Sunday residence. The Rev. D. J. Johnson held Sunday residence. Newport district, big four the last quarter conference, big four the last quarter conference, E. church Sunday and Monday nights.
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PAGE TWENTY-THIRD
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EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE
THE
Chicago Defender
WORLD'S GREATEST NEW WEEKLY
Founded May 6, 1868, by ROBERT S. ABBOTT, LL. R.
Published by
THE ROBERT S. ABBOTT PUBLISHING COMPANY
(INCORPORATED)
2. The Appointment of a Member of the Race to the President's Cabinet.
MODERN COURTSHIP
"I give thee all I have—my love—
What more," he pleaded, "canst thou wish?"
She playfully gave him a shove
And said, "Get off your knees, you fish;
Whover heard—in modern times—
A guy put love up as a bait?
A flock of dollars, quarters, dimes,
You must produce, friend, ere we mate."
EXIT YELLOW PERIL
SINCE JAPAN has been recognized as one of the world powers there has been much talk of the "yellow peril," the rising tide of color and the advancement of the darker races in general. Behind the talk was a certain amount of fear, and fear only enters the breasts of those guilty of wrong doing and who shrink from the consequences. The government of these countries was threatened the position of these Americans, as powerful as she is, diplomatically avoided crossing Japan on issues the latter held vital and important to her welfare.
THE RECENT EARTHQUAKE that left a large part of Japan in ruins and caused untold suffering brought the rest of the world to a realization of the fact we are all brothers and sisters in a general sense and it matters not what color we may be or from whence we come. It also drove from the minds of agitators the thought that Japan was preparing to down "white supremacy," a hugely important year that was disturbed the sleep many. So the truth it seems is seen, "It's an ill wind that blows no one good."
THE NEW JAPAN was born amid the revolution of 1860. And during the 63 years of its existence no people have manifested greater powers for the assimilation of modern western culture than they. She has been able to attain the rank of a first-class power despite the fact that her soil possesses little or no iron ore, which today is so necessary in the war well as in the manufacture of the war. Yet the Japanese, with their imitators of the war of the white man, but have appropriated only those elements of Occidental civilization that could be made to fit with advantage into her own. JAPAN has set herself up as a guardian of the Far East, and certainly by far she is best able of all Oriental nations to assume that role. One may venture to say that the vast and rich country of China would have long ago gone the way of Africa had there not been a Japan standing protector. And is it not equally fair for Japan to inaugurate a "Monroe Doctrine" for Asia as America for the New World? It is a bit of interest in space what may be the opinion of higher diplomatic circles regarding the future policy of Japan since the devastation of the earthquake.
CIVILIZATION is an abstraction, and is not measured in terms of material accumulation. The mental power that gave Japan her place today in the affairs of the world is still alive and unimpaired. Her losses are mainly material, and she is increasingly fortunate for Japan that she has not been able to get a footing on the mainland. And this has been the central thought of many of the philosophies of her thinkers of the past. To acquire a position on the continent would not only remove her from the world, but would also make her aware of those mineral and coal deposits of which her island empire is so lacking.
THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
THE RECENT TROUBLE in the Adriatic Sea brought the League of Nations into a prominence that is never before enjoyed in this country and we naturally have a aroused a questioning interest in the minds of many people who previously had given it the thought. The usual conception of the league, that it is a machine that has been designed to secure peace. But as a matter of fact that it can many aims it seeks to achieve. The league its might its importance and weak nations of the latter; it undertakes the care, activated and partly developed people; it seeks to protect trade and industry; it endows to make a life of workers better both as to working and livelihood.
AGAIN it opposes the optum traffic and everything that tends to degrade humanity. The manufacturers for wholesale slaughter it proposes to live in time abolish. In short the object of the league of Nations, according to the noblest that have occupied the thoughts of men, and they hold their successful attainment would bring into conditions that would give one a fortune of the maximum.
