Chicago Defender
Saturday, November 22, 1924
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
LINCOLN-HOWARD GAME TO DRAW 25,000 FANS
ENTERS BEAUTY CONTEST
Miss Esther C.
Hogan
Seventeen-year-old high school girl of Geneva, N. Y., who has entered the . Chicago Defender's Billiken beauty contest. Other pictures of entrants will be found on page two, second section.
Treasury Workers Protest Latest "Jim Crow" Stunt
J LE COUNT CHESTNUT
Influenced by Women
After this, however, but with no notice of his change of front, Mr. Spiellman again did a right-about-boot, but in the wrong direction. It went from Dixie, workers in the office, dired the register to put into effect his promised recruitment. It is further alleged that Kiu Kuxens, of Kiu Kuxens, also put fear into the heart of Mr. Spiellman. Plausibility seems to be lent to this chain, because it is reported that the presence of knights established by the mingling of application blanks in the desks of some Nord workers. At any rate, the wheel of dissemination turned and Gauckeeper Harold was established by the mingling of application blanks in the desks of some Nord workers. As a result, a formal protest has been sent to Goldgold, by a committee of James E. Walker post, No. 26, Angelica, of the Major West A. Hamilton, commander, and Captains Arthur C. Newman, Sylvester Epps and Henry O. Wood, following is an excerpt: "We rebellant, Mr. President, that this drawing of the color line in death constitutes an insult to the $00,000 loyal
FOOTBALL SCORES
Heward, 7; Hampton, 3.
Wilberforce, 21; Kentucky, 0.
Wilcox, 0; Louisiana, 0.
Va. Union, 0; Va. State, 0.
Tuskegee, 28; Alabama State, 7.
Atlanta, 39; Fisk, 0.
Tampa, 39; Tuskegee, 0.
Royer Williams, 12; Walden, 7.
Rust, 7; Lane, 0.
Tenn. State, 10; Morris Brown, 0.
York, 14; Seymour Houston, 0.
Bishop U., Prairie, 0.
Southern U., Straight, 0.
Miles Memorial, 12; Alabama A. & M. 0.
Skiva U., 24; Stillman, 0.
Knoxville, 6; Simmons, 6.
HIGH SCHOOL
Central, 14; Pear, 0.
Owensboro, 18; Douglass, 0.
Owensboro, 18; Mo. Hir, 0.
Bordentown Industrial, 40; Borden-
town Military, 12.
American soldiers of our racial Group who served our country during the World War: to the 12,000,000 Negroes who ported this government to their uttermost; to the memory of the dead, whom we all gathered to honor and borne on Armistice day; and is in charge of the administration upon which this government is founded. Such action is inexhaustible and up-American and should and must receive the condemnation of all our citizens. Many of the tablets referred to are in strange contrast to the tablets created to the memory of the war dead in the District building (Washington, D.C.) and the city postoffice (Chicago, Illinois). Of all deceased soldiers, regardless of color, are arranged alphabetically. The office of Register Spelman has been a constant source of friction between the Coolidge administration. Complaints have been lodged often against the segregation of Race employees in a partitioned off part, said to be on the top floor, "Jim Crow" toilers were also attempted and a practical segregation scheme on the elevators was effected by having the Race workers report and be dismissed at different times. It was said that the late President Harding promised the office in question to Hon. Charles Cottrell, president Ohio republican, but the assailant in question was for years looked upon as one of the political plums to be banded out to lice republicans. The late Woodrow Wilson made it "safe to carry out lice republicans by capturing a white-man-as-head policy.
In the recent set of proposals from William C. Matthews, Boston, mass., and in the recent Coolidge campaign, it was set forth that this choice fruit of patronage should once more be allowed to drop into the lap of a Race to the Top at present citizens and the James E. Walker American Legion post are House. In the meantime, Harvey Spelman is trying to hide behind the statement of the tablet maker that he is to blame for the separate plagues.
CHEATING IN POKER GAME LEADS TO FATAL STABBING
CHEATING IN POKER GAME LEADS TO FATAL STABBING
Brooklyn, Nov. 21. "Alleged cheating in a poker game" caused the death of Herbert stephens, 390 Osborn St. early Saturday morning, morning altercation, in which three men took part, according to the police. Two of the three men, Abraham Lewis of 333 Blake Ave, and William Bransham of 333 Osborn Ave, were found by the police of the Liberty Ave, station and held as material witnesses. A general alarm has been sent out for Walter McNair of the Osborn St. address, where the game claimed cut Stephens to death. According to witnesses the trouble started when Stephens was accused of holding out cards whereupon Merle whipped out a noose and cut Stephens' short time at the Brownville and East New York hospital.
ALBERT GEORGE LEADS BURKE BY 66,347, COUNT SHOWS
The final tabulation of votes for judge of the municipal court show that George had been appointed by Sepher Barke, who led the Democratic judicial field. The tabulation shows that George had been in the police returns George had a lead of about 5,000. This shows that he gained at least a thousand votes in the first round, and signed the first Monday in December.
OUR LITTLE CLASSIFIED ADS GET BIG RESULTS
Chicago Defender
WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
Office of Publication: 3435 Indiana Avenue. Telephone: Douglas 0697
VOL. XIX. NO. 47 CHICAGO, ILL., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924 PRICE TEN CENTS
MILLIONAIRE'S MARRIAGE TO POOR GIRL STARTLES WORLD
---
HUBBY AND A BLOND CAUGHT IN RAID
New York, Nov. 21.—The most recent scandal to be unheard from the thumbr-worn pages of New York's society blitter is the case of Mrs. Alice Uanks Reed against her husband, Walter P. Reed, two of Gotham's best known personages, who will, according to authoritative information, air their domestic difficulties in a courtroom in the city, where they recently the couple resided in their beautiful home at 2373 Sullivan Ave.
Charges filed in a bill for absolute divorce by Mrs. Reed have included almost every count upon which did not comply, unfaithfulness and even extreme cruelty. The actual filing of proceedings came as a result of a raid said to have been conducted by Mrs. Reed on an apartment at 61 W. 14th St. where Reed was alleged to have been found in a compromising position with a robber, who was from the building before her name was learned.
Married in Detroit
The Reed, according to information, were married in January, 1921, in Detroit, Mich., by the Rev. Bradley Smith, for whom the couple in that city as well as in New York, Boston, Minneapolis City and Washington, where the bride is well known, Mrs. Reed's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Fenimore Cooper, for whom the couple in Ohio. When the wedding took place the bride was reputed to be one of the wealthiest women of our race in this city, having been successful elsewhere. It was she who sustained the loss of $20,000 a few years ago when her purse, containing some of her jewels, was snatched from her as she after having worn them to recollection. When the newwives returned to New York after the honeymoon, Mrs. Reed is said to have spent $25,000 remodeling her Seventh Ave. home. For four months, it is alleged, the couple lived in comparative happily married circumstances, trouble began. It is stated that Mrs. Reed in an effort to interest her husband in business established him in an elegantly furnished prewed fulton. Reed, it is charged, became an habitual drinker and began to neglect his wife for other women. She chains that on numeral cards $10,000 Renz motor car while under the influence of liquor. She has owned three specially built foreign cars. It is openly charged that Reed spent his wife's money lavishly on other women, and that on more than one occasion women have humiliated Mrs. Reed by calling at the home for her husband. The three occurrences of Mrs. Reed being deceived by her husband was merely his housekeeper.
Borrowed From Tenants
Other charges have followed in rapid succession. Reed, it is alleged, has borrowed money from his wife's account, and forced his wife to redeem it and at different times has been accused of striking her. During February of 1995, Reed was accused of wife and was persuaded to return and effect a reconciliation after remaining away 11 days. He deserved a sentence. It is alleged that in an effort to secure a portion of her property Reed filed suit against her, charging that she had promised him one of her Ace houses upon their marriage.
HEAD OF MOSAIC TEMPLARS,JOHN E. BUSH, IS DEAD
Little Rock, Ark. Nov. 21. Chester E. Bush, national secretary and treasurer of the Mosaic Templars of America, and son of the city of E. Bush, founder of the order, died at his home here Tuesday.
The order of Mosaic Templars was founded by the elder Bush in 1858. New age polls reached almost the 120,000 mark. Death came after a long, lingering illness. Arrangements for the funeral, which it is believed will be one of the largest ever held in this city, for been completed. He is survived by a wifow, three children, his mother, Mrs. John Bush, and a brother, Bridge E. Bush, who, it is believed, will automatically come into control of the order.
BEAT COUNCIL
SEGREGRATION
LAW IN SOUTH
City Fathers Lose in New Orleans
New Orleans, La., Nov. 21.—A court victory has won by the New Orleans branch of the National Colored People organization, it was announced, against the segregation ordinance enacted Sept. 18 by the city of New Orleans. The victory, according to the decision pronounced by Judge Stuart H. Kline, based on the decision of the United State supreme court in the Louisville segregation case, won by the N. A. A. C. G. W. Lacombe president of the New Orleans branch of the association, writes to the national office: "Our people are very much encouraged and it is possible that this matter will be settled without governmental interference. However, we are prepared to go any distance. We are waiting on another arrest and then our attorneys plan on taking the court, as they say it can be done." The present victory is won in the case of Joseph W. Taylor, a white man who sought to enjoin Ben Harmon from making over his single cottage into a double house in the addition of our people. Judge Cage's decision, as quoted in part by a local white newspaper, in referring to the New Orleans segregation ordinance, "I cannot find that the statement in question differs from the similar Kentucky ordinance on which an opinion was handed down reversing the decision of the Kentucky court to how to that decision and hold the 14th amendment." Judge Cage is quoted as expressing himself out of sympathy with the decision forced, by prior victory to render.
The secregation law declared invalid in New Orleans, had provided that neither whites nor our Race might live in a district inhabited by the other group, without the express permission of either color.
WALL CAVES IN
Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 21.—While doing excavation work at the Hotel Arkansas, Seventh and Main, Dan Rowland was struck by a pile of debris slightly hurt him. Rowland was saved a possible painful death through the quick work of his companions in rescuing him. At once to the General hospital, where his wounds were found to be not serious.
---
HONORABLE MARRIAGE CREATES FURORE
Atlanta, Ga. Nov. 21.—The marriage of the New York millionaire to Miss Alice Jones in New Rochelle, N. Y., has created a furore in the South when it was learned she had Colored blood in her veins, where white men of money have lived with girls of the Race and kept them in beautiful homes, not with colored blood, as associated with men of their own Race, which is a decided contrast to the many single women of our Race, whose children carry their maiden name and the child's father has to slip in after dark. It is charged that there are few big southern white men who do not live in adultery. Rhinelander must be given credit of being at least "honorable."
New York, Nov. 21.—Like a bomb, possessed by an unfortunate ranks of American and Eastern bluest of bluebloods came the news Friday that the dashing young millionaire, Leonard Kip Rhinelander, heir to a fortune of $100,000,000, had been a charming Miss Alice Baitz Jones.
The young millionaire, who is 23, is a member of New York's most exuberant family. He was well settled on Oct. 14 in New Buchelle, now settled by the Rhinelanders more than 200 years ago. Mr. Rhinelander went into the marriage compact with his eyes wide open. He was well settled in New York, and her and had repeatedly called upon her at her father's home. He also knew that Miss Jones' sister, Emily, was married to Robert Brooks, a Collector of the Jewels owned by Mrs. Joseph Arthur of Pelham.
Met Three Years Ago
The couple met over three years ago at Stanford, Conn. It was love, friendship, ship of a life and a half. Mr. Blander went to California for his health. They corresponded daily. The absence only inspired the millionaire's love him as he returned. He was a man he was as he contemplated. He and Miss Jones resumed companionship and it is said that they became engaged in a war that nearly two years ago. The fact that Blander hurriedly returned from the West and became handsome, engaged to miss Jones and became married to miss Blander. He has $500,000, which he received from various legacy sources, and, if disinterested, can still count an independently wealthy bank.
Introduced Into Society
All efforts to discourage Rhinelander from marrying Miss Jones because of his high social standing failed. Last summer the took her to the University of Chicago, where no one except the wealthy frequent. I introduced her into the exclusive circles of society and, for the six weeks that they were there, the milieu of the elite. She was the ultra-exclusive and the elite of the 400, who are looked upon as being the bluest of the blackbooks. While at the resort Miss Jones attracted unusual attention. She was fascinated by the art of permitting her to make three and four changes a day. She is of medium height, slender and extremely attractive. Her eyes are bright and sparring. Her hair is dark and delicate rose color that is natural, her figure is boyish and she is the possessor of the pulse of an artist's model. As she attractive young couple embraced arm in arm upon the polist sands of the beach at Newport.
(Continued on page 11)
---
ECTIV
WEDDING CAUS
GIRL BARRED FROM SCHOOL BY'Y.W.'RULE
"Christians" Display Race Hatred
New York, Nov. 21.—The Young Women's Christian association has again exhibited the kind of "Christian spirit" it practices by refusing a 20-year-old girl, not white, admission to the Central School of Hygiene and Physical Education at 600 Lexington Ave.
Miss Lydia Gardine of East Orange, N. J., and a 1924 graduate of the East Orange high school, was the victim of this latest race discrimination. Desiring to become a physical culture teacher, Miss Gardine applied to the Y. W. C. A. school for admission. After receiving and returning the blanks to Miss Helen McKinsey, director of the Central school, she was informed in a letter dated Aug. 5 by Miss McKinsey that she could not be admitted because she is an "American Negro." Miss Gardine took her case to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the assistant secretary of the chairman of the national board for a statement. An answer was sent by Miss Mary S. Sims of the city department, averring that by the local organization and was not connected with the national board.
Undaunted by this seeming drawback, Miss Gardine matriculated at her institution, and is being assisted by friends in the pursuit of her anulition. The young miss has a mother who lives in the home of Mrs. Louise D. Howe, a wealthy resident of East Orange, 108 N. Arlington Ave. Gardine, president of the metropolitan board of the Y. W. C. A, the case is still "under discussion," but no action has been taken in the matriculation.
Carlos Burton Caught as House Thief
Champaign, Ill. Nov. 21—Carlos F. Burton, sophomore at the University of Illinois, confessed to police here to the robbery of 10 fraternities following his capture by Officers Frank Doblish and N. F. Hendrickson early last Friday morning. When Officer Hendrickson first detected him Burton was climbing a ladder leading to a second story window of Nu Phi Beta fraternity house, 1004 S. Sixth St. At the flash dropped from the ladder and ran to Chalmers St. successfully eliding immobile capture. Officer Doblish, attaching a beak and a mask to the Interaction of Chalmers and Sixth St. He heard Hendrickson give alarm and at the same time saw the student dash on Chalmers St. He pulled the gun and fired one shot at Burton, then half a block away. He did not stop, but continued in zig-zag fashion. Doblish, as he ran, held the gun and dodged behind a house and took a path through a yard, where a wire clothes line grimmed around the neck, throw the gun, and fell into a few feet behind, pointed upon him.
26 PAGES
NATIONAL EDITION
GE TO
ORLD
FLAT
MAY LOSE HAND AS RESULT OF ROW
New York, Nov. 21. The 161st of Miss Mary Pierce, 21.24 W. 139th St. was partially cut off at 2 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 12. when she was attacked in the vestibule of her home by her alleged sweetheart, who is a Howard university graduate. The loud screams of Miss Pierce aroused the entire neighborhood. In an effort to shield her assailant, who is unknown man, who attempted to rob her, it later was explained that Miss Pierce had earlier in the evening visited sweetheart 142 W. 139th St. finding another woman there, an argument took place. Lobby is said to have tried to exonerate very indignant. She rushed from the apartment. Lobby followed. He pleaded with her along the street, but she refused to listen. In the house, a heated argument ensued in the vestibule. A sharp instrument with a keen blade came into play. Her assailant is said to have attempted to cut her. In Miss Pierce grabbed for the blade and, in doing so, she received cut in the palm of her hand, which left a portion of her hand and fingers banging. Miss Pierce's screams attracted members of the household, who rushed to her assistance. Her assistant fled. She was rushed to Harlem, where she was assistants claim she may lose her hand. Miss Pierce is from a very prominent Washington family. She is said to have been in the government service well age with her two chums, the Misses Anna Chambers and Maggie Simmons, also well known in society.
SEARCHES FOR HIS FAMILY
THROWN OUT BY LANDLORD
Dunna, N. C. Nov. 21—I'm lost from her and she's lost from me, said Sam Underwood. Race man, when he came to Dunn in search of his wife, Jessie, and their three children, Sam sought the aid of the local town and in finding her half, He has been searching for her for almost a week, day and night, with no satisfying results. The strain of suspense is beginning to tell on him.
The separation of Sam, and Jessie came about in a most unusual manner. They lived at Angier and were as happy, so he says, as husband and wife could ever hope to be. His protector, taken slick and he was called to her bedside. He stayed away for several days and in the meantime the landlord put his wife and children out of the house, which he left them. They had to move to some other place, and so far Sam has been unable to learn to what place.
Jessie was described by Sam as now chunky, dark, a golfer on her knees, and in about 27 years old, according to the best of his knowledge and belief.
BLIND MAN STRUCK
Little stock, Ark, Nov. 21—An unidentified blind man was struck by an automobile last Tuesday morning which was driven by R. H. Ketzlob which was operated by the Central Power company. The accident occurred at 10th and Wolfe St., Ketzlob testified to the police that he tried to find out the man's name, but the blind man refused to tell who was walking, away, after having been hit.
CONVICT THO
YOUTHS WHO
KILLED COP
Wasuingten, D.C, Nov. 21.—The
case in which Poitcemain Lelsinger
twhitey of the locul force was killed
hers fast Aug. 28, had its final atring
a the court of Chief Justice MeCoy
in Criminal court No. 2 last week.
‘One of the sensational features in
connection with the ease and one
Jargely commented on was the pres-
ence in the automobile at the time
of the alleged murder of « young
Qwomitn, Misy Helen daesson, whe Was
Thought to be white because of her
fair skin, She ater proved to be a
member of our Race,
Mustice MeCoy directed the jury to
bring in a verdict of not guilty in
the case of the defendant, John a.
Grose. on the round that he was
snerely_ un eccupant of the “death”
Gir and that the testimony: in me
wise showed an conspiracy on his
part.
Tiurry W. Freeman, 22 years of aze,
and Jamnes T. Holmes. also indicted
Gn fitet degree murder charge, were
found guilty’ of second degree murder
by the Jury late Saturday night, Nov.
15, The penalty. ls from 20 years to
fe. {mmprisonment.
‘On the stand, Freeman admitted
firing the fatal’ show alleging that
Helmes handed him the gun, saying,
Spent let him murder us,” as Lel-
singer was hanging to the tire rack
and firing into the tonneau of the
car. Freeman ‘claimed that he did
not know that Leisinger was 2 po-
Mceman. He also claimed that he
had never before fired a gun and was
moved by fright.
"A signed confession of Freeman's
was admitted by Judge McCoy, de-
spite the fact that the convicted
Youth clilmed that he had been elven
the third dexree in a most brutal
manner, alleging that one Detective
Hrodlo even pointed a pistol at him
while two other slugeed him with
thelr fists and kicked him.
