Chicago Defender
Saturday, December 22, 1923
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
DEFENDER UNCOVERS HIGH SCHOOL "SCANDAL"
TRAIN KILLS WIDOW AND SON
THIS NEWSPAPER
Is Recognized as the Greatest
Advertising Medium by Those
Who Wish to Reach Our People
Everywhere
EVERYBODY READS IT
TRAI
PRINCIPAL ADM
USED CZARLIKE
IN CASE OF
PRINCIPAL ADMITS HE USED CZARLIKE POWER IN CASE OF STUDENT
MOTHER RETUR XMAS SHOPPIN SON BURNED
MOTHER RETURNS FROM XMAS SHOPPING; FINDS SON BURNED TO DEATH
YOUNG WOMAN 14 YEARS FOR
YOUNG WOMAN GIVEN 14 YEARS FOR MURDER
VOL. XVIII. NO. 51.
BY DEWEY R. JONES
Out at Englewood high, 62d St. and Stewart Ave., one of the largest and best known of Chicago's public schools, a slow fire has been smouldering. It suddenly burst into flame, was smothered, and is now smouldering across. It is the same age-old story: Prudence, elegance and unfair dealings. It was used to fan the flames into what threatened to be a seething cauldron—but it didn't because doing the fanning were afraid of getting their fingers burned. As the fire rose, the face boy of unassailable character and a reputation in the school as elsewhere for integrity and manliness, has been sent away from Englewood high school and students are still wondering what it is all about.
As the story goes, Ellis Reid, a 2A student at this institution and a member of the J. J. C. A. was at the trances to the school auditorium stage door on the occasion of a play which was given by the students
New York, Dec. 21—Rush home with a bobby horse for Eddie, and impatient to see the glee on the face of her 2-year-old son, Mrs. Celia Chambers, the lone mother of two children, collapsed when she learned that the child had burned to death during her short absence.
After supper on Thursday, Dec. 13, Mrs. Chambers left Edwards and his sister, Kate, alone in their lodging room house at 79 West 134th St. while she did her Christmas shopping. Mary says Edward left upon the table and touched a bomb to the gas light. The complex quickly find a moment later the gas was enveloped in flames. Mary's screams attracted other occupants of the house
Looking little more than a child, Mrs. Stella B. Rouse, wokking less than 30 pounds, slouched down in her chair and covered her eyes with her hands as the girl meaning of the word "Guilt" startled her reasoning powers once more into action. In panoramic view of her life swept before her eyes. She saw herself a wife at the age of 15 years, a year late a baby came, a little girl cared without a father's presence, a penitent when the child was a year old. Six years ago, she gave her love to another man, which culminated in marriage five years later. The age of 28 years she finds herself staring blankly into the future, for a jury in the Criminal court of Judge Frederic R. De Young has just sentenced her to 14 years in prison for the murder of 18-year-old girl, accusing her of homicide. As the condemning court was being led from the museum to the 12-year-old, she was taken home, without your permission, as is to snatch her from the museum room then fell senseless to the floor. Mrs. Stella B. Rouse, 1909 Coventry, testified in her defense that he had taken Ophelia into her home, and that Ophelia had stolen her husband's
on Wednesday, Dec. 5. The instructions given him by his superior officers were to allow no one to pass him in, and to allow no one to his statement. Her girl came to his door during the performance and demanded admittance. When told that she could not pass the young lady started through, but was halled by the custodian, held him across the entrance, the girl touched him, but seen her way blocked indignantly retraced her steps.
Life Threatened
A few minutes later six white students came on the post and muttered threats at him and informed him that he had insulted a white girl, the penalty for which, according to them, would be death. He escaped them into the cloak room and then making his getaway vla, the back door.
The new bride Reid was summoned into the office by principal, J. E. Armstrong. He was on
(Continued on Page 3)
TURNS FROM
PING; FINDS
D TO DEATH
who put out the flames after the child's face had been burned her and recognition. He died shortly after.
The grief-stricken little mother, who is the sole support of herself and two babies, was deserted by her husband shortly after the birth of the boy. Speaking a hard worker and does day work.
Thursday she hurried from her job to her Christmas shopping spend, what she had saved to make her own happy holiday as Tuesday of this week the little woman was unable to secure enough funds to bury the charred mass of humanity which lies cuddled in a tiny white skirt at Undertaker Steep across the street from her home.
IAN GIVEN FOR MURDER
love, causing him to move to 19 W. 32nd St. where Ophelia had free access to his room.
On Aug. 22, last, she had seen Ophelia and her husband, Ossia, board a street car early in the morning. She had watched the clock daily, knowing that she would need a street car work that evening. She had seen alight from the car in company with Ophelia, bid her an affectionate farewell and start towards his place of employment.
Stella, according to her own admission, had a knife. She claimed that she stabbed in self defense. Two men who were watching the women told a far different story. W. L. Doyle, 1821 Warren Ave., stated that he was standing in front of his place of business at the house where she and Mrs. Rose stab her victim twice in the neck. then chase her into a road areaway at Horsham and Emma Hill, where she planned to kill the man. Ophelia body fury forced her to leave the hospital in his teenage years by Herman Lindsey, 1825 W. Madison Street, who commanded the women to steal the dying woman's house hospital, but she plunged into a few minutes later. Stella was killed by her death. Ophelia was buried in Lincolnshire, where her father, who stated that she had been here just three months from Mississippi.
Arrest 5 Who WereEating $30 Worth of Pies
The police reported that they found in the basement $200 worth of women's clothing which they believe was stolen from a tailor shop at $209 Fifth. They early Wednesday charged the woman charged with burglary. An additional charge of violating the Sullivan law was brought against McLean when an automatic pistol was found in his possession.
LOUISVILLE IS HOST TO KAPPAS
Louisville, Ky., Dec. 21.—Louisville is to be the secession meeting of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity Dec. 26 to 29. The occasion will be the thirteenth annual grand chapter sessions and all Kappa is alive with interest and enthusiasm over coming of so large a group representative men of our Race and nation.
Judging from the intellectual and social programs that have been arranged, this will probably be the most glorious of the many splendid gatherings of the strong clan of Kappa Alpha Psi. Representatives from most of the chapters of this fraternity will be present and introduction of fellow present. Large delegations from Chicago, St. Louis, Indianapolis and Nashville have been arranged for the meeting will open with public excursion Wednesday evening. Dec. 26 and close on Saturday evening with the annual banquet. The list speakers at the opening session includes W. Ellis Stewart, secretary of the chapter; Chicago grand polmarcher; Dr. Curl G. Roberts, polmarcher of the Chicago, Commi chapter, and Prof. A. E. Jayzeek of the Louisville alumni chapter. Professor Wilson Lovett, of Chicago grand polmarcher, Standard bank, will deliver and address at one of the business sessions.
The Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, which is now one of the leading college chapters on all of the classes, A. university from the Atlantic to the Pacific, has had a remarkable history, and in its 13 years of existence has brought forth a type of the progressive types of people as leaders in achievement, whose contributions to community and Racial life carry its progressive teachings.
M.ALTER Slover, Adams, Elmer V. Mosee and Prof. A. E. Mayeck, chairmen of the entertainment, banquet and program committees, respectively and William H. Perry, Jr., has made a preparation for the entertainment of the delegates. Outstanding features of the social program are a reception dance by the Ladies auxiliary, a dance by the party delegates, the local chapters of the Omega Psi fraternity and Delta Sigma Theta sorority.
Numerous dinners and house parties have been held on the occasion of the party, and any delegates will find time hanging heavy on their hands. Two hundred seats have been reserved at McCauley's theater for a Kappa theater party on the occasion of the party. The annualeral the Louisville alumni chapter as host, assisted by its splendid Ladies' auxiliary, has spared no pain to prepare for an epoch marking session, the annualeral the march, and J. Ernest Williams, grand keeper of records, have arranged a strong program for the business sessions of the fraternity.
CHICAGO, ILL., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
COL. ROSCOE SIMMONS CARRIES DEFENDER'S PLATFORM TO VICTORY
CHRISMUS IS A-COMIN'
BY PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR
Bones a gittin' achy,
Back a feelin' col',
Hain's a growin' shaky,
Jes' lak I was ol'.
Fros' erpon de meddah
Lookin' mighty white;
Snowdraps lak a feddah
Slippin' down at night;
Jes' keep t'ings a-hummin'
Spite o' frost' an' showahs,
Chrismus is a-comin'
An' all de week is ouahs.
Little Mah-a-axin',
"Who is Santy Claus?"
Meks it him' o' taxin'
Not to them de laws.
Chillun's pow'ful tryin'
To a pusson's grace
W'en dey go to pryin'
Right on till'oo you' face
Down emnong yo' feelin' s;
Jes' pears lak dat you
Got to change you' dealin' s
So's to tell 'ent true.
An' man picammy—
Dreamin' in his sleep!
Come hyeah' Mammy Jinny,
Come an' ten' a peep.
Ol' Mass' Bob an' Missia
In dey house-up dah
Got no chile lak dis is,
D' ain't more any whaith.
Sleep, mh' little jammy.
Sleep, you little limb,
He do' know what mammy
Done saved up ful him.
Dev'll be banio pickin'
Daming all night thoo.
Dev'll be lute' o' chicken'
Flenty tukky' too.
Drama to wet yo' whistles
So's to drive am china.
Whine' bear fur drizzles
Talin' on de hills?
Jes' keep the a-hummin'
Spite o' go' an' snipins'
Chrismus day's a-comin'
An' all de week is ouahs.
The victory was a surprise to the whole country and particularly to the British, because the criticism of what is known as the "Old Guard leadership." Once, more and more, the Guard was required to be trained, and once more it brought victory out of defeat.
Washington has been attired as never before by a side of political leadership and the contest has attracted universal attention in the East.
Coolidge Helps
Following the argument of Roscoe Simmons before the full committee of the Senate, Howard was advised that something had to be done to satisfy Colored Republicans in the free states, who were determined to vindicate the oppressors in Republican cities in the South. President Coolidge, who had just appointed Walter Cohen, is said to have advised his friends on the committee. They took his advice. The first skirmish was won when the sub-committee, whose chairman was helpline to both Southern Republic organization and Colored people generally after listening Monday to Roscoe Simmons for two hours decided to and a hearing to the full committee.
Senator Howell replied to Simmons from the chair. He said that the matter had been closed for two
Cohen were asked by the chairman to take charge of the race from every section met and unanimously agreed that Roscoe Simmons should preside; the militant leader of New Jersey, whose figures Monday had impressed the sub-committee, was asked, as representative of the North, to back up Simmons.
Simmons' Plea
the ball room of the New Willard was packed for the hearing. Howe- vided Adams called on Simmons to proceed with his argument. For an hour the old veteran stood before the commit- tory and asked him to face in his hands. Once he was about to conclude, but Chairman Adams indicated that the committee would be the cause or his Race along with the case of his colleagues.
White ladies joined in the cheering, often rising to their feet, while the committee was in constant applause. When Simmons saw the crowd, he smiled and it was apparent that the case was won at least in the hearts of his hearers.
Dr. Cannon in brave language then advised the committee that the North stood behind every word that had been said, and that he would show it the next election would show it, unless justice was mine. But this point the committee got. Oh it fits, judges themselves, being the nation's Arkansas governor, inassioned plan for Colored Republicans. "Henceforward I will stand with them," he thundered. Senator Howell, chairman of the
Insane Asylum Takes Man and Wife; She Dies
NO SCHOOL; FIRE IS THE CAUSE
Fire in the Forestville public school at East 115th St. and St. Lawrence Ave. damaged the building so badly that many classes were canceled for Tuesday.
Children on their way to school turned a corner and came upon the familiar four story brick structure find the walls blackened, most of the windows shattered and six rooms in the interior seriously damaged. Almost 1,400 children attend the school.
"No school today!" raced like wildfire through the neighborhood. "No school today!"
Damage is estimated at about $10,000, although the flames were subdued an hour after the firemen arrived. The library is unknown and Fire Attorney Elmer Whitty promised an investigation.
Flames shot through the building, according to fireman, with astonishing speed, a machine discovered the blaze on the mine. The firefighters foreground the first engine company had arrived it had reached the troop. Battalion Chief William Brown of the company answered the first alarm and ordered more equipment.
Anderson Is Again Named as Collector
New York, Dec. 21.—long career of notables public service, especially in his efficient discharge of duties as collector of internal revenue funds. New York district by Charles W. Anderson was reawarded with the Coulidge again nominated Mrs Anderson to succeed him in his present capacity.
JOHN H. BURKE
For ye a r s
is fondly known
by his tion of
his passions
been prominent in the councils of New York and the party of New York state and, for that master, the nation. He has held numerous positions of trust in the nation.
DON'T BE MISLED
The Chicago circulation of this
newspaper exceeds that of all
other local publications
combined by many thousands
THERE'S A REASON
SON
O-YEAR-OLD
AND BOY LOSE
AT CROSSING
ND SIXTY-TWO-WOMAN AN LIVES AT
SIXTY-TWO-YEAR-OLD WOMAN AND BOY LOSE LIVES AT CROSSING
Mrs. Chlvers was on route from Beverly Hills where she was em- patured, spent time in school and on his return from his studies he had
WAR VETERAN
HAD RETURNED
ET HIS CLOTHES
WORLD WAR SHOT; HAD TO GET H
WORLD WAR VETERAN SHOT; HAD RETURNED TO GET HIS CLOTHES
When Taylor went away in Man he left some of his clothes in the apartment. He appeared Wednesday and demanded them from his wife. Mrs. Taylor told him to get them, she said in her statement to
COMBINE NOW LS MISS. LIFE
ATLANTA CO CONTROLS
ATLANTA COMBINE NOW CONTROLS MISS. LIFE
Memphis, Penn. Dec. 21. — The Service company of Atlanta, Ga., acquired the controlling interest in the Mississippi Life Insurance company Dec. 10.
Details of the transaction could not be obtained from the publication.
In the transaction, the insurance company paid one million dollars in cash between some of the service companies. The insurance company with his license J. Ai Robinson and W. H. King, were in Memphis representing the Service company in closing the deal. The
her patrol, the police department, the fire department, the commissions, the large and the enterprise in the warehouse, the large and the enterprise in the box and the warehouse $10,000,000 was principal of operations in the warehouse, and the Service Renty building, which is now building a King, well learned that the intention is to make the Service Memphis one of the important centers of operations.
24 PAGES
Mrs. Michel Chivers, a widow and formerly of Georgia, living at 11315 St. Carpenter St., Morgan Park, and her adopted son, Lawrence Green, 12 years old, were instantly killed last Friday night at the Chicago. Rock island and Pacific railroad crossing at 1421th St. by train No. 208 from Peoria en route to Chicago. Although the bodies of the aged woman, who was 62 years old, and that of Green were pitched blight in the air and found a blood away alongside of baskets of provisions which the victims were carrying, neither engineer nor fireman were aware of the tragedy, according to their statements, until they had alighted on the station platform and were forced by Defender rescuers that two persons had been killed.
The Annelus building, at 3501 Wabash Ave. lies the scene of another murder Wednesday afternoon, Dec.
12, when Wil-
23, when World
22, war veteen in,
was shot to death by
Maggie Taylor,
in her apart-
ment, on the
third floor, at 6
3:06.
1930
For seven
months Mrs.
Taylor and her
husband have
been separated
said. May
without any
aparent cause.
where had been so trouble between them and she did him until he came to her apartment Wednesday she had not seen or heard him and didn't know that he his father's home at 3633 State St.
PRICE TEN CENTS
been sent by his landlady on his usual daily mission to meet Mrs. Chivers and escort her home.
It was brought out at the Inquest, which was held Monday at 1971 W. 111th St. that the train was coming to meet Mrs. Chivers, proaching the crossing at the rate of 40 to 80 miles per hour. It is said that the flagman was at his post, the east gate was down, but it is said, the west gate was out of working condition. The coroner's jury held that the houses are to be buried by the family and the Morgan Park Beauty Men's association.
The death of Lawrence Green wipes out the last of his family with the exception of a mother who is in an inpatient Massachusetts. Mrs. Chivers left an aged mother, Mrs. Americus Wilkinson, of La Grange. Ga., a brother, the Rev. A. W. Wilkinson, also of La Grange, both of whom are en route by train to Sepharah, Powell, Wilkinson, 485 Chippewa and a niece, Mrs. Katie Tiggs, 4840 Dearborn St.
the police, and proceeded to his trunk to get his clothes for him. While she was thus engaged her husband cursed her she said to be called and asked for his razor. She told him it was in the other room and that he should go and get it. In the meantime she had secured his revolver from her own trunk. He moved toward her and he started toward her and she warned him not to advance any farther. He ignored the warning and continued on, she said; then she began firing at him. Five shots were fired and the revolver, and Taylor stopped to his death, shot through the stomach.
Officer Ernest Rogers on the Stanton Ave. station was the first on the scene. He was followed by Officer Inglis and Sergeant They found Roger in in dress, with a flask containing liquor on his person. The gun was found under the mattress. When Officer Rogers returned again to Taylor, after searching for the dead man, he was on duty, the officer said. The body was taken to Hill's morgue, 3641 State Lt. where an inquest was held Saturday, as was continued to Dec. 11. The State station gave Mrs. Tavlor, who is in custody, time to obtain counsel.
transaction was handled through the law firm of Metcalf & Metcalf.
The Mississippi Life Insurance company is one of the largest insurance organizations operated by the state. The company is formed around $20,000,000 and assures of $50,000,000 in insurance premiums more than 200,000 young
SEEKS TO STOP FRAUD EDIGT ON MAGNOLIA MAIL Head of Magnolia Remedy Co. Asks Court to Halt U. S. Stamping Mail "A Fraud"
Jacksonville, Fla. Dec. 21—Bill for an injunction to restrain a restrain Herbert E. Ross from further refusal to address him to or to the Magnolia Remedy company, under which firm name he trades, and to restrain the postmaster from stamping such a document addressed to him or to the Magnolia dead letter office at Washington in pursuance to a "fraud" order against him by Postmaster General Hilbert W. H. Brown, who there last week by Dr. D. H. Brown. The bill after restricting the privileances complained of and alleging him to be the postmaster of a mailing office so disposing of mail addressed him and his firm has caused and is causing him thousands of dollars loss in the postmaster's office. The notice issued and made permanent. It is alleged in the bill that the complainant, Dr. D. H. Brown, is the same person referred to in a certain notice filed under date of Feb. 2, 1923; that the defendant, Herbert E. Ross, is the postmaster at Jacksonville with exclusive control there. It is then alleged that the Magnolia Remedy company is a more trade name under which the complainant does business in Jacksonville, the business he is the exclusive owner.
Treats Tuberculosis
The complainant alleges in the bill that he is a regularly licensed physician under the laws of Florida; that he is a licensed nurse at time. Fla, the Magnolia Remedy company, a name used to designate a formula prepared by him for the treatment of tuberculosis, pneumonia, allergy and other pulmonary diseases. The complainant sets forth that he does not claim that his romance will lead to marriage and that family. But does claim that it cures diseases of the respiratory organs, and that this claim is based on the results secured by its use by hundreds of patients. The bill sets forth that due to increase in his business the complainant moved Jacksonville to hire Jacksonville to laureate his business is transacted through the United States mails which made him approximately $1,000 a month. The complainant, a prominent alleges, he sent out through the mails a large amount of advertising matter and received through the mails money by checks and post-
Some time prior to Feb. 2, 1922, he allogues, certain competitions of his complained to the postoffice department that he was not engaged in a legitimate business and he was notified by the postmaster general to appear at Washington on a certain day and that he is a certain should not be issued a gift him.
Issue Fraud Order
Because of the short notice given and financial matters, complaintant Mr. Brown says, but only through counsel, and after a hearing at which no witnesses were examined, complaintant Mr. Brown said order was issued against him. Brown alleges that since the issuance of said order the defendant, Mr. Brown, has been held to him and that as a result he has been deprived of the receipt of checks and money orders amounting to $10,000. Mr. Brown has informed him that he intends to stamp on each letter addressed to complainant the word "complaintant" or knowing what its contents are and return said letters to the dead letter office at Washington. The complaintant will be will to destroy his business. He derails any fraud or intent to fraud and asks that the court issue a warrant from so marking his letters and refusing to deliverame to him.
ELECTION DATES
The polls in Chicago will be opened on Monday. Primary elections and three registration days for the voters in minnesota will be held in a presidential election year and several other offices will be decided on at some these elections. Cut this out and register to vote. You will be required to register. You must be registered March 18—Registration for state and
March 18-Registration for state and county primary.
March 19 and 20 - Retention.
March 19 - Indeterminal state and country primary.
June 4—Judicial election.
Oct. 4—First day of general regis.
Oct. 14—Second day of general registration.
Oct. 15 and 16—Canvass of precincts.
Oct. 18—Revision of registration.
Nov. 4—Presidential, state and county election.
DRINKS WOOD ALCOHOL
While brewing over domestic affairs,
after a quarrel with his wife, Olsie
Becken 27, 3134 St. W. to his room and drank wood alcohol.
SEND NO MONEY
Columbia
Columbia
FOR THE
LATEST HITS
Just check the records you want and mail
them to the following addresses:
MONEY. Pay the Postman when he
delivers the package.
Wood. Blues
726. Wow. Weepins. Blues
756 Katy Wollman Bestsie Smith
Jimmy Jones at the Piano
Greater than Jailhouse Blues
13000 *My Sweetie Went Away*
756 Who Tillie Take Your Time
Clinet and Piano Accomp.
13024 *Lawrence Goanin' Blues*
756 Moanin' Goanin' Blues
13023 *Waltzing For the Evening
Mail*
756 Don't Never Tell Nobody
Clinet and Piano Accomp. Fletcher
Henderson
4A001 *Jailhouse Blues*
756 Jailhouse Dream Blues
4A000 *I Never Mooin the Sunshine*
756 Awful Moanin' Blues
1201 Uncle Sam Blues
756 Kansas City Man Blues
12056 *Chicago Bound Blues*
756 I Love My Man Better Than
I Love Myself
12063 *I've Got the Blues For*
Rampart Street
Chattanooga Blues
14623 *If You Don't Go Give What*
It Wants to Get it *Somewhere Else*
We have any O.Keb. Paramount, Aisle, Vocational or Columbia record advertised elsewhere in this paper.
Send for our special catalogue listing Distinctive the names and names of collections Special catalogue of blues on all records for your photograph—and on the famous G. K. Roll for your player piano—FUENTHIC FREE ON EQUESTRIAL.
All orders shipped the same day received.
KAPP'S
2200 W. Madison St. Chicago, Ill.
THE MASTER OF THE ROAD
While hubby frets and frowns at home, in an attempt to prepare his own supper, friend wife shifts gears and yells, "Taxi" along Gotham's busiest thoroughfares. It's the latest stunt in New York where folks are "always trying their darndest" to keep just one jump ahead of Chicago. Women drivers are supplanted by men when night falls.
DIED WITH BOOTS ON FIGHTING BIG CRACKER "ARMY"
Joe Pullen Faces Machine
Gun in Mississippi and
Shoots to Kill
Clarksdale, Miss., Dec. 21.—This section of the state has added another disgraceful chapter to its already long story of crime against members of the Race, but it is one which carries a lesson to a class of "whites" who have from time immemorial browneboot and robbed the blacks; while the blood-sucked Mississippi a place of profit and case in which to live.
Demands Money
W. T. Sanders, who owns a small plantation near Drew, a small town a short distance from this place, and the Race who worked a part of the Sanders place on shores, owed him $50. This Pullen denied and in so doing he aroused the anger of Sanders, who upon a friend, J. D. Manning, for assistance and together, armed with pistols, they went to a cabin which they had seen Pullen enter. The latter was at by Sanders. He returned the fire and in the shooting which followed both white men were killed. The sound of the firing drew a crowd of men, and Sanders was nothing left for him to do but sell his life as clearly as possible, secured an additional revolver, a shotgun and several hundred rounds of ammunition and retreated to a shallow swamp.
Hunt Pullem
In a short space of time a crowd of over 1,000 armed white men had surrounded Pullen's place of concealment, from which he continued to attack them, which found its mark among the gang of would-be lynchers. In all, he wounded over a score, killing five outright, and many of the others so will no doubt mount to 10 or 12. Reinforcements were called for and soon a machine gun was brought into play. This group was led by a man named the latter being one of those killed by Pullen. Over 400 rounds were fired by this pose before Pullen was finally disabled. His body was dragged through the streets of Drew left feet in the middle of the main thoroughfare.
The Cause
This bloody incident is just another brought about by the system of robbery practiced by the so-called robbers, who are for the purposes rob the members of the Race who work their pieces on shares through a system of peonage. They have been supplied with supplies needed from time to time; they underweight and cheat on the weights and measures of the products resulting from their labor. The lack of supplies until life is unbearable and they realize that their victims know that the laws down here are for whites only, and that the robbery is an incident at Drew should be as much of a lesson to this class of robbing whites as to members of the Race who work their pieces on shares which allow practices to exist which lead to such results.
INJURED BY AUTOMOBILES
Listen to
BESSIE SMITH
sing these weird, woof-
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Any Woman's Blues
and
Cemetery Blues
(Record 13001-D
75c)
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New Process Records
Columbia Phonograph Company, New York
Buys City Jail to House Fine Breed of Chicks
Bellport, L. I. Dec. 21.—Chronec Ward, a farmer near here, bought for $50 the one-story, 10 by 12, steel-lined jail Bellport used for 20 years. "To him my chickens in" he explained to townmen.
The building was one of half a dozen owned by the town of Brookhaven. The Bellport village selectmen rented it for $10 a month, but since prohibition, it was explained, it had been a loss.
DOCTORS REMOVE DULLET AND
PIECE OF WATCH FROM MAN
New York, Dec. 21—The main spring of a watch was removed with a bullet by doctors from the abbreviation MONTE, who was shot at 134th St. and Lenox Ave. Saturday night by James A. Chapman, 88 W. 100th St., Monroe where it was learned that the bullet had passed through his watch and carried several parts with it. Chapman then fired five shots at Monroe during a dispute on the street over money matters. One shot only took effect. Monroe was rushed to Harlem hospital and was taken rapidly. Chapman was arrested.
CALL ON PRESIDENT
Washington, D. C., Dec. 21—Senator L. Heilshalter B. Fourth Assistant Postmaster General Harry Billett Thomas of Thomas, the different rite commission, and Jefferson H. Coage, formerly of Wilmington, Del, now of Washington, called on the president recently for a visit to which has not been disclosed. It is rumored that Mr. Coage has been recommended for a very high federal position here. He is one of Washington's prominent Race business men. MRS. PATSY ANDERSON DEAD Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 21. Mrs. Patsy Anderson, 411 Carlton-Ave, who lived to the grand old age of 105, died last Wednesday at her home. Mrs. Anderson was born in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of Tazwell Lewis and Katie White, also Virginians.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
YORK"
Photo by McLoughal, N. Y.
prepare his own supper, friend
nourgauftares. It's the latest
adest" to keep just one jump
when night falls.
CON GAME GETS TWO $800 WHEN OLD 'TIP' WORKS
Woman Draws Money Out of Bank to Be Robbed Later on Pocketbook Trick
Springfield, Mass., Dec. 21.—Two exponents of the time-worn "alimam" game made their appearance in August through with the intracases of their method of operating the stunt Mrs. Anna Williams, 59 Hollyce St., had been victimized of her savings of 800 that she wished to lose. The Chicago National bank after falling for the smooth line of talk dotted out by the two men. John A. McNeil that she was walking along Main St. near Ferry St. about 9 o'clock in the morning when one of the men accosted her saving, and she saw him pick up that you see that fellow pick up that pocketbook. I will catch him and make him give us part of the cash he pair pretending to count the contents. Just as she arrived the pocketbook was being closed and the men were saying that $2,600 represented them.
The man who called her attention to seeing the pocketbook being held up, as all three had seen it lying on the sidewalk. But there was a hitch. Mrs. Williams must first be taken to the hospital before such a sum could be divided. She told the pair she had $800 deposited in the Chiepeo Nacional. She went to the bank and withdrew the $800, which she handed to her wily "hendefactors," and the trio Elliot St., which was reached about 10:30, the two men agreed to return at 12:30 for a fee, and for all. As far as the woman was concerned it appeared that the matter was already settled, for when she showed up at 12:30 the two men failed to appear.
HIT WITH SUN
During an altercation with Paul Peterson, 61st E. 1st St., Henry Young, 5, 601 Grand Litchi, into strangle over the head with a gun. He sustained a painful cut over the eye.
SOUTHERNERS IN WILD GRAB FOR SOUTH AMERICA
Countless hundreds of white men are going to Brazil and other South American countries from this country to the future for fortune and fame just as in earlier days they saw it in the Southern states of our own continent. It ought to be self-evident that if these people can see fortune and success ahead of them in a strange way, they ought to help our people to the same thing and step in ahead of the Southern white to take their share. That is the only part of the world where color is no barrier. This is what gives a man a chance to take out of the natural resources, as yet unexplored, more than he has to put into action. In other articles and in many issues the editor of this paper has tried to point out to his people the wealth and opportunities awaiting them in the edge and some capital with which to start a career in South America.
"Safest Country"
J. C. Culberman. a business man
practiced in New York, said in New
York letter, 1965.
Preparations are now under way for an excursion to South America in 1925 when a two months' special when it comes to give prospective settlers and businessmen and women an opportunity to see the country first hand for themselves. Watch for the advertising which will be presented about the proposed excursion tour.
LONOON SINGER IN CITY
John C. Payne, eminent barke of London, England, was here this week visiting friends. He has been requested to give a talk about the excursion and sign at Seattle. Wash. His library includes several cities on the coast. He has written articles on the critics as the possessor of a marvelous voice, and attracts large audiences whenever he appears in a reel. He records for the Viator Photograph company.
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Pastor Deserts Wife for Choir Girl; Arrested
Dallas, Tex., Dec. 21.—Authorities have not yet taken any definite action concerning the arrest of a fictive F. W. Lynch, an lynchman, accused of killing a child on a charge of bigamy preferred by a wife in Wichita, Kan., whom he deserved. According to information, Rev. Lynch is determined his wife more than a year ago in Kankakee, ill, where he was pastor of the First Christian church, and eloped with his wife, Martha, with her. With this young lady the evangelist preached through the states of Oklahoma and Texas and then married the singer in the latter city. The mother of a 5-weeks-old baby. While the preacher admits that he has done wrong, the wife sits in a house room and wonder what will become of her and the baby.
Washington, D. C., Dec. 21.—An hour after Ransell and Broussard, President Coolidge to refuse to re-appoint Walter L. Cohen compriser of the president had sent Cohen's name to the Senate. That was the first reply the senators had to their request, and he received it. The re-appointment was one of the first signed by President Coolidge when he came into office. Mr. Cohen was known nothing of his appointment until he read it in the afternoon papers, following his fight before the Federal Reserve against reduction of representation.
Will Be Confirmed
Already Senator Jones has announced that Cohen's appointment committee on commerce. If any fight is to be made on him it will be made, not in the committee but against him in the committee means that no charges will likely be sustained. Every indication is that Republican senators, except three or four, will vote for his confirmation and Cohen will be appointed senator, including Edwards, New Jersey; Walsh, Massachusetts, and Copeland of New York, will be for him. McKinley, Inglis will support his confirmation. Republican senators openly support McKinley, Lodge, Edge, Pepper, Reed (Pennsylvania), Jones, Willis, Pess, Watson, Couzens, Cummins, Ekins, Warren, Johnston, Warren, Shortridge and Reed. The seven collectors in Cohen's district have written letters of warmer praise of his administration of
GUN TOTERS FINED
McKinley William, alias Robert Jones, #412 Corlain St. who was arrested for carrying a gun, was fired $100 and costs. Jalifhil William, alias Jones, #25 Corlain St. who was arrested Officer Walsh, was fired $100 and costs and sentenced to the house of correction for carrying a gun.
FACULTY IN REGITAL
The faculty of the Colordage-Taylor school appeared in reital at Pilgrim church assisting.
MAN IS KILLED BY SWEETHEART AFTER QUARREL
Mack Lewis Shot Thru Head While in Bed by Girl He Threatened. to Beat
Another man to go to his death at the hands of a woman, his alleged common law wife, was Mack Lewis, who was shot through the brain early Sunday morning as he lay in bed by Miss Eleanor Green, 23, who died with him as his wife at the 33d St. address. Lewis died at the South Side hospital Sunday afternoon. The death of Lewis makes him one of the many victims who have been recently shaken on the South side by a gunshot. He was under the common law. Under this arrangement Lewis and Miss Green had been living at the home of Mr. Lewis, Hazelle as roommates since September.
Attend Dance
Saturday night they attended a dance at 658 Cottage and Green going first and Lewis and Bazelle going later.
In her statement to the police Miss Green said that at midnight Lewis came to her and said, "Let us go home." But she didn't want to leave the house, she said, and told Lewis, and added that she wasn't coming home at all. This appered him and he said, according to her, "I'm going to break your law and see why in h- it wouldn't come." Lewis and Bazelle then, left the house, and there. Both men had retired when Mrs. Bazelle and Miss Green came in at 4:30 a.m. m. Miss Green went to the dresser arranging her hair when Lewis and was standing at the dresser arranging her hair when our car was home when you got ready."
"Yes," Miss Green replied, according to her story; "you went off and left me."
"I'm going to break your jaw," Lewis added, she said. The girl reminded him that he made that threat before the others at the dance, so he did it, too, "was the alleged reply.
At that instant Miss Green said she stepped to the foot of the bed, she stepped to the mattress and fired at him. The bullet penetrated Lewis' forehead, passed through the foot and came out at the end of the bed to rise from the bed. He was removed by the police to the South Side hospital, where he died Sunday afternoon. He was arrested by Sergeant Glenz / and Officers Stokes, Walsh and Meyers of the Stanton Ave. police. They met her in com-munity and she was taken to south on Vernon Ave, toward 45th St. Miss Green said "she didn't mean to shoot Lewis". Lawrence's interest, held at Lawrence Jones' morgue, 3091 Cottage Grove Ave., Tuesday Miss Green was held to the grand jury on a charge of murder. She is a sister of James Green, 603 Vinnings Ave.
STORY GROVE
Mr. and Mrs. Hertlest Sanders are the proud parents of a 10-pound baby boy born Tuesday, Dec. 4, at Provident hospital. Mother and baby are doing
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
The board of directors of the Binga State bank declared a semi-annual dividend of $360 per share, payable Jan. 1, 1924, to stockholders of record Dec. 20.
At a special meeting of the stockholders held on Aug. 12, a resolution was adopted that the capital stock of the Binga State bank be increased to a total of $0.000 million. The price of this additional stock was set at $130 per share. This has been subscribed by the stockholders.
The foundation of the new home of the Binga State bank on State Street near 515 is about completed. The building is a memorial to the doors of a modern bank building. The polished pink granite, a structural material that stood in the columns for the front of the building. A ladies' department offering special service, a fine marble and granite countertop, the fire and burglar proof vaults and the modern safe deposit and furious treatment will make it one of the finest banking institutions of its size in the state.
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
TUT'S TOMB IS 'GOLD NEST' OF RARE TREASURES
Find Large Collection of Gilded Scepters of Excellent Workmanship
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Luxor, Egypt. Dec. 21.—Removal over the doors of the great blue and gold and white tomb of Tut-Ankh-Amen's tomb has, it is understood, revealed a find which is unknown. Howard Carter's high hopes of discovery of the history of Eptology the full picture-urea regina of an Egyptian king, the great king of gilded glided scopes both of the priety with sloping head pieces and of the one significantly known crook shape, the other rule. The Egyptian rule is inhalation depleted as carrying it is also discovered various staves, one and also discovered various spikes, one didly jeweled in faintness and all. These articles bear the now famous carouche of Tut-Ankh-Amen.
Fine Workmanship
Another alabaster vaso of fine workmanship also is said to have moved the chamber with the almost care to the ante chamber of the tomb for preliminary preservative treatment in the laboratory in the tomb of Sadi I. A closer examination of the great setteet, which hang over the second shrine, shows that it has come apart, one portion lying on the floor, the other morning in the laboratory. Prof. Percy Newberry, the renowned British Egyptianologist who examined the collection of secretaries morning in the laboratory. Later he visited the tomb for the first time and examined the collection of secretaries morning in the laboratory. The opening of the second shrine probably will be deferred until the first shrine, or cannister which will require several days. The increasing evidences of the shrine laid to rest justifies the expectation that as the dismantling of the shrines proceeds the various component attire may be brought to light.
Mr. Carter hopes to find all four of the official headresses of the white crown of upper Egypt; the red, sloping headress with projecting crown of lower Egypt; the double blue crown of lower Egypt; the double blue crown or battle helmet with its close fitting cap known as the chapel crown; and the present no idea of how these headresses were constructed. But have some kind of wicker frame built upon some kind of wicker frame.
SLEDGE HAMMER USED ON JANITOR DURING ARGUMENT
New York, Dec. 21. -- Staggering into the W. 131st St. police station blood, which flowed from an unply wound that he had received by being hammer Sunday, William Champl, 469 Lenox Ave., explained his story to Leuteman Leath and then collapsed. Champl's condition is seriated and may die from a fractured skull. Sunday afternoon Champl returned with the news that during an argument, Milton Mays, 34, junior of the building, had attacked his wife, Ada Building, with a hammer. Falls of the building were crowded with spectators. As Champl spoke to the turbance, it is said, Mays struck him a wicked blow on the head with the sledge hammer from behind. Blood and wound. Women screamed as they hastily scattered from the scene. Police whistles piew and during the attack a murder was being committed.
Champ was rushed to Harlem hospital, hoping the hammer away from Mays. His wound was attended but he insisted upon leaving the hospital in an effort to avoid the told of Mays' arrest and staggered to the police station. Confronted with his assaultant, he attempted to kill him, during which he collapsed. While at the station, Mays, who was being held by a fonder reporter that Champ entered his apartment, whereupon a fight started and he fended off. Then again, after being questioned, he stated that Champ received his wound by falling down on his knees. The nurses, then strenuously they strenuously the story told by Mays, but state that Mays positively attacked Champ with a hammer while his back was
FINED FOR ASSAULT
FINED FOR ASSAULT
Walshoe Ave. find 541 and cost for assaulting ball Pearson, 2522 Vernon Ave. with a minor.
—Photo by Woodard
Student who was "transferred" from Englewood High school from high frame-up to whites, who gained support of Principal Arm-strong.
"MR. ASTORBILT" OF GEORGIA WAS JUST OLD CROOK
Baltimore, Md., Dec. 21. After two days of legal wrangling in the crimi- people of Maryland vs. James S. Williams was concluded when the jury charged with the defrauding charge of fraud. As this trial un- brought to light, the jury darling, and the same time one of the most naive get-rich-quick companies. There were two principals in the attair and as information progressed each attempted to place the blame on
Came From Georgia
Swindles Lawyer
All these things, and more. Williams was telling those who were interested in them, then he chose a partner from his admirers in the person of John R. Gross, a lawyer. With a proposed renunciation imposed renunciation for possessing wealth Williams persisted Gross to build a Building & Loan association, for which he gave Gross a $1,2000 bond on a New York firm, which uponigation was found to be worthless. At the trial Williams attempted to persuade Gross to pay $7,000 of the $10,000 and that he was aware of the nature of the entire affair was a thin scheme by which Williams had hoped to profit at the expense of those who had conceived the entire affair a thin scheme by which Williams had hoped to profit at the expense of those who had conceived the entire affair a thin scheme by which
BITES WIFE
New York, Dec. 21—Biting his wife, Christine, the arms and body during a family mix-up at her o'clock, resulted in James Dixon, 42, a chauffeur living at 28 W. 134th St, being taken into custody and charged with assault. Mrs. Dixon's screams and an officer. When the policeman arrived Dixon was still chewing on his wife's right arm, which was a horrific lesion. At the hospital, where it is feared she may suffer from blood poisoning.
SHOT BY "SLATS"
While visiting at the home of Jesse Love, 256 State St., a man known only by his overcoat. Because his host could give him no satisfaction about the stair garment, "Stats" shot him in the knee. The police are looking for "Stats."
ATTORNEY FARMER OUT
ATTORNEY WALTER M. FARMER, 15 W. Washington St., who has been detained at home on account of illness for a week.
PRINCIPAL ADMITS
WRONG-DOING IN
SCHOOL SCANDAL
Color Line Plays an Important Part in Dishonorable Discharge of Student
(Continued from Page 1)
fronted with the charge of having insulted a white girl and was told to go home and remain until Monk and his students would be less indignant. Monk the student returned and was told that he would have to go to some other school. A letter was written to the principle of Tilden and Reid was asked to explain the strong remarks that laid "is a Colonel's job" who got a difficulty for which he entirely to blame, but which is leading to serious difficulty between races.
The principal goes further and and way, being a faithful student and of excellent moral character, but through him, being a race controversy that may end in a possible riot. He is a member of the army and has the rank of first sergeant."
The day following Reid's dismissal from Englewood high school the following notice appeared on the bulletin board Headquarters R. O. T. C. Englewood High School. Date: June 7, 1923. Special Order No. 19. Series 1924-24 Series 1924-24 "A" Co. having conducted himself in a manner to bring discredit upon the R. O. T. C. officer and a gentleman, therefore ordered that Sgt. Diet shall be dishonorably discharged as a member of the Englewood R. O. T. C. officer and all credits now due him. By order of (Signed) "H. A. WHITE" Capt. I. N. U. S. A. A. P. H. S. & T. E. U. S. When concerning this order he answered that he had opposed that answer and let it down as soon as he heard of them. Throughout the interview given two Defender representatives brought out that he (Mr. Arnustrup) did not believe he guilty of the crime his apprehension to the stand taken by some of the irresponsible students by sending the student away from the school without an opportunity of return.
Mr. Armstrong also stated that during training, he and Friday groups of Colored boys 'tried to break into the room where the acting was going to be filmed, and the organization of students failed to disclose that any such attempt was made. Mr. Armstrong was unanimous that Reid had been given an unfair trial. Many white boys questioned, who were the actors in the charge that the boy insulted any girl. One member of the high school faculty applauded in the R. O. T. C. and suggested to them that they turn in their unauthorized books that they do not believe Reid to have been treated fairly. Then there were more about the possible collusion between the R. O. T. C. major and the young girl to disqualify Reid because she was commissioned officer. Students admit freely that there has been an effort to keep Race boys from being promoted in the student organization. One instance of an instructor grimly stated that inmate Race boys was told by boys on the campus. Joy E. Quant, swimming; and students as "coons" and has remarked upon several occasions that they were Phillips, "where they belong."
Questioned concerning Mr. Quant's activities the principle of surprise all surprised if such were true." It is not the first time, according to Mr. Armstrong, to ask him to him about the coach, but too hard has been made to uncertain the truth of these charges. Enwood from Gary, Ind., where his activities at the high school there came near involving members of the faculty and students.
As an aftermath of the whole Englewood affair Ellis Reid, making homes for his sister and daughter, Mr. and Doug Reid, Alphin, 5333 Dearborn St. has been forced to resume his studies at Tilden high school. Armstrong, 5333 Dearborn St. may be permitted to return to Englewood in February, "when some of the white boys intermixed with the blacks in the Reservoir Officers' Training corps, all his credits in that course and his rating have gone for naught unless there is a revocation of Speech.
FALLS OVER DEAD MAN
New York, Dec. 21.—After stumbling over a dead body in the dark午夜 of his home late last Friday, Greenwood Jr. Bergen St. St. stushed from the place and notified police. The dead man was Joseph Grant, 50, 1691 Bergen St. St. stushed from natural causes he died from medical aid.
Early Thursday morning, Hans Bergman, 11½, 153th St. St. was found dead, belated by Taylor of the same address. It is claimed there was nothing suspicious about the death, as he died from natural causes.
FOUND OVERCOME BY GAS
New York, Dec. 21.—Found in bed overcome by escaping illuminating Robbing, 25, 80 West 1324 St. St. who accidentally turned on the gas as he was retiring. Fortunately other occurrences of deadly odor and traced it to Robbing's room. He was found unconscious and rushed to Harlem hostel where he was rescued by Dr. Jones.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
FIRES STUDENT
JAMES E. ARMSTRONG
Principal of Englewood High school, who permitted students to influence his decision by passionate prejudice in the case of Ellis Reid.
CITY RULED BY KLAN LIVES UP TO ITS RECORD
Marlow, Okla., Dec. 21. *Mob law*, the supreme tribunal of the state of Oklahoma, again made its presence known late Monday night, when A.W. Birch, a white hotel proprietor, was shot through the heart because he violated one of the traditions of the city and employed a Race man nickname, the unwitting cause of the shooting, was also wounded and is not expected to live. The three towns in Oklahoma that houses such signs on its depot as "Nigger, don't lot the sun go down on you," and "Nigger, read and run, and if you can't read, the Jermigan can work to work in a hotel. When the powers that be heard that there would be impunity, they man in Birch to rid of him, and Birch to rid of him, but the proprietor, evidently a different type of man from his neighbors, persisted in the fight. About midnight Monday, 15 unmasked men went no the hotel to "get the nigger. Birch attempted to warn him of the warning or a man's chance, he was shot down. The "citizens" next turned their attentions to the unarmed porter and poured their lead
The men who composed the party are well known. They boast openly, with the exception of the nongangs' entertainment. No arrests have been made, nor will there be incursions. The police of the lawless, now that they have rid themselves of the only real governor the state has, have taken one of those that took such a prominent part in the proceedings against ex-Governor Paul Kutui of the Kui Klu Klu.
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PROMOTION AND BONUS IS VOTED FOR MAJ. LOVING
Bill Introduced in House to Give Retiring Bandmaster the Rank of Colonel
Manila, P. L. Dec. 21.—In appreciation of his faithful services the Mahlahil to award Major Walter Hoyard Loving, retiring Consiliary band, Consiliary band, $1,100 and to promote the rank of full colonel in the insular force. Representative treasurer of Hollo submitted a bill to the house approriating the named thorizing the promotion.
making an enviable record. During all but a brief portion of this time he has been a major band which has won fame. The band is turned over to Lieutenant from the United States. Writing of Major Loving's retirement, "Old Fogy," old-timer in Manhattan, "Under the direction of Major Loving the Constabulary band has become a major band should feel a pride in the fact that it is composed wholly of their members here, yet it required the guilding band of an expert to mold it into a musical machine capable of renaming it in an artistic manner. Major Loving has accomplished this and now leaves the band a charge of leading to many years of training under Major Loving, has had a year's experience in the schools of the United States. The lieutenant faces a difficult position in following so able a conductor as to have a whole-hearted support of the public as well as that of the band in his that organization."
At the Grand Opera house the farewell concert was a brilliant art performance. The Russian baritone, Mr. Ellen, did himself great credit and was the pianist for piano and orchestra was brilliantly rendered. Mrs. Hillierer's committee of that composition places her in the front rank of technicians and her expression was both so solitary and captivated calls. The major has not only well demonstrated his ability as a conductor but also handled man, which is an important quality in a conductor.
KILLS SELF WITH GAS
Escaplin gas attracted the attention of attending household duties at her home at 2555 Elles Ave. Calling assistance, 517 E. 37 St. broke a window in a room at 2555 Elles Ave. Traywisk, the woman's husband, lying cold with a rubber hose in his mouth which had been attached to a gas jet.
FOUND DEAD IN ROOM
After four days about having a cold and living in a room at 2555 Elles Ave., William Walker, 29, 2725 Wentworth Ave. was found dead by his wife, Banks, 2414 Dearborn St. of J. Banks, 2414 Dearborn St.
WALKING, TALKING AND SLEEPING
DOLLS
Loving, retiring conductor of the band of the $1,100 and to proclaim the full colonel in the insular force. The insular force. Tomas Confessor of Hollo submitted a letter to the authorizing the amount and authorizing the proclaiming
Major Loving has been in the constabulary for about 20 years.
KILLS SELE WITH GAS
FOUND DEAD IN ROOM
World Against Her, Girl Says; Dies by Poison
Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 14—After a few heated words with her mother, Mrs. Mattie Green, about her death, she decided Genevieve Davis, 33, 1738 Virginia St., felt that "the whole world it would be better decided that it would be better dead. She walked to a nearby drug store an purchased a small bottle of alcohol in it. Thirty minutes later she was found 20 feet from the store in a critical condition. She was rushed to the hospital, but died on the emergency table.
FORMER PULLMAN EMPLOYE
SLAIN IN STREETS BY POLICE
FORMER PULLMAN EMPLOYE
SLAIN IN STREETS BY POLICE
Henry L. Harris, 30, 4546 Prairie Ave., a former employee of the Pullman Railroad, sat in a Saturday night in the New York Central railroad yards at 42d and State Sts. by Officer N. Oliver of the Pullman Railroad when Harris attempted to escape after being arrested. He was first seen by Officer Oliver at 10:30 a.m. hurrying out of the railroad yard carrying a suspicious looking bundle and was apprehended. He told them they said that the bundle was his laundry package. To make sure his package was which he identified as Special Investigator Walter Clark as belonging to the Pullman company. Harris was placed under arrest. A Officer Oliver started with him to order to the officer, grim him in the mouth and turned to flee. He had run but a short distance before Officer Oliver stopped him. Harris dropped dead. He moved to the morgue of Fred Johnson, 4548 State St. where an inquest was held Monday afternoon. The shooting of Harris held justifiable by the coroner's report.
RESCUES WHITE MAN
FROM AN ANGRY MON
Cries of "Lynch him" Lynch him" were heard as a mof of white men had been beating him and were beating him for enticing it Little 7-year-old "white girl" into a hallway. The old man who stated that he had beaten a house to the angry man by Robert Lee, 10 E Illinois St., and William Fope, 212 The men prevailed upon a white woman to go for the police. Of two men protecting the man from the crowd, which had gained in size. Two white men protecting the man from the crowd, which had gained in size. Judge Joseph Laury for their heirlooms in keeping the crowd at bay; and to the grand jury under $4,000 bonds.
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New York, Dec. 21.—In attempting to evade being struck by an automobile, Mr. Mosley was struck midnight Saturday, Lemuel Mosley, 45. 627 Wales Ave., prominent Bronx business man, stepped directly into the path of another machine and was struck by a car. He was seriously injured about the head and body. Mosley was rushed to Harlem hospital, where he now lives in a bad condition.
SOUTH SIDE TEACHES HIM
Henry Aikerman, 458. Broadway, objected to the police officer Wiggs when he was attempt- ing to drive him that he did not like the way the officers acted on the South side, and would get hit. The dug in his jeans for 25 and costs.
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PAGE THREE—PART ONE
was read he broke down completely.
His attorney has filed a motion for a new trial, with wife who was shot twice, Korn was shot who times the night of Nov. 25, 1921, when he interrupted a holdup at Orange Park, where he said to have been implicated in the robbery and at the time they all escaped.
A few weeks ago she was arrested when they returned to Cleveland after being away since the morning after the murder. The third man is still at large.
STABBED IN THE BACK
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FOURTEENTH ANNUAL ESSAY MRS. R
CONTEST TO BE HELD SUNDAY SU
FOURTEENTH ANNUAL ESSAY MRS. ROBERT TERRELL IN CONTEST TO BE HELD SUNDAY SUIT AGAINST PHONE GO
The various councils of A. U. K. & D. of A. of Illinois and jurisdiction of, A. of, the grand queen, has closed a successful tidour carnival at *Entertainment*-halls and councils and representatives worked with the councils and representatives of Mrs. Ella L. Holmes was chairman and Mrs. Leona Dixon, secretary.
JOHN PAYNE ENTERTAINED
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jordan had as his wife, Mrs. Ella L. Holmes, of London, England. Mr. Payne is a singer of international repute and was the conductor of the orchestra. He is en route to Seattle, Wash., to visit his sister. His return is expected to Egypt and other points of interest.
should learn to design and make the family gowns, waistls, skirts, linieries, wraps and rulers one set, the store price, or have the garment set at the former price of one.
SATURDAY. DECEMBER 22. 1923
Prof. and Mrs. F. L. Williams, Dr. Mary D. Dan Howles and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Malone, St. Louis, Mo., were invited to the Bina Kapia fraternity and Mrs. Cary B. Lewis during their recent visit to the Mound City Ave., entertained with a whistle party Saturday evening in honor of the Alphna Kapia Fraternity to the Alphna Kapia Fraternity. Mr. Morer Angela St. Louis, Mo., was invited to the junior college that city, will arrive in the city Sunday to spend the holiday as the guest of the Bina State bank. Mrs. Angela Cashier of the Bina State bank. York city, is in the city and is under the care of a specialist. Mrs. Angela expects to visit her parents in Louisville, Ky., after the holidays. Her tenor, who appeared in a recital at Orchestra hall recently, is expected to return to the city in Illinois. Donald E. Brown, Paris, Ill., was in the city last week on business with Mrs. Laura Globe has returned to the city. York city, she is stopping with her sister, Mrs. Thomas Williams, III. Miss Laura Globe has returned to the city. York city, she is stopping with her sister, Mrs. Thomas Williams, III. Miss Laura Sharp, Philadelphia, will be friends with Mrs. Sharp, will stop with her uncle, Leon Sharp, 4625 Vincentnes Ave., with her chum, Mrs. Addley Kasten,
Mrs. A. B. Kastor, 5344 Prairie Ave.
vacation in the East. She attended
the Howard-Lincoln football game, stop-
ped in the East. She guest of Mr.
R. L. Moss, Mrs. Joseph R. Austin, New York city,
company, was a visitor in our city last
week. stopping at the Vincennes hotel,
left Saturday at the Vincennes hotel.
stopping at the Vincennes hotel.
Thomas Saddler, Tacoma. Wash. were in the city last
wook, on route home from New York
city. N. J. visited friends.
Charles Strudget, Detroit. John who
visited friends. Mrs. H. Hubert
Iayne, 5313 Calumet Ave. returned
home Monday. Books will spend the
holidays, the guest of her mother, Mrs. H.
Jackson, Paris, Ill.
Charles W. Abernathy, Indianapolis
Ind.. is in the city visiting friends.
---
The great fourth annual essay contest will take place Sunday after afternoon at the Ebenzer Baptist church, 45th St. and Vincennes Ave. of the city have representatives. Subject to be discussed: "Is the migrant benefit to the Race?" A fine musical program has been arranged for the occasion for the honorary cards are urged to be present not later than 2:15, as seats will only be reserved for those in promptly at 2:30. B. W. Fitzs, founder and manager. Frank W. Henry, C. Francis Stradford, assist-
HODGES CELEBRATE
Hampton, Va., Dec. 20.-Mr. and Mrs. 20th Hodges, college alumni, 25th anniversary of his college, 15th Lincoln St. on Dec. 4. The home was a large, well-furnished house with pants and large yellow and white chrysanthemums. The bride was at her home, handsomely embroidered in cut white silk, with a large white tulle, while the groom, in his usual jolly mood, wore the full dress. Attended by friends from Newport New Phoebe, Hampton, and many other cities. Reception committee and served in a reception committee. The gifts were many and beautiful from the following cities, together with his sum of Newport New Phoebe, Norfolk, Richmond, Cape Charles, Baltimore, Washington, D. C. Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Newark, Atlantic City, Asbury Park, Trenton, Buffalo, New York, Albany, Newport, Springfield, Boston, Cambridge and Chicago. He is one of pleasure and its memory will ever linger. Mrs. Hampton and I, B. P. O. E. of W.
RECEIVES APPOINTMENT
Miss Edith McCree of San Antonio, Texas, a graduate of a high school in New York, and a graduate of a college later an honorary graduate of Wilberforce university, vested in music, exerted her influence on many and called by her state in teach in the Dear, Dumbbell was chosen above many and called by her departure is regretted by her many friends here.
CHURCH AT BAILEY'S HALL
New Light Missionary Baptist church, of which the Rev. G. W. Jones, pastor, is a member, services at Bailey's hall, 3634 State St. every Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m., as well as other, are cordially invited.
AN EXPENSIVE HAM
Reckoning without the length of his coat and wig. He had a wounded knee. Aave assisted to put a stained arm under his coat as he was passing Officer Lilly. The harm he had harm ten days in the house of correction.
BELIEVES IN APPOINTMENT
Armed with his appointment, as a notary public, George Burler, 555 E. 43d St., sought to convince Judge Judge Lilly that he had even if he did he beat his wife. Edith who lives with her mother at 5024 Fédera has faith in his paper he has shaken.
DIES FROM ACCIDENT
Furman Turner, 47, 516 E. 46th St., passed away at the Provident hospital in New York. Mr. Turner he missed his fooling on a street car at 33th and State Sts., and fell to the ground. Mr. Turner was employed in Indian's service in the Federal building.
HAND CRUSHED
While working at the press of the Wieland Printing company, 74 Fed. Farmers Market, Pearlton St., suffered a crushed hand when it was caught in the machinery.
KNIFED IN CHEST
While quarrelling over a game of pool, the two men were seated on a northern stair, which was situated in the chest of the house.
DIES IN AMBULANCE
Suffering with dropsy and tumor. Mild fever and chills. Died in the police emblance as they were trying to get her to the hospital.
MOTHERS
Mail the Coupon Today Sure
Washington, Dec. 21—Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, wife of Judge Robert L. Terrell, a former member of the board of education, has filed suit in the District of Columbia against the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. of Baltimore for alleged personal injury when her car on Annapolis Blvd. on July 28 when an auto truck belonging to the telephone company was hit with her car and demolished the machine and injured her seriously. She was arrested by Lawyers Newman and King.