SUCH A LEAGUE would tend to develop the first fist of human character; it would bring into being kindler feeling for the other fellow; a larger forturance would take the place of intolerance. We may see how such a severe and unjust condition under which now would vanish. Wrong would be over by justice; hate would be turned to love, a forturance would give place to frank and glad acknowledgment of the fact that it is not the color of man by which any man should be judged and give place in society, but by his character and accomplishments. By any such standard of measurement is not any flight of fire so believe that our predeceased proverbs itself worthy of an equal standing with men of different color, and deserving of the highest respect and admiration by reason of our accomplishments in every field of endeavor. If the league of Nations is to be a forerunner of the things we are for it.
THE RECENT TROUBLE in the Adriatic has brought the League of Nations into a prominence it has never before enjoyed in this country and very naturally has aroused a questioning interest in the minds of many people who previously had given it little thought. The usual conception of the league that it is a machine that has been designed to secure world peace. But as a matter of fact that is but one of many aims it seeks to achieve. The league interposes its might between powerful and weak nations in the interest of the world it undertakes the care of united and partly developed people; it seeks to protect trade and industry; it endeavors to make the life of workers better both as to working and living conditions.
---
AGAIN it opposes the optimum traffic and everything that tends to degrade humanity. The manufacture of weapons for wholesale slaughter it proposes to limit and in time abolish. In short the objects of the League of Nations, according to some of its authors, have ever occupied the thoughts of men, and they hold that their successful attainment would bring into being conditions that would give one a foretaste of the millennium.
SUCH A LEAGUE would tend to develop the finer traits of human character; it would bring into being a kindler feeling for the other fellow; a larger bearer of the truth; a larger bearer of the love; see how such a revolution would affect our group. All the disabilities and injustice under which we suffer now would vanish. Wrong would be overcome by justice; hate would be turned to love, tolerance would give place to frank and glad acknowledgment of the fact that our man should be judged and given his place in society, but by his character and accomplishments. By any such standard of measurement it is not any flight of fancy to believe that our group would quickly prove itself worthy of an equal standing with men of different color, and deserving of the highest respect and admiration by our group. Of completeness and bright light of endeavor. If the League of Nations is to be a forerunner of these things we are for it.
SOMETHING WRONG
TAM THE AMERICAN LEGION CONVENTION
has held at San Francisco, Cal., there was a need
for more than three days because the Michigan
legion held out for a complete repudiation of the
Klux Klan. This means in the ranks of the Klux
there must be many Klux sympathizers if it
finally members. This is a mighty poor showing
of the Klux, and the Klux dye-in-the-wool brand, and for the public to discover so many wolves in sheeps
does not augur well for this organization it
is always had the respect and confidence of all. The
Michigan delegation is to be congratulated for
story to their colors and not permitting themselves
stamped as a Klux. This is the way the Klux
to the swine. They insisted that the convention
renounce the Klans as "un-American"
and "contrary to the very principles for which
AT THE AMERICAN LEGION CONVENTION recently held at San Francisco, Cal, there was a deadlock for more than three days because the Michigan delegation held out for a complete repudiation of the Ku Klux Klan. This means in the ranks of the Legion there are members. This is a mighty poor showing for an organization supposed to be the full 100 per cent American dyed-in-the-wool brand, and for the outside public to discover so many wolves in sheep's clothing does not augur well for this organization that has always had the respect and confidence of all. The Michigan delegation is noticing the colors and not permitting themselves to stamped, threatened or coerced into throwing their principles to the swine. They insisted that the convention renounce the Klan as "un-American in fact" and "contrary to the very principles for which the American Legion standa". The better element of the legion must be more dangerous than one outside of camp, and they should appear at once and out these undesirables if they would save their splendid organization. The best way to keep a few rotten apples from spoiling a barrel full of good ones is to throw the bad ones out as quickly as possible. We need the American Legion; we can get along without the Klan.
THE STORY from Louisville to the effect that a presumptuous a corn stock for a tree indicates either that Kentucky corn is tall or that Kentucky corn price is powerful.
}
IS NOT THIS TREASON?