Counsel for the uccured. Attorness
Jamey O'Shea, John 3. Sacks and John
Ti, Wilron, pave notice that they
‘would tile a motion for a new tial.
‘All the young. folky Involved were
well known around the Seventh and
T St. district, where they ate said
to have been’ frequently seen. The
Noung lady, headlined at the time of
{he murder as “Tho Lady in Pink.”
jn eaid to have lived in the anartmen:
ntnve the drug store at*Seventh and
Sts. at the time of the crime.
Mrs. Georsia Spoteville, 64 E, Aus-
vin Ave, was held to the grand jury
on a charge of mansigughter BY a
caroners jury Now, 12 iavestigat-
fie the death of Samuel Jones, a
Tomuner in her home, whom she fatal-
ie''Show Inte Saturday night. ‘The
Hagen Was held at the county
Tne shooting followed_a_ drinking
and wambling bout. in dirs. Spots
‘ities home in whieh ‘she took part
A" fow minutes prior to the shooting
the had been plasing ‘poker with
Soin "Smith aniothierroomer, ‘and
John Rolunson, 124 B. gist St
‘Accardins to her statement, she
Wat “G3 im the mame and accused
Kabiisun of cheating. She left. the
eum, returned “t minute liter armed
with an automatic revolver and de-
Inanded “Robinson “to” return her
nionew.
Under cover of the mun. he par-
lexed with her, ‘She dropped a daline
itt aid stopped to recover it. This
Euve Itobinson 2 chance to spring gt
er and attenspt to take the gun he
sid, "but she’ fired before he had
Selzed her,
‘The bullet. Intended for Robinson,
struck ones inthe abdomen, To
San standing benind. the former.
Hobinsin wrenched the. gun. from
Mira. Spotsvilie and held her covered
Until ‘the police, summoned by her
hustand, Brady’ Spotsville, arcived.
Jones died a few minutes after he
was shot
———»——
HOW MANY POUNDS WOULD
YOU LIKE TO GAIN IN A WEEK?
if you are thin and want to gain
wolght, wonk and want to be strong,
T'will send you a sample of famous
Alexander Vitamines absolstely Eroe
Xo mones, just name and address for
Sample, Alexander Laboratories, 1181
Gateway Station, Kansas City, Mo.—
nav.
gee
WHITES BEAT WORKER
Brenham, Tex., Nov. 21—Columbus
Jefferson, i cement worker, was me=
verely beaten mr two young White
Tuflans when he asked them to not
Rep on “a sidewalk whieh he, had
Just tinisned.. Iie ia recovering from
inle tnjurien at his home. “Tt required
neveral stitches ta sew up hig wounds
ahout the head.
New Treatment
for Failure of
Nervous Energy
To combat the causes of. prema-
ture ager nerenus wenkneees debility
Tack “ef eneree. and. amin. ah
ther enferblinng conditions that Fob
Heng of ta Jo. new “compound
own sts Mubin has beets developed,
The formula x heen under test fo
note thin Lea seats. nd has Drought
come Treluekalce “evyertss Seng
She have tat it say thee’ are now
To" igurvus hal ind “feel yest
Shuncers Aged jruuat, in tarsieaiie
fruke the compose ingly as a
Pnerinee.
‘Tie Mebin treatment te. nterniod
se eneien the, Most eye to Ted te
Sesto ef ison sud renee wp fn
Seria ayes Gmportane western ti
iSministered ithe forint tatioce
that ant war Weltag taal afer eae
Minch tablet are trce from hrs
Males dau hannful stiouzante, and
Sine ised hy elther men oF Wohnen
Stang axe. They are mot lateaded
fie cehidgen, mmncecer.
‘rite compound snot Yat on sale
fu dong stores Tet treateneate
Tiwrcer, dine cbetme -dlsteltuted tay
Ed tine im "ie ouained "ny
Sho person who sei AIL ut” te
Sandhu tne cousin Delow.
—————
GUARANTEED TEST COUPON
Smitiemmas Aw guaranteed, 67
2 OE a Mt pemtooent
Beating it fou do met find 32
reted snail AF ga 28 Ot aca
UIUEats han WES Fennec
ea wethin de agg ater eects
fie fo ges gon fer ur refund DE
i
Fig Out and tail tot Hiobin Coy, 3370
Ba ee eat a eatin tes |
GRANTED DIVORCE
if . ‘
fonts Ks st
Ree Nie By
Ye ) Mme. A’Leila
oN ‘lI if Walker-
ten ae granted a
a ae as: q divorce in
Bee : peace Sy Los Angeles,
Pea ee oe Calif, last
Hae ~e Dr. Wiley
ey HS eee a prominent
eae, physician of
fee oO See New York
EGS } mH
Welfare Workers Discuss
Issues in Race Problem
i
sWhat Js the Race Problem and
oe it Cath eS ecr NT he
the chetin tno “Enotes
| (white), sceretary of the commis-
SEHD ant of ibe
Barts aatcah aehe
Hag GSS Beste eh GS
sara nay ish
Sela eens Ht Se
Reet mes, Sst oe
[Seats SRT Cha a oP
[satan Seiad aon
Baeeoe peal oat jeans
[Sa gd le ha ean
ee ag tite Sete ar hes
Sata Sn Tee” 20a"
ser ala edi lta
[iene Soe as 1 ea
[Stead ai i
Made Study in South
ae pester teegn, oe,
ed ANE RET tl td
ec EI aT te
at the city hall as to what methods
[eects Eitan EM ee
Rea ore ite Fo ta
|was: “The darker races live in one
Bling ara Si i el
seus data” Sea he
tere pean ch metas
EES Bhp SMS Iho et
Gia ae He SPSL
BN sy, lade mekeeP he
adh pe Ba whe hol
fadites the erae fet et Se
Hees MR TNE So
Bee ested alte Ssh a
Side eeee
ais ea ee to know, “Ca
Seorimn (nines (ns ee
fer ded ean
i etn te Ea
evn ale th nd
maaan a
there Comment
Dr Lasser sated tnt te pon
shetty BRED ca atebeay
SScRi, Sean ue ae ng
Sea geet Be
sere Hee te ia
seacemenh ana Gee nan
etteg Wee Te eras hs
eee Ce sie Sat
Pad tae AE of Ste
Inch WN nan see
Sean ares
Meret cei A Nene
SHOP ohteity Salted ie
Eth foe sets ee
BRM, tty of Chiat nie:
Ben Sasriaes Sanaa
Ban What" Seams fae
Se at ait a
Christian way of life; E. C. Carter,
See, a eee
BS SS zadt Penta
Go a ee Mate hit
Sachets Eeird at he
SSSDSE SN TG ofthe Bi
Sn Nang Heute 2 ede
Spi aah Menate gle HA
SRI Ant
Shee Nie Cpe
Stan: Wie Ate: Moe Wee
See NEO EAY oF te
Sees alts asian? Sate
ete ate teats
Se aig sea ay on ot
BUY YOUR GUN
Fee” STEEL CITY
ass
£090 Ya 2d
$138.45 Ore
Sex i03¢ mean, fanoos tant [a
AER eancde he eae i
Pitafen toads to load ee ustond tbe sheet
whet atten pee is hase Tel
Series cen trench cee
Eri ML eH Sinton” eel ba
eee rae ncattlted Siget ati
ee =
Fursished i ealiber (32-20 of 38; 4,5
ene ae ae Die or ick" aca
HONE seats your order at once te
cany SRABING ‘EO: ‘Dept. >
A0bY-6 Broadway, GARY. IND.
anise eee CAS: Bay pone
Aiseles th Baits Be Si los
MEN WANTED
| Reco Yass Meine antag eas
| Bee ahs aie SAS ea
[EE gomrans arg squeot, |
Ve a8 PEO canes
eatin sagt 0A, uF
a ee
Busia aN ae
‘Sumer
rite nomen eAitbod E pumtiscse
oe EGGS Een ered
SMe lohan a AE
‘Hosered we cevomd-elues wetter Fel Te 1206,
Te Sager east Wa es
STE or FUERA ra
| aun) te Soaps $5.00, WF twenties FLT
{iinet Fear 83
ation, and AC. Thayer, Chicago Ur-
han Teague.
‘Aniong the other prominent * per-
sone present "were: Misa Amelia
Sears, ‘United Charities: Mrs. Lulu
Lawson, Indiana Ave, branch, Y. W.
Az Miso Jessie Binford.” United
Charities: Mex. Helen Abbott Sayre.
Ehieazo" Urban Teague: Misy Leah
‘Taylor and. Graham. Taylor. Chicago
House of Commons: Mrs, Ada Me-
Kay, South Side Community center:
Mra Harriett Van Ber Vaart, Chi-
cago Woman's club: Mrs. ‘David
Lawrence, South Side “Community
center, and “iss Florence » Dunlap.
Des Sfoinex settlement. “who In en
route to Geneva, Switzerland,
To Issue Booklet
“ik series of books ontitied, “And
Who “Is “My. Neighbor?” an ‘outltnc
for the study of race relations In
‘America, will be relensed very oon
‘by the commission on race relation:
of the national. conference: on the
Christian way of te.
Nay oe
Eddie Levy (white), former owner
of the Pioneer cafe, was fined $50
and costs by Judge George Curran
inthe niunicipal court for assault-
ing and striking “Misa Pearl Dun-
can, who lives with Levy's estranged
wife, “Mrs. Minnie Levy, 2128 Indi-
ana Ave, and Who Works for her as
maid.
‘Misa Duncan testified that Levy
came to his wife's home and made
inquiry as to. her whereabouts.
When informed that his wife was
Rot at home he became enraged und
struck Miss Duncan with his fst_in
the face, knocking her down. | She
Immediately procured a warrant for
5 ‘arrest.
A cgi
A visiting Frenchman, expecting to
find pence, in surprined bs” zeneral_un-
Kotsie dhge ‘we pay’ people in Washing’
Kamin, Keep ‘uk worried Wal” Stren
THE PORO AGENT RENDERS
A DISTINCTIVE SERVICE
It Pays to Patronize Her |
. PORD HAIR AND TOILET PRODUCTS stand out
from the crowd of competition with character strikingly their own.
PORD Products are amazingly effective. That PORO
satisfies is evidenced by the fact that over THREE MILLION
PORD patrons were served with FORD Treatments and PORD
Products by more than SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND PORO
AGENTS during the year just passed.
Wherever you live you may use PORD and enjoy
matchless satisfaction. |
'
There’s a PORO AGENT nearby who will cheerfully
+. serve you.
= If you don’t know her name, write
‘ g., PORO COLLEGE
Ges, \\ 4300 St. Ferdinand Avenue
we Q ST. LOUIS, MO., U.S. A.
Qu y . DEPT, 8-4 ~
) Mee aL) “a:
i ARM , 2
Mees ia .
—pZARRONG, AUT win a Fen.
ARES)! V [ig SOGNO ONIONS LO NOION EE),
\ | | | Kk aa:
q Sf ‘
( we pS) py
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
tflat obtained In Mi
BATTLE BEGUN 22s
alanuing. for. acqult
silent’ sentence
tho iury"wwat Ball
regent third telat
IN REDUCTION SSE te het
OF SENTENCE DAYLIGHT BANDI
if DOOR AND ROI
oe. Dayilgnt bandits J
door of the apart
Citizens Urge Review | tere ouch
of Collins’ Case |e sttting una ca
Houston, Tex., Nov. 21—The Na-
tional Association for the Advnnco-
ment of Colored Peoples announces
that {ts local branch has been in-
strumental in saving Luther Collins
from the death penalty, to which he
had been sentenced after a hanty
and mob-swayed trinl In 1922. As
a result of the recent new trial In
Richmond, Tex. Collins was sen-
fenced to 99 years in prison and
the branch is now beginning a new
fist tw have the sentence reduced
and Collins freed.
Woman Makes Charge
Luther Collins was accused on
Jan. 24, 1922, by x white woman of
Houston, who alleged that he as-
aaulted her, forcing her and her 22-
Fear-old white escurt at the point of
pistol to £0 into h deserted wood
Yard, and that Colling held off the
White man while the assault wat
cominitted.
Tnvestigation by the Houston
branch of the association, after Col-
ling had been hastily tried and sen-
tenced to death disclosed that Col-
Ins not only bore ‘an excelient
reputation but had heen nowhere
near the aceno of the allened attack
| Furtnermors, it was shown. that. te
traverse the route Indicated by. the
white woman It would have heer
necessary for Collins to have forces
the two while people to. walk 25
yards at the point of a pistol on
main. strect_ on which there wer:
five strect. car lines and two Mne:
df auto busses. Evidence was als
adduced showing the undispute:
had" character borne by the “whit
woman, the Impossibility of the as:
nault having heen committed whit
a gun was belng pointed at the
white escort, ani the sinaliness 0
the room which would have madi
such scene impossible.
“Under eross-oxamination the wht
ees ag
a GF)
As ( IRI Bw
SAY “‘BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Colis. Headache Neuralgia Lumbago
Pain Toothache -Neuritis¢ © Rheumatism
Co only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Drugziste.
awoivio 1s the trade mark of Bazer Manutactore of Monoscetlcacidester of Salteslleactd_
ttlat obtained In March, 1924. The
Jury, compared” entirely of nites,
emalned but two. days, elght_ men
alariding for acquittal ahd four fot
a light sentence. Unable to agree,
the jury. was finally dismissed, ‘The
recent third trial, held Oct. 25, re-
sulted in the 89-year sentence.
Daylight dandits jimmied the front
door of the apartment of Mrs. Pru-
dence Fouche, 4944 St. Lawrence
Ave, apartment 1, Wednesday, and
took clothing und cash amounting to
moré than $200.
‘The robbery occutred In tho morn-
Ing when the bandits discovered
that no one was home. ‘They en-
tered the fron{ door and pald a visit
to the room.of Elliott Sheen, brother
of Mra. Fouche, who 1s n sophomore
student at Armour institute. Hero
they dimmied his army trunke, and
took more than $75 in cash. | They
also paid a visit to the closet of Mrs.
Fouche and helped themselves to
dresses valued at-more than $125,
Herbert Sheen, a freshman at the
University of Chicago of Medicine
was the frst to discover the rob-
bers. He notified the police. They
were unable to find a clue,
Sirs, Fouche told ‘a. Defender re-
porter that the bandits had come tc
the house on Tucrday ovening and
attempted to enter n side window
bur were frightened away.
pa
Minister Dies
New Orteuns, La., Nov. 31.— ihe
Rew T. F. Rolbnson, D. D., for more
than 10 years pastor of the First St.
A. 'E. church, one of the largest
churches In tha efty, died Nov. 7 at
‘the. Filnt-Goodrldge hospital "wfter
anattick of bent trouble, ‘The tu-
‘neral was held. from the church,
of which he was pastor, Tuesday,
Nov. 4.
The Rev. Mr. Robinson was high-
ly esteemed by members of both
recs. He was, horn In 1880 and
moved to this city about 1896. He
had ynatored tho largest ehurches of
this dlatrict and was largely respon-
sible. for the remarkably growth of
tho First St. church, | Many’ additions
were made during his term as pas-
tor.
Tie Is survived by his widow, his
slater and two brothers, one of whom
isthe Tey. John C. Robinson, pastor
of St. Murk’s M. E. ehurch, New York
city.
a ne)
voce uantite of wong used the
10" brileve. that the Chinese must hiave
founda cemeters tp hich all the dead
politicians are burled.—-Columia, Rees
G. F. P. iS HELPING THIS
POPULAR BIRMINGHAM WGMAN
OVERCOME CRAMPING SPELLS
a
sll le
NN
on
ec OS ts
S: =. fil =2
eee Pi =
msgs aS a = 2
oe \ cl
a S44)
oN BD |
hen
ot ON LL
ON
Burs \ rh C2
BP] MAUD fy RR iG
(A LAWSON Q) NS O\ ea
Women Now Lypona on
Je Reaore er tay
ee
i GREATEST RECORD |
TIN MODERN TIMES |
den ccminioenaet
‘The now famous St. Joseph’s
medicines are selling at the
overwhelming rate of more
than ten million packages a
year.
This undoubtedly proves that the
asfrerent St. Joseph's medicines are
filing @ long tele want in grent
American homes in cuses where’ peo-
We are able to diagnose thelr ovn
Yrouble and’ simply. want relia
Fredicine to help’ them overcome the
cause.
You should tearn about them and
he prepared to ‘make use. of thelr
wonilerful merit, ‘not only for your-
self, but for your family us well.
If your druggiat hasn't got St
Joseph's G. Pe send $1.00 find 25¢
extra to cover postage charges te
Rattlers Mharmaey, Memphis, ‘Tenn.
ea beta
“T suffered from irregular-
ity,” says Mrs. Maud Lawson,
whose home at 312 N. Eighth
Ave. is so often the center of
social affairs of the Race in
Birmingham, Ala. “During my
—— I would have such ter-
rible cramping it would take all
my strength and | would have
to stay in bed for two or three
days at this time. It seemed
as though I always had back-
ache and, if I had to"be on my
feet for any length of time,
L would have sharp, shooting
pains in my sides and stomach.
“T had tried so many tonics
which didn’t do me any good,
T had about lost all faith in
medicines. Then a friend of
may, who is using G. F. P. is
getting so much benefit from
this wonderful medicine, 1
thought I would try it.
“G. F. P. fs certainly differ-
ent from any of the other medi-
cines I have ever used. Before
Chad finished the first bottle
of G. F. P. all the pain in my
back had gone. And, by the
time I had finished the second
bottle of this great medicine.
T had regained so much of my
strength that, when my ——
came on me, f didn’t have an
che ora pain. Now Lam just
‘as strong as I ever was. It does
not make any difference how
long I am on my feet now, |
never have those sharp, shoot-
ing pains any more. I wish |
could tell every woman and
girl about St. Joseph's G. F. P.”
‘The experiences of this popular
Iaeminghatn society woman are simi:
ar to thore of thouxmds of other
Firle and women hn_our. group. whe
fre active in the seelal worl ‘The
Srentious demands upon the strength
Uf these seomen nownays is go nerve
Crnnusting that these seomen are vers
ee Ne U eat eeonkenied conditsen
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1yz¢
Battle Against Unseen and Terrible Enemy Which Is
Causing Most of the Headaches, Backaches, Pains,
Nausea, Cramping and That Nervous Weak, Run
Down Condition of Depression, Is Making the Inter-
ests of All Women the Same
| Authorities on the subject,|backaches, pains in the sides
who have studied the condition |and limbs, irregularity, loss of
of women in all walks of life}appetite, nausea, cramping,
are positively alarmed at the|‘izziness, fainting spells and
increasing number of women|that awful feeling of drowsi-
and girls nowadays who suffer|ness and depression. And they
from so-called “female disor-|are frank in stating that, unless
ders,” such as headaches, | they get rid of the cause of this
thet they easily hecome victims of
Unt dreaded malady—Catarrh of the
Pemale Orenns,
This dreuded enemy to the health
and happiness of our women and
Rinks is always hovering over. them
Natting fer an, opportunity. to. tind
Teagement In. the. mucous. lining. of
their tmost Important. organs when
thes are weakened through colds. ex-
Lngure, wver-eserton oF Some Uns:
had drain on thelr svstem, such as
Lakes lice when xirls are. Blossom
ine Inte womanhood, at ehildbteth
Gurimg “the change of life.”