MISS LINDSEY TO WED
Among the New Year brides-to-be
youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Lindsay, 6555
Aherdened SL, whose
seph Maurice Alford
was announced this week.
Miss Lindsay,
her many friends,
her many friends,
is quite prominent in the
circles, and this announcement will be
enthusiasm. The wed-
dnesday in February.
Miss Lindsay has also been
Alberdeen St., whose engagement to Joey Mancee of Mancee of 514 Wabash Ave. was announced weeks ago, Ms. Lindsey known as "Katie" to be quite prominent in the city's younger social circles and will be a noncement will be enthusiast. The wedding is to take place in Lindsey has also been prominent in athletics and was a memorial to Roamer Girls basketball quintet. Mr. Lindsey is a former resident of Cincinnati, Ohio.
WEST SIDE NEWS
Bry J. Werley Jones
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Women Demand Fair Play for Race in South
Group Includes Many Civic and Religious Leaders Who Make Plea for Justice
Louisville, Ky., Dec. 21—Thirty Kentucky women, leaders in their rebellion, met here in connection with the state interracial conference, organized as the woman's section of the interracial conference. A pro-urgent statement in the interest of justice and good will between the races. The organization meetings were prepared by Mrs. R. K. Massley, Louisville and the permanent officers chosen were Mrs. Charles Semple, chairman; Mrs. R. K. Massley, vice chairman; Nannie Hille Winton, secretary.
Hits Lynching
The statement issued congratulates Kentucky on its recent freedom from bynchings, condemns the injection of pornography, demands a single standard of morals that will protect the integrity of the race, declares for the protection of the life of children all alike and for fair division of school advantages and other public resources in every community an intercultural group of women be formed for mutual understanding and co-operation, and for the welfare of women and children. Following are some of the more striking paragraphs: We are our helplof in the righteousness of a single standard of social morality for both sexes and both races. We plead for the protection of the womanhood and urge that the integrity of the Negro home shall be held inviolate by the men of both
Demand Justice
"We hold that no circumstances can prevent women and human rights involved in lynchings and other forms of mob violence. We deplore the fact that such violence has only increased in the past. We believe that in non-Christian countries our Christian civilization is discredited. It is thankful for our honour and our bravery, the fact that it has been upheld, we pledge ourselves to support our offenders in every effort to enforce this." "We believe it to be our imperative to protect girls especially among the young people home and in school, such attitudes of good will and mutual helpfulness that we have established to a continent and strife shall yield to a cosmos faith in our common humanity." Similar groups of women have been involved in co-operation with state interracial committees and with the various denomination and clergy in interest of better race adjustment.
WEDDINGS
BURROUGHS·ROBERTS
ENGAGEMENTS
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. M. Coey, 4015 International Drive, of their daughter, Irma, to Wallace a Smith, 3553 Langley Ave. Miss Me. Coey, 3553 Langley Ave. the writer of many short stories.
ALUMNI DANCE
The dance given by the auxiliary to the dance program at the Alma chapter on Dec. 12 at St. Eliza Zion presents a dous success. The beautiful decorations and black garments, the background of the Meharyar color cinnamon and black, gave quite a picture of the gala affairs on the campus. Many whist prizes were given. Clarence and the students must pay the cost. Much credit is to be given L. P. Morrow, the dancemaster of the occassion, for the commendable way. He is of the class of 03. Walden university, founder of the dedicated Dancing Masters of Chicago.
GIVEN SURPRISE PARTY
On Thursday, Dec. 6, the members of the House of Ruth celebrated their No. 7, O. E. S., together with a number of members of the chapter and Household of Ruth, gave a surprise party for the new non-Ace, celebrating her $80 birthday. A purge of over $10 was given to the chapter for a celebration for her splendid and faithful chapter and court for more than 30 years.
STORK ARRIVES
Charles Fielding, 4501 Prairie Ave., Houston, TX presents him with a fine baby girl and presents him with a proud father. Charles is a proud father, he has already assumed an air of dignity and self-confidence of his daughter. Of course, it must be done pleasantly. Fielding and baby are doing nicely.
STRINGEELLOW TO SING
Herbert in Sittingwell, the "respect
church," 30th and Dearborn Site, Suns
morning, Dec. 11, fell in stone. Uncle
Dry and When, Mother Prayed.
Herbert in Sittingwell, the "respect
church," 30th and Dearborn Site, Suns
morning, Dec. 11, fell in stone. Uncle
Dry and When, Mother Prayed.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
JOHN B. BROWN
Photo by Underwood & Underwood
ROLAND HAYES
Roland Hayes, celebrated American tenor, who appeared in recital last week, was acclaimed by musical critics as an artist of the highest world's greatest singers. Mr. Hayes has spent several years abroad, and upon coming to America, was enchanted by the music of her orchestra to appear on its annual program. Many of Mr. Hayes' sessions were given in German, French and Japanese.
The Y. M. L. I. Charity club met
the first meeting of Plans were made for a Christmas tree for poor children. The next meeting
Plans were made for a Christmas tree
Forrestville Ave. Mrs. Linda Jump
Met at the home of Miss Linda McCoulgh. 3213 Calumet Ave. The next meeting
Plans were made for a Christmas tree
Mills. 404 State St. Mrs. Nandine Rice president; Mrs E. S. Smith, secretary;
Met at the home of the president. 448 Indiana Ave. Mrs. Maith Mitchell, presi-
dent.
GIVES DINNER DANCE
MRS. ELNORA HILT ENTERAINS
ident of HILT'S S. I. C. club, served a five-course dinner Sunday, evening,
members who will leave members who will leave Saturday to
spend the holidays in the South. Covers were laid for seven, Mrs. Hill wishes
and friends for the can shower that was
given for Mrs. Hannah Hardy, who is
ELECTS OFFICERS
North Star judge No. 57. U. B. f. in its recent meeting elected officers to the board, making a great drive for the future. Street, worthy master; Andrew Keeling, deputy master; M. T. Ballue, security, and Solomon Thomas, treasurer.
TO VISIT ST. LOUIS
Mrs. Ora Williamson and her sister, Mrs. Ann Lucas and her brother St. Mary, are preparing St. Louis Chapel, St. Louis Mo., to spend their Christmas with their sisters, Mrs. Sallie McAney, and their relatives.
GRANVILLE H. MARTIN DIES
Hackensack, N. J., Dec. 31—Grandview, N.J., Rev. E. T., Martin, died her Dec. 5. Further details will appear in next week's issue of the Defender.
MRS. M. EMERY RETURNS
Mrs. Emery M. N. Wells St. Harper turned seven weeks with her brothers, John and Emery, at Brunswick, Mo. her former home.
CLUBS
Dramatic Club at Hampton in One-Act Comedy
Louise Saunders' "The Knave of Hearts" Delights Large Audience of Students
By WM. ANTHONY AERY
Sophocleon Dramatic club of Hampton institute, which is a student organization, recently presented before a group of students assembled in Ogden hall Louise Saunards "The Knave of Hearns," a deposition directed by the proves beyond the shadow of a doubt that the maligned Knave of Hearns no knave, but a very hero indeed.
The Hampton students, costumed appropriately for a college home-made scenery, entertained the institute workers and students with their perseverance in excellent home-made scenery, entertained the institute workers and students with their perseverance in common ambition of men and women to appear well in the world and the world of politics that such ambition imposes.
CHURCHES
Hope Presbyterian Church, Glat St. and Loomis Blvd. the church will deliver a special Christmas message to the pastor will deliver a special Christmas message will be Miss Alpha A. Bratton. The junior church will render a literary and musical large choir will render a canta- "The Son of the Highest" at $ p. m. Carter's Temple C. M. E. Church, St. A. Stout church—a large congregation heard the pastor Sunday morning noon at 3 o'clock a meeting of the heads of the department, 5:20 and 6:20 p. m., respectively, interesting sessions were held, Mr. Davies of St. Mark's M. E. church addressed both sessions, men on "Plotting and Prophecy." The Red and Blue milk was launched to the church will be red Sunday and the Rev. Johnson will preach in the morning and the Rev. J. L. Williams at night.
Bahal Assembly—Until further notice headquartered N. X. Nilehiah Ava. Lectures on Thursday evenings at $ 5 p. m. No collections. Everybody welcome.
Bible Lecture—Auslese of the International Bible Student Association, Jewelry, Jewellery, Found, by W. Willis, Sunday, December club, 3140 Indiana Ave.
M. Olive M. E. E. Church, the Rev. G. W. Gordon, pastor—Sunday at 11 a.m. "Christmas service" at 13:00 p.m., Sunday school, and 7:30 p.m., preaching.
Carey Chapel A. M. E. Church, Transfer hall, 417 and State Sts., the Rev. W. Gordon, pastor will preach Sunday at 11 a.m. on the subject, "Redemption." The Rev. W. Gordon, pastor will preach the evening services at 7:30 o'clock.
Allen A. M. E. Church, 30th and Dearborn Sts., the Rev. L. T. Scott, pastor will preach. Five o'clock candle service on Christmas morning.
Quinn Chapel A. M. E. Church, 24th pastor, pastor—The pastor preached to a large audience from the subject's morning. Special services will be held all day Sunday. Church church will render a program and a cantaion entitled, "Holly Art will have charge of the program."
AT IDLEWILD HOTEL
The arrivals at Hotel Idlewild, 50 F. 33d St. the past week; Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Washington, D. C.; G. Allison, Ishbeming *Mich.*; T. J. Neumann and wife, Louis; N. J. Neumann and wife, Louis; M. J. Smith, New York, N. Y.; J. Johnson, St. Louis; G. W. Lacey, Cleveland, Ohio; N. Gresham, New York, N. Y.; Anthony Cunningham, William Wakeau, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Wakeau, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Washington, D. C.; Harold Worfforce, Spokane, Wash.; Miss Ophelia Morlison, New Orleans, La.; Miss Susie Millen, Birmingham, Al.
RESTORES GOOD NAME
CUT SCHOOL VACATION
Superintendent of Schools Pater A. Mortenson has announced that the McKinney school children would be slightly cut down year after year. The McKinney school into the hot weather in summer. All public schools will close Friday, Jan. 2, and the superintendent said, "MISS O. K. WILLIAMS DIES MISS O. K. WILLIAMS, who has been ill for some time, passed away Saturday." A pint of blood had been given by her honee. Eugene Raines, the day after her death, in an effort to save her life, but his efforts were in vain. Funeral services were held at Mejgock chapel, 3323 S. State St.
STABBED THREE TIMES:
During an argument with Bobby McKeen, 1708 Dearborn St., Charles Edwards, 22. 32 W. 18th St. was stabbed by a man who was McKeen, keeled after the attack.
---
SICK LIST
Unhappiness in the home is very common. Your husband straying into the forbidden path, but when either one or both of them are in danger of a tragedy. The day of atonement will surely come, and when it does your husband will remain with your husband if he is abusive, for no reason only for disfavor. You must try to see the good in him as well as the evil in him, and be vigilant. Could it be possible that he is irritable because you provoke him to behave in a like manner, and must be dealt with in a like manner. Set an example to the same with a man, if he is a real man. I feel sure that if you show a loving kindness, he will have no reason to mistreat you. You have never lived your life with your husband. But than your husband is. All that glitters is not gold.
Madam Princess: I am going with the same girls in the world, the same people in the world, because I love and respect her. Would it be all right to kiss her some times, and then give her some love, I would feel less respect for her? I thank you for your advice. - Gridiron
Dear Princess: This is the first time I have had children of 42 years and I have four children. I work very hard to retain my job, and I have a lot of necessary things to care for my family. I have gentleman clientele who have been my friends for five years. He is 55 years old and has a great deal for me and has been exceptionally good to me, only now and now I have children of which have occurred. I think he is very well placed upon himself, which makes
CONSTANT CARE
Human history and experi-
many persons believe tha-
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[Image of a woman with a headband, wearing a white dress with a bow. The background is a dark, indistinct pattern.]
CONSTANT CARE—NOT LUCK
Human history and experience have taught us that many persons believe that a head of naturally long and beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely smooth complexion come from luck, but they do not. Constant care and the frequent use of preparations of proven merit are the secrets.
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me feel very much disatisfied, as well
he refers to me. I also refer him to younger girls, as I have been told that he likes young girls, but
won't listen to me. I also subdue him,
subdue him, he loves me better
than any woman he ever know, even
when he has divorced, preceding though he has been separated from her for 10 years.
What do you think of him and what
There is such a thing as being as big as you are, and such a thing will finally be your cause. The freedom and security you have given to your children will be your ability to he can play "fast and loose" with you and you will be satisfied. He knows what to do, so he教它 it out when the occasion demands it. You can want him or you don't want him. If you want him, you are too old to make over. If you don't want him, tell him so in such plain words as possible. Five years of association is sufficient satisfaction and happiness if it is there.
HAYES ENTERTAINED
Following the recital at Orchestra Hall, the captain in honor of Kobalt Hays and more than 100 attended, Mr. Stevens, the captain in charge of the entertainment, which consisted of dancing, which was enlisted to J. Wesley Jones, presented the guests to the musicians who were well known musicians and friends of Mr. R. George, Mr. Hayes, William Lawrence, accompanist to Mr. Hayes, Mrs. George R. Garner, Mrs. J. A. Japhet, and Mrs. S. A. T. Watkins welcomed the guest of honor and it was leave to fill an engagement at the home of Mr. Arthur T. Ryerson on the morning of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Watkins, host of the concert, Mr. Jones accompanied Messes Hays, and Lawrence to the North side, where he spent two hours, and his manager, Mr. Judd, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Binga for dinner during the day afternoon he was the luncheon at the North side. Mr. Hayes left Thursday for Navalbase, where he sang at Ryman for a risk university, his alma mater.
THANKS SOCIAL SET
FOR PARTIES GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Chester A. W. Williams
subst. Thank the guest for the wonderful reception and showers given in their honor
reception and showers given in their honor
formed Nov. 28 at Fulham Ave. Baptist
church. Special thanks to Miss Pearl
Ford, Mrs. Perry Thomas, Mr. and
6. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thomas for the whist given Oct. 31; Mr. and Mrs. Perry
twice, once in honor of the bridal
groom-elect at a whist, and the
bridal-groom-elect at a whist, and the
Mr. and Mrs. Lockey Lee for the wonderful reception for the bridal party on
for the wonderful reception given on
faculty of which Willis school, of
which Mrs. Williams, former Miss
number of years, for the surprise party
given on Nov. 22.
They are at home to their friends at 2613 Prairie Ave., Chicago, Ill.
MRS. COLLEY DEAD
Tinnehan, Ohio. Dec. 21. - Mrs. L. Coley, of Oakland, died at her home in L. David Coley, $80 Buena Vista Hospital, Santa Hills, founder of her hospital in the city, died at her home in Oakland more than a year. Mrs. Coley was a graduate of St. Francis academy, Baldwin University, taught school at Amnesia, MD. She is survived by her husband, three children at Howard; ReginaD. is attending preparation at the New England Conservators of Music at Boston. The funeral services will be held at Yale and Gilbert Aves.
VISITS CATALINA ISLANDS
Catalina Island, Cal. Dec. 21—Mrs. Hazel Alexander-Butler, formerly of Chicago, has been with her husband and son. They have taken trips on boats, including the gullion-bottom seals, listing the colonies seals. Pebby Beach and other points of interest in the Isthmus and bathing in Avalayo, the only beach where the sun is visible across the water. Glaring into the eyes across the water, Mrs. Burch has lived in Sioux City, Mo., and has made a host if friends. She was well known in the social circles of Chicago and has a host of friends wherever she goes.
PIANIST IN RECITAL
Frieddola, C. Pierson, graduate of Chicago Musical college and a former music teacher, will appear in recital in the near future. She is now assistant to J. Wesley Jones, vice president of National Association of Music Teachers.
RE—NOT LUCK
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at Rouge Vanishing Cream
u have lovely, smooth complexion.
of Agents aid by Mail.
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THE
PAGE FIVE—PART ONE
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'Wicked House of David" at Grand; Hegamin at Avenue; Good Show at the Monogram
herding the boys and girls together, performed a "group" marriage. These are but few of the many damskins who bore children by the Wicked House of David, at Benton Harbor, "King Ben" ruled with an iron hand and anyone daring to question his power and right to convert to "The Wicked House of David," many methods for publicity were employed. A very novel means was used, a group of well-trained team, a group of men of uncertain ages with flowing beards. The beards were a symbol of their religious belief that the king was the chief wizarders the mark of God. Through the aid of this picturesque group of men representing the Wicked House of David, many persons were susceptible to the Christian powers of "King Ben" as related by these bewildered beings, sold their belongings and took themselves the Wicked House of David.
THE AVENUE
THE MONOGRAM
Arthur Boykin's Jazz Maniacs are the attraction here this week and the older Arthur has 12 real artists in his line-up and there is no sort of entertainment with which they can show the show is fast and furious from beginning to end. The girls are pretty and the guys are real dancing have a treat in store for them while this attraction is here, as there is more "hoof-da" offered in the real shows. The comedy is clean and the singing of the best grade most of the numbers being original and as a concession. Don't miss seeing this attraction.
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PAGE SIX PART ONE
e patrons of the "repeat" on the Wicked
The demand of it Grand theater for a sensational drama has been met and that play is the offering of the week and its final Sunday night, after which the Rosary, one of the prayers of all time, will be presented. The story of the presbytery is presented in these columns before, but for the benefit of those who may have overlooked it
Hundreds of girls became mothers, yet they were but children themselves. To safeguard his own interests "King Ben" imprinted "teen marriages." When the fact came to his notice that a certain number of girls were possessed of the seed of life, "King Ben" immediately pick a like number of boys, and, hurriedly
WE WANT TO HEAR
FROM-
Musical Companion, Fondueville Acts of Every Description
Also Musicians for Orchestra
Address
JOHN HARRIS, Manager
GRAND Central Theater, Dallas, Tex.
1
The Weeks Movies
**STATES:** Two days each of "The
Little Barrier," Single, Shoe,arker,
"Blinding Barrier," Single, Shoe,arker,
"Soul," Sunday, "Flaming Heart,"
Sunday, "Flaming Heart," Big
Dig, "The Spanish Dancer,"
"Tango Cavaliere," "Ponjoil and" and
"The Mysterious Rider."
Shorty Brady has lain for Baltimore
imm & Garris Klein Cleveland Folksie
Viola Wilson is playing a two weeks engagement at the New Central theatrical called The Bandana Girls. She is playing the show she is playing the present half between Worland, Grey Bull and Lovel, Wyo. and along in great shape, are on the coast and getting their milk care of Bert Alzear building, San Francisco, Calif.
Richard Perry ordered his sent caretaker Ala. Ab. to play in the New Orleans Minutels, writes the show will play San Antonio, Texas, but the players will be from these birds can be with a show, writes Lee & Wright are playing the week
J. Rosannard Johnson & Co. will play the week of the 23d at the Grind the Theater, a local letter sent in by Lice Langster. The match, traveling over the Palm Beach area, will their way to San Francisco, Calif. Co. is playing the week the Columbia theater. Junction City, Kans., is at the Douglas theater, Macon, Ga. Mason & Zudosa, making them all together at the Avenue theater, Chicago, this week.
Famous Georgia Minstrels are at the Johnny Hudging, with Town Scaldale on the Columbia Wheel, is playing the at the Casino theater, Boston, Mass. Bowman's Cotton Blossoms are at the star theater, Baltimore, MD. Demons are at the Palace theater, Baltimore, MD. The act is a hit as a special entertainment Happy Days on the Columbia Wheel. The Silm Parker & Littie Jeff, featured with Hightower & Jones, are playing the week at the Gayetey theater, Washington, D.C. Easton & Stewart, featured with Bits of Hits on the Columbia Wheel, are at the theater, Baltimore, Md. Sequ route. Hightower & Jones, featured with Hightower & Jones, are playing the week between Schecteney and Albany, N.C. Brooks & Blanks' Whildflower Four, featured with the Happy Go Lucky Co. on the Columbia Wheel, are playing the week between Joyner & Foster, doing great on a coast trip, are splitting the week between Mississippi and Oakland, Send route.
Foxworth & Frances, always at it. R. F. Foxworth, at Louis, Mo, and Champaign, IL, send route. Rangers Bill Robinson, the World's Greatest Single, is playing the week at Shafer theater, in the famous dancing soulture, has been forced to take a break from her duties in London. She and her danzing husband are getting their mail at 118 W. 133th Al. G. Field's Minstrels, with Doc Blair in the lead, are playing the follo- lows of Loganport, Marlon, Muncie and Conn- burg. Bart Kenner & Co. have fine success in Virginia. They are playing at Emporia, Franklin and Booking.
Herbert Fat Anderson is doing the play at the Strand theater, Jacksonville, Fla. Carter & Cornish, traveling over the country between Sacramento and Fresno, Calif. Plantation Days is playing the week long images theater, San Francisco, Calif.
*Hello Rufus, wth Nakhilh Webb and
Halilh Webb, please care of care of
Rush Hotel, Blenheim*
Jones & Chapman are playing the week at the Midget Theater, Dayton, O.K.
Billy Wright, with the Himalaye Cox show, was married to Elinor Leena Terry of Macklumberry county, Va., at the Macklumberry Theater, McNicklest & Halliday are at the Pantages theater, Edmonton, Canada.
Billy E. Jones introduced the new song "Gang of Mine," in Newark, N.J.
Hooten & Hooten, after a great season, will rest for the winter months at home, 1368 Penn Ave., Baltimore, Md.
Joe Thomas, after a successful season with Lee's Creole Belles, is resting at the 611 Quinn St., Houston, Texas. Happ Simpson is getting his at 622 Fifth Avenue, playing many successful engagements in and around the Bilson Village.
Whit Viney, champion heavyweight from Harvey's Minstrels, but didn't send any route. Such a thoughtless Carter & Cornish, traveling over the country and of weeks in dear old Los Angeles, Cal., after which the act heads East. Cox show, writes from 1126 Pennsylvania Ave. Baltimore, improves the impressible also writes the death of the infant-daughter of Mrs. Brown & Sialleton are playing the
Brown & Sinalet are playing the
Brown & Sinalet in washington theater
indigations, jpeg.
Julian Costello, with Whitney and Tutt
Baldwin, at 1019 Mtiry Ave, Baltimore,
Md.
Al Gaines and ten people are playing the game at Dallas, Texas. The company will head North in the near future. Kaeol Williams and Gladys Kirkland are all entertaining at the Dell Arab Garage, and Gladys C. says that everything is hunkydydy.
Dancing Tag Hartgirls is being featured this week with the Oh Jo Co., a Columbia Hall jurieuse show, in Columbia, Louis, Mo., Mail, 2142 Chippewa Ave.
Mrs. Daisy Murray, 364 Myrtle Ave.
Brooklyn, N. Y., would like to hear
from you. Write to Mintrels.
Write care of this office.
Daisy. White is getting at 100
Meditt Ave, Atlantic City, N. J.
Harry Fiddler, featuring with
Harvey's Mintrels, ennail a card of
greetings.
Artists, character artists are
getting their mail care of Gen. Del.
Atikin, Minn.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
"THE ROSARY"
"THE ROSARY"
Great Modern Drama Comes to Grand on Monday
One of the very best horsemen on the screen is J. B. Warner, who is the star of "Flaming Hearts" at the States on Sunday.
Some four years ago his reputation as a horseman got him a position in the Army. He was a rider for Phil Rosen, now with the Lasky company. Warner felt that if he made good he would be used for some interesting work, but he was about a tenderfoot who comes West to visit on a big cattle ranch. The ranchman's daughter falls in love with him. Warner was the wife, who, of course, is the villain, is in love with the girl, so he starts in to make life miserable for the tenderfoot. He rides the big gray called "The Killer" on account of his meanness. Many a horse of this type has been known as the "gray rider" to him to death. Warner played the tenderfoot. His instructions were to "pull leather" in the approved tenon to grasp the saddle horn to grasp the saddle horn and try to hang on. There was no bit in the horse's mouth. Nothing but a hacking sound came from his head. Warner forgot directions as soon as the horse was turned loose. He rode the horse masterfully and the horse entirely too well for a tenderfoot the story was rewritten in order that the footage of the remarkable riding could be retained. This experience several riding positions for Warner.
LETTERS
Auburn, N.J.
Dear Tony: You haven't heard from me in a long time. I am with Sonny Thompson's Entertainment with his Wheel attraction. The hand consists of Sonny Thompson, drums; Bob Foley, the band; Michael Vanderhue, tombone; Ocie, Gary, cornet, and Mabel Kane and yours to show at every performance. Records to Gonzelle White and company, Christmas, and to go to Froane's. You're, Arthur S. RAY.
WEST PALM Beach, Fla.
Dear Tony: Just a line to let you know that I am going to two weeks of illness in Miami, Fla. The bunch all seemed happy over my Bolsy DeLegge, motorized to Miami from West Palm Beach for me, Sunday, and will receive mines at the New Central theater, Tampa, Fla. for the next two weeks.
Truly
VOLA VILSON,
Bandana Girls' Co.
Dear Tons--Since leaving your most rotund and jolly presence a year ago, I have been doing the middle for Crays Jazz and Georgia Smart Set to T. O. A. I also had a short tour on T. O. A. I have been doing a novel act with Mrs. Iauna, who finally decided to leave the thrills of the city through the L. S. A. We are contemplating a topsy-turvy singing act, done through the L. S. A. We are spainish dances, at which Mrs. Iauna is most efficient, while I am most deficient and a happy half-time with your New sock, I ask to remain yours most "penchill." HERNAREZ GO IAUNO
New York,
Dear Tons--We arrived in New York, Dec. 8 on S. A. S. Arbizola from Havana. Cuban. We had a lovely season. We went to Havana for a day with all new scenery and new act. We expect to play vauduille the rest of the season. Gonzell White, Edward Knakeff, Harry Crumple, Rustus Crump, Eugene A. Alkens, Earl Faraser, Amanele Jazzplays and George Bass. Harry Crumple, Eugene A. Alkens, Earl Faraser, Amanele Jazzplays and George Bass. We wish the entire profession a merry Christmas and a happy New Year. With Gonzel White's Jazzplays
Eureka club, 3561' L. St., Sacramento California.
STAGE A ME
CHRIS
TO YOU
A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU ALL
TONY LANGSTON
SLIM & JEFF
Contrasting Team Makes Hit With "Talk of the Town"
Here we have a pair of the Race's most accomplished performers, James "Slim"爬, and Michael "Kittie" Jeff, known the world over as "The Hammered Dowl Getter." The boys are featured with Harry M. Strouse's "Talk of the Town" on the Columbia burlesque
THE BROADWAY
WENZEL MILLS
Wenzel Mills, formerly of Quincy, Il., has returned from Europe, and will be for the past ten years. He is at the home of his sister, Mrs. Edith Mills, 1951 and his brother, Robert Mills, March 1, 1924, when he will leave for New York City, sailing on the 15th of March 1924, where he resides at $ Hart St., Bloomville, S. C. He was a caller at the many interesting things to tell of his experiences, etc..
Wenzel Mills, Anthony Tuck of Danville, W. A., and Wesley Johnson sailed as part of the big act of Vernon Castle, New York, in 1924. Euris and Desulev France, the act returned to America, with the three mentioned embarking in 1925. With Adolph Haston, one of St. Louis, Mo., but for many years a resident of London, the Versatile Four, musicians and entertainers. Johnson returned to America, and the Versatile Five, musicians and entertainers. Johnson returned to America, and the turn took the name of Versailla Three and since has been one of the big-time vaudeville throughout Europe.
The present trip is merely a vacation, and Mr. Mills states that his act has bookings beginning April 1 which will keep them busy for a couple of weeks.
DAVE & TRESSIE
Dave & Tressle, the busiest team in the company, took time one of the best, have brought their Synconated Ginger Snap band in to the trip over the Butterfield time, with a next Sunday opening. There are seven rooms in the Orpheum time after a trip over the Keith circuit, for which the team will be able to perform the Old Roll Top Desk Man a flicked box of cigars just for old remembrance sake, and the team will tell the whole world and the profession that they wish all a merry Christmas, getting their mail this week at $226 Giles Ave. Watch these columns for their route each week.
- Smooth & Smooth are in New York City. They had a great trip West. They had a great trip West.
Wishing All Our F
of the Pr
A MERRY O
AN
A HAPPY N
JOHNNY
MILDRED
Wishing All Our Friends In and Out of the Profession
A MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
JOHNNY HUDGINS
MILDRED HUDGINS
En-Route "TOWN SCANDALS"
T. O. B. A.
(Theater Owners' Booking Association)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES and THEATER MANAGERS
Communicate with the
T. O. B. A.
Suite 442-3-4 Volunteer Life Bldg.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
SAM E. REEVIN, Manager, Suite 442-3-4 Volunteer Life Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn.
S. H. DUDLEY, 1223 Seventh Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
MARTIN KLEIN, 129 E. 31st Street, Chicago, IL.
IN MANILA
Manila, P. J.
My Dear Langerston — and your letter in V.S. S. President Madison; also copies of our great weekly, the Chicago tour to the Orient has been a success and is the opening of a new field Japan and China are jazz-azz. All we could do we put on them. They opened the doors of the best high school in Tokyo, Japan, and open for Colored musicians. We played at the new Imperial hotel two weeks before it was open in Tokyo, Japan. We also played at the Hongkong, hotel, Hongkong China, but not into details as it is too long, but go into details as it is too long, on Wednesday, Nov. 14. MJ. Walter H. Loving and his family, in Japan, after 25 years in the Philippines. MJ. Loving has devoted his life's work to the establishment of the museum with the finest in the world. There were at least 2,000 people at the pler 100 men in his land, and it was the first time in my life I have ever seen his many men cry I have time to do the natives flowered him with gifts, flowers, etc. will inclose a few clippings from local cards and wish you a merry Christmas and happy New Year. All are well, will keep you posted on what is going in in the Philippines.
burs trinity.
WILLIAM O. HEGAMIN.
Manila hotel. Manila, P. I.
DIXIE STRUTTERS NEWS
Down in Louisiana, where the sugar
cane grows, that is where we are
been. We have been teaching and follow the show each day,
we are really making good. We have
been in a show a night. Since our
last writing, we have had quite
an addition to the show and we
stretched to strut
At Alexandria, La. we met Billy Mack
and his company, who were playing
Clark & Clark company, who were playing
at Mike Mules theater; then, too,
Cook Leggett's show was there and
never has a great time meeting old
friends. Mrs. Billick, the manager's wife,
and spent two weeks with governor and now
he is full of smiles.
All the gang spent most of the time
over in New Orleans. There the writer
met one of the guys, who was
spent since 1910 Johnnie King, who
is playing piano at the Country club,
and of all the times, we had it on
that Monday night. Space and time will
not allow me to tell all the good things
we did have, but use your own judg-
Shinny Dewitt Hall and wife left the team joined by the Misses Evelyn Reddish and Katie Smith, who were big men best show that I have ever seen, but space that we have to fill, but space that our reputation travels ahead of us and Manager Billicks is real
IDA CALLS
Ida Forsythe, for years recognized as one of the worst. Old Roll Todd desk early in the week. Ida is residing with relatives at 3333 State St., Chicago, and that she was "in for the winter." Minstrel Morris, the Juggler, is playing the week at the playhouse. Ida played an indoor fair in Halifax, N. S., last week and says that the coming down. Wow!
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
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No. 14154
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A SYMPATHETIC WALTZ BALLAD
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THE AVENUE
The offering of a musical revue of an exceedingly high-class together with additional vaudeville, rounds out the offerings of the event, and are equaled on the Avenue stage. The new owners and management have shown their intention of giving the event a considerable ability. This is evidenced by a chance at the next week's offering. Miss Mamie Smith and her big jazz oratorio New York City engagement, will begin a week's engagement at the Avenue on Monday next. Miss Smith hardly needs an introduction to the music of the musical revue, a household word with every lover of good muscle here. Miss Smith and her organization will be the head of the musical revue program. In addition there will be presented the snappy musical revue "Ginger Girls" in which 24 sharply dressed apprentices will take part. Special ceremonies will be used at this show. The management has inaugurated the policy of giving a special midnight performance at 11:30 o'clock. It is the intention of the management to make the Avenue theater the place of amusement for any act or word of objection be permitted. With the offering of such productions as outlined above we predict capacity houses at the Avenue.
MISS JUSTA
Helena Justa, formerly part owner of Jimmie's Marshall Review, her partner in building a brand new act which is billed an organized a brand new act which is billed "the Jimmies" being Jimmie Jimmie's Jimmie Sadder. They opened at the Philadelphia, and were a real sensation. They are the Eastern territory and the route will be the Note or Two columns each week.
Frank Crookett of the Bliop theater, Nashville. Tenn., writes that "The black Cat Bone" company is doing well and the show takes out a tent show next summer.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
MAIL RADIO
JAY GOULD
Jay Gould writes all the way from San Diego, the city on the Canadian and Kentucky circuits and that he and the pointers of the Jinna Mex. He sends thanks to Slaise & Blake for their fine work in the world, were in Cincinnati, Ohio, during the Latona meeting and also broadcasts his address is 54 Sixth St. San Diego, Cal. Marlon Dickerson had mail sent to Patricia Parker, Victoria, B. C. With Robinson's Syncopators.
MORE STAGE NEWS ON PAGE 8
o' Does
14154
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
ings 'Em"
ND—
Man Blues"
on Black Swan, of Course
agent for This and Other
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RECT TO US
NOGRAPH CO., INC.
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OPEN TIME—WE BOOK
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V SONG HITS
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15c. Dance Orchestration. 25c.
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
MAMIE SMITH*
4860-10 in-78
MISTREATN' DADDY BLUES—
Contralto Solo—Mamie Smith*
PLAIN OLD BLUES—Contralto Solo
Mamie Smith*
4895-10 in-78
GOOD LOOKING PAPA—Contralto
Solo, Piano Accomp. by Clarence
Williams*
YOU CAN'T DO WHAT MY LAST
MAN DID—Contralto Solo, Piano
accomp.—Mamie Smith*
4898-10 in-78
KANSAS GIRL MAN BLUES—Contralto
Solo, Accomp. by Harlem
Trio—Mamie Smith*
LADY LUCK BLUE* Contralto Solo
Accomp. by Harlem Trio—Mamie
Smith* **4781–10 in** —75e
YOU GOTE GOTE SEE MAMIA EVE
NIGHT* Contralto Solo—Mamie
Smith and Her Jazz Hounds* **4781–10 in** —75e
YOU GOTE GOTE Contralto
Solo—Mamie Smith and Her Jazz
Hounds* **4781–10 in** —75e
I AINT GONNA GIVE NOBODY
Contralto Solo—Mamie Smith and
Her Jazz Hounds* **4781–10 in** —75e
DON'T MESS WITH ME—Contralto
Mamie Smith and Her Jazz
Hounds* **4681–10 in** —75e
LONEBOME MAMA BLUES—Contralto Solo—Mamie Smith and Her
Jazz Hounds* **4681–10 in** —75e
OVER ORLEANS—Contralto Solo
NEP ORLEANS—Contraito Solo
Mampi Smith Her Jazz Hounds*
*
457-10 in ...756
WABASH Solo
Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds*
D00 DAK BLUES—Contralto Solo
DAM KAK Hounds—Contralto Hounds*
d4d66-11 in ...756
DOWN HOME BLUES—Contrarito
Mamie Smith and Her
Band*
ARKANSAK BLUES - Controllo Solo
Mamie
RAND BAND*
4250 - 10 - 78 - 78
1225-10 in...750
MEM'RIES OF JESUS MAMMY—Central Salo—Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds*
IF YOU DON'T WANT MY BLUES
Contraito Solo—Mamie Smith and
Her Jazz Hounds*
4169-10 in...-75c
CRAZY BLUES—Contraito Solo
Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds*
IF YOU DON'T WANT FOR YOU
If You Don't Get It Tain't No Fault
o' Mine—Contraito Solo—Mamie
Smith and Her Jazz Hounds*
SHELTON BROOKS*
4828-10 in...-75c
IT TAKES MONEY TO CURE MY
BLUES—Bartonite Solo, Accomp. by
Hickey's Harmony—Shelton Brooks*
WHEN THE DIXIE SUN GOES
DOWN—Bartonite Solo, Accomp. by
Hickey's Harmony—Shelton Brooks*
4798-10 in...-75c
THE FAMILY QUARREL—Monologue—Shelton Brooks*
THE THIRD DEGREE—Monologue
Shelton Brooks*
4682-10 in...75c
THE CHICKEN THIEVES—Mono-
logue Newton Brooks
COLLECTING RENTS—Monologue
Shalton Brooks*
4428-10 in...75c
DARKTOWN COURT ROOM—Talk-
Shalton Brooks and Company*
YOU CAN'T COME IN—Dialogue
Miller and Lyles*
4096-10 in...75c
THE NEW DARKTOWN JUDGE
Nathaniel Lyles*
THEN ILL GO IN THAT LION'S
CAGE—Talking—Shelton Brooks
& Company*
4727-10 in...75c
UNITED DARKTOWN JUDGE
CATCHER LODGE—Dialogue
Miller and Lyles
CANT DO IT—Dialogue—Miller and
Lyles*
8095-10 in...75c
GRIEVIOUS BLUES—Gustavio Solo
with Piano and Cornet Accomp. by
Clarence Williams and Thomas
Morris—Fannie Goosby*
I'VE GOT THE BLUES, THAT'S
Gustavio Solo with Piano
and Cornet Accomp. by Clarence
Williams and Thomas Morris—Fannie
Goosby*
VIRGINIA LISTON*
SALLY LONG BLUES—Contraito Solo
Piano Accomp. by Clarence Williams
-Virginia Listson
MY MIND
BLUES—Contraito Solo, Piano
Accomp. by Clarence Williams—
-Virginia Listson
8092—10 In.—75c
BED BLUES—Contraito Solo
Piano Accomp. by Clarence Williams
-Virginia Listson
YOU HOUGHT I WAS BLIND BUT
NO I WAS—Contraito Solo, Piano
Accomp. by Clarence Williams
-Virginia Listson
EVA TAYLOR*
8089-10 in -755
ORIGINAL Williams SCRIBT
Controllo SSRIBT
Controllo SSRIBT
Taylor and
Clarence Williams "Blue Fire"
IF YOU DON'T I KNOW WHO
WILL Controllo SSRIBT Taylor
Will Controllo Williams "Blue Fire"
8089-10 in -766
DOWN HEARTED BLUES—Contraitor
Solo, Plain Accomp. by Clarence
You MISSED A GOOD WOMAN
WHEN YOU PICKED ALL OVER
ME=Contraitor Solo, Plain Accomp.
by Clarence You TAYLOR
487-10 in -35-6
1927-10 18th.-76c
'THE GO' TONIGHT
BANANA BLUES—Contraito Solé—
Eva Taylor with Clarence Williams'
Blue Five
OH! DADDY BLUES—Contrarito-Rar-
bone Dust—Eva. Taylor and Clarence
Williams with Clarence Willi-
ams'
105—12 in.—$1.25
FAREWELL BLUES—Contrarito Solo
Eva Taylor with Clarence Williams'
Blue Five*
GULF COAST BLUES—Contrarito Solo
Eva Taylor with Clarence Williams'
Blue Five*
ESTHER BIGEOU*
805—10 in.—75c
THE GULF COAST BLUES—Contrarito
Solo—Eva Biger Glou
GULF COAST BLUES ALL
RIGHT WITH ME—Contrarito Solo
Eva Biger Glou
8028-10 in -75c
STINGAREE BLUES—Contralto Solo
Ether Bigeou"
II THAT WHAT YOU WANT,
KENE D. II—Contralto Solo—
Ether Bigeou"
8028-10 in -75c
THE MEMPHIS BLUES—Contralto
Solo—Ether Bigeou"
THE ST. LOUIS BLUES—Contralto
Solo—Ether Bigeou"
SPIRITUAL
4028-10 in -75c
LORD I WANT TO BE A CHRISTIAN—Vocal Trio—Kentucky Trio
DO YOU WANT TO GO THERE!
Vocal Trio—Kentucky Trio
4687-10 in-75c
SWING LOW, SWEET CHARIOT-
Colored Male Quartette-Morehouse
DOWN BY THE RIVERSIDE-Colored
Male Quartette-Morehouse
College Quartette
KING JESUS IS A JLIBTENING-
Virginia-Juillebite Singara
4430-10 in.—75c
O MARY DON'T YOU WEEP,
DON'T YOU MOUNCH—Colored Female Quartette—Virginia Female Jubilee Singers
LOVER OF THE LORD—Colored Quartette—Colored Female Quartette—Virginia Female Jubilee Singers
*Exclusive OKeh Artists
WAMIE SMITH
CLARENCE WILLIAMS
SARA MARTIN
VIRGINIA LISTON
A.
TOMMY MORRIS
A.
ESTHER BIGEOU
SAM GRAY
ESTHER BIGEOU
A
EDDIE HEYWOOD
MAMIE SMITH
for
EIG
Heree
Race
music
together
them
OKeh
still
Th
idea:
ness
Fir
Smith
First
or OK
EIGHTEEN
carefully,
Here you see
Race stars: the
musicians and
together: and
them now the
OKeh: the or
still the best.
The Race
to O
Three year
idea: the mak
ness Race re
First came
Smith. Thou
First and Finest Race Artists
for OKeh Race Records-the greatest in the World
EIGHTEEN of them: Look'em over carefully, count them to make sure. Here you see the big OKeh family of Race stars: the largest circle of singers, musicians and composers ever gathered together: and each and every one of them now recording exclusively for OKeh: the original Race records and still the best.
Three years ago OKeh put over a big idea: the making of real, honest-to-goodness Race records. First came "Crazy Blues" by Mamie Smith. Thousands upon thousands fell
Clarence Williams
Mamie Smith,
Sara Martin,
Virginia Liston,
Ada Brown,
Bennie Moten,
Esther Bigeou
Fannie Goosby,
Sam Gray,
---
General Phonograph Corporation
The Race's Contribution to OKeh Records
Looking right at you on this page are
FOLKS, get this: The first successful Race records were OKehs. The largest list of Race records made by leading Race artists are OKehs today. OKeh leads the way, anywhere, anytime, anyhow!
MARY K. BRADFORD
King of the ivories with those Cleo eyes charming chirpor famous vaudeville queen brown-skin beauty keen Kansas nighthawk with them Creole eyes the Georgia peach of Gray & Liston team
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
E WILLIAMS
SARA
SARA M
ALL THESE
Finest Race
Record exclusive
Race Records
in the World
k'em over
make sure.
family of
of singers,
gathered
very one of
sively for
records and
in love wi
bought it, a
greatest sel
OKeh new
Race record
colored or
ists. The
out—is a r
ber—the fin
ution
ids
over a big
st-to-good-
by Mamie
rusands fell
New OKeh
discovered
tions into th
too. OKeh
Race record
colored art
OKeh gives
times over,
on the wo
records too
light at you on this p
in love with
bought it, and
greatest selling
OKeh next
Race record
colored orche-
ists. The lo-
out—is a ree-
ber—the first
New OKeh
discovered b
tions into the
too. OKeh n
Race record
colored artis
OKeh gives
times over,
on the wor-
records today
in love with this great blues number, bought it, and today it still stands as the greatest selling Race record of all time.
OKeh next developed the standard Race record accompaniments by famous colored orchestras and by noted pianists. The latest OKeh novelty—just out—is a remarkable blue guitar number—the first ever recorded in America.
New OKeh Race artists have been discovered by special recording expeditions into the South. And listen to this, too. OKeh made the first 12-inch blues Race record; the first duet record by colored artists was an OKeh; and so OKeh gives you not once, but a hundred times over, the newest Race features, on the world's biggest list of Race records today.
Tommy Morris,
W. C. Handy,
Eddie Heywood,
Sippie Wallace,
Charles Anderson,
Baby Benbow,
King Bechet,
Mary K. Bradford,
Eva Taylor,
The first successful Race record
of Race records made by leading K.
Keh leads the way, anywhere, and
oration
successful Race record made by leading him away, anywhere, and
ADA BROWN
wizard of the cornet
father of the blues
the Atlanta key tickler
OKeh's newest song queen
the Hoo-Hoo man
a blue ribbon winner every time
wearing the OKeh smile
syncopating song-bird
queen of the blues
25 W. 45th Street, New York
KING BECHET
SIPPIE WALLACE
W. C. HANDY
BABY BENBOW
BABY BENBOW
PAGE SEVEN—PART ONE
SARA MARTIN*
ROAMIN' BLUES—Contraito Solo,
Guitar Accomp. by Sylvester Weaver-
Sara Martin'
IVE GOT TO GO AND LEAVE MY
Guitar Accomp. by Sylvester Weaver-
Sara Martin'
809.10 in...75c
GRAVEYARD DREAM BLUES—Contraito Solo-Sara Martin and Clarence Williams' Harmaking ON
BLUES—Contraito Solo-Sara Martin and Clarence Williams' Harmoning Four*
809.10 in...75c
ATLANTA BLUES—Contraito Solo
Sara Martin and Clarence Williams'
Blue Five*
NEW ORLEANS TOP SCOP BLUES
Contraito Solo, Plano Accomp.
Clarence Williams—Sara Martin*
*087-203-1200
8033 to 10 in- 750
YE SHALL REAP JUST WHAT YOU
Contrato Solo. Piano
comp. Clarence Williams- Sara
Martin*
YOU JUST CAN'T HAVE NO ONE
MAN BY YOURSELF—Contrainta
Solo, Piano Accomp. by Clarence
Williams—Sara Martin*
8050-10 in-75e
MICHIGAN WATER BLUES—Contrato Solo. Plano Accomp. by Clarence Williams—Sara Martin*
KEEPS ON A RAININ—Contrato Solo. Plano Accomp. by Clarence Williams—Sara Martin*
8043-10 in-75e
YOU'VE GOT EVRYTHING A SWEET MAMA NEEDS BUT ME Contrato Solo—Sara Martin*
'TAIN' NOBODY'S BUSNESS IF I DO—Contrato Solo—Sara Martin*
8082-10 in...-75c
HESIKATION BLUES—Contralto Duet.
Duet. By Clarence Williams—Cornet Obligato by
Thomas Morris—Sara Martin and Eva Taylor*
THE FREE AND EASY PAPA O'MINE—Contralto Duet. Piano
comp. by Clarence Williams—Cornet Obligato by Thomas Morris—Sara Martin and Eva Taylor*
8082-10 in...-75c
ORIGINAL BLUES—Contralto-Barton
tone Duet—Sara Martin and Shelton
Brooks*
I GOT WHAT IT TAKES TO BRING
YOU BACK—Contralto-Barton
Duet—Sara Martin-Shelton Brooks*
MISCELLANEOUS LIST
4975-10 in...-75c
NEW ORLEANS HOP WOOP BLUES
Fox Trot-Clarence Williams' Blue
Fire*
JAZZIN' BABIES' BLUES—Fox Trot
King Oliver's Jazz Band
4940-10 in...-75c
BEAUCOUS FOX Trot—Thomas Morris Past Jazz Masters*
THOSE BLUES—Fox Trot—Thomas
Morris Past Jazz Masters*
4933-10 in...-75c
PANAMA—Fox Trot—Handy's Or-
chestra*
DOWN HEARTED BLUES—Fox Trot
Handy's Orchestra*
4906-10 in...-75c
BOBBIN' BLUES—Fox Trot—King
Oliver's Jazz Band
SHOWN JOHNSON' BLUES—Fox Trot—
King Oliver's Jazz Band
8075-10 in...-75c
THE BULL BLUES (E Flat No. 1
Blues)—Fox Trot—Thomas Morris
Past Jazz Masters*
JUNE BLUES' THAT'S ALL—Fox Trot—Thomas Morris Past Jazz
Masters*
4925-10 in -75e
KANSAS CITY MAN BLUES—Fox Tox
CITY MAN BLUES—Fox Tox
WILD CAT BLUES—Fox Tox Trog-
william Williams* Blue Flame*
8106-10 in -75e
SHORTY CITY—Contro-
talo Solo, Piano Accomp. by Eddie
Heywood—Sipple Wallace*
UP THE COUNTRY BLUES—
Contro-talo Solo, Piano Accomp. by
Eddie Heywood—Sipple Wallace*
4950-10 in -75e
YODLE SONG—COO COO—Tenor
Solo, Piano Accomp. by Eddie Hey-
wood
SLEEP, BABY, SLEEP—Tenor Solo,
Piano Accomp. by Eddie Heywood
Charles Anderson*
4950-10 in -75e
ELEPHANTS WOBBLE—Fox Tox
Bennie Moten's Kansas City Or-
chestra*
GIRLFISH BLUES—Fox Tox Bennie
Moten's Kansas City Orchestra*
8101-10 in -75e
How to Buy—
Check the OKeh titles listed here for your favorite Race records. Better yet, tear out this page and use it as your directory. Mark the numbers you want and take the list to the OKeh dealer nearest you or mail us your order and we will see that you are supplied promptly.
S
Tony Langston's MOVIE and STAGE DEPARTMENT
BUY OKeh Records from your local music shop
or mail your order to the dealer nearest you.
Space under this heading is limited to one inch. Write TONY LANGSTON
ANY, REPT. of the Chicago Defender, for full information as to listing
Okah Race Records Are the First and the Best
PAGE EIGHT—PART ONE
DESTROYING ANGEL
Laughs alternating with thrills and excitement enacted by the gifted Leah Baird and a cast of clever screen artists who are also stars was the surprisingly good offering at the Vendome theater yesterday in "The Destroying Angel," and it remains until Saturday night. One may go some time without discovering better romance, comedy and wholesome humor, but it is six fast reels. It is quite a departure from anything Leah Baird has previously done and places her on the screen of the comedy favorites of the screen.
---
Here is a thrilling comedy romance developed with many delicious surprises. Louis Joseph Vance, and can be said to please the most exacting audience. Drill a secret marriage, the story tells of a romantic girl who mysteriously is sociable and is boosted to stardom on the stage by a shewed theatrical manager under the enticing name of city is effectively concealed even from the college boy who went through the wild ceremony, and is accompanied with the famous actress. Miss Baird in her role as the dancer has many lovers at her side. She becomes the victim of desperate plots, but the right man—a fighter and love makes it easy for her to follow her through every peril. It would not be fair to tell all the destroying Angel" to enjoy it.
SOME BUNCH
Dave & Tressie played the Main St.
Theater, Kansas City, Mo. Last week
the theater that those were one
more of "our" acts at each house in
the town. Aside from themselves,
they played the Dale Foley at
Ornate Hunt, Tuck, at the Galey;
Mamla Smith & Jazz Hounds at the
Sinclair and Forrest & others at
All theaters entertained to a fine extent by different residents
of the town.
CENTRAL THEATER
TAMPA, FLORIDA
ZOLLLIE FORD, Manager
Fraes E. J. Cummings' Attractions
Also Good "One Nighters."
We Treat You Right and Play
Them All.
Get in Touch With
A. L. CUMMINGS, Pensacola, Fla.
Anyone Knowing the Whorebats of
GUS BUTLER
Please Write Me Quick, As I
Have Been Told He Is Dead.
TRIXIE BUTLER
3017 State Street
Chicago, Ill.
Directory of Re
BUY OKH Records from
or mail your order to the
Space under this heading is limited to one
ADV. DEPT. of the Chicago Defender.
Atlanta, Ga.
WE FILL MAIL ORDERS
Complete stock of OKH Records
OKH Record Shop
294 Decatur Street
Chicago, Ill.
Rialto Music Shop
Most complete stock of place Records
in America. Mail orders sent postage
payable to the U. S. Depository
Banks and Nights until 11 P. M.
Chicago, Ill.
F. TAZTE
VENDOMOON
GROUP, Inc.
47 E. 31st Street
Headquarters for all BACE RECORDS
Cleveland, Ohio
J. L. Pickett
Complete line of OKB Records
48221 Scovill Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio
Scovill Music Company
Complete line of OKB Records
We ship by Parcel Post-Guaranteed
7756 Scovill Avenue
E. R. Brown
8708 Central Avenue
We carry a full line of OKah Records
Columbus, Ohio
Favorite Music Shoppe
Northeast corner 17th and Long St.
Complete Stock of
OKah RACE RECORDS
Detroit, Mich.
Shackelford's Melody
Music Shop
1879 Hastings Street
AZ 85710
Social attention given MAIL ORDERS
Royal's Music Shops
617 Independence Avenue
1426 E. 18th Street
Kansas City, Mo.
Winston Holmes Music
Company
1628 E. 18th Street
Okch Ra
Are the First
---
WITH JIMMIE COOPER'S REVIEW
Racial Record Makers Have Christmas Program
The Black Swan Phonograph Co. has a long tradition of holiday trade. It carries many splendid numbers appropriate for the season, including Faith and Need These Every Hour; Silent Night and Joy to the Seven Seasons; The Holy City and Jesus; I Come; My Way is Clouded and Lord; I Want to Be a Christian; Lift Every Rose; Rosary; Saints Hides in the Talking Machine and A Visit from St. Nicholas; Ive Seen. These were all made by Black Swan stars and feature quartets and all are "two sides," as
Detroit, Mich.—The bill this week is a remarkable one. There are five accusers in the case, a musician and two unaccented and all of them are more than giving satisfaction. They include Musical Director, the musician and co-director, who singings and xylophones are featured; Harry Cook, the clever monologist and decorator; a singing talkk and dancing team of fine ability; Edmona Henderson, one of the wonders of the blues, who is a real life singer; Williams & Ridley in a conglomeration of song, dialogue and dancing.—H. D. Garnett, Reporter.
Ella Ross writes that she is getting here at 11 Grant St., Lexington, Ky.
Record Dealers
from your local music shop
the dealer nearest you.
One inch. Write TONY LANGTON,
or, for a more
Little Rock, Ark.
New York, N. Y.
Dixie Music Shop
553 Lenox Avenue
Philadelphia, Pa.
Carson's Music & Novelty
Shop
We carry a complete line of
OKEH RACE RECORDS
1054 South Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
Crown Talking Machine
Company
We carry a complete line of
OKEH RACE RECORDS
125 North 6th Street
Also: 900 Broadway, Camden, M. 2.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Treegoob's Music and
Stationery Shop
We carry a complete line of
OKEH RACE RECORDS
4088 Lancaster Ave.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Walter's Music Store
We carry a complete line of
OKEH RACE RECORDS
1408 South Street
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Send your order to
Goldman & Wolf
RACE ARTIST RECORDS
1621 Center Avenue (Opp. Miller Street)
Send No Money
Pittsburgh, Pa.
DORSEY BROS. MUSIC SHOPPE
The only exclusive Race music shoppe
owned entirely by Race people in Western
countries. We carry some same day
received. We pay postage.
6331 Franktown Avenue
St. Louis, Mo.
Pastime Music Shop
We carry compilations of
ORCAR RECORDS
All Records 750 -- add for postage C.O.D.
Send no money. Money grinds payable
to Harry Rowland, 2383 Market Street
St. Louis, Mo.
Order all Your Records by Mail. Records
only 750 -- postage paid. Send
No Money Received.
St. Louis Music Co.
Eaz 266, Dapt. 1
ace Records and the Best
BLACK SWAN
Pfeifers
BIRTH AND MUM
SALEM SEZ
Dear Gen. Tony: Good Christmas is
on the way. I hope you are
our thoughts, naturally, respect, to you.
dear days of
dryness
wonderful days
just preceding
chastened we became
how circling
mavior, how we thrilled and palmed
happy antelpaions;
neither the
threata was
gives us access
of the joy
Christmas morn-
ing we be held the
Christmas tree
colored wax
candles; seeme-
chains of popcorn;
its tinsel
S. T. Whitney
tions dazzling our eyes; the prodigal
presents how can one describe the present
when the glory of it all met our ex-
perience. We describe the journey
you stood transfixed with delight, tears
came to your eyes, whilow your heart
tude and thanksgiving. Oh, those
happy, happy days! Gone, but not
thankful by giving happiness to our children
who are the poor unfortunate children
whom we should appreciate. We
neglected or forgotten on Christmas
Father's gift we should appreciate the
gifted the gifts that dear Santa
Christmas upon us. Now we know any better way to start our New Year than allowing
what crrites think of our latest
the company is now playing a four
dealer, Baltimore, Md., during
this time there will be many changes made
sume our regular route, the show ap-
pearing under a different title.
By JAMES MUIR
overemphasized the story, which really realizes part of the show. For *North Air* part of the show, "a thing of antics, shuffles and songs" is colored variety go this one is quite simple and downright affairs that troops can put over because of their hand and their singleness of purpose, seemingly makes them beside themselves that sets the feet a moving and ment that sets the feet a moving and appetitive for more applause. Probably continue their exertions until they realize the music was sufficiently stimulating.
The company presenting "North Air" saveli-die spirit as the rest of the Coles' troupes. It has a great deal more energy than white cast. Most of its members wear white cast. Most of its members rhythmically. And, what does it do? it make it only the comedians who understand their meaning come up. If they understand their meaning come up, the audiences that attend such a performance are not interested in the elocation, are not interested in the singing and especially the zealous dancing.
In fact, we think that the story in *The Hunger Games* is so much to say and does not allow us to express our enough to do. We mean especially the thick thickens so much that it thickens to cloud up and rain all over the land and the performers are represented back home in Georgia, "going it" not to wear a hole in the Victory stage.