ONE OF OUR CHICAGO DAILIES, self-styled "The World's Greatest Newspaper," is very much opposed to prohibition, nationally and locally. It had a perfect right to oppose the incorporation of the eighteenth amendment to the Constitution. But even so rank and bitter a Southern Democrat as Oscar Underwood of Alabama, who was also opposed to that amendment and voted against it, claimed favor of its enforcement, not in favor of it but because it, and all laws while they are laws should be enforced and obeyed.
WHILE THE SENATOR'S UTTERANCE may have been with mental reservations, yet he does not openly and impudently declare that any and all laws to which he is opposed should be violated, disobeyed and repudiated. This is not true of the "W. G. N." for it not only opposed the eighteenth amendment before it was ratified, but now advocates its evasion and repudiation in any locality where it is unpopular, justification for its defensible and insecure attitude it continually harps upon one of the fruits of its own permissible teachings, with the nullification of the fourth eighteenth amendment by some of the northern states.
IN ONE OF ITS RECENT ISSUES we find: 'The fourteenth and fifteenth amendments are in the Constitution. The United States sent an army into the South to support those amendments and it had success. It was the white race of Potomac, but it failed.* * The carpet bagger followed. The Blacks arose under the bayonets. States were swamped in political debauchery and ignorance and for a while the Blacks ruled. The amendments remain in the Constitution. They are not effective in the South.'
THE RESEARCH naturally infer that the writer of this RESEARCH is a southern cracker, recently from the piney woods of Alabama or Georgia, where falsehood is a virtue and ignorance is glorified. There is more falsehood and exhibition of inexcusable ignorance in the above quotation than can possibly be imagined. There is more falsehood and ignorance of the southern states, but there was a time when they had a voice and participated in the election of those by whom they were to be governed. They not only loyalty supported white men, provided they were not identified with the political organization that sought their political extinction and degradation, but also that the line against ex-slaver and ex-Confederates.
THEY CHEERFULLY FOLLOWED the leadership of such ex-Confederate generals as Mahon and Mosby of Virginia, Longstreet of Georgia, Baeuregard of Louisiana, Alcorn of Mississippi and such able and brilliant civilians as Orr of South Carolina, Parsons of Missouri, Cornell of Wisconsin, sent the finest manhood and purest blood of the South. And yet this narrow and prejudiced sheet would have the public believe that the election of white men of this type, chiefly through the election of Colored men, would result in the ruin of the white race in the South.
THE EDITOR who penned the above quotation wrote that the fourteenth amendment enough to know what every schoolboy in the land knows, that the nullification of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments by some of the southern states was not to maintain the supremacy of the white race—which was never in jeopardy—but to maintain the ascendancy of a local and tyrannical political oligarchy which the sheet referred to has so peremptorily been taken from the hands it has been too helpless, no offense too grave and no methods too inefficient to suppress the Colored vote in the interest of these political machines that this sheet has not excused, supported and defended. And now it gloatantly appeals to the public to treat the eighteenth amendment in the same way that some states have been unwise enough to act favorably upon the amendment, a reference to the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments.
CLAIMING to be a Republican newspaper, it has been the instrument of incalculable injury to that once strong and powerful organization, for it has not only advocated acquiescence by the public in the nullification of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, but it has succeeded largely in having that party's military hitherto andandon its time-opposition by not only ceasing any further opposition to the nullification of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, but has used its influence to induce that party to accept the results of such nullification in making the basis of representation in conventions of the party.
THE FACT that two amendments to the Constitution are practically nullified by some states is no excuse for the nullification of others. And all law abiding officers should hasten upon the enforcement and observance of all constitutional laws and statutes whether they are wise or unwise, popular or unpopular. The advocacy of the breaking of any law should be characterized as treason against the government.
IT IS REQUESTED that the United States government is a half million dollars better off because of the Dempsey-Firpo fight. Perhaps it is patriotism which prompts people to pay to see such spectacles.
CHICAGO'S WATER BUREAU reports a great increase in the consumption of H2O. Is prohibition becoming a reality?
SPEAKING of good reading, there is a class who limit the indispensable books to two—bank and check.
WHAT this country needs is a law against grass widows being as good looking as they are.