Unfortunately, once Catarrh gets
its held ana vietim, It never. “work
Téelt gue uf the system.” aie 30. mans
‘other ils re commonly. supposed. te
flo. But, unless the proper ‘stes aré
taken ts overcame and stump tc out
ie continues. to grow cand. aprew
Ghroughout Ue entire aystem, Cearins
Chven and wasting Away Mesh, muscle
nd tise nnd destroying nerve-tores
Rnd energy faster than the nourish:
iment Nou take ino your system cat
build Cup.
However. now that the discoverer
of the famous St. Joseph's G. FP
fave definitely proven that In at Yeas
nine out af ten cases, those palntu
anil distressing troubles of women
Ruch ‘as headaches, backaches. yal
fn the sites and limbs, trrewalarits
hervousness cramping’ loss, of Ay
petite, sleeniessient, dizainess, faint
Inge studs anal thae awful weary feeb
Ind. tee ayinptome ot the. presiie
af ‘nite. dreaded. Misease, thousand
fF nue women sind gis’ are. Andin;
fe wisdom to take the proper stem
te overevnnn al stam at Gaines
then thes frst hemin to feel any
these distressing symptoms,
St. Joseph's G. B.D. te what i be:
Tieved by ite discoverers to. beth
first ivect specitte for the overcom:
Jing aid stamping out of Catarrh «0
he Female Organ and ts proving it
fower amd rellabiity aver tht
readied mnnlads in thousands of case
every day. And there tx xearcels.
Section nt the United States it whiel
So wil wot find. teaming, hap
women, wea. were ance thin, nerve
and in’ pdm and: suffering, “Mat Ww
[are now. stronz and vigorous wit
Jan abundance of-vitality snd. south
tii viger through the cnasistent. 1s
of 6, F'n he phengnienal medi
which. ie mhaKing such a" Uremendou
Suveese wherever ttle being intro
Guced to our wamen ond zirla,
If sour deugeist hasn't got St
Josephs G. E_P. send $1.00 and 25
extra to cover postage charges. t
Rattier's Pharmacy, Memphis, Tents
sop canta
backaches, pains in the sides
and limbs, irregularity, loss of
appetite, nausea, cramping,
dizziness, fainting spells and
that awful feeling of drowsi-
ness and depression. And they
are frank in stating that, unless
they get rid of the cause of this
condition in their most import-
ant organs, our modern women
will soon degerenate into a lot
of weaklings, unfit to bear or
rear healthy, happy children,
and only a source of misery to
themselves and those around
them.
The trouble is so many of
our women nowadays overlook
their health entirely in the mad
scramble and hard grind of so-
cial and household duties and,
‘before they realize it. they are
exhausted, sick and weak, with
no energy, hope or ambition
eft in their nervons and pain-
racked system.
And more pitiful yet is the
fact that so many of our
‘women don’t know where to
turn for relief and help when
‘they begin to feel their health
jand vitality slipping from them
land pain and suffering begins
to set their nerves on edge and
depress their spirits. In spite
of their years of suffering and
experimenting, there are still
many of our women who make
the common mistake of trying
one thing and: then another
which promise relief. when
their common sense tells them
that such a course is worse
‘than useless.
Women Now Depend on
St. Joseph’s G. F. P.
A remarkable feature of the
success of St. Joseph's G. F. P.
is the different types of women
it ig attracting. They range
from the prosperous looking
and fashionably dressed
woman to the plainly dressed
working girls and women. |All
rub elbows in a common cause
—the search for vitality and
‘health, which will relieve them
‘of their irregularity. nervous-
Jness, headaches, “backaches,
pains in the sides, back and
limbs; and that terrible de-
pressed, melancholy feeling.
SAWhy Rot? auaks the representa
Live of the discoverers af the now f=
nous GB Pe Grease a woindn
fay money and social position, that
Mowsn’'t make her immagine fron the
ietects of wstrelessness, neleet. eX
fesure and Imprudence. I fact. tid~
Wig around in closed. cars, atvendinz
inetien in. the day time and. social
Einetions at night, together with rien
food which ig uswalls consumed, wil
hue woman's most dinpwctint wrens
Ct of order ax sure ae fate.
Joc Meth wien athe
have heen (seeing awrve. specialists:
The well-toste wornan seem toate
friute her’ trouhles tu her nerves,
Hut tee Gatarrh nt the Pesntle Organs
(hich is making the theusunda, of
Tistlens, ‘sallow and nerviuts. women
Bawng dhe rich and your alle all
Geer America,
“Many. who are getting GF. PY
new are being sent by telends. Tolay
A'prominent woman sald-she beat
ising It hecatise her mata, told her
GUE fis Going swondere ‘for her.
She eald: “My maid siffered Crom in-
Fommias caused by. nervenie exhaule-
Cone and T have find the same erste
for'geares Twanted to sa, “remmgs
Foe, inadame, both son snd Your mld
Bre ‘ufering from Catareh of the
Hemals Orauns. whieh is sipping Your
Siaity and strength from sour preeis
jus atateme fut] didn't, sold her
The medieine and ste left, tiemls bee
Twine he ie oine to take cP. Dy
for chow high-suding silent, Te
Emakes Ie wells she: will be. pois
tive It felieved her of Insomnia or
Some other: iminary: trouble. when
ie feally simpy drives out the Cie
[tirehal:tntlammation of the mucous
[liming of hee most Imprtane onan
Pint helps. the fom she eat nenteish
Gun mulctes nerves nnd theutes to
Td np her witalite, emery and
Srength.*
Te yon search far the explanation
jaf Why Soctoseph's GF. Py ix fain
He Inch “for sumen ts inpemine
‘eit condition, sehen other medicines
juve dane ser ittle. yeu wont have
Ui ool fire the reason Gur the uns
Muunted success of this great medl-
Cine ia ite'day. in and diy_ out ree
iiabitity ty overcome and stamp out
(autrh of the Female Orzans, that
vtircaded malady which isthe cause
[ur Mine ut ug every” ton cuses of
| Stcallea Menme’ trae.”
Te year drucgist Ivisn’t ot St
{goseph's G. Fe send $1.00 and 330
aatrt to cover ‘pestuge charges to
[Batters stharmaey. Memphis, ‘Tents
Bann oll Yes
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924
THE LADY OF THE ROSE
To soften and silken, add life, lustre and incomparable beauty to bobbed hair in a surprisingly short time, use Madam C. J. Walker's Glossine. Not sticky and gummy, but made of beneficial scalp oils, pleasantly perfumed, it is positively the surest, safest way to make your bobbed hair look its best. Try it today.
THE MADAM C. J. WALKER MFG. CO., INC. 640 North West Street Indianapolis, Indiana
SEEKS PASTOR WHO STRAYED FROM FLOCK
Wife Broadcasts News On Missing Mate
Springfield Mass., Nov. 21—Mrs. Piera David, wife of the Rev. Moses Prince David, of 24 Hulbard Ave. has entitled aid of the press in a search for her husband, who disappeared from Springfield, Oct. 23, after visiting New England, leaving her penniless in his hosty departure, Mrs. David as sired, her husband found time to collect all of his personal belongings, with what household effects were still transportable, leaving her to the landlord. For two years prior to the abduction of the house, Mrs. David as arts, she has worked to provide household expense money. When a lecture tour, with stereo/cinemas, failed to make expenses and forced her to draw upon her slender earnings to make up deficits, she protected. It was after her retusal to continue platform work with her husband that he suddenly left town, on morning when she was as usual, at work.
The Rev. Mr. David at the time of his departure was leader of the Mt. Choir. He was formerly leader of the Loring St. A. M. E. church choir.
Truck Damages Train:
Railroad Brings Suit
Muskogee, Okla. Nov. 21.—Asserting that one of its trains had been in the way of the train at $2.00 when it struck a motor truck at a crossing near Stroud, Okla., the St. Louis, San Francisco railway recently filed suit for that amount in the United States district court against the owners of the truck, George Berry and Thomas Hughes, members of our group.
TORNIGHT
Tomorrow Alright
KEEPING WELL—An NR Tablet (a vegetable aperient) taken at night will help keep you well, by toning and strengthening your digestion and elimination.
Used for over
300 years
Get a
25" Box
MR
MINDS
Jrs
Chips off the Old Block
IN JUNIORS—Little NRA
One-third the regular dose. Made
with a special blend of
coated. For children and adults.
SOLD BY YOUR DUROGIST
THE FILM OF "THE LADY OF THE RING" BY JOHN B. HARRIS, WITH A FILM BY JOHN B. HARRIS, AND A FILM BY JOHN B. HARRIS.
For Sale by Agents, Druggists and Direct by Mail—Write Today for Our Free Beauty Book
Mr. and Mrs. George R. Garner, Jr. 441 E. 42d St., elapsed all former social functions complimentary to His Royal Highness Prince Kojo Tovalou Houenou, when they were hosts to a box party at Orehestra hall Monday evening, Nov. 17, the occasion was the annual recital of the internationally famous tenor, Roland Hayes.
At the close of the Hayes concert, Mr. and Mrs. Garner displayed their originality by conveying their guests to the Blakstone hotel, where a sumptuous after-recalled supper was served in the main dining room. Prince Kojo was made very happy
TO BEAUTIFY BOBBED HAIR
KEEPING your bobbed hair healthy, well groomed and in place, requires no little amount of care. Mere cleansing, brushing and combing is not enough.
during the evening by meeting several Frenchmen, who were also dining at the Blackstone. They recognized the prince at once as he is the owner and editor of Le Continent, a newspaper of wide circulation in Europe.
The guests, including Mrs. George R. Garner, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. Spencer Dickerson and Dr. E. H. Stephens, were invited to see the prince unanimously acclaimed Mr. and Mrs. Garner very pleased hosts and the prince assured them that this function was by far the most pretentious one given in his honor since his arrival in America.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
DROPS CHARGE AFTER CONFAB WITH LAWYER
Wilson-Allen Case Is Stricken Off
Attorney Charles A. Wilson dropped the prosecution against Miss Marie Allen his former 18-year-old office girl, whom he had arrested a few weeks ago on a warrant charging the forging of checks drawn on the Franklin Trust and Savings bank to the amount of $498.
Miss Allen, prior to her arrest, was residing in the home of Mrs. Lucinda Lilly, 3532 Grand Bwd. She was held to the grand jury under $1,000 pounds following her preliminary hearing in the Wabash Ave. court on the charge. Ave. police held her held in jail until Friday, Nov. 14, when she appeared for hearing, after her indictment Thursday, before Chief Justice Hopkins of the criminal court, who dismissed the case after Attorney Wilson refused to prosecute her.
Wilson Hears Charges
Steps to have him drop the case were taken by Attorney Wendell E. Green, counsel for Miss Allen, after a conference on the evidence in which Attorney Wilson elected to waiy prosecution. Mr. Wilson is married. According to Miss Allen's story, Wilson took her into his office at 3415 Michigan Avenue, where she guarded when she was 14 years old. He paid her $4.50 a week. She was getting the same salary at the time of her arrest. During her four years in his employ Wilson is alleged to have given Miss Allen wide privileges. The writing of checks was a part of them. He had her failed, however, when he was forged. But, prior to that, he persuaded her, the girl stated, to refuse another position which would have paid her $15 a week.
Miss Allen is now residing with her aunt, Mrs. Alice Pierce, 4001 Calumet Ave. She has already paid back nearly half of the money. The balance will be paid in monthly installments. When asked about the case by a Defender reporter, Wilson merely said: "The case has been settled. I won't say why it was dismissed, but it's over now."
SHOPLIFTERS CAUGHT
Mrs. Bessie Johnson, 2174 Broadway, Gary, Ind., was arrested by Sergeant Gorman and charged with stealing dresses in a Loop department store. She was fined $50 and costs and placed on probation for six months. Ben Morris, 650 Liberte St., New York, was fined $1 and costs and sentenced to 30 days in the house of correction.
Fit Attacks Stopped FREE
Don't suffer or allow anyone you know to suffer from it. You can help by contacting the attacker that has suppressed the attacks on those sands of raws. This simple home treatment gives relief to anyone who has been attacked and on an attack since she took this treatment 10 years ago, has requested her to send a FREE $100 gift card to the Attackers, App. 69, 895 Island Ave., Milwaukee, WI.
INJUNCTION IS ISSUED AGAINST ORDER OF MOOSE
Philadelphia, Nov. 21.—Judge Bartlett in court of common pleas on Saturday granted an injunction against Keystone lodge No. 5, the supreme lodge of the Independent, Renewal and Protective Order of Moose, Inc., George W. Grant, grand dictator, and J. Harry Seeggins, secretary, restraining them using the name of "Moose" or any badge or emblem containing the head of a moose, or using any ritual of the Order of the Moose. The defendants were incorporated in New York in September, 1923. The local auxiliary has headquarters at 1700 Addison St. this city. The proceeding was brought by the supreme lodge of the world, Loyal Order of Moose, and Philadelphia lodge No. 54, L. O. O. M., which do not admit Face members to that order.
VETS MUST MAKE BONUS APPLICATIONS BY JAN.
The Editor of this paper, at a Lincoln Legion banquet in Chicago a few weeks ago, urged the organization to raise a half million dollar fund for the aid of our world war veterans. His stand and suggestion was well taken it seems. President Coolidge is now head of an organized effort of the American Legion to raise $5,000,-000 for the aid of world war veterans. If the American Legion needs a sum of this magnitude for this purpose it seems to us that the half million suggested is a modest sum for the purposes in mind.
Editor Abbott also mentioned the fact that the larger part of this contribution from recipients of the bonus who could give a small part of their bonus for such a fund.
We want to urge that those who are eligible for the bonus, both in this state and for the federal bonus, delay no longer in getting their applications in. The state secretary announces that January 1 is the last day for filing applications. The cut off date is not not to late. Late applicants ought to get busy. The Defender bonus bureau is available for your help and service, without charge. Write to our bonus bureau for any advice and information. Word comes to us, that in the South, many of our boys are being coerced by the whites in a manner to prevent or discourage the filling of our bonus bureau, that the invested and remedied by the government. If ex-service men have had experiences of this sort let our bonus bureau have the facts. An effort will be made to put them before the proper governmental authorities.
Mother of Nine Given
SENTENCE FOR RINGING
Linden, N. J., Nov. 21.—Indicted for manslaughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Edgar, 64, of Burlington, attended Friday when she appeared before Judge Stein in the Union county court. The mother of nine children, Mrs. Edgar, who had been in jail since the date of the crime, June 1, was charged with smothering her infant in bed clothing. It was brought out that there was no blood intent in the murder under the influence of liquor had gone to bed, not knowing the child was covered with the bed clothes.
Pape's
DIAPEPSIN
FOR INGESTION
Instantly! End Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn, Acidity
RESOLUTIONS PRAISE LATE MASS.LEADER
Lodge Great Force for Justice in Senate
Hoston, Mass., Nov. 21.—The sympathy of our people in the death of Senator Lodge was expressed in the following message sent to John E. Lodge, relative of the Senator, by the National Equal Rights league.
"The National Equal Rights league learned with regret of the death of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, eminent statesman, who in the last decade of his career as Senator was ever courteous, sympathetic and responsive to citizens of Color seeking to petition Congress for justice, right or protection denied.
"He repeatedly granted personal or committee audiences to delegations of the league, one on the anti-lynching bill, thereby saved from the committee pigeon hole and brought to the Senate floor and there pushed as long as his party would permit against the Southern Democratic filibuster. We shall call his appreciative lover a justice in the position for parlon of the Colored soldiers in prison for the Houston retaliation.
"The league, in behalf of the Colored Race, sends sincere sympathy and condolence to the relatives of Henry Cabot Lodge.
The message was signed by Hon. William Trotter, national secretary, and Albert Wolff, secretary of the Boston branch.
The first skywriter to come to America got $1,000,000 in a year. And yet he did not believe that a higher Iberian lot would not pay—New York Herald Tribune.
Pape's
DIA PEPSIN
FOR
INDIGESTION
When Stoma
Instantly! End Indigestion
Correct your digestion and quiet your rebellious stomach by eating a few tablets of Pape's Diapespin—any time! Nothing else known relieves the distress of Indigestion, Gases, Heartburn, Flatulence. Bleeding on Acidity so promptly—besides, the relief is pleasant and harmless.
MOTHER WINS CASE
A 60-year-old mother, Mrs. Nunnie Jackson, appeared before Judge Francis Borell and pleaded the cause of her son, Hoysie Jackson, 3806 Cottage Grove Ave., who was charged with assaulting James Cooke, 744 E. 39th St., with a knife. The mother won, and Hoysie was placed on probation for a year.
WOMAN IS SENTENCED FOR KILLING FIANCE
St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 21.—Confessed slayer of Albert Boone, her finance, Mrs. Orlean Morton, of 349 Rondo St., was sentenced to two to 15 years at the Shakopee reformatory by Judge Charles Beechloeer, in the district court here. Mrs. Morton plued guilty to a charge of second degree manslaughter, asserting that she shot Boone in self-defense, in the mishap of a quarrel at her residence, St. Paul. After the shooting, Mrs. Morton ran into the Rondo police station, where she told the desk sergeant. "I shot a man up there; you had better go up and look at him!" When detectives reached her home, the man was dead.
Brights Disease Claims
Sandy Bryant in Gotham
New York, Nov. 21.—Sandy W. Bryant, 217, 139th St. passed away in New York on November 21. St. Brights disease. Funeral services were held at St. James Presbyterian church Sunday, Nov. 9, the Revs. Frank Hyder, W. R. Lawton and Mr. Watson officiating. Mr. Bryant leaves a widow, Mrs. Nancy Bryant; mother, Mrs. Cornella Bryant of Charlotteville, a.; two brothers, Robert Bryant of Springfield, Mass, and a sister, Mrs. Belle Wilson, 125 W. 13th St. Mr. Bryant, who was ill for a year and four months, died in the full triumph of the faith. Interment was in Flushing cemetery.
The news that the senate will broadcast its sessions has played havoc with the sale of radio instruments—Life.
ch "Rebels"
n, Gas, Heartburn, Acidity
Millions know the magic of "Pape's Diapepsin" and always keep it handy to reinforce the digestion, should they eat too much or eat something which does not agree with them. 60 cent packages guaranteed by druggists everywhere.
BED H
The Genuine Original Glossine
SH
The Gland That Causes Men to Get Up at Night
The gland that causes getting up at night is known as the prostate and is a notorious trouble maker. It is estimated that 65 out of every 100 men past 40, and many under that age, have prostate disease, which, if unchecked, often leads to a serious operation. The prostate surrounds the neck of the bladder like a washer. Naturally, when the bladder becomes inflamed by polysomnia, the kidneys filter out the blood, the irritation spreads to the prostate. As the bladder fills, it closes the neck of the bladder, making urination difficult and painful and causing pains in the back, head and legs.