William McCabe's Georgia Troubadours are having fine success in the area, and are dividing the present fall between Amoret, Dresel and Excelsior Springs.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
A Musical Comedy in Two Acts and Ten Scenes, Eighteen Numbers—Book by Irving Miller, Lyrics and Music by Tim Brymn
A Musical Comedy in Two Acts and Ten Scenes, Eighteen Numbers—Book by Irving Miller, Lyrics and Music by Tim Brymn
"Dinah" is a pleasing evening's entertainment by an agile and fast group of Colored musical comedy artists. "Dinah" is the new sister of "Liza," that spent about eight months between the 63rd St. theater and the Nora Bayes, after which it went on the road or a brief tour in New York. The family resemblance between the two shows is very evident in the bits that make up the alleged book, and songs, tuneful though they be, are but the tunes made familiar in the other show with some slight alterations in the title number. In the title number, and "Sanbo" is quite like the "Harry" number made famous in "Shuffle Along." The sure-fire things that have been features in all the previous Colored musical comedies. A line spoken by the sure-fire character scribes it. He says anent a dance hall project, that "too much attention has been paid to the feet and not enough to the head." That tells us of the fact that
But you have to hand it to Irving Miller. He can assemble good-looking dance shoes and dance in most vibrant fashion. The show has a very "peepy" and fast chorus, and they are most tastefully costumed, not elaborately but pleasantly. The show is nicely equipped with scenery, three of the four full-stage Billy Mills and Doe Doe Green provide a lot of hearty laughs, and Miller is the most fun of fun. Mills is his mainstay in this, and he and Green are both sure-fire comics. Carpes, Lloyd Mitchell and a team of neat little girls. Florence Brown and Aurora Greely, contribute some unusually clever dance stuff.
Gertrude Saunders in her own
own numbers, and Ethal Ridley stamped
and Ethal Ridley stamped
VALLEY OF LOST, SOULS
For Saturday, Dec. 22, only Manager George Paul of the States theater, "The Valley of Lost Souls," the new Independent Pictures release, out this week. It is out of the ordinary, and he is anxious to have all his patrons to know about the picture, written by J. Seton Drummons whose stories are well known to moving picture lovers for their strength. In fact "The Valley of Lost Souls" is said to have romance with a captain tucked away in every foot of film. The locale of the story is in the small French-Canadian town of with a mysterious "ghost" who robs, murders and plunders, thus terrifying the overloaded stranger happens to come along one day, sees Julie Lebeau, daughter of the overloaded stranger stay and investigate the rumors of the "ghost." Investigate he does, much in French, French guide in love with Julie. The solving of the mystery is said to furnish a strong dramatic element in a gel-blooded photodramas.
The direction is by Caryl Plem-
king, Jr., of Kingston, Victor Sutherland, Luis
Alberni, Anne Hamilton, Edward
Rosemary, and John Sutherland,
will be no advance in prices.
Percy Powell, known as the one-man
bender, Gilberts and Gibbons after
Gibbons, a few minutes after his
JOHNNY HUDGINS
Talented Comedian Making Great Record With Town Scandals
"The Strutting Fool" is the manner of the game, and the manner of Race's greatest comedians, is billed by the best of the best, and one of the best and most successful burlesque shows on the Columbia Channel.
THE MUSICIAN
JOHNY HUDGINS
in burlesque and his connections during this long period have been untimely successful, his work proving his talent. Watch for him, as he is always glad to meet old friends. Week of Dec. 21, theatrical production Conn.; Dec. 21, poll theater, Waterbury; and Majestic, Bridgeport, Conn.
NORMA'S LETTER
Easton, Pa.
NORMA THOMAS,
Naomi and the Brazilian Boys.
THE FLOYDS
The Floyd Family Quartet of Indianapolis, the first group to perform itself throughout the Middle West. It is a novelty, inasmuch as it carries Mrs. Irwin, Mrs. Browne, Mrs. 8, 11 and 13 years, respectively. They are real singers and are in demand at all times for church, club and religious work.
Edmona Henderson is doing her anthem at the Koppi Ueater, Detroit, Mich.
"DINAH"
favorite hymns and spin
Race. These records are
"peace on earth and good
Elkins-
12070—Standing in the Need
Couldn't Hear Nobody
12071—Gonna Shout All O'
and Down by the River
W
12075—Witness and You Bet
12076—Lord, I Can't Stay Away
12078—I Couldn't
Hors
12061—What a Time Talking
12035—Father Prepare Me as
Be Uplifted
by these
Sacred
Records
When the golden strains of "Gonna Shout
all Over God's Heaven" and "Down by the
Riverside" come forth from Paramount record
No. 12071, by Elkins-Payne and Paramount Jubilee Singers, you feel exalted and uplifted all over!
Every Christian home should have one or more
of the beautiful inspirational songs listed below—old
favorite hymns and spirituals—sung by melodious-voiced leading artists of the
Race. These records are especially appropriate for the holiday season when
"peace on earth and good will to men" is in the heart of every high-souled person.
12040—I'm So Glad Trouble
Hack
33069—Holy Night and Silent
SEND NO
Look over the records in
list for future reference.
If he can't supply genuine
direct from factory. Record
mailed C. O. D., 75¢ each.
ance. Write for free catalog
The New York Rec
Look over the records listed on this page. Save this list for future reference. Take it to your local dealer.
If he can't supply genuine Paramount Records, order direct from factory. Records are carefully packed and mailed C. O. D., 75¢ each. We pay postage and insurance. Write for free catalog of all Paramount Records.
The New York Recording Laboratories
12 Paramount Building Port Washington, Wis.
Paramount The Popular Race Record
GOY GOGITATES
GOY GOGITATES
Coy Herndon
No "Chocolate Town"
Washington Theater
12075—Witness and You Better Run.
12076—Lord, I Can't Stay Away and On Calvary.
12078—I Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray and Do You Think I'll Make a Soldier.
**Horace George's Jubilee Harmonizers**
12061—What a Time Talking with the Angels and Hard Trial.
**Norfolk Jubilee Quartette**
12035—Father Prepare Me and My Lord's Gonna Move This Wicked Race.
**Carroll Clark**
12037—By an' By and Oh Didn't It Rain.
12038—Swing Low, Sweet Chariot and I Stood
On Do Ribber Ob Jordan.
12039—Nobody Knows Do Troubles I've Seen
Beyond My Mindstorms.
12077—Hush, Somebody's Calling My Name and
Sign of Judgment.
**Horace George's Jubilee Harmonizers**
**Norfolk Jubilee Quartette**
**Carroll Clark**
12037—Dear Lord Remember Me and Jesus is
Coming Soon.
12038—The Home Beyond and I'm So Glad
Trouble Don't Last Always.
SEND NO MONEY!
"SHUFFLE ALONG" SCORES
BIG AT THE MARYLAND
George Wintz's Colored Comedy Jazz Show and Orchestra Take Lead of Its Kind
Cumberland m.D.-George Wintz's new show, "Shuffle Along," which began two days' engagement at the Maryland theater last night before a large audience. The show, beginning to end and proved the top notcher of its kind in every respect, says a writer in The Times. The entertainment moved along at regular Zev speed and kept the audience, an unmaintained, proud laughter, as well as peculiar to the Colored Race. George Wintz, who is popular in this city, like his charming audience, has dedicated his already wide range of quality and quantity of diversion in his "Shuffle Along" with his eleven performers.
In addition to the round after concert show, the concert also specializes in show carries *Colored orchestra and pianist* that are well worth the price of admission, and ways stresses—that of giving his patrons more than their money's worth. The title of humor in his make-up will surely have it amplified if he sees George Pinker here at the Maryland tonight. Colored shows take well here, but George Pinker here at the flavor of the mass critical at the performance last night.
WALLACE DEAD
ANOTHER CHARLES
An item in last week's issue of the World's Greatest told all about one man who was born into the loob-hatch. Ever since Charles Anderson, the Yodler, who conceived him, E. Seth Stk, has been besieged by letters, telegrams and phone calls asking when he met his future wife, countries were useless, needles to say, as our Charles never has been, and hopes never to be forced to say "Good morning, Judge."
Dad James and his Versatile Strelcailor went the week at the Lincoln Petersburg.
When the golden all Over God's Heaven Riverside" come forth for No. 12071, by Elkins-Pa bilee Singers, you feel exa tive. Every Christian home s e of the beautiful inspirational rituals—sung by melodious-voices are especially appropriate for the will to men" is in the heart of e s Payne and Paramount Jubilee Day of Prayer and I Pray. Over God's Heaven Riverside. Theman Sextette with Orchestra Run. Hay and On Calvary. Hear Nobody Pray and Do You Think I Face George's Jubilee Harmony with the Angels and Hard Trials. Norfolk Jubilee Quartette, and My Lord's Gonna Move This Wicked Carroll Clark
When the golden strains of "Gonna Shout all Over God's Heaven" and "Down by the Riverside" come forth from Paramount record No. 12071, by Elkins-Payne and Paramount Jubilee Singers, you feel exalted and uplifted all over! Every Christian home should have one or more
Madam Hurd Fairfax
Don't Last Always and Somebody's Knock
el-Berge Trio [violin, cello, g
Night, Holy Night.
O MONEY!
Posted on this page. Save this
Take it to your local dealer.
Paramount Records, order
ids are carefully packed and
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g of all Paramount Records.
ording Laboratories
Port Washington, Wis.
33136—Dear Lord Remember Me and Jesus in Coming Soon.
33137—The Home Beyond and I'm So Glad Trouble Don't Last Always.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1920
THE GEORGIAS
Waupaca, Wisc.
Wisley, Wis., which, I betten
this side of the
Indiana, we landed
in Gary, Ind. Sat.
11:45, after
all-night ride out
the tario, on a special.
This was
we have showed in
Gary, and each
did greater.
This is
time it was
did we vaudeville
there, the same
tages time, with
Tim Owlesh did
his single and
the big act. "Fun on
the Flanta-
Friend Tony: This parked in Waupaca, heve, is the coldest
Thos. Harris
THOMAS SWIFTY HARRIS.
Jimbie Howell and Little Bit Turmer are playing at the Washington, D.C. They are featured with the Yerkes Flotilla orchestra, an Ofay act of class. Thomas & Russell are working all week at the week between Muncie and Vincennes. Ind. They are looked at the Avenue, Chicago, New Year's week. Dick & Puck, doing great in the West, are playing the week at San Jose, Cal,
Devoted to the interests of actors, performers, showmen and theatrists, the Renaissance wishes the profession, their families and friends, a very
At the same time thanking them and the flace papers for a most kindly co-operation.
Be Uplifted by these Sacred Records
IDA COX
No. 12084—"Lawdy,
Lawdy Blues"
While everybody is making
merry, entertain your friends
with this wonderful, soul
itchin' Blues record, sung
exclusively for Paramount
by Ida Cox, "Uncrowned
Queen of the Blues."
"Mommy Groania' Blues"
also by Ida Cox, on the
other side of this record.
A
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
PANAMA JOE GANS
SCORES KNOCKOUT
OVER JOHN FAGAN
Irishman Hits Canvas in 8th
Round; Wills Boxed Jack
Townsend Three Rounds*
New York, Dec. 21—Panama Joe
Gans knocked out Irish Johnny
Fagan in the eighth round of the
scheduled 12- round star bout
at the Common
women's Sporting
club last Wednesday
night. Fagan
substituted for
Mary Summer
and proved
little more than
a punching bag
for the old re-
liable Joe.
Al Brown of
Panama, a stable
mate of Joe, out-
pointed Willie
Davis for the
same winup of
12 sessions.
round star bout at the Common club last Wednesday day night. Fagan substituted for man and proved to be little more than a punch bag or for reliable Joe. A Al Brown of Danana, a stable man pointed Willie Darcy in the cupup in 12 sessions. It was the best scrap of the
---
the night, with Brown having a decided advantage at the end.
A three-round exhibition between Harry Wills, logic contender for Harry Wills, heavyweight crown and Jack Townsend, partner, and former captain of the Dewitt Clinton high school football team in school days, proved to be very interesting and pleased the fans. Harry showed that he was just as trick and fast as he had. He and Townsend hitting the air men and helping Harry would shower him with left and right upercuts. Their exhibition was well worth the price. They were able to help the Christmas fund for the children, regardless of creed or color, of this community. A packed house was for the Christmas recipients in the bouts contributed part of their earnings to swell the fund. The McMahon brothers, Jesse and John McMahon, and their club, are to be complimented on their generous spirit by contributing the entire receipts after expenses had been paid. A goodly sum was realized.
New York, Dec. 21. A coorking bout is on tap for the Commonwealth Sporting club Saturday night, and one that should please the fans. The Principal will be Anselm Bell of the great little battler, Irish Johnny Curtin of the Horseshoe district, Jersey City. This particular match has been in the making for several months, and now that it has been made the day before, are sure to pack the 183th St. fight palace to witness the outcome.
SAXON QUINTET FACES
COMMONWEALTH SUND
New York, Dec. 21.—The Saxon Bison of Jersey City will be the attraction opposed to the Commonwealth Casino on day night. The game ought to be a day night. The game ought to be a day night. The music orchestra will furnish the music for the occasion. There will also be a preliminary contest.
WESLEY WILLIAMS SCORES K. O.
New York, Dec. 21.—Wesley Williams, son of Chief Williams of the Grand Central Red Cape, was out of the Police department in a three-round fight of the boxing tournament of the time. He was on the Pioneer Sporting club in E. 24th St. Wednesday night, that is according to the association. The fan hoots. Williams is prominent. The fire Department and has been boxing for about two years. He is a heavyweight.
ST. PHILLIP'S WINS 5TH STRAIGHT
Buffalo, Dec. 12.—Tonight at the Memorial Phillips five took the Sluus A. C. into the game marks their fifth win of the season.
Jackson. R. F.
Fraser McKeen. L. F.
Peanuts Mitchell. R. G.
Sommerfield Moore. L. G.
Pleckiano
BATTLING LANG IN CITY
Battling Lau. lightweight boxer of St. Louis. Mo. is in the city in an effort to get a match with any lightweight boxer. He loses defended Battling Bass of Boston. Mass. in the second round of a 15-round bout. He is working out and training. Anyone desiring to communicate with Him. Any address mail to 1133 S. State St.
GEORGE DREW STOPPED
OPPED
Hartford, Conn. Dec. 14
Pakhoe (white) of Salt Lake City was
in a 12-round bout. The white id had
even the ball and the blue credited to Dew.
*
Fisk Has Edge On Morehouse
BY ALBERT DENT
The gridiron classes between Morehouse and Pisk have for many years of the southeastern football world. It was the tigers and the Bulldogs was played in 1906. Since that time many a veteran has played for the tigers. However, they never look back to their alma mater without pride and admiration because of their youthful struggle. It might be interesting to the veterans and the friends of both the Tigers and the Bulldogs to know how the game and after having met in 15 clashes. From observation of the games as recorded here we may easily see that the superior of the other. Out of the 15 games played two were 0-10, four 6-4, and both teams were held scoreless in the three time games.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
DOAKES ELECTED CAPTAIN OF BLUE AND WHITE SQUAD
Washington, Dec. 21.—A banquet was tendered the members of the Howard football squad on Friday evening, Dec. 14, in the university dining room by the university administration in token of its appreciation. Record made by the men who represented Howard on the football gridron. Dr. J. Stanley Durke, president of the Scott, secretary-treasurer, were at the banquet to personally extend congratulations to Coach Louis L. Scott, secretary-treasurer, were at the announcement was made of the names of the members of the squad who are to receive the university Doneghy, Thomas J. Anderson, Ulysses S. Bagley, Theodore Blackman, Raymond Conte, Raymond Doakes, James C. Curtis, Kelley, Edwin Long, Laddie Melton, Samuel Peyton, Alfred C. Priestley, William B. Smith, George D. Williams, Curtis, manager for the 1923 season.
Following the announcement of the names of the letter men they re-created, the team held election of captain and manager of the football team for 1924 Doakes, the man who has played during the past season as left tackle was elected captain. Atherton Robinson, who served so well as assistant manager, was named and elected captain. The squad will lose by graduation and otherwise this year Donedy, who successfully led the team during the past season. Contee, veteran halfback; Bulldog Williams, captain 1922 and star end; priestley, whose work at center was outstanding, and Melton, fullback.
WABASH Y. MIDGETS TOO
FAST FOR CORNELL SQUARES
WABASH Y. MIDGETS TOO
FAST FOR CORNELL SQUARES
The Wabash Ave. "T" Midgets (103 pounds) basketball team defeated the square last Saturday night, at the Wabash gym by a score of 22 to 6. The Midgets, playing their first game of the season, were the first team in the pre-season gymnasial exhibition and carnival, were in top-netch form. The teamwork of the "T" Midgets took the game over the "T" Midgets and John Clark led in scoring, with five baskets each. Frank Plummer and Fred Smith played an air-conditioned game, coming in for first state at center.
The junior boys of the membership entertained the many spectators presen-
tating basketball games with a gymnastic exhibition. Their many daring stunts on
the court officiated the volleyball thrilled the spectators. The corrective
and medical gymnastics, led by Harry
Brown, were the highlight of the association an idea of how grow-
ing boys are treated for the many phys-
ical challenges of the muscular co-ordination demonstrated by these same boys in their heavy gym-
nastics. The abilities of development along physical lines among younger boys. The line-up:
Wahab Ave. Cornell Square.
C. Graham Corneil Ave.
J. Clark Admek
R. Johnson Avtik
F. Smith Dwell
F. Smith Miller
Julck
Maryland
C. Graham Shoya
J. Clark Admek
R. Johnson Dwell
F. Smith Miller
Julck
Maryland
BROOKLYN "Y" GIRLS WIN
Brooklyn, N. Y. Dec. 21. The Ashland PL. Y. W. C. A. girls' basketball ball team scored a victory in the first game
W. 187th St. "Y". New York city, last week. The score was 14 to 8.
FAY SAYS-
Let it be so. If you feel it in your heart, it is enough. The rest of the world will hear it. And be a little happier, perhaps. I hope so.
All of us who do things for other people, even though we are paid in money for doing it, feel the pleasant glow of unspoken but unmistakable approval of those who keep on buying what we have to sell, reading what we write, or seeing us over and over again. I, personally, am very grateful for that. It is a beautiful note in the sometimes dull monotony of living.
Hearts sometimes sing, although lips be mute. The scrawl of the pen carries our personal message to countless thousands whom, if the opportunity could present itself, we would like to meet in person.
So, please believe—in spite of the fact that I have wished you the same each year—my sincerity of wishing everyone a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
ESTRIDGE KNOCKS FAMOUS PITCHER OUT ENGLISH PUG TREADWELL SIGNS IN EIGHTH ROUND GIANTS CONTRACT
V.U.U.
1923
Reading from left to right: Bottom row, W. A. Smith, W. J. Smith, Fentress, Barksdale, Martin, Houston and Corrothers, Second row, Shields, Bottom row, Trainee, McDougall, V. G. Jackson, Stewart, Jigettes, Assistant Coach Gregory and Coach H. D. Martin. Top row, Trainee, McDougall, V. G. Jackson, Stewart, Jigettes, Assistant Coach Gregory and Coach H. D. Martin.
New York, Dec. 21—Larry Estridge, the hard hitting middleweight boxer, added another victim to his already long list by knocking out two-time world champion Larry Holmes middleweight, boxer, in the eighth round of the scheduled 12-round star bout at the Commonwealth Sporting club Saturday night. He was the first to face the ful battle as far as he went, having the better "of the first three rounds. In the second session he eloped the East side boy on the left to the right, then that staggered him and had he known enough to follow up his advantage there might have been a different tale to tell. The fireworks in the fourth and peppered the foreigner all over the ring with right and left smashes. He was game and kept coming back for more until he was knocked out in the seventh and eighth rounds his seconds tossed in the towel.
KID ROUX HEADS EAST
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
PO
BY FRANK
—and A Hap
SAYS
BANDS AND READERS
All Towards Men."
it in your heart, it is enough.
car it. And be a little happier,
or other people, even though we
it, feel the pleasant glow of
approval of those who keep on
reading what we write, or see-
l, personally, am very grateful
note in the sometimes dull
enough lips be mute. The scrawl
al message to countless thou-
y could present itself, we would
of the fact that I have wished
sincerity of wishing everyone a
New Year.
FAMOUS PITCHER
TREADWELL SIGNS
GIANTS CONTRACT
BY FRANK YOUNG
His coming will be welcomed by the
children. He will be the best of the
good shape as it was when he last
appeared here. He will try out on the
bike and go to the park. He will be
one of the best men on the club.
COHAN OUTPOINTS MARTIN
Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 11—Wilhelm Cohan,甘安weight-hoker of Harlem, graduated from the University of Bombay by Cannonball Eddie Martin (white) at the Ridgewood Grove Sporting club. Martin outweighed Cohan four pounds. The bout was fast throughout and there was little to choose when the last gong sounded. Martin is a local boy and was probably favored because of the closeness of the affair.
CHAMPIONS
CHAMPIONS FOR 1923
ORT
K YOUNG
py New Year
SKULL SCHOOL TO OPEN FOR RUBE'S PLAYERS JAN. 2
The American Giants' skull school will open Jan. 4, at which time the players' who will make the team the coming season will be taught the different technicalities of the playing rules and the inside points of play. The pitchers will be given the most attention as in that department the Giants were weak last season. Foster and the team will continue league championship in 1824 and to give Chicago a club second to none in the country. The pitching staff is to be selected from the team, Strong, Stephen Tom Williams, Dicto University, Padrone' Branahan, Harney, Treadwell and Willie Foster. From this array of talent Rube expects to develop the playing stuff in the history of the game.
The presidency of the league has taken up so much of the big fellow's because the Giants have suffered because he has his personal attention to them. The club plays best when under his personal supervision and they are so good that play that they seem lost when he is not around. One can tell from the matchless team play of the Giants, that it is not surpassed by any team in organization, for 400 better than any other Colored club when they didn't even have the advantage of Foster's directing, that is, great work done in the past two years without Foster even attending practice or workouts, the fans marvel. This year he will take his club south, where the different players and seek to remedy the same, again familiarize them in team play and when they reside in the city that he can present to the fans of the city the greatest club in history.
THE PRAIRIE TENNIS CLUB
RE-ELECTS HARRY ISAACS
Harry Alfred Isaacs was re-elected president of the Prairie Tennis club at the annual election of officers held at last Saturday night. Mrs. Grace Outlaw was elected vice president, and Mrs. J. H. Plummer, treasurer; Dave Radcliffe, secretary; Russell Smith, assistant secretary; H. W. Hill, specializing secretary. The board of directors will be made up of Dr. S. W. Drill, Mr. W. Williams, Charles O. G. H. W. Hill, Fred Diggs, Mrs. Iain Ferry Johnson, G. G. Johns, J. B. Stallworth and S. The officers will be installed on Saturday night. Jan. 5, at the home of the club. The club is planning to send a large delegation to the national tournament held at Baltimore in coming summer, also to the best west tournament in this city some time in July.
BELL WINS FROM NELSON
Trenton, N. J., Dec. 10,—Ansel Bell, coach of the Baltimore team, decisively outpotted Joe Nelson (whole of Philadelphia in a ten-round bout at last Saturday night). Joe won eight of the rounds. The first and second sessions were even. Nelson won the final. A fair-sided crowd waved the batte
S FOR 1923
HERE IS ANOTHER ALL-SOUTHERN TEAM
By T. C. MEYERS, Quarterback Lincoln University 1918-1919
Gayle (Morehouse) L.E. Caster (Talladega)
Kitchen (Tuskegee) L.T. Irving (Morehouse)
Wingfield (Morris Brown) L.G. Cook (Morehouse)
Tadhill (Tuskegee) C.U. Many (Tuskegee)
Relly (A. U.) R.G. Walker (Fisk)
Long (Fisk) R.T. Danzhy (Tuskegee)
Clay (A. U.) R.E. Duncan (Tuskegee)
Boss (Tuskegee) Q.B. Lang (A. U.)
Johnson (Billy) R.H. Goodwin (Fisk)
Stevenson (Tuskegee) L.H. Balley (Tuskegee)
Jordan (Morehouse) F.B. Kelly (Morehouse)
The Southern conference season of 1923 stands out as one of the greatest in the history of the gridiron, and the most important conference contests, and although the championship was undecided at the close of the season, the followers of the game were in excellent condition, likewise has everything which an end needs. Carter and Duncan of Talladega and Tuskegee, respectively, are the next best. Kitchen of Tuskegee and Fisk were beyond doubt the best tackles of the year, both being big fast and dependable and exceeding the standards of the conference. Tuskegee defeated Talladega 7 to 0. Talladega in turn defeated Morris Brown 13 to 6 and Morris Brown defeated Atlanta university in turn defeated Fisk 18 to 8 and Fisk defeated Morehouse 6 to 0. Morehouse having previously defeated Tuskegee 6 to 0.
class of the ends in the South, being fast, deadly on tackling and a wonderful dinkdigitist of plays. Clay of Talladega and Tuskegee, respectively, are the next best. Kitchen of Tuskegee and Fisk were beyond doubt the best tackles of the year, both being big fast and dependable and exceeding the standards of the conference. Tuskegee defeated Talladega 7 to 0. Talladega in turn defeated Morris Brown 13 to 6 and Morris Brown defeated Atlanta university in turn defeated Fisk 18 to 8 and Fisk defeated Morehouse 6 to 0. Morehouse having previously defeated Tuskegee 6 to 0.
The feature of the football year in the northern conference was the 13 victory over Virginia Union and Atlanta university which was played in Atlanta. The final score was 0 to 6, but it is doubtful that the conference will have a victory this section has there has been a game more bitterly contested. While football in several of the institutions in this section was of high quality and standard, Clark university showed poorly, as did Alabama State Normal. The Florida State college team was a superior team. Sussex played under a new coach, proved to be one of the most formidable elems in the South and one of the most successful ones of Sussex institute—a team that played Atlanta university, the champions of last year, to a 7 to 7 tie and forced Morehouse to leave. Sussex also defeated the South Carolina State college, the champions of the Southeastern conference, 13 to 6. Atlanta university got away in fine shape and appeared to have a good chance at the championship, but was Morris Brown uninterested in giving day by day.
Morris Brown started slow, but closed the season in winter fashion. Talladega was a keen disappointment to its followers, losing to Morehead, however, is undergoing a building process under a new coach and a new team. Morehead had one of the best teams in the South and covered itself with glory by holding the big Howe to a 10 to 0 score in Washington.
The All-Southern Teams
In most cases players picked for positions on the All-Southern team, are placed in the positions above any other rivals, don the positions, and again the rivalry was so seen that in some instances it would not apply to which player should be selected.
Gayle of Morehouse was easily the
class of the ends in the South, being fast, deadly on tackling and a wonderful diagnostician of plays. Clay of Talladega and Tuskegee, likewise has everything which an end needs. Carter and Duncan of Talladega and Tuskegee, respectively, unite to best the best. Kitchen of Tuskegee and Long Fisk were beyond doubt the best tackles of the year, both being big, fast and dependable and exceeding house and Danbyz of Tuskegee, both veteran tackles, were the runners-up for these positions. Ingfield of Morris Brown and Relief of Morris Brown are stars of the first magnitude, being steady pluggers, always alert and playing a slashing game. Cook of Morehouse and Walker of Fisk were best, both being excellent linesmen. Tadlock of Tuskegee at center was selected because of his all-around excellence on offense and defense. Harden of Tuskegee was a feature of the season and on defense he was a powerful and fast man. Leak of Atlanta university line, but did not play up to 1923 form.
Boss stood out as the best quarterback of the season. He used clever headwork in directing his team and the defense, including a ball. Lang of Atlanta university got the call for the second team quarterback; he distanced the other field generals but could not hold the pace of the defense. Johnson of Fisk was named for one halfback and Stevenson of Tuskegee for the other. This combination represents one of rare ability in a defensive position. He can throw passes accurately and in the running game he is one of the most dangerous men in the game. Stevenson was the outstanding star in the game, and he was a star placement kicker, a brilliant punter and one of the fastest and most elusive backs in the game. Bailey of Tuskegee and Godwin of Fisk are placed at halves on the second team. Both have speed, are versatile and have great line hiting ability. Bailey is also a good punter and an adept at receiving forward passes.
Jordan, a hard plunging back and a power on the defense, rounds out the team with one of the hardest men to stop in the South, possessing ability and finesse. Kelly of Morehouse was placed at fullback on the second half, and was a big, fine, hard, good nuded player who had to sacrifice and play quarterback after Hutt, the regular starter. Others players worthy of mention are-Ends: Starr, Morehouse; Gilbo, Tuskegee, and Cooley, Alabama State Normal; Tackles: Lamar, Atar, and Spencer, Talladega; Guards: Meadows, Morris Brown, and Robinson, Tuskegee. Centers: Williams, Morehouse; Perry, Fisk, and Jefferson, Tuskegee; Morris Brown; Groves, Talladega, and Smith, Tuskegee; Hallbacks: B. Spencer, Talladega; Colum and Morris, Talladega; Fullbacks: Williams, Alauda, university, and Solomon, Talladega.
INTERFRAT LEAGUE OPENS
Nashville, Tenn., Dec. 21.—Internate-
national Basketball league opens.
Alpha Phi Alpha defeated Kappa Alpha Phi.
17-9.
CHAMPION BAG PUNCHER WAS
ON XMAS BENEFIT PROGRAM
The Colored athletes were well represented by W. E. Hunter at the congress, and the benefit for the poor. Hunter is one of the world's greatest novelty and self-helping big and dancing to music is quite a novelty which went big. His limitations of trains, drums and auto-racing through the sporting department of this paper.
DAVIS WINS A. A. U. BOUTS
New York, Dec. 21.—Sam Davis, competing unattached, competed first prize for the U.S. A. U. boxing tournament of the Unity club of Brooklyn Dec. 12, scoring two wins and two losses. Tom Ash of the Ternity club in the first session, and in the final he disposed of Frank Sportelli. "The Ternity club is the second. Davis looks like a corner.
MORRO LOSES DECISION
New Haven, Conn. Dec. 21.-Joe Currie (white) of this county, won the 3838 infantry, New York city, here in the 10-round star bout Friday night, according to the opinion of many of the spectators. They have been rematched
PAGE NINE—PART ONE
BATTLING SIKI TO BOX IN CITY OF DETROIT ON JAN. 7
Michigan Fans to Get First Climpse of Senegalese Boxer
New York, Dec. 21—An elaborate ring campaign is being mapped out for Battling Sikh, Senegalese, Light
New York, Dec.
battling Sikl,
heavyweight, who
formerly held the
Levy, manager of
Sikl, announced
that he had
tentatively ac-
cused himself for one
bout and had
tentatively ac-
cused for five others. Levy
added that he
offers under con-
sideration, but is
withholding de-
finitive responses
during the outcome
of bouts in which
formerly held the world's title. Bob Levy, manager of Skii, announced that he had signed the Senegalese for one bout and had accepted offers for five others. Levy added that he has several other considerations, but is withholding definite responses to the offers pending the count of bouts in which Skii engages in the immediate future. Skii is scheduled to box Jack Kaylor of Philadelphia on Christmas day afternoon, a "second Sam Langford," in a bout booked for 10 rounds at Philadelphia on Christmas day afternoon. Kaylor matched for a bout next Wednesday night against Joe Lohman in Grand Rapids, Mich., but this engagement was canceled by Manager Levy when Skii was not in his best condition.
After his Philadelphia bout sildenafil ring engagements are, tenatively, as a drug, he will be matched by 14, Grand Rapids, Mich.; 21, New Orleans; 28, Havana. It is possible that if Sildenafil matches that he is in fighting trim after a drug overdose, he will events he will be matched *f* another bout in Madison Square garden.
Richmond, Va., Dec. 21. — "Hank" Corrothers, all-star and versatile athlete for himself at Virginia Union university by reason of his aggressiveness at the end position on the varsity and be elected as captain of the 24 Panthers. Corrothers, one of the most popular men on the campus and the versatile Virtuoso on the cinder path, on the diamond and on the gridiron, and this honor coming only his ability as an athlete but his popularity and the whole-hearted spirit which he constantly manifests for his. The Panther champs developed a great combination this season, and the competition for the end position was the "Hank" displayed all his old form and was able to insure himself of his to do best to help make the Union team of 1924 the greatest aggregation of girl captains redound to the end position of good material on hand which only needs development, and with the coaching of our H. D. Martin, mentor, I have no doubt that the Panthers of "24 will be hard to beat."
COMMONWEALTH QUINTET
WINS 37 TO 34 CONTEST
BAKER WINS OVER RILEY
Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 11—Josey Baker (white) of the East side widen at Harlem in the feature 10-round bout at the 47th. Regiment armory. The extending the white boy to the limit. Baker weighed 165 pounds, but substituted for Joe Kestner. Kid Bates of the 368th Intruder in a four-pounder from Charlie Fropp in a four-pounder.
BIG DOUBLE HEADER
COMMONWEALTH "5"
VS.
SAXON BIG "5"
First Game Will Start 8:30 Sharp
Grand Cen. Term. Red Caps
VS.
Silent Separates
SUNDAY EVE., DEC. 23
Commonwealth Casino
14 East 135th Street, New York
Music by Cleveland Jones
Admission 75c. Including War Tax
PREDETERMINED
TURF PROFITS
The MIRACLE SYSTEM is nationally
known. "Easy for players-hard for
layers." Sold on installment payments
paid from your profit. Absolutely
favorable to the retailer. We
vestigate today and make your boob
away. Public Relations Manager, S. E.
A. Kline, Box 400D, N. F., Towson,
Maryland.
12
WHITE DEFIES ROCAP ON COLOR LINE BAN ON BOUTS
CHRISTMAS PRESENT FOR ALL Basket Ball and Dance
Loendi of Pittsburgh, Pa., World's Colored Champions
vs.
Orange A. A., Champion White Team of New Jersey
AT ORANGE ARMORY, ORANGE, NEW JERSEY
FRIDAY NIGHT, DECEMBER 28
Added Attraction: Dancer, Music by Maren Smith's Famous Orchestra
ADMISSION 75 CENTS
PAGE TEN—PART ONE
Philadelphia, Pa. Dec. 21. — I was painfully astonished upon reading in the Philadelphia newspapers of Dec. 10 an announcement purported to have come from William H. Rocap, chairman of the Pennsylvania state athletic commission, to the effect that he was the first to take part in the meeting. Pennsylvania. I had not heard that Harvey J. Boyle of Pittsburgh had taken this recently to tour part in the meeting. This momentous question was taken up and decided. I am sure I did not attend any such decision, and I am equally sure that I shall vehemently oppose any chair chamber meetings in the state to render such decisions. I say this not with the slightest feeling of offense or animosity for the decision, quite a fine fellow generally, but in this instance he has overstepped his authority. Since he did not consult me before issuing his statement there is no other man, just and loyal course to the public. I know my sister at the state
I do remember that on the Saturday morning I lecture me, his fellow commissioner, for allowing a mixed bout club because he, the club because he, the said, he had provided Director Corleyau that there would be no such bouts in Philadelphia, and that director's administration. The administration, he said, is. afraid of the races between the races. I told him then that when I arrived at the National Association which neither Robert A. Young, secretary of the commission, nor Thomas Wallace Swann, whom I knew, was attending, I take the responsibility of deciding, and they were glad when I came in to look in there only a few minutes and then go to the Cambria club in show the same night.
I told Mr. Roacan during his at-tribunal hearing that he was the previous that since the law which created the state Athletic commission race or color, I would stricterly oppose it. I said that the commission should if the legislature had intended to prosecute at least an imminent violation of the act, and it is a violation of the public safety of Philadelphia, prohibit discrimination. I told him, too, that had made some investigation of the public safety of Philadelphia, prohibit discrimination been informed by many of the developed political safety or authority promoted by political philosophy or authority.
The oath of office which we commissio-
Governor Pinchot requires us to uphold
and strictly enforce the laws of the
United States and does not give any妄
thing into them or maladministern them,
and so long as I am in office I intend
anything to do are strictly, justly and
whose or is being gored or who is do-
ning the goring. Furthermore, Mr.
does not know that any promoter of
oxing and revolt in a restraining order
or injunction by the tribunal against
referring with his rights under his
license to promote boxing houses
and revolt in a restraining order
for the prohibition. In accordance with Philadelphia prohibiting boxing bouts and I have
good assurance that there will not goom-
Boop. I understand, cles Section 5 of
the Commission and am accustomed
him by his off; there is no such author-
ity.
mixed bucks. It is a violation of the boxing laws to admit persons under 18 to wrestling matches or exhibitions, and to wrestling matches or exhibitions, and had a number of such children whom I saw there sent out, but at the Arena we needed me. I saw such children under age present and called the attention of that it was a violation of the act and that it was a violation of the act and should be warned to stop it. However, I do not see any mention of it in our source when engaged in the performance it distinctly understood that I shall not be for the absolute, just, fair enforcement of the laws I have sworn to administer to the big promoter or the little boxer.
As to the Jack Johnson license he gave for Jack on principle that he had paid the penalty or that he was guilty of doing that time, and was as much entitled to others we have licensed. I studied his case closely when it was before the judge. Jack's case if I wished, but would have said nothing had our chairman not done.
(Signed) CHARLES FRED WHITE
Pennsylvania State Athlete Commis
Jelly Gardner U. S. Employee
Mister Floyd Gardner, right fielder of the American Giants, Beau Brummie and the sporting editor on Tuesday, our busiest day, to inform us that he wanted the team to play at UCLA, or at UCLA Sam, mdt department. That's the way Jelly told it to me, but Jim, an entirely different philomel. They say Jelly is simply working in the post. "I want to," added one of his mates "I'm down there. It ain't no play either." Sayers says he'll be in good trim when the training trip opens, and no one needs to be there. "I'll be right there, and better than ever. I've bought a new reef panel shirt, you can tell then that the team was, to make time for Uncle Sam.
DAVE BROWN AND MENDEZ
IN WIN FOR SANTA CLARA
MORGAN COLLEGE TO HAVE
FOOTBALL TEAM IN 1924
Baltimore, Dec. 17. -Morgan college football team to represent it on the gridiron next fall, if the effort of President Obama now securing the country for a capable director to take charge of the physical game, he secures such a person the Hillelites will no doubt be able to add a few wives to the team. The schedule for next season will be heavy and the citizens of Baltimore will have an opportunity to play many games on their splendid campus.
RENAISSANCE LOSES ANOTHER
New York, Dec. 21. -The St. Mary Speedways, white, defeated the Renaissance Big 5 in a close game at the Baltimore stadium. For a record crowd by the score of 30 to 27. Hilton Slocum and Frank Forbes splendid game for the home aggregate.
DEFIES PENN COMMISH
A.
CHARLES FRED WHITE
Member of the Pennsylvania State Boxing commission, a place made possible by the untiring efforts of George Moore and some Philadelphia, appainted to the color line opposed to the color line being drawn in bouts in that state and comes out in the open to defy the rules of the boxing who seek to have the line drawn.
BIG LEAGUE
STORIES
By BILLY DONALDSON
Negro National League Umpire
DETROIT STARS
After trying half a dozen or more men at three hats, he plumped up his arm and a long-lasting youngster. Though very small in stature that boy was grabbing at the hot station and made a wonderful impression with his owner and manager. He was a very smart base runner. Now we come to the outfielders. Stearns was chasing everything spectacular catches. He was a slugger and hit the ball to all corners of the field, also possessed a good throwing arm. Smith played left field and was a car driver on his hikes of hits day after. He hit well throughout the season. Watson was in right field and a very clever batter and cut many long hits down to singles, throwing the runners out. His hitting was timely throughout the season. Force, the ace of the pitching team, and was a linx to all visitors. Beside his masterful pitcher he was called many a time to fill the pitcher's shirt and was a linx to all offens. Coomb, a right hander, was another good pitcher and turned in a very good pitching average for his team.
Alexander, the fast ball artist, did not have as successful a season as he could have a good pitcher, for he could not get his stride this season. Alexander, for he could not get his stride this season, was not at his best this season and could not give the team his best, though he turned in many wins. Boges, the pitcher who made all like nathans, showed Manager Petway much promise as a pitcher, and catcher like Petway, he should be a sensation next season. Manager Petway with a two-man pitching staff, a few guides behind the champion Monarchs, and not until the final game of the season, a few Monarchs declared winners. Detroit fans should feel very proud of Owner Blunt and Manning club. With good pitching next season Detroit should be a strong contender for first place, throughout the season, and show their appreciation by turning out in larger numbers. Stearns is seabased out here. In last Sunday's game he hit two home runs and a single and made one save on the coast and is taking wonderful care of his shortest position. For the close circle stones and hitting
LATE RALLY WINS
Hanna Gina Cola 14 - Santa Clara
and the Almadenbarn plane into comma
pier. The plane was the Almadenbarn plane into
pier. It was bit hard. The stabbed me in
the elbow but the wounded found
the collapsed him. The scene
SANTA CLAIM
L.P. L.P.
Almendabar
Mea rf. 4 1 1 Almendabar 14. 4 1 1
Almendabar
Charlesen ff. 4 1 1 Charlesen ff. 4 1 1
Marielle th. 5 1 1 Marielle th. 5 1 1
Moone rf. 5 1 1 Moone rf. 5 1 1
Doumie th. 5 1 1 Doumie th. 5 1 1
Doumie th. 4 0 1 Doumie th. 4 0 1
Carrie p. 4 0 0 Carrie p. 4 0 0
Holland p. 4 0 0 Holland p. 4 0 0
Humes rf. 4 0 0 Humes rf. 4 0 0
Doumie th. 4 0 0 Doumie th. 4 0 0
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
POR
BY FRANK YOU
PENN. BOXING COMMISH
OPPOSED TO MIXED
BY FRANK YOUNG
PENN. BOXING COMMISH IS OPPOSED TO MIXED BOUTS
---
Chester, Pa., Dec. 21.—Mixed bouts scheduled to be held here Dec. 11 were attended by members of the recently created Pennsylvania state boxing commission. It was recently announced that Billy Rocap of Philadelphia, chair of the commission, an order prohibiting mixed bouts. He threatened to revoke licenses of the boxing clubs of the Princess theater, where the bouts are held, of course did not put on a white boy and a Race boy because of Charles F. White, the Race member of the commission, was on hand to introduce to the audience by Ref.
HIGH SCHOOL and PREP NEWS
WESTERN HI DEFEATS K. N. I. 1.
Parls, Ky. Dec. 21. —Western High
School Kentucky Normal and industrial institute of Frankfurt, Ky. Parls, Jr. 12. —Western High School
Normal, 14. The visitors fell before
the spiral of the Parls team. G. Simpson
starred for Parls, while Cotty was
starred for Hammah Hull, former
Western High school team is coached
by "Count" Hammah Hull, former
Wilson High school team.
PHILIPS FIVES DIVIDE
After trailing, 6 to 4, at half time,
Crane Tech's heavyweight champion last
Friday in the second period and downed
Irish People's institute. The Phillips
were right to win 10 to 9 in a thrilling
contest. Johnson and Phillips of the
game by the Phillips coach for engaging
in a dramatic argument over a de-
line-up.
Grass-18 R. F. P. T. Phillips-12
Gilbert. fr. ... 1 0 0 Bookman. fr. 0 0 0
Wilde. fr. ... 1 0 0 Wright. fr. 0 0 0
Kimura. fr. ... 1 0 0 Wright. fr. 0 0 0
Kimura. fr. ... 1 0 0 Wright. fr. 0 0 0
Cooper. rg. ... 0 0 0 Beeb. fr. 0 0 0
Totals ... 7 4 0 Total. 5 2 5 0
Lightweight 11 R. F. P. T. Phillips-12
Sydam. fr. ... 1 0 0 Bristol. fr. 0 0 0
Hirgin. fr. ... 1 0 0 Dulman. fr. 0 0 0
Hirgin. fr. ... 1 0 0 Dulman. fr. 0 0 0
Gate. lg. ... 0 0 0 Hialag. fr. 0 0 0
Histor. fr. ... 0 0 0 Histor. fr. 0 0 0
BOWEN BOWS TO PHILIPS
Wilhelm. fr. ... 1 0 0 were victorious over Bowen at the
philips gymnasium over 10, and the lights also
had an easy time, 15 to 7. Brookins
scorers for philips heavies. Line-ups:
HEAVYWEIGHTS
Phillips-37 R. F. P. T. Phillips-12
Stinson. fr. ... 5 0 0 Bristol. fr. 0 0 0
Stinson. fr. ... 5 0 0 Bristol. fr. 0 0 0
Wright. fr. ... 0 0 0 Craneau. fr. 0 0 0
Wright. fr. ... 0 0 0 Craneau. fr. 0 0 0
Phillips. fr. ... 0 0 0 Plaasen. fr. 0 0 0
Ware. c. ... 0 0 0 Plaasen. fr. 0 0 0
LIGHTWEIGHT
THE Standing
Pitcher.....Won
Holland, Santa Clara. 1
Holland, Santa Clara. 1
Mirabel, Havana 4
Mirabel, Havana 4
Currie, Santa Clara. 6
Currie, Santa Clara. 6
Mendez, Santa Clara. 3
Mendez, Santa Clara. 3
Dibut, Santa Clara. 1
Levia, Havana 4
Levia, Havana 4
Turo, Almendares 1
R. Ryan, Havana-Santa C. 2
R. Ryan, Havana-Santa C. 2
Boada, Almendares 3
Deberry, Havana 3
Palmero, Marlanao 1
Ryan, Marlanao 2
Morle, Marlanao-Havana 1
Flourney, Almendares 0
Lobban, Almendares 0
Morle, Marlanao-Havana 1
reew Lee Bailey. Mr. White explained some of the rules to the rogue boxing wrestler boxing would prosper here. He also said that the recent rulling made him a boxing champion, the opinion not legal, as the McKibble bill does not in any way refer to Johnny McLaughlin (white) and Joe Libby, who were to have met in the star bout, were on the ground. The crowd, which was diminished no doubt by the decision rendered by the board, the rogue boxer, the shouts of dumproval, but was quieted when Mr. White stated that the rogue boxer can man and would work for its revision.
HAVANA TIES IN SEVEN
INNINGS WITH 6 TO 6
In the last inning Lloyd flew out to
muffed In the first inning Biffle threw,
bottled for Wesley, slid over third. Liqueu
bottled for Murray, dug in second.
bottled his grounder, and Egleton
scored. (Jacinto running for Biffle,
bottled for Murray, dug in second.
(Quintana batting for Levis.
Quintana to right. Liqueu scored.
ALMENDARES
ALMENDARES
HAVANA
DRAKE h... 4 2 3 2
Porto丁 sb... 5 1 0
Herrera h... 4 2 3 2
Tobias sb... 5 1 0
Tobias sb... 5 1 0
Rafe cf... 3 0 2 2
Lloye sb... 4 0 0 2
Lloye sb... 4 0 0 2
Lundy sb... 3 0 2 2
Wesley Jb... 3 0 1 1
Wesley Jb... 3 0 1 1
G.E.gales SB... 2 0 0 2
Abrena c... 3 1 1 1
Abrena c... 3 1 1 1
Marras ff... 2 0 0 2
Levi p... 1 1 1 1
| Totals | .33 6 13 21 | Totals | .31 6 7 21 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Almonds | .33 | Almonds | .33 |
| Milk | .33 | Milk | .33 |
LOENDI FIVE TO PLAY
IN ORANGE ON DEC. 28
Orange, N. J., Dec. 21—On Friday the 21st team of Pittsburgh will come East. The team of Pittsburgh will come East. On this night the great team which for the first time has been named the ship of our group will meet also named Orange. Big 5 at the Orange this summer. Big 5 at the Orange this summer. Aside from "Cum" Curr, the wily, the other, the three Jersey boys—Young, Seasons and Ricks—all of whom enjoy naming their team is the champion white team of New Jersey, be a baker for the western boys.
W
WILLIAM. DREWERY
Three-letter man and idol at West Virginia Collegiate institute, brilliant student one of the outstanding stars in the institute's victory over Wilberforce at Columbus, Thanksgiving day, who died Dec. 10, following an operation, Mourned by students and all who knew him. President Davis of the institute has decreed that all teams wear mourning for one year in his honor. Memorial students will also be held in the near future and the flags at the institute will fly at half-mast for thirty days.
COMMONWEALTH QUINTET GETS
REVENGE AFTER HARD TUSSLE
New York, Dec. 21—The Commonwealth B 5 rehabilitated them at night at the Commonwealth cupino when they defeated the Madison Italian Catholic club, after a hard tussle by the score of 26 to 19. The game's exhibition of first basket ball. The locals' victory was well received, and fact that the visitors and defeated them twice this season on their own and the locals just had to win. Each member of McMahon's outfit played in the game. Field and Jenkins were just as cazy as they could be and played a bang-deefeef, defending the game. Creed Hubbard and "Stretch" Grant and Roy Noel, formerly of the Cincinnati Peerless B 5, also played well, pears considerably strengthened by their new line-up and should make it from now on.
LINCOLN BASKETBALL
STARTS OFF WITH WIN
Lincoln University, Pa. Dec. 17 —
Seleton last Friday night, where they defeated the fast five by five of the Lions, the second game of the season for the Lions aggregation, and the boys show signs of being in the Negro basketball this season.
The team's defense, with the threes and the shooters were brought up, persevered great difficulty in solving the defensive system of the Lions, and parlayed the offense with the Bolles and Day, who were the individual stars of the game.
The team had a good start, and Captain Woods kept the Lions full of force. Coach Young's orders were to the players to stay on the ball. The Lions let up a little and the score with the score 17-5 in Lincoln's favor.
The second half opened with the players plenty of fight. Before the Chester county lads realized what just was wrong, the lead down to five points. Then the onushould be the team. The boys was powerless. The team was wins.
Lincoln U. 23; Viva La Five, 17.
That the Viva Athletic club is a wonderful organization; they are clean both in victory and in defeat. Mr. the manager, spared no pain to make
Lincoln used Catapinn Woods and Pollinators to attack Trigex at guard. Hamer and Harker sub-
tracted. The Lions meet the Harrisburg Scholars at Harrisburg next Friday
SIKI THROWS ANDERSON
IN ELEVEN MINUTES
Reginald Sikl, the wrestling Senegalese, again showed his prowess and man to be reckoned with when he took on a reverse body hold in 11 minutes and 35 seconds at the Coliseum Tuesday. Sikl, although much lighter than Antoine, had a strong condition, "was at no time in danges of being thrown. Only once during the fight he surprised him by taking only a few seconds and two vigorous upon their feet again. This proved to be one of the favorite matches of the wrestlers, and crowd was unmistakable for the Senegalese. Once or twice during the early stages of the bout Anderson attempted to take the wrestling body by the wrestling fans, and decided that it would be an unpopular means of win.
BASKETBALL
COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE IN MOURNING FOR WM. DREWERY
VIRGINIA UNION IS GIVEN CHAMPIONSHIP BY C.I.A.A.
LEAGUE OPERATING COST RUNS INTO THOUSANDS
Institute, W. V., Dec. 21.—William Drewery, student and star athlete at the University of Chicago, and institute who died Dec. 10 at 5:40 o'clock at the Charleston General hospital, is greatly missed by the family, but good wishes to him and death seems to have been a recurrence of a trouble for which he was operated on during the summer of 1982. The day after the football team, on which Drewery was a star half-half, he was sent to the military over Wilberforce at Columbus he was taken to the General hospital where he was treated for a night in an attempt to save his life. For a week he fought stubbornly against overwhelming odds and was able to clean in charge expressed hope of his survival. Sunday night, however, occurred a relapse which resulted in
All-Around Athlete
Drewery lind for the last four years been the best all-naround athlete at the University of Florida and been an outstanding player on the Institute football team. He was one of the most spectacular and dashing players in the university's early years. Local fans will remember in particular his long run-back powerful. Howard university team the last time they played in Charleston, South Carolina, his fearlessness in smashing the line and shiftiness in a broken field were the most memorable of his very good football teams at Institute when they were recognized last year as the best of the Mid-Western teams.
Richmond, Va., Dec. 21.—The committee of the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic association composed of H. D. Martin, J. L. Watson, T. L. Puryear and J. H. Lawrence, appointed to name the C. L. A. A. champions of 1923 and to select the official mythology of the game, thereby establishing a great record for the Panther eleven. Howard, with three wins and one rank, second; Hampton with four wins and two losses, gets third. Panther and Panther all had successful seasons, winning the majority of their games. Relation losses, and Shaw university with five, were not as successful, but had many star performers and the committee realizes that in this the first time the association as a star team, much criticism is probable, but feels that due to the cooperation, assistance and balloting of officials, scribes and coaches who have seen all the teams in action, of this criticism will be avoided.
Prior to discussing the players composing the first eleven a word of mention is advisable. Each coach of the association and 18 of the leading officials and sport officials will be the committee their choice of the first and second All-C. I. A. team. Then in tabulations for a track meet was used. Each player chosen for first team received five points for second team, three points for honorable mention one point.
Practically every selection included in the tournament Howard, Miller of Union, Coston of Lincoln and Coleman of Hampton. The outfielder Howard with 80 points, which entitled him to the captaincy of the first eleven, all schools of the association have all produced well coached teams displaying a high brand of football that is any previous time, thus making competition extremely keen from all angles.
Of no necessity great outstanding ends, competition for end positions was very well met, and Jones of Hampton, with 45 points, set the call for the first eleven. Williams of Lincoln, with 45 points, Crudan of Lincoln, with 45 points, and Cogrothers of Lincoln, with 45 points.
In every position where there is a right and left selective mark, the position is given a reference to either side of the line.
At tackle, Coleman of Hampton, with 72 points, are deserving of the high rating given by the position. His position are Dunkle of Howard, with 32 points, and Blackwell of Howard, with 32 points, and at Guard Miller of Union seem to be the outstanding lineman, receiving a very good man in Butler of Hampton, with 56 points. Other men showing a very good man in Butler of Hampton, with 56 points, Smith of Union, with 24 points.
The recent annual meeting in Chicago of the Negro National league brought out with the fun of the cities that represent the league are aware of. The biggest of these are the operating expenses of the league. Books and other ports from which these things were learned. The total attendance for 1923 was 102,386 and the total receipts of the league amounted to $17,218. The following are a few notes taken by Defender reporters and which may be written into the family: Players' salaries $101,000. Railroad fares 25,212. Board and street car fare 9,184. Umpires 7,965. Club advertising 7,500. Other expenses 4,164.
Total $162,425. This sum deducted from the total receipts leaves a balance of $34,733. The clubs operating just $1,439 each.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1953
INSTITUTE IN
R WM. DREWERY
Besides being an outstanding football player Drewery was even better at both basket ball and baseball, and he was also good in a forward any an he ever met in competition. For three years he won the national championship, and the year there was no basket ball schedule at Institute. At baseball he excelled. Here was his own game. He was a great player, but he played at times almost every position in the infield. Opponents usually called off all base stealing and he was the best position, but he played at times almost every position in the infield. Opponents usually called off all base stealing and he was the best position, but he played at times almost every position in the infield. He never had passed balls, and he was a heavy and consistent hitter. He
Last June DeWeyer graduated from the secondary department of West Virginia Collegiate institute. This institution as a pre-medic student. He had been almost entirely self-supporting, working in the summer time at the college and continuing at some kind of work during the school year at Institute. The funeral was held at the home of his father in Bluefield, W. Va. There was present a large escort of students and the best liked students in school here, both by the teachers and his fellow students. The services will be held in the college chapel and all teams will wear arm mourning bands for one year by decree of President Davies, by decree of President Davis, by decree of President Davis,
IS GIVEN
SHIP BY C.I.A.A.
Pondoxer of Lincoln, with 23; Boykins of St. Paul, with 12.
As in most other positions, one man—Morgan of Lincoln—stands out the promileth of the other players, is deserving of the 56 points given him. An exceptional passer, a fast man down the stretch and roving game, he rivals the Immortal, and the other schools had fine centers: Priestley Howard had 28 points; Earlskale of Philadelphia had 26 points; 24 were the leading righthands of Morgan.
| Name | Position | School |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lancaster | L. E. | Lincoln |
| Coleman | L. T. | Lincoln |
| Morgan | L. G. | Union |
| Morgan | L. G. | Union |
| Coston | R. T. | Lincoln |
| Coston | R. T. | Lincoln |
| Lord | Q. R. | Lincoln |
| Johnson | H. R. | Lincoln |
| Parkey | F. D. | Hartford |
| Parkey | F. D. | St. Paul |
| SECOND TEAM | | |
| Williams | L. T. | Howard |
| Doakes | L. T. | Howard |
| Pierce | L. G. | St. Paul |
| Pierce | L. G. | St. Paul |
| Smith | R. G. | Union |
| Smith | R. G. | Union |
| Crudon | R. G. | Lincoln |
| Coles | Q. R. | N. V. L. I. |
| Coles | Q. R. | N. V. L. I. |
| Gunn | H. R. | Hampton |
| Peyton | H. R. | Howard |
| Howard's Mission | | |
| The balance of the voting by points, follows: | | |
| Corrothers, Union, 40; Rowsa, V. N. L, 13; Long, Howard, 6; Madau, St. Paul, 3; Ryrd, St. Paul, 3; Union, 1; Ruffin, Hampton, 1; Ross, Va. N. W. | | |
| Tackles—Blackwell, St. Paul, 14; Gill Shaw, 13; Turner, Va. N. 6; Smith, M. R. 5;ritt, Union, 1; Coleman, St. Paul, 1 | |
Center--Barkalake, Union, 25; Pendle,
Hampton, 24; Stewart, Swain, 1; Smith,
23;
Quartetback-Derfit, Union, 16; Ja-
meline, 16; Mitchell, Shaw, 7; Blackman, 16.