"IS ANY LAW fully enforced?" asks Attorney Albert George. Well, there is the law of gravity.
ALL THE MAJOR European powers have voted for a wet ocean beyond the three-mile limit.
DOES jazz just sound that way, or is it really dying?
DO YOU KNOW ABOUT
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER?
[From the Boston Herald]
It would not be surprising if the ambitious weekly organ of the militant element of the Colored Race in America, known as the Chicago Defender, should become a factor in affairs, and quite likely a troublesome factor. It apparently has a large circulation and is prosperous. It sponsors web advertising; hotels, theaters and other concerns, particularly mall order houses, which seek the patronage of the Colored people in the various cities, are liberal advertisers.
But the important thing about this publication is the sort of education which it gives its readers. It announces a platform of two planks: First, the opening up of all trades and trade unions to blacks as well as whites; second, the opening up of the Race to the President's cabinet, "Race" is always spelled with a capital "R". It wants government ownership of telephones, telegraphs, gas, electric and water power plants, street, steam and elevated roads, because it believes that in this way Colored people will have a chance of the places from which they are deprived under private ownership. It believes that in this way Colored people, over whose course up to date it expresses some regret. It does not like the appointment of Slemp as the private secretary because of his known attitude towards the Race question. It does not like the President's failure to move actively against the Ku Klux Klan. But it is willing to wait until his successor gives a final judgment. It insists that he should make the Dyer anti-Lynch bill an administrative measure.
Neglected
THEY'VE NEVER RAVED LIKE THAT OVER US
THE QUARTERTH AMENDMENT
THE FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT
THE 18TH AMENDMENT MUST BE ENFORCED!
WE'LL MAKE FEMINITY OBEY A AMENDMENT!
THE PEOPLE MUST OBEY A AMENDMENT!
THE 19TH AMENDMENT MUST BE ENFORCED!
THE EIGHTTEENTH AMENDMENT!
PROBITION MUST BE RESPECTED!
POLITICIAN
POLITICIAN
SENATE
CONGRESS
OtherPapersSay
THE KLAN AT HARVARD
[Boston Herald.]
Regent. Lace of Harvard and President Comstock of Radcliffe have discussed the Klan in old Cambridge with a vigor which the most violent opponents of the order will approve, and a frankness and fairness which will please even over-zealous citizens of the John Haynes Holmes type. Mr. Lace says that the college rules require that organizations shall file data including constitution and list of members. If it does not, "it is an outlawed and illegal organization, so far as we are concerned." If it compiles with college rules in this respect, that is another matter. The office will then consider the case on the facts furnished. President Comstock would judge an organization in morals and not eradicate it "unless it is expressly forbid such activities." That seems adequate. The Harvard Crimson, which probably has that "inside" and "low down" story, which is so often more interesting and significant than the printed title, has a credible little piece of work in bringing the matter up for discussion.
Cambridge would not seem to be promising soil for the propaganda of an organization of the Klan kind, but the Crimson speaks definitely of "the Harvard Klan." although an inactive one. It is not altogether surprising that it should gain some sort of foothold. Harvard is a microcosm, and not so small, either. Among 3,000 students, drawn from different fields, it would not be impossible to form a church of even the famous society "that voted the earth was flat, as you hat, flatter than that."
The average student is clean, fair, and most important of all, not without a sense of humor. Even a good cause that looks ridiculous is likely to be "joshed." An organization which is ridiculous in appearance, which is insensitive to incentive to laziness is not going to strong among the great mass of alert young men. That unnamed senior, quoted in the Herald yesterday, who said that the Klanmen with their hoods and nightshirts, kleeagles and kinds, would be "blowed away by laughter," although a few members recently approve of klinchnish mumbo-jumbo, spoke a whole blue book. We await impatiently a Klan number of the Lampoon.
Editor's Mail
LIKED BRAZIL ARTICLES
Oct. 23, 2013
Dear Mr. Abbott: I happened to see the last and tent article concerning your trip through South America. I'd be glad to read more from you about that country. How can I get it? If you should put the information in book form at reasonable price I should be glad to sell them here for you. I believe they would have a splendid sale.