An easy way to treat these annoying and dangerous conditions is to take one or two renex pills after each meal. The renex formula has been victorious in thousands of such cases. One authority says, "Each has a valuable tote offer and tests your valor. Anybody wishing to prove the value of the formula can get a full-size, two-dollar treatment of the pills under a money-back guarantee by sending the attached coupon to the address given therein. If you prefer, you can pay the postman two dollars and postage on delivery, instead of sending the money with your order. In any case, if you report an entire 10 days that the purchase price will be refunded at once upon request. This is a thoroughly reliable company, so you need not hesitate about ordering the renex if you need it.
GUARANTEE COUPON
Gentlemen: Send me a regular-size Renex treatment, as guaranteed unless you indd. be enclosed. I will pay $5 and journey on delivery, but you are to refund the purchase price at once, upon request, if I report within 10 days that I am not satisfied.
Name
Address
Fill out and mail to: The Renex Co.
Dept. 1268, Kangas City, Mo.
Winter Weight
Extra Pants FREE
SIZES
6 to
17 Yrs.
Worth Double
This Sale Price
Boy's Suit
$598
An amazing bargain! The best of fine quality wool
Boy's suit of fine quality wool
Nortford jacket style with
two zippered side pockets
two zippered side pockets
belt jumps and adjustable
by extended thighs, adjust in appearance and will with-
hold comfort in hot weather. In appearance and will with-
hold comfort in hot weather.
SEND NO MONEY with orders, just go to
nothing, the extra hickery. If after examination did
not fit, back. COLORS: Navy Blue or Brown. SIZES: 6 to 17 years.
International Mail Order Co. Dept. V4408, Chicago
Musa Rhodi
HAIR
NONE
ANUINE
FINE
HAIR
35 Cents Everywhere
PART 1—PAGE 3
Free! Free!
Over 44 of hair grower, glass
no cream etc.
Cloth, no cream
MADAME
RHODA, 130 West 139th St.
New York. Editor Eye Race
Journal, copy 10c.
The above picture is the luxurious apartment building at 650 Main St., N.Y., owned by the Rhinelander estate, where Leonard Kip Rhinelander and his bride, Mrs. Alice Beatrice Rhinelander, now reside. Insert at left shows the humble home of Mr. and Mrs. George Jones, parents of the bride, on Pelham Road, where the young millionaire did his courting.
Police Give No Aid When Mob Menaces Man's Home
St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 21.—While a mob of white toughs outside his barber shop, located on a semi-exclusive residential boulevard here, demolished an automobile, pulled down the light in front of the shop, and to the rufous accompaniment of the threatening moose over the light-arm, Joseph Starks, proprietor of the shop, stood calmly at the window listening to the screeching drums, and men whom he recognized in the mob. Then he walked to the door and warned the reverellers that his protection he had sought, there would be bloodshed if the mob's violence continued. The whites dispersed. The display of violence on Oct. 31 was the second attempt of organized
tfully perfumed Pluko
containing the finest hair
own to science—
preparation which so
mns hair and makes it
and easy to arrange in
new being used by thou-
en and women, whose
admiration of all—
Miss Gussie Williams of
in' Wild" Company, who
to use Pluko Hair Dress-
a delightful fragrance
so soft and easy to ar-
ner I wish."
For those who appreciate the best
there is the delightfully perfumed Hair Dressing, containing the first growing oils known to science—This wonderful preparation will quickly straightens hair and long, soft, glossy and easy to adhere any manner is now being used in sands of our men and women beautiful hair is the admiration Among them is Miss Gussie Wit the famous "Runnin' Wild" Comp says: "I just love to use Pluko Hairing. It has such a delightful and makes my hair so soft and even range in any manner I wish."
For those who appreciate the best
there is the delightfully perfumed Pluko Hair Dressing, containing the finest hair growing oils known to science-
This wonderful preparation which so quickly straightens hair and makes it long, soft, glossy and easy to arrange in any manner is now being used by thousands of our men and women, whose beautiful hair is the admiration of all Among them is Miss Gussie Williams of the famous "Runnin' Wild" Company, who says: "I just love to use Pluko Hair Dressing. It has such a delightful fragrance and makes my hair so soft and easy to arrange in any manner I wish."
Pluko HAIR DRESSING
BLACK AND WHITE CANS
40¢
BIG GREEN CANS
25¢
Pluko
HAIR DRESSING
PREPARED ONLY BY
The Pluko Co.
MENPHIS, TENN.
DEALERS EVERYWHERE
ARE SELLING IT AT THE
OVERWHELMING RATE OF
MORE THAN A MILLION
PACKAGES YEARLY.
PART 1-PAGE 4
NINE WHITES ARE INDICTED IN PEONAGE CASE
Made Prisoners Work on Farms
Penskeel, Fla., Nov. 21—Charles and Alfred Land, two of nine persons indicted here by a federal grand jury recently on the working of Race men on turpentine farms in Calhoun county, gave bond of $2,500 each Nov. 12 for appearance before Judge William B. Shepard. They are naval stores officer, C. D. Clark, W. T. Chaffin county judge, and T. E. Cason, a deputy sheriff, all of Calhoun county, are among the indicted. They gave bonds in their home county, M. B. Davis, the third turpentine operator indicted: Thomas Simler, deputy sheriff of Liberty W. White and William Procure have given bonds for their appearance. The turpentine workers are allowed to have been arrested and sent to District Attorney Fred Brady, the case when carried to will produce testimony from some of the alleged victims of unlawful firing because they at-
Individual presented before United
Horse Commissioner W. H. Milton at
hours of the primary hearing
conducted by the grand jury investigation,
located the abuse of the state
counts in arresting and holding the
assistant District Attorney
Henry M. Holliday, who are being
members of our group are being held
withitness, following their appearance before the grand jury.
NEW YORK BADY SUFFERING WITH SLEEPING SICKNESS
New York City, Nov. 21.—As we go to presbytery George Zeigler, 5-year-old boy, W11 and W12, he was still suffering from sleeping sickness of which he has been afflicted for the past 10 days. Since Monday, Nov. 19, the doctor has been visiting him with three minutes at a time. He has been in Harlem hospital since Nov. 13.
"Cascarets" 10c if Dizzy, Bilious, Constipated
安
To clean your bowels without cramping or overacting, take *Cascarets*. *Sick headache, dizziness, billiardiness, gasses, indigestion sour* and all such dis-
tress gone by morning. Nice laxative and cathartic on earth for grown-ups and children. 10c. 25c and 50c boxes—any drug store.
te
d Pluko
nest hair
which so
makes it
range in
my thou-
, whose
of all—
miams of
ny, who
r Dress-
agrance
sy to ar-
PLUKO
WHITE
HAIR DRESSING
PREPARED ONLY BY
The Pluko Co.
MENPHIS, TENN.
whites to drive out Joseph Starks, who along with Attorney W. T. Franks had aroused the openly expressed displeasure of renegade whites by purchase of property leaving the barber shop, which Mr. Starks has opened upon his property, the mob continued its Halloween disorder in front of the residence of Attorney Franks. Mr. Franks was later induced, according to announcement of Creston Ave. Improvement association, to sell his property and move elsewhere. Mr. Starks has evidenced no intention of weakening in his position. The Groveland Park association and the Creston Ave. Improvement association held meetings in public school buildings to discuss the "invasion" of fashionable residence districts by
Hermione
Stanley
Olga
Hermione's
Studio
Clapo
HAIR DRESS
Alfredo
Sicario
Olga
MISS GUSSIE WILLIAMS of the RUNNIN' WILD COMPANY
HAIR DRESSING
DEALERS EVERYWHERE ARE SELLING IT AT THE OVERWHELMING RATE OF MORE THAN A MILLION PACKAGES YEARLY.
---
RIDE RESIDE
International Newsreel Photos.
New Rochelle, N. Y., owned by the
ice Beatrice Rhinelander, now reside.
ents of the bride, on Pelham Road,
Race property-holders. Their resolution to adopt drastic measures was a shot was fired through the window of Mr. Stark's barber shop, Halloween, while a customer was being shaved. Flying glass for a moment endangered both barber and customer. It was following this that Mr. Starks made the request for police protection which was promised but received. Citizens of the race have empowered attorneys to consult with the municipal authorities, and to forestall violations to restrict property-holding by members of our Race. Attorneys George W. Hamilton and E. H. Anson, of the race, and Mr. Stark's in a civil rights suit, now pending grand jury investigation.
HELD TO GRAND JURY
Upon the testimony of Jack C. Conner, 4705 Greenwood Ave. Henry, NY, he held to the grand jury under $5,000 bonds. Conner contended that Lloyd pushed him up into an elevator shaft, strong-armed him and robbed him.
```markdown
```
IR SING
---
SIDE WOMAN HELD FOR MURDER OF HER SON
Shoots Him to Death After Quarrel
"I didn't mean to kill my child. God in Heaven knows that I did not mean to take his life, but I couldn't bear to have a child. I had given him choice and beat me when I not supporting him," declared Mrs. Mary Watson, 33 years of age, 4733 Federal St., when she testified before the Supreme Court of the Chester Mitchell at the Provident hospital Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Watson was charged with having shot to death her 20-year-old son, George, in greenwood after quarreled in their home late Monday evening. The fatal shooting is said to have come as the climax in a mother and son斗. Upon several occasions it is said that the boy had-been his mother and once attempted to take her life. Mrs. Watson, who also accompanied her, now came to Chicago in 1919 from Canton, Miss, since which time it is said that the two had lived happy until a year ago, when she was struck by a truck of working and would look to his mother for support.
Argues With Girl
On Monday evening he and his mother were home, Miss Mary Adams, 21 years of age, 498 Denbear St., his former sweetheart, Percy bibb, 39 years of age, 498 Catherine Freeman, 498 Dearborn St. Everything went well until Mary and Percy began playing. Percy bibb Mary on the finger, and Percy the cheek, Percy became angry and asked if there was any blood coming from his cheek. "If there is any I'm going to hurt you," he said. Even though he dID not hurt Mary, he did not try to bruise the girl. She ran to his mother for protection, but he is said to have struck her again. Mrs. Watson who was working on her dressing room, the lighting, "You haven't a d — thing to do with this," he said. At this the mother became angry and told the boy if he made such a remake, he would have to stop the lighting. This did not seem to frighten him as he continued to curse his mother and the girl until Bright Weems, 4758 Federal St. and Howard Anderson, and asked the boy to stop the argument. He refused, however, and began striking his mother and the girl. Mrs. Watson ran to the dresser and put on a dress that drew it on the boy, satting that she would shoot if he failed to stop the fighting. "Shoot! Shoot! I don't believe the d — gun will shoot, he would shoot it," he said. His mother pulled the trigger and sent a bullet into his left thigh.
Beats Mother After Shooting
Perey then made a rush at his mother and knocked her to the floor and severely beat her until he fell to the floor exhausted from loss of blood. Weems and Anderson rushed him to the hospital where he died very soon afterwards. Officers N. L. Olivers and W. D. Williams of the 48th St. station went to the home, where they found Men into custody and is being held to the grand jury on a charge of manslaughter. He brought out that the boy was intubated during the time of the fight.
FIGHT STARTED. IN GEORGIA ENDS IN CHICAGO STREET CAR
A fight of four years ago which took place in Tacoma, GA, was renewed when Oatel Barnett, 3389 Vincennes Ave, met William Brown, $255 Barnett. The couple force Barnett was fined $50 and coats of cutting Brown with a knife.
WINTER MAKES PEOPLE SUFFER
Leaders of Groups Hopeful About Promised Relief
When the thermometer gets down below the freezing point, and foot and knee are cold, we want to do something to keep from being miserable all winter long. Most people are more "at home" in winter weather and cooler weather inflictons on most of us the tortures of aches and pain of rheumatism, and feet might easy. And because most of the things we use to get rid of them are cold, we need to be prepared it courageed and soon lose confidence in everything which is supposed to get rid of it. It is sometimes easy to relieve the pain for a time, but unless you get it right, it will keep coming back, and often when you least expect it. That is the reason our prescription which was found to be so good by some folks in a little town in the south of France, and take long for the news to spread, and before long the doctor had so many orders for it he had to make it in big
After a while the job got too big for him and he had to take drummists and people call it Prescription C-2233, after the original number it was given by the doctor, and they are asking for it by that name now to be sure that they get the right medicine. Nothing has ever equated this Prescription C-2233 for quickly driving the poles, to the out of your system. In fact, they can't stay in your blood when the ingredients which go into Prescription C-2233. All dealers have this prescription. You simply ask them for C-2233, and for 60 dollars what a wonderful medicine it is.
A "BROKEN OUT" FACE
Many men and women of middle age feel that they have never had a chance to make anything out of themselves. But the main reason for it usually is that they can't things like zena, letter, etc, on the face, neck, hands or arms, make them feel that they are not wanted around and they keep to themselves too much. You can get just as much out of life in yourself as you are in confidence in yourself, which you get naturally when you rid yourself of those skin troubles, if, you just use Black and White Ointment, and Soap. They are economically priced in generous packages. All dealers have when you buy one of the Ointments contain three times as much as the "size" Ady.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of *characters* Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it.
$16.50
ALAMO BLAZER
The new 1925 AISR Ranger, a revolver created by master firearms designer Ralph Ranger, is the most accurate revolver made. This revolver is made of finest blue steel, with automatic side rod ejector, and is equipped with white bone handles. It is guaranteed to be satisfactory in every way, and among its best refunded. Send for this revolver AT ONCE, as our present stock is limited. A regular $37.50 value for... $16.50
22-cal. Trench Automatic . $9.45 30-cal. German Luger . $22.50
22-cal. Genuine Mauser . 14.50 25-cal. Automatic . 11.75
LIGHT SKIN WINS
The man with the light skin is the man chosen for the leading and better-pasting positions—and he usually is the man in greater success than the successful men will prove this. There is no reason why you cannot be among the leaders. Here's a quick and easy way—simply use
Lighten and soften your skin. Remove the blotches and blisters.
Give the skin a smooth clear appearance.
Give the skin a smooth clear appearance after using this mar-
vous vanishing cream. Makes the skin years younger. Use it
before you powder.
Chicago drug stores have Fletcher's Bleach in 50-cent and $1
larr. Start today; improve your appearance; be successful.
FLETCHER LABORATORIES 138 W. Lake St.
ILL. IF YOUR DRUGGIST HAS NO FLETCHER BLEACH, SEND $1 FOR A JAR, POSTPAID
This Book just insisted should be in your home—sent fast, has send your name and address. We are the largest importer of the finest quality real estate in the United States. We offer Transformation, Combo, Hairdressers Supplies, etc. Save money—buy the direct from us at the lowest prices. Satisfaction guaranteed or refunded.
SLAYERS CLAIM THEY WERE PAID TO KILL WOMAN
Indiana, Miss., Nov. 21—James Parker and Cornellus Johnson, who were arrested here last week in connection with the murder of Mrs. Parker, were sentenced, according to the sheriff, in which they implicate some prominent white people. They claim they were paid by the people to kill the woman, whom they shot her body was burned almost beyond recognition by the murderers. Josa Corero, a white woman, his son, Jon, 15, and her brother, Frank Corero, are also being held by the police.
SUIT AGAINST WALTER COHEN IS DISMISSED
U. S. District Judge Renders Decision
New Orleans, La., Nov. 21.—The suit of E. Edward Bolte, said to be a debarred lawyer of Washington, D. seeking to oversee L. C. Roberts' renunciation of this suit, who is holding the office of comproiler of customs here, from that position and attacking the legality of the adoption of the amendment to Constitution of the United States was dismissed in the United States district court by Judge Rufus E. Foster. According to Bolte's suit, Cohen was not a citizen of the United States and did not consent "seventh," and could not claim citizenship because the amendment conferring it was illegal. If the case had been won by Bolte it would have been dismissed from the 15,000,000 people of Color in the United States.
"Statesmen, jurists and historians have termed that amendment the American Magna Charla," said Judge Foster, without mention of the Maxima Charla. For 50 years it has stood as a bulwark against the rights of citizens.
The following is the last paragraph in Judge Foster's decision: "We have prompt court first decided that certain rights were guaranteed and projected by the 14th amendment it necessarily then and there affirmed the validity of the amendment. The motion to dismiss be sustained and the bill dismissed."
There was a time when flappers got into the news, the sensore, but parents are more silent now—New York American.
I
cically prepared for Infants in
To avoid imitations, always look for the
Proven directions on each package.
IT'S HERE—ALA
$16.50
The new 1925 Alamo Ranger, a revolver
mechanics. The Alamo Ranger is, w
most accurate revolver made. This is
finest blue steel, with automatic side
white bone handles. It is guaranteed
if not so your money will be refunded.
AT ONCE, as our present stock is limi
value for...
32-cal. Trench Automatic.....$9.45
32-cal. Genuine Mauser.....14.50
Send for Free Firearm and Je
is Coming. You OWE Your
ORDER
GARY TRA
1004-6 BROADWAY, DE
All Orders Sent Parcel Post, C. O.
LIGHT SK
The man with the light skin is the
safest man with the least risk. A look at the
favor with the ladies. A look at the
There is no reason why you cannot
a quick and easy way—simply use
Fletcher's
IT VANE
Lighten and soften your skin. Remi
And women, too, are finding great
yellow vanishing cream. Make it
before you powder.
Chicago docks store have Fletcher
Jars. Start today; injure your
FLETCHER LABOR
IF YOUR DRECCIST HAS NO FLETCHER BLUE
```markdown
```
A
The best made solid brass straightening, comb sent postpaid 89e each
GREAT FRENCH STATESMAN TO TOUR AMERICA
Deputy from Senegal to Visit Chicago
To Make Tour
Mr. Logan, after having informed those present that he had made arrangements to have Mr. Diagne speak at Washington, MN, New York, Boston, burgall, Cleveland and Detroit, stated he would like an organization of representatives and influential citizens to underwrite a lecture in Chicago. The explanation given by Mr. Logan, the explanation unanimously decided that the coming of Mr. Diagne to Chicago was highly desirable and that they would gladly sponsor a lecture in this city. It was also known that it would perhaps be a good thing to have the proceeds turned over to the Old Folks' home in this city. It was suggested unanimously that 100 representative people be invited to attend an arrangement not later than two weeks hence. This was done in order to obtain the interest and co-operation of other leading citizens of the city.
Dr. A. Wilberforce Williams made a motion that Dr. Smith and Mrs. Jessie E. Jones secure, if possible, a salary similar to that for the presentation of Mr. Diagne the lecture carried. This motion was supplemented by a suggestion, which was unanimously agreed upon, that Mr. Diagne appear on Monday evening, Alison Mr. Logan is leaving for Kansas City, Mo. St. Louis, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Columbus and Charleston, W. Va., in order to complete arrangements to have Mr. Diagne appear in the lecture. The group formed an organization with the following officers: Robert S. Abbott, chairman; Dr. Spencer C. Dickerson, vice-chairman; H. A. Dickinson, executive; Dr. H. Reginald Smith, executive; Dr. G. Chang, Jessie E. Jones, recording and corresponding secretary.
As further progress is made in the organization the facts will be received by the Chicago Office of the Chicago Defender, under whose auspices the lecture in Chicago is being given.
Cry for Hatcher's CASTORIA
MOTHER:—Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, espearms and Children all ages.
The signature of Charles Fletcher Physicians everywhere recommend it.
AMO RANGER
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924
MOTHER!