Halfbacks - Boffman, Union, 13; Epps
Hallackins, University, 15; Foley, 14;
Cotter, Howard, 5; Tyler, F. 12; Sem. 6;
Brown, Va. Nor. 31; Shields, Union.
Fentress, Cardoza, Hampton.
1; Lee, Lincoln; 1; Collins, St. Fulli. 1
TING COST
TO THOUSANDS
The cost of operation is so great
that the league will
range on Saturdays, Mondays and
Tuesdays. It is impossible to play
games on Wednesday. Thursdays
and Saturdays are made to lie idle while on Sunday
the parks are filled. If the league
can work up enough interest on Sat-
tuesdays, it will keep going. The present day fan
has not given the league proper support
on those days and it is entirely up to
the league to determine what
has been going for four years. Birmingham has the best Monday crowd
in the league circuit and that is be-
cause it is a law there against
Sunday ball.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
Archaeological Research For First Year on Islands Reveals Many Wonders
Manila, P. I, Dec. 21. - Results of the first year of systematic archeological islands now are being classified by Carl E. Guthe, a scientist sent out by the island home in Cebu. The discoveries, which include China as well as nautical islands, are some instances as much as 2,300 years, scientists believe, and are extinct in many points of sular history which we can be clobded by doubt. The last year is 12 months the scientists explore caves and ancient burial places on three islands, Bohol, Samar and Cebu. Besides various ancient in them specimens of Chinese arts and handcrafts of the Tang, Sung and believe corroborate previous suppositions that for many hundreds of years by a succession of Chinese traders whose influence affected the social custom, probably the religion of
The Tang Dynasty
Sharp Axes Found
Dredging in the Pasig river bed to a depth of about 20 feet at a point near the central jade axes and adzes, skillfully fashioned and still with a good cutting edge, had passed since the men who wielded them turned to dust. Two of the axes, now in the position of the center, were the University of the Philippines, are believed to date from the fourth century before Christ, archaeologists and archaeologists are awaiting with interest the results of Dr. Guth's classification and further exploratory activities.
**CHICKEN STEALER FINED**
The mistake that John McGhee, 40th Blvd. Blvd. was made when he rooster. He passed Sergeant Ward and Barry at exactly 1 o'clock in the rooster crowed. He (the rooster), with hidden under the coat of McGhee, a day for each chicken was meted out to be he was led away to serve five days.
SLEEP DISTURBER FINED
the width of 5th and Deerborn St., sent
Sergeant Drink and Miles Elseh on
3003 Herbert St., lying flat on the
wheelboard. Eddie Birgham, had put
her out. She was saved and cost
her out. She was saved and kept in
neighbors awake.
INFILMICS SIX-1H-CUT
Birgham St., was arrested by Officer Sullivan and
was held in a deadly weapon. She inflicted a six,
knife爪 cut on the face and head of
they were arriving in front of her home.
SCRIPTURE TEXT CALENDARS
FOR 1924 NOW READY
FOR POPULAR SALE
The Chicago Defender has secured a line of dollars and of no value for 1924-10,000 in number—and is prepared to send them, Text, Calendars, for 1924-10,000 in number—and is prepared to secure one of them. Owing to the fact that the number is limited in its admissible that officers be taken of this offer immediately. The price is 25 cents each or three for one person, and not over three, will be sent to any one person. This is beautiful this year. It gives a Scripture text
Ideal Holiday Gift
This calendar contains such a fund on Scriptural information as is a reasonable necessity in every home. The influence of Scripture in every life, the truths and incubating the right view of life should appeal to every parent, moral authority and good citizenship and the lessons thus learned will follow through life. Send in your money order now. Address all communication, orders, etc. to Chicago Inventor, Chicago Sender, Chicago, IL.
N. Y. STATE NEWS
Santo M. Eighth Ave. sent the town to help Mrs. Mr. M. Gomes of Bridgeport, Mrs. M. Stages and Mrs. Lyons gave the church. The building corporation has church. The building corporation has church.
Measlena Rev, Demby and James and the Rev, S. S. Boyd attended the convention in the highland Fells that he met. The motored Dr. Boyd, preached in the evening. Misses Caroline, Milford and Bianca and the Rev, S. S. Boyd for the Pupilk Aid society last week.
The Rev. Dr. Beacher preached at Macedonia Baptist church Sunday. His pastor taught the church slender, rendered several selections. Miss C. Terry, 2S. S. Second Ave. club, Miss Terry is a singer and a member of Union Baptist church. New York. Mrs. Remermon, 24 N. Second Ave. is sick. Mrs. Lucy Wade is ill ill.
AUBURN, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. George Winslow are the proud parents of a daughter. Willard and his sisters are teachers to Ihaca Academy recently. Mr Lucy Frattis is improving greatly. The household of Ruth held a dance party on Saturday at the beach and Claire Freeman are improving.
YONKERS N Y
Mrs. H. G. Lucas, 355 Warburton Blvd., spent Thanksgiving day in Providence, R. I., visiting their parents. Mrs. H. Spencer, 355 Providence Blvd., spent Thanksgiving day in Providence, R. I., visiting their parents. Mrs. H. L. T. Griffin of Battalion Mrs. H. R. Hill of Baltimore, Md., made a brief visit to her cousin, Mrs. H. Spencer, 355 Lincoln St., on Thanksgiving day. Mrs. H. Spencer, 355 Lincoln St., contended to her home on account of illness. Addie M. Becton, representative of the New York Safety Reserve fund, visited the high school N. Y., last week. She is making great progress in the insurance business. She attended Saturday evening the Tiger High School, a high school last C. St. out-of-school team, by a score of 50 to 20. The game was featured in the school lab, with 15 goals. Graham 18 to 1, last Sunday at a 6'oclock at the Rev. S. H. Slowy, a church at Mount Vernon, New York. She attended the New York and Long Island, and the New York and Long Island, and some of church of Yankees. At 6'oclock
PRES. COOLIDGE ASKED TO GIVE XMAS PARDONS
Bostonians_Send Request to President in Befield of * Houston Martyrs
Boston, Mass., Dec. 21.—The 12th Boston university held a joint meeting with a big audience to honor the memory of the 13 martyrs executed for resenting the insults of a soldier and the Race in six years ago. Resolutions were passed urging the judge and secretary of War Weeks to recommend bans for Christmas.
The keynote was sounded by Rev. D. W. McCormick, the Boston branch, which held the meeting, on "Eternal Vigilance—the President E. T. Morris, who spoke out manfully, J. M. Jullen, chairman of the Massachusetts American Association, substituted for General Edwards.
Details of Trouble
Rev. H. D. Green, holding a photograph of Sergent Vereid Henry, and himself, gave details of the trouble as he knew them on the spot, and himself, "Not murderers, but martyrs," he proved. Monroe Mace, World War II veteran, Loreworth showing the men had been disarmed and a shout arose that the mob was coming and it did come. Loreworth, with any other organization working for pardons, but wished all others to join. Rev. Thos. S. Hurten was given an ovation. He told how the lengue delegation saw "president Coolidge speak fully on the race question which foreshadowed his retirement," Coolidge to speak fully on the race question which foreshadowed his retirement, spokesman. He said the Race was to blame for its condition because it not organize under its own leaders. Secretary Albert G. W尔茨 read the resolutions to President Coolidge for the retiring Weeks also. Rev Swain raised $25 toward expenses. Captain L. Moore and Captain Simmons spoke briefly.
Want Letter Shower
It was voted also to ask the Race to give a letter shower for the soldiers for Christmas by every member of the army. Declare Coolidge asking a Christmas pardon, including request that he abolish segregation of clerks as Christmas booners. Declare Coolidge asking a W. Weeks, secretary of war, to recommend the pardons for Christmas are also urged.
STEALS FROM STORED CAR
George Johnson, $250 Prairie Ave. W., Sandiegon St., with stealing wearing apparel from her automobile when she was in the house of George worked. Most of the clothing was recovered in George's house, to 30 days in the house of correction.
WIFE BEATER FINED
M. Val McGee, 2234 Dearborn St., was the first to call her on his wife, Lulu who charged that he beat her up all the time. His greatest seemed to be to give her a black eye.
she gave a talk to the B. Y. U. of Mount Olivet Baptist church of New York. Mrs. J. P. U. of Messiah Baptist church of Yonkers was invited to attend. Mrs. Julia Post of Albany, N. Y. is her niece, Mrs. Ada Kingland, 127 W. 11th St.
CANANDAIGUA, N. Y.
Mrs. Mac Yenius, who has been seriously ill at Thompson Memorial hospital, was the first woman to where she is convalescing. Mrs. Lawrence Kenney of High St. and Miss W. Johnson of the city last Saturday to do the same were in the city last Saturday to do the same. Thomas motored to Kenny Yan Sunday and was the guest of William N. William Johnson and son of Johnson City were in the city last Saturday to meet Bennett. Daniel Holcomb of Keuka, who formerly lived here, was a girl from Green St. and son of Green St. of Greene St. is ill at his home. Called on account of afe illness of his sister, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson were last week. Mrs. John Miller was here last week. Mrs. John Miller spent the week on out on the farm of sister. Mrs. Renlina Amury. Mrs. Greene were in Rochester last week. Mrs. Wm. be out again after an illness.
FLUSHING. L. J.
The regular services were held at the Reverend R. L. Byland, pastor, the Deacons and Deaconesses union of Queens county had their annual sermon on Sunday, March 6 p. m. in the B. Y. P. U. held their literary program. James H. Hubert wrote the league addressed in a representative group of citizens at Ebeneneer Baptist Church, and took part in the services were the Rev. Mr. Whaley of the A. M. E. Church, the Rev. Mr. Johnson, wife of the editor of Opunemity, and the Rev. Mr. Byland.
NYACK, N. Y.
The sacred concert and musical by the Bantis church was unsuccessful. C. Moses is president and A. White organist, and the Bantis church was on at the Nyckel hospital. is improving. Mr. and Mrs. Bell of Chicago are vfresh Miss E. Conway has returned to Cincinnati. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank gracer entertained at dinner last week Thomson has returned from a visit in Hallmere. Mr. J. Simmons was invited. C. Vancille met with an accident last clothes wringer. Mr. and Mrs. G. Brown and Mr. and Mrs. J. Foster of Yonkers and Mr. R. King Sunday. were guests of Mrs. R. King Sunday.
INDIANA
JEFFERSON, IND.
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
NOTICE
My wife, Evelyn Moor 4023 Calumen
Rd., formerly Evelyn Long, left her
Rd., formerly Evelyn Long, left her
sponsible under any circumstances for
any date from this date
David Moor-Ady.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
tor of the A. M. E. Zion church in
Corporate Hall, the Jackson, had a union
Thanksgiving service.
CARD OF
LOST RELATIVES
[ADVERTISMENTS]
THOMAS B. TAYLOR, 38—Want to locate my son, Thomas S. Taylor, Jr. Last bear of Hirz in Chicago and working in the post office—Knights were and information as to his whereabouts was his father, Thomas S. Taylor, care of W. Forbes, 304 W. Walnut st. Sudbury, KY.
WILBUR WILLIAMS—Want to locate William B. Williams, kindly help his sister, Marie Louise Williams, 125 Haldley St., Indianapolis.
**DAILY OFFENSE**—Would like to know the whereabouts of my father, Randall Fennell, Left Burling Green Park, 32 years old, Kindred North Arm, Indianapolis, Indiana.
**CORRECTIONS**—W want to know merely in business on market St. near the Union Station, St. Louis, Mo. Kindred North Arm, Indianapolis, Indiana.
**COLLECTION**—Wekt Wing, 1500 Collin St., Julie.
**JAMES HASIN**—Awareness knowing the whereabouts of James Haskin, last heir of living on Indiana Ave., Chicago, IL. Kindly help Miss Lisa Hanna, 2515 Grant St., Flint.
**MILES HOO**—Awareness knowing the whereabouts of Mary Ark, last heir of in Newport, Ark. Kindly help his daughter, Jude Burlie, child.
**GEOGRAPHY**—W want to be George Christian, alias Jack. Also Maud N勇, aunt; Alice Sister, aunt; Harold S. Sister, aunt; Nettie, aunt; to H. Nettie, 500 Lake Shore Ave., Oakland.
**RELATIVES OF SAMSON OWENS**—I am one knowing the whereabouts of any of the relatives of Sampson Owens, my father and his brother, or Maggie Stewart, last heir of in Newham county, New Hammer county, Lindenville, have not heard of any of them since
IN MEMORIAM
[ADVERTISEMENTS]
One year ago, he and Sarah, both ronnie ronnie, and Gerphalm, with loud bells, did little that had were called away. With his heaviest bowel, the earth was sad. With we are sad and do we need, yet we are sad and do we need, but just ask. But just ask. John Johnson, who passed from this life Dec. 25, 1922. A loving father and devoted husband, he loved his daughter, Jodie Jack Jones, son-in-law.
In loving memory of our husband and son, he was born Dec. 15, 1918. cannot say, we will not say. That he is dead, he is just always. That he is dead, he is just always. He has wandered into an unknown land, left his dreaming how very far it came. For the last year, he was born. The oldtime step and the glad return, of a little rung on.
In said and loving remembrance of our dear
Sister Mary, our beloved Sister Mary, 18, 1923
in San Antonio, Tex.
We miss you, we miss you,
but you save me, again we'll see you.
But some savely sweet, again we'll see you.
Sleep on, sweet be the number,
Sleep on, sweet be the number.
—Ida M. Bley, sleep and children,
In sad and loving memory of my dear mother, Mrs. Susan Gaskins, who passed away in 2015, and Mrs. Bell Mackenzie, who died a few months later, you are not forgotten, and years have passed. You are not forgotten, and years have passed. God takes our loved ones from our homes,
—Hollanda Florence Bell Mormon; Bertha Clarvette Wooden and F. B. Bell, grandmothers
LADVERTISEMENTS1
OBITUARY
[ADVERTISEMENTS]
To the many friends who so kindly assisted
their children, Mary Lewis, daughter of
Taylor, beloved wife, daughter, mother and
sister of the late Mary Lewis, express our deep thanks and appreciation to them for their kindness. Maye McSoule, Mary Lewis and
Lewis.
KERSEY, MCGOWAN
& MORSELL
Undertakers
3515 Indiana Ave
OFFICE PHONE DODGEL $235
CALHOUN & SCOTT
UNDERTAKERS
Chapel Free
Lady Assistant
451 EAST 1ST STREET
OFFICE PHONE: DOUG 9100
BUSINESS CHANGES
FOR SALE
LET ME HELP YOU MAKE BIG MONEY.
MISSING FAMILY MONEY to Ouage
10,500. Fenns M. Baltimore, Md.
DO YOU WANT A BIG PROFITABLE PAY-
MENT? Write LR Mfg. Mt.,
FREESTYLE, N. C.
84
FURNITURE FOR SALE
4 KOOMS COMPLETE
$185
ONLY $15 CASH REQUIRED
LIBERAL TERMS TO SUIT YOUR
CONVENIENCE
KESSEL BROS.
401-318 S. STATE ST.
If
NEW FURNITURE MANU-
facturer's fault, bills, furniture and
can be bought very cheap. We are conti-
nued to offer free delivery, free freight. Cash or credit. Bed, mattress and
202 Westworth ave.
WE SAVE YOU 30 TO 50 CENT CENT AND
80 DINNELLE. 40 E. 13b. 18t. OF EAST WISCONSIN
or DINNELLE. 40 E. 13b. 18t. OF EAST WISCONSIN
AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
PACKARD T-PASSENGER. JUST THE THING
for most or older customers. Offer change
for $200. Pay up to $2000 per bag. See actu-
lity. E & G $2000. See actu-
lity. E & G Englewood 0013. If
100% paid, MODELS AND ALL
PARTS sold with a written guarantee.
Cargo Port Exchange. Open envelopes and
bags. 1460 S. Mebsan Ave. If
MEDICAL
RHEUMATISMIS RHEUMATISMIS HUNDREDS
RHEUMATISMIS RHEUMATISMIS HUNDREDS
RHEUMATISMIS RHEUMATISMIS HUNDREDS
RHEUMATISMIS RHEUMATISMIS HUNDREDS
their crutches and wheel chairs. This sale is
for $1 per jar. Blanton's Rheumatism
lief. $1 per jar. Blanton's Rheumatism
lief. $1 per jar. Blanton's Rheumatism
EXCELLENT MEDICINE. WRITE REV.
Berkley, 2022 N. Kiddle, Chicago III.
FORMULAS
SKIN BLAIRH - HAIR T-SHIRTEN-
200 other formulae; 600 to $5. Start a bu-
tiful career. Western Formulae Box. Co-
piler Cocoa.
SUMMER RESORTS
CAMERAS AND KODAKS
USED AND NEW CAMBRAS: YOUR OLD
CAMBRAS: YOUR OLD CAMBRAS:
Co. Kodak Headmasters 100 N. Dearborn
st. Phone State 7410. tf
CLOTHING FOR SALE
FOR SALE- CHEAP: COMBINATION CLOTH
FOR SALE- CHEAP: COMBINATION CLOTH
$245 AVE. Apl. S. 183, Dearborn 83001.
DEATHS
MEDICAL
FORMULAS
How to drive it, how to repair it, how to
money out of the automobile business
call on
OGDEN DAVIS & CO.
Expert instruction in automobile Engineering
60 East 43rd Street, Chicago, Ill.
We give jobs to all students.
Call in Person or Write for Booklet tf
LEARN AUTO TRADE
AND
EARN AT SAME TIME
Oliver and best equipped school has
opening for ten weeks in class now forming.
If unemployed will get you a good job
Reduced rate to complete class right away.
Address Box 25, Chicago Defender.
tf
AUTO INSTRUCTION
COMPLETE COURSE in automobile repai-
ring. PERSONALLY TAUGHT by prominent
will be by CLEAR demonstrations on
the procedure of 8 and 15-cylinder cars
on the machines that come into our shop
for
OUR METHOD OF teaching is QUICKEST
not require you to have a college education
not require you to have a college education
ENTHESIVE COURSE, including Electric Light-
ing AMPS during practice, $50; Garden term,
Day or expireng, GOOD; Garden term, procured for
every graduate, fee of all miscellor-
OGDEN, DAVIS & CO.
60 East St. St., Near Michigan Ave. st,
STEAD WORK; MOXI; 30 STRINGS; 1822
middle College; Community Government
line; 1822 middle College; Peasant Government line; 1822 middle College; Vacation with pay; Common education
Vacation with pay; Common education
business; Pay; Teen Institute; b
business; Write department; F-73, Hocken-
Franklin Institute, Write department.
MEN WANTED TO QUALIFY FOR SLEEPING
MEN. Transportation furnished. Write
McFafferty, Supt. St. Louis, Mo.
or 30 or 40 years of age; no student
wanted per credit on a dollar. J. A. Coleman,
100 FIRESHEN, BRAHMEEN, BAGGAGEEN,
sleeping car, train partner: $100 to $200
E. St. LOUIS, MO. RS Railway Bureau,
E. St. LOUIS, MO.
LEARN BARBER TRADAY-DAY OR NIGHT
BARBER, Barclay, 110 S. State, Chicago,
ID. DETECTIVE-WORK HOME OR TRAVEL
Detective System, 1088 S. Broadway, N. X. Y.
ELECTRICIAN WANTED TO DO HOUSE
Detective. Detective, 1088 S. Broadway, N. X. Y.
BARBER DEFENDER
PERSONAL
STRANGE POWER
GOOD LUCK HERBS
EGYPTIAN MAMMA-IAYKINE IHBRR
IHBRR for Dearborn, IL
Lion's Blood, Original Gum, Solomon Seale,
Ice, Ilex box with call us instruc
Ilex box with call us instruc
Ilex box with call us instruc
$1,600. Immediate. Genuine Magnetite
life lining free with all $2 orders. Send bir
bir agency, $2.1st Hat 4t,
Chicago, IL.
FREE
A GENERAL ASTROLOGICAL
SEND FOR FREE CIRCULARS
DE-LA-SPHINX SERVICE
2604 COTAGE GROVE-AVENUE
FREE
CHICAGO, IL.
SEND $1.02 TODAY AND I WILL SEND YOU
animal all your coins and give you luck.
animal all your coins and happiness; then from the great
creature strictly confidential. Write F. Martines.
creature strictly confidential. Write F. Martines.
GOOD LICK HERBS, JOHN CONQUISHER,
High John Coquercier. Fire Finger Grass
box. Send $1 for the fire box.
box. Send $1 for the fire box.
will give you a Lucky Glass free. Send orders
Drug Store, 1007 Market at., etc.
HERB DOCTOR BOOK AND HERB GATES
medicines from roots and herbs for all
medicines from roots and herbs for all
133 Brush达, Detroit, Michigan.
Cooper's Supplies
MAGIC WORDS, SECRET, SURB METHOD,
obtain anything you want! 10c postpaid.
18 Miller ave., Brooklyn.
N. X
LOVE SECRETS. EXPLAINED IN THIS
GREAT SECRETS. ORTAINING ANYTHING
Co., Toledo, Ohio.
GREAT SECRETS. ORTAINING ANYTHING
Co., Toledo, Ohio.
2500 Fulton店, Chicago, Ill.
OFFICES:FOR RENT
PRIVATE OFFICE
Porsche
complete office service, light, phone, informa-
tion clerk
$849 INDIANA AVENUE
Porsche
Dallas Jones 2024
INSTRUCTION`
This product SHOULD be. and WILL be. Thousands of dollars worth of advertising we have already done alone. We are going to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to help our representatives sell more of our products.
Such an opportunity has never been offered before, and you may never be presented to you again. If you believe yourself capable of making an offer, you want to be respected as one of the most important people in your life. You want to make more money than ever before. You want to BE FORCE ON ALL APARTMENTS. DO NOT BE FORCE ON ALL APARTMENTS.
AGNORT WANTED TO SELL LADAINYT
used and recommended by the famous singer
and reconstructed by the famous singer
make big money because they have the best
and valuable premiums. Give your territory
of your own. Write today for agnats special
price. Appt. C. Tyson & C., Perfume
AGENTS WANTED EITHER SEX PART OR NOVELS; possible customers in every family novelties; possible customers in every family novelties and special money market proxies; possible customers in every family bank proxies; National Bank Blade, Boulder, Colorado. cc
AGENTS--REAL WORKERS CAN MAKE
EVERY house a prospect. Write us at onec.
Everly, Gallon, Ohio.
NEW WORLDWIDE WORKERS
over dollar sales. Delivery on spot. License
manycareers. Sample free. Mason Shop, 518
AGENTS--OER SOAP AND TOILET ART
article plan in a wonder. Get our free sample
offer. 16-To-20, Coorb, St. Louis, MO.
WE START YOU WITHOUT A DOLLAR
WE START YOU WITHOUT A DOLLAR
performance integrity. Compliance Dept
WE WEEKLY: 3 TO 9 HOURS HOME
WOQ: 10 OR more. Etiquette: 10
WOQ: 10 OR more. Etiquette: 10
CONTRACTORS
CHESTER A. WICKS
LICENSED ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTOR
CONSTRUCTION
REPAIRING
MAINTENANCE
LET US GIVE YOU AN ESTIMATE
HAVE YOUR HOME OR PLACE
OF BUSINESS WIRED. WE
EXTEND CREDIT IF DESIRED.
DOUG. 4513. 820 B. STH ST.
ROHNER R. LEWIS
Building Contractor
REMODELING. HOMES AND GAR-
BERS. MONEY LOADED TO BUILD HOMES.
8525 CALVANT ST.
PHILADELPHIA 10000
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
WANTED--GIRLS, WOMEN, 16 UP, LEARN
gown men's wear. Many spring
apparel worn while earluring.
sens free. White immediately. Franklin
institute, Dept. F-022, Rockefeller, N.
50-518 DECORATING PILLOW TOWERS at bons; experience necessary, particular for Grange, IL. 50-520 DECORATING PILLOW TOWERS at Grange, IL. 50-520 DECORATING PILLOW TOWERS at EARL, IL. 50-520 DECORATING PILLOW TOWERS at Circulation, Instruction 12a. Moor back if disaffected, Mailting Co. To WANTED 50 EXPERIENCED WOMEN TO do beading on dresses at home, J. Christie Co. & Co., 1350 Blue Island ave. Carcass 6555. BWANTED -28 GIRLS: WORK ON POWER FIRST CLASS RETOCHER AND _RECEEPT INDIANEast, 24 600s. FIRST CLASS RETOCHER AND _RECEEPT INDIANEast, 24 600s. FIRST CLASS RETOCHER AND _RECEEPT INDIANEast, 24 600s. Apply B&C, Chicago Defender.
FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS
FURNITURE FOR SALE — $P 1,918 H
cabinet, $20; Brunwick-Hill Colleague-Co
cabinet, $75; new; bargain. $320
Grand Bldd. Douglas 4088. tf
SITUATIONS WANTED—MALE
SITUATION WANTED BY: GRADUATE
pharmacist; experienced. Box 12,
Chicago Dealer.
LAVENHAVE AVE. NR. 401F ST--SUN
DAY 9:30 AM--modern. modern. price $2,500.
$7,200 cash.
8 TO 15 PLATES
INDIANA AVE. 8 to 8-plat. -- 6 PLATES
Broom and 4 r-room. price $4,000.
Broom and 4 r-room. price $4,000.
N. E. CORR. 40TH PL. & VINCENNX 800
Rental over $10,100. Price $20,000;
Rental over $10,100. Price $20,000;
N. W. COLE 89TH PL. AND ST. LAWRENCE
Bldg. 1000 W. 10th St. Oak cottages.
Price $5,000. $10,000 cash.
OUR BUYERS NEVER FAIL
MORGAN PARK LOTS
$300 AND UP
SPECIAL MID-WINTER SALE
FINE RESIDENCE AND
BUSINESS LOTS
LOCATED AT 11TH ST. AND
SOUTH ASHLAND AVE.
We have been instructed by the owners to
unload at sacrifice price, and on very easy
terms.
GUT OUT THIS COUPON
Present with application of purchase, and
with receipt credit of $2.00 on each lot
purchased.
Call, phone or write us for further information
20TH CENTURY REAL ESTATE CO.
Flats and residences. Buy now and save
money. Hours 8 to 10:30 a.m. and 8 to 6 p.m. c.
LIVE IN CALIFORNIA: NO JIM CROWNEL
hours 8 to 10:30 a.m. and 8 to 6 p.m. c.
LIVE IN CALIFORNIA: NO JIM CROWNEL
hours 8 to 10:30 a.m. and 8 to 6 p.m. c.
Opportunities in the United States to your
wonderful schools, wonderful
opportunities. Send 500 letters to
Colored Californian. Worth its weight in
publishers. 1739 Central Ave. Los Angeles d.
FIRST HORTGARD 7 PER CENT
FIRST HORTGARD 7 PER CENT
PARTIAL DAMMENT PLAN
PARTIAL DAMMENT PLAN
INDIANA AVE.
INDIANA AVE.
WILL SELL HALF INTEREST IN THOM
base; hear garage, hardwood floors, elec-
tric floors, fireplaces, SEC. 12 will handle.
firewood; $500 will handle. Sec. 12 will
handle. TOWNSHIP OF SWEETWATER, COUNTY
of Lake, Michigan. Town 19 N. Range 14 W.
SEC. 12 will handle. Sec. 12 will handle.
Morrillan, Utah. SEND ONE DOLLAR FOR INFORMATION
government lands. Wm. be
Leffertidge, Alabama.
MISCELLANEOUS
FULL DRESS SUITS
FOR RENT
B. A. JONES
Ladies' and Gents' Tailor
448 East 31st Street
Phone Douglas 4006
FREE TO POOR PEOPLE. SUCCESSFUL
business man and inviter offer two-year
free interest in other product with
union-wide demand, with only ordinary ab-
ility to pay postage and cost of legal papers.
For $6 to pay postage and cost of legal papers.
with model pattern. Never before such an offer
Reason: for this generous gift - inven-
ce and express interest in other bus-
ness with no time to give up to outside affair.
Addition: for care, Baker's Garment
Shop, Osceola, N.Y.
WANTED - FOR CASH
OLD POSTAGE, STAMP, COLLECTIONS
A. E. AVERY
3103 S. STATE ST. CHICAGO
BUILDING PLAN
ALTERNATES
SPECIFICATIONS TO ORDER
L. W. Baker, 802 St. Stanley Ave.
Detroit, Mich.
WHY BE LONELY?
When you send a stamp for the "Happy Home
plan" that make you glad. Add Eden Bowy
Club, Box 22, Carron Station
Pittsburgh, PA.
MAIL US ANY PHOTO YOU HAVE. WEEK
DAYS ONLY. Mail with order. W. C. Fowler
shown by mail. Mail with order. W. C. Fowler
shown by mail. 3110 University avenue. Dept.
Dresher, Mt.
GOOD LUCK IHERS-LOVINE BERES
Jon Coopershaw and Sam and Brace: Master
of Care. W. C. Fowler postpaid, or $15; Maggie Lodore,
postpaid, or $15; Maggie Lodore, postpaid, or $15;
MARRY-MAGAZINE CONTAINING PHOTOS
and descriptions of ladies and gentlemen
Club, Yale Ctr. Mls.
FLATS FOR SALE
FURNISHED FLAT FOR SALE WITH LEASE,
1000 SQUARE FT. in town. 600
Grand bldg. Jat app. 1200
1000 SQUARE FT. in town. 600
PAGE TWELVE—PART ONE
YOUNG WOMAN
ACCEPTS AUTO
RIDE; BEATEN
Early Sunday morning a woman appeared at the Third district police station and reported that she had been beaten and robbed by a man and thrown from his car at Washington park. She gave the name of Mr. Marie Jackson, 26, 3539 Michigan Ave. She said that a man claiming to be a police officer picked her up at 35th and State Sts. between 2 and 3 a.m. Sunday, drove her in an automobile to Washington park, where he beat her over the head with a knife and dropped a diamond ring from her finger. The woman was abandoned in the dark by the alleged auto handie. She halted a passing taxiic, reported the police to Provident hospital. The police are searching for the handie. At the hospital, she was arrested and her address is 3539 Michigan Ave, but inquiries there revealed that no one
Arturo Billiaman, 49, 2947 East 90th St. was another robber, including a police officer who told the police that as he came out of a barber shop at 38th and State Sts shortly after, in the car he was in, he met him under the "72 road at 40th and State, beat and kicked him and robbed him at $11. Billiaman was taken to the County
ELKS TO GIVE CHICAGO
NEWSIES XMAS DINNER
During the Christmas holidays, the Fort Dearborn lodge, led by the Rev. Dr. Robert and sunshine to 200 newshows of Chicago. Through the generosity of the Hon. Oscar DePriest, the lodge has been donated for the purpose of giving a Christmas dinner at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 16. The clubhouse has been donated for the purpose of giving a Christmas dinner at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 16. The Fort Dearborn orchard, while the dinner will be served by the Daughter Elks of Liberty temple, to be with the editors, with the press to give each of their newspaper boys an identification card of admission, which will be honored by the keeper to a guest at the dinner.
FIND STOLEN LOOT
The attentiveness to duty of Officer Jeffrey Sevier, 20, had saved hundreds dollars worth of stolen goods. Officer Jeffrey noticed Robert Lowe, 20, the street swinging a new overcoat on his arm, noticing failed to bring an answer. Holsey and his companion, Edward McCrary, 20, stationed. There they confessed to Officer Lowe and Brown that they had stolen several ruts and the officers soon gathered into the net. Mr. William Walker, 20, Darborn Ave., who were charged with receivability, their case was continued until Dec. 27.
PREACHER ASSAULTED HER
"Judee, you don't know this man. He preaches. He cries. He cries just as good as the preaches," declared Mrs. Lizzie Johnson, 20, 421 Washburn Ave. He was charged with hitting the woman who would not sell her property rights to him.
ASSAULTS WIFE
Robert Gaddon, 2601 Calumet Ave.
was fined $50 and sent over to court.
wife in the head. Gaddon claimed
that he failed to go to work because he
suffered from a stroke. James Gamble, 2730 Glen Ave.
in their home. When he found them there
he assaulted his wife with a knife.
SCRIPTURE TEXT
SCRIPTURE CALENDAR TEXT for 1924
IS BEING DISTRIBUTED BY
Chicago Defend
WORLD'S GREATEST DISTRICT WEEK
SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOME
CHRISTIAN SPIRIT DW
SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOME WHERE
CHRISTIAN SPIRIT DWELLS
SCRIPTURE TEXT CALENDAR
1924 JANUARY 1924
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
A CALENDAR
Not only is the Scripture Text Cal
indicating all the dates in 1824, h
Scripture verse for each day of
eastern for each Sunday, while
given on each Saturday for the S
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these pictures represent what is b
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CALENDAR DEPARTMENT, CHICAGO DEFENDER
3435 INDIANA AVENUE
CHICAGO, ILL.
NEWS OF THE MUSIC WORLD
The faculty concert of the Coleridge success in every way and I regretted that the faculty concert was not a concert. Those who appeared were Alisa Brahton, soprano; Irene Howard, tenor; James McCormack, clammer; Walter Gossette, lament; Lam C. King, clarinet; Walter Gossette, bassoon; assisted by the Pilgrim choir with the talent of Miss Alpha Brahton is well known to Chicago auditioners. The condition of the exacting number from Jeremy Brahton possesses personal charm and power and her volute vocalization and her volute regret not hearing the
Mr. Taylor, ratered "Schwarzer" by IBM, said that the two other Thesus numbers were greatly agreed. Thesus numbers were excellent technique and interest in displaying excellent technique and interest in his being a constant student of IBM.
Mrs. Robinson rendered two inter-
esting cases: the "inflammatory" by the chair gave evidence of the earnest work that they are doing. And the deserts great
her efforts.
These convoys are given to establish a Musso Gooldy Goya, who is teaching at Howard university, recently gave a lecture on proven her worth as an artist and congratulates her upon her success and she has done just what we expected, large and beautiful. Both been received Roland Hayes internationally famous tense, at Orchestra of the fact that there was a driving rain and the rains of the daily papers came in for a short time to hear Mr. Hayes the words of praise of his art.
Mr. Hayes has a lyric tone voice and a strong sense of interpretation that is stirring and fascinating. He is singing of Handel's "Would You Gain the Tender Crown" and members for his superb duction in the pianissimo passage, and he and control in the German group, "Die Forelle". It had to be repeated before the program concludes. He marveled abroad at the diction. Every German and the German erics abridged at marvelous diction. Every German and the German erics beautifully interpreted and as an encore Mr. Hayes played the opera "Manson". There were numerous encores and as one of the most memorable pieces there was audience spell-bound. "Steal Away" truly took one to heaven for there was an applause following the rendition and the Negro spirituals were greatly appreciated and were sung as only two "Crucifixion" by Maj. S. Clark Smith, the Negro spirituals which is the supreme test of a voice, the pain and despair for the forgetten songs, the pain and despair
William Lawrence, the accompanist,
and the singer in every mood. Mr. Hayes
is fortunate in having such a sym-
phony, and him in his wonderful success.
He is also the singer in every mood,
but Chicago hopes that before
returning abroad the first of February,
he will return to hear this wonderful singer
and is continually adding to it, so that
engagement would mean a new program.
Mr. Hayes has 40 engagements in
returning abroad to fill six months of
excellent engagements. Mr. Hayes years
after England after his wonderful recta
that our readers may know what
Chicago critics said about him. I quote
—“This tenor is endowed with a fine
lyric voice, a strong and artistic degree.
It is very smooth, the quality is liquid and
the singer is even throughout.” —The Daily News.
“He needs no apology from any points
of view,” he is a singer and an artist.
—The Tribune.
CALENDAR
for 1924
TRIBUTED BY
THE Defender
TEST GOOD WEEKLY
EVERY HOME WHERE
SPIRIT DWELLS
1924 JANUARY 1924
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
R AND MORE!
Ender a complete calendar, clearly
but it is a devotional aid, giving a
the year, and the Sunday School
the Golden Text of the Jerusalem
sunday directly following. Besides
calendar contains twelve reproduc-
the world's greatest artists. All or
best and most refined in the realm
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---
By MAUDE ROBERTS GEORGE
McCormick sings them again 1 do not
explain the examples of classic song as
such examples of classic song as
Handel or Lacha's "Bibit du mil瑟"
—Hirschal-Zammerer.
The tone was unusual sure, and his power of sustaining
the plasmismo was extraurreal.
"Applying his voice to many varied refinements of treatment which is uncommon for its taste," the journal, "he is not only an artist, he is a writer and not live and feel some of the poetry he wrote, but he is like that, phrase with such cunning instinct and intelligence, unless you know him." "And if you have all these you belong to 'crowned heads' of the art world."
"William Lawrence is an accomplished touch, tactile and innate understandability," the American "beyond our average."
Hazel Harrison, internationally internationally a successful tour, Chicago hopes that she will be heard as soloist with the orchestra. Her ability as a pianist of unusual merit has long been at the Opera in Germany. The most beautiful of rare treats to opera-goers, Gail Curll Tito Schipa, Charles Marshall, Muslue
The Schoja, as Gerald, a British officer interested to get a peep at her and he hears her singing and finally comes into contact with a peep at her and a tery which brings her alarva who summons her father. While they voice expresses every emotion and with the tery it is thrilling and the audience burst into a storm of applause. Opera lovers, a competent singer, who is very commanding in his manner and is an ideal love-object, come in the centre cast, which included Desiree Margery Maxwell, Bevell Brown, Marie Chessons and Glido Moralez where Lakme nurses Gerald back to health after he has been wounded and the singing was of the type that gives the eats poisoned flowers when Gerald has been persuaded to return to his regiment in the final singing during the death struggle and Lakme dies in the
Observed in the audience were: Dr. Louise, in a box, which was also occupied by one of the city's financiers and Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Abbott were horseshoes. Mrs. Estella Bond, Mrs. Bond, daughter and granddaughter and Garner, Sr. and guest, George R. Garner, Sr. and guest, George R. Garner, Cole Talbert, J. Wesley Jones, Mrs. V. A. Harper, Mrs. W. Clyde, Mrs. W. Clyde, Dorrell, Hattie Goode, Elthon Miller, Walker, Dr. Ernest J. Ricks and James Harrison Jones.
Colle Talbert was the principal solist at the first annual meeting of the Colored Y. M. C. A. More than 10,000 people attended and there was occasion for Jack Thomas, which received splendid commendation. Of Mrs. Talbert the following was written: "Florence Cole and she would be a credit to any stunner. Her perseverance in pitch, and she has a method that might make the best of some of them of wido reputation, too, envious."
Anderson, contrata of Philadelphia, was heard as solist with the daily papers gave excellent mention of her accomplishments. One of these
"Following the policy of the encour-
lement, she presented as the first solist of the
evening, Marion Anderson, the young
woman who appeared here and elsewhere on
the first time she has been heard with
an orchestra. She is possessed of a
gift, and her use of her gift showed that
she is a brilliant and artistic librarian and ars formant on Donatella
La Favorita, her opening number,
the technical requirements of this
opulence of voice that gives her
future much promise. She then sang
Burkle's spirituals, the second,
imperative "been, being especially
impressive."
JESSE FRIERSON IS
When Jenet Friserson, 53, 4427 Calumet Ave, left home Wednesday night to go to your workplace telling his landlord, Mrs. Mittle Morgan, good-by for this week. He received a telephone message stating that he had been buried alive by his sub-assistance of the Illinois Merchants bank, left home in progress.
Frierson was killed when he and five other men were standing in an open outdoor root awaiting orders from the foreman to go to work. A sudden movement Frierson ran toward the interior of the cave while the other five van saw the earth slide over him succeeded in extricating his body from the debris and that he died before first aid could be administered. Frierson came to Chicago five years ago from Ancilla, Miss.
**TURNS ON THE GAS**
According to the police, Mrs. Pauline Swain, 27, 3623 Grand Blvd., turned on the gas in her apartment and attempted to commit suicide.
POLICE OFFICERS
At Street and School Crossings
WHEN YOU MAKE OUT YOUR
CHRISTMAS LISTS
At the Opera
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
AUTOIST IN ASSAULT ON SCHOOLBOY
A warrant for the arrest of Philip H. Benson, 3156 Glies Lane, charging assault and battery was sworn on Friday by Archie Womack, 3012 Vernon Ave. in behalf of his 15-year-old son, Benson was identified as the man who got out of his auto to attack with another boy, was returning to the Douglas school building at 323 and Ave. at the end of the recount. According to witnesses, Womack ran across the street in front of Benson who stopped his car, got out, drew a revolver and knocked the boy unconscious. His act was witnessed by one of the teachers of the school who came to the scene. He held off by Benson at the point of his revolver. He told her witnesses he had a hand on the boy he would blow her brains out. A few minutes later Womack was taken to Provident hospital. Through the license number on the car its ownership was revealed, a warrman for his arrest followed.
COL. SIMMONS LEADS RACE TO G. O. P. COMMITTEE VICTORY
COL. SIMMONS LEADS RACE TO G. O. P. COMMITTEE VICTORY
Howell was a sorry spectacle to the people of the city, alone his recollections of 1912 when he was killed by a bomb, for supporting Ehru Root at a rage and wore vengeance upon him.
DuPont in Support
YMCA
Following the very strong address of Dr. Dennis M. C. A. next Sunday university before the Sunday Afternoon classes of the Chicago Illinois of Olivev Baptist church will speak at the Y. M. C. A. next Sunday the pastor of the largest congregation in Chicago will speak at the National Baptist convention, he会话 to the young men at Sunday's meeting as will add to the attractive program that has been arranged for this occasion.
Two more sessions remain of the first term of the community school of reduced attendance for Sunday school teachers will be offered for this occasion.
Two courses have been offered this term to nearly two secoe men and nominations.
The students under the leadership of the chapel committee are the students of the Thursday of the month as a sitting member of problems in method and in materials of religious education. Repherat will be received on Jan. 10, the regular instruction beginning the next Thursday.
Mr. Searcy, employment and business manager, three weeks' vacation at the home of his mother in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and the wife of the Wabash dermatology the men of the Wabash dermatology on Monday and turned in his keys, including one to a mail box and claimed the customary found in Dearborn. Davis claim submitted by the found in Chag, W. Pierce, then desk clerk at the "Y" now proclaimed by the Chag, W. Pierce, after ten years of continuous residence in the building Mr. Pierce high school. After ten years of continuous residence in the building Mr. Pierce home." Among other pieces the inventory of the holidays out of town艺 Clarence Mormon, returning to Lafayette, Christmas in Kansas, and William Titus, who expects to return from a
GOES TO PRISON
Robert James, 2947 Dearborn St. was born in 1827. He was a correction for stealing, the Stubbs of the City and Vigil Harris, all of the State. He was a member to jawn one of the clothes of jautes.
---
WOMAN ADAMIST WOMAN
Stated to judge Joseph Lahley that she was abused by Miss Helen McCurtis and asked to her soliciting in her hallway. She stated that the woman had no respect anyone. Helen was fired $10 and costs.
PAYS TRIBUTE
President Calvin Coolidge is slate Booker T. Washington, the great to the school. The marble statue over a year ago, and shows Dr. War from his Race and pointing to a bet on the school grounds, and President visit it.
OUR RACE IN
ROGER WASHINGTON
1856 - 1919
WASHINGTON, D.C.
A MEMORIAL STATUE OF
THE FIRST AMERICAN
GOVERNOR OF THE
UNITED STATES
WASHINGTON, D.C.
President Calvin Coolidge is shown paying a silent tribute to the fake Booker T. Washington, the great Tuskegee educator, during a visit to the school. The marble statue was unveiled with fitting ceremonies over a year ago, and shows Dr. Washington lifting the veil of ignorance from his Race and pointing to a better day. The memorial is a show place in school grounds, and President Coolidge made a special request to visit it.
OUR RACE IN LITERATURE
HAVE often wondered why some one has not written as a supplication, "On a Certain Condescension in Americans." Such an effort, in some small measure at least, might serve us as a clearer estimate of urgency.
Our powerlessness, our utter futility in the face of a concrete situation, is not well, but other we ourselves or our machinery are at fault. In our courts the conviction is simply implied in the sentence but simply a new trial. We are ten by industrial and social unrest. We are statement discuss the bonus and shift subsidy with an eye to the next election. Sometimes our national honors are lost, and we can send a million men to Europe, but not until we have been trampled upon, and we are not surprised, it is any wonder that flag is not always respected abroad
Sometimes in our leisurely democracy develop hardships a responsible citizen must surpass our real generosity and charity. A man who has survived the death, that the President of the United States and the governor of Pennsylvania both interceded for the life of a man who was killed in the death. Dick, it appeared, was owned by an alien contrary to law. I could not believe that was able to call forth such remarkable weight or executive clemency? Did its ancestors come over on the "Mayflower"? Could its grandfather vote? Should kill your hometown, your family, your years heard of any President writing to a governor about a citizen who died in death within these United States.
Our inconsistency does not mean that as a nation we have lost sight of our own history. We have never needlessly as sea before finding it. Democracy does not always mean when we make it far off its course and has to make a violent effort to find its way. While, moreover, we talk about the presence of there are always with us those who want something else. In the old good days Rhode Island was the most of all the country, and we do not always stop to think that there was a time when there were rock-ribbed families of Boston there and a sea-covered island in the catalogue on the basis of their social standing. Among the rock-ribbed families of Boston there were plantations and slaves. Southerner with whom trade was good and behind whom was the romance of plantations and slaves. We discussed the Jew and the Negro New England has again beckoned to the South with its warm turns; the worm turns; the dog wriggles out of our grasp, and the glory of democracy is that it is the freedom to to work out his freedom—and live.
In the new day to which we have come it is necessary first of all that we keep our eyes on ourselves, in humanity. Let us also as never before honor Truth—not propaganda, not the flattened face of a biopic journalism, but simple, clear-eyed Truth. This will mean that we shall have to readjust many of our biopic sibilobolts. Our country is changing, and those persons who insist on abiding by the opinions formed 20 years ago simply stand in silence in another world.
With nothing shall we have to be more careful about hasty judgment with subjects relating to the Negro. Today there is no telling
By A CONTRIBUTOR
what an individual Negro may or may not be, war hardly more than one in ten could read; today literacy has been the most important of the stead of his being your tenant you may even find that the Negro you have been living in increasingly complex, and in some matters of music and other forms of art, the most "advanced" in the country.
The Negro is naturally such an artist and he has such an innate appa-
sition to the world. He is essential faith unchanged, he is likely
to take on a new form of worship and develop almost always a call to
Just now Bahamis is popular with the exoteric, and since the war cynicism
the nihonese developed almost so a call to the matter. The other is that of
the strange prominence of the Negro in
American history. In the colonial era it was the economic advantage of
the Negro to displace this institution as a system of labor. Two of the three com-
munities of the Constitution were prompted by the presence of the Negro in
the country; the expansion of the Negro in the
question or the excuse of fugitives was the real key to the Seminole
determine the status of the Negro in the
republie, and the legislation after
the history not only of the South but
very largely of the nation as well.
The later disfranchiscing acts have
unfair system of national representation
controlling the election of 1918
the attitude of America in the
World.
Here then are two great themes—that of the Negro's aspirations and that of the American body in influence on the American body in might reasonably engage the attention ousely to have a contribution to American literature on this general topic. The first would call for treatment of the work should be sympathetic to treatment largely objective; but in any case the work should be sympathetic to treatment I regret the Negro has not had. With our biggy and condescension on this subject as no other we have had, the Negro has not spoken within which spake in the beginning. Two great failures still most frequently occur that the education of the Negro has been a failure, and the other is that the integrity of the womanhood of the Negro is not the same. It makes no difference how much evidence there may be to the Negro's failure to start still likely to start off with those assumptions. The Negro himself, moreover, must be either a brute or a charming person. It is not yet a popular play with American audiences, some years ago a Shakespearean company performing "The Merchant of Venice" in Atlanta found it advantageous. Morocco, because of local conditions
Literature is supposed to be the reflection of the national life. Unfortunate is not complimentary to the country's life. We have the best printers and books that are they asked to produce — ales of scandal skilled over with sentimentality — genius people who people smiled at E. P. Roe; but Roe was at least harmless. More recently we have seen that even he has been in out-Herdorde. If we today go over the list of writers we can consider only those who are most outstanding, the extent to which many will be found to have a master's degree, they started in astonishing. In all this walter of commercialism, and sensationalism we can see so far as he is concerned, is that he be fearlessly and absolutely honest, as it is in identifiably—as it ought to, but let it cease to exploit out-worn theories or be the vehicle mere mortals to world—is upon us, with new men, new visions, new desires. As never before, our demands are whole.
It is now a little more than six years ago that I contributed to "The Diln" (then in Chicago) a paper entitled "The Diln: A Study of Influence." In that discussion I endeavored to deal at some length with the work of several authors—notably George W. Cable, Joel Chandler Harper, and Robert Dilyn—as well as with that of reprs.
BIG BUSINESS GROUPS PLAN UNIFIED ACTION
THE SOUL OF A KU KLUX
THE SOUL OF A KU KLUX
The Chicago Tribune recently printed a story of the ill-fated trip of the "Plantation Special," which was scheduled to leave this city carrying disappointed high wage seekers to the land of the lynch rope. In the article the editor of the Chicago Defender was quoted as follow: The ment is opposed to any movement back South." The letter below, signed in H. Busey, Monton, Miss, came as an answer to that statement. It is printed verbatim:
Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 21.—Unified action, long needed for the economic development of the Race, has at last been assured by the most outstanding group of financial enterprises controlled by Ngroes. Information from the group, led by Perry who is the head of the Standard Life Insurance company, the Citizens Trust, trust company, and the Service company, the triangular group of business enterprises here, that the organizations with which he is commissioned are the most important group a place or major importance in the economic in. Keeping with his recent statement that "The Standard Life Insurance company is the cause of uplift and education of the Colored people of America," Mr. Perry has requeste. great publicity program to educate the masses of Colored people to the realizations of the need for a common world.
Of this program Mr. Perry recently added, "the work as expressed in the articles on the value of an economic viewpoint prepared by our faculty and the thought of our Radcliffe group in America. I am more convinced every day that the ultimate goal is upon the foundation of nationwide economic development. When our group meets, we look at the idea of the economic viewpoint the strides we have made
If you have made the statement accredited to you in the clipping, you are as most 'Niggers are—because it was the low down no count Nigger. You are not a Nigger would leave his deity. But there were thousands of lefthands who did leave and and are still on the black belt of Chicago, St. Louis and that will bear me out, and see what the good Nigger is. A Nigger is a
There is the South side Nigger and there is the Nigger who tries to do to found none who are absolutely honest, and I have $5 family who have any places are full, and any white man who tries to buy a Nigger to work for him must have any will to deal for them, and it is the fool Northern whites who will Nigger done for the South side, driven every decent family out of once the our William Hate Thompson thinks they
sentative short story writers of the day who had introduced O'Keeffe charm and advanced the proposition that in our literature as in our social life we were largely female and had happened within six years, and now that the war is four years behind us and we are trying to find the key to our success, we may not unreasonably ask if there has been any advance. At once we have written five books by O'Keeffe and sketches of E. K. Means and Octavus Ryo Cohen, and these we find to be biography. Five other books—"His Own Country" by Paul Kester, "The Shadow" by Mary White Hale, "White and Black" by H. A. Shandz, and "Jolindetree" by Colonel* byvin C. Robert* interesting to observe, have all appeared within the present year, and practically every one of them has written the first novel by its author. Taken together these books mark an advance, but one would hardly need to mention the method, "His Own Country" and "White and Black", however, while containing much to be genuine epochs, it must attitude on fundamentals, and the treatment of its hero is especially open to attack. We have our interest and the race problem. "I am not problem. Is a pussion," he says; "I craves to be so regarded. To that
As for the Race itself, because of the pressing questions incident to and resulting from his recent experience, he has recently been given mainly to journalistic work rather than to that more imaginative, and had W. Burghardt Dufolls' collection of essays, "Darkwater," and Claude McKay's striking work, "In the Land of Death," in but fiction nothing as polignant as Paul Laurence Dunbar's "The Sport of the Gods" has recently appeared in, and are appearing on the horizon, however, and within the next few years we may not unreasonably exert more than one work of enduring importance.
It has well been said that to be as good as our fathers wore we must be good. We must be good because we become us to represent anything but the highest standards of efficiency and the highest standards of etiquity is too much capitalized; "100 per cent Americanism" too often beaten up. Has our melting not been bottling too fast? Very well; let it simmer. Let us not, let us not. Let us not be so swept by the fires of biorgy or even by the glamour of industry or men's souls. Those who have been prosperous and happy can never tell what divine gift may have been and what years have learned and have yearned and upheld. The Negro and the Jew, the Italian and the French, the earth-earned and uplifted, purified as we all must be, each brings so much to the making of our country.
But, say we, they have not culture. N., they have not; none of us have. Those who think they have most are likely to be the most provinced. We are not a board hearing Professor Kittedge remark some years ago that culture is a Dy-
S GROUPS
FIED ACTION
In the past 50 years will pale into insignificance by the comparison with our accomplishments in the future."
The particular thought back of this new program of advertising is the advocacy of the belief of the Standard Life Insurance, the Citizena Trust company, the Service company and the allied interests of that company and its subsidiaries, that the locus is destined to take a larger and more important part in the industrial and economic life of Algeria.
The Standard Life Insurance company has insurance in force of more than $297,000, and accumulated reserve company with a paid up capitalization of $300,000. The company with assets of approximately $300,000; the Service company with assets of approximately $300,000; the stunted backing necessary to put over the gigantic program of Race Mr. Every has set for these organizations. Despite fault finding and misinformation, demonstrative facts prove the worth and importance of these con
---
With this great group of financial institutions dedicated to the economic progress of the Negro in America as outlined by Mr. Perry, it will be but an easy task to bring such a nation with the action necessary to make the face one of the most important factors of American citizenship.
A KU KLUX
intended a story of the ill-fated trip of the caduled to leave this city carrying disland of the lynch rope. In the article as quoted as follows: "The better eleack South." The letter b-low, signed me as an answer to that statement, It are as good as he is. I believe he is right.
I am glad the Nigger riff raff is leaving the Nigerian riff raff that will get real human beings to work the land and make it a white man country; need not come South to know what a Niger is, see the declinated houses that we looked at with pride when the white people occupied them. But make thinking peoples hearts ache. I would chief Clifton put 400 extra police on the force in the black question? I would like to tell you a few truths about the Nigerians that the white man makes them live together, use one another as cats and dogs, blame them for the passion they have. But I do blame the white fathers. All the warden and Joliet paid for his kindness to that Nigerian trust with the Nigerian. The Niger was not to blame. The people of the North have come, and it is their responsibility not to come South to know
BRICK THROWSER SENTENED
BRIK THROWSER in the house of Kraus Brothers,
dow in the store of Kraus Brothers,
Smith, Smith, Smith, Federal St. and Arthur
St. each month, each month each in the house of
Kraus Brothers.
White Woman's Skin Is Given to Burnt Girl
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 21—One of the best prots that came to the city is the city cently, when Mrs. Howard Bartges, n. 24-year-old, white woman, 14 N. Hopkins, a grating operation at the hospital of the Woman's Medical college of Philadelphia, N. Hopkins, 4-year-old girl, who was severely burned in her home, 1811 N. Hopkins, a mono ago. When it came to such an operation was necessary to restore the little girl to her home Bartges, a native of Scotland, volunteered at once. The operation was a success and both patients
THIS NEWSPAPER CONSISTS OF TWO SECTIONS-BE SURE YOU GET BOTH OF THEM
Boisterous Conduct on Cars Casts Reflection on Race as a Whole, Writer Says
By THE OBSERVER
The writer, whose work takes her into all parts of the city and among all classes of people, has from time to time felt keenly the lack of training and understanding evidenced by her experience in the matter of public customs and manners. This criticism would apply to many of the older residents are not without fault in this particular time for offenders, but cannot work eventually for the good of all concerned. It is hoped that this article
Entering a South side market not long ago the writer was greeted in the company tones by the butcher in a groaning dee do? How are you? How are all your folks?" and a lot of such chat he seemed to have, but alas at the lack of response, but carried the same loud-toned message, using identical words. This latter party seemed to fall into his mood and gave in to something of his family history and all the other things he discussed his personal matters with the butcher that he did not notice he was overcharged for his purchase.
Called "Sister"
In different sections of the city, especially west of State St., these tradespeople often address their customers buffed, and always lots of joking and laughing are indulged in that carries an underlying tinge of ridicule with it. Our people seem to think that this hater with these people, but conduct a courteous business transaction. On the Avenue Ave. car the other driver with these people, the attracted the attention of everyone. It developed that one of our workmen had a large paper bag with two chickens in it that sent up protesting great amusement of the owner as well as a few of his friends who, by the way, were dressed in very dirty overalls, and although standing in close conversation at the top of their voices.
A word might be said as well about the very rude and annoying way some of our people have in allowing their friends to walk around a crowded street car. It is well to seek the front of the car, but no excuse can be made for the way some people treat others around the crowded alley. It is hard to everyone about. It is decided uncomfortably to have one's feet tread upon, but knocked off and clothing removed. It is out a word of apology. In fact one is rest with haughty stairs and beliefful attitude if a protest is made. The looks of disfustert the writer has been careful to note on the faces of harmonious living.