May I hear from you, please?
Yours truly,
H. W. McNAMEE
P. O. Box 188. Fort Gibson, Okla
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS
The Sagamore of State Street
[Episode 81]
Hoy, Boy, Page Methuselah
Mexico Boston Bay, Boy, knocked
out Jim Flynn, the Peuble Freman,
Friday night in the third round of a
scheduled 15-round bout.
The Race will continue to progress
in spite of the Ku Klux, high water
and the Blues epidemia.
THE OLD MEDDLER
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It is rather refreshing to see the new women's slippers are both strappeless and buckleless.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923
TALKS ON PREVENTIVE MEASURES, FIRST AID REMEDIES, HYGIENICS AND SANITATION
WORRIED ABOUT "WHITES"
tes: "Doctor, I you write an ar- I have often discharge. Your doctor will know the various antiseptic solutions and medicines to be used in clearing up and curing your case.
We are more inclined to the belief, from your letter, that your trouble is due to inflammation of the bladder, since you path or staining and great difficulty in urinating.
We do not know your age, but where there is a history of a yellowish-brown discharge with foul odor from the genital canal of a woman it is always imperative that a careful examination and diagnosis be made and proper treatment is instituted at once, else cancer or some other disastrous trouble might en-
Dr. Williams
Our advice to you is to seek the
available medical service immed-
lately.
Anxious About Shreds in Urine
Mr. Anxious writes: "I am discontented about the presence of shreds in my urine. The urine is clear and the shreds are also clear and stringy. I contracted gonorrhea four years ago and again two years later. It ran quite well, and then I had five months' treatment from private doctor and four months' treatment at Public Health institute for stricture and prostate gland. Have had three blood tests, all negative. Was discharged, be informed that the shreds did not contain germs, and that the shreds impaired? Is it safe to marry? Where may I learn if I am sterile?
Reply: No, there is no danger of your health being impaired if you were cured. Following chronic gonorrhea shreds often remain in the urine for an indefinite time. These shreds and secretions should be examined under the microscope or prostate gland. If the microscopic examination of secretions in the hands of a good physician reveal the presence of no germs, it is safe for you to marry. But do not marry until you have had such an examination made by an honest, skilled physician. You may learn whether or not you are sterile in the office of your doctor, and then understand how to find the spermatozoa in the secretions from the proper source.
We congratulate you on the intelligence of your letter and wish all of our readers who have been venereally infected would find out whether or not they have been thoroughly cured before marriage—whether it is safe to marry without infecting his innocent wife, whether or not he thinks and looking forward to the bringing of healthy children into the world. A sterile man should not marry a woman this side of 45 or 47 years.
By A. L. JACKSON
also of the law school at Yale. He is a good socialist and at one time campaigned in Alabama for suffrage for the Race, which we all know is the state. He confesses that he is deficient in his knowledge of educated folks among us, but is anxious to make up that deficiency. It was rather interesting to sit at a dinner with a colleague with considerable amusement to himself how he was the author of a petition to the Yale corporation to have our students excluded from using the gymnasium while he was a student there. As he paired it, he has been being just a plain Southerner, even though his family is listed in Who's Who. Now he is Clement Wood, a person instead of Clement Wood, Southerner, and we think you ought to do it, for what has happened in his case can happen in the case of others. And it is up to us to help the good work along.
Wherever women gathered, and men, too, for that matter, the name of the late Mary B. Talbert was well known. For years she has been an indefatigable worker for the cause of life and her talents to their service. Her ambition and determination kept her associates up to the mark and made the preservation of the home of Frederick Doughless possible as a memorial and shrine for the Race. She is mourned by many friends of both men and women. She had won in her service for others. And her place will be a difficult one to fill. Nevertheless it ought to be filled many times over in various sections of this country. The young women of today have so many more advantages for preparation and application than was Mary Talbert on days of Mary Talbert at Oberlin. There are now organizations ready to hand to which one may give one's time and talent. She had to fashion her own organization. Today organizations are crying for service and help, and they hope doubled whether they need leadership from their own kind and thrust it from them when it was offered.