Hurry, Mother! A teaspoonful of "California Flax Syrup" now will thoroughly clean the little bowls and in a few hours you have a well playful child again. Even if cross, feverish, bilious, constipated or full of cold, children love its pleasant taste.
Tell your druggist you want only
one of the medications, which
has directions for babies and
children of all ages printed on bottle,
or "California" if you want any imitation.
dresses grow their hair,
and positive women
can help them do so.
Special today and get
a discount on
diamonds to grow
your hair or refine
it.
Brilliant colors.
Immense luster and a
little shine.
Fabulous hair.
Furl appreciation, having
been sold for a num-
ber of years.
They remove dandr
irriff, and break
hair off falling hair.
These agents making a living selling these oils.
You are a good salesman and put the course of beauty
culture, haircare, beauty training, the entire course
course, and give $.00 worth of oils for you to
issue a beautiful diploma. You cannot afford to omit any of these articles.
PRICE LIST
Albright's Temple Group and Hair
Dressing
Albright's Pressing Oil
Albright's Gold C Cream
Albright's Foam
Elite of the above three articles $1.35.
Ask your朋友 for Albright's Preservation
Semi stamp for copy.
ALBRIGHT INDUSTRIAL
4032 Indiana Ave.
Chicago
S14.75
The TEXAN
52.20 or .38 Cal.
A Powerful, Accurate and Safe Swing.
SEND NO MONEY! Pay on line
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED
NEW YORK IMPORTERS CO.
Dept. TZ51, 201 Broadway, New York
New
$ 98
Contains nutriment, powder, puff and
cinnamon, enriched with a wind waker.
Also a photo plate. Beautifully
Wear
MAKES WONDERFUL GIFT.
3 pieces, filled and hung on armoire. If you
want $2 bill, we pay postage. Canadian
Ways
COASTAL TOTAL. Paris importing co., 3607 B. Michigan Ave. Dept. 505, Chicago
ELEGANT 7-JEWEL WATCH
$7.95
CAB
hobnail hardware designed this model. Watch for only $7.95. Genuine gold filled case.
A day's worth of jewelry, stone and sand.
A day's worth of jewelry, stone and sand.
FREE If you pay at our store, jewelry and china
not only $7.95. If you get delisted, return at owe and
expire free.
UNITED BUYING ASS'N
800 N. Clark Street, Dept. KK, Chicago, II
I have given 70,000 people free Goodyear Raincoats for living advertisement and 10,000 people free, write me today. Goodyear Mfg. Co., 589 Goodyear Edge., Kansas City, Mo.
USE THE DEFENDER WANT ADS
Come on
and hear
Bessie
Smith sing
"WEEPING WILLOW BLUES" and "BYE-BYE BLUES" on Columbia Record 14042 D
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924
Columbia
HERE is a pair of blues with tearful titles made to order for the Empress of Blues Singers-Bessie Smith. The blueful voice of Bessie is made all the more effective because of her accompaniment-a sobbing trombone and bleating cornet. This record will surely delight you. It is on sale at the Columbia Dealer's now. When you go to get it, be sure to hear the other new hits sung and played by your favorites. The finest Race talent makes records exclusively for Columbia. You are always sure to find just the music you want, as you want it, at the Columbia Dealer's store.
Have you thought about the New Columbia Phonograph for Christmas?
It makes a fine present because it is the finest phonograph your money can buy. It has new improvements which make every record you play sound ever so much better. Ask the dealer to play it for you. He will also show you many different models to choose from, with prices from $50 to $350. The dealer will take your old phonograph in exchange and arrange for you to pay the balance in easy installments. Columbia Phonograph Co., 1819 Broadway, New York.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
VILLOW
and
LUES" on
rd 14042 D
Photo by Petian Studio
BESSIE SMITH "The Empress of Blues Singers" EXCLUSIVE COLUMBIA STAR
mbia
New Process RECORDS "Columbia has all the hits and usually first"
PART 1---PAGE 8
```markdown
```
Here are new records by Columbia Race stars now on sale at the Columbia Dealer's. If you haven't them all, go and buy them today.
"SALT WATER BLUES."
"RAINY DAY BLUES." 14037 D 75c
"WORK HOUSE BLUES."
"HOUSE RENT BLUES." 14032 D 75c
"LOUISIANA LOW-DOWN BLUES."
"MOUNTAIN TOP BLUES." 14031 D 75c
"HATEFUL BLUES."
"FRANKIE BLUES." Violin and piano accompaniment. 14023 D 75c
"TICKET AGENT, EASE YOUR WINDOW DOWN!"
"PINCHBACKS. TAKE 'EM AWAY."
14025 D 75c
"DEEP BLUE SEA BLUES."
"TEXAS MOANER BLUES." 14034 D 75c
"BASEMENT BLUES."
"MAMA'S GONE, GOOD-BYE."
14039 D 75c
"I'M TIRED OF BEGGING YOU TO TREAT ME RIGHT."
"HARD-HEADED GAL." 14030 D 75c
"I'M GOIN' OUT TONIGHT AND STRUT MY STUFF." Fletcher Henderson at the piano.
"I WON'T STAND NO LEAVING NOW." Alexander Brown at the piano.
14015 D 75c
GEORGE WILLIAMS AND BESSIE BROWN
"HE'S NEVER GONNA THROW ME DOWN." Alexander Brown at the piano.
"YOU NEED SOME LOVING." Fletcher Henderson at the piano. 14017 D 75c
"IF YOU HIT MY DOG, I'LL KICK YOUR CAT."
"NO SECOND-HAND LOVIN' FOR MINE."
14033 D 75c
---
ART 1—PAGE 6
GREAT BILL AT THE GRAND;
REAL VAUDEVILLE AT MONOGRAM
and dancing novelty. They use a
special drop and their talk hinges
around the fact that they are left
strained through the dance, but
they are all of them to "pick
a winner" at the races. Both have
fair singing voices, but chief interest
conters around the dancing, which is
first class. The bill opens with De-
velopers in the chorus, tortorists since the days of Marsh
Craig. Niles' bones, if he has any,
must be in his head and he has a
bunch of "limber" tricks which keep
them hands all through his
intimities, with couple of bows at his
end. Some bill.
Martin Klein, the genial manager of the popular Grand theater, will present a magnificent passing the explaying the present week at the Grand Theater. He is of the opinion that he will find trouble in even slightly large audiences are features in the line-up which stand out in the most wonderful manner. Racial variety being considered. The feature spot. The spot capped by Clara Smith, the famous
gather all writer's information at week at the Grand. Indeed, the writer is of the opinion that he will find it easier to enlist it as they are features in the line-up which stand out in the most conspicuous man- ways, being considered. The feature spot on the bill is occupied by Clara Columbia record artist. There is no
THE MONOGRAM
By Bob Hayes
This week's is one of the best bills seen here this season. It has DeGaston and Yuen, who open with "Some of the laughable chatter. The singing of "West Indies Blues" by DeGaston and the dancing of Charleston by Miss Yuen helped greatly in putting Emma White, a talented bit of humanity, who possesses a splendid alo voice. She sings in the wings and her small form is in such contrast to the result. She has four songs, all of which go over well. Walker and Brown, always prime favorites here, have a singing and romance act, carving a nastic stuff and the act closes with a well-received dance review, billed "Dances of Other Days." The new team of Cooper and Jr. and George Helfen, closes the bill. They start with an argument, which is followed with an original song, called "Up in the Air" by the dancer and Cooper hits with a strut number. They close with "Dixie," in which they tie with each other in footwork. It is a well balanced bill.
Tony Landon
MILLER AND LYLES
MET BY BRASS BAND
MILLER AND LYLES
MET BY BRASS BAND
St. Louis, Mo.-Miller and Lyles in "Runnin' Wild" are playing a very succesful theater show. The show opened to a packed house. Monday night. They went on to the marching club of the local Elks lodge and the entire work paraded the theater to be remembered. People of both races cheered the actors and their escorts along the march, and the lodge logged the Monday night performance in a body.
SHEFTELL'S REVIEW
A hot time with a hot OKeh
MUSICAL chicken pie and nothin' else than, is this new OKeh record,"Emancipation Day in Georgia." Effie and Charles Tyus do some singin' which you'll sure eat up. And OKeh serves the puddin' too, on the other side, when Clarence Williams raps the ivories while Horace George coaxes the clarinet in "The Meal Is Low in the Barrel Blues." Another OKeh feast.
GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
25 West 6th Street, New York City
Okeh
race records
A NOTE OR TWO
Williams and Perry, always buys, are the best of all. At Read's hippodrome, Cleveland, Ohio, Gerritude Struffin-Galanes asked that hers be sent to the Hippodrome theater, bound, Va. Returned to writer, Gerte. Robert L. the pianist, now has a band. Robert S. the things down bam. Mall will reach Robert at 70 O'Cluer St., Atlanta, Ga. Willie Jackson and Al Smith are going on a week at the Liberty theater,
Prince and Princess Mysteria, world's best mental telepathists, are more than pleasing the natives of Cleveland, Ohio. The Saddle Montgomery has ordered that hers be sent pronto, if not sooner, to 220c Elgin St., Houston, Texas.
The Famous Georgia Minstrels are the
famous performers we watch at the
Auditorium, Oakland, Calif.
Annie Johnson's Knickerbocker Girls
are meeting with the
Walker Reid is meeting with more
than passing success through the state
and the nation. Erna Hollas are with the company.
Duke Johnson and Bob Harding, are back in the town prior to going back to their lair, Los Angeles. Drone, San Francisco, are spending a few days in that town prior to going back to their lair, Los Angeles. The blue blues with the Miss Tabasco company is doing the week at the Casino, Boston, Billy Cummy, featured comedian with the Record Breakers on the Columbia circuit, is playing the week at the Star and the Three Eddies, featured with the "Sliding" Billy Watson company are the stars of the Prometheus and the Columbia, gift.
Naomi and Brazilian Boys, with the Steen On It company, are tearing them New York, Columbia goods. Sidney Edeney, in "Why is a Doughnut Town on It," Town company at the Empire, Toledo, Ohio. Columbia circuit. Georgia Lafayette, band are still george Lafayette, the Regent theater, Youngstown, Ohio, and going great gats. Deck Blair, 35 years with the Alamo, and going great. Jack strut the present week between Little Rock and Pine Bluff, Ark. Texarkana, Monroe, La., and Vicksburg, Miss.
Lillian Goodner, featured with the
Lillian Goodner, makes her for a
party at 510 Eldre Ave.
Thy Gray asked that hers be served at 200 W. 1432 St. New York. He is in bursage stock at the Opolo theater, New York. Mysterious Dillard declares that he will his for a spell at 27 Kendall St. floston. Rockie Johnson will meet the letter peddler daily at the Central hotel.
Harrison Jackson, playwright, will be found pronto at 812 W. Walnut St. Charles, N. Nicholas, former secretary of the Cooper and Lamar Players, stevers that he will hit at 717 S. Bob Russell and his Musical Tab company will be seen at the Harris Temple Cleveland, Ohio for the next three weeks.
The Strayhorn Kids will get their in a hurry for the present at 731 N. Sevensey Street, Jacksonville, FL. John and Ben Skylos, doing everything musical, are setting their at 1203 Central Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. They are playing the week at the Strand theater, Jacksonville, Fla. Brown and McGraw, the heavyweight entertainers, are putting their james for the week at Indianaapolis, Ind. Mall 224% Indiana Ave.
Members of Rushy's Minstrels can be
seen at times at 2123 Franklin
St. Gotha, N.J.
Curtis and Curtis are playing the Lincoln theater, Paramount, Texas.
colon theater, Beaumont, Texas. The Great Clemon, former president of the Market Ss., St. Louis, is now doing "monkey" with the Toliver Smart Set. Minstrels. And he didn't say what. Will Lane, formerly with a minstrel show, the name of which he failed to win, is playing at 226 Montesquia St. Dallas, Texas. Laura Smith and her clever unit are playing the week with success, Cleveland, Ohio, a return date. Roscoe Montella's Radio Girls company is playing the week with success. Greenville, S. C. Many thanks, Emily. Alo Lockhart, Eooker, sent us a mirage of a week from Titleton, Ga. Many thanks, Billy E. Jones is doing his famous ballad stuff this week at Columbus, and featuring "Mr. Radio Man" and others.
BROADHURST THEATRE, WEST 44ST.
MATINEES THURS O'SATJ
NEW YORK CITY
A JUNGLE JAMBOREE
LEW LESLIE
PRESENTS
FLORENCE MILLS
The Greatest of Colored Entertainers
"DIXIE TO
BROADWAY"
A ROARING REVUE 2 ACTS and 25 SCREAMS
WITH
SHELTON BROOKS
CORA GREEN
HAMTREE HARRINGTON
AND
WILL VODERY'S PLANTATION
ORCHESTRA
and A CHORUS OF 70 CHOCOLATE DROPS
ACTS—TABS—ROAD SHOWS OF ALL KINDS
We can take care of any show
REGARDLESS OF SIZE
Wire Your Open Time
JACK SHANFIELD, MGR. Formerly of Grand Theater, of Chicago)
PALACE THEATER ST. LOUIS, MO.
Most Beautiful Theater for Race Folks in St. Louis
H. T. Ford, the bugle and cornet instrument, is splitting the present week between Catherine O'Neil, and Gunny N. T. Ford, the greatest spreader of the "wheelie" is spreading it this half at the Cinderella Eldridge and Spencer, write that they are getting ready for a fiver over the weekend at 3435 S. Clairborne St. New Orleans, La. Williams and Perry, always busy, are doing little at the Hippodrome at Olive Glen and Jenkins, that hard-hitting spreading their oil for the present week at Kefir St. St.剧院, New York. Ross and Pye are playing the half hour at the Prospect, New York. Seymour and Janette "indulgence bass and trumpet" are walking the way this week at Moos Flatbush theater, New York. Dave and Tressle are splitting the present week between the Irving, Carloandale, and the State theater, Nautilus
Bojanjevic Bill Robinson is featured on a fine-hill at P叔剧院's theater. New-
Aarom and Kelly, going big all alone
the Grosso Keys and the William Penn
the Grosso Keys and the William Penn
Danning Dutson, Fitting like the hammer of Thor, is dividing the week between the Gleason, the Gleason, and the Doh, Worcester, Mass. The Waters and Dancer, better at all, are in between the Orpheum theaters, Sacramento and Fresno, Cal.
Luckyh Roberts and company are
playing with the Paintings the
Fantasies can.
Jeeps 'Boots' Marshall Review is dis-
tressed. Theaters. Colorado Springs and Pueblo.
The Dixie Four is playing the last half of the Delaney St. theater, New York. Williams and Williams, the bird, are attending at 3501 Wattsah Ave., this burg.
Bob Hamilton, the pianist and singer,
will get his at $355
State St., Chicago, Illinois
Sylvia Mitchell, arises to tell the world that she will get her wets at 2034 William F. Sledge, the drummer and chair舞师, has put out a musical present week at Nokouaha, La. Mall 1018 beirut beach. Perrin, the launch gathers, are taking theirs for the present at 4897 Champaign Ave. New York. Washington's quartet is meeting with success this week beunruhly, Bellette, Ek Rapids, Buckley, Honer, Thompsonville and Free Soil, Ralph the Mind, as polite as a Japanese schoolboy, is doing his "how-the-washington theater, St. Louis. Mo. Eather Brooks has arisen to ask that St. Washington, D. C.
Carmouche and Mitchell "We Go
at the Koogin theater" Defino, Mike
Leon Long tells us that he has at last crossed the state line of Georgia and headed to at 164 Cemetery St., Jacksonville, Fla.
Henry Troy and Edgar Dowell, according to reports in the juvenile acts and pieces in conjunction with their musical productions,
*Along*, with Eddie Connors.
Emma Jackson and many other clever artists, is playing the week at Trenton.
The show is under direction of George Wintz, and Al Watts is manager.
Wilbur Swetman, it will, is said, will reward new weeks with a seven-piece orchestra.
Genève gleams, the clever little orchestra, Omaha, Soh, has ordered hers there to 823 S. 12th St.
Joe Loomis is doing his oil the last hour, Mall sent, Joe.
Vader and Hunter, that clever pair, have in the city and getting their
Gentleman Giles and his partner, Wilson, are invaded by a mob at Muscatine, Iowa, for Rent Levy. Giles dropped in to see Shekes sites from Winchester, Ky., that some big business men are invading a big theater there in the near future.
James Isoh, featured comedian with the 1980s show *The Hulk*, at 418 Haskell St. Tulsa, Okaa. Ernest Seals, write, write. John Burkum, the one-man cirle, will open at the Star theater, Shreveport, La., next week, according to IJs. 18 Strong has ordered his sent to the Frolic theater, Birmingham, Al. Sn. Old Folks Turner, with the Jimmie Clark Review, is doing his oil to perfection, week at the Frolic theater, Birmingham.
Mysterious Dillard and his Canadian Caners are ruining things at the Renshaw
Jessie Love asked that he be written. We have we returned it to writer. Sorry.
FATHER DIES
According to the Billboard issue of the past week, Howard King of Columbus, Ohio, writes that the father of the child of the late King Billy is asked to communicate with his home at once. The article did not give the date of the older King's death.
C. H. DOUGLASS, PROP.
34 Rooms, Single or Ballet; Modern Con-
temporary
Next Door to the Douglas Theater
311 Broadway
MACON, GA.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
GIBSON SCOOPS 'EM
Famous - Philadelphiaian Beats All Others at a Blake-Slake Show
No better evidence that John T. Gibson, of Philadelphia, Pa., has other neighborhood managers of the East Side than the man who gets first shot at the Stake and Blake production, and successful engagement on Broadway, New York City. Arrangements with the Blake and Erlanger combine through which the big show will play a brief season at the Dunbar, beginning with the Dunbar complete in every detail and without a change in personnel as the supersummarizes the date should prove worth breaking one for the handsomest of all "Racial" events owned and operated by your group.
$50,000 Iron Men
There is no reason why members of the Gibson star should not feel elated, but the brothers Love should not be condescending. Love should not preciation in no better manner than by giving the proposition their unrestricted performances and rambles and the regular with the usual maitresses, midnight performances and rambles and the regular are many theaters east and west which are favored with a great deal of sunshine and are several in New York City, Washington and other towns on the other coast. The principal patronage is gleaned from our folks and it is safe to say that not one would risk a fortune of $50,000 on as great an uncertainty as a theatrical Old Roll Top Desk Man repeats many times the show declaration that when the activities of the show game John F. Gibson stands head and shoulders above the other, the delphin will rally round the box office in sufficient numbers to make the announcement the luck success it deserves to be.
BILLY KING COMING
Chicagoans have been reading all about the club and the clever waukee partner, Marshall Roers, have been having in the past three years a first glimpse of the pair as a variety act and, from all reports, we can hope that all of them will act as the manager Martin Kehn has the act booked as an added attraction at the Grand Ballroom. The night and the boys are coming all the way from New York City to fill the room for the work Carmouche and Michelle's "We Got It" company, one of the best of the group. The road, the clever S. H. Dudley, Jr., is a feature and there is a fine list of the best dancers in the drilled dancing and singing chorus. This should be a great show and we can well imagine the dancers and dash to attend early. Don't forget.
Tauber and Green are playing the week at Gordon's Olympia, Boston.