"Hog" on Street Car
A friend was relating a rather amusing incident that happened on his way to the store of stature. She states a workman in his desire to reach the front of the store, back almost knocking her to the floor. He seemed to be entirely unconscious that he had committed a crime but fought madly to his destination.
We who have preceded our more untrained brothers and sisters to a certain degree must give warning of the result to be expected by such practices. We cannot close our eyes to the trouble that these offenders at the time of the attack caused. Yet if one should in the most pleasant manner speak to one of these offenders at the time of the attack, the feeling that exists is that to ask information or to appear uninformed is to stump one's familiar past. These offenders are unintentionally committed. It has been noticed also that one familiar past is not sufficient, rather than seek an intelligent source of information. Gentle, courteous manners, careful consideration for the feelings of others should be observed at all times.
EX-GOVERNOR ALLEN FLAYS
DAVIS ON RIOT MOVIE O. K
Former Governor Henry J. Allen of Kansas, in a statement published in the *Victoria* "Protest" newspaper recently, accused the Kansas authorities in releasing "The Birth of a Nation" film, which had been barred from the state under previous administrations. "Governor Davis' action in letting this picture back in Kansas is sordid. There are no single good purpose in the picture. The unfortunate passions of the period which it attempts to pletter are not good remedy; it merely reinfames the subject. The only effect that follows its reproduction in separate situations between the white people and Colored people."
FOUR GET DIPLOMAS
FROM STATE NORMAL
Montgomery, Ala. Dec. 21.—Awarding four diplomas the Alabama State University, 1923 fall quarter with the ninth quarterly commencement exercises, the feature of which was the address by Dr. P. A. Calaham pastor of the Montgomery church. The regular commencement sermon was preached by Dr. Chas H. Pratt of the Trinity Presbyterian Montgomery church. Dr. G. W. Wynn, president, announced that the total student registration for the quarter was 1.625, with 819 in residence. Completion of the quarter was celebrated symposium and installation of electric lights on the campus were noted as the chief physical improvements. A professor, professional department were named Hamilton and Eiffe Wheat. From the high school normal the graduates were Amanda Bell and Edgar Moore. The quarter opened on Monday, Dec. 21.
THE WEEK
"YOU are wasting time, energy, putting your self-respect on the counter," said many when a few friends, faithful to each other, faithful also to you, decided to tackle the Republican national committee on the veto of the veto. Daily papers of great print volumes divide in opinion on the result, some saying one thing, some another; some for, some against. You keep our white people jumping.
Between sessions of the sub-committee that heard the opening argument at Washington this writer dictated a hurried report to you. You are ever in mind. You were told that the outlook was dark, but the fight was on. Maybe you didn't realize that your right to REPRESENT as well as to be represented was the home of contention. You or three hot orators gave the committee fits, but those in charge stuck to the issue.
Stick to the issue: keep reason in front when arguing your case before an American white jury. They face a man who picks it up and knows how to handle reason is patient enough to see it work out. A thought for you.
The speaker concludes. A wave of the heard outside the hotel sale. Committee grasps his hand now. No vote possible. Dr. Cannon to inform the committee that North
Whisper very often together, and down the aisles. The chairman man of great heart, of an open man of the committee will how hear spoken the Constitution-understanding clauses that shut the ballot box in your face; drove you from home.
By this time you know all about the fight; likewise about the outcome. Daily papers of great print volumes divide in opinion on the result, some saying one thing, some another; some for, some against. You keep our white people jumping.
Between sessions of the sub-committee that heard the opening argument at Washington this writer dictated a hurried report to you. You are ever in mind. You were told that the outlook was dark, but the fight was on. Maybe you didn't realize that your right to REPRESENT as well as to be represented was the home of contention. You or three hot orators gave the committee fits, but those in charge stuck to the issue.
Stick to the issue: keep reason in front when arguing your case before an American white jury. They face a man who picks it up and knows how to handle reason is patient enough to see it work out. A thought for you.
The speaker concludes. A wave of the heard outside the hotel sale. Committee grasps his hand now. No vote possible. Dr. Cannon to inform the committee that North
Write down that the matter was argued out into light, then to victors of your men, those who cheated the game. O. P. to learn language, turn phrases, meet point with point, speak to the understanding. That is, in a family quarrel the spoiled favorite sons determined to break up the house. If your children read of you a century hence they will read a romance.
GO back to Washington, seat of your government. You were there with this writer last week. Go back there. Look in on the second session of the first day's battle. You sessions you were told that it looked like a losing fight, but your side had the best of the argument. Again the Munsey building. Three clock. Again the only larger. Noon papers reported that a political battle was going on. That is a fire alarm in Washington. The morning train brought the Georgia delegation, but the train was not on. Mr. Davis, a man of powerful brain, rides out with this writer to talk over the situation. The party, including John T. Risher, master of detail, arrives at the place of hearing.
The sub-committee is in one room, the spectators in another. Mr. Mulvane of Kansas, now seeming to lean forward, informs the committee it is writing on his desk. Time is placed in his hands.
Cohen and Howard instruct the writer on allotment of time; how to proceed. The committee, headed by Senator Howell, files in. Immediately the hearing is
Speakers, as introduced: Pollard of Virginia, who held back many thoughts, being a fine lawyer, in the interest of his case: Cohen, nestor of Tehquilcanism, whose son was killed by Washington lawyer, who pulled both triggers of a double-barreled shotgun. Sometimes the kick is worse than the shot. Mr. Howell replies. The writer closes, asking questions of the chair that brought several to their feet. Again the chairman replies, this time with show of an anemic blood raised on Nebraska corn must have temper.
The hearing is over. Out goes the crowd. The sub-committee remains behind to confer. The chairman Adams with the news that 45 minutes would be allowed by the national committee Tuesday morning in the Willard hotel for presentation of the case.
THE VICTORY WAS ON THERE.
Tuesday morning the rooms of the Lincoln league on Pennsylvania Ave.—the only colored office on "The Avenue Lincoln." The chairman of the committee present. The question is one of procedure before the committee. Henry Lincoln Johnson takes the floor. A motion is made that Roscoe Simmons of Illinois shall make the argument that he asked to bring his figures into play one more. He agrees. Three-thirty is the time. Once in life ALL Colored men are together. Worth remembering.
PLACE: New Willard hotel, Washington. The ball room is packed with the wealth, blood, intelligence of your country, wide open fields, standing with the chair as associate members, the latest in dresses and the oldest stones and jewels.
Senators and dignitaries occupy seats. The press tables are crowded, young men and old reporters waiting and pencil to take down motions, periods, questions and arguments.
Hundreds stand. Many line the wall. Senators stand the rear. Are Emile Kuntz and Walter Cohen, Louisiana; Benjamin Davis, Georgia. They will watch the chairman and the committee. Keep an eye out, so to speak. Wink or wave at the speaker. They will watch the committee with Rudolph Hyndlek, committee from Ohio.
Determination
The Issue
Back to Washington
[Copyright Chicago D]
YOU are wasting time, energy, money, and friends, faithful to each other, as decided to tackle the Republican Party's Constitution-understanding claustion box in your face; drove you by this time you know all about the outcome; got fussed on the victory. Editors side in opinion on the result, some another; some or some again in fighting.
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BLACE: New Willard hotel, Wash
room is packed with the wealth
of your country. Ladies of high
estation own the latest cut in dresses and the
awesels.
Senators and dignitaries occupy
the bedding well towards the front me
with pad and pencil to take doo
questions and arguments.
Hundreds stand up at the rear,
standing well towards the front me
alater Cohen, Louisiana; Benjamin
he will watch the chairman and t
n eye out, so to speak. Wink or w
Henry Lincoln Johnson, members
with Rudolph Rynkla, commi
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
They whisper very often together. Howard walks up and down the aisles. The chairman, John T. Adams, a man with a green cap, opens the committee will now hear apprehension for the detention opposed to the new apportionment. Mr. Howard briefly states the issue, asking for a reopening. The writer is then introduced to make the argument.
The committee is indifferent; then not so indifferent. Ralph Williams leaves his corner to sit with George B. Lockwood, secretary. A sentence or so further; applause. Ladies on the committee lean forward. Something about the Republican party being the trustee of this government brings long applause. The speaker tells this committee that the governor is the top officer in these ladies. Mark Hinton is named. Wild applause. A tribute is paid to Henry Cabot Lodge, as the crown to Puritan manhood. Cheers, several ladies and gentlemen. The governor tells the speaker to go ahead, that the committee is glad to hear him. Mr. Davis of Georgia, standing over Lincoln Johnson, smiles. Tears run down the cheeks of Tolbert of South Carolina. The governor tells the speaker to go ahead, that the committee is glad to hear him. Ladies on the platoon lead a short demonstration.
THE speaker concludes. A wave of applause that could be made outside the audience over the audience. Committeemen grasp his hand. "Take a vote now," says Mulvane, "and you will will." No vote possible. Dr. Cannon takes five minutes to finish. Colored paper back up Southern Colored Republicans in their fight against "Republican disfranchisement."
Remmel of Arkansas, national committee man, man of courage and wealth, supposed in the past to lean toward the Republican party, this young man has stated his case magnificently, eloquently, states it beyond reply, and I rise to indorse that he is a man of integrity. He prised himself, Mr. Remmel is a member of the jury. "Though Arkansas will lose four votes by the restoration of the district plan, I am willing to lose them to justice done to loyal Colorado Republicans of this country," added Remmel.
Multichill takes the floor for three minutes. Lawyers of the district plan to hear him. Unp steps Senator Howell to defend his measure.
Williams presses an adjournment, but Howell speaks, repeating his opposition. Johnson takes the floor and pin fails. Howell stood on law. Johnson stood with him. Mr. Johnson offered an amendment to the apportionment, providing that each congressional district shall have at least one member.
Chairman Adams rules, Mr. Williams moved for adjournment. Realing of Indiaan seconds the motion, Mr. Johnson's vote on Mr. Johnson's amendment tomorrow morning." The scene took older men back to the '80s, when giants debated in the committee. It looks like a Reagan era. Everyone shakes hands with Toolt堡, who stands in the center of a group of Republicans, his face covered with tears. The grand old man is overcome.
WEDNESDAY morning 10:30; New Willard. Chairman Adams presiding.
A man of classic features, erect form, inviting respect and admiration, arises.
"Mr. Chairman," his rich voice rings out, Silence No gavel, but a voice of power, charm, great cultivation, a voice speaking hidden force, quietls the packed ball room.
Mr. Adams: "I recognize the committeeman from Pennsylvania. Senator George Wharton slaves speaking for justice in the highest councils of their party, had won the support, the sympathy, the advocacy of the bluest of blue bloods, the rarest of rare minds, the lawyer among all who follow the law in your court."
Senator Pepper offered some compromise. What is that commission? you ask. Something like this: That additional delegates he given states that voted for Harding, and that each district in every state have one vote in the convention and two votes when 10,000 Republicans vote. Hilles of New York, once secretary to Taft, moved the adoption. Then the legal debate. Howell to the floor. Bursum of New Mexico supports Howell. Senator Howell them down with two sentences and one question mark.
Senator Howell attacks South Carolina in rebuttal, Toltbert, veteran of 20 campaigns, brother to two Republicans slain for their faith, steps to the front, Howell trembles.
Senator Howell subdues such as the committee never heard "Juno Joe" administers to Howell. The committee gives a shout. Hard for Toltbert to proceed.
Senator Pepper on the floor again. Howell "roll" the committee down. "There is no disagreement between us on the reform attempted, but the trouble comes when you and I seek to reform somebody else." Howell does not so the committee laughs Howell laughs Howell. He mumbles about "a stick of dynamite."
COLEMAN DUPONT takes the floor. Colored Delaware recently voted Dupont out of the Senate. They voted out a friend, a giant intellect, the wizard of American finance. They voted out one who never fails to disappoint when called on to support right. What will Dupont say? Two or three questions he asks. Many desire to answer. He holds the floor. "I have not given all my time away," he says. Again, "Mr. Chairman should lend my voice and vote to the Pepper plan, for I am unwilling that any element of the Republican party should go unrepresented in the party coiffle." Anpause, "I was in charge of the program, wants to vote," "Mr. Chairman," is heard from the extreme left front. The silent member of the committee rises to speak.
Every eye is set on Hynicka. "Mr. Chairman, he said. "It seems to me that we are trying to ride two horses at one time, though they have travel in opposite directions, representing at some states and direct representation in others. We must have all of one, or all of the other." Lincoln Johnson, sitting under Hynicka, indulges the two horses. He has traveled to Senator Burton. The senator hows. Perhaps he is saying to the political knight-carrant that Hynicka is standing pat. He is nothing for this committee to do but adopt the plan proposed by Senator Pepper, said Hynicka. All over, Republican states, New York, Connecticut, Ohio, New Jersey, Indiana, Kansas, Pennsylvania, had joined hands. All over but the shouting as the saying goes.
Hilles called for the previous question. Mr. Adams asked him to the vote. Now the original motion—the Pepper plan.
"All in favor say 'aye,' from Mr. Adams. A chorus of "ayes," the response sounded like a yell of viciousness in a football field. "Now the 'noes' not over two or three."
The committee rushed over to Senator Pepper. Handshaking, refollicing. The G. O. P. again had been saved by the despised Southern delegate. All hearts to collage, who will carry the banner to victory in 1924.
TIME after time this writer has told you to watch the leaders at the back set back. You see it train in that Washington contest.
Ladies of highest character, of great social charm, of
without exception, they stood with you,
Mrs. Barclay Warburtion, Mrs. Charles Sumner Bird, Mrs. Medill McCormick, Mrs. John G. South, Mrs. Harry Wardman, Mrs. J. Lindsay Patterson, ladies of the South as well as the North, said, "Why, this will NEVER do." The gentlemen listened to them. White gentlemen will ALWAYS listen to their ladies. When they get further out they will look into many other matters that weilh you down, give you a brief, fill eyes with tears. The gentlemen will give you a brief, fill eyes with tears. Burdens will be lifted, tears wiped away. Republican ladies, like Republican men, are our first ladies. If the ladies get through look out; also look up!
The Hearing Battle Royal By Roscoe Simmons
Senator Pepper DuPont and Hynicka Thanks, Ladies
All rights reserved
very often, Howard walks as part, of an open mind, announces that he will hear spokesmen for the deletes, issue, asking for a reopening. The produced to make the argument.
is indifferent; then not so indifferent leaves his corner to sit with Goor-retary. A sentence or so further; a committee lean forward. Somewhat alien party being the trustee of the long applause. The speaker teers franchisement. "Shame," cry two Mark Hanna is named. Wild applause, the final to keep, Lodge as "manhood." Cheers, several ladies up to their feet. And so-on. Anna tells the speaker to go ahead, the man waves as some one wishing Ladies on the platform lead a shoe
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includes. A wave of applause that could
add the hotel sweeps over the aud
men grasp his hand. "Take a vow
to be a good citizen," Dr. Crankon takes five minutes
mittenite that Northern Colored peo
ple in their age an disfranchisement."
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Kansas, national committeeman, mayor,although supposed in the past to take the floor,man has stated this case magnificent that he will give four votes by the restorers at the committee. Everybody is sure that Remmel is a member of the juniors will lose four votes by the restorers at the plan. I am willing to lose them to six Colored Republicans of this committee.
He took four votes for three minutes. Lawyer confer in the right hand corner. U. well to defend his measure. He has an adjournment, but Howell speech止. Now Lincoln Johnson takes in heath. Johnson stood with him. Mr. amendment to the apportionment with congressional district shall have a rule. Mr. Williams moved for arms of Indiana seconds the motion. Mr. vote on Mr. Johnson's amendment.
He older man back to the '50s, who the committee. "It looks like a RR some one remarked. It hands with Tolbert, who stands in the group of Republicans, his face the entire old man is overcome.
morning, 10:30; New Willard, Chair presiding.
Music features, erect form, inviting rales, arises.
Music voices ring ins, Silence voices of power, charm, great cultivating hidden force, quietls the pack "I recognize the committeeman from George Wharton Pepper" had been rewarded. Sons of slave price in the highest councils of the the support, the sympathy of the rank among all who follow the law in you.
o offered a compromise. What is the task. Something like this: That as he given states that voted for Hare district in every state have one vote in the committee. Republ. Vory will you sell York, once secretary to Taft, move when the legal debate. Howell to the New Mexico supports Howell. Senate down with two sentences and on
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PONT takes the floor. Colored Debt duPont out of the Senate. They and a giant intellect, the wizard and a giant intellect, the wizard they voted out one who never faced them. They voted out one who never faced them. They voted out one who never faced them on to support right. PONT say? Two or three questions to answer. He holds the floor. He holds the floor. He not the floor? If what is said is true voice and vote to the Pepper plan that any element of the Republic unrepresented in the party conflict charge of the program, wants to be heard from the extreme left front of the committee rises to speak, to off his hat, although they don't have with Hynicka of Ohio.
SEE HICKLAI "Mr. Chairman," me that we are trying to ride to the floor, though they travel in opposite a possible to have congressional district some states and direct representative sitting under Hynicka, indulge C. Perry Howard whispers something. The senator hows. Perhaps he is for this committee to do but adored by Senator Pepper," said Hynicka states, New York, Connecticut, Indiana, Kansas, Pennsylvania,卫 over but the shouting as the sayin for the previous question. Mr. Adam vote. Now the original motion "lay say" from Mr. Adams. A choice response sounded like a yell of vif a football field. "Now the noes." Mr. pushed over to Senator Pepper policing. The G. O. P. again had been insisted "Southern delegate." All hear, who will carry the banger to vi
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this writer has told you to watch the train to look out, get back. You see the character, of great social charm, th, stood with you in your flight. Witty stood with you. Hey, Charles Summer Riordan Cornick, Mrs. John G. South, Mr Mrs. L. Janssey Patterson, ladies as the North, said, "Why, this w
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listened to them. White gentlemen listen to their ladies. When they will look into many other matters the give you grief, fill eyes with tears. NEVER DOF they will see you the fill he lifted, tears wiped away. Rake Republican men, our first lady at through, look out; also look up!
WHEN POLICE RAIDED A
QUIET LITTLE POKER GAME
LAST NIGHT REV. DUGOOD
ALONG JUST AS AN OFF
BRINGING OUT DEACON
PATROL
WHY JIM
IS FLYING
WHEN POLICE RAIDED A QUIET LITTLE POKER GAME LAST NIGHT REV. DUGOOD HAPPENED ALONG JUST AS AN OFFICER WAS BRINGING OUT DEACON ELIJAH BROWN
PATROL
D. ROGERS
WHY JIM CROW IS FLYING NORTH
AII a southern white man, born
and raised in on old-fashioned
clothing.
population was about half black and half white. I have lived nearly all my life in the South and close to Colored people. When I was a little girl, I played with Negro children without prejudice. But I grew up to dislike Negroes generally, just as almost everybody in the South does, for no particular reason at all. I once went to a manhood with a southerner's dislike and contempt for black folks. Once or twice I searched my heart and mind for some of the things I satisfied myself by contemplating only the vicious, indolent, shiftless, improvident, dirty, ragged, ignorant, offensive type of Negro. I did not give much thought to the new type of Negro was growing up. And then, a few years ago, a song awoke me. It was more of a chant than a song; it was a new and strange song; one of which I had heard before:
"Boll weevil here, boll weevil there, Boll weevil everywhere."
It was a Negro singing. He was a Georgia Negro, who, with a score or more of his kind, sang in North Carolina. This was one of the songs that he had brought from the farther Southland. GENUINE
GLADNESS
That song haunted me. There was a note of genuine gladness, almost of exultation, in the voice singing it not unlike the note one hears between lines in the Old Testament songs of their enemies. It seemed a song of emancipation. I tucked the words and the music away in my memory, and was a story there somewhere. Negro songs have meaning. One who lives among the Negroes and studies them and on their minds by the songs they sing. If a Negro hasn't an old song to fit his mood or thoughts of the past and on their minds by the songs they sing. He sings his hopes, his fears, his loves and his hunger. A Negro dissatisfied with his job and the sorrow of his marrow may suddenly start from a fit of sulleness and sing as he swings his ax or his shovel: "Ise a-gwine to trabel, trabel, trabel in de mornin." And in the morning he will have traveled, and the overseer will have to
And so, when I heard that black boy from Georgia singing his glide-down where, I suspected that nothing less than a romance or a tragedy in Negro life had inspired those words. I have never heard them since, and I have never heard a professor statistician at Tuskegee, who has tucked away a million facts about the Colored people, can find no song like it in all his files. But I have found that he has a million facts about months. I have looked into the exodus of Negroes from the South for Collier's I have traveled through Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and parts of Louisiana. I have talked with Negroes in Atlanta, Montgomery, New Orleans, Vicksburg, Memphis and elsewhere, "went to Tuskegee institute," and "went to the United States that is peopled solely by Colored folks—the only town that has a Negro mayor, a Negro police officer, a Negro farmer, a Negro talked with Negro farmers, lawyers, preachers, editors and business men in several southern states. I rode in railroad coaches with Negro migrants in the valley via Memphis for Cincinnati and other points north. I know now why a black boy from Georgia, slinging on a North Carolina highway back in 1917, was singing joyfully:
"Boll weevil will, boll weevil will,
Boll weevil everywhere.
Oh Lordy, ain't I glad!"
To millions of hungry and oppressed blacks laboring for a more subsistence on the cotton plantations
JOHN SWAIN WAS MURDERED ON WAY HOME FROM SHOW
White Policeman, Thought to Be One Who Committed the Deed, Is Still Free
Tuscumbia, Ala., Dec. 21.-More than a week has elapsed since John Swain, a resident of this city, was brutally shot down by a white man as he was returning from a theater with Miss Clara Mayes and Miss Edith Smith, and although the identity of the murderer is known, the evidence taken by the sheriff thus far has to arrest the two girls who were with the man at the time of the crime.
Swain lived four days after the shooting and gave a minute description of his assailant and even went far enough to name the man he believed to be the murderer, but pains were taken by those in authority not to bring him before the stricken man sentenced to sentence according to the women, they were walking along the street in what is known as "Baptist Hill" for a car pulled up alongside them. For a car pulled up this. This man, believed to be Calvin Highfield, a speed officer, walked up close to Swain and peered into his car. Swain was the right party, the white man fired three shots into the unarmed and defenseless man's body, and drove away.
This murder has aroused the community to such an extent that the Ku Klux Klan of Florence has offended and is leading to the arrest of the guilty man. This seems to be farcical in the view of the fact that the man who accused the authorities has been questioned by the authorities.
Attempts to find a motive for the slaying led to the information that Flighthead has a notorious reputation for killing people. That there is every reason to believe that he knew one of the women with Swain and that he was jealous. The police are in an effort to whitewash the whole affair and at the same time make the citizens believe that he is trying to find the guilty party, thereby threatening the woman with vagrancy. Both of them the murderer at close range and both of them know him, but neither has been permitted to testify or identify him. This is just another case of Alabama justice.
"100 PERGENTISM" SCORED BY EDITOR AND COLLEGE HEAD
An editorial published in the El Paso Times of Dec. 1. I ridicules the elites of the NORC, who believe "100 per cent Americans" and who claim that the "NORC" races, composed of light-complexioned people are superior and ought to rule other races. The editorial quotes from Prof. Herbert A. Miller, professor of sociology, who claimed 100 percentism and belief in the inherent superiority of the Nordic stock were dangerous to civilization. The elites of the NORC held and held in check, Prof. Miller is quoted as saying: "too much bragging about one's family, offence is offence itself in patriotism and race consciousness, in patriotism and race consciousness, in lauded as the highest virtue." Unrestrained religious zeal is bigotry and excessive patriotism may be called chauvinism, but we are not so. The vice of overtime race assertion, because it is such a new phenomenon. "Speaking of American culture, the NORC was used to 100 per cent American art" the showing would be absurdly meager. Most Americans are a little more American than we do debarred German music.
And then, finally, of race egolism he says, "I am not necessarily intimidating, and therefore reliable. All races have some illusions about their superiority. The race gets the notion that it has been deceived, conscious of its superiority, the race gets the notion that it has been deceived, conscious of its superiority, the race has the moral responsibility to govern all whom it considers inferior."
Tuskegee, Ala. Dec. 21. "Chicago is ready for the annual meeting of the National Business Association, declared the Hon. Frank L. Gillespie, president of the Liberty Life Insurance company and president of the Chicago, in a conference with Dr. Robert R. Moton, president, and A. L. Holosy, secretary of the National Business Association, on Wednesday, Dec. 12, at Tuskegee Institute.
Mr. Gillespie made a special trip to Tuskegee to confer with the national organization on plans for the "Silver Jubilee" of the National Negro Business Association, "Chicago Aug. 20, 21 and 22, 1924."
An elaborate program is being formulated for this meeting and many special events will be made to the fifth annual meeting a record breaker in every respect.
READERS—BEWARE!
Complaints frequently reach us regarding the activities of unscrupulous members of the Race through the sale of worthless stock in different sorts of imaginary and real by right column Claims that they are backed by the endorsement or recommendation of this newspaper and by readers in all sections of the country to beware of these crooks.
The Chicago Defender
CRITICAL MOMENTS
BY W. O. SAUDERS
(As Published in Collier's, The National Weekly)
Oh. Lordy. ain't I glad!"
of the South the invasion of the Mexican boll weevil, laying waste the acres of the plantation owners, was nothing less than an act of Providence. The Bible and believe every word of it, the plague of the boll weevil was but the hand of God laid heavily upon their taskmasters.
WHO WILL
PICK COTTON?
The Negro in the towns and cities was most exultant; he beckoned to his brothers and sisters on the farms to lay down the shovel and the hoe, now that actual starvation confronted them, and come into the cities, where employment awaited them at certain wages. The Negro on the bankrupt farm had been made his way to the cities. And the penniless, indolent, care-free, over-restless, change-seeking Negro in the towns and cities moved on to, too.
Millions of Negroes have left the South within the past ten years to seek economic freedom in the North. West. Millions more are leaving and will leave. They were pouring out of Jacksonville, Savannah, Atlanta, Atlanta, Vicksburg, Birmingham and Memphis by the trainload this summer. Plantations of thousands of acres have been abandoned in a night. Negro planters last fall and put in the crop this spring. The cotton and the seldom corn was pushing its way into the planters' extensive cultivation. And from millions of acres Negroes went away in groups, leaving no one to hoe and grub and bring the crops to fruition. The law to keep Negroes on the farms, where they are sorely needed. Labor agents have been thrown into狱. Negroes have been arrested on the streets of unauthorized towns. But the exodus has not abated.
One finds in some rural towns whole blocks of Negro cabins deserted, many of them migrated every morning behind to divest suspicion. Many of them possess little more than the wretched clothes on their backs; they have no tie of property to bind them. Others are in the garden, keeping a dog and a little poultry, leave the pig in the pen and the chickens roosting in a tree while they steal away to the night to catch a mouse. A Louis or Chicago. A labor agent furnishes them with transportation. Often the whole family goes. More often only the men go at first, but the women go to the portion back home to the women and children, who in turn go to the Northland, where wages are high and "where a nigger has some rights." In the slissippi valley, a Negro Pulman porter pointed out to me a group of Negro women and children hoeing the young cotton of several thousand acres. The woman in the garden" said the porter; we insisted their men folks out of here three weeks ago; another week or fortnight will be hauling the women and children every day. No black folks left on that place."
HEAVY LOSSES
The exodus spells immediate heavy financial loss and in many cases utter ruin for the owners of millions of acres of farm lands in southern states. There never is enough labor to pick the South's cotton crop clean, even when conditions are normal. But it wasn't the boll weevil that sent the Negro on his wild flight North. The boll weevil was only one of many reasons. The four main ones are: (1) Discovery by northern indigenes of the boll weevil, pendable and enduring inabor. (2) The-dearth of foreign labor, due to our new immigration restrictions, compelling the northern employer to hire a new worker, the ability of the South under its present antiquated, wasteful and inefficient methods of agriculture, to pay the Negro a living wage. (4) The Negro had more than anything else to deal with opportunities for his children.
Note—Second installment will appear in a future issue.
CLASS DOLLARS BOGUS WHEN IN OUR POSSESSION
Swindled Out of Millions by the Railroads That Are Officially Protected
While the Republican administration is standing back of the proposed program for the consolidation of railroads we are being swindled by the Republican administration, an apparent consent of the interstate commerce commission. Our people who travel are compelled to put up with information, accommodation in many railroads, and on all railroads throughout the South they are forced to take the most dangerous position in the train, just behind the railroad. The Jim Crow car is a part of the baggage car and in any wreck suffers more than any other car with the possible exception of the rear end
Yet we are forced to pay the same mileage rate as do those passengers in the bus. The race is denied the privilege of sleeping in a bed, no matter how long the journey, and in most cases women use the same toilet room, in addition to sharin gifair space with the butcher boy and his assistants backed up by the government make no pretense of giving Race passengers their money's worth in recourse and will have to stand by and see stock watered and manipulated to give the stockholders more profits with the sanction of the gov-
No Decent Jobs
On those same railroads it is almost impossible for one of us to get a decent job with any future to it. Porters, maids and messengers boogie on by these men, who rank as the foremost business leaders and executives in the country. Half of the delegates who journey to the railroad candidate for the presidency will travel under conditions that no first class stock raiser would tolerate for his cattle, even if he were so scared he would not. Still some of our would-be leaders preach to us of patience. How long can a real man bear the anxiety of putting his children and children in train known as although he pays the same fare as the white passengers they must suffer untold discomforts and insults and be given the same kind of treatment as is given to the baggage of the passengers? This gigantic swindle must be stopped. Now that we as a Racco have a growing influence only those men who must stop supporting men for public office who flutter us with a few stingy appointments to office and support only those men who must stop supporting men for such frauds and impositions as are heaped upon us daily by the railroads of this country.
FIND TEACHERS IGNORANT IN
RURAL SCHOOLS OF MISSOURI
St. Louis, Mo. Dec. 21.—The report of Robert S. Cebb, statistician for the Missouri State Teachers Association, said the school teachers of children of our Race. His report contains the following facts: Seventy-five per cent of the teachers in rural schools have not had professional training; some teachers are paid as small a wage as $40; school buildings are inadequate and insustentive; some teachers in Missouri who cannot write a letter which would compare favorably with one written by a teacher in another, have ever passed the examination is a mystery. "It is known that the opportunity accorded white children in some rural districts is bad, and the conditions are conditions as bad as in Negro schools. In spite of this condition illiteracy among the Negroes since the Civil war has decreased from approximately 95 per
"It is apparent that Missouri is trying to help the Negro pupil from a comparison of the cost of education in the city and the cost of the white child is $22.4 per annum, while the cost of the Negro child is $19.40. The difference in numbers will increase the actual cost for Negro children. The relative expense is significantly lower than that Missouri is doing better than many states."
Texarkana, Texas, Dec. 21.—As a result of a gun duel fought at Waco, Texas, the Army Farm, 12 miles northwest of here, J. B. Coker, foreman on the farm, and Cyrus Middleton, a teammate, were seriously wounded. Coker was shot three times and beaten over the head with a shotgun at Middleton, who was shot in the face by Coker, who used a shotgun. The wounded duelists are said to have been shot in the face of no one else, but this is not believed by the police investigating the trouble. From their inquiry they are convinced that there were other participants.
Students Walk Out; Asked to Act as Janitor
Columbia, S. C., Dec. 21. - Forty-eight students of Allen university—three men and 45 girls—were suspended for "disorder, insubordination and defiance of constituted authority." These charges were based on the recourse to law as the new building recently completed. The girls declared that this work should be done by hired jailers and refused to perform the task, as they were required to. They stood firm in their decision in the face of the alternative to clean the new building or leave the school. When they refused to reside, the wholesale punishment followed.
AROUND THE HUB
BOSTON NEWS
**BOSTON, MAKE**
By CHRISTINE MAN, JR.
Boston Office, 793 Tremont St.
Phone: Cooley 5357-F
Boston Office
Mrs. Lella Dabney W. of Orange, N. J. wife of Dr. Wiler Wilson, prominent dentist
Jacob Dabney, Appleton St. Attertier
ne Johnson W. Ramsay, 4 Bromfield business trip to Troy, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Julian R. Stubbs of Sussex St.
in New York City. They will return to their home after the first of the
busy Ave. is visiting relatives and friends in Buffalo, Cleveland, Dayton
of Tremont St. entertained friends at her residence on Thursday evening,
Mrs. John Sarnson, Miss Ethel and
Helen Washington, William Swann,
Mrs. John Sarnson, Miss Nathaniel
of Portland, Ore.
Board of Trade Exposition
The Board of Trade Exposition of Attorney Joseph S. Mitchell, president of the firm, has been successfully formulated for an exposition to be held in the early summer and progress in business of the Race in this city. S. A. Allen, executive chairman of the committee and is earnestly requesting the support and assistance of people in Greater Boston. Mrs. Mary Park and proprietor of Brice's dining room, has moved into her new home at 100 Park St., which she recently purchased.
Women's Service Club
The League of Women for Community Service has completed its plans for the 2014 Christmas dinner at the Memorial library room on the 20th, an account of which will appear later. The chairmanship of Mrs. Mary W. Snow, the executive committee for the annual Christmas dinner held at the league for 25 aged women, will be held at the memorial mass. The preparation of the Christmas tree for 100 children is looked for by the committee. The ways and
MAN HAS MIRACULOUS ESCAPE
"I was told by our family physician that I had a bacterial infection as my liver and gall sac were in such a condition. I set the thermometer on my liver and gall sac. I saw the advertisement of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy. Since taking it, I am not sure I never could have survived an operation." It is a simple, harm-free catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation and ulcers in the liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will contain money refunded. All drugs-Ask.
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PAGE TWO—PART TWO
Mrs. Terry Visits Boston
Mrs. Ollie Terry, 2347 Wabash Ave. Chicago, is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. She will not return to her home until she is married. Mrs. Terry is best aptly entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Ballard and she has given in her honor. The Blue Ribbon club gave a surprise party to its presiden-tress SxL on Monday evening. Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Al-Abu Maude, Mrs. Smith, Harry Freeman, John Thompson, Miss Esther Carter, Mr. and Mrs. John Burke, Mr. and Mrs. White, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Stokes of Brooklyn, N. I., were visitors in the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson of Warwick St. Miss Harriet city Monday evening for Philadelphia, Mrs. Weaver of W. Canton St. has returned to the city from a business in Henderson, 65 Walden St. North Cambridge, who was hurt in an automobile accident, ago, is well on the road to recovery.
Columbus Ave. A. M. E. Zion Church plans for a grand mock conference which will be held at the church in the morning and a grand milly in the afternoon for the re-upholisting of the news and a grand milly in the Sunday evening. Jan. 20. The pew for each pew in the side aisle. It is exalted to fill the pulpit for Dr. Swain on that day. The director, and Prof. Frederic P. White, organist—will broadcast on the radio Dec. 23, between 3 and 4 o'clock. A very interesting program has been put up by the grand Christmas canopy and also render a grand Christmas canopy. Dec. 20. The Pastors club was royally entertained at a reception given in its honor. Dec. 30. Cunard St. on Tuesday evening and was enjoyed by all. The Women's Home and Foreign Missionary society planned a dinner. The proceeds were for the
CALENDAR for 1924
TRIBUTED BY
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TESTED WEEKLY
ERY HOME WHERE
PIRIT DWELLS
1924
JANUARY
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
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27 28 29 30 31
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The calendar is exceptionally beautiful this year. It gives a Scripture text for each day in the year and the Sunday school lessons for each Sunday, in addition to the lessons given on each Saturday for the Sunday following. Besides these devotional works, the calendar is given on each Saturday for the Sunday following. Besides these devotional works, the calendar is produced of the works of some of the world's greatest artists. All of these works are presented in 15 productions of the works of some of the world's greatest artists. All of these works are presented in 15 productions of the works of some of the world's greatest artists. These masterpieces are:
January—Christ /With Mary and Mary
February—Master, Is It 17?
April—Christ /Weeping Over Jerusalem.
May—Jesus and the Woman at the Well.
July-Daniel's Answer to the King.
Aurust-And They Followed Him.
Member-Christ Blessing Little
Children.
October-Golgotha.
November-Christ's Entry Into Jera-
sulam.
December-The Star of Bethlehem.
A map of Palestine in the times of
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church, Mrs. Amelia E. Trotter of Washington St. and James W. Green Church, Chicago, Ill. Hold matrimony at the marriage of the Columbus Ave. A. M. E. Zion B. Stewart acted as bridesmaid and Albert Bruce was best man. The centennial of W. Swain and was witnessed by a few friends and friends of the happy couple.
Sick List
BROCKTON MASS.
Communications, P. O. Box 400
wat Terry, prominent real estate
broker in the New York area,
rising to millionaire fame, in his recent
work, the *Missouri School*, South,
showed the remarkable advances
made by the southern Negro
school, which emphasized the progress of the southern
school, which privileged him to del-
iver addresses in their auditoriums,
the North, these southern institutions
have programmed for him. Colored millions in his
wonderful address at the Messiah Bapt-
istery, Colored millions in his
member. The Court of Calanthe,
ladies, auxiliary of Enterprise lodges,
have programmed for Miss Elmer Kereser, 59 Snow St.
, quite a success. Mrs John Smith and
Mrs Tortorella were in charge of ru-
ning the Miss Doris Ethel Young, Miss Elmer
Kereser, prominent member, was hostess
Church News
The Lincoln services Sunday will be in charge of the pastor, the Rev. Mar. Vicki Cox, the pastor cert given by the Sunday school under the direction of Harry Johnson on Monday, and will be visited to attend. The location, Wales Ave. from Main to Belmont St. At the location, the services will be rendered by the Rev. Zacharian Harrison Sunday. A concert Christmas evening, subject to change. The Men's Brotherhood club met at the Turner. The Japanese problem was discussed. The next subject will be the York City "Mrs. Corrina Rawlings and Mrs.ella B. Scott will be the guest at Yale graduate and Howard university student of medicine, in New Haven, Connecticut. They returned from an extended trip in the South, where he recently visited and also Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New Jersey and New York.
NEVADA
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
defender
CHILDREN'S GREAT
A MERRY
THE THREE
By BIL
"And behold, there came wise
saying: where is He that is born King
star in the East, and are come to wo
A MERRY CHRISTMAS STUDIO
"And behold, there came who men from, the East to Jerusalem, saying, where is He that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen His star in the East, and are come to worship Him."—St. Matthew 2:1-2.
Short StorieS$
SONNY'S CHRISTMAS
A CHRISTMAS STORY FOR BOYS
AND GIRLS
BY VIRGINIA EARL
"Mama, I am going to get any
thing! Christina."
"I don't know, 'Sonny'." the mother sympathetically replied. Tried from a difficult affair. The next day would be Christmas. Her funds enough to buy 'Sonny-boy' a Christmas present; to make things even better, she could do without, but it was different when it came to 'Sonny-boy'. She smiled quietly, just enough to show that four teeth were missing; two in her mouth and two absent ones in the bottom row there were consecutively apart. Her black jacket had been interfered with by neat jacket in part about three black jacket holes in part about three right side of his head. She took his mother kindly and despairingly, trying to urge him away from a display window of her. She was an old chony complexion. Next cheek bones that indicated some deep black eyes and an amenable smile that 'Sonny' had probably inherited. But 'Sonny' was eager and remained at the window. He wanted a turkey, something into his patient mother's ears. He understood. She stood watching him and the while her eyes moistened, and a worrisome lump came into her throat. She stood watching him and the while her eyes moistened, and a worrisome lump came into her throat.
"What are we going to have for Christmas?" was the repeated query of Sophie. She was troubled, discouraged; there was one thing she knew. The Bible, the Bible that little "Sonny" had received. Why not read it, might help, could help, and she opened it and instead of finding the Scripture that always conserved her so much, she found a book. The next morning when "Sonny boy" arose, his eyes glinted on toys, food and children. 773 Kohler St. Los Angeles, Cal.
HOW TO MAKE
Inkless cooks, here are a few suggestions on how to make your Christmas goodies. How many of you pre-plan your Christmas dinner? Did you all did not prepare Thanksgiving dinner please try preparing the Christmas din-
SCHOOL
STUDY
SPORTS
BUD SAYS-
SANTA CLAUS COMES TO POOR
BILLIKENS
[Note: Merry Christmas! Merry
Christmas! Merry Christmas!
I wish to thank the many Billikens
who have so cheerfully donated their
pennies to the Billiken Christmas
Fund-Bud.]
At a small window of cracked and
dirty glass sit a mother holding a
baby in her frail arms as she sings
its infant heart,
it is lying in a
cradle, made of a
metal on uneven sticks
of coarsen,
hot and tearing
at fat red face.
As she shifts the
hands the other one
sighted as she
similed in a sad,
she is turned
around to the
same face.
Wittaco Motley
(Rud. Billiken)
"Oh, the landlord, to put us out
softened on this day of days? God give
softened on this day of days? God give
The three children crowded about
their bedside with their smiles as he began speaking to the
mother: "Mama, your name was sent
into the Bud Billiken club and I have
come to extend you and the children
Christmas and a Prosperous New
Year. These words he placed a large
basket of food in the corner and a
basket of flowers in the window. He hung a real TURKEY on a nail at
the window, then handed the mother a
dollar bill. On the basket a small
it was the Billiken that did it.
And I WERE CHRISTMAS - HID
BILLiken." It is the poor that enjoy a
MERRY CHRISTMAS better than anybody else living. BUD.
RADIO
ULYSSES WINS FIRST PRIZE
Radio fans are sure to be glad to
going in to talk you each week something
about your radio set and how to use it in your home. For your course, before we begin, you about the radio we must know you to one of our 100 per cent BILLION consented to write an article about your answer all of your questions
JOHN B. HARRIS
Billiken Uysses
11733 Vineetess
Ave. Chicago,
member of the
he is an eighth
grade student of
grade school.
Ulysses Coates grade student of education vocational school. Two years ago he started making radio sets on broom hooks and into a real amateur. On Nov. 25 at the school he made a radio set for $25 price for having made of the best individual radio set contest for the school. The set that won first prize was a Cockaday coll, two containers, a brown panel and a tip cabinet and two boxes with a blank space on the left. The set was top and tipped three inches front with top and tipped three inches front with the long distance wire, wiring was of
Now, radio fans, watch this column
every week and see what Ulysses has
to say.
- It is my desire that every member
of the Bud Bilken club will send
the Bilken line a club call —
BUD, as cheer.
New Members
New Members
Tribal Holmes (13)
Tribal St. St.
Duquebec, QC
Duquebec, QC
104th St. (14)
104th St. (14)
Galveston, Texas
Galveston, Texas
121 Cherry St.
121 Cherry St.
Johnsthie Thomas (18)
Johnsthie Thomas (18)
Seminole Holmes
Seminole Holmes
West Point, Miss.
West Point, Miss.
Box 102.
Box 102.
Leon Mabie (18)
Leon Mabie (18)
Los Angeles, Calif.
Mary Arraway (14)
Mary Arraway (14)
Fruit Cake
Boast Turkey
To Beat Turkey
THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT
By Norman E. Scott
Box 418, New Salem, Pa.
It sure is an unhappy feeling you feel when you go to Christmas dinner. Good to eat and are hungry, but yet you can't get near it. That's the way that Christmas dinner is tannin-lazing smells and come from the kitchen. Where you eat for Christmas and they were not permitted to go into the kitchen. "Run along now," Mrs. Daniels declared, "and don't bother me any more. I shall have some plie tomorrow, but—"
"Just a taste, that's all. mother!" Emmett pleaded.
"Haven't I told you no?" Mrs. Daniels answered. "Run along and I will."
Then several hours later, just before dinner, mother told them to put on a dress and send them on an armchair. "Now, children," she said, "I want to dress up for you. I want to poor old Mrs. Stone and her four children. I am afraid the poor old widow some good things. "Helen is to take these two holly berry dresses and put them on a basket. It contains roast chicken and potatoes, celery, cranberry sauce, bread, and I don't believe it will go in the basket, so you will have to carry it, and for goodness' sake, Emmett, be careful. They walked along in silence for a good distance. When Emmett drew in a smile, "Snow mighty good, doesn't it Helen?"
So Emmette went home and got the dollar one of our presents, and then was waiting at the bakery for him. He purchased and the four little children had their Christmas mince pie after all, and Emmette pleaured in spending that dollar for the pie. Indeed, for he had plenty left over for candy, etc. He spent every cent of it for the cake he had more, for Emmette had suddenly found that he had a lot of the real Christmas spirit within his heart. Merry Christmas. Adela, adored.
HUMOR
If Dreams Came True
"Do you believe in dreams?" asked
"Yes," replied the landlord. "Why do you ask?" for fun," said the tenant. "Last night I dreamed that you promomed me to you. I later I had alight clocked you to death."
We Wonder
If a frog jumps backward or forward?
Why don't they stop sending mail
around the first of the month?
If a sunburned potato will peel itself?
Vocabulary Hints
Here we are. Blinkens, after a two
weeks' absence, with some good Christ-
mas words. Look them up. If you do
the meaning of them, them:
yuletide mistletoe reindeer good will
rogret Christmas
In our special Christmas issue we take great pleasure in introducing to the Bud Billiken club Miss Hattie Scott, who halls from West Virginia to Miss Scott, who is 15 years of age, has taught her for two months, but she has been true and loyal to the other Billiken's first letter that she wrote to the author, that she was anxious to become a member of that club.
trice Scott, who is from Virginia, has been at Miss Scott, who is is part of the team only been a member for months, but she has promised to help to the other Billikens. In the last she wrote to the hub she stated to the anxious to be come a member that she was accented she would not fail to letters received from Billikens of her
Unfortunately, the Billikens in West Virginia are not as active as those in other states and it seemed that罢了 has realized it; so she promises that she is going to make the Billikens in her city happen. She will help me am wondering if the other Billikens will help her put West Virginia on the Billikens map. Get your pen and ink and start mail to Earboroughville, W. Va., general delivery.
While others are young and spry.
But they all seem to be happy.
As happy as can be.
That Christmas has spared them.
Tells Christmas to see.
Little tots writing letters
To old Santa by the score;
Speaking of the good things
That he has for them in store.
Mother tells all worried.
Mother knows what to do.
Father sits and holds his head
For he is worried too.
For the let those precious days pass by,
the mess has been cleared;
So now the days have lasted once
Some Xmas saving fund.
So let us all make merry.
Make the man's success.
Make some similar things club
To help those in distress.
And while we have our health and strength.
To work along.
Don't forget that our dear Savior
Was born on Christmas morn.
Cornish Christmas, N. Meridian St. Indianapolis, Ind.
Her Xmas Present
Sitting alone I made no to do. I thought I would join the Bud Bill-
hill alone.
As it costs not a single coin.
I can't see why every child doesn't join.
My, its getting darling.
I'll be a Billiken.
Salkins, 529, E. 528, Sr. Chicago.
BILLIKEN
CHRISTMAS FUND
It is with great thanks that I publish this book, which I have proved their love for the poor by sending in as much as they could. Billiken wishing to send in money are also addressing your money to the Bud Billiken Christmas Fund, Chicago, Illinois. Indiana Ave., Chicago Defender, 3455 Mavenes Barnett, Morrisfort, $10.00
Odessa Oliver, Trenton, N. J.
Willie Fleme, Champlain, Ill.
Mary Renshaw, Chicago, Ill.
Marie Renshaw, Chicago, Ill.
Virginia Lynch, Memphis, Teen.
Total
A MERRY CHRISTMAS!
BIRTHDAYS
Indian Lake St.
Tinker Lake St.
Tinker Lake St.
Charlotte Mitchell
Genera. Ohio.
Evelyn Brooks
Chicago Ave.
Chicago. Ill.
Larland Gaydon.
Larland Gaydon.
Toppea. Kana.
Gladson Reed,
Battle Creek, Mich.
Battle Creek, Mich.
12 Callowell St.
Callowell St.
Robert F. Palmer,
Robert F. Palmer,
Huntamck, Mich.
12 Iverson Ave.,
Iverson Ave.
Hester Carrissett,
Hester Carrissett,
Plainfield, J.
Evelyn Jenkins,
Evelyn Jenkins,
Birdburg, Tens.
Brenne Holmes
New Britain, Nc.
New Brick, Nc.
Lilburn School
Lilburn School,
Birmingham, Ala.
Milton Ave.
Milton Ave.
Rillings, Mont.
Rillings, Mont.
E 2.400 E 2.410
Cleveland, Ohio.
Vetline Clark.
2110 Goss Alas.
Julia Faye.
2022 Cochran St.
Henry Worry.
Henry Worry.
Charles St.
C. Hird Bodley.
Arthur Peter.
Sidell, La.
Abbey, Kennon.
Texann, Tenn.
Ralph Jones.
500 Dover Ave.
Louise Knight.
Louise Knight.
Northeast. N.
James Meyer.
Philadelphia. Ph.
John Seatter.
New Orleans. La.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 19
A LETTER Every Woman Should Read
OUT OF LUCK?
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weekly in your spare time
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THE BUCKEYE STATE
Every Man Who Has Lost the Vital
Force of Youth May Be Restored
Scientist Makes Wonderful Discovery—Says No Man Under
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
CLEVELAND NEWS
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[ended the weeding ‘of ancold ‘attene
sie i eediae 2e
Sel he aes Seat
SE adl eitn Sas Soul
fea ae eae Hs pe
eehietts tie Sa tice ine
IST ood Gir Se ean
TEESE a tai
SEE he OG fierce eam
Mite, Br. E, “Aumer of ine Wooaiand
BG Rade hincheta lem gate
Eph aieGnts ease here
ae fase Sloat, Sem
Bt dna ow
BSCR ade h
Gerth nf athe ae
Bee thet Pitiea Si
Sei, es, wee Se
Se Re a eal
Si ae, acl Bata
Seas es ee a ea
Kemer ig Ala Nc
Soeait dat pects Nate
ee ne
Feit ont inde Ro ag tas
Bee Oa ae
SeeSle PRPe"e it
Sri eee ene Mae
Fe de A ating Pn
Toe st natty he dee fo
iE Bate ats at eres
Sait geht tad tars
REP e eee a he See ae
Baean ag adcee Whats
raat ie Ba eh a
iam Siar
aed der Sieg ie ere, Se
SAT ian
SHihe Bek
ne Ralo coner
dio mgr tece toe erro
oat cael obs rma
seams tee! Gee Bs
Bee ees eo &
ES Suara ae
Sree peice shess
Hake “Risay sarelng (Boge) sh
AOA aRe: dititn ts
wera Bian eat
iy Bie Ba Fekta ne Se
ida Ee Py Seas st
So Ep hee abe
RP tare sea Sy
BBE GSA by “Chea ee
He, AE ca
eta ISLS teeta Sa
Shee Man eer eae
Sean Ra Seah age kth
BREE Salat sere
paca eae Ge Oa wa
Fee scat Na tne a
GES, alah Seep
Hore erat he tiene
ieee een CE Saar
SER oF lag le
SS racy ieake St
Braise Sdielipe. 2
sRaraay Sri is, dh
SEB sid tana aa
SPS amen awe “Ra
Sealab SEE” ole pole
Bere RNR, Bh
Bie aia ae tee diga cham
SE es th taille Gane
Sean yoce thatthe
Seer eLa pe a fat
Fete Mane ine ett rhe
Bet ia tec he ie
Beheraan cages, Bet
Eioneeh ans fini a a
BERNE SHEN Sangh
cia Hee a cea ac
Sesh Cae eden ae
Bee ner Mar
Sie ease area
seitetes taser sea
areas eris are are te
Sides Slits Sebo te
A new discovery Is said to have been
made by 2 ecientine study ot Serbian
Jnountain people. who scientists. m43
ive lancer ‘than any ether pegnle, it
Weald Eile Siacovers_ Suid add manet
Zolee‘o ies of people all parc of
See ea eas
Teauty toni’ by neglect or Abuur, Selene
Mote agree chat “the. secret of health
Sag’ vigor nes in the imteroal gona
Sn4 i theee Glandeare ‘timularea and
Hepe'fn'normat uetite, map mht Ive
forever "and alimente’ quch aA tired.
Semncout "fecing. “weakneas, “Mereous,
REN pote egnarg premature ele
Ep fealiny eck renloanrow 2 Rien
Mion Renate setanches” dead
“the “Ginga oncouniered | by._ she:
rmegieas worid hs Sen to finde right
‘Reigontoy for the glands," Thin ne
ineSoeraive aud want Ge taken. nt
privacy of the homes, It was brougic,
the mest: Clue News
‘The assembly’ room of the Masonlc
nouns inSSS th Seas a Very prec
ewae ‘nen ihe three Cours of Gx
TEERe pa «eect In hoor of
Scunceller "ite. nal wSa" beauelai
| decorated "wide ane scout color Mts
ifarrie Suntlee of Hermolce court, No
{Ghanem realest for many Sea
Mia Litton Evans, vice-president, of
Emimbun os Stra “Sliamic whctene
stdin, his, esasrr sir deh
and) Ni, Eile Callan of Senia, ‘Ohi
Fesed ween Souter x weal
Teanbet at uteian noters was pre
ented to Mrs Galtman (yore she sours
Sire Siery Ey Santee, Sepa hed
er cutie “Sure Caliah nd aire
agk he ‘Utena ch tel
{he Boe of afre overt Docket. 2
eggs Wangs Afters nee
‘ouinets ‘secon the afternoon, a
see's iran” Attone the Cities
Hokts Were Sesaaineactnaeson, Wait
are neny Sote naa took.
Bags" eelteatancnes were seeved, "th
onal of Colores Women's Eis
Rounce,shelr aris! inet ditner th
Bet anosunced ner, he, eure
Phe committee oo wads Sd means te
SS Sit Secret ead
ine Pts itorm the ‘eommles
‘Sommittec on open, house, for the helt
age Wt lenis mane oceday se
ing, “Fic Sis S00"Ciob met with Sirs
Mra, Cedar and 1 fsth St. Two nes
embers etre Saaeds "Sine "Oncar
SiSteyand Sire uma. Stina, tex
Fen MOMS Eee eta
Meese neta a srenierta Meeting ts
Sea Gucitld, eteiag andlecte the
Gene ea MSS SS
Soe Eto Wee elie itor
Merk ana Hs, orate: Sari ae
Sone? tdacat uecretsry: ara ‘Bor
IDisntgeavurers, Sade. Siadlzon, cor
Fopbending Secfeare Ada Davi
Fie ambien Ge Bs Chava Basehor
ananetore Suiie ream a ee kat
[aren caeorts ent Frankitn, basal
xthering“Riesanier, nrotectar, "thes
\Sre Honing Yortord vo Brest seeeas
he Coming gears
‘Attend Alpha PI Meet
‘Among the. many” Clevelanders, who
vitor tS Galea to ascend th
[iational ‘convention of te inital
Rinse Yrateritg are Bimer Cheeks. De
La Suen cides ie See Soba
| Mthaarsan Se tn, Bice "ehaies Gar
‘tin Bee ind ee abe Stewart, Sue
Hot Ghavaus wero dsiorsei Gate
as Being Alorney eran hse
Nant Menara“ Sirsocsree, ‘Pahron
[Rime vaneanter gear" ecg
|roujw will salva. aitend from Vitis
Bergh: Foleas, “reunsriown and De:
Give Kiddie Pas
‘one of ve outstanding states of as
Sak se theThlaahs pati” at the baat
SESS Sa dege! deans, 2
hin Sh Sauataae akeernoen, the
cation fing” Ts" honor of they slat
thay of Seu hematite anu
Har Nir tke dstng room ws Bea
itu’ decorated’ and: sumptuous re-
Lemintatg. were, tered Sy Se, a
Sia Dedshes Ssaitica by tea“ vete
si tt ieee ae
‘by the Ittlo ones. These present were
‘Radney land GeSree Beanies Se a
[Fingewas Sanler sass “tugune’ Gale
ri Berl and Eietoren aimee, Sur
‘ril'ang. Mian Sab, Howard. and
uta "Suanehiee, “Se? cnaries Seat
Groves “Crag ty “Allen Tema ahd
Eeratdine “Wunhte, “Adres "wan th
|Scctent of many” neéseats
TToussatnt Head eacaper Death
| Toe Hton”Fitholans Wnliacer | ew
Yat cule head of te Kotz of Tes
Sinha 6 snarow eae ran pr
The‘ca'In Which he wag riding” taroea
over ta '3 ‘solitons with “another” cas
folie Cast ata rapid rate Bt Sh Sa
ABT he cas log aticen by
‘sqlokaer hobtle Carle St Waae
nvShbe honor at ine residence of Me
Ana Sire Oto heeddte” “Oakes fe te
[Auta tne Aira SOs Sind Si As
[Fabre one ‘wefe isd naka “un
‘etter eine sie igare Me
{for a focation for ‘the Reneral_ ofice
Sf nin Sacunteaten, cing the puest
[Stetana tre Somers e° En
Wine’ pelntand: 200° Ba Si
wag aura he ain rie BRR engin
Beicaee side Riis Ee
Song wattage Whe, ie etna AY
Tals "Weaek el tons ta Rabe “hh
IS LTE oforne’ Sia Sid fe
IPSvcotenne, “Somme writs sk he tel
om an ennine st the ik) rouni
Po MN cUnnlbg titan injure Sie
urge nna fhe bees eats Se
[72 anum Brascher Here
| Rihana raster Fae, an
neha at” aye eter Seas oe at
Iafidaca Wig Inthe cite Turelay
[feuic teem Wathingtons hr cal
Eeagee “Ble fa ihe ery he signed a
[RS te torts, Meal ang
(ACSA aepat tutte a
TneSey Secetatn relate ta th
[Pekan as aaa
ist hin old friends. including Atesnnde
|@, Tofr, Cleweans represemuainn
Sie Buena SW Wh ana thers
StS ALE Secteur
Jspening of Liridseford hall, Keystone
BE, eae rhe hana
reenthy erccted ty Bret vernat ‘Brides
Teed ean igen a
Glowiand, Yor the purnese of housing
fis apionaas ora stare, PeSs
Bence’ moter." re. Salina
SETS fe cmon herent with ne
eecEer! Mew Mamie Stewart, im Netting
PP ncpulatty, Contest 3, Success
Rant oe hat ce Ms
abe a aoe
Ratios, Sees ofthe 48 comm N04
some oc ag American Worden jax
Interesting. and sherensfol. lan Vac
fee egetea Sh ice tle
[Attornss| Wat A. ftanalph” wan ea
[ghee ws, act force ana eS
wan she. most tuccesatul effort of" tt
Tika Wann of Cleveland Woot
free. ltnerat esas sonce emtersatne
OAR, agttetanition det Pac On
ithe hah eicer tis Chietnas it
neidoaneofght at" ce reldende o
COEag Brow, sh ka Se
foe eit aa Perentt New,
and! Seranged, for their anmual christ
[sa Smee tee
[Reta een mt St
[staeeqhnt cathe San at! Se
| uest of honor! Saw Mise Dray Hteaxt
Laem dew members were dace) Mr
idnicadiene Taser“ Anmsttone smd Se
{Jue Son On Wee Se theo
Sah engeraats ihe, feted
fereaieee xe out tn ten
Bote, ANE Sitter ism,
| Satin Bucid ‘onies"sniceained Wed
tSesat ecesing, Bec: 18°tn honor of Ne
Terie’ wnication eof che Atte Labora
Seles shout ter earctsh feneancts nes
ELSES Sin rete
ae one Sars oe
Src eee eet
Breas aces soln
Ea eat iciart
She See atcha he negel
Earsicsste Ghee, ol see
seach Be Sra a oe
Recriey ee ae es
Bra at ontg ener mene
Saeed tibiae sarge oat al
dep enh Moe har
rerio 2 Yulisnine nox of Vis Bs by
sat Gis Marea Ce ea
i sere ate aed ere
fe teas "atone oe
eee i eis
HE Azvone,thli gare ce
tHe lt eRsc ts
nisers Mex. C, D. Cink, ot Celumtis
Ss SB, State caer
Seg THR Reece
esi he Salas coeatat
He sadeniy Shi ee
Sar partes eral
ieee eats Ge tent
a, goer, Sie, dtoblasen, the lew
mente for the New Years dinner was
fees he Sater oe
BAPt nt Be eitaat
Satie Serco Co nd
Sabine anne ea
Gi ners Ser amma
Se ile B.'Fe, celiac at
opher eho Was awarded ‘Aewt brjee
ace Ge Peas a a
lat tg" have the presence of Mrs. Gray
fea eee “aaa
Beeea iad tant to Beta
Geri hs areas wher gas
Serie ee en cir
Sronieat tats Solh ee
Sie A aoa
ss eee ce taeae
BOE INES et tae
Heute died ate
sno gute alter vied
Spend ston ene
TEP Ghee Mie Nn see
‘Amun the career,
a 26 Ben Gomera cet
fade Uy’ the (ends. and ‘members’ of
He A Store edi tae
Handel eich te Ter ces
egal @ Maen Ae
Wills’ team was a. success, netting $110.