The exigencies of space or rather the lack of it has resulted in our being denied space for publication of the Book Shelf, so to get around the lack of space we occasionally will slip in a book notice in this column. The only way we have of judging whether our readers like it or not is the backwe get in letters differing with such and such a book may be obtained. We get a good many such inquiries and we must ask you to send stamped envelopes for reply when addresses are desired. We publish a company for this service and yet we like to oblige our readers.
No Cases Are Diagnosed and No Prescriptions Given in These Weekly Articles
Mrs. A. L. G. writes: "Doctor, I
wrote on whites. I have often
titles on whites. I have often
would like to have
title on 'whites.
wanted to read an
article written by
you on the sub-
title of the complaint
known as 'whites.'
This is a case six or
seven years old;
not been to affect
my health, it does not let me
mrive in flesh.
I have been to
fourteen doctors and
have had one
A. B.
through examination, and the doctor said the womb was lacerated and had to be sewed—some stitches taken. And another doctor called it catarror of the bladder. These are the symptoms: The discharge is regular every day; the color is like the white of an egg, sometimes it has a yellowish hue, when it has a bad odor. Now for the last three weeks it has bothered me very much. I cannot urinate freely—just a little—and it stings me. I would like to know what to do for a perfect cure for this complaint. I have lots of confidence in your writings and we have been reading the Chicago Defender for years and think it is an interesting feature in the paper. Your article is what I look for when I take up the paper."
Reply: The term "white" is the vulgar or common expression used for the term leucorrhea, a mucopurulent or pus and mucus discharge from the female genital canal. Some females are troubled more than others with leucorrhea. It may be uterine or womb discharge from the neck of the womb. Leucorrhea is a common result. Your case being one of long standing, of six or seven years, no doubt dates back to the time when you had children, if you had a lacerated or torn womb following childbirth. The proper thing for you to do is to have it repaired and the womb cleansed by curtreatment. If the statement is true that you cataract of the phthalocyanine your bladder is irrigated by the use of hot boric acid and 10 or 20 per cent solution of argyrol. Of course you will not be able to use these solutions yourself; they will have to be used by your physician. The first thing to do is to have a careful examination made of the discharge from the vagina and bladder infection. If so, a smear made of the discharge and examined under the microscope will reveal the character of the germ causing the
CLIMBING UP
THE sessions of the National Urban league just closed in Kansas City ought to give encouragement to those people who are interested in the battle of an oppressed race for freedom and a place in the world. These young men and women leaders who are giving their lives to so-called welfare work are in reality the sentinels on our post duty in this warfare for an advancement of an ambitious people. As one looks around at the countless men, women and children in our places who are seeking to find their place in
A. L. Jackson
the world, who desire to express themselves but hardly know where to turn, one must be thankful for these well-trained, keen men and women who are trying to show the way to these seekers after light and guidance, and the way also. While we are in deep sympathy with the school of opinion which believes that our salvation as a Race lies in our development of a stronger Race pride and solidarity and the resultant emergence of a Race leadership which shall be able to take the larger view and pray and work for a leadership which shall be strong and effective not only because it comes from within the Race but because it is capable of leading anywhere and in any situation regardless of race or culture, and in any situation strive to bring along with us white men and women who know and appreciate our worth. This can only be accomplished by working together and in the give and take of competition and service. These young welfare workers are important to our success and strive to keep the lines of communication open while the disciples of Racial solidarity work out their side of the problem.
CLEARER VISION
In talking to Clement Wood, the author of that much - discussed novel on the race question, we were pleased to find him something more than a Southerner. He is an exceedingly interesting personality, with a well trained mind and a determination to see as many ways it might to be. We believe that when he gets time from all of his other interests he will some day give us another novel, or perhaps a more serious treatment of this problem, than he has attempted heretofore. The race question is but one of the many subjects in which he is interested. For the benefit of our readers we give a few facts about him, including that who have read his book or those who may do so later. He is a graduate of the University of Alabama and
9
MARY B. TALBERT
THANK YOU