Kansas
Oil up the little oil' phonograph to the nearest AJAX dealer, earful of the finest dance st boys pulled off in this wide, syncopatin' the "L" out of Lo your feet right out of your sh it" when you hear that me till you've got this one going good," believe us. If you can near you, send direct to us a AJAX records postage paid. is 75 cents per record.
The Other Side Is
TEMPER'MEN
Kansas City Five
Oil up the little oil phonograph before you toddle down to the nearest AJAX dealer, for you're gonna get an earful of the finest dance stuff that ever five Colored boys pulled off in this wide, wide world. Talk about syncopatin' the "L" out of Louisville—man, they'll pull your feet right out of your shoes if you don't "step to it" when you hear that medicine music. Stand pat till you've got this one going. There ain't no "just as good." believe us. If you can't locate an AJAX dealer near you, send direct to us and we will send all your AJAX records postage paid. All you pay the postman is 75 cents per record.
TEMPER'MENTAL PAPA
DANCE-KANSAS CITY FIVE
Doesn't Scratch Wears Longer
Susie Smith
Feel Elated
DETROIT, MICH.
BIG THANKSGIVING DANCE
FIFTEEN-PIECE ORCHESTRA
DIRECTED BY
FRED ANDERSON
KING OF DRUMMERS
BILLY BUTLER
STARTING 2 O'CLOCK THANKSGIVING DAY
AND CONTINUING UNTIL 2 O'CLOCK FRIDAY MORNING
12—HOURS OF MUSIC AND DANCING—12
AT ARENA GARDENS
WOODWARD AVENUE AND HENDRIE STREET
Does it Scratch Wears Longer AJAX The Quality Race Record
Raleigh, N. C.
Dear Mr. Langston, I trust this finds you feeling well and, since we know you have been through the "ship of state" for the next four years, that you will not have to worry about your health, and a while since I wrote you, but judging from the continual growth of your health, you worry about hearing from me. (Laugh) It is refreshing to get to such a great place, and I am glad to be on each week as is sent out by the World's Greatest Weekly. I am a magician, have been jamming them almost nightly in the larger schools and colleges in the country, and engaged at Shaw university Thanksgiving night, after it was cancelled. By way of Florida and the Southwest, we were my greatest friend, and by a call, We hope to do so in the near future. We extend best wishes to you and the staff and to all friends in and out of the General Delivery, Southern Pines, N.C. Respectfully, J. H. ARMSTRONG Crosby, N. D.
Dear Friend Tony: I reached the Rock and Walker Mintrels all O. K. Kaiser is an 18-piece show, well put together ministrel troupe. A laughing show from start to finish. Jeff Smith took a band program to please the public. The public always says a ministrel took a band program to please the public. The public always says a ministrel took a band program to please the public. So he must have a real band, people crowd around in the cnd to hear Everything in North Dakota last week. We'll mention the show as it runs down to the last act. There is very little imitation of a Walter show and it looks like good camping grounds for me. A bunch of former members of the old school. They believe in giving a good show and that's what it takes to make a real name for the band. The former musicians—Yours respectfully, Frank Kirk.
Dear Tony, Colorado Spring, Colo.
rest of the Sunset. Four in pretty fair shape, with the exception of a little cold here in this high altitude Colorado. This is our first date on our regular route. We opened here today. No, we are not here. We are second on the bill of six nets. We have an extra act here. We are here, there will only be five nets in the show. Of course, the third act tonight. Keep our route in a week ahead of each issue, as it is here. The
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924
MICH.
ING DANCE
ORCHESTRA
ING OF DRUMMERS
ALLY BUTLER
ANKSGIVING DAY
BLOCK FRIDAY MORNING
DANCING—12
ARDENS
HENDRIE STREET
BLUES
Blues and Neglected Blues, Helen Choo Jazzers.
Blues and Death Letter Blues, Helen Choo Jazzers.
Took My Man Away From Me and Dies, Mamie Smith and Her Jazz
Blues and Salt Water Blues by Susie Choo Jazzers.
Blues and Flora's Weary Blues by Josie Choo Jazzers.
es and House Rent Blues, Susie Choo Jazzers.
AX ace Record
paper is out Nov. 21, so just put the following week route in. Nov. 21, Rock Springs, Col. Ratio theater. I will keep you posted as to when the show is coming, and things beck good. Touy, and we are getting along fine. The Sunset Four friends in and out of the profession. Well, old top, I must say goodbye for the good time. Good luck Crawford, and Singet Four, W. V. Ross Show No. 1.
JOLLY HAPPY
Hello, Tony: I'm not going to take much of your time, but just a few minutes. Angeles now and will be here until the 20th of December. Everything is going a good time and enjoying myself. Doing Tug Harraves and Kennedy are playing behind the beehive and the night of the owl war and are going to motor back to Chicago—that is, if they don't get pinched before the "Stepin' Hitch" show is playing this week. Harry Fudler is billed like Mike away from being with the show.
I spend a lot of my time over at the
school. I love the music and the
actions there. Mebonal and Leges-
are right behind me and are having
room. But they will soon be in Los
Angeles, and I will take care of them
Well, Tony, I will say look-by-and-
well. Tony, I will say look-by-and-
well.
Well, Tony. Will say lead-ly-ab
sounders in the sailors' juggler-
dohly" Sounders.
OH HONEY
Gus Smith, producer, owner and manager of the "Oh Honey Company," has recently, added some more talent to his company and augmented his "Jazapators," who are under the personal touch of the company's wizard, and are going big through New York State. The show is playing the present week between Fort Plains and the city, where he's carrying 29 people and says he is booking runs "clean" up to June.
ORIENTAL SERENADERS
Buster and "Boy" Lee's Oriental Seronaders are meeting with more than passing success out through the East. The show is out that way are bleckering for return dates at all stands. The show is playing the Palace theater, Norfolk Va., where they will be heard from Bonnie and Sweetie, Jimmy Jackson and Baby Renlow-All.
---
COOP'S CHATTER
By the Way
Practice being agreeable.
Being cool makes tools fired.
The easiest things we may find are trouble.
Pair with our neighbors — fair with our neighbors.
We can practice, that of making others happy.
We must be a past master of ourselves to master our work.
Proper selection of words prevents running off at the mouth.
The instant we face a perfect is when we can set in.
Building pair case the
Fair with ourselves — fair with our neighbor — worthy of our practice, worthy of making others happy.
We must be a past master of our work to master our work.
Proper selection of words prevents running of at the mouth.
The constant we want is perfect when is when decay sets in.
Our car costs little but our upkeep is
where the rub comes.
The man who believes in placing him in the rub is it is due is seldom in debt to anyone.
A thousand dollars in cash, handled by a person with a poor brain, is when no one wants to imitate us or know our business we are then ready for the "No Good" club, or a thing done well is dangerous. Remember there is room for improvement.
When we think every one +sbe in
wrong time, to give us advice
DANCE
Some Dealers' Territory Still Open
Phone State 1327
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 22, 1924
THE WOMEN'S CLUB
Famous group recently signed at a great salary by the New York Recording Laboratories, makers of the celebrated "Paramount" records. Mattie Dorsey of the Whitman Sisters' company is likewise named in the contract, which is considered one of the most important ever made by a recording concern. Tests and releases are to occur in the near future.
FULTON'S LETTER
Tommie Gates has at last come to the conclusion that he is tired of working in rehearsal, and from the way they go one to work for him. His act is now in rehearsal, and from the way they go one to work for him. The line-up is as follows: Thomas E. Gates and his Ten Versatile Mary Parham, Gussie Nelson and Sarah Evas make the chorus; Jonnie Mankin and blues singer; Thomas E. Gates, manager; Kirk Humry, comedian; Arcelie Straight man; Harvey Porter will handle the music. This promises to be a wonderful business, return date, size ever presented to the West coast, "Steppin' High" seems to be doing a wonderful business, Petition is long tour for their production, which will carry them through Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico, and will intend the West to meet the East. Received a fine letter from John Mankin, Snapp Brothers' Minstrels. He says things are in fine shape and that he will welcome you, Johnnie.
To the entire show world. Listen and
protect professionally. Fulton Alexander, 125
125
Julian Costello, the famous dancer, M. J., where he gets his care of G. H. Wilson, whom he is taking it easy as he gets his activity to be vaudeville work. Julian radio and he writes that he gets Club Albanian cry night. Mitchell helps her stuff and others of the featured her stuff and others of what they are getting big salary for.
LARUE AND LARUE
LaRue and LaRue are in Pittsburgh. Dan, rehearsing with Ollie Burrowes, starts early opening in the Smoky City. Much of the talent in Ollie's group has been brought in from New York City and it is hard to believe that the average as to chase
own a-wearing out yourself
looking for the blues songs,
is that you want. All you
down in your own home,
the coupon below or write
other records you want and
Don't walk 'round the town a-wearing out yourself and your shoe-leather, looking for the blues songs, dances or spiritual records that you want. All you have to do is to sit right down in your own home, check the numbers in the coupon below or write down the names of any other records you want and
ORDER BY MAIL
distributors of Race records
special loud tone records listed
at, fill in your name and address
Q. Please call us at 212-745-7000 or
us their names. You'll get
in our complete stocks. SEND
man when he delivers the rec-
MUSIC CO.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
MAIL THIS TODAY
your name and address. Mail today.
8158-CAN ANYBODY TAKE SWEET
100 MAIN A'S PLACE
MASS. 212-745-7000
Sipple Wallace
from the world's largest distributors of Race records
Order any one, or all, of the special loud tone records listed
below. Check the ones you want, fill in your name and address
in the records you want. If you don't have records not listed here, just send us their names. You'll get
them, cause we have them all in our complete stocks. SEND
them to pay the postman when he delivers the records
to your door.
SALEM SEZ—
Dear that you wonder if it is conjecture that looks me to believe that some show folks are unique, dissimilar, eccentric and eccentric to a unkempt heart. Others who may have a few other names that look me to believe that are used to be known called names that don't understand us. Not every one can understand the "Low down Blues, or can go over the hill" is eligible to be called and classified in show folks. It is possible who do things in public that bring up problems in the profession. Every society.
he called an acturer and classified him, and is generally those who do things in the opprobrium upon the profession, the club, lodges or organization, and which has its undesirables, its delinquents, its misogynies, Judas got mixed up in the business and assembled. The theatrical profession is braggart, its bops, its longers, its hypocrites, its scissors, its sophists, its hatreds, its hatreds, its think with a pretty fair bond of folks. We have our hatreds and our jealousy, but we are the most generous hearted bunch of stickers in the world. We are among the most generous hearted bunch of stickers in the world. When there is money to be raised for our worthy cause we are solden over the real profession for raising funds will prove the above statement. And, also, imposed upon bunch of bodies on earth. Self-preservation forces act to fraternize among ourselves, but when something august is imposed upon one of the fraternity, look out for the rest of the
We had a regular reunion in Kansas this past summer and company was with us one week in Kansas City and two weeks in Nashville. The company was with us one week in Kansas City and two weeks in Nashville. The James brothers, the Four Tracker-Jacks and Madeline, Ivey Gray and the same couple at the same hotel. Both the Street hotel and the Grand Central will no longer be required. The second week in St. Louis is scheduled for the 1-11 company—then it will be Howard, Cooky Tolgh Whitney, Weddle and Fairchild to the movie to all loves of peace and quietude. At Memphis we not at Anderson and her husband, Babe Toussaint, Arthur Ray, Theresa Brooks and others whose name I can remember. The Id Anderson company, the Andrew Bishop company and the Proverse Company, are in the colored theatrical world. They are doing pioneer dramatic work that is not as well appreciated that their work not highly appreciated by the very folks who claim to be the company that is highest and best in art.
HERE 'TIS
Oken—Talk about your gala days and days of the week. You don't see any heard of no days like Imagination Day in Georgetown, International George and Eiffel Tyus and that mean when these people get through with this number it simply worms to a fragrant opposite side of this one you will find such much undiluted pleasure in "The Meal Low in the Barrel Blues" a charmer Williams doing up the accompaniment, and too, this one has strong charm — how you could set along without it.
Good stock companies. Can give one or two weeks' work; on main Washington, D. C., and New Orleans. Good place to break jump. All old friends write me. Pleasant and good treatment. Wire or write.
Send no money!
---
Los Angeles, Cal.
LISTENS IN
"WHITMAN SISTERS AND ALICE"
HUNTINGTON'S MINSTRELS
By Buzzin' Burton
FORD DABNEY ILL
ROCKPILE WRITES
Rockpile Johnson, who can be remembered as half of the team of Rocke-ler, said he was "fido" do wah! he was from 1928 Central Ave. Tamma, Fla. that he has been teaching since he has when she matches the brood will be one of those different kind—one that he will not rewrite anything, but he will be teaching taste for something new. He describes that he will not rewrite anything, but he will be breeding in his mind for the past 18 months. Rockpile also says that he was about 30 years old. He union, S. C., where mul will land safe at 57 Gadhower St.
REAL FOOT WARMER
Alax—if ever there was a red-hot jazz bunch, Kansas City Fizz. It was a band that was so good that "good" will wake up to the fact that they have been imposed upon when they have been released. No. 1927; they tear off "Louisville Blues" for a fare-fell, and we are the best of all dance records. We also loast of what is on the reserves of the dance scene, and we same aggression—and we tell you now that you haven't a complete cabinet for demonstration at your dealers. Drop in on him and get an earful.
THE STANDARD
Philadelphia, Pa. — Supreme vanderbilt, the usual face of attendance. The acts are: Mason and Henderson company, Woolly West, the musical comedy featured Rosa Henderson, Virginia Listen and pay, in aesthetic and fire dances; Davenport, and Curry musical turn, Ruthene; the Gerty Miller Triple, one of dances three: Golden Dance in "Land of Simoncation"; Smith and Jackson, a musical comedy; Andrew Tribble, in a screamily funny act titled "The Toubles of Sambo and
GUS DROPS IN
Gus Alken, the "cornet phool" was a man who was not poor judges of appearances. Gus looked hotter than the well-known "cornet phool" than to be the thing he isn't meeting not only because he is famous Gouge White's Jazzzers of Real Jazz, which act in ruffling things in Chicago, but in Chicago, the present week. Then, too, Gus propped our own jaw just a few
DARKTOWN BAZAAR
Alten and Stokes" "Durkinson Bazar" is meeting with five success down in the show. The show is playing the present week at the Bijou theater, Nashville, Tenn. Al Wells—who is stage manager of this show—will be presenting the article published to the effect that the company laid off at Mason, Ga., and that it published the article. If published the article we have so far been unable to trace it. However, we are sorry the mistake was made.
THREATENED
George Williams of the team of Williams writes us a nice letter from the library theater, Chattanooga. Tom, in down that way, Google also lets us in on the information that he has just with the Colorado community, and threatened to proin our job in fine shape for a future. We're looking out, George.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
cording Laboratories, makers of the company is likewise named in the cording concern. Tests and releases
"SAM FROM 'BAM"
Dear Tony: From Shifllin' Sam from Mississippi. It's now in town. I am playing at Mississippi and doing playing wonderful turn engagements and doing wonderful business, packing fun and everybody is happy excuse Joe D. Dalley, Mr. Charlie had a few words and he came home sick and found his suit. Mr. Charlie made a great gift to make any man sick. He only missed one parade and now he is up and naked and is making a great gift with her Flips and her daughter's quartet. The Darktown Harmony Four, is still hitting it up again. She Mike Campbell left, but she is up again. Mrs. M. E. Griffin visited her daughter, who was slightly ill, and enjoyed a pleasant visit. She is up in Thomas, producer and comedian.
Rampart
Graveyard
Bama B
Moonshine Bl
Bo Wea
Bad Luck
South Bour
True Blues
Hot Spring
Prauj' Blue
Count
Sunday
"M
Rampart Street Blues
Graveyard Blues
Bama Bound Blues
Moonshine Blues
Bo Weavil Blues
Bad Luck Blues
South Bound Blues
Blues:
Spring
Quin' Blues
"Lawd, I'm gonna sleep now,
Gonna dream my troubles away,
Trying to count those Blues."
Par
[Inc
The Po
Param [Including Black S The popular
THE GEORGIAS
Dear Tony: After you read what I shall say, you will no doubt be interested in politics, and especially in the state of India, where I could travel as we do, from town to town, and visit to the other, and find laws enacted to fit your needs to the other people, as a rule, they only fit in the first place. Then there would be very little wondering. My interest in India is far greater than I can explain at this volume from the election returns of Nov. 1 that I hinted will be in Revelius.
Tim Owley
A. B.
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
By D. THOMAS IRELAND
The Moving business, as my talent for the stage is correct. So please let me know my hall. Yours truly, Roosevelt Howard.
If Mr. Roscoe will give me more particulars about himself and enclose him some advice. To experienced Operator, Washington, D.C., I am sure he will probably be able to give him some advice.
To experienced Operator, Washington, D.C., the theatre is now being used in a number of exchanges and many theaters. It means better prints for the theaters and the theater company. The machine catches every defect, including those that are usually missed by the printer. You can right in trying to keep up to date. Your name will not be published, although it must not be mistaken as a baffled one. Never worry about what you do not know or understand. This column is very glad to hear that the capital theater in Washington, D.C., around a theater, to expect to hear that the capital is on the main street. McClane, manager of the Royal theater at Philadelphia, Pa., packed an evening night at a midnight show. Address: 1000 Fifth Avenue, Lincoln, Charleston, S. C.
"7-11" IN WRECK
FOLLOW ME
I. Welinggarden's "Follow Me" company is planning to visit the Dunbar Philadelphia. The show has been having engagement at the John T. Gibson house will prove a fine appetizer for the "luncheon" which will open there Monday.
Countin't the Blues
by "Ma" Rainey
DOOR "Ma" Rainey! She "laid in her bed, the wall; trying to count the Blues, so she She's so all taken up with the Blues—Griffpart Street, Moonshine, Bo Weavil—that there's so many she can't count 'em, let alone real Blues—wonderful, you'll say. On the e-buses"—a record that'll "make you laugh, make Blues away." Accompaniments of "Ma" Rainey's Georgia Jazz Band. Ask for Paramount.
Count this List of Blues—I'll
8—Countin't the Blues and Jelly Bean Blues, "Ma" Rainey and her Georgia Jazz Band.
—Praying Blues and Miss Anna Jane Blues, Trixie Smith and Her Down-Home Syncopators.
—Cherry-Picking Blues and Wild Women Don't Have No Blues, Ida Cox.
—Hot Springs Water Blues and Who'll Drive My Blues Away, Sodarisa Miller—new Paramount star.
12098—Dream Blues and Lost Wanderer
Rainey's Souvenir Record. Her picture on both sides.
The Race's Greatest Spin
5—My Lord's Gonna Move This Wicked Race, and Father, Prepare Me, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
—When All The Saints Come March In and That Old Time Religion, Paramount Jubilee Singers.
Send No Money! If you greet the coupon. Just check the records you Records shipped promptly. We pay pay nothing until you man 75 cents per record.
n't the Blues
the "laid in her bed, with
the Blues, so she could
with the Blues — Graveya-
ly, Bo Weavil — that she g
count 'em, let alone sing
you'll say. On the other
make you laugh, make
companiments of both s
l. Ask for Paramount N
of Blues — It's a
Blues, "Ma"
Blues, Trixie
Men Don't
Drive My
amount star.