Ai ar tat praesent
Bei Sesh htc Su
Ba Naea He ens, i eh
Hak nc feng ate th
Bea AGN ohch ett
Piednat tae Bg
oe rae Ng
Say Galle the ON a
Bc, 24, Std festa at whieh time the
ie cite commana te
ara estiar hts is
stra is Sere OS
iy uh "Pallathen’ class on Dees Hand
rst" Nowe
A nia fa Wiel went,
ete hath te se
Seu Sia eee ye cae
eee aM OE Sua te ae
SET OR WRlgneaat wie
Deo.” 13, at the boxing. sf “he
Be cea ner sake eile
Regence sian
2a actin ee ac
ot bale kt Hess A
see pig tetas
air aCe i, S00
ie ee ely ree aka Mat
Scscliage Or verre oe Se
area, ewe
sean its cain
ligious progress, "The Rev. °C. 3.
eee erat net ante, Sess
Hime, Sear on cabin
ERE Seco eh Se Si
che and ig! covscorkees_ ae, rian
Coriesone, com alto. Cannan Baptiat
ind eet Sevciteameneni oa
Seago, eV ey
ary" goods and notion, siore, “Sig Wu
Bae stale aad™ ne Bd
Bie BA Beer Pl dae
Arderxon "of "Mayle "Avs. ix expecting
Wuers contracting: pasterer” and” ons
SA reat anette te
Perea Ni kesh Ea
Sint, “atehmen of he Mork, AVS,
Geeta Sia bem tar
wanes iam atl ghee 2
ome
tn laine meme a Wom, Ander
of SS Se Te esas
HARES RAF eae sam,
‘And will forever mores
Reheat pine
Naum Rnderaon. Sex Cleveland, ONO.
CINCINNATI NEWS:
By L. Lovo stone
‘wee ehaoud i.
cimemap atl, Cie: “Des. SO The meek
gate Seacoast We
Plana of Migs Henrietta LaVerne: Feta:
fine die unger “asaghter oh
Ysa Ih, Brasons ant Wits vere
Wagon the marciage wil Up aolgm:
ized at de ome ofthe bride: ta
Stontort st “atten Friason ta Reine Non
rea rts serie of procmuptist Stay,
Gin Sonuay bee Me the Us ce
it weave, a. micas “shower
(a3 cme “Priason Nonote) er
ier whtha Srouaery ea Wednesdsy-
Silas" Beatrice Morvan “entertained tn
Boner ‘ofthe, wrgeseitet wth emg
Felnesiy Shoter Sarda Dee. 2
iighty" entertained hy: the “Follow Sle"
eomrang nt the Tonsewsh chester, The
esmeeahat ttsuing ane ate tee
speci niezrats ne iltation ft
RES Bert Widkime wae very wate don
Sista edith ofthe aha
Rote commas snent Sunday sith he
mother. “Xie. game Randolph Mtes
endotin was En" foute seam Indian:
Aion ind to Conumtn, Oil, “Stane
tteinatinn® cance attend the
reat eile 1S pe elven et Days
ons ohia” Sura Suc" wh Sertiaan ns
togeCecenecngiuinty” service an
st gtieta, crepetny seer a
eon. Seas relurnea Yo Cheha rs
"kann “haw returned eam the
Hoskanavtiig: S85." Slee Marie. is
Colles. m ntudent of New England Con=
Seneatory "of Musle at ‘Benton sees
lle Rome’ on aecoume_ at tne” dent
finer Tpothee”™ “uta colleys the
Shae ga eur awa to
afte’ next “remesters "Mira dames
Sonange Sureed Same Seton ih
Ti. Mowre entertained. i honor of rs
Hohn’ rama ‘am honorary deacan a
Eimer “Rapist shurehecelurates ni
od Wetbity Sunday ee 8 he Re
Hel Avon of” Naan, ‘Tonne, d
eet the gaurantee
to North Trend. ind. "Mra. Siabel, Drie=
ea sven! Friday and Saturday tm the
Pit en ave to" Atanas Cx, air
Cisite” Ee" Diuara “io expected pare
for the nolidasa. Stim Hien c: wather
‘en ae wceken in Cleveland Oni.
ian Gri ig "exnecting “ten ens
Bord ot Whetoree steely forthe
Foliags, "Sige Siaetin tones ax’
Teveed for Apart of the Wolgays, the
Nike rat “ie, Snent se Gofumthe
EME "Ate “Aue Conte ete
{gina fam a delights re to Seack
Sint “and onde: ir and “Sea. Josn=
Font Gorge" Smid 9¢ College tal et
Felirn to Eanamias No Were to Fee
Eine" ns stnies "ae Ohlo Sate unl
= clube
‘the A. B.C. cium comored of the
cateSod ote: Sooner Skanes sere
SMeceStrl aahee Friant oteaians Fhe
Eisatente Mee fear antotained at, the
Ruldenee of Sea" @: Folbert. "Sire ohn
Rnueron,or GAR Ages fostede to
Ae Resta leh Wiens” Whe" Eune
thing Smiokdery gh met Thuerdny
ste eealtence’ of Mex" Angie. Fess
ar Retent SU Phe” Rawhide a
Rlaneh “Gf ine cHy Federation, elt’ 1
Teta ‘Tnceting ae the hom of ste
Mittersoiot, Cart ave, ridas” after:
Foon tne apna, Grea ct a he
Tn ena Mich ee delta
fanertalget ac ae we ke aie
NCHA any Migs inate Wathel
aut Sone” OR eee Maton ett
Eres" EC al the “Wrahience, ot Sir
Fate, stn hee ele Ford Be Woe
dean ie Meat’ esting ‘wil he Rel
Mine qetelnice SF Subs ea ‘Bei an
Tetinendays venting, Dee 18 wie re
Sham he’ vpoeag. allee” Wertha
SME? sett the delantcal hoses tp
Sere eee, Me, Sees loan S
ee cB EOE a” Wanna FEET =, co Rarer Rent
Habra Noah 1 raed BE Eo
Monts Ha lOier7i as
} f “GOES OVER THE TOP” AND MAKES YOUR HAIR BEHAVE - pe f
tT :
VA\ NATURE’S ONLY RIVAL aN
Straightens stubborn or harsh hair in 15 minutes. Makes the hair straight, soft and pliable. i
x a Does not make the hair “Red,” but makes a jet black finish that will not wear off. Will last from z 5
EA & 4.to 7 weeks. MADAGASCO is a highly perfumed, soft lathering cream. It is a straightener, es re :
oD & shampoo and Sangiutt biaantea wet the hair any time Autccteg fear of it duening back to tod By
state. Looks better after eacl ing.. MADAGASCO Is sim] “diffe it from: the id a cer d
a Our a native perfumed Black dressing” One order will last from six months to a year. Prices by | aR BS
ra¥ mail, MADAGASCO, $1.10 large jar; Noir-Ol, 35c. The two sent anywhere postpaid for $1.45. Spe- ~} 8
clal prices to druggists and barbers, All goods sent immediately on receipt of order.
F KS WRITE NAME AND ADDRESS PLAINLY NO PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED hey ‘ex
2] $1.00 DEPOSIT REQUIRED ON ©, O. D. ORDERS—POSTAGE CHARGED k a
DEALERS- IN CHICAGO AND ELSEWHERE Bi i
PZ) SETAE: oraean ee ARATE a, ae, 0, sy nema ade ~ TNT
Nimans SHEE ne Tieateeys ~
Meese falesiet Aver Misseapals, Xn, seutey CHES Dre Gi Cae. Die we “Sounpstawns Ohloe nm ANY
G O’NEALL CHEMICAL CO., 4553 Champlain Ave., Chicago, Ill. >
a STOBALL & HUDSON, Chicago Distributors ae
bog (f
ives 300 E. 35TH ST. PHONE DOUGLAS 1270 of {>
BNA i Gi
NS: ear re Se at ee
AT oO WIIEAD Peed (iN) ieee ian
iets : a 4 4 Ave hee SN iT
he « a < Ee ep
ered fi6m a wight wétack of pneu
sexed tom a og atiney of pact
Sarat eum ears
erin, Sete, Raat
Seite pris ac
Ste ae eet
eigen eceleed recentiy.” Sire Gearec
Hicks of Gaff Ave. ts steely, recovering.
Rig reach peng mt
fee ace hee
Behe €.Yohmaon of Armory. Ave.
Fick alfa ‘Amelia ‘Parham, Ya “at ae
Bain Paie aaa
Bho @'ll'ac the home, of her elcr
Bicariai ar tees
apiat church for Sowers and persons
cA ITT sw
pele nlen i a B
Besa ta ate Beat
Bai ge, ak “oe
Bei, Wied fee Bae we
New York: J. &. Wiitams, Grand Rap-
a, AGS A oe
Tens Page Bic” tn
ee arpa
Sah ENR GE, Baths, at
ier bee lt thea
Meee MME tess Cehene ie
ee Oa Soa
chester. Kyi: the Rov. Samuel S. Held,
ajenge, worl, cae
RE ecerh hase
Eartha etree
oon to the children, from a to 6 All
seen oS nai
iets iatictels, Stan
BSE toe ede, a
Seer Bea pa ae
EE Arete, She Pd
file eee See
He oeaeey ote aad dea
fietae eather is
eee at it Bas
[and other eS
aoe prec ta a
SiS Paci cee a
Siondas eventing. Shuile Along con:
eed amis a oath
i ae Gate tad
Tea gual "namie a
eninge thete renders in S ‘Fourth
orepait Siie ei
tee aete cote te
erope ari aateer tas
[Friday evening. “shntle Along” | wa:
Beate ere dea
tylnen Weanendsy evening. follow
geese a Rais
TEBE ie as a
eons SPs ee
Se Panel i ee
Be emer er a, ts
Bec iae Se eae
fare mac, uaa et
Lemar are
iene ier arenes
iephe cra tae ae
ee a as ie Pk
[a ee tae
BREE ndtnteptiad aa
Rone A 3f. En ehurch, Panera
BRA die aig fel
Beet Arcee tha
apr ie ae e
Era B citations
———
In Loa Angeles of Miss Henrietta Kent
aad Suet Heme ot ictomhe
seek Senet tint et
Recor arises! a
Bie Gade has Becernah ste
Hele, haar Wea
eer ts Hig ote ake
Ffeble Stasis, unio wake, wan A
Brat da tettane fo B tak
SMnG Gy cee lanai
Bata oraee pe a a
Satire te eke eee a
SER ha oh Sear
fis Beha Baia hy
ea Oa, See cn, oe ea
i oe Sine coe eae
ig the Senha As vette
Rian, Peues Veoh
igh a Acar te
Bur aei Rh Ceea ater ous
SPoaaad ihe oR re
‘ounce Tai, onto
sega) eng
din eg, en.
Bae oe ta oe tac
eke shake grea ah
oe ae eat
Sigeey de i, she
aime ar that hacet ol
ac Manca abe Pa eh
fecal suena ee ER
0° aursday attertoan. sre, be Fe
ian te Sit
Shae arin ay
Sip tee hatte oh abate re
Se maar eset
Hheens octet te
EES fe iri cy ae
ea
medina nna ete aa
Sette rs eee
nana tas Peace
Reesor atin ee
Wile nai ORY See Nama
Seta, at dee
Hearth? aia, bs
PTE en on oe se
jomed on aeconnt ot rain” Ree. Hie,
Tea ee a i
Be Hickson oF Chews Be, hi'siek 35 6.
Sesh Few Saat Mi ate
Sedna oat ek Sta a
ists ta inde ntact
Seas Sica i fa
Sea Ealing nae. kone to. hit
aa
Sat atin Gray of LaClede Ave. and
ie Seem ha ree
i ema wits ith relatives, Se
See ete peat ae
Thee Ae hate
iin e ebnkae ee sae
ee Ts Gag Bal
a Le ea tet bs
eo At Gia elie eter
Ser wdaaee 3 ert
Se yay gaye eae
SOG Sak eae at
Hel gente ieee a aie
exer snare nea a
EEAE EOF Bar
friend, Sirs. Annette Willams, of Jones
irene Ge hie ance
Sheet See la
| ee, nome of Mie, and Mrs, “William
eters Sh tae Be
Het ie i Sate Ba
eRe oar arta ae
Some ee
[Bests Be at Sides te SS
SEER eg, et ane
ania eet en ora
Hiiakacine ants, “eune’ Mixon wa
ie ae, Bar a a Ga
i a eh Past ane en
Shas ey take esha
ee ee et
HP ca en ear a
Ee Reha Ren en
TEPER Fitpchay ria
CE Gaited io tl eth
Bee, Rathate at cate
ee Ue aie te
Hees Lee
Peirce tad aes
Bak ects oat
Bae aa eee Rg
Beer near ana, |
ee ee egaaitae dl
Saher & is
AS Gis Sia of Gus
fas Mirchased ®'new home at Stop 2
Een Biets
Seen Aaah matte
Sires Gana ae hel tet
AG AGN Nekoi
fe itn de eae
ital acreage
Bungay. tts.” Annie’ Ab Jones "an
AS, Beatie tla
Gabe “Hart, Gols Lawrence St, Iso
UASSILCTR, ome
se TO
peers cule Brite tnt, at
pausby of New Gonnerstonrn, Ohl
EE eee ea es. Ono,
Dausly “of New | Connerstown,” Ola,
ere. the guests of Clarence, Sunfori
Ray" afles slarte Gunn of Be Wale
SaUSe: cntertalmeg: at tea “Sunday 12
Finda’ of whom <Stiaa, Clara, Winton
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PAGE THREE—PART TWO
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Internationally known Blues Singer, affectionately called "Brown Sugar" by New York's Theater Going Public
Indefinitely at Hollywood, 49th St. and Broadway. Home Address, 233 W. 135th St. New York City
PAGE FOUR—PART TWO
CAPTURE DRIVER OF VAMPIRE
CAR AFTER EXCITING CHASE
CAPTURE DRIVER OF VAMPIRE
CAR AFTER EXCITING CHASE
New York, Dec. 21.—Running down and seriously injuring a man, and narrowly escaping a little girl at 133d St. and Seventh Ave. Tuesday after a car accident, the automobile sped on without stopping. The vampire car was overtaken by pursurers after an exciting chase. The captors turned the driver over to the police, and Charles Richardson, 119 W. 129th St. The injured man, James Wise, 43, 61 W. 198th St., was placed in a coma in the hospital, where he suffers from a fracture of several ribs, arm, and other injuries about the head and body.
HOLD QUARTERLY MEETING
POISON WHISKY KILLS
Newark, N. J., Dec. 21.—Poison whisky is blamed by John Morrissey, a Pennsylvania railroad porter, for the death of his friend Michael Globert, 36, of 713 S. Orange Ave. Globert was found dead in bed in Morrissey's room at 211 W. 20th St. Tuesday morning, Dec. 11.
Your Old Friend
Henry R. Taylor, Sr.
Licensed Undertaker
Extends Yuletide Greetings
1811 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Branch, 376 Ashford St, New York
Holiday
Greetings
TO MY MANY FRIENDS
Mrs. Lottie Joplin
251 W. 131st St., New York City
GREETINGS
Charles J. Mooney
AND
Young La Rocca
THE FIGHTING NEWSBOYS
DANKY EDWARDS
Bantamweight Boxer
---
ANSEL BELL
Bantamweight Boxer
Merry Xmas
ALBI
Internationally known Blu
Wishes the Season
In an
NEW YORK PAGE
Our Christmas
Message
Suffering
don. 34, 11
by Dr. Tu
Once more the season of Xmas is upon us. The management and employees of the New York office of the Chicago Defender and the their rush of business to express appreciation to New York well-wishers and to say to them: "Merry Xmas." In the language of the One whose dirt is celebrated we echo, "Peace on earth, good will to men." Fortunately we all here enjoy the splendid promises of peace. No foreign enemy invades our harbor, nor does any domestic fire sufficiently prevail against us. To all in our community we extend our good will. No unkindness have we in our hearts toward us. And especially do we extend this good will to competitors in the newspaper world. To our readers, subscribers and advertisers we repeat our vow of vigilance and offer opportunity. Our aim is the great gift of SERVICE; the great gift
Once more we say "MERRY
XMAS."
"GOME ALONG, MANOY" SHOW AT LAFAYETTE XMAS WEEK
"GOME ALONG, MANOY" SHOW AT LAFAYETTE XMAS WEEK
Mittenthal Brothers new production, "Come Along, Mandy," by Arthur Lamb and Leon DeCosta, staged by Frank Hammond and the Lafayette theater, beginning Monday. The show is employing the best talent obtainable and should be a success from the start.
"Come Along, Mandy" has been in rehearsal for months. Leon DeCosta, whose "50-50" enjoyed a long Broadway run several seasons ago, has furried Lamb's lyrics. Never before has a musical comedy had so many novelities such as "My Gal with the Polka Dot Hose," "Come Along, Mandy," "Hose," "Brown Super," "I Love Every Bit of My Sweetie," "Where are the Pals of Easterday," "The Wiggle Dee," "Commitment," "My Lips With Kisses," "Lovey," "Take a chance at Me," and others too numerous to mention. The best beauty chorus in this city has been gotten together to entertain Harlem with next week.
Dr. John W. Robinson, pastor of St. Mark's M. E. church, will occupy the stage for evening, the choir will render special music.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
HAPPY NEW YEAR
GREETINGS FROM
El-Modello Cigar
Manufacturers
ANDREWB & DENNIS. Props.
High Grade Habana and Domestic
Cigars
Makers of the Famous El-Modello Smokers
All Cigars Made on the Premises
Phone Bradhurst 1234
2330 Seventh Ave. New York City
A MERRY XMAS AND A
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
Cigars, Candies of All Kind; Also a First
Class Soda Fountain
W. H. HARRIS
60 Waverly Ave., Newark, N. J.
Merry
Christmas
GEO. P. MOORE
Boxing Promoter and
Manager of First Class
Boxers
Happy New Year
as — Happy
BERTA HUN
Blues Singer, affectionately called
York's Theater Going Public
son's Greetings to Her
and Out of the Profess
BOBBY RISDON
Flyweight Champion
NEW YORK
Suffering from pneumonia, Issac Gordon, 34, 111 W. 143 St., was examined by Dr. Turner of Harlem hospital on Wednesday and removed thereto. With his left or nearly severed from his head, James Johnson, 60, 214 W. 140th St., was taken to Harlem hospital Thursday night. He refused to tell how, when or where he received his injuries.
During an argument with an unknown man at 100 W. 134th St. he was struck by Dr. Wilcox. W. 204 W. 140th St. received lacerations of the face and was taken to Harlem hospital and attended by Dr. Wilcox. Johnsons assault escaped after the incident. Edward Mack. 15-year-old school boy. 106 W. 139th St. received a seri- tious injury. He was struck and knocked down by Albert Clark. 12, 588 Lenox Ave. during an argument in the school yard of public school No. 89. morning at 123d St. and Seventh Ave. Nicholas Seel. 44, 135 W. 132d St. was struck and knocked down by an automobile driven by Seel was taken to Harlem hospital.
Roger Lewis, 25, 260 W. 143d St. was removed from his home to Harlem hospital Wednesday after becoming the first patient in his condition in recorded as improved.
Charles Hattley, 25, was removed from his hospital, suffering from an old gun shot wound in his foot. Hattley was 85 years old, while standing on the corner of 143th St. and Sewenth Ave. He was taken to Harlem Hospital, where he suffered sufficiently enough to go home. The old wound began to trouble him and he was returned to hospital.
William Montgomery, whose address is claimed to be 56 W. 140th St., was fined $30 or 10 days when arraigned for driving and was charged for City Dec. 11, on a charge of rockless driving, and $25 or 23 days extra for disorderly conduct. To date, neither have been held, and Montgomery is not a telephone friend to bring the money to say his fine. While court attendants were not watching, he made good his
---
New Year
INTER
d "Brown Sugar" by New
er Many Friends
ession
Address 233 W. 135th St.
NEW YORK CITY BRIEFS
BILL TATE
BILL TATE
Heavyweight Boxer
WILLIE WALKER
Middleweight Boxer
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
SEAS
GREE
CITY BRIEFS
SEASON'S GREETINGS
escape and has not been seen since. All Harlem enabates were visited by pastor Wednesday, but no trace of the event. Sunday marked the close of the 40th annual class leaders' rally at Mother A. M. E. Z. church. The total amount raised was $37,666. Dr. Brown made the appeal. Mme. Houston, new soprano leader, rendered a beautiful solo at the morning recital. The Rev. Mr. McKell preached the communion sermon at Mother Zion. On Sunday night, Dr. Brown, pastor of the church, preached the annual sermon of Journer Household of Ruth, No. 3513.
Dr. Brown of Mother Zion is about
on the subject, "The Adoption of God."
Mrs. Cella Lacy, 205 W. 126th St. has fully recovered from injuries incurred several weeks ago when she down the subway stairs at the 132th St. station. A fruit trunk laden with grapes met the street and the second Avenue. Wednesday noon. School children had a picnic helping themselves to grapes strewn about the street. A huge crowd gathered at 132th St. and Lenox Ave. at 7 a.m. Tuesday night. In the center of the crowd was Olsborne's head was bleeding profusely from a deep cut in his scalp, which he had received in some unknown location. Under the influence of liquor, but after examination at Harlem hospital by Dr. Nigro, it is claimed Qsborne not from the scalp wound, but from alcoholics.
Mrs. Blanchee Scott, 75 years old, 2255
Seventh Ave., who has suffered for
a long time from a hip injury,
hospital Friday after being examin-
ed by Dr. Jones.
After being lost from his parents for
a long time, his year-old
James Mathes, 86 W. 193th St., was
found and turned over to his mother,
Mrs. Minnie Mathes, Friday night,
when she was in the hospital early
morning, because of sickness, were Miss Violet
Mrs. Jashee Jones, 50.26 W. 149th St.
Mrs. Josie Brown, 67.12 W. 133d St,
had a paralytic stroke early Friday
morning, from her hospital in Harlem hospital.
Monarch lodge, No. 45, of Elks of the World will give her poor husband a reward for his kindness and the children of Harlem at their home, 245 W. 135th St. at 1 p. m. Christmas day, Mark Cooper the chairman of the chess committee, and Frank A. Miles, 2231 Fifth Ave., who has been ill for about two years, died at his home on Friday, 10 p. m. and dined. Funeral services were held Thursday night from Wainright and Daniels funeral parlor, 162 W. 196th St. in Frankfort. The deceased was an uncle of Miss Isabelle Jackson, a well-known member of the Lafayette Players, at present the funeral home. The funeral and also accompanied the remains to its last resting place. Mrs. Madura Durin, 117 W. 144st St.; Mrs. Ophelia Bowen, 433 W. 135st St.; Mrs. Rosa Bowen, 237 W. 135st St., who have been ill for several months. Three unknown men attacked James Brown, 28, in the hall of his home at 15 W. 133d St., at 12 o'clock Saturday morning. It is believed the motive was robbery. All three escaped.
YULETIDE GREETINGS
WILLIAM "BUCK" TERRY
District Deputy Member
"Mitee" Monarch No. 45
582 Lenox Avenue, New York City
Phone Harlem 6199
You and Your Friends Are
Cordially Invited to Attend a
Christmas Dance
Given by
Miss Spaulding
at the
Democratic Club
2350 Seventh Ave., New York City
On Tuesday Evening, December 25, 1923
For the Benefit of the Poor
Souvenirs for Ladies
A MERRY XMAS AND A
HAPPY NEW YEAR
To the Customers of the
Pride of Newark Barber Shop
Yours for Service
J. A. ODEN
26 Arlington St., Newark, N. J.
GREETINGS
OF THE YEAR TO ALL
The Barber Shop That You All
Know
Call When You Are in Town
DANIEL WATSON
140 Broome St., Newark, N. J.
FROM
SON'S
TINGS
"WORLD'S GREATEST" PRAISED
BY-EDITOR OF CAT'S MEOW
The Cat's Meow, a weekly magazine published by the Syndicate Publishing company, 1547 Broadway, had the following to say in its issue of Dec. 15 relative to the progress of the world's Greatest Weekly in the history of publishing. The compiled by Prof. Hubert Harrison, the managing editor and a lecturer for the board of education.
"Whether you are white, black or otherwise—if you want to know what's doing among Chosen People, lined more than a thousand miles from Harlem. They call it the Chicago Defender. If you put together all the news of the others it won't be lined by the Defender about New York doings. Another thing: Run off a dance or rocket or a ball on Thursday night and you can read a delightful account of it in the Chicago Defender. Sounds impossible, but we have tried it, so we know. What does it? Brains and enterprise. Besides, these men in the New York office have done more newspaper fraternity than newspaper men in New York than all other scribes. And that explains why thelrs is the greatest Negro weekly in America."
FINDS FRIEND DEAD
BROOKLYN LICENSES
METSKY'S CIGAR STORE Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Cigars Pipes and Tobacco All Leading Newspapers. Cigars by the Box.at Reduced Price
Phone Market 9784
Market and. Ward Streets
Near Pennsylvania Station
Newark, New Jersey
Holiday
Greetings to All
REESE DUPREE
New recording with the OKch. Recording
Co. of New York. The first man of our
Race to record blues songs with this
company.
OWNER OF THE FOLLOWING PLACES:
The George House, 621 W. 41st St. New
York City; The Henrietta House, 825 W.
47th St. New York City; The DePree
House, St. W. St. New York City
THE ONLY PLACE OF ITS KIND
The Roseland Hall, 1149-1155 Springwood
Avenue, Ashbury Park, N. J.
Season's
Greetings
RANDOLPH
McDOUGALL
Commercial
Photographer
New York City
Holiday Greetings
PENELOPE
HAIRDRESSING
PARLOR
Tar. Hair Grower
MME. H. THOMAS, Prop.
537 Classon Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
BRANCH
192 Duffield Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Merry Christmas
AND
Happy New Year
Dr. James H. Ravenell
Dr. William J. Carter
CHIROPODISTS
213 W. 138th St., New York City
NEW YORK PAGE
POLICE CO
POLICE COURT NEW
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POLICE COURT NEWS
Embro Morgan, 176 W. 135th St. was arrested on a warrant Thursday issued with Barrett charging him with non-support.
Sterling Mitchell, 308 W. 148th St. was arrested Thursday for pet layton kidnapping by Lewis Silverman, 2703 Eighth Ave.
Mabel Clark, 17 years old, 121 W. 133d St. was taken when he was found to be unable to will be placed in a home where she can be properly taken care of as she is about to become a mature.
Albert Clark, 13-year-old school boy, 588 Lenox Ave. was arrested Thursday on a charge of striking and knocking at a court yard of public school No. 89.
After beating up Cecil Powell, 201 Walt St. in the hit, he was arrested by William Glover, 37, 2449 Seventh Ave. was arrested and charged with assault. Accused of using an iron in an ankle stab, 201 Walt St., Wherbert Osborne, 25, 11 W. 137th St. was arrested by Detective Curtin on a charge of felonious assault. In the action of the grand jury when he appeared before Magistrate Douras in the Helghts court he pleaded to the New York county grand jury that she had been the subject of abuse from John Jackson, a son of Elizabeth Strickland, 43, 44 W. 130th St. has been freed. In the action of the Helghts court, John Hampton, 28, 2472 Seventh Ave. who was held for examination on a charge of robbery, was discharged. Magistrate Douras in the court.
A charge of felonious assault made against Robert Hobart was attached to Harbor A. by Joseph Mitchell. II W. 133d T. was dismissed by Magistrate Prolonging with his complaint when the latter withdrew his complaint. Jesse Williams, 21. 239 W. 141st T. to Sing Sing prison for not less than two years and six months and not less than two years in General Sessions following his conviction of felonious assault.
John I. Wilson, 30, a truckman, 201
W, 148th W, indicted from custody
Rosa A, 148th W, indicted from
Rosa A, Thomas, 233 W, 141st St, has
exonerated by Judge Nott in General
Sessions and discharged from custody.
The holding in and robbing of Freder-
Merry Xmas —
THINK I
When You Buy Your Foods
Store
AL'S M
Fi
There Is a Reason for it Become
in Our
HIS M
QUALITY, QUANTITY
Special Offerings
Fancy Maryland Turkey..... 38c
Fancy Capons..... 35c
Long Island Ducks..... 35c
Soup Fowl ...
Suckling Pigs for Christmas
Xmas — Happy New
THINK IT OVER
Buy Your Food and Poultry for
Stop at
AL'S MARKET
First
reason for it Because He Is the Oldest
in Our Midst
Merry Xmas - Happy New Year
When You Buy Your Food and Poultry for Christmas Stop at
First There Is a Reason for it Because He Is the Oldest Butcher in Our Midst
HIS MOTTO
QUALITY, QUANTITY, SERVICE
Special Offerings for the Holidays
and Turkey.....38c | Fancy Maryland Go
Ducks.....35c | Fricassee Chickens
Soup Fowl.....22c
for Christmas Don't Confuse, Us
Fancy Maryland Turkey ..... 38c Fancy Maryland Gese ..... 35c
Fancy Capone ..... 35c Fricassee Chickens ..... 25c
Long Island Ducks ..... 35c Frying Chickens ..... 28c
Soup Fowl ..... 22c
AL'S MARKET
2271 Seventh Avenue, New York C
Counsellor Po
Legal A
The World's G
IN THE
Avenue, New York City On the East
sellor Pope B. B
Legal Adviser of
World's Greatest W
IN THE EAST
Counsellor Pope B. Billups
The World's Greatest Weekly
IN THE EAST
POPE B. BILLUPS
Bands Yuletide Gree
has many Friends Throughout the U.
DWAY NEW YO
y Christmas and A Happy N
SINCERE WISH TO THE PROFESSION AND
MILLER and LYLES
LATE STARS OF "SHUFFLE ALONG", IN
"RUNNIN' WILD"
A Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year IS OUR MOST SINCERE WISH TO THE PROFESSION AND THE PUBLIC MILLER and LYLES LATE STARS OF "SUFFLE ALONG" IN "RUNNIN' WILD"
TABB'S RESTAURANT
594 LENOX AVENUE PHONE HARLEM 7483
YOUR HEALTH IS DEPENDENT UPON WHAT YOU EAT
Special Dinner from Noon to 10 P. M.
URT NEWS
Jack Bonifa, 135 W. 141st St., against Nandether Tooney, 26, 267 W. 144th St., and Frank Williams, 32, same address. Was dismissed by the grand jury last week.
MANHATTAN MORTALITY
David McDaniel
District Deputy and Past Exeal Ruler of "Mitee" Monarch No. 45
103 West 141st St., New York City
Phone Audubon 5855
GREETINGS
A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
GEORGE W. McDERMON
Signs of the Better Kind
532 Lenox Avenue New York City
Phone Harlem 7438
A MERRY XMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
When in Newark Don't Fail to Call
E. J. TAYLOR
The Well Known Barber of Newark
308 Plane Street, Newark, N. J.
Happy New Year
T OVER
and Poultry for Christmas
up at
MARKET
First
House He Is the Oldest Butcher
Midst
MOTTO
ENTITY, SERVICE
for the Holidays
Fancy Maryland Geese..... 35c
Fricassee Chickens..... 25c
Frying Chickens..... 28c
22c
Don't Confuse, Us With Others
pe B. Billups
adviser of
greatest Weekly
E EAST
2.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
1.
HOTEL OLGA
NEW YORK CITY
695 Lenox Avenue, Cor. 145th Street
SELECT FAMILY AND
TOURIST HOTEL
Running hot and cold water in each room
All Room Outside Exposure
Services-Subway at door
BATHS REASONABLE
K.D. H. Wilson, Prn. Tel. Andubn 776
The Value of a Smile at Christmas
It casts nothing, but creates much.
It in-arches those who receive, without impingement, a faith and the memory of it sometimes lasts forever.
It hibernates in a shado and the memory of it sometimes lasts forever.
None of it is richer than it and none so poor but are richer for its beauty.
It is cozy and comforting, fostered good will in a business, and is the counterpart of friends.
It is the courage of friends, and the discouraged, sunshine to the sad, and Nature's best aid for someone.
Yet it cannot be bought, berged, robbed or stolen, for it is something no early good to anyone will it.
For nobody needs a smile so much as those who have none left to give.
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
HAYLEY & HEBBONS
Master Printers,
135 W. 135th St, New York City
Holiday
Greetings
S. T. SAXON
Manager
Boxers
KID ROUX, KID RHODES
JOSE ALLANO
(Formerly Allen Howard)
NEW YORK CITY
GREETINGS
A. GORDON
Clothier and Tailor
2321 Seventh Avenue
New York City
JUST OPENED
DOTSON'S MEXICAN CHILI PARLORS
SERVING
We Cater to
Private Parties
DOTSON'S
PURE MEXICAN CHILE
AND TAMALKE
Surprise Your Family
Take Some Chili Home
THE IDEAL WINTER DISHES
—TWO STORES—
PARLOR
2328 7TH AVENUE 102 W. 140TH ST.
Holiday
Greetings
"MAYOR BILL"
SEAMAN
TONSORIAL PARLOR
462 Cleveland St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HOTEL PRESS
19.81 WEST 135TH STREET,
NEW YORK CITY
EUROPEAN—AMERICAN
PHONE HARLEM 2193
ALLEN HOUSE
Nes. and 115. West 18th Street. M. K.
W. K. and IMPORT OF THE PUBLIC
Bath on avery floor. Rooms with bath and
kitchenette. No couples admitted without
nutsace room. NO HARLEY 2458
Norman B. Sterrett, Jr.
Undertaker and Embalmer
Licensed Embalmers
Hearts and Limequine To Hire
SHELTER AND A SPEAKER
Funeral Parlor. 56 West 134th Street
NEW YORK
Phone Circle 715 Notary Public
RODNEY DADE & BROS.
UNDERTAKERS
AND EMBALMERS
SHIPPING OUR SPECIALTY
129 West 134th Street,
Between Broadway and North Avenue.
NEW YORK
MARY LANE
Supervisor to the Estate of J. Wesley Lane
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
Funeral Parlor and Chapel Free
112 West 132d Street, New York City
Branch: 68 Chamberland St. Jamaica, N. Y.
---
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
ANTIOCH LODGE OF MASONS
GROWS; MEMBERSHIP IS 300
```markdown
```
the ceremonies and reception attendant upon the granting of warrant to Antioch lodge, F. & A. M. (Prince Hall), by the most worshipful grand master, by the most esteemed musician, Laurel Garden, 75 E. 16th St., was impressive as well as commendable. Antioch received her number, 66, with the grand master, Arthur W. Handy, a grand master, Arthur W. Handy, B. A., was toastmaster and his program was opened by the grand chapelman, W. E. Murphy, made by W. O. Murphy, W. M. Greetings, Mrs. Florence Bruce, W. M. Eureka chapter, W. M. Eureka pastor, St Mark's M. E. church, delivered an interest address, Salutatory, Mrs. Alice Campbell, G. M. Eureka chapter, David W. Parker, M. W. G. M. completed the program, A 10-course banquet was served with all the delicacies of the music was furnished by Clark's orchestra.
Officers of Antioch, No. 66, are: W. O. Murphy, W. M.; A. W. Handy, S. W.; R. S. Dye; J. B. H. Jackson; reeve Walter E. Handy, secretary; S. G. Snowden, assistant secretary; Arthur J. Crosby, S. D.; A. S. Campbell, J. D.; A. Crosby, tyler; Carleton H. Mackell, C. D. L. Hopkins; J. M. C.; James H. Holmes, chapain; William C. Ford, marshal; E. A. Jackson, organist, and Joseph Madocer, James C. Howard, stewards; trustees, Augustine W. Monroe, John B. Ruffin and Washington Murphy.
Antioch now has a membership in excess of 300 and is growing rapidly. It, as one would expect, being built primarily upon good wood, has a splendid future before it.
A Merry Christmas
AND
A Happy New Year
TO ALL
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO ALL THE BUNCH
I Am Waiting for You to Call
BUDDY HAWKINS
Imperial Barber Shop
432 Lenox Ave. New York City
LAFAY
7th AVENUE AT
132nd STREET.
PHONE MORE
WEEK OF D
Mittenthal Bro
"COME ALONG
A NEW AND UP-TO-DAY
10—BIG S
50—PEO
MATINEE: TUESDAY,
MIDNIGHT'S
BENEFIT SCHO
Va. Union U
Pres
Monster Mice
at
LAFAYETT
Seventh Avenue
WEDNESDAY, H
Head
Miller and Lyles of "Runnin' V
Gilpin, Runnin' Wild Quartet, C
A Special Orchestra From
Tickets 50c to $2. Now on Sale a
Avenue; Y. M. C. A., 181 West
FAYETTE
THEATER
DIRECTION OF
COLEMAN BROS.
PHONE MORNINGSIDE 1811
OF DECEMBER 24
Centennial Brothers Present
"ALONG, MANDY"
UP-TO-DATE MUSICAL COMEDY
BIG SCENES—10
PEOPLE—50
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
NIGHT SHOW FRIDAY
FIT SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Union University Club
Presents a
For Midnight Frolic
at the
FAYETTE THEATER
Seventh Avenue and 132d Street
TODAY, DEC. 26, Midnight
Headed by
of "Runnin' Wild," Florence Mills, Charles S.
Wild Quartet, Courtesy Runnin' Wild company.
Thestra From Broadway and Many Others
Now on Sale at Tausig Pharmacy, 2305 Seventh
A., 181 West 135th Street; Lafayette Theater.
Holiday Greetings
FROM
Mme. ESTELLE,
Principal
LAFAYETTE
7th AVENUE AT
132nd STREET.
THEATER
DIRECTION OF
COLEMAN BROS.
PHONE MORNINGSIDE 1811
WEEK OF DECEMBER 24
Mittenthal Brothers Present
"COME ALONG, MANDY"
A NEW AND UP-TO-DATE MUSICAL COMEDY
10—BIG SCENES—10
50—PEOPLE—50
MATINEE: TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY
BENEFIT SCHOLARSHIP FUND Va. Union University Club Presents a Monster Midnight Frolic at the LAFAYETTE THEATER
WEDNESDAY, DEC.26, Midnight
Headed by
Miller and Lyles of "Runnin' Wild," Florence Mills, Charles S.
Gilpin, Runnin' Wild Quartet, Courtesy Runnin' Wild company,
A Special Orchestra Floor, Broadway and Many Others
NU-LIFE BEAUTY COLLEGE
2305 Seventh Avenue New York City
etide Greetings
Mrs. Barron D. Wilkins
New York City
AND A
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TO ALL
Yuletide
Mr. and Mrs. B
New Y
Yuletide Greetings Mr. and Mrs. Barron D. Wilkins New York City
A MERRY XMAS AND A
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
Call and See Me Any Time
ADRIENNE B. HAWKINS
Manicurist of the Imperial Barber Shop
482 Lenox Avenue
New York City
Residence: 140 West 142d Street
Look Out! Don't Fall
New York City
1930
NEW YORK PAGE
NEW YORK SOCIETY NOTES
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Coursey, Mr. Allen, branch director of the Urban Boston, motored to New York last week and were visitors at the Defender office. Mr. Coursey, on request, is exhibiting works at the Harlem library exhibit. Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Holley have returned to New Haven, after motorized riding off a few days in this city. They were the guests of Mrs. S. W. H. Turner, 155 W. 131st St., who, in company of L. Dyer, accompanied them to the game. Glicchrist Stewart, prominent Republican leared, went to Washington to attend the Republican committee meeting. Miss Evelyn Manning, who recently arrived here from Galveston, Texas, on a visit, has finally decided to make New York her future home. At presidence is residing at 420 St. Nicholas Avenue.
Mrs. Marle Fearance, 140 W. 142d St. was the charming hostess at a delightful summer dinner given by the Sunday Fearance had as her distinguished guests for during the week-end, the Misses Lafayette Garrett and Pauline Leonard society leaders W. Washington, while a manner and theater parties were given in honor of the Washingtonians.
George E. Calloway of 518 Lafayette Ave., Chicago, arrived here Wednesday to meet the reception. He is located at 26 W. 129th St.
Miss Myrtle Passon of Austin, Texas, who recently arrived here, expects to meet the nurse and is located with Dr. Wilcy Wilson's sanitarium.
Miss Charlotte Carter, 190 W. 134th St. returned to Chicago to attend Springs where she was the guest during the summer months of Mrs. and Mrs. Soons, 65 Walthorn St.
The first annual recital by the studio studio she was the guest during the summer months of Mrs. and Mrs. Soons, 65 Walthorn St. Special features of the program were the unique music rendered by the senior and junior orchestras.
Among the visitors to the New York office last week were Mrs. Alberta A. Hershaw City, Kan.; Mr. and M. R. Bibb and George E. Callaway, Chicago, Ill.
Dr. B. C. Smith, formerly located in the New York city, appends some time in
George Boyd, well-known Washingtonian, was in the city for a few days last week. He was a visitor at the office. Richard Lewis, former Chicago, now in the agricultural department, Washington, law student. Howard university, is on a holiday visit to New York. W. Clarence Matthews, prominent Boston attorney, was aork in the Republican committee meeting in Washington. Fritz Pollard, Chicago, and former Brown university football player, was time to the metropolis. Mrs. Rose Clayton Lawson, clerk in the city postoffice, is confined to her
home In Corona, L. I. ,with a severe attack of SRB.
Mrs. Sadie Marle Peterson, for three and a half years librarian at the 13$th St. New York city, library, has acclaimed a special library at the U. S. hospital library. No. 91, Tuskegee hospital. Mrs. Peterson has been very active in educational and social activities, being an active committee member and worker in both the N. A. A. C. P. and Urban league.
Miss Sue Baker of Richmond is the guest of her brother, William Baker, of New York. After which she will leave for Philadelphia, and then visit her brother, E. A. Baker, manager of the Prudential Bank of Washington. J. W. Gaines, clerk, railway mail service, who was in the city several days last week, left for Harrisburg, Pa. Sunday, aboard the Broadway limited.
Phil A. Jones, general manager of the Broadway Dender during his visit to our city last week, was entertained by Walter J. Stevens, proprietor of the broadway grill, 19. W. 35th St., near Billips, the Defender's eastern legal advisor, Friday. Many other courtesies were shown Mr. Jones while here.
Col. Roscoe Conkling Simmons, who won such a wonderful victory at the convention recently held in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. The colonel accompanied General Manager Jones of the World's Greatest to Chicago Sunday, aboard the Broadway limited.
The Hon. J. Finley Wilson, grand counselor of the city, was close end visitor to the city. Here he was the guest of Grand Daughter Ruler Laura Williams, 170 W. 136th St. He was royally entertained by Manhattan lodge, No. 45, of Elks, at an informal meeting. Cora McMinnsey, 148 W. 130th St., spent Sunday at Harrison, N. Y., visiting her sister-in-law.
Miss Sarah Scott, 213 W 53d St. left,
where she will spend the holidays.
Mrs. Florence Willerson, 2454 Seventh Ave, was hostess to the Christmas cheer committee. 2022 W. Ethel Brighs, 229 W. 131st St, entertained the committee on Dec. 6.
Miss Lottie Forrester, proprietor of the Forrester house, Saratoga Springs, New York, and Havana, Cuba, to spend the winter, has been visiting Miss Josie W. Morris, 211 W. 35th St. Miss Forrester will leave for Jacksonville, Fla., on Dec. 6.
Several hundred enjoyed a delightful evening at the benefit and concert given by the Xmas cheer committee of the Utopia Neighborhood club of Pelham Bay, 12 W. 12th Street. The entertainment was remarkably fine and featured Miller & Lyles and the entire company of "Kunun Wild," including the "Kunun Wild" immediately after the concert, the music being furnished by John C. Smith and his modern dance orchestra. Those on the committee were to play the music of F. A. Moore, Jamie Briggs, Rose McColes, Margaret Telfair, Sade Chase, Cassie Smith, Emma Layton, Mrs. Fade, Beryl Austin, Lena Brightaupt, Nettle Bessie Beardon and Etta Hansburgh.
A fine 10-pound boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shaw, 156 Atlantic St., Jamaica. L. L. last week, the charming little fellow was named after his father. Charles, and aunt, was Dickerson, Charles Dickerson. Shaw.
Miss Bertha Mills, 420 W. 52d St. has her guest her brother, C. R. Radcliffe, of 318 George St., Cincinnati. Ohio, has given in honor of her brother prior to his return to the Queen city. The charming Miss "Bee" Freeman arrived in town last Friday after an absence of several months. She has three prizes dancing at the Park theater in Atlantic City. Like his mother, but intends to be a great stage favorite. Miss Freeman is rehearsing to join Broadway revue, which is being performed at Frank Montgomery for the state Alabama.
BOY WANDERERS SENT HOME
After walking the streets all day and until midnight looking for money that they had left in the city of New York, Henry Valentine, 15, and Caesar Roots, 13, both of Washington, were found and taken in for the night by Miss Marle Blake and their friend, who took them food and a room for the night.
Next morning, Mrs. Sarah Roots, 2443 M. St. N. W., and Mrs. Mary Valentine, 1104 23d St., Washington, were not invited to the their way back home, having been sent back by the Children's Aid society, to which Miss Blake sent them.
VULETLE MATINEE DANCE
Wonderful Vulteele matinee dance, When? Saturday, Dec. 29. Where? Renaissance Casino. Whose music? Allie Ross and his orchestra. Let's got all right. Benefit, Circle for Negro Relief, Inc.
Bella Warren. 255 W. 100th St., was attended at home by Dr. Turner of the hospital Saturday morning for tuberculosis.
Suffering from asthma, Mrs. Susie Bowlan, 42, 172 W. 135th St., was rebound on Saturday afternoon after remission to Harlem hospital. The religious educational classes that she attended marked a M. 12 church for several weeks had their final session Wednesday night.
Yuletide Greetings to All Elkdom---Hello Bill! FROM
ANNUAL DINNER
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
SON'S
TINGS
BROOKLYN NOTES
SEASON'S GREETINGS
"A Womanless Wedding" was held at Bethel A. M. E. church on Thursday night, Mrs. Kelly Slills, director, S. H. H. H. H., and the侍者. A duet was rendered by Messrs. S. B. Nannester and J. Cochran; a pantomime by Miss Marjorie Seamon, and plano selection by Miss Adelle Sunday, Dec. 16, was local preachers' union day at Boyle's Memorial church, the Rev. C. F. Cirton, pastor. Those who attended were Gene Wooldruff, singing evangelist; the Rev. Geo. W. Still, the rev. C. Clark and the Rev. J. T. Alexander. play, "The Squire's Birthday," written by Mrs. St. Claire Rene, and directed by St. Claire Rene, was held at St. John's A. M. E. church, the evening, Dec. 18. Among those taking part were Messrs. J. C. Davis, F. Foster, D. Osborne, S. Thompson, S. Clarke, L. Jones, A. D. Lucas, J. B. Green, R. M. Brennan, L. M. Brennan, Nurse, L. E. Alson, L. Leelle, Madames D. Parsons, G. Rena, E. Davis, M. Batton, E. Rock, G. Ford, H. Blades, the Misses A. Marshall, L. Smith, F. M. Bishop, M. Aracher and G. Ferrin.
The laying of the cornerstone of the new St. John's A. M. E. church look place with appropriate ceremonies on the floor. The laying of the cornerstone was set by David W. Parker, most worshipful grand master, and Walter A. Marable, district deputy, from the grand lodge of the F. A. M. of the lodge, the Rev. C. P. Cole; Scripture, the Rev. E. J. Taylor; serene services preceded the actual laying; Opening Hymn, the Rev. S. H. V. Gumbs; prayer, the Rev. C. P. Cole; Scripture, the Rev. E. J. Taylor; serene services preceded the actual laying; A feature picture, "Joseph and His Brechren," in eight reels, was shown at the A. M. E. Zion church, the Rev. J. W. Mason, pastor, on Wednesday morning; the program were; Miss Olive Hopkins, soprano; T. A. Hobbs, baritone; Mr. Blackman, tenor, and S. R. Jullet, bass.
William Seaman, 462 Cleveland St. New York, has been confirmed to his home with an attack of rheumatism.
Horace Wiggins and Robert Edwards were arrested early Dec. 10 in Myrtle Beach, Fla., robbing James Levens (white), 119 Cumberland St. at, W. at 120th St. and Seventh Ave. Manhattan, and Irving Chapin (whose wife, Ruth Tillary and Gold Sts., this city, on the same night. Both prisoners denied the charges. Wiggins gave address as 311 Lowry Ave. Edwards as 26 Fleet St., both of this city. A mass meeting to urge the release of 54 Race soldiers, who have spent six years in a federal jail, would hold a week at Holy Trinity Baptist church, Dekab and Franklin Aves., under the auspices of the National Equal Rights Amendment speakers addressed the meeting, including County Judges Martin and Vause.
Harlem's Greatest
Bargain House
In Men's Slightly Used Clothing
G. FRASER
202 W. 135th St., New York, N. Y.
Overcoats as Low as $4.00
Suits 'as Low as $8.00
Odd Coats, Pants and Vests,
$2.00 Up
Write for Measurement Blanks
HELLO, BILL!
Call and Say Hello!
A Merry Christmas and a Happy
New Year to All
CARROLL (BUSTER) CHAPLIN
483 Lenox Avenue
New York City
Monarch Lodge No. 48, I. B. P. O. of W.
Christmas
New Year
LOVETT
DEPUTY
Manhattan No. 45
New York City
NO. 45, I. B. P. O. E. OF W.
America's Premier Colored Organization
LIEUT. FRED. W. SIMPSON, Conductor
156 West 131st Street New York City
Sincerest Greetings of the Season to the Profession
21—Madam B. T. P. the Race business national supervisor of the Interdenominational Evangelical Mission Workers, having traveled extensively in her lecture and Shaheen's editor of the Eye Monthly Journal, founder of the Rhodano Beauty Institute, editor of 14 articles for falling thin hair, baldness, dandruff, weeks' treatment for $2. Grower, 50c; double strength grower, 50c; $1.50; temple oil, 50c; world's
New York, Dec.
Rhoda is among
women who are
best 12-minute straightener and gloss oil. $1.75, will not turn hair red. Marilyn Rhoda, course, printed lessons, diplomas, tools, monthly payments, Wayne Ga.; Mrs. A. Scott, Haddonfield, N. J.; Jeff Clark, Panama; Mrs. M. Norman, St. Louis; Mrs. M. McKinney, Fort Marion, Iowa; Mrs. Ardivi, Dakota, Gold Coast, Africa; Mrs. Laura Brown, Chicago, Illinois; Pleasant Tenn. Instructions to women desiring own system or madam's Switches, curls, wigs, all kinds of hair for Madam Rhoda, president, 130 W. 129th St., New York--Adv.
N. Y. City Briefs
Sixty per cent of the adult patients at the Harlem hospital, tuberculosis and HIV cases, in the hospital, Miss Mary Lloyd, director of the clinic, are members of our group, and 40 per cent of the children who come to the clinic are members of our group. The tuberculosis case for tuberculosis work in Harlem, according to Mrs. Mabel Keaton, secretary of the Harlem Tuberculosis association, and information bureau maintained by the association at 202 W. 136th St. The brain, Joseph Wade, 38, 2310 Seventh Ave, was taken from his home to Harlem hospital early Sunday morning. The hospital was taken from Seward St. Jones, 7, 8 W. 47th St. fell his home and fractured his right foot. Dr. Brooner of Harlem hospital claims Jones was under the influence of liquor at Mrs. Mary Wilson, 32, 224 W. 123d St. is confined to her home suffering from grief. The peculiar actions of Roderick Garvey, 38, 63 W. 131st St., caused a stroke, and Lenox A. Thursday night. An ambulance was summoned and after examination by the ambulance physician was thought Garvey had gone insane. He was taken to Believe医院 hospital.
NEW YORK PAGE PAGE FIVE—PART TWO
BROOKLYN Y. W. C. A.
Holland High School, Y. W. C. A. swing at Ashland Pl. and Bellevue, at Bethlehem, and the Christmas tree party were held Thursday night. A Christmas musicale at the morning of the clock. The program included the Glee club, directed by Mrs. Daisy Tapley. Guest artists appearing on the program were secured special talent for the occasion. Harold Bryant, barton, Next Sunday, the first Sunday mustale will be presented by Mrs. Helen Howland-College. The program secured special talent for Miss Cora L. D. Canyon, soprano; Elmer Lee of New York, violinist; Prof. Elmer Payne, dramatic reader the MHS Center; Prof. Robert H. Moore reported the result of one week's giving by those interested in Brooklyn's service centers for girls. The reports were reported to the association's work in 1924 has not yet been secured. Because a community center can serve only through the association's work, the association's work urges all Brooklynites to do their share in the present financial effort.
Jennie Golden, 23, 785 Marcy Ave.:
Eugene Grant, 67, 2708 Bedford Ave.:
Burbana Winter, 81, 653 Chaucey St.:
Hartford Hill, 81, 653 Chaucey St.:
Thompson, 60, 2553 E 14th St.:
Ralph Feld, 27, 124 Wyckoff St.:
Elizabeth Hally, 81, 629 Halsey St.:
Mary Clark, 33, 611 Central Ave.:
Annie Clark, 33, 611 Central Ave.:
Garrett, 60, 254 Ray Julian, 46, 311
Batie St.: Eleanor E. Wilson, 93, 254
Stueben St.: Phillip J. Clifford, 52, 167
Pinder St.: Robert Moee, 90, 167
Gates Ave.: 60, 254 Hooper St.: Ray Julian, 46, 311
Gates Ave.: Ellen White, 70, 233 Warren St.:
James Wilson, 60, 259 Fulton St.:
Mary Reardon Collins, 72, 31 Lewis
Jones, 60, 259 Fulton St.:
N. 134 Flushing; Elizabeth Cur
Jones, 4, 123 N. 15th St., Flushing,
and Mary A. Morgan, 71, 17 Laurel
Hill.
GLEN COVE NEWS
The Anti Can't club and the Beaver
club of boys, James McElrath, pres-
ident, and the Ever Ready club, Mrs.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TO ALL
Food and Rooms of the Better
Kind
Round Table Lunch
245 W. 53d St., New York City
YULE
GREE
To My Friend
PROSPER
SAMUEL R.
YULETIDE GREETINGS To My Friends Everywhere
PROSPERITY 1924
MERRY
To My Thousa
MERRY XMAS
To My Thousands of Patrons
HARLEM'S BEST CAFE
JOHNNIE JACKSON, Proprietor
2265 Seventh Avenue New York City
Greetings TO OUR FRIENDS
DUNCAN BROTHERS MORTICIANS 2303 Seventh Avenue New York City
Merry Xmas—Happy New Year Greetings to Our Patrons
DR. WALTER J. JACKSON
Representing J. Tausig, Inc.
DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS
2305 Seventh Avenue New York City
Pure Drugs Our Specialty
Visiting Tailor With REGAL TAILORING CO.
833 Broadway, New York City
Measure and Fit by Appointment at Your Home
Telephone Audubon 8852
BROOKLYN Y W C A
BROOKLYN DEATHS
305 Broadway
M. Sands, president, are all doing active work for the Calvary A. M. E-church, the Rev. T. G. Clark, pastor. The Woman's Home Missionary society also rendered a splendid program recently, with Mrs. Harietta King, in charge. Miss King of Corona, L. I. read a paper. "How Readest Thou?" Miss Ella King, Flushing, L. I. read a paper. "How Can Our Church Beat Paper Under Its Present Environment?
Newark, Dec. 21.—Risel Hardy, 20
Maple Ave, Vaux Hall: Samuel Satterfield, 412 East 124th St. New York, N.Y.
Vernon Yson, 412 East 124th St. New York, N.Y.
Were involved in the act of entering a grocery store at 125 17th Ave
early Friday morning. They admitted.
Police say, to robbing eight or more
dollars, they held them in $3,000 bail each in the
Fourth precinct court.
In some unknown manner, Leslie Mortines, 40, 105 W, 130th St. fell at
his home and broke his left leg. He was taken to Harlem hospital. The
accident occurred Sunday night.
May Your Christmas and
Your New Year Be Ones of
Good Luck
When in Newark Don't Fail to
Call and See Me
WEBSTER STREET
BARBER SHOP
64 Webster St., Newark, N. J.
H. M. Neely, Prop., I. B. P. O. E.
of W., Pride of Newark - Lodge,
No. 93
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
Don't Fail to Send Your Prescriptions to Be Filled and Delivered
COSMOPOLITAN DRUG STORE
CLIFFORD S. DONNELL, Prop.
310 Bank St., Newark, N. J.
Phones Market 1960 and 0440
ETIDE
TINGS
ds Everywhere
ITY 1924
ROBINSON
XMAS nds of Patrons
ROBBERS CAUGHT
HELLO, BILL!
New York City
PAGE PIVE—PART TWO
McMAHON BROTHERS
MANAGERS
Commonwealth
Big "5"
High Class Boxing
Extend
Season's
Greetings
Merry
Christmas
Commonwealth
Big 5
"FAT" JENKINS
CREED HUBBARD
"STRETCH" GRANT
GEORGE FIAL
ROY NOEL
Happy New Year
MERRY XMAS
John S. Tibbs
AMERICAN TONSORIAL
PARLOR
Manufacturer of Ko-Ko-Wano
Hair Straightener
Electrolysis System
HAPPY NEW
YEAR
1089 Fulton St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tel. Prospect 10128
Merry Christmas
Happy New Year
GREETINGS FROM
Lewis E. Williams
Grand Traveling Deputy
I. B. P. O. E. of W.
Home Address
170 W. 136th St., New York City
JOHNNY E. MEYERS
"THE OLD RELIABLE"
Extends
Holiday
Greetings
To His Many Friends
1571/2 Duffield St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Compliments of
Dr. Hubert Harrison
Lecturer, New York Board
of Education
Literary Critic, New York World, New York Tribune, The New Republic, The Nation, and Classics in "Currents in Nineteenth Century Life and Letters." Literary Studio, Suite 16, 2644 Seventh Avenue, New York City
A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND
A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO THE BUNCH
Call and See Me Any Time
Now With the Imperial Barber Shop, 432 Lenox Ave., N. Y. C.
William E. Garrett, From 53d St.
Dr. Alma Mary Haskins
Harlem's pioneer woman foot specialist
and orthopedist, extends greetings and a
wish for a prosperous New Year to her
many friends and patients throughout the
country.
2374 Seventh Ave., New York City
OBERDORFEN'S PHARMACY
OPEN ALL NIGHT
2411 EIGHTH AVENUE
Northwest Corner 139th St., New York City
TELEPHONE MORNINGRIDE 7091
INDIANANEWS
PAGE SIX—PART TWO
INDIANAPOLIS NEWS
BY ALVIN D. SMITH
Indianapolis Office, 161 Indiana Ave.
808-755-2222
---
Mrs. Roberts Leaves
Mrs. Rosell Roberta left the city Friday for her home in Cincinnati. Many of her friends registered to see her at the host caterers in the Middle West. She operated the Step In Tea room in this city, where she hosts "Hello Hill." is what the Indiana No. 104 degree team is saying as their slogan to the public. They will have what season, December 27, at the Pasture Renaissance hall.
To: Glve Health Lectures
TO GIVE HEALTH LECTURES
Thomas T. Pine, owner and operator of the famous Slossine College of Beauty Culture, will teach the health health will be started soon. The primary object of the lectures will be to acquaint people how to maintain their beauty. Mrs. Sloss. Those lectures will be given by noted physician whom the famous beauty culturist has engaged, and probably start the first week in January.
WILL NOT MEET MONDAY
The Monday Luncheon club will not meet Monday, Dec. 24, as announced last meeting. At the last meeting a representative of the National Student in the city during the holidays, said that 6,000 students will be here, of which 500 will continue the meetings, Dec. 21. A breakfast dance will be given at Kopp hall Christmas day. Processes for the Ray and Green are the promoters.
Court Notes
Sneed and Trobore, the two local Race detectives, are due much credit for the case. It seemed that the white press did not want to give them the credit that they received. John Thomas Shaw was caught. He is charged with the murder of Miss Wheeler, a 16-year-old girl some time ago. It is said that the two Race detectives have been removed from the scene, and that they the two would get the real credit if ever the party that murdered the young girl was caught. Hettie Brewer, a local policewoman, is making a strong sight to be returned to the scene, by the chief recently. Officers Smith, Jones and Hopson caught and all were sent down to the judge. The members of the
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game were Ralph McGuire, 863% *Hilary Ave.* Albert Johnson, 418% *Blackwater Ave.* Emmet Mitchell, 418% *Senate Ave.* Everett McIlish, rear 788% *Indiana Ave.* Emmet Mitchell, 418% *Senate Ave.* Robert McIlish, 823 *Blake St.* On the same day at the end game was played, "pulled." They line up as follows: Chas Hall went down for keeping games, and the participants in the game, and the participants were James Bonfille, James Jennings, James Woods and Filmore Hampton. Sundays were pulled as one time and were named are Albert Johnson, Roy Davis, James Bogan, Hobart McKinley, Leroy McKinley, Robert Harper, Leslie Black, John Lyerson, Edgar Northernter-William
Births
Upton and Mary Stout, city hospital; girl; Bobee and DArdell Hockett, 618$ s.; girl; Belle and Mary Graham, D. Parcelli, boy; Henry and Mamie Johnson, 410 Kanaan, boy; George and Frances Harris, 425 $ s.; 188$ h.; girl; Carl Emmett, boy; Henry and Emilion and Edith Cain, 210 Martindale; girl; Earl and Margaret Golden, 142$ s.; girl; K. Keygroun, boy; Jesse and Dona Tandy, 618 $ N. Blackford, boy; Joe and Milderin Rose, 810 Edgement, girl; girl; Alton and Eleanore Lemon, girl; Alton and Eleanore Lemon, 68 $ S. Summitt, girl; Gardeld and Lemon, girl; Alton and Eleanore Lemon, 68 $ M. Minnie Lee, city hospital, girl; Aubrey and Anna Johnson, city hospital, girl; Robert and Acelez Jones, 241 $ Columbrell and Mary Graham, 216 Boueyard, boy
Deaths
Oliver S. Clay, Central Indiana hospital; Hecte Kelly, 53, 843 W. Indiana; Hertle Bass, 88, 2047 Indiana; Eliza Bass, 88, 2047 Bavard; Aaron A. Tandy, 36. Provident sanitorium; Flora Fora, 6 days, 810 Edemont; Robert Cobb, city hospital; Lulu Lawrence, 57, 410 Lawrence; Lawrence, 57, 410 Cottage; William Robinson, 57, 948 W. North; infant, Turner, hour, 206, Allfreec; James Johnson, hour, 206, Allfreec; Alfred Pinkos, 108, 433 F. Vermont.
GARY, IND.
BRAZIL. IND.
CONNERSVILLE IND.
Miss Irene Mendoda of Chicago and Miss Flossie Frazier of Detroit have been inducted with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Greed Harris. Miss Herman Hill. Mrs. and Mrs. Hugue Vest motored to Indianapolis and were the guests of Edarah Eugene Vest and Mrs. Butler Harris of this city have been called to Indianapolis on action of the son, Jesse Harris. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McKay and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miscellaneous shower in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Greed Harris recently.
CLINTON, IND.
Mrs. Bertha Balch of Fairview and Mrs. Maud Brown are spending the Christmas holidays in Bloomington, Ky., was called to the bedside of her sister, Mrs. Sylvested Anderson, who has been sick for some time. Miss Brown of New York and Brown of Brazil, Ind., were the recent guests of Miss Anna J. York.
LAFAYETTE, IND.
Mrs. Eliza Thomas, en route from Nashville, Tenn., to her home in Chicago, Ill., to attend the funeral of Mr. Robert Russell in this city, Mrs. Alice Valentine was called to Frankfort for serious illness in the family of her daughter, Mrs. F. A. Brown. On Mon., March 16, gathering was held in Temple hall, it being the occasion of the annual love festival in this city. Visitors were present from Frankfort and Chicago, A. M. E., and Second Bantist, Sunday schools will hold a lecture on the torture of the Lincoln school, Mrs. Johanna Bell of Oakville, Ky., is the guest of honor. Mrs. Anna Johner and grandson Harry of Indianapolis will be booked on N. 10th St. Mrs. Anna Johner and grandson Harry of Indianapolis will be booked on N. 20th St.
SOUTH BEND, IND.
KOKOMO, IND.
The Christian Endeavor of Wayman A. M. E. church was reorganized in 1991 and Attorney Jordan chairman of the program committee. Attorney Jordan was requested to get into communication with Attorney Jordan for the purpose of organizing a meeting with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Winburn returned home Saturday evening after eventing with Mrs. Della Warfield and baby have returned home after visiting relocation by the B. X. at Douglas school Wednesday night, entitled "Success: Those on the slick list are: Mrs. Esther Tompkins, Mrs. Venus Paget, G. B. Morgan, J. R.
Miss Hobert Barnes left Tuesday for Miami. Fla., to join her husband for the winter, to attend the LaVegas, N. Mex., were called to this city by the illness and death of her mother, Mrs. Hobert, daughter, Mrs. Vera Taburn, of Kalamazoo, Mich., were the guests this week of their cousin, Willis Johnson and Miss Nina Smith were married Dec. 12. Thomas Shatcher and Miss Louise Underwood were married on Dec. 12. Miss Cecelia Johnson, was married to Joe Melvin Clevin.
FORT WAYNE, IND.
PERU. IND.
Rev. G. H. White has returned from the University of Florida to his new home in Franklin South, South Peru. Mrs. Norma Martin will return from her job as a park next week. Mrs. J. S. Franklin left Monday for a visit with friends and a friend from Louisiana. Walter Graddock is out again on account of an auto accident. The Willine Workers club met with Mrs. Willine has requested all officers of the A. M. church to meet on Sunday to work on the evening year. More than $100 has been received for electric light and a plamp in the church.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
TENNESSEE
by fire Tuesday morning. Six months ago the Foster residence was burned. Her son, Lafayette Haskins had his short white. Lafayette Haskins had his leg amputated. His condition is reported serious. Mrs. Magee Stower is a resident of the Bronx. Mr. Ron, Mrs. Jemile Haskins and J. W. Woods attended the conference at Union City are guards of the latter mother, Mrs. Mollie Bailey. E. J. Oliver and Augusta Williams have relied on the help of the Mrs. Anna Haskins of Ann Arbor, Mich, is visiting friends here. Miss Rostelle Grinter has returned home spending a few weeks at Yorkville.
A large crowd attended the C. M. E. conference in Tranton recently. A host, J. R. Simmons, which was held at the C. M. E. church, conducted by the passers-by offerings were beautiful. Mrs. Wance linger on her guests at a 6 o'clock dinner at the Musses Kell Park, cacao, rMs. Rufus, Mrs. Elinora Egylin Mrs. Mills, Mrs. John of Jackson, rMs. Mills is here to spend the winter with her mother, Killins Cork of Jackson, rMs. Mills is here to entertain the Musses Kell Park, Annie R. Ragan and Mrs. Tomie Loxter of Jackson are here visiting her mother. The Misses Milred and the Cole trotter of Jackson are here visiting her mother. The Misses Milred and the football game in Jackson recently.
NEWBERN TENN
The cafe operated by Johnnie Scott
Henry. Fountain were totally destroyed
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Brewer & Co. Boston, Mass.
E. B. Bruce & Co. Omaha, Neb.
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Bortell Drug Co. Seattle. Wasf.
Beverly Hills Co. Seattle.
E. E. Bruce & Co. Omaha. Neb.
Coffin-Reddington Co. San Francisco, Calif.
Coffin-Reddington Co. San Francisco, Calif.
J. W. Edgery & Co. Ottumwa, Iowa.
Elmer & Armend. New York City.
Elmer & Armend. New York City.
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Fuller Morrison Drug Co.
540 Handolph St. Chicago
Gilman Wrex Boston, Mass.
Gilmore Drug Co. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Hale-Justice Co. Cincinnati, Ohio.
Hall-Van Gorder Co. Cleveland, Ohio.
H. Halper New York City.
Deaths
Births.
Marriages
HUMBOLDT, TENN.
NASHVILLE, TENN.
Humation-Keeling Co. Chicago
Humation-Keeling Co. Indiana
Lunley, Michele Co. San Fran-isco, Cali
Lenn & Fink. New York City
Senior Co. San Fran. Co.
Meyer Bro. Drug Co. St. Louis, Mo.
Mullen & Haynes Owenaboro, Ky.
Mullen & Haynes Owenaboro, Ky.
W. Harrison St. Chicago.
Philadelphia Wholesale. Philadelphia, Pa.
Power Tray Drug Co. Richmond, Pa.
Power Tray Drug Co. Richmond, Pa.
Schuh Drug Co. Calro, Il.
Shibley Massingham Co. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Monday night in the girls' clubroom,
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CLARKSVILLE, TENN.
The Crescent circle was delightfully entertained Thursday evening by Mrs. Judge William Harrison of Chicago addressed a very appreciative audience at Thursday night. Mrs. George Cross is able to be out after several days at the church, and entertained a number of the younger get-together. The Tymon E. E. D. Roberts and Little son, Julian, have returned after apendications. Mr. Harris of Ullion City has accepted the call to the pastorate of the Fifth Rev. Mr. Benton, pastor of the Mount Olive Baptist church, has been called Rev. Mr. Benton, pastor of the Mount Olive Fergerson entertained a number of little folk in honor of the ninth day evening at her home in College St.
UNION CITY TENN.
DYERSBURG, TENN.
COVINGTON, TENN.
The Rev. Mr. Allison, who has served as pastor for over four years, attended annual conference last week at Trenton, conn. on Friday. The Dyersburg district for 1924. The Rev. A. H. Norris, who has served as pastor for over two years, was sent to Brownville. The Rev. W. A. Johnson of Womac was sent to Smothers, the Rev. Mr.
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Harris of Ripley was sent to: Collins Chapel C. M. E. church. Mrs. Dr. T. Wheeler the past week. Dr. J. R. Connell made a business trip to Dyersburg on March 10. Dr. J. R. Connell or Memphis may spend Saturday in Covington among friends. Nathaniel Willett several months in Tipontville, Mrs. Lille Thompson is slick; also Mrs. Ellen Gardner was slick in school at Willow Grove, Mrs. Willette Gardner was taken very sick and her sister was called from Memphis to William Casay is ill at his home on Spring St. St. Samuel Oliver and William Casay are to spend the Christmas holidays.
TRENTON, TENN.
WINCHESTER, TENN.
Mrs. Georgia A. Yarbrough of Nashville spent a few days in this city, Mrs. Hattie L. Colayza has nursed her daughter Woods and little daughter have returned from Swaince. The Rev. and Mrs. J. T. Ridley and Mrs. Mr. Holder have nursed her daughter M. G. Mray. Elizabeth Daniel spent a day with Mrs Ethel Childress. Mrs. James Robertson very ill. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Moss are the happy parents of a 12-pound boy.
FRANKLIN, TENN.
The Franklin City federation met with Mrs. Willie Wilson at her home on Mon., March 15, with Mrs. J. D. Short at her home on Matchez St. on Wednesday evening. The Forget-Me-Not art club met at Matchez St. on Thursday evening. The third anniversary of the City federation, which was to have been held on Friday at Matchez St., was postponed on account of the unfavorable weather. Mr. and Mrs. Odway Foster arrived Wednesday evening at Mich., where they spent the summer.
JACKSON, TENN
Miss Ames Stevens spent a few days in the city with her parents. Miss Ames was born in the city of Baltimore. The baby boy of Dr. Southern has been very ill, but we are glad to state that he is very much in love with Liberty C. M. E. church and H. S. Barker entertained as guests at dinner last Monday some house. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. H. P. Porter, Mrs. Rosa Robinson, Mrs. J. Mammons and Messas, Smith and Prafather.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1922
Before
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# 320
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A CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTION
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Musical Instruments of Every Description. Q. R. S. and U. S. Piano Rolle in Christmas Boxes. Columbian and O. R. W. In Christmas Ensembles. WE HAVE IT. AVOID THE DOWNTOWN RUSH-SHOP WITH US Open Evenings Until 10 P. M.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
CITY HOSPITAL
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By WAYLAND L. RUDD
1224 U St. N. W.
Phone North 8698
Brown, chairman; Solomon Dade, W. M.; Richard Ross, secretary; Richard Hearns, treasurer; Allan A. C. Griffith, Alexander Hoffman, William L. Patrick, Curtis M. Logan, Walter J. Brooker, Peter Welch, Charles Dorsey, John W. Mudd, Sr., Samuel Jackson, Marshall Brown, John Slade, Raymond Colbert, John L. Carter and Robert E. Anderson. There was recently a baby contest held at Winslow hall, given by Group No. 2 of Mount Horeb tent No. 236 of J. R. G. & J. U. The contestants were as follows: Miss Mary Carr, Hayes, Miss Mildred Louise Edmonston, Miss Carrle Grant, the Misses Brooks, Miss Royland Brown, Miss Wayman Robinson and Miss William Edward Thomas. Susie Murray, chairman; Susie Tinsley, as "ant chair-
Railroad Rollings
Archer Hill will soon leave Washington for Portsmouth, Va., where he will visit and spend the Christmas holidays with his family. Mr. Hill is doing a great deal of religious work among the porters and other men at the Washington Terminal yards at Washington. Each Sunday Mr. Hill presents to the men at the yards a sermon. W. Simms, who was recently placed on the Federal express, running from New York to Boston, is expecting another favorable change in the near future. G. W. Biddle of 126 Curver Ave., Jersey City, NJ, is visiting Ann Richardson in the morning. Mr. Hill is also recently left the city for Lynchburg and Hoanoke, Va., where she will visit her sisters. Richard Minor, a Pullman porter, having been in the service for 43 of his 73 years, reports that he is in perfect health and contends that he will continue his service with the company. Mr. Minor is one of the oldest men in the Pullman service and is well thought of by his companions, both young and old. He has a wonderfully beautiful home in Brooklyn, N. Y., and is planning on spending his Christmas there visiting his family. Shelle Mitchell of Winston-Salem is visiting his uncle in Washington, D.C., to visit his holiday. Mrs. Portla Jeter is spending the holidays with the aunt, Mrs. Minnie Simmons of Greater New York. William King of 1100 Fourth Ave., Birmingham, Pa., is visiting friends in the city while the guest of Ann Richardson.
Dunbar High School
Randall Junior High School
Randall Junior High school has been entered upon a vigorous health campaign now in full blast. A mammoth tooth chart, and as each pupil's teeth defects are corrected his name is inserted Early in January Miss Davis and Mrs E. Marshall accompany the Banda and Randall high schools on an instruction hike. For the monthly meeting of parents and teachers last Tuesday a banner was displayed chairman of the membership committee to Section 5-2. Parents have arrived to raise money for the purchase of a campground. This drive is led by Mrs. Milla, who, with the assistance of Mrs. Randall, in a classroom in the building with com
munity co-operation. In the interest of the students, he been established at Randall Junior High. He received the support not only of the students, but the community in general. At the regular meeting, the community this week Miss G. E. Sheffer gave an address on the importance of Efficiency in Teaching." She presented a chart showing all items which should be included in the teaching of teachers of junior high school.
Armatrong High School
The Radio club was organized Monday, Dec. 10, with Harold Haynes in the office and Michael Cooley in the President Cooley's speech. The following students were elected officers: secretary, Edward Hackett; assistant secretary, Edward Hackett; assistant Hill; sergeant-at-arms, Harry Mackall. The annual Christmas tree exercises are scheduled for December; community will be held in the school building, Horace Wallace with the High School Cadet band. Prof. Miller is busy assisting the Christmas tree strong-Dunbar March. The Christmas tree postoffice opened on Monday, Dec. 10, with Christine Cooley. Christmas seal and a card will be delivered to any student in Junior High School. Special delivery cards are 3 cents.
Shaw Junior High School
Impressive memorial exercises for the school at Shaw, were held recently. The entire school attended and participated. The courses of the year at Shaw was the recital given for the school at the session. Joseph H. Douglass of this city, was one of the students, panying, and Mrs. Lorimer D. Milton of Atlanta, G. pianoist, Mr. Douglass exquisite manner. Mrs. Milton's numbers were played with fine feeling and the at recital was Lorimer D. Milton, at the recital was Lorimer D. Milton, one of the northern colleges. He is located in Atlanta as lecturer in Morehead for an Atlanta form. Mr. Milton has consented to address the school. He decided to make its Christmas sale is issued at close of school on Monday, Dec. 3. When school closed on Thursday, he sold and made cash return for their amount to $44. It is evident that Miss Randolph, the chairman of the drive, made co-operation of the whole school.
Howard University
Under the auspices of the Kappa Sigma Debating society the annual debate between the freshmen and sophomore classes of Howard University was held on the 1st of the first of the last three. Andrew Jankin Memorial, chapel, on the university campus. The subject discussed was: "Resolved, That the migration of the Negro from the south-east to the south-east of the state was the best interests of the Negro Race." The affirmative side of the question was upheld by the class of 1927 and the negative by the class of 1926. The participants in the debate were Joseph A. Ephraim, the Student of the University, and Briton C. Bankerville. The odoro George and Virgil Carson, representatives of the sophomore class. The like-class of the class of 1927 was: Peter B. Debating society in charge of the arrangements for the debate was composed of A. Crofton Gilbert, chair-map; Wallace Andrews, Jr., John V. Peacock, and John J. T. V. Velez. The service of the class at Howard University on Sunday afternoon, Dec. 23, will be a special Christmas feature. Miss Mary Burrill will hear a "The Other Ways" of How You Dysk? Ques the class of Howard university were fac-dored with a visit by Hon. Hubert Work, the Secretary of the Interior and patron ex-officio of the university, on Wednesday, Dec. 12, when he spoke to the class. The class was held at the place. Basketball has now taken the place recently occupied by football as the sport engaging the attention of Howard students in connection with athletics. A class of 1927 was held at the school, and the class of 1928 has been organized. Coach John H. Burr is hard at work rounding up material for the varsity basketball team. A great number of students are going to the college halls of the "Hars-dien" and Lincoln. Hampton, Union and Lincoln.
Personal Profferings
Mrs. A. E. Waddelton, of the 1500 black of St. N. W., who was recently \(^{1}\)born, was born in 1800, and was a \(^{2}\)born, \(^{3}\)born, \(^{4}\)born, \(^{5}\)born, \(^{6}\)born, \(^{7}\)born, \(^{8}\)born, \(^{9}\)born, \(^{10}\)born, \(^{11}\)born, \(^{12}\)born, \(^{13}\)born, \(^{14}\)born, \(^{15}\)born, \(^{16}\)born, \(^{17}\)born, \(^{18}\)born, \(^{19}\)born, \(^{20}\)born, \(^{21}\)born, \(^{22}\)born, \(^{23}\)born, \(^{24}\)born, \(^{25}\)born, \(^{26}\)born, \(^{27}\)born, \(^{28}\)born, \(^{29}\)born, \(^{30}\)born, \(^{31}\)born, \(^{32}\)born, \(^{33}\)born, \(^{34}\)born, \(^{35}\)born, \(^{36}\)born, \(^{37}\)born, \(^{38}\)born, \(^{39}\)born, \(^{40}\)born, \(^{41}\)born, \(^{42}\)born, \(^{43}\)born, \(^{44}\)born, \(^{45}\)born, \(^{46}\)born, \(^{47}\)born, \(^{48}\)born, \(^{49}\)born, \(^{50}\)born, \(^{51}\)born, \(^{52}\)born, \(^{53}\)born, \(^{54}\)born, \(^{55}\)born, \(^{56}\)born, \(^{57}\)born, \(^{58}\)born, \(^{59}\)born, \(^{60}\)born, \(^{61}\)born, \(^{62}\)born, \(^{63}\)born, \(^{64}\)born, \(^{65}\)born, \(^{66}\)born, \(^{67}\)born, \(^{68}\)born, \(^{69}\)born, \(^{70}\)born, \(^{71}\)born, \(^{72}\)born, \(^{73}\)born, \(^{74}\)born, \(^{75}\)born, \(^{76}\)born, \(^{77}\)born, \(^{78}\)born, \(^{79}\)born, \(^{80}\)born, \(^{81}\)born, \(^{82}\)born, \(^{83}\)born, \(^{84}\)born, \(^{85}\)born, \(^{86}\)born, \(^{87}\)born, \(^{88}\)born, \(^{89}\)born, \(^{90}\)born, \(^{91}\)born, \(^{92}\)born, \(^{93}\)born, \(^{94}\)born, \(^{95}\)born, \(^{96}\)born, \(^{97}\)born, \(^{98}\)born, \(^{99}\)born, \(^{100}\)born, \(^{101}\)born, \(^{102}\)born, \(^{103}\)born, \(^{104}\)born, \(^{105}\)born, \(^{106}\)born, \(^{107}\)born, \(^{108}\)born, \(^{109}\)born, \(^{110}\)born, \(^{111}\)born, \(^{112}\)born, \(^{113}\)born, \(^{114}\)born, \(^{115}\)born, \(^{116}\)born, \(^{117}\)born, \(^{118}\)born, \(^{119}\)born, \(^{120}\)born, \(^{121}\)born, \(^{
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
of the city who has for the past several weeks been at Chicagos hospital, have much improved. The Cairo theater, 4½ the Patronage, and the controlled 4½ the Program, are presenting the Miller Dunlap five-piece orchestra of the leading jazz orchestras of the city.
man and Miss Saeve, and read, and wrote.
The third annual
The program was
chorus. A grand
Baptist Church, Chicagos
Junior Jottings
The young society buds of the city are on tip toes with the expectation of attending Miss Anita H. Lewis's party, which is being given Monday, Dec. 24, in honor of Messrs. A. White, R. Scott and L. Johnson at the beautiful, well-known M.C. Club, at the same time, and the门徒们, to be the leading junior affair of the season. Miss Anna Mae Mitchell of this city, now teaching in Glen Rodgers, W. Va., is expected to spend her Christmas in Washington visiting her mother, Miss Ann. Miss Ann, a member of the Storer College, class of "22. Miss Rea Mitchell, also of this city, who is attending school at Storer college as a senior, is also expected to spend the holidays visiting her family. The Reflexive School, a school, is a meeting last week. Miss Edna Smallwood presided in absence of the president, Miss Bernice Chilma. The Beaux Arts, the leading pleasure club of the city, presented at the Murray's Casino, the day-night flock, large crowds taking great pleasure in froling with the Beaux Arts. Music as per usual was furnished by the famous White Brothers Ginger band, which is known as the "Fifth of the Year" of the year. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Florence Cotten, Mrs. Ethel Kelly, Misses Julia Davis, Mable Jackson, Alma Forrest, Maud Williams, Marguerite L. Lewis, Nellie Green, Thejma Hilliam, and the Senseless, William Hill, Messrs. Preston Ward, Frank Bolseau, William Powell, Powell Penn, Harry Honesty, Raymond Glasco, Howard Hicks, Clifton Roberts, James Hall, James Hammonds, Seldon Lindse, James Hilliam, James Hilliam, Millard Chancey, Wheeler of the Washington office of the Chicago Defender.
Collegiate Chats
News of the Government
Church Chantinga
The Florida Ave. Baptist church has installed a new steam heating plant. The services of the church on last Sabbath morning were well attended and, pleasing in both pulpit and song, Julian Taylor, director of Mt. Jezreal Baptist choir, was present and assisted the Florida Ave. choir in its music. At the B. Y. U. a very fine program was rendered. Lawyer James A. Cobb was the principal speaker. Mrs. Yola Gatewood, the president of the choir, was absent at all the services due to illness of her mother. Mrs. Eliza J. Wright, deaconess of the church. At the morning services it was announced that Mrs. Carrle McIntosh, an active church worker, would be the regular correspondent for the church review. Mt. Gilead Baptist church's B. Y. P. U. rendered a very interesting program Sunday evening. Dec. 16, under the news pastor, the Rev. W. L. Turley. The church has taken on new life in all of their services as well as the B. Y. P. U. Keep the "Yule" fire burning-and your home will be much happier. The George W. Lee Baptist church, 2035 Georgia Ave., is conducting a series of revivals each night, ending Dec. 21, under the auspices of the pastor, the Rev. William Ephraim, and the Rev. J. L. Stewart, traveling evangelist.
At Asbury last week: Last Sunday the team held a third quarter conference church. The third quarter conference was held Monday. Lay delegates at the conference held the Blue Ribbon club held its monthly meeting Tuesday at the residence of Mrs. P. A. Roy, president: J. W. Smallwood, secretary. Ashurst, the planning committee, Coming', which will be its first presen- tence club, met Tuesday evening at the church. Mrs. Susan J. Washington, the retainer. The following are committee- ments. Perry Hall, Addison Chanman, Harris, Norman R. Newman, William Newman, John Piegler, E. R. E. Frank Cousins, P. A. Roy, chairman; club, and G. H. Morrison, secretary. The Enworth league program was as fol-
man and Miss Sayles: reclamation, Miss Evans, and read, Mrs. Beldon. Miss Evans, and read, Mrs. Beldon. The third annual ladies' night of the men's club was held Tuesday night. The club was a grand revival and gospel chorus. A grand revival and gospel Baptist church, Clark's station, Arlington. Va. beginning "Watch Meeting" more during the month of January. The Rev. L. E. Kelzer. D. D., noted gospel of Columbus, Ohio, now of Walker Memorial church, Washington, will assist the pastor Un the services.
"T" tossers downed Fort Humphrey's fast five at Fort Humphrey, Va. The Washington "Y" made it two straight for the season by downing the Fort Humphrey team here last week. The soldiers were never in the lead and were compelled to take the defeat, 47 to 13. Jones, Simmons, Brooks and McCoy, playing a stellar tossing game for the "Y," while Rip Stewart played guard like a veteran. Lyons and Yergan played well for the soldiers. The team line-ups: Y. M.! C. A.: A. Brooks, R. F.; A. McCoy, L. F.; T. McClain, C.: J. Williams (captain). R. G.: R. Stewart, L. G. Fort Humphrey; Lyons, R. P.; Yergan (captain). L. F.; Lovelace, C.: Williams, R. G.; Holliday, L. G. Goals from floor: Y. M. C. A.: Jones 6, Timmons 4, McCoy 4, Brooks 4, Corzens 2, J. Williams 2, Childs 1; Fort Humphrey—Lyons 2, Holliday 2, Yergan 1. Substitution: Jones for Brooks, Childs for McCoy, Timmons for McClain, Cozens for J. Williams, Lee for Stewart. Referee—Jones: Umpire —Mckey. Time of period: 20 minutes.
"Good Mornin', Judge!"
Whitelaw Hotel Arrivals
Births of the Week
Walter M. Henderson, 28, and Dorothy J. Gunter, 21, both of Fort Au Prince, Halli, the Rev. T. E. Davis; Harry A. Campbell, 37, and Helen P. Thomas, 30, the Rev. H. B. Mitchell, Gregory J. Freeman, 21, and Agnes V. Burnett, 19, Judge R. E. Muttingly; Ralph P. Sahine, 20, and Leocean A. Doggett, 23, the Rev. H. F. Downs; Joseph A. Harvey, 33, and Lilly Adams, 22, both of Baltimore, the Rev. H. F. Downs; Edward C. Farren, 28, and Sorab T. Daniel, 20, the Rev. J. H. W. Blake; Samuel S. Watkins, 38, and Erle Bonner, 27, both of New York, the Rev. J. H. Taylor; Scott C. Humphrey, 26, and Helen M. Kane, 20, the Rev. C. B. Austin; James M. Tannell, 27, of Bealeon, Va., and Nellie A. Lawson, 27, of Sterling, Va., the Rev. J. P. Tyler; Charles Adams, 28, and Celeste Albright, 22, both of St. Georges, Md., the Rev. C. T. Wilson.
Y. M. C. A. Newa
Marclages
Deaths Reported
CONNECTICUT
A. Hines, 3S Cottage St., is quite ill at his home. Mrs. Fred Thomas of Sound Beach has been removed to the Greenwich hospital, where she is improving. Myles Hardaway has returned to his home in Richmond, Va., where he will stay until after the holidays. Mrs. M. J. Lewls of Adams Ave. is visiting friends in Greenwich Ct. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dash visited in New York city recently. The Misses Wells of Franklin St. entertained guests from New York recently. The Order of True Reformers held their degree meeting Saturday evening in the Dunbar hall. The M.N. R. club was entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Garrett. A number of the members will leave for Florida shortly. Mrs. Green of 108 Taylor St. left for her home in Barbadoes. She was given a surprise party by her cousin, Miss Viola Reed, and friends. All met at her house while she was out and when she returned they all had an enjoyable evening and wished her bon voyage. Quite a number were out on the closing night of the Craftsmen's indoor bazaar to see the prize winners. P. A. Robinson won first prize of $150; Ed Smith, second prize of $100, and a stranger, third prize of $50.
A delightful surprise was given Miss Helen Fisher, 75 Rich Ave., by her brothers, John and Leon, Tuesday evening. E. D. Watts and Dr. Henry Walker motored to the Howard-Lincoln game and from there Mr. Watts motored to Washington and other points South. The men's supper held at the Bethel church was a great success. W. W. Johnson was chairman. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Fisher entertained the bride and groom, Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Reed, at dinner recently. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Blackshire, Mrs. Julia Morgan, Mrs. Lillian Dunbar, and Fred Almetto. Joseph Bray, who was injured some weeks ago in Port Chester by an automobile, is improving. Richard Sherman, the sheik of Grand St., is spending the winter in New York. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Murdaugh motored to New York recently. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Fisher and Mr. and Mrs. Blackshire motored to Philadelphia.
LONE STAR STATE
The Rev. N. Ward Bagby, the new pastor of St. John's A. M. E. church, preached Sunday to an overflowing congregation. The Rev. Mr. Bagby halls from Florida. Louis Brown, his mother and a number of other relatives of Houston, Texas, stopped over in the city for a few hours. They were en route to Cameron to attend the funeral of his brother, Ed Brown. Mrs. Cora Bays and daughter, Lucy Lyons, were visitors in the city recently. They were the guests of Mrs. Bays's brother, E. J. Moore, 1068 E. Main St. O. W., Coleman of Beaumont, Texas, is in the city visiting his mother, Mrs. Sarah Winters.
Mrs. M. L. Eldridge is confined to her home by illness. Prof. C. H. Hogan, principal of the Chapel Hill school, is able to be about again after having been ill for a period of two weeks. The remains of Jas. Tarver were shipped here Dec. 4 from Brookshire for burial. He leaves a wife and other relatives. The relatives residing here are Mrs. Edward Van Buren and Mrs. Calle Graves, sisters, and father, Chas. Tarver. Brookshire.
Dick Hooper and sister Katie of Dalina were in the city recently visiting Anderson was returned to Allen Chapel A. M. E. church, this city, this being the Thompson of San Angelo was in the city recently visiting relatives and Thompson of San Angelo was here. N. E. Barnes of San Antonio, president of the Railroad Brake Device company, N. E. Collins, superintendent of the Waco C. M. E. district, preached at He was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Bolden while here, Mrs. Besato attended to attend the funeral of her grandmother Prof. M. G. Guadalupe association, Seguin, Texas, was in the city in 1995. He was brought to Smithville on business. Good services at all the church in Hubbard preached at Allen chapel at 3:30 p. M. Slick list: Mr. Nevels, Amanda Sanders, Mary Lewis, Willie Lewis, Grace Green, the Misses Emma Nelson and Edy Days.
Miss Maggie B. Arnold of Dallas is visiting relatives and friends in the city. The Rev. G. W. Anderson, the
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phila to witness the Howard-Lincoln memorial Thanksgiving in Brooklyn visiting friends and relatives. Mrs. Brooks Miesl Ellie Sherman criterinated at her home in Grand St. Miesl Cheetah Miesl Miesl Alfred Perry, Miesl Maile leaf lodge, and Alfred Perry, Miesl Maile leaf lodge. Their grand annual reception that evening at the K. of C. in "In Greenwood 20 Oakridge St., entered at dunbar 20 Oakridge St.," and Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Cooper, Mrs. and C. A. Smith and Miss Erel Friedel visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Boulton and Marie Thanksgiving in New York. Mrs. Marie Thomas of 48 Maple Brickling Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Banks. Dr. Geo. Thompson of 48 Charles St. writing Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Banks. Dr. Thompson is a Howard man. Mrs. Thompson is a Greenwich woman with xiph.
HARTFORD CONN
NORWICH CONN.
Mrs. C. C. Tounsel and Mrs. Robert C. C. Tounsel, both from winter in Orlando, Fla. W. M. Geary, S. Cedar St. was a recent visitor in a frame house on Bowell Ave. is near the Bassett School by the Missionary society of the A. M. Zion church was a great success. Johnson, Jr. of Yale college is at his Johnson, Jr. of Yale college is at his holidays. Sachem St. for the Christmas holidays.
Rev. A. C. Crosby, Meseames Fannle E. Clark, Charley Early and others attended the annual conference at Austin recently. Prof. O. L. Wife, Beissle A. F. Price, Mesdames L. L. Leonard, I. B. Moore, S. J. Thomas and others attended the teachers state meeting at Fort Worth recently. Prof. D. E. Williams of Waco, assistant manager of the Mississippi Insurance Co., was in the city recently on business. Mrs. Reslie Hicksberry was called to Palestine recently to the bedside of grandfather, Mrs. Lula Umphreys of Houston is visiting her sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. George Williams, Henry Thomas and Miss Bannle Wilson were quietly married last Sunday evening at the groom's residence. The Rev. M. L. Covington performed the ceremony. Miss Mattle Dickey of Waco is in the city visiting her brother and family, Dr. J. L. Dickey, The Rev. T. H. Merchant of Longview, a Christian evangelist. was in the city last week and preached at the Murphy St. Christian church.
EL PASO, TEXAS
The Rev. G. W. Taylor, supply pastor of the Second Baptist church, left for Dallas Tuesday on business to be gone about eight or ten days. Dave Gill, a wealthy rancher of the lower valley, left Sunday night for Fort Worth with several carloads of cattle. Mr. Gill has the show place of the lower valley, being situated ten miles from the railing and a beautiful ranch house. He has a beautiful ranch house with all modern conveniences and is planning on putting in a refrigerating plant and cotton oil mill in the spring. Mr. Gill is the only big rancher in either the upper or lower valley who does not pay the U. S. government for water, having built a large ditch and bought an unpumped, unpumped, at a total cost approximately $100,000. Mr. Gill is the first to have his water direct from the river. Mrs. L. A. Garrett is recovering from a brief spell of sickness. F. A. Hill, the district grand deputy of K. of P. is the proud father of a bouncing baby boy. Mrs. J. H. Clayton has returned from an extended visit to Los Angeles, Calif. Mr. J. H. Clayton is a万老汇Gov. and is visiting relatives in Kansas City. Miss Vashi Jones expects to spend the Christmas holidays with her mother in Shreveport. She will also spend a few days in Marshall, Texas, visiting former classmates of hers while she attended Wiley university. The N. A. A. C. F. held an open forum mass meeting on Sunday evening for the Shiloh Baptist church. Jullus Johnson, Mrs. Zephyr Smallwood,
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PAGE SEVEN—PART TWO
A Baby In Your Home
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FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE GIVES PROMPT RELIEF FOR PERSISTENT COUGHS
A Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year from Detroit, Mich.
The ADVERTISERS on This Page Extend to YOU A Merry Christmas and Good Wishes for the Coming Year
PAGE'EIGHT—PART TWO
SHAN
WORLD'S
T A I
545 GRAT
Chas. C. Diggs
Funeral
Director
Extends to you his sincere good wishes for a
Merry
Christmas
and
Happy
New Year
A Merry C
SHANK
WORLD'S GREATEST
TAILOR
545 GRATIOT AVENUE
Ask any Detroiter about Our Service
1391 MULLET . CADILLAC 5549
---
To My Colored Folk Friends of Detroit
After eight years in this one location, I am anxious to do more business with you. If in need of a Diamond, Watch, Ring, Scarf Pin, Bar Pin, or any other article of jewelry, just ask your fellow man or woman and they will tell you Wright never misrepresents anything. If not as represented or sold for, your money is here for the asking. We buy and sell antique jewelry of all descriptions. I want your trade and will do anything in my power to treat you right. My past reputation and square dealing ought to count for much. Thanking you one and all for past favors, hoping to merit a continuation of the same. I am yours with best wishes for a Cheerful Christmas and a Happy New Year.
The Wright Jewelry and Luggage Shop 553 Gratiot Avenue, Detroit, Mich.
The HOTEL TANZY
2472-2478 St. Antoine St.
Telephone
2472-2478 St. Antoine St. Detroit, Michigan Telephone Clifford 0737-R
This hostelry was established in 1913. It is the first owned and managed by a member of our group. Hence the far-seeing eye of Benjamin W. Tanzy, the proprietor hereof, is now looking forward to a chain of Modern Apartment Hotels, which project is now being launched.
"WATCH US GROW"
"WATCH US GROW"
Wishing You a Merry Xmas and Many Happy Returns for the New Year
B. W. TANZY, Prop. SA
MELROSE
TEA ROOM
B. W. TANZY, Prop. SARAH J. GOODEN, Matron de Charge
MELROSE
TEA ROOM
1905 BRUSH ST.
OPEN 8 A. M. TO 1 P. M.
CHERRY 7848
Give that
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DETROIT'S MOST FASHIONABLE DINING ROOM
RESERVE TABLES
EARLY FOR SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS DINNER
A Merri
The AD A Merry Chris
---
A.
WE HAVE THE KIND HE WILL LIKE
Bell Tailoring Co.
1238 Randolph Street
Corner Randolph and Macomb
Open Nights
The tremendous increase in our Detroit and Michigan circulations within the outgoing year shows that the progressive and thinking public recognizes in this publication the one and only reliable source of information on matters of racial interest. Wide-awake advertisers know what this means and are taking full advantage of the situation.—H. D. Garnett, Detroit representative and correspondent.
THE PALMS
Detroit's most cosmopolitan spot
Special Holiday Entertainment
See the Palm, Revue
Assisted by Bart Howard's Syncopators
We also wish to announce that in connection with our cabaret we have opened to our many patrons a
unexcelled in choice of foods with service and cuisine first class. Make your reservations now for our special Christmas dinner.
Dining and Dancing
On the A's—Adams and Antoine
Open 4 P. M. to 4 A. M.
F. Willard Laey, Mgr.
In a large measure, depends upon:
A. Exercise of constant vigilance; and
B. Enduring service on the part of the house.
C. The ability of patrons to appreciate uniformity; and
D. The ability of patrons to distinguish between Quality and Price.
THE NEW DRUG STORE
Cherry 2992 Lincoln 3845
SYNONYM
Heiskell-Insurance
Representing
National Benefit Life
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Salary, Income Insurance Fire Insurance
536 Gratiot Avenue Detroit, Michigan
X-Ray Examinations
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Cherry 3345 Office Hours 9 to 7 Sundays by Appointment
Wm. H. Lawson
Coal and Coke
700 Catherine Street
Main 2514. Detroit, Mich.
VERTISERS on T mas and Good
The Stability of a Business
Yes, Quality the Highest, at Fair Prices—Try Us!
614 GRATIOT AVENUE
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
DISEASES of the CHEST
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614 Columbia St., corner St. Antoine
Cherry 3220
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Office: 588 Gratiot Ave., Second Floor
Rea: 6826 Firwood Ave, Garfield 4422-J
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
and A Detroit
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and A B
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A REAL DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED BY EXPERTS POLITE, SNAPPY SERVICE OPEN ALL NIGHT
GOREY COR. GRATIOT AND ANTOINE DETROIT, MICH.
The Royal Gardens Cafe Gratiot Avenue and St. Antoine Street
Special Christmas Program and Holiday Novelties Entertainment by Benbow's Musical Revue and the Seven Syncopators of Jazz
Something New Every Night
Make your reservations now for Christmas and New Year Eve. "Our orchestra does not play for records" and "Our dinners are not famous," but "Better come up and see for yourself" O. W. HARVEY, Prop.
The Liberty Tailoring Co.
W. T. HARDY
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Suits Made to Order
CLEANING, PRESSING, REPAIRING and DYEING
Detroit, Michigan
Work Called For and Delivered
2001 St. Antolne Street
DETROIT, MICH.
AL
ave It!
DROELLE'S
CUT RATE
DRUG STORE
DROELLE'S
CUT RATE
DRUG STORE
901 Gratiot Avenue
Corner Hastings Street
Phone Cherry 0570
Owned and Managed by REGISTERED PHARMACISTS
Prine Street
Detroit, Mich.
AL
PRESCRIB
OUR SPE
Same Location for O
on This P
ood Wit
PRESCRIPTIONS
OUR SPECIALTY
Same Location for Over Thirty Years
The Superior Beverage Co. Manufacturers
High Grade Soft Drinks and Soda Fountain Supplies
643 Russell Street Cadillac 5534
EAGLE CARTAGE
610 MONTCALM
AT ANTOINE
CADILLAC 1894
WE MOVE
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Furniture, Pianos, Commercial and Household Goods. Moving and Expressing. Large Van by Load or Hour. Storage, Crating, Packing, Shipping.
ESTIMATES FREE
A. L. GREENFIELD, MGR.
Extend
for th
New Year
THE QUESTION IS
Why should you learn the plastering or bricklaying trade?
THE ANSWER IS
1. Because these mechanics earn from $1.35 to $2.25 per hour.
2. Because you are paid while learning.
3. Because employers make very little, if any, color discrimination when hiring you.
MUSIC! MUSIC! MUSIC!
A CHRISTMAS WITHOUT MUSIC IS LIKE
A WEDDING CAKE WITHOUT SUGAR
We Extend the Season's Greetings to Our Many Customers Throughout the United States and Canada
We carry a complete line of the latest RECORDS and PLAYER ROLLS
LLOYD M. SHACKELFORD, Prop.
Phone Main 7792 1529 Hastings Street
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
HOLIDAY SHOPPING
AT THE
HOLIDAY SHOPPING AT THE Big Drug Store of the East Side Saves You Money
Best Wishes to All CALLAN DRUG CO.
CALLAN DRUG CO.
Wm. Kane, Pres. Wm. M. Moynihan, Sec.-Treas.
CORNER RANDOLPH AND MACOMB STREETS
ELITE CLUB
577 Gratiot Avenue
DETROIT.
577 Gratiot Avenue Phone Cherry 1887
DETROIT. MICHIGAN
Where you can meet all your old
friends and make lots of new ones
When at Leisure Stop By
---
Dave, Jones, Pres.; Tom Burr, Sea.; Horace Milner, Treas.; Tom Hammond, alias "Rooster," Mgr.
Hotel
Biltmore
O. H. BANKS, Prop.
Limited Accommodations
Cafe in Connection
Hotel Biltmore
O. H. BANKS, Prop.
Limited Accommodations
Cafe in Connection
AFTER THE SHOW
Special Christmas Dinner
WILL BE PREPARED
By our new chef who can cook anything—any style.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1970
Year
We teach a complete course in auto repairing. You can open a shop with very little money and earn $60 to $200 weekly.
Office open 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.
Write or phone for full particulars
Standard Trade Schools
414-416 Woodward Avenue
Phone Main 1976
SHOPPING
---
RUG CO.
Phone Cherry 1887
ICHIGAN
---
Special
Christmas
Dinner
WILL BE PREPARED
By our new chef who can
cook anything—any style.
---
MICHIGAN
We Sell Everything, at Cut-Rate Prices
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED
BY EXPERIENCED COLORED PHARMACISTS
ORLIN'S DRUG STORE
724 Gratify Avenue, corner of Hastings Street. Cherry 7312
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
DETROIT NEWS
By HENRY D. SMITH
637 E. Adams Ave.
Rhona Cherry 2740
Entertained
St. Paul A. M. E. Zion; Last Sunday, March 16, 2014. The Rev. F. Mack spoke from the subject, "The Checking of Power." We prescheduled a wonderful sermon to a large congregation, message Mrs. H. P. F. Plack sang very impressively the solo. It was a wonderful sermon, the school has services promptly at $2.00 and everyone as it meant to me," was the comment of a number who attended last Sunday morning on. The Last Trumpet last call would be made soon or later. The Women's club rave a Christmas through its president, Mrs. L. Smithers, a big time of real service for the Christmas season. Women, remember, the school. You are welcome to our service. A big time of real service for the Christmas season. Women, remember, the school. You are welcome to our service. The Rev. F. H. Howard, pastor, prescheduled a wonderful sermon last ladies of the finance committee of St. Stephen's Church on the week and fine attend-
Slater-Morris
A quiet wedding took place at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. James Morrison, a dedicated tracive daughter, Lillian, was married to John C. Sister, 500 Woodward Avenue, New York, NY. The young couple will be at home to friends after Dee, 17 at 5200 Woodward
Sima-Bibbins
One of the most delightful affairs of
Simeon is that Stine to Ruth Bibbins on Tuesday, Dec.
4, at the home of her parents, $841
workers in the church. The Rev.
LaChce predeated at the piano and Miss
Everice O. Hawkins acted as registrar.
The rev. predeated a funeral and useful
funeral and useful gifts. After the re-
verence and useful gifts, Cleveland, Ohio,
for their honeymoon.
Hotel Arrivals
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH
PONTIAC MICH
LANSING MICH.
The Rev. R. L. Friday, D. D., of Detroit, preached Tuesday evening at the A. Church of Detroit will speak at the A. Church of Chicago. Copeland Alfam of amanazo are in the city for the extra Greek is visiting her brother, Mr. Dangy. Mrs. Florence Porter, who visited the for the week-end, has returned to Chicago. Mrs. Dangy is generalized by Mrs. Parthenia Harte of the Central apartments Friday St. Dec. 27. The U. & J. Artist home of Mrs. Mary Cook Thursday St. Dec. 27. Mrs. Mary Cook Thursday St. W. R. Roberts, 2125 W. Alma Craig, 2125 S. Sycamore St. Dec. 27. The U. & J. Artist home of Mrs. Mary Cook Thursday St. W. R. Roberts, 2125 W. Alma Craig, 2125 S. Sycamore St. William Dyer Piscifex, 1115 S. St. Mrs. Rosa Jackson, 1000 Hillside St. Mrs. Rosa Jackson, 1000 Hillside St. Lucas home here Christmas day at 2:20 p. m.
BATTLE CREEK, MICH.
dinner at diner for Mrs. Delaigh of Schlob
cago, Mrs. M. Bedford, Gilbert Boland,
Mrs. M. Bedford, Mrs. Pearl Boland,
Sam Webster was confined to his home for a few days. Mrs. Pearl
was confined to her home on Wednesday, Dec. 16, at the santarlam. Her mother is in the city of Chicago. Beason recovers, Mrs. Della Seballot
Beason recovers, Mrs. Della Seballot
Mr. S. Bedford, and friends, Mrs. Elizabeth Bedford, formerly of Chicago, Mrs. Elizabeth Bedford, formerly of Chicago, pleasant visit in Chicago with friends, Mrs. Elizabeth Bedford, formerly of Chicago, Alma Grayton attended the concert in Grand Rapids at which Roland Hayes spent the week-end in Detroit with friends in Chicago, Mrs. Beaul Smith is at Nicholas hospital for another opioid bedside, Mrs. Edessia Toler will spend the week-end in Chicago, Mrs. William Burrell, Little Alice Long is confined to the K. of P. hall recently.
BENTON HARBOR, MICH.
FLINT MICH
MINNESOTA
DULUTH, MINN
OKLAHOMA
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Mrs. W. M. Turtle and Mrs. Famille W. M. Turtle and Geraldine Hammet, a former Napapal society mister was married in Garland, Ga., and died in the Prisco yards. Dr. E. E. Hammet, a former hemorrhage caused by a bullet wound. Roy Anderson was called to help the mother, who has been on the slick Jack. Baptist church was organized Sunday.
BARTLESVILLE, OKLA.
CUTHBIE OKLA
Mrs. Affera Klimbrough and children, who have been visiting her home, met Mrs. Battie Klimbrough and their home in Chicago. They were the guests of Mrs. Ruth Stanton for dinner. Mrs. Battie Klimbrough has been visiting in Chicago, has returned home, has arrived late. Mrs. Battie Klimbrough and the guests of the Miss Warfield Sunday, Miss Amy Klimbrough, spending time with her aunt, spending tends school in Hopkinsville. Miss Beatrice Carter is visiting relatives in
MONTANA
Rev. and Mrs. Myers with the Flak Jubilee nurses appeared acceptably in evening. Rev. A. Wayman Ward, presiding elder of the Colorado conference, was present the day. While here the reverend was enlisted in L. J. Tankerclay, Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Starkey, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Sommers and Mrs. J. L. Tankerclay, Memorial services were presented by a president of the National Federation of Colored Women's clubs, were church under auspices of the Phyllis Wheatey club, Mrs. Edith Greenway, entertained at a four-course dinner request and Mrs. J. L. Tankerclay and Mrs. J. Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. James Yates and Jar. Ibry were the proud parents of a sen. John Jr. born Dec. 5. Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
MISSOURI
MOBERLY MO.
ST JOSEPH MO
The Rev. Mr. Phillips, pastor of Grant A. M. e. church, will presach at Mrs. Caroline Maxfield, for years a resident of this city. Mr. Phillips will spend the last Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Browning parsonage recently, Mrs. James Davis has been quite ill at her home, S. here from Leavenworth, the guest of her brother, George A. Burton and son, Robert A. Burton, to the Charity club and friends last week and Mrs. L. E. Feery, Mrs. Myles Flord taught the pupils of O. E. Bonewood a convention in St. Louis, Ms. Branston, a teacher in Lincoln school, waned two years, and Mrs. Myles Williams taught her pupils, that Sunday, celebrating his 54 anniversary in business, Mrs. H. L. Stone, who will make his home with Mr. and Mrs. Walker, G. K. Kearney, his brother, Lawyer J. H. Kelley, his brother, Lawyer J. H. Kelley, complimentary to Mrs. Greena uncle, C. S. L. Baker, Investor, who will spend the winter with his daughter, Mrs. Daniel, Comney left for Kansas City last Saturday to be gone indefinitely to the city.
Aunt Rhode Thomas, who had been home for 60 days, home for 80 minutes, home for 80 minutes, officiated. Mrs. Don Cannell of Oklahomia parents, has returned home. G. Green, who has been returned home. Those having news for the Leftovers home. Those having news for the Leftovers home. Send it.
LEAVENWORTH, KAN.
FORT SCOTT KAN
Mrs. Jaithe Coats is improving rap-
tion skills. She is a very poor pro-
spective. Mrs. Rosin Cook is able to be
a good teacher. Mrs. Whitler is
on the slack list. Mrs. Whitler is
on the slack list. Mrs. Whitler is
EMBORIA KANS
The Rev. and Mrs. R. S. Everett and Mrs. Phillip motorized the historic Art club was entertained by Mrs. James Gardenier, guest of the club. Mrs. Artelle Harrison left for the winter to spend the winter. Mrs. Welcher and Mrs. Moore were on the Legend Smith is on the sick list. The choir is excellent program last Sunday evening.
HIAWATHA, KAN.
The Rev. E. C. W. Williams preached he
the Baptist church recently to a large
Baptist church in the city, and a
union. He left for Omaha, where he
will preach for the Rev. Mr. Kanada,
now comfortably settled in the parson-
ship of the A. M. E. church, is certainly a
MEXICO NO
PAOLA, KAN.
George Moss and lady friend from
Miami to walk to Chicago to attend the week end.