Blues and Lost Wandering
Lord. Her picture on both sides
Greatest Spirit
Race, and
Artette.
In and
Jee Singers.
Money! If your de-
great Paran-
just check the records you wa-
red promptly. We pay postage
pay nothing until you get you
man 75 cents per record, plus
Count this List of Blues - It's a Wonder!
12224-Mr. Freddie Blues and Mecca' Flat Blues,
Priscilla Stewart.
12238—Countin' the Blues and Jelly Bean Blues, "Ma"
Rainey and her Georgia Jazz Band.
12232—Praying Blues and Miss Anna Jane Blues, Trixie
Smith and Her Down-Home Syncopators.
12228—Cherry-Picking Blues and Wild Women Don't
Have No Blues, Ida Cox.
12219—Papa's Lawdy, Lawdy Blues and Airy Man Blues,
sung by Papa Charlie Jackson, acc. by himself on
the album.
12231 - Hot Spring Water Blues and Who'l Drive My
Blues Away, Sodarira Miller—New Paramount star.
The Race's Greatest Spirituals
12217—Ezekiel Saw Do Wheel and Crying Holy Unto The Lord, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12035—My Lord's Gonna Move This Wicked Race, and Father, Prepare Me, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12073—When All The Saints Come Marching In and That Old Time Religion, Paramount Jubilee Singers.
the coupon. Just check the records you want. Send no money! Records shipped promptly. We pay postage and insurance. You pay nothing until you get your records. Give postman 75 cents per record, plus 10 cents C. O. D. fee.
THE NEW YORK RECORDING
LABORATORIES
11 Paramount Bldg., Fort Washington, Wis.
mount
wan]
REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.
Race Record
Name
Address
City-
nt
PAT.OFF.
cord
Se
ord
Post
12238
12232
12228
12231
Name
Address
City
Ella B. Moore, a Xerox woman, has
been the owner of her face. It is located at 426 North
Rocky Mountain Drive.
"Ella B. Moore, the other face. It is Central Ave. and Moore theater, name — the Ella B. Moore theater, village and legislature with all all-Coilcast cast for the 2016 season in a week special reservation for white people, who attended by the mayor has become quite a fail in Dallas, a bunch of folk to wind up an event with a trip through the Col-
name — the Ellis B. Moore theater, ville and legitimate attractions, which will be cast for the offerings. During the week, the cast will special reservations were made here, there are those who attended by the hundreds. It is not a fail in Dallas. In fact, for a man drawn to the wind up an evening's entertainment through the Colored section. The writer is personally acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Moore and also with the theatrical situation they will make this new theater a howling success, as the City of Dallas is too many, in fact, for the population of the city. The patronage of the white will do very much to pull them through. G. S. O'Neal, Jr. advises the mail land theater, Durham, N. C., where he is present publicly. He also said the sad news of the death of his father. The following is a sample of some of
"101 Erdrick St. Holmesburg, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania." Dear Sir, I am asking great pleasure in asking you to please send me at once further information, please, of how I can get into the stage for forgiveness, especially during apple season. Portland for two days, boys, out of the country into the city—use your own judgment. Here we meet Mr. Akebono, playing the Hippodrome. Both are looking the picture of health and have a happy day and date with them now until Frisco. Tommy Harris joins us here, and we are a few hours for him, a few hours for himself. We are glad to see Tommy back. Do sorry his vaulted venture did not do as he would. He never knows which end he'll land on when he jumps. Fools are the only ones in the school of experience. As fine for me to tell the public how big I am. But when they see what can have done in life, they know my size.
TIM E. OWSLEY.
PART 1—PAGE 1
BY ALBERT B. MORDECAL
After breaking all records for continuous performances at the playhouse, Sandy Harrington returns to a full house in each performance, and the public seems never to become familiar with the first-run pictures are still being put on.
Lafayette theater. The Neighborhood Theater, a nonprofit institution, resulted from the neighborhood of Harrington (nonprofessionalists), was saved from the demolition of the time acts known as Ethel Williams and Fred Johnson, who were the whole cast of Miss Marie Cunghart, who has a wonderful voice, and her singing was well received by the audience, including Miss Brendan Ellis. Eddie Hunter and Lily Higgins, with a well-known night in "Who Stole the Money" which was well received by the small crowd.
Colonial theater. Sleek and Blake, with the "Chocolate Dandies" snow, and hit the road after a long run at this house. It is reported that the Philadelphia, Fla. on the 24th of this month.
Hartford theater. Florence Mills, Hartford theater. Cora Green and Hammie Harrington, with "Dickie to Broadway" and from the advance sale of tickets it will be a long time before a sign will be taken down at the last pier.
N. O. STRUTTERS
The New Orleans Strutters, one of the clearest companies of the Kirkland area, pass favor through the land of warm climate. Behind Georgia and Florida, the city of Attownsville, Ga., and the line-up has, aside from the band, Buster Scott, comedians Jesse Hamilton, straight-tie little Lee Young, comedian; Shadow Lacy, comedian; and lady. The chorus has Alberta Wiles, Evon Gordon, Ray Roberts, Emma Moore, Beauty William, and the band, one of the hottest on the road, has Leonard Phillips, Otto Jones, James Clark, Leslie Young, Jesse Hamilton and Kid Jones. The band is under-the personal directive and also owner and manager of the show.
BASKETBALL TEAM
Paul Floyd, stage manager of the Miller and Lyles "Runnin' Wild" comedy troupe, will off and organized a real un-to-the-minute basketball team on the show and a special performance team to a flock of fecesions, roaring rhinos. Paul has in his lin-up the following: Jerome Burke, Billy Andrews, Archie Cross, Lionel Monagas, James Reeves, Adison Malone, and James playing the present week at the American theater, St. Louis, Mo.
with her face turned to
could sing them all"!
Loveyard, 'Bama Bound,
she gets all bawled up.
sing 'em. A most un-
other side is "Jelly Bean
take you cry, and drive
with sides are by "Ma"
No No. 12238.
It's a Wonder!
Dadie Blues and Mecca' Flat Blues,
wart.
Butter Blues and Kentucky Man Blues,
by Lovie Austin's Blues Serenaders.
Brain Blues and Don't Shake It No More,
and Her Down-Home Syncopators.
Lawdy, Lawdy Blues and Airy Man Blues,
pa Charlie Jackson, ecc. by himself on
Singing Blues, "Ma"
sides of the record.
Sermituals
How Do Wheel and Crying Holy Unto The
Jubilee Quartette.
Morn and Do You Call That Religion,
your dealer hasn't the above.
It Paramountrecords, send us
you want. Send no money!
postage and insurance. You
get your records. Give post-
, plus 10 cents C. O. D. fee.
The New York
Recording Laboratories
12 Paramount Blvd.
Port Washington Wisconsin
Send me the following records, 75 cents each, C. O. D.
Postage and insurance paid.
12238 () 12224 () 12098 ()
12232 () 12220 () 12035 ()
12228 () 12211 () 12073 ()
12231 () 12219 () 12217 ()
12221 ()
PART 1—PAGE 8
COAST DOPE
Los Angeles, Cal.
Bryant, Tenn.
Dear Friend Tony: Just a line or two of news regarding things theatrical on the Coast: South Carolina act "Dyne Sympacators," last Mon., Oct. 11, theater, where three-night engagement. From what the art from various sources, I should see something "true" about JUST what I saw. They have a neat little revue that runs far too long, but they think so they were
patrons," the last Monday at the A-museum, they were playing a three-night engagement. I had heard about the act from varistro's friend, who thought that I would see something "wild" and "JUST" what I saw. They have a neat reuse rule that runs too long, but the museum thinks so they were a $1111 begging for
Johnnie Mitchell and his Versailles ensemble of six pieces, are fast becoming popular with dance lovers. They made their debut in Central and made such an impression on the stage, enchanting them for a series of dances to be staged at this popular concert. About Mitchell and his orchestra later friends and in out of the profession. With best wishes to the "world," your friend, Johnnie, Col. 124th Central Los Angeles Col.
HARRIS AND HOLLEY
Harris and Holley have but their own, the elastic Orpheum circuit like it is still installed. This week, Seventh St. the theater he caught Ziefeld Foley and was invited to see Mosconi Bros. using the new project to the act direct and then improved his attorneys instructions to the act director, which he says he has the power convicted.
WAY DOWN THERE
Arthur Thompson, who has been rushed to the hospital now by his care of Horn Palice, brought his son to the hospital in for a three month subsumption. "At that he just couldn't live," he said.
MAIL RADIO
TEXAS TATTLES
Dallas, Texas—Butterbeers and Susie,
Nina Marshall Trio, Bobbie Covington,
and Mayo and Glenn at the Park the
new Players at the new Kila B. Moore.
The Lafayette Players in their last engagement at the Ella R. Moore was "The Law of God and Man"
at the Park theater packed in them on their first week's engagement. Miss Nina Marshall, with Jessie Love and Marine Parker, stopped the show nightly. Miss Shirley Howard is recovering from her home Monday evening. The Lafayette players are in Houston, Texas. Friday night Butterbeers and his wife were at the Ella R. Moore theater and were well received. Ole McBerson, at the Ella R. Moore theater and an extra attraction. Miss McPherson open at the Ella R. Moore theater. Newark Blackburn, of one-man-mime, shereveport, La. week of Nov. 24. Harrison Blackburn, of one-man-mime, shereveport, La. week of Nov. 24. Henry R. Dixon, after taking a rest to launch a company carrying 15 to 25 people with a jazz orchestra at the Reisterstetler Courtyard late of the Allen and Stokes "Darkown Bazaar," is very ill at the writing and mother, Mrs. P. M. Jones, are residing in Dallas for an indefinite stay. Mrs. Jones is in the Ernestine is attending Catholic school in Pauline Stephens, Skeeter and Kid Brown, all of the Jimmie Coe "Gorger" and indefinitely. Miss Skeeter was called to Houston on account of illness of a Week of Nov. 17 Leola Grand and the attraction at the new Ella Moore. Jessie Mooper, clarinetist with the Ernestine, is attending at the Central Dancing academy.
JIMMIE'S REVIEW
Jimmy Clark, the famous pianist and up and put hard and often with his ready review down South. Jimmy has been a George Gould, Leo Davis, Gussie Rose, 10 other cheer singers and dancers, "himself." George Gould, whose mother has been very ill, is according to a biography, playing the present week at the Froyle theater, Birmingham, Al. Joy Scott, who would like to hear from Edna Rates.
I. T. CRONIN SHOWS
The J. T. Cronin shows are being his models in packed houses nightly. Members of the group declare that the old walk farther and longer than than the new, being one of the best of its kind travelling down this way, being dressed to the occasion, and being personnel that is hard to equal as far as the house is conserved, and the man is "hot."
ROM BAY GIRLS
The Drake and Walker Bem Bem Girl's company, which is spitting the fire at the Capitol theaters, Newport News, Va., is making a record a second through a clipping from a dailly out that way, to a clipping from a dailly out that way, which George Crawford, as the praeciler, and Henry Drake, as John Green, shows seen in this section for many moons. The clipping also holds that the Drake and Walker pieces sounds like a military band.
BLOSSOM'S MINSTRELS
Bv LAMAR B. NELSON
We are now in the land of sunshine and flowers. The bunch is enjoying good Fla. George Gillen and wife had the father, and the son the father and mother, as that is his home town. Little Jack, the senator, each day for the ship's players. Would like to hear from Monroe Hands, Dravco Graden and Lewis Fleicher.
JAW PROPPED UP
Marie Kitchen, who is at present the only person sent in the very welcome old "daw proppers" from Memphis, Penn. "I don't know," she says she is rehearsing with Joe Clemons, one of the clearest hoofers in the country, for the future with something that will take the well-known "kake." We sent well to Cleveland, Misa., as per her request.
STRENGTHENED
AT THE HIPP
Richmond, Va.—We had a good show at the annual dance, which included Herbert and Marguerite Brown, an artistic dancing act; Gertrude Troughton, a dancer; Ginnie Gaines in an acrobatic, tumbling and wire-walking novelty. All acts. Each one of the three turns is a top notch and they make up a bill of imminent class—E. A. Martin, manager.
LIKES HER CHIRP
C. G. Gaston, P. O. Box No. 26, Jumbo Stadium, has lots of records played on his graphphone, but never has "sucked" the chirp. He has the "chirp" of Miss Irene Struggs, whose voice he claims, just like Ms. Struggs and of "Cant Help It" and that that's that.
WESTWARD HO!
The clever team of Jines and Jacqueline are meeting with fine success at all times. The team's things are just fine in spots as far as accommodations are concerned (in some places), but they are getting theres at the Liberty theater, Centralia, Wash.
SAYS JONESY
SAYS JONESY
West Palm Beach, Fla.
This is the work we are doing on "Expressing titionnion" written expressly for the exclusive column of the O. R. T. of the University.
I want it plainly understood that you criticize no individual and man towards no one. I am always glad to be presented articles in the hope they will contain food for me. I might write. I am sure all per-
Save and Have
Pepper Steppers
Mistletoe befell five members of the police, arrested in a rail on the rooming house in which they resided last Saturday, placed under $500 bank, charged with being inmates of a house of ill-fiance, Brown, expressed his sorrow at the inmates' cash to have the folks released, nowwithstanding the fact he had to have cliffs best people were under lock and key. Ratcliff prevailed upon him to take the cash and that's that Ratcliff then went to the theater, an opposition house. He and Mitchell are good friends. Mitchell also secured his employees a gentleman's promise as security. Ratcliff then secured his employees a little theater theater. Now folks, show think there are many like him. At court the next morning the judge, on officers and fammant of their environments, demanded them attention at their stoppages in the future. The other interiors and $50 cash
Notes
I made a flying trip to Miami a week
ago and spent a day with the members
Alfred Norrum left Thursday night where his grandmother was wilted, well
Yours truly may winter here in West Palm Beach. Look good to me. Any way, until further notice, radio at me at mailroad Ave. care Jordon—
IN DETROIT
Detroit, Mich.-What promises to be the event in years is the Thanksgiving dance at Arena Gardens, this city's largest dance will start at 2 o'clock Thanksgiving early until 2 o'clock morning only until 2 o'clock Wednesday, under the direction of Frid Anderson, will handle the music; only Billy Butler, Kinz of Trump Drumline, will handle the additional features will be presented and a great time is assured those who attend.
TABOR AND GREEN
SHOW BUSY
A letter from William Green John
Stater, the former head coach of the
stater that the show is having fine suc-
cess, wrote to the theater, Greenville,
Greenville, S. C. He says
Jr., Jrs. sends regards to Gane
Jines, S. C.
There is perhaps nothing more distressing to people who are bothered by the sight of a woman pleasing to others who see them, as pimples, blotches, bumps, rash, scrofula, eczema, "breaking out" and similar skin disfigures and White Ointment, and Soap, are proving to be so dependable in quickly getting rid of these diseases of the skin, it is easier to use them, using them and making themselves attractive to others instead of being slighted all the time. The black and White Ointment, and Soap, in the convenient, low-priced, liberal packages. The 50c size Ointment contains three times as much as the liberal 25c
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
T.O.B.A. BOOKINGS
WEEPING STUFF
GABL RETROSPECTIVE
"Runnin' Wild" played a short encomium in Cincinnati, last week. Black Cark who is "front" man with the show, is the first player in his third date there. The team of Miller and Lyles occupied the same position as Walker, whose show Carl traveled with the first visit backstage at the Grand as a member of Calendari's Mini-past. For years the late Henderson Smith, the famous Broadway producer, was the only one left of that great aggregation, and now the latter two are the sole
Miller and Lakes are in St. Louis for
their spring break. They will train
by week between Toluca, Ohio,
and St. Louis.
"COUNTIN' EM"
BILL A NIMROD
Billy McClain, the famous globe trotter, is the man he is having great success on his hunting trip. He has bagged a few dozen dogs and has mentioned if he had shot any bullet, but he had. Bill also tells us that he ran across the face of Wiltshire. Leggins in on account of the death of his mother, Leggins for 20 years.
Robert Wilson, old-timer in the show business, now at the courthouse, S. C., and is doing well, all things considered. Robert, a lawyer, wants to hear from qualified acts and tab companies. He calls at Liberty, who wants to hear from united between Washington, D. C., and New Orleans and could well be used as a broker between those and other states.
NEW REVIEW
E. P. Eugh and Lillard are rehearsing a new play in which the much required to put on the goods is on hand and they claim that their production, the E. W. E. Ettle Watts Stafford will be in the line-up. Pugh is getting mail at this time of Williams, 71 W. 1350 St., New York.
CROSSING THE BRINY
Teresa West and Ellen Meadows, late members of the "Diane to Broadway," late Ava Meadows, late Larry week, where they will join the Moulin Rouge Review. Eight others left three of the show's original cast by Billy Piper of the Leonard Harper studios, New York City.
NEW SONGS
Sulkes Brothers, the well-known comedy troupe from West Coast production, "Steppin' High," sent us copies of several of their albums, including "Blues," which has a distinct quality of the most impressive sort. The Splakes operate a performance at 125 Centerville, Los Angeles.
HAVE PATIENCE
Cherokee Thornton of Thornton and Yankee Thornton of Jacksonville, fifth week's layoff in Jacksonville, Fla., and is still waiting to hear from the orchestra. To O. B. A. They are getting their care of the Strand theater.
Maria Hurtie and Lee Allen, featured with the Yerkes Flute orchestra, are performing at the Palace theater, South Bend, Ind.
KOPPIN THEATER
YOU ARE NOT TOO BIG FOR US IF YOU CAN DELIVER THE GOODS
THE LIBERTY
NEW SONGS
REEVIÑ STATES FACTS
Exclusive for Chicago Defender
Several actors and managers of comedies must have a better show, when the inferior shows get as much as we do<sup>1</sup>. Men and women are honest; they mean just what they say about their shows. Women call in inferior think the same about men and women as they believe that they have better shows than the other fellows, and there is no use they are wrong. I don't mean to say that they want to convince them that what a good show is. I don't clink to be a critic. I know that I cannot be a playswright and everything else, but I can and tell when it is bad.
Here is another instance: I know here you are a comedian, which contained wonderful material. The show needed a comedian, whom I really really funny, yet the comedian weren't good. I happened to see the comedian weren't good. The parts assigned to them weren't good. What they could not do. It seemed that the stage manager made a special comedy and comedy, and only a limited line of parts to them. The comedian, who was a comedian, would not show the principal comedy. This show really would not expect a blacksmith to make a good job setting diamonds in a room and show that the reports aren't good and that he must improve it he had show with all those good people on the show. If you go you are a sinner. At the fellow said, "If you go to church they will call you a hypocrite, so you go you are a sinner." Yet the situation isn't alarming. We have a large number of bigger and better shows, and even the smaller tags have even have their scenery. I am looking for a good long, profitable season; but I don't want plenty of room for improvement. Go to T. O. R. A.
DETROIT, MICH.
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
Orchestra Leaders and Music Lovers!