He went to Fannie J. Tucker entertained with
Fannie J. Tucker with W. Jackson
Shannon S. Thursday evening.
CARE GIRARDEAH MO
GIRAISHAM, MD.
The Rev. R. B. Barkhall, pastor of the Free Baptist church of this city, was a longtime night. The Rev. R. F. Williams of the Missionary Baptist church and the Rev. R. Winn of the church with his members have dealt a willing hand. Mack Primm came home to Winn. He shepherd and Sam Lane are firmly in the grasp of affliction. The faith while confined to his bed was the faith while confined to his bed. Manha Winnest had suffered much as the result of dropping a stove door on Rev. R. F. Williams, and Miss Skelton at breakfast.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
ST. LOUIS MO.
The Ushers alliance was guests on the tour of E. B. Stockton, president, Attorney Bell of Leavantworth, Kan., was in the city of Pendleton Ave. have moved into their home Mine, Mrs. Oberebe, a dramatic reader of much repute, was in the city of St. James A. M. E. church, addressed a church Thursday evening at their regular meeting at the home of Mrs. C. Williams was also present. Hostesses Mrs. Walker, Mine, R. E. C. Douglass of Vifu college opened a church and Mounts, and before returning to Cairo and Mounts, and before returning to Ark. Therion Blues of New York spent Sunday with the family. Mr. McBride of Cole Brilliant Ave. was given a week by his wife, Mrs. Florence McBride, Mrs. Annie McBride, Mrs. Anne McBride, the holidays in San Antonio, Tex., her home after an absence of several weeks.
CANTON, MO.
Miss Erna Johnson of Montclousteon Wednesday, Jodie Range of Canton, who has been working in Canton, who has been better able by a falling brick, but is better and able by a Quincy visit Saturday, Mrs. Erie Johnson and daughter of LaGrange Mrs. Annie Range is on the clist list.
TOREKA, KAN
HORTON KAN
ROCATELLO, IDAHO
Sunday night marked the close of a 60-day rally at the Allen A. M. F. raised. This is not the final report. This is not the final report. Rev. J. B. Coleman, pastor, was highly pleased at the success of the entertained with a dinner party honor-giving and Mrs. Luther Davis and daughter and Mrs. Charles Albert, Mrs. Gadie dinner at which covers were placed for the dinner at which covers were placed for Bertha Sampson, Mt. Elizabeth Har
CANTON NO.
IDAHO
grove, G. W. Washington and Harry Gilgove. A beautiful dinner was given to his sister, M. Helen Bradley and Mrs. Gilgove. M. Helen Bradley and Mrs. Gilgove group of young girls was delightfully entertained with a candy party Saturday, Jennie M. Boyd. Fred Feldson is in Eva Shelson. Jan. 3 Mrs. Caldine Nayle will present. The Passing of Boyd to Progressive Club. Mrs. Al Robertson Leon. Edwards was hosting Thursday afternoon to the Semper Fidelis Club. Mrs. Al Robertson Leon. Edwards was hosting Thursday afternoon to the Semper Fidelis Club. Mrs. Al Robertson Leon. Edwards has returned from a visit to his sister, has returned from a visit to his mother, Mrs. Boplem R. Richardson after two years in her home in Salisbury Lake, U.K.
NAMPA, IDAHO
Phone 549-R for the Chicago De-
cade team. The team has attained
at cards Sunday evening. The
team has members from the
society and others with Stearns' Uncle
Tom Cobb company. The "Twentieth
Century club" met in a meeting of
the season with Mr. and
Mrs. Stearns, the officers were elected to serve the re-
serving members of the Twentieth
Century club.
NORTH CAROLINA
Leon B. Poe, professor of sciences at the University of North Carolina city for Knoxville, Tenn., on Dec. 13. The high school will preserve the教室 for representing Christmas in the Y. M. L. Miss Blackhawk will have charge on the former secretary of the Y. N. C. Holdt St. Miss Freddie McWilliam will preserve the illness in her home on Chincheng Ave.
GASTONIA, N. C.
Charles Sackell Morris, Jr., prominent orator from Norfolk, was a poet at the large audience. The Star Fides club of the church held a concert at the home of Mrs. and Mrs. W. M. Pharr. Among those guests were Mrs. Chalk, Mrs. Foster, Mrs. Claton, Mrs. R. G. Morris, the Rev. R. G. Morrison, the Rev. N. N. Armstrong, Leon Adams, Tom Means, Ervinle Poate, James C. Adams, and Thomas E. Poate, and Thomas E. Poate, Beulah G. Poate, a widely known musician, who is in the city last week visiting her sons, Ervinle Poate, Alexan Avery, and Thomas E. Poate, Beulah G. Poate, was in the city last week visiting his sister, Ervinle Poate, Alexan Avery has been out of town, visiting his sick mother in Morganton, N. C. Morris, who is in the city visiting his mother. Miss Cleo Ferris, a schoolteacher, was in the city visiting her parents. Mrs. and Mrs. Ferris.
GALLIBOLIS, OHIO
XENIA, OHIO
BELLAIRE OHIO
GREENFIELD, OHIO
Mrs. Ruth Cotman journeyed to the University of Texas to attend the Stewart Jr. Jr. Mrs Mary Louise Coleman will not be able to complete her report will not be able to complete her report is reported on the slack list.
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PAGE NINE—PART TWO
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PENNSYLVANIA
KENTUCKY
PAGE TEN—PART TWO
---
PHILADELPHIA NEWS
By J. H. GRAY
1017 Lombard St.
Phone. Walnut 5111
MILLERSBURG, KY.
The Rev. T. Is Everett of Llhringh has accepted the church's invitation to serve in the great pulpit orator as well as a church graduate themselves, upon securing such an abstraction, and Sunday was quarterly meeting at the Methodist church, McGee of Covington, preached both Sunday and Wednesday, and Bodd of the Baptist church preached an aelson sermon in the afternoon. Saxen filled for the ensuing year Friday morning at Green, vice princes; Martha Taylor, secretary; J. Sue J.urnell, presbyter; assisrser; Laura Lawson and Jennie Allen of Carlisle was a visitor in the city. Mrs. James Allon Wason has returned to Louisville after spending several days at Carlisle, returned home last week from a visit at Xenia, Quite Sue, vice princes; Laura Lawson in Indiana after spending several days with Huntington, W.Va. after several days with his preacher, the Inspector for the National Benefit Life insurance
The members of the Christian church are invited to attend the church tree at the Odd Fellows auditorium on Tuesday evening. The church will have their Christmas tree festivals at the church cremation will entertain the public and members of the city school gave a day evening. Mrs. H. M. Derrickson, the city school day guest, gave her parents, Mrs. Sadie and her children.
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See your druggist for a package today—tell him you want *Muglarian Herb Tea* compound in the red and yellow bottles with similarities. In your druggist cannot supply you. I will, send you my large box post-paid, for $19.99. Non Schlichte products. Marvel Products, Pa. Dept. 6, Marvel Buildings, Pittsburgh.
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Mr. and Mrs. Gentens of Deary St. entertained Monday evening at whistle-blowing Bethel A. M. E. church, has returned to the city after visiting several and many West. Charles Fillette, well-known fraternity member, has returned home. 226 Wylie. The young people of Bethel A. M. E. church are repleased with the presents of Christmas eve. Mrs. Wilcox, 3447 Ward St. is able to be out and about to observe the absence of the teeth. The sacred concern presented by Bethel A. M. E. church was a great success. Lois Depper's evening, Mrs C. A. Carrington and Mrs. Ottawa Douglas of Cleveland are returned to the city after appearing at Frank Chase has returned to the city. Frank Chase has returned to the city. Louise Crabble died Saturday at her home 45 Roberts St. Funeral services were held on Friday the slick list are Joe Butler, Sam Jones, Scott Taper and John Valen. Leave Bethel A. M. E. Defender at Kendall 2128 Wylie.
Rogers of Carlsbad has purchased on
Jerry Williams property on 11th and
12th Avenue, where burg people attend the funeral of Kelth Edwards at Paris, Ky, or
Boston.
MIDWAY, KY.
LEXINGTON KY
COVINGTON, KY.
The Rev. F. C. Lecoutt and J. K. McCarthy, the Rev. James McCarthy, the interracial conference at Louville Ky. recently, Little Ions Bishop was buried in Burmese but was burned in the Ninth Street church. The church was affiliated with several Interfaith organizations with the city of the moms. Mrs. H. R. Merry entertained with an elaborate breakfast and dinner with Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor is able to be our guest. Mrs. Edith Hardin is convalescing at the Mies Edith Hardin Center. Mrs. Edith Hardin is assigned at the Mies Edith Hardin Center.
William Grant high school after a brief turnout from the interacial conference which was held at Lovellshire, Ky. Miss home on E. Ninth St. Two unmasked men attended the conference last Sunday and forced Matthew Carroll and Earl Davis, the clerks, against register of its contents. Not being a good watch from Garrett, "A lired Davy" wedding was held at St. James Church, where most unique, wedding ever given in the most beautiful country, much credit for her ability to originate such idea. James Buckett and Clinton First Baptist Sunday school will hold a special service at the William Grant large church. The Covington Rotary club is giving a fundraiser at the William Grant annex on Dec. 21.
CYNTHIANA, KY.
Forest Johnson of Sturgs, Michele, is the guest of his mother, Mrs. Eliza Cottin. Mrs. Mary Williams was the host of Wednesday afternoon. The Ladies Aid Wednesday afternoon. The Ladies Aid Wednesday afternoon. Day, Dec. 16. The Sunday school of Christmas tree Monday night. Dec. 24. Christmas tree Monday night. Dec. 24. booklets are usual. Misses Etheline Ginnie and Eden Coleman will arrive from the Christmas holidays. Miss Amanda Crawford are sleek. Mrs. Marge Mugley crises are sleek. Mrs. Marge Mugley crises are sleek. Polk at funeral of Polk, Polk at Cincinnati funeral of Polk was formerly Miss Merritt Bray.
MADISONVILLE KY
MIDDLESBORO, KY
FULTON, KY.
OWINGSVILLE KY.
Walker Ramsey of Ashland, Ky., and his wife, Jennifer, were assistants. Anderson Basel was in Ms. Sterling Ky., last Tuesday on business, and attended her home in Ashland, Ky., after a visit to her son, George Coleman, Mrs. George Coleman. Among those who attended the funeral of Joe Jacker, Ms. Evaline Warner, Emma Jenkins, and others were: Mrs. Evaline Warner, Emma Jenkins, and Mrs. George Coleman, Warmer, Mrs. George Coleman of Moorhead, city willing retiring. John Santfiora has returned to his home in Moorehead, Ky., where he lives with his sister, Mrs. Laura Wright. The Jolly club has given Christmas dance events.
PADUGAH, KY.
WEST VIRGINIA
POINT PLEASANT YA
WEIRTON: W. VA
Mrs. Cherry, Hurt of New Brockton, Ahi, is送留 with Mr. and Mrs. Dowell spent Thanksgiving in Pittsburgh with her brother, Will King, Ardine level, both recently. The Rev. E. L. Williams, pastor of the Morning Star Baptist church, presided over the meeting of Mrs. Otho Saunders is organist. The B. Y. P. U. was also organized and held a meeting of Edith Corbett is visiting her sister, Mrs. Fred Lacy, in Belfast, Ohio, Mrs. suffering from a broken blood vessel.
FAIRMONT W. VA.
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COLLINSVILLE, ALA.
BROOKSIDE, ALA.
GADSDEN. ALA.
M. H. M. Brazeelon and Mrs. Valentine of Chattanooga, Tenn., were the guests of Mrs. Annie Broom, Mrs. Amie Arnold, Washington and little piece Dorothy Coffey, W. G. Harris, formerly of Selma, is now present here. Mrs. Kate Keeling departed this life recently. She leaves a husband, Mrs. Hester Connor the daughter of other relatives and friends to mourn her loss. Mrs. Hester Connor the daughter of other relatives and friends to mourn her recent at her home in Tuscaloosa Avenue.
ENSLY, ALA.
Fred, H. M. Brazeelon of the city Wednesday attending the funeral of the Hon. C. N. McDaniel, grand sister of Mrs. Hester Connor, J. P. Boothe of 32th St. Fairfield,Indiana carrying her arm in two places. Mrs. Viole Fole of Uniontown, Aha, has come to her brother, W. Travis, Mrs. Lella carried to her home in Smith Station.
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Aln., to be buried. Mrs. Beaulie Russo, to be accompanied the businesswoman Mrs. Amanda Watson of 37th St. Fairview, to be dressed in afternoon wear and was married to Mishaw preached a very interesting Mishaw preached a very interesting M. C. M. church last Sunday. Ben Procter is recovering from a stroke. Mr. Finch, presiding order of Mobilie, has been assigned to the Metropolitan church of Unitown preached at Morning Star church at Unitown evening. The Rev G. W. Jackson was the dinner guest at Battle Baldwin and her daughter, Lena Dunn, were in town on business. The Rev of the Tallahassee district preached at the Metropolitan C. M. E. church on
ARKANSAS STAMPS. ARK.
Mrs. Lula. Anity is on the sick list. Mrs. Thelma Lee, who has been sick, is on the sick list. Rosie Mac Muir of Minden, La. was recent guest of Mrs. Eoh. Bohn was recent guest of Mrs. Eoh. Bohn was recent visitors in Oklahoma, has recurred been sick, is now able to be up. Mrs. Easten Burton, a pioneer citizen of Oklahoma, who has been visiting his wife in Strong, Ark. has returned to the city. Daisy B. Carroll were guests of Miss Vlahia Thompson recently at Lewis University. She was visiting his uncle, Lula. Sweett, and friends.
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MARY
MRS. E. G. FULTON
wedding of Joahan Williams and Mia
Blackwell High school, will take place
sunday at the residence of Mr. and
Mia Blackwell High school and also of the
Blackwell High school and of the
cently, Charlson Thompson left for St.
Holden, will spend the holiday with relatives.
NEWPORT, ARK
W. H. Suleb left Sunday for Cotton
W. H. Suleb was called Monday to look after
the remains of Tom Roberson. Funeral on
Odin, Brinkley, arrived Wednesday to
hold the executive board meeting of
church. Rev. Dewitt, Williams, Cat-
town, Rev. Dewitt, Williams, Cat-
town, agent Wednesday here, with
the executive board. Misses G. Griffin
Tuckerman with Miss Ridley and Miss
Jacqueline Freeman with Wednesday,
W. M. Griffin, C. W. Carter left Tues-
day to visit Mr. and Mrs. Frank
W.
MORHLAN LANE
Albert Lee, of Miss Eliza Lancaster in Rock Springs, Wyo., will be the daughter to return soon from Kansas City, Kans. Red Cannon is reported to be the daughter of Lake City. Mrs Mary Steel will be to Mrs. her daughter, Mrs. J. R. Price, soon.
OGDEN, UTAH
MARY
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ILLINOIS STATE NEWS
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
BLOOMINGTON, ILL.
ROCKFORD, IL
CHAMBIAIGN J11
Luster Drake, son of Mr. and Mrs. w. M. Drake, 409 E. St.林, and w. M. Drake, 409 E. St.林, and they will make their future home Luster Drake has been living in Clevelder for the past six years. Miss Cindia Marie for the past six years at a dinner party recently.
KANKAKEE 111
HODGES PARK 111
Roy Saudernah has returned home from France, where she will serve at the M. B. church last week. She will also be in the quarterly meeting at Sandusky and the University of Michigan. Kyle of Mounts Vulcan, Mr. and Mrs.
CAIRO JUJ
The Yates Women's club gave a ben-
jamin day. The carnival given by the Sunn-
ner grades, of which Miss Lydia Amos is
the Black and daughter of Thompson Bend-
Mo. were business visitors here Mon-
roe, Leoiva O'Neal has been confined
to the club. Mrs. Leoiva O'Neal has been
given at 12th St. Baptist church under
auctions of the Sewing circle, was a
gold bracelet watch, was won by Mrs.
Leoiva O'Neal, a club of A. M. church met Monday
at the home of Mrs. Mata Wall, Poulin-
Park are here visiting their daughter,
Park are here visiting their daughter,
mery of Cairo, died in Sandyss, Ohio.
The body was brought to Mound's cemetery
cent of Elkhart, Ind. arrived a few days
also to visit Mound's mother and other
children left for Wickleford, Ky. at a meeting of
ant princesses were re-elected for another
trm. Dr. J. K. Williams, supreme
chief of the Parent-Teacher"s aspe-
day. Mrs. Edmona Watkins gave an
address. the principal, Miss Azalia
Golden, the president, Mrs. Washan-
golden, the president, Mrs. Washan-
Wade were given half a dozen eelers
epones cach. J. L. Samples has been
master of Delta City lodge of Mason.
MATTOON, ILL.
Miss Thelma Robinson of Lerna was taken on Saturday, Miss Hattle Smith has returned from Smithville, Miss, to the three months Mrs. Harry Malone, who has been very sick, has been in for dolyn Gray, who has been ill for about two months. Mrs. Harold Hartwood of Nokomis where the guest of Arthur Anderson has returned from Chicago, where he bradshad and Mrs. George Jesse. The church held a spelling bee at the church
IFRUPTURED Try This Free
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NORMAL ILL
MOUND CITY, ILL.
METROPOLIS, ILL.
J. L. Batterson was so unfortunate that he was able at work on Thursday to seriously hurt that he was hurried to the hospital in Batterson. He was taken to the Batterson went to Paducah Saturday morning to see his son, Mrs. Batterson. He was at Riveride hospital. The following teachers of Massasau county attended the Masses: Misses G. Boddy, Rosevelt Sims and O. Nance of Brookport, Mesdames N. Boddy, Misses G. Boddy, Rosevelt Sims and Miss Daisy Long. The Rev. Mr. Mines, recently elected pastor of the church, filled his pulpit here Sunday.
DUOQIN
MURPHYSBORG JLL
FREEPORT, ILL.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Glens are the proud parents of a beautiful church from a visit in Michigan City, Ind. Thomas McCoy, Iowa. Wm. Henry was called to the Michel McCoy Cunningham gave a supper for the benefit of the Wm. Henry was called to Chicago to a church as a child. Church paid the last note on the church.
JOLIET. ILL.
SPRINGFIELD JJJ
Mrs. Nancy Crippens of Metropolis,
Harmon, 1416 E. Adams St. The
New York Central Limited vietnam
church, 1416 E. Adams St. The
New York Central Limited vietnam
church, 1416 E. Adams St. The
Program rendered at Zoha Baptist
church. A large number of men were
inflated into the Knights of Lythas
QUINGY JJJ
Rev. Wilson of La Grange, Mo., visited with his family Saturday and Sunday, and church Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Hatschul home on account of sickness. Rev. G. S. Smith, pastor of Wayman, Mo., visited with seventy-eight persons took comfort in two excellent sermons. Reports showed that more than twenty people attended the quarter,苏斯 Davis is ill at the Soldiers' Hall. A large Small at the armory Tuesday evening. Small at the school for ten persons school in a basket ball game Wednesday, 13 to 11. Rev. and Mrs. Sydes were entertained at dinner by Sydes were entertained at dinner by McPike, pastor of the A. M. E. church at Palmery, Mo., visited with Mrs. Hampshire, Hampshire St., is slowly improvied. 22d S. is, ill Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Munday has as dinner guests Monday Harsbush and family and Rev. Murrell and family and visited with her mother, Mrs. R. H. Donaldson, of Louisiana, Mo. to begin revival services in January.
PONTIAC
G. M. Lowry has been on the sick list for several days. A. E. Hamilton spent several days in the city on business, Mrs. Stella Stricklin and I. E. C. Cargo on business and pleasure. Misses Harriet Stricklin and Louise Cargo with friends. The annual supper given by the members of Bethel and was a grand success. The sum of $5.25 was realized, Mrs. Cargo and was a grand success. John Harbor motorized to Dwight Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bowman and evening after spending several days in Chicago. The Hon. John Cargo and was an independent of the Illinois State reformatory, spoke at Bethel was in the city Tuesday on a business Barton spent Sunday in Bloomington. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bose returned to Bethel in the city Tuesday on a business Barton spent Sunday in Bloomington. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bose returned to Bethel in the city Tuesday on a business Barton spent Sunday in Bloomington. Master Clirence Arthurs' last days is rapidly improving. The Rev. A. A. Lowry was conduct the funeral service of the child of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Jackson, who moved away very suddenly on Saturdays.
GRAND CHAIN JLJ
**THE ROYAL A. T. TAYLOR and wife,**
*Mrs. Elisa*, have moved here from
*Maryland*, where she was educated
as pastor for the Missionary
Baptist church, Samantha Jew and
with their families have moved to this city from
Tulsa last recently; for the Memphis
infnirmary, where he will stay in an
adult residence, she is a daughter,
*Mrs. Mary M. Ransom*, accompanied him as far as Cattley,
bitten by a dog, is improving, Lee
Hooper, L. Crump of Silkeston, Mo,
and Henry Thomas, Charleston, and
now in the city, *Mrs. Vernice Moore*
of Forest View school was asked to
provide care for the southern part of the county recently. Nathan
presents Penn, was a recent visitor
in the city.
DECATUR, ILL
ROCK ISLAND ILL
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
GALESBURG, ILL.
CARBONDALE ILL
CENTRALIA 111
MOUNDS ILL.
LOVE JOY JLL
their Christmas programs, which are to surpass previous programs. Pryalle教室位于St. Louis En-Suite Sunday, Llega Langford, En Suite Louis, visited friends here recently.
MONMOUTH ILL
PULASKI: ILL
After several months of illness, Fred was hospitalized for a broken leg. He leaves to mourn his loss a wife, two children, one sister and a host of friends. He continues ill. J. D. Barker and Long continue ill. Mrs. Ann Martin has arrived to pick a sick list. Mrs. Ann Martin has arrived who has been for several months.
Mrs. O. B. Hines, 565 Madison St. has returned home after visiting in a successful operation. J. G. Gray went a successful operation. J. G. Gray and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. White Anderson of 515 Planters St. Miss Ruth Anderson of 515 Planters St. in the city with her mother and father, Mrs. J. Chelsea of Jersey City was called to the reception by the illness of her brother, J. H. Watson and in Barnesville, the guest of Mrs. Potter's brother, W. H. Hipkins. She days in the city recently, Miss Jante Dickens was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Potter. Mrs. Dickens was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Potter. Mrs. Austin of Atlanta is in the city. Mrs. Austin of Monroe St. is visiting in Cuba, Texas.
PELHAM. GA.
The Rev. A. R. Rafford, pastor, desi-
tors Hill Baptist church Sunday. Mrs.
Baldassari Davis, maid, returns to
children. Da Evans is home again
children. Da Evans is home again
Warren left, recently for Pittsburgh,
will stay for a while with
husband.
MARIETTA, GA.
Mae. Nellie Easy wans hostes to 20
children, December 12, at her evening,
December. Dec. 12, at her home on Lake
St. In honor of Little Ruth Alexander's
garet Morris cut the pretty birthday
dress. Morris will be home for the Christmas holiday,
Williams, inez Williams, Elos Morris,
Preston Williams and Inez Williams,
Robinson Williams and Inez Williams,
Catherine Robinson and Oss
Knoxville, Teen., and Catherine Ragius,
Spelman seminary, Atlanta, Ga.
DAWSON GA.
Charlie Booker and wife of Montana
Rev. F. M. Johnson is at home
and Texas, and F. M. Johnson is at
Texas with his brother, Bishop
Hugh Booker, and several days out of the city on loneliness. Dock Jones and family, left last
home. Miss Sister Reickel and Mrs.
J. Rev. A. E. Clark is out on nain
spent last Sunday in Lamptholm, Ga.
CHEYENNE, WYO
ROCK SPRINGS, WYO
Mr. and Mrs. W. Shaw and Mr. and Mrs. W. Davis of Superior were in the room of Dines were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. McCants on Monday, Mrs. J. N. Morrison on Wednesday, the engagement shopping Wednesday. The engagement shopping Green River has been announced. Thomas Saunders and Edgar Rendolph Sr. is steadily improving. Mrs. J. Madison and mother have arrived former's husband, who is employed in the room of a guest at the home of Mrs. L. Collins. Mrs. Charles Shields and sister, Mrs. Charles Shields and sister, the former's husband is returned from Bowdler, Colo., where he was born. The Rendolph Sr. returned from Bowdler, Colo., where he was born. The ladies of Dines gave a kitchen shower for Miss Bernice Lancaster, who has been quite ill for several days.
NEW MEXICO
BATON N. MEX
WAVEBLY VA
Stephen Williams is suffering with an injured leg which he received at Ebola treatment. Ebola Jackson is quite ill. "Mrs. Bentrice proving. Mr. Morley Haskins was a visitor in the names of Mrs. Amos last Thursday afternoon. The services last Thursday afternoon. The services attended on the second Sunday. The pastor, the minister, attended a splendid sermon. The Sunday school of the above named church exercises on Dec. 28, Christmas day.
GEORGIA
ALBANY, GA
WYOMING
VIRGINIA
A Woman's Message to Women:
Only a Woman Knows a Woman's Trials and Understands Her Need for Sympathy and Sympathy. That is why hundreds of women gladly testify to the value of Mr. Summer's popular "Popular Women" book, and suffering only known to wormandin. REACTION, if you are troubled with some of these issues, women—SEND FOR A FREE TEN DAYS' TREATMENT
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OSKALOOSA, IOWA
MUSCATINE, IOWA
The Bethel A. M. E. church held a congregation in the morning to a large congregation and evening program was in the Feast in the Willemess "was given by the church. It was a success. Those sick Mr. Jackson, Mrs. Thompson was out. Mr. Jackson, Mrs. Thompson was out. Mr. Jackson, Mrs. Thompson was out. Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Black of Washington, Iowa, are stopping with the Jones of Pine Wood was in the city for the doors Thursday. He let for Burlington.
CEDAR RAPIDS IOWA
AMCEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA
cleddies elsewhere are Mrs. Nina Miller
holidays elsewhere are Mrs. Nina Miller
Iowa, to visit her mother and sisters,
and Miss Nettle Hurst to Kickapoo,
and Miss Nettle Hurst to Kickapoo,
and Esterville isuest of Mrs. Andy Grey
of Fairfield is visiting at the home of
mrs. Bakee G. Baker, Mrs. Minne
Watkee G. Baker, Mrs. Minne
Watkee and F. H. Gresham are sack
turner visited Mr. Turner and Mrs.
Turner visited Mr. Turner and Mrs.
Turner isimproving Geo. Neal was a visitor there the first of the week. Mrs.
Turner her foot last week. Phone 5344-11
and Mrs. Charles Groff entertained at
dinner Sunday in honor of Mrs. Groff
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Milliam, Mr. and
Mrs. D. Alken.
FORT MADISON, IOWA
The box social given at the A. M. E. College of Nursing. Aldo society at Saturday night, was a grand success. Also Lewis of the college last week. The social at the city last week. The social at the club last Thursday evening was a success. The social at the Baptist Sunday schools are preparing for Christmas. The program at the Christmas eve, and the one at the Christmas night. Kenneth Higginbotham, who is generaling very sleek, Mrs. and Mr.
TRADE MARK
A
Alonzo Whittaker and daughter, Hazel of Keokuk, Iowa, were visitors in the room visited his son, Dr. William H. Harper of Keokuk on Sunday. Dr. William H. Harper on Tuesday 6 o'clock dinner on Thursday for the following: Dr. William H. Harper on the Rev. Mr. Smith, Mrs. A. L. King and Mrs. Betty Bannister, Mrs. Wnii and Mrs. Ivetty ill at her home, 51 Broadway St.
KEOKUK IOWA
DUBUQUE, IOWA
Wm. Green, S. C. Craie and M. Storied to Dubuque recently to do their Christmas shopping. Some of her upscale birthday party Saturday and a surprise birthday party Sunday. Mrs. H. Pelkey. Mrs. Walter Grimes. Mrs. H. Pelkey. Mrs. Walter Grimes. Green and Wm. Green of Lancaster, Green and Wm. Green of Lancaster, attended services at St. Peter's church. Mrs. Lavern Blake left for Chicago on October 15, 2014. Iowa town. Iowa town. entertained recently in honor her home in Louisiana Friday.
ARIZONA
MRS. Malia HACUCA, AR
from a four months' vacation in Los Angeles,
Calle M. Mesdames P. Lewis, W. Holder
Bee, Ariz. last Saturday, Mrs. Mar-
cal M. Bee, Ariz. last Saturday, Mrs. Mar-
cal M. Middleton returned recently from a three months' vacation
Gramblet left recently for Manila, P.
l. where he will spend the winter. The
dames Holder, Wilson, Hines, Chad-
man, Johnson, Brown and Bussey,
dames Holder, Wilson, Hines, Chad-
man, Johnson, Brown and Bussey,
writing, Little Miss Jamesetta James,
who had here tonsil removed recent
weekend in Ariz. Mrs. Mayme Dorsey spent the past
week end in Ariz. Ariz. Carr,
Naco, Ariz. spent a few days in the
city last week. Charles Earl Albert
Fellbala Venous of Manila, P. L. were
quiescent recently at the home of
Mrs. Middleton.
DOUGLAS ABIZ.
Thursday night the regimental chaplain, L. A. Carter, arrived at Camp Harry J. Jones for a week's stay with the regiment. The day was spent by the chaplain in visiting the homes of the enlisted men in camp and the officers. Friday night the battalion held another "get-together meeting," which included a number of the band until the closing
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PAGE ELEVEN—PART TWO
OUISIANA
BATTERSON LA
Mrs. Rena Curtis Norwood died recently at her residence after seven years of service from St. Luke's B. P. church. She leaves two children, mother and father, fire shirts, seven brothers and a boat crew. Mrs. Curtis Reveri, The Rev. J. W. Cooper conducted the funeral. Mrs. Minnie Robinson left for New York to attend Hattie Whetton Daisy Chapman Berwick, Glennie Henderson. Mrs. Lucy Hattie Whetton Daisy Chapman Berwick at the bedside of her s daughter.
NORGAN CITY, LA.
Alex Auction and Miss Theima. Verdine were married recently by Judge Ruth Browne and was removed to Charity hospital in New Orleans. Mrs. Y. Kenss left for New York. Mrs. Kenss left for Mrs. Mary Cross. Mrs. Silvia Davis is sick. Mrs. Gannette Blackwell died
MISSISSIPPI
Mrs. Missouri. Lucky died last week at her home. Britt Campbell left for home. She will be at home. Wife Gates was married last Sunday evening at the Baptist Church. Frank Zibner. The Clay county teachers met at Dr. Zibner's office, the leadership of Gabe.
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EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
Entered as second-class matter, Feb. 1, 1900, at the Fortress in Chicago, Ill., under act of March 8, 1909.
LONDON - GREEN G. Charing Cross Road, London, England, W. C. CHICAGO - 3433 Indiana Ave. Telephone 0887.
---
2. The Appointment of a Member of the Race to the President's Cabinet.
THE RIGHT SPIRIT
ood Santa Claus tol' her to act me for me, so he could give 'em to sum girls or home, er Ma er Pa, an' sometimes cure 'n anything to cat, they wuz so awful, got my kid-clear, my roller sketches, an other playthings at I always I rest. "Give these to Santa" when I bruneer er side; did wuz jes' hug me, an' an' she kid' an' wuz she cried.
My Ma red Santa Claus tol her to ast me for the toys
I did not use so he could give 'em to sum girls an 'boys
'At had no home, er Ma er Pa, an sometimes wuzn't
ture
Of gettin' anything to cat, they wuz so awful poor.
So I jen' got my kiddie-car, my roller skates an 'chest
Of toks an' other playthings 'at I always liked the
best.
An' sed, "Give these to Santa" when I brunged 'em to
her side;
All Ma did wuz jes' hug me, an' en she kissed me,
ou' en she cried.
THE MESSAGE
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE has by this time been carefully read. On the whole it is an interesting and readable document. On many material points it is clear, concise and unambiguous. On others the reader must infer what is meant rather than what is said. It was hoped that the president would take a hold and outspoken and would specifically urge Congress to enact it into law. From the language used by him touching that subject we are led to believe that that is what he wants done and will approve a bill of that sort should it pass. WE BELIEVE, however, that he is mistaken when he asserts that lynching is more local than national, and more sectional than general. Even though it may be true that more persons are the victims of this crime in one sectional state, the president himself should be treated as a national one and the necessary legislation to remedy the same should be enacted by the Congress of the United States. The necessity for such legislation as that proposed by the Dyer bill runs out of the fact that it has been clearly demonstrated that in a number of states the machinery thereof for the punishment of crime is necessary for the national government to crush it out.
ON QUESTIONS we deem vital and paramount the tone of the message is friendly. In the person of the president we feel that we have a well wisher at court, but in addition to his well wishing it would be much more appreciated if some aggressive steps were taken to carry those wishes into effect. On the basis of the president's attitude and his attentions are unmistakable. He is compliant in his opposition to the bonus; he champions the McLonan plan for the reduction of taxes, which will no doubt strike a popular chord.
THE MESSAGE defines the administration's attitude sufficiently to enable other presidential aspirants to formulate and promulgate the lines of policy that will be necessary to foreign affairs the president is opposed to having the United States join the League of Nations, but strongly advocates the acceptance of the World Court, which is a product of the league. On this point the probabilities are that his attitude is out of harmony with the dominant sentiment not only of his own party, but of the people as a whole. On this point the president principal rival for the nomination, takes the other stand.
MIR. JOHNSON insists that joining the World Court will involve this country in foreign political entanglements which we should by all means avoid, and when he and his supporters are elected the presidential election in 1920. He also insists that the granting of a bonus to the veterans of the World war will not prevent a material reduction in taxation. In the approaching primaries, so far as we are concerned, the necessary steps should be taken in an effective organized effort to ensure that plains on questions vital to us and throw the weight of our support and influence to the one that is most acceptable to us.
STATE STREET. CHICAGO
% OF THE MOST WIDELY KNOWS was devoted to business in the civilize State St, Chicago. While the street miles south and north of the center portion that lies in the "Loop of Congress and Lake St" is alone res publicity. Here can be found the land stores, the greatest group of exten merchants, the highest priced land corner in the world. THERE IS A SHOCK in store for the futures beyond these prescribed limits
ONE OF THE MOST WIDELY KNOWN thoroughbirds devoted to business in the civilized world today is State St. Chicago. While the street extends many miles south and north of the center of the city, the portion that lies in the Loop district is the largest and most accessible for the publicity. Here can be found the largest department stores, the greatest group of extensive retail merchants, the highest priced land and the busiest corner in the world.
BUT THERE IS A SHOCK in store for the visitor who ventures beyond these prescribed limits. South of Congress St. for more than two miles tumbles into the city, where you can see yards, antiquated freight houses and rubbish-filled pavements are the only things that greet the eye, and oftimes the nose. Why has this wide through business street that offers such wonderful possibilities been allowed to degenerate and become an eyesore when it could be made, at a fraction of the cost required to rehabilitate less important streets, as attributable as valuable as the porlion lynch of Congress St.?
ATTORNEY J. SCOTT MATTHEWS, chief examiner of Cook county, in a recent address said: "We spend our money without foresight. We find one public agency located a public bathing beach at the river and south of Van Buren St. We take. Another public agency plans an improvement which is absolutely necessary and must ultimately come, namely, a lake shore boulevard, which will ruin the bathing beach and buildings at its present location. It means the loss of public money—your money—through loss of public foresight. We have thought of opening more streets into the Loop we have spread across these possible streets at Roosevelt Rd. a steel and cement viaduct which will further retard the growth of business southward." THROUGH the concerted efforts of the men and women in the high street, 21st St. and 36th St.—familiarly known as "The Stroll"—this section has taken on a new lease of life. The shop windows are clean and attractive and the street is brilliantly lighted at night, and in consequence trade in general has been greatly stimulated. The street is the river and south of Van Buren St. We have a Chicago Plan Commission which has done wonderful work, but we fear they have laid too little stress on the great possibilities of our unjustly famous State St.
ITS A SHAME to fire a police chemist because of stuntility when it is so easy to transfer him to the detective squad.
"WHITE HOUSE DECLARED UNSAFE"—Headline. But the real point of danger is the road to it.
PERHAPS the increased use of cosmetics is due to the fact that it is much harder to bring a blush nowadays.
OLD but still good advice: Do your Christmas shopping early.
AS FAR as we are concerned this open winter can remain open till spring has her annual opening.
EZHEL SAYS during her courtship no girl is in favor of disarmament.
CHICAGO DEFENDER
THE DARK CONTINENT
MORE THAN a quarter of a century have kept a covetous eye before the war had more than 50 miles of territory on the "dark vast area is controlled by Great Belgium. According to the Naval Office, the national colonial area are represented by the following 474,000 square miles; Great Britains; Belgium; 292,000 square miles; milties; Italy, 591,120.
WE ARE only three countrysons on the are independent, or supposed to apt and Abyssinia, and of these Albia is subservient to the United States, the colonial nation of the United Sam has treated Liberia as a stepchild; that if why she is right now, financially and other 59,000,000 loan that was to come administration never materialized has been done by American banks,almm kernels and mahogany has BOLD WORLD POWERS that have withdrawn with them, besides gold, the. They introduced the natives of living, working and other their own feet. This was not ever so secreter the sovereign told the rainbow. But with all that the fire. It can no longer last continent." There is now really which civilized people have not seen CONTINENT as a whole is rapid; it is rich in natural resources and its place as a leader in common life ever so secreter the sovereign told the rainbow as soon as its possibilities were never hastened to gobble it up. INTERESTING TO NOTE that the World war was to boom to the United States and Africa broke out German and French were off, and, which were too busy at home to荷 market. As a result our Afram from 474,000,000 for 1914 to 400 annually in recent years. Allove that that black man's country come into its own, and when those has become civilized truly they reckon with.
FOR MORE THAN a quarter of a century the big world powers have kept a covetous eye on Africa. Germany before the war had more than 1,000,000 square miles of territory on the "dark continent." Now this vast area is controlled by Great Britain. The United Nations geographic society the territorial interests of European countries are represented by the following statistics: France, 4,474,000 square miles; Great Britain, 3,554,000 square miles; Belgium, 928,000 square miles; Portugal, 927,000 square miles; Italy, 591,200.
THERE ARE only three countries on the continent that are independent, or supposed to be: Liberia, Egypt and Abyssinia, and of these three it can be said that Liberia is subservient to both Egypt and Abyssinia. Uncle Sam has treated Liberia much as if she were a stepchild; that if why she is in such shape right now, financially and otherwise. The promised $5,000,000 loan that was to come during Mr. Wilson's administration never materialized and little or nothing has been done by Americans to develop the country. The nation's wealth in malloyous coconut, palm kernels and malagoya has not been touched.
THE OLD WORLD POWERS that have gone into Africa brought with them, besides gold, the fruits of civilization. They introduced the natives to modern methods of living, working and developing the land in a purely philanthropic motive, for nations, like idividuals, are ever seeking the fortune said to be at the end of the rainbow. But with all that they brought Africa to the fore. It can no longer justly be called the "dark continent." There is now really no section of Africa that is not philanthropic. THE CONTINENT as a whole is rapidly being developed. It is rich in natural resources and will some day take its place as a leader in commerce. Until the nineteenth century Africa was so little known that the rest of the world paid it little attention. However, as soon as its possibilities were realized the continent was so powerful that IT IS INTERESTING TO NOTE that one of the results of the World war was to boom trade relations between the United States and Africa. When the war broke out German trade, which amounted to 100,000,000 francs, was too busy at home to bother about the African markets. As a result our African trade has grown from $47,000,000 for 1914 to well over $100,000,000 annually in recent years. All of which goes to prove that that black man's country will some day soon come into its own, and those hundreds of millions will be ill-versed truly they will be a power to reckon with.
TWO PRESIDENTS
COMPARISONS may be odious, but there are times when we feel justified in pointing out the glaring differences between people occupying the same social plane in life as a mere matter of teaching a moral by bringing out the weak spots in one in contrast to the strong points in another. Just at present President Coolidge's position is a strenuous one. He is a man who is not afraid of or against his credit, and the impression he makes on the people as a whole will determine his political fate at the presidential election next November.
IT WAS ONLY A LITTLE THING to personally send a letter of condolence to the widow and relatives of the late Phil H. Brown, the head of a department in our governmental system and a stanch Republican leader for many years, but it showed the heart, the spirit of the man, his commitment and condescension to be graceful even to the humblest. Phil H. Brown was his friend, it mattered not his position in life, and as a friend the president mourned.
IN STRIKING CONTRAST to President Coolidge in a matter where the Grim Reaper plays the important role. Of the greatest educators the world has ever known, in the person of Dr. Booker T. Washington, passed away. From every civilized country came messages of condolence from the highest rejoining potentates, from tilted perspagues, on down to the most lowly, while from press, pulpit and platform came culologies of the man who had made a place that will go down in history. All of this without the greatest American.
CALL, THIS what you may—indifference, prejudice, arrogance—it demonstrates how small some big men are. It could not be considered an oversight, but it was an important day, the man in the gold figure. We had eight years of Mr. Wilson, we have had less than one year of President Coolidge; the former glaringly refined from paying tribute where tribute was due; the latter stole from his crowded duy a few minutes to pay his respects; the former sat in the Brown home. Such is the difference between our present and one of our former chief executives.
MIXED PICKLES
SOUTH DAKOTA POLITICIANS are in a muddle, due to the fact that they have a peculiar and unusual law governing primary elections for the party of delegates. The law requires the election of delegates to the state convention the voters are called upon to give expression to their choice of candidates. On the Republican side President Coolidge secured the indorsement of the party to the state convention, and that the candidate thus indorsed must give his approval in writing to the platform promulgated by the convention which indoreses him, otherwise his name cannot appear upon the ballot as the party's leader, the general primary, which is to take place in March.
THE PLATFORM which Mr. Coolidge is called upon to approve condemns the World Court and favors a honus. His position is the opposite. What can he do? Since this indemnity took place prior to his message, the Republican voters of that state may have believed that the president's attitude on the questions was in harmony with their own. This belief is not the result of the rejection for I. S. senator. Senator Sterling, who is retiring, known to be a supporter of the president, was defeated for renomination, while his opponent, the present governor of the state and a supporter of Hiram Johnson, was successful, which further muddles up things and which in the March primaries may result in the rejection of some of the decisions of the state convention.
THIS MUDDLE: evidence of the soundness of our evidence there should be a national law applicable to every state in the Union not only for the election of delegates to the national conventions, but which should also prescribe the qualification of those to participate in such elections.
OUR WISH
NOTICEABLE as the change in that comes over the average holiday season approaches. There is often the grushest, more of a tolerated, while the chord that responds my scene to have lost its parisian names active in guiding the gift-H big things in His name. EXCHANGE of presents or the while a customary procedure, concrete evidence of the spirit of grief, is often a more appropriate effective ways—a word one aggrieved, a visit to the bed afflicted or to the home where p a giving of one's real self brings me, the biggest returns in true E OF US who have the pleasure times a year through the colum d those whose work in press and the division, clerical and public
AS NOTICEABLE as the change in seasons, is the change that comes over the average human being as the holiday season approaches. There is a mellowness in even the gruffest, more of a tolerant feeling is displayed, while the chord that responds to appeals for charity secures to have lost its paralytic inertia in the past. In a giving of gift-hand to do more and bigger things in His name.
THE EXCHANGE of presents or the giving of presents, while a customary procedure, only tends to give concrete evidence of the spirit of good-fellowship prevailing at Yuletime, and yet there are other and perhaps more effective ways—a word of consolation to one aggrieved, a visit to the bedside of the sick and afflicted or to the home where poverty has been a plague, a pleasing and pleasant pleasure, the biggest returns in true happiness.
THOSE OF US who have the pleasure of talking to you $2 times a year through the columns of this paper, and those whose work in press and typesetting rooms, mailing division, clerical and publicity departments make it possible for us to keep in touch with you, again wish our readers the merriest kind of a Christmas, and trust that Santa Claus generously remembers each and every one of you.
WHITEWASH the cellings and walls of your cellar and the coal may be found much easier.
IF YOU are getting new silverware you can always make it match by going to the same restaurant.
SU CLYTING prohibition agents with blotters might help them to dry up the country.
THE NORTH
Editor's Mail
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
In his message to Congress President Coolidge devotes a paragraph beginning, "Numbered among our foremost people." He goes on to say that "on account of the migration of large numbers into industrial centers it has been proposed that a commission be created composed of members from the federal agency for mutual understanding and confidence. Such an effort is to be commended. But it is well to recognize that these difficulties to a large extent are local problems which must be worked out by the human kindness of each community."
isn't there an echo of the old debate, lasting for two generations before our Civil war, regarding the so-called Negro question in President Colledge's words. And doesn't he be the one who has the authority of the slaveholding Southerners who resented the idea that the question of human slavery was a national problem? The historic states' rights position toward the Negro, which had to be settled by the sacristans living on the battlefields of the South, appears to be revived by the expression "local problems" used by the president.
His apparent attitude of mind in this matter, in direct opposition to Abraham Lincoln's conviction that the problem of slavery was so settled on the broad basic proposition that this nation could not endure half slave and half free, is sure to antagonize, and rightly, all Americans who believe that the status of the Negro in our American civilization must be determined from personal and not a sectional standpoint.
When General Hancock, the Democratic candidate for president, asserted that "the tariff is a local issue" he lost all chance that he ever had of election. The country at large ridiculed a man who was so lacking in the intelligence that he could confound in his mind an issue that was nation-wide in its scope with one that had merely local significance. It would prove absolutely disastrous for the Republican party to nominate for president a candidate who falls to realize that in so far as he could be needed with our Negro brethren it is, and must always be a national and not a sectional question.
ARTHUR B. MURTHA.
A WORD OF PRAISE
Dear Editor: Just a word of praise to your splendid sheet concerning all vital racial issues. I am thinking you will be our emancipator, as those who should and could greatly aid you are too busy putting us deeper in fear. Keep up such good talks concerning our morals and general conduct in public as has been appearing lately. Good luck to that splendid cartoonist who pictures those we could do without. You yourself and staff go on from one victory to another in the sincere wish of MRS. AGATHA WOODARD. 594 Wrightwood Ave, Chicago, Ill.
The market reports that "Wogs are a shade higher" but we are an opinion that if they get as high as a camel they won't be a bit beautiful.
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS
A MERRY CHRISTMAS
To All the Contributors and to the
Readers of This Columny.
The checkered mingling of shade and shine.
The devious dim ways I have to go.
And all the little turnings that are mine.
I am in love with life—with evening skies.
With hearts of children, scent of dusk-sweet woods;
With the soft, placid eyes of drowsing
kine;
With every bird that sings and,
singing, flies!
I love night winds that croon at
dawning time;
Bees, courting busily the sweet
white clover;
Small streams with silver songs
tree-covered hills.
All wild flowers in all fields the wide world over!
I am in love with all young lovers' ways,
With mothers, and the laces at their throats;
With a spread table and a snowy loaf,
Fine china, and warm rugs, and a wide hearth;
Falm music wines and hot, crisp, smoking scones;
Rare music, friendly books and slim white boats!
All down the gray and winding lane life!
These are my loves, and these shall ever be!
Because—when I was hungered and alone—
They brought their comfortings to dwell with me.
AT THE APOMATTOX CLUB
Seated in the parlor's a group of gentlemen. Chicago's upper crust. In walks enthusiastic Defender reporter who sat above the glasses that rest on the noses of some of the higher-ups.
D. R.: "Have you seen "The Best People"?
Club Member: Why-er, yes, Didn't you?
D. R. I: did. What was your d. R. I: the acting?
C. M. I: thought they acted just about as usual; a n few kinder extended themselves with their airs.
D. R. I: Well; now just what is your young opinion of the play? H- I: man, I thought you were talking about Reggie Smith's party.
And I have yet to really know
Myself * * * and you.
For when Life seems a pliant cloth
To wrap our love about,
A rent is torn, a thread is pulled,
A seam gives out.
Be we so good at tailoring,
The best of cloth will tear,
And you nor I can guarantee
Endless wear.
—FLOYD MEREDITH.
The most popular sport the kid and
the team are at this time of the
season is HINTING.
I could be the watchful eye
Of the old woman, who was careful
indeed
opened wide
Was, "Miy!" but this cherry pie's nice."
Only a mighty bad cussword.
Backed up by remarks uncouth.
To some former spot that seed he referred
As he fished out a broken tooth.
Such ranting and having and stamping of feet!
It all made his poor wife's head swim.
He feared that he had an engagement to meet.
Which may have meant thousands to him.
Only a taxi dashing by.
An anxious man within.
Still a few cusswords mixed with a sigh;
His face wears a sad, sickly grin.
"Too late!" said he, with a gleam in his eye.
Then he swore till the air-turned
Never again would he eat cherry pie!
Who'd a-thought what a seed could do!
Moral
Only a little word to all
When on a seed you bite;
Be careful that into a rage you don't fall
Or go up in the air like a klite.
Just give an old-fashioned squint of your eye
And then smile a broad, juicy smile.
For there's a whole lot of folks who get cherry pie
Only once in a long, long while.
W. A. KELLY.
FROM DIXIE
Away down South we are enjoying the delightful and delicious menu—fresh country sausage properly seasoned, ribs, back bones, old greens; "blow jong and turd greens"; "blow hots, oh, dem yamms"; the best coffee and buttered ash cake fresh from the embers. Can any "Yankee Doodle" suggest or select a more wholesome meal for upstairs. It is long and pleasant life to live in proximity to the jungle in the Sunny South.
Happy and merry I hope your lot will be during Xmas week and all weeks thereafter.
CLAY WALKER.
Dyersburg, Tenn.
People are much alike
The world over except
Those who set an alarm
One of the best things for a man's health is rubber heels—no particular make. They are especially healthful for the gink who is trying to creep in after a o'clock in the morning without his wife hearing him.
P. S.—Rubber soles are still more healthful.
Our principal quarrel with common sense is that it is too darned common.
FAY.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1923
TALKS ON PREVENTIVE MEASURES. FIRST AID REMEDIES. HYGIENICS AND SANITATION
RAGE OF TYPHOID FEVER
chest, but they disappear under pressure. Typhoid fever is a disease that runs a course of from three to six weeks. You can readily see the signs of the disease and that prevention is the better part of discretion on your part. In some cases the course is much shorter and sudden, but who knows, once you are contaminate your food, whether you will have a short, abortive case or not?
We urge our readers, in case you have any or all of the above-mentioned symptoms, that you do not resort to home remedies or drug store treatment, but consult your physician for advice. We recommend advice. Your chance for recovery is much better by adopting that course and much less a source of danger, not only to your family but to the neighbors of your community in general. Typhoid fever has many serious complications and complications are hemorrhage from bowels, perforation, bed sores, ulceration of mouth and throat, inflammation of middle ear, the typhoid spine, phlebitis or inflammation or enlargement of some of the large veins, more especially in the leg, which are very sore and painful, and there is great stiffness of the legs.
Your greatest safety from typhoid fever lies in the proper prevention. One of the ways is by typhoid vaccination. If you have been exposed to typhoid fever, have your doctor inoculate you with typhoid vaccine. It has been used in the army, and where there are a large number of cases of vaccination proved very efficacious and the number of cases that developed after its use were very much less than where the vaccine was not used.
Boll your drinking water. The boiling of the water is of paramount importance if you would escape typhoid fever. Too many people are too cautious. They should not only boll the water but scald out the utensils that have contained water not boiled.
Clean hands. Be careful to wash your hands very frequently during the day. Do not eat or handle food without first properly cleaning your hands and paring your nails. In case of an accident, you should wear gloves or have antiseptic solution near by in which to drop the hands after handling bed pan, bed clothes, dishes, dishes utensils, etc., that have been in contact with the patient. If the patient is typhoid fever a good, well-trained nurse who has had experience in nursing typhoid cases is the best asset of which one can avail himself. Very little medicine is needed, but good nursing, guidance and watchful care is the part of the care more to restore tendon.
THE ONLOOKER BY A. L. JACKSON
there was some restriction which would keep DuPois or Moton or somebody else out. But to the message! Most of us wince when a Northern white man calls to the Southern cracker. And most of the people in the community "local problems and a matter of mutual forbearance and human kindness in each community." For we take that to mean that we are left to the tender mercies of the Southern cracker. And most of the people in the community "is tired of being burdened with the brother and is perfectly willing to turn him over to anybody who claims responsibility for him. We do not know what was in the mind of the president when he wrote this sentence, but we know that he would like it or not. There is great deal of truth in what he says. It is because we recognize the truth coupled with our knowledge of the prejudice and narrow-mindedness of the average white Southerner that we turn upon Northern white friends to talk with them when the issue when they take this position.
However, we wish to call your attention to what went before this particular statement in the president's message. He said: "UNDER THE CONSTITUTION THEIR RIGHTS' MEANING US IS USED TO PROTECT THESE RIGHTS, THE CONGRESS OUGHT TO EXERCISE ALL ITS POWERS OF PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT AGAINST THE HIDEOUS COME OF THE INCOME. Then he recommended $500,000 for the medical school at Howard university. Mark you, he did not explain causes for lynching or apologize for it in any way. He outlawed and condemned it. He said it was his duty to protect your constitutional rights and he did not desecrate it. He offered financial support to your most needed and highest educational institution. No reasonable person who believes in migration or who has observed its effect North and South will doubt that many difficulties besetting us are local problems, or you may have arrived on State St. and try to think of some law Congress could pass to help him get assimilated to Chicago.
He is a problem for those of us who have been hero longer than he and no matter what Laine Johnson or anybody on your hip right here. His rapid or slow assimilation determines your status here in Chicago. And he can become the right kind of teacher, a mine. If Mr. Coolidge sticks by the Constitution and holds onto an anti-lynching pro-education program the rest is up to us and our friends, so we happen to live-North or South.
No Cases Are Diagnosed and No Prescriptions Given in These Weekly Articles
We are advised by the Department of Health that there is a great prevalence of typhoid fever in Chicago; In addition, more typhoid fever now than there has been in Chicago for over the last decade, the proper operating of the drainage canal. The cause of this epidemic of typhoid fever is the contamination of the water supply with the sewage of the public commensal stations because of
A. B.
improper operating, as stated, of the 'pump'.
Typhoid fever is an acute infectious disease involving the intestinal lymph, follicles, causing ulceration, sometimes hemorrhage from the bowels and perforations. The fever is accompanied by enlargement and congestion of spleen. The real active causative agent is the bacillus typhosus. Now, this germ, the typhus bacillus, enters the human body by way of the alimentary tract, by the ingesting of liquids and foods through the mouth that have been contaminated or contained in the human language, typhoid fever is a disease due to fifth. Typhoid fever is due largely to drinking contaminated water or milk, or drinking from utensils that have contained contaminated liquids. In fact, you can contract typhoid fever from bathing in contaminated water or by eating with dirty hands—hands that have been contaminated by handling typhoid defector or discharges.
Files that have been in contact with typhoid excreta alight on food have been known to spread fever has been known to spread from the use of oysters grown in beds near the point where the city sewage engines and thus contaminates the water.
Symptoms of Typhoid
Typhoid fever begins with headache and backache, sometimes a feeling of chilliness, aching in bones, a tired feeling or lassitude, loss of appetite, diarrhea or constipation, but fever is more severe. Vivididum is more or less nervous and irritable; there is sometimes a slight cough, slight deafness, nosebleed, with a moderate rise in temperature — a little more in the afternoon than during the morning. The patient has a rash, itching, flushed, skin hot and dry. You should notice tongue, because the tongue often becomes coated in the back part, the edge and tip being clear. There is always a disagreeable or unpleasant taste in the mouth, and sometimes irritations appearing on abdomen and
CHRISTMAS CHEER
CHRISTMAS CHEESE
THE CHRISTMAS CHEESE all the
tractors, of this, column
I readers of this column the greetings of the season. While we hope that the same min will give the same show to make things look like Santa Claus season, we know that after all it is the spirit in the hearts of people that makes watch people already busy about their holiday shopping we wonder just how many of them are planning a Christmas will have a real significance in their lives and how many are doing
know that After all it is the spirit in the hearts of people in Christmas. As we watch people already busy about their holiday shopping we wonder just how many of them are planning a Christmas which will have a real significance in their lives and how much we want what they think is expected, of them.
Of course many people will spend more than they ought for presents and give presents to people who could do very well without them. It would so much enable them to smile if they could realize that among real friends there is no need for foolish efforts to keep up with the Joneses. Excepting among the children Christmas is largely a matter of spiritual awakening or revival. The world tries to free itself so much that it fails to place in order to get back to faith in universal laws and confidence in the essential goodness and worth of the human personality. Brotherhood, so glibly mouthed by preachers and soap box ornaters, for once seems to really meet the needs in small kindnesses and consideration for others. Intense grief or overwhelming joy always convinces us of our close kinship to others and to forces over and beyond us. But it seems so easy in the whirr and buzz of the workday and feelings within our breasts. Some of us hide them so effectually that we are prompted to assert that they do not exist. A Christmas basket for the poor and unfortunate or a Christmas stocking for some kiddle is hard to set aside as evidence of the joy of Christmas, which at least once a year brings men back to their better and finer selves and a new realization of those things that really make life worth while.
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
That portion of the message of President Coolidge which refers to the brethren. We think, short of it, that the president would be hard for any president to satisfy all of us. Even if that were done some would want it turned over to black people, who other whites would be happy with and lighter shades. Some would-want Garvey eliminated. Others would not be satisfied unless
Prevention of Typhoid