GET THESE FOUR POPULAR NUMBERS
"EVERYBODY LOVES MY BABY"
"ALL THE WRONGS YOU'VE DONE TO ME"
FROM Sissle and Blake's Show, "Bamville"
The Above Sheet Music Sells for 25c a Copy, Money Order or Stamps. Orders Get Quick Attention.
CATALOGUE SENT FREE ON REQUEST
Clarence Williams Music Publishing Co., Inc.
1547 Broadway Dept. 56 New York City, N. Y.
HITS AND NOTHING BUT HITS!
"DOUBLE CROSSIN' PAPA, DON'T DOUBLE CROSS ME," sung by Bessie Smith on Columbia Records. Another, "It's Right Here for You."
"HE'S A MEAN, MEAN MAN, BUT HE'S GOOD TO ME." Bigger hit than "He Used to Be Your Man," etc.
"IVE LEARNED TO DO WITHOUT YOU NOW." Get this. It's 100% Melody.
"BYE AND BYE." Beautiful, true-to-life Waltz Song.
"THE RIGHT WAY IS THE BEST WAY AFTER ALL." A Song with a Moral.
"HATEFUL BLUES." Girls, if he doesn't treat you right, sing this one to him.
LEMONS WRITES
Columbus, Ga.
MAE KEMP'S SHOW
BEAR GOT MAD
Bruin, a trained bear, with which its been traveling in vaudeville for some time, got all riled up when slaving the bear is been traveling in vaudeville for some time. As a consequence John Stosk is lying in a hospital with but his bear is cooling his heels in the ice box. The bear is cooling his heels in the ice box. The bear is executing his members of the Atlantic police force. Our correspondent Bruin had acted that way and we are the opinion that the bear also be the last John will do a double with a grizzly. We are thinking that he has a speedy recovery.
NAY, NAY, NAY
The three famous Nay brothers, with some time trying to find a title suitable for their class artists, are now traveling West. The trick is still with the well-known outdoor artist and gardener. They are playing the present week at Bartlese's.
ILL, BUT HITTING
Sweetie May, one-half of the team of Bonnie and Sweetie, was taken ill last week during the Chicago, during the latter part of the week, but hone up and, with her clever teamwork, won. The team is playing the present week at the Washington theater, St. Louis. Sweetie May is also performing each performance. According to news from that town, Sweetie is much better.
NEW TRICK
Kid "Kurley" Brown writes from 2125
Ivarsvars St. Columbia, S. C., that he
will be able to tab and will be ready to be the air in
a few days. Kurley declares that he will have 12 real artists. Among them are
Moses Barnes, Moses Barnes and
others of abilities.
COY COGITATES
Silas Green Show
Millions of thanks to my friends for their cards and letters asking about my health when it was reported I was sick.
asks to my friends for help it was reported I was No doubt my little brother overwork in trying to show to open on the campus the scheduled date, the many commitments he has made to the artists with the show people who have made it their husbands dressing room and company men who have not been re-fees have not been
M. B. H.
CROSS AND JACKSON
Cross and Jackson, two young men
caught in the Indiana theater, Chicago,
on last Friday night, opening up a
entrance that brought a ripple of circles.
funny or nutty, gets grunts of disgust,
gag. telling his partner he saw
every nationality he could visit, the kicker.
The heavier of the two is possessed of
bigger company later. The later need
of a gift, if he wishes to get a laugh,—Coop.
EMMETT WRITES
Eunmet Anthony, star comedian with the Cincinnati Reds, statistic that the Cleveland, Ohio, engagement at the Harris Temple theater moved to Pittsburgh, Pa., where burns were treated to the whole works, Irwin, beauty chorus and all will be doing blackface if they don't. The fact the show went to Pittsburgh that it is headed east, Cleveland.
NEEDS ASSISTANCE
and Music Lovers!
POPULAR NUMBERS
LOVES MY BABY"
"—Waltz-Ballad
ME, GOOD-BYE"
YOU'VE DONE TO ME"
It's Show, "Bamville"
bells for 25c a Copy, Money
ers Get Quick Attention.
FREE ON REQUEST
Music Publishing Co., Inc.
6 New York City, N. Y.
CHING BUT HITS!
"IT DOUBLE CROSS ME," sung by
Records. Another, "It's Right Here
HE'S GOOD TO ME." Bigger hit
etc.
OUT YOU NOW." Get this. It's
to-life Waltz Song.
WAY AFTER ALL." A Song with
he doesn't treat you right, sing this
now Teddy.
"AIN'T GOIN' TO CRY NO MO!"
Send ONE DOLLAR and get them
MUSIC PUBLISHING CO.
New York, N. Y.
B. A.
Booking Associations
and THEATER MANAGERS
with the
B. A.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
4 Volunteer Life Bridge, Chattanooga, Tenn.
Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
p. 3621 State St., Chicago, Ill.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924
CHRISTMAS GIFT
An Attractive Woman of the Race Who Owes Her Beauty to Tissulax
TISSULAX
Beauty in 30 Minutes
WRINKLES, pimples and blackheads are ban-
bled by the race. It removes muddy skin. Faces are made
for the race. Women are overjoyed with the
new beauty. Young and old sing its praises.
A man in his 30 minutes
money back
was satisfied in 8 days
and address with 10
and shipping
and shopping
When the man
Tissulax comes down
to the maidman. Or
when the maidman
writes $1.15. This
writes $1.15.
TISSULAX
beauty clay
TISSULAX
Dust Beauty Clay
Lincoln Laboratories
2004-6-14, Lake, Chicago
$2.50 Jar for
$1.00
Plus Postage
SPECIAL OFFER Our complete beauty
套装, consisting of
50c. Lincoln Hair Pompes, 50c. Lincoln Face
套装, 55 value, only $2.65 longsleeve. Send orders
Daniell, Chicago, Ill. Drug stores can order
from A. Schaeff, 39th St. Chicago, Ill. Bank wanted everywhere.
Smartest Paris Style
SALE
to Get New
Customers
WOOL
FINISH
SERGE
with
ASTRAKAN
CARACUL
FOR ONLY
SALE
3.98
C.O.D.
Misses
Sizes:
40 yrs
20 yrs
Ladies
Sizes:
SEND NO MONEY
We Take the Risk
FREE! FREE! FREE!
8-PIECE MANICURE SET
Yours for selling Liquid Perfume.
Easy to sell at like a bottle. Only 30
calls and the set is yours, postpaid.
TURNER SPECIALTY CO.
45 Warburton Ave. Yonkers, N. Y.
UNDERGROUND TREASURES
HOW AND WHERE TO FIND THEM
We will send you
FREE, information
in the mail and
your fortune. The
secret of locating
underground, or
buried treasure.
If you want this
secret write us to:
Magnetic Co. Dept.
11, St. Louis, Mo.
BASEBALL LEAGUES IN JOINT SESSION DEC. 4
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 22, 1924
EASTERN AND WESTERN MEN WILL CONFER
Meet in Chicago First Week in December
The Negro National league and the Eastern league, which carries an offseason Eastern Baseball club will hold their annual session in the city of Chicago, commencing Dec. 4. Immediately after each league and its annual session, two league will hold a joint session. There are many things to be ironed out at the city council which will interest the city in compiling a plan to appear in the western circuit. Joe Rush will be on hand to insist that his Birmingham club be a fledgling Cleveland, Detroit and St. Louis are quite likely to remain. The Cubans may be allowed to play in the Giants of Chicago and the Kansas City Monarchs are the only safe bets. All in all, the league is likely to remain. Gouma or some other strong city comes in with a likely business proposition. The East Ben Taylor and George Robinson of Philadelphia have come to the parting of the ways and, as a result, Robinson will run the Washington outcomes by himself, with the Ben Taylor. Thomas Jackson has been succeeded by Hammond Daniels as head coach.
An important meeting of the Eastern league was held last week in Philadelphia at the Church of St. Charles Spedden of Baltimore, George Robinson of the Baltimore, Nat Strong of the Brooklyn Hilibale club, Col. C. W. Strothers of Harrisburg, Hammond Daniels, William Weeks and Charles Johnson of the Lincoln Giants, James Kroenan of the Lincoln Giants, and the Chicago meeting will be watched with interest all over the country, and will be attended by different tribes, also that certain cities would be represented in each league. At the present time it looks as though the Eastern league will be one of the largest in 125 years, one of the biggest runners, which may terminate into a real possibility, that Indianapolis may be again one of the biggest factors in the western organization. President Rudy Roster will call the Nassau National league to order Thursday morning, Dec. 4.
Louisville, Ky. Nov. 15—Before a record-breaking crowd the Pearl high school of Nashville, N.C., won championship of the South, went down in defeat before the North. Much enthusiasm and interest were shown in the game and the vince-mental remembrance upset local sports场. In the first half Stumby skipped the first touchdown of the game. Central High School debated about 60 minutes in the second half due to a reference defense fighting hard, were unable to cross Centers 35-yard line and the eleven representing Henderson, Ky. high school on Thanksgiving day, while Dearborn turtledove Douglas high team of Evansville.
AMATEUR KNOCKED OUT
Newark, N. J., Nov. 21—in the interim, boxing tournament tamariscus evening. Moes Tucker, a local lodge started off like a cyclist on a flat track, but 1 minute and 22 seconds after Moes on the floor, down and out.
HAIR STAYS
COMBED, GLOSSY
Millions Use It - Few Cents Buys Jar at Drugstore
HAIR
GROOM
WITH A NAT OIL
Keeps Hair
Combed
Even stubborn, unruly or shampooed hair stays combed all day. In Wear the Hair-Groom™ it is dislissified combing cream which gives that natural gloss and well-groomed effect to your hair, both in business and on social occasions. "Hair-Groom™ is greaseless; also helps grow thick, heavy, lustrous hair. Beware of greasy, harmful imitations.
675
1924 VAL.
CAL. AUTOMATIC
MADE
1924 Parma
model for
women. Well cut, out
new. World bester.
$22.90, regular
$32.90, special at
dard automatic cartridge.
ERY, pins plate.
BUNGLETON GREEN
BUNG, DIDN'T I HEAR YOU SAY YOU WERE LOOKING FOR A ROOM I KNOW WHERE YOU CAN GET A NIFTY ONE.—IT'S DOWN AT 1352 ASPARAGUS STREET-JUST ASH FOR MRS. TURNER.
THE ARROW I'LL GO AT IT N
Virginia Union H
Nothing-Nothing
Virginia Norm
BUNG, DIDN'T I HEAR YOU SAY YOU WERE LOOKING FOR A ROOM? I KNOW WHERE YOU CAN GET A NITTY ONE.—IT'S DOWN AT 13.52 ASPARAGUS STREET.—JUST ASK FOR MRS. TURNER.
THANKS ARCHIE.—I'll GO LOOK AT IT NOW!
MRS. TURNER, I HEAR YOU've GOT A NICE ROOM TO RENT.—HOW MUCH D YOU WANT FOR IT?
YES—YES—COME IN.—THE ROOM IS ONLY $8.
WHAT?!! DO YOU MEAN TO CHARGE EIGHT ROCKS FOR A ROOM THAT LEAKS LIKE THAT?!!
AHH, YOU DON'T NEED TO GET WET—WE FURNISH THIS UMBRELLA WITH THE ROOM—
Virginia Union Held to Nothing-Nothing Game by Virginia Normal Team
Frankfort, Ky., Nov. 15.—Wilmerforce university's gridron combination warriors, 21 to 10. Hickie and Captain Brown of Force Feature the played and good running. Fumings played and good both teams, being largely responsible for Wilmerforce's scores. Forces proved himself a good field general though the odds were against him. Callaway also starred for the locals. Porter, Force Feature the full-fledged thrillers for the spectators. Brown of Force did fine work while Slater, Force Feature the bright lights on the defensive.
Wilferforce (21) Kentucky (0)
Strown L. E. L. E. England
Davis L. E. England
Locus S. E. England
Sweet R. E. Cauley
Woodside R. E. Miner
Harris L. H. Miner
Williams L. H. Miner
Reference—Brooks (Moulhouse), Empire—Hamilton, Holden (James—Jimmy)
Hampton and Howard Tie in Cross Country Run
Washington, D. C. Nov. 14 - Hammond institute and Howard university are running today during are annual running over a course approximately three miles in length. George Bendleman, William Stromon of Hammond was secured, William Stromon of Hammond was third. The fourth barrier to finish was bornish Bendleman, brother of Howard's on a point score, but since the second, two and fifth teams secured five points, runner behind the last Hammond runner, the team honors were declared a first, second and place two points, and so on. This usually the number of points is usually the winner.
Fort Worth High and
Tulsa Clash on Nov. 29
Fort Worth High school football sucks,
1925 Texas High School football conference
with the Tulsa High of Tulsa, Gum
here Saturday, Nov. 29. This will be
two sucks, the other two having been
favored in this year's battles,
favored in win this year's battles.
Pitts, the Oklahoma halfback, has
been expected that he will be stopped in
expectation that he will be stopped in
a new flash, will no doubt emerge from
the scramble with honors.
ST. C. H. HOLDS SMOKER
New York basketball club held a smoker and
reception at St. Phillip's varnish house,
Nov. 12. Three men who helped to organize
the events of the club. They were
Frank Sinclair, the first president, John
Treasure, the treasurer, and William Alermathy.
Hen. Forcik, the theater manager
and song writer, also addressed the
belief of the team and told of completing plans to play Virginia Union
THE
THE UNDEFEATED HOWARD FOOTBALL SQUAD THAT FACES LINCOLN NOV. 27
SERVICE
PHOTO
Va. Union (0) Va. Normal (0)
Mark.....L.E.
Drown.....L.E.
Merritt.....L.G.
Thompson.....L.G.
Todd.....L.G.
Smith.....L.G.
Ashburn.....B.T.
Earboble.....B.T.
Garbrelle.....B.T.
Turper.....B.T.
Baldwin.....B.H.
Baldwin.....B.H.
Baldwin.....B.H.
Motion.....F.E.
D. Broug
C. M. Cain Directs Shore "Y" Basketball Team
Atlantic City, N. J., Nov. 21.—Under the direction of U. Gurur, the team ball at the "Playground of the World" is again expected to flourish as in- season. The team ball at Y. outinthe field, and will meet the leading teams of the country, which is undoubtedly good news to all traveling teams. The present team, however, will be as good at this season as in previous games, as all members of the "Y" team played the open court game at the Central Y. team. The team is the former "Y" Reserves for four years lightweight colored) winning all games against white opponents on the famed Boardwalk piers and at the Central Y. M. C. A, is backing the team financially, and a, leamer season is coming. Thanksgiving night, with the Scholastic of Philadelphia as opponents.
Jose Lombardo Fights
Kaplan in Garden Rings
New York, Nov. 21—Jose Lombardo, featherweight champion of the right to battle for the featherweight championship crown, made three weeks ago, when he battles Kid Kaplan, white, in one of the three tense on the program at Madison Square Garden, as his opponent is one of the champions of Dindee, more than to do with Johnny stepping down than anything else we know of. However, the puncher and grudge to core
WILBERFORCE IN
21 - TO - 0 VICTORY
OVER KY. NORMAL
ST. C. HOLDS SMOKER
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
JES IN
"All Modern
ER, I HEAR
A NICE ROOM
HOW MUCH
T FOR IT?
YES-YES-
COME IN.= THE ROOM IS
ONLY $8.
FANS DISPLEASED
GIVE TONY MAR
OVER BATTLIN
FANS DISPLEASED AS JUDGES GIVE TONY MARULLO VERDICT OVER BATTLING SIKI IN EAST
---
New York, Nov. 21. — Tony (Younuk) Marullo of New Orleans was awarded the judges decision over battling a 12-round bout at Madison Square Garden Friday night. The decision far from suited the fans and they showed their disapproval by bibing in the 20 minutes before the spectators could be cleared out. They thought the 20 minutes were: Marullo, 165%; Sikl, 113; the early rounds Sikl seemed content to let the Southerner do all the work. In fact, Sikl did not start to show anything until the second round, when Marullo plenty. Sikl adopted a peculiar crouch that puzzled Marullo throughout the entire bout and on one occasion stuck out his chin, which the white lad took a turn for Marullo's inaccuracy at shooting punches. Sikl looked square at the referee — away from his opinion — which landed flush on Marullo's jaw.
WATCHING TH
WATCHING THE SCOREBOARD
BATTING AVERAGE AT HAVANA NOV. 9
HOWARD FOOTBALL
JOIN
Conveniences"
DO YOU CHA
ROCKS THAT LE
TH
D AS JUDGES
CRULLO VERDICT
NG SIKI IN EAST
SQUAD THAT FACE
Wilberforce Prepares to Stop West Va. Institute in Western Classic, Nov. 27
WALDEN LOSES
7 TO 0 GAME TO
ROGER WILLIAMS
NEW YORK TO HOLD ANOTHER
AUTOMOBILE SHOW NOV. 27
NEW YORK TO HOLD ANOTHER
AUTOMOBILE SHOW NOV. 27
New York, Nov. 21—The Eastern
demand that another automobile race
he held, his decided to stage a big
race in the city. The Kansas race track in Jersey. Among the
features will he a 10-mile race between
Louisville and Lansing (white) of this city. Other fea-
tors will be drivers of both groups. A closed event
for colored drivers and a 10-mile
race is being oiled and the race is
sanctioned by the big automobile firms
of the city.
Lincoln, Mo., Ties Kansas
Toppea, Kans., Nov. 21—In a battle
for Lincoln university, Jefferson City,
Mo., vs. Kansas Vocational college, the
Lincoln eleven easily outplayed
K. I. in the first half, keeping the ball
down, but the locals rallied in the last
half by triple crosses and run 20
vards for a touchdown. R. Kobnack
kicked in and tied the Kansas (7)
Lincoln (7)
Williams, B. E.
Prosper, B. E.
Bolton, B. E.
Boston, B. E.
Wood, B. E.
Wood, B. E.
Win, B. E.
Bridge, B. E.
Brooks county, B. E.
Stokes, B. E.
Empire-William
clarkers.
BRUCE FLOWERS BEATEN
Yonkers, N. Y. Nov. 21 — Bruce Flowers junior lightning strike junior in six rounder to August Hissane (white) at the 100-yard line. It was a working粘粘, with action in every round. The boys will probably be the 10-session route three weeks over the 10-session route.
By Rogers
DON'T NEED
BET.—WE
HIS UMBRELLA
THE ROOM—
Prepares to
a. Institute in
classic, Nov. 27
Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 21.—With the Wilmerforce university and the six faculties, the university is well-browned with final touches for the Western classic on Thanksgiving day, elaborate arrangements have been seen in the campus, a whirl of fare and hotel rates, and a whirl of entertainment for the big holiday, entertainment here for the game, and games for the guests" are lustily wailing comparative records, and comparative strengths of the rival institutions of both institutions are uniting in perfecting a program of social events hemlining in from both forenoon and midnight. The Wilmerforce-Virginia "boosters" club" has even been organized among alumni of the institution for the annual classics.
Olympic Star Beaten in
10-Mile Canadian Race
Gleiph, Ont. Nov. 21—Flashing into the 14-mile race last week, Charley Minton outspit all the "dome" by showing Cuthbert, Canada's Olympic marathon runner, to have in a race time at 12:22:00.
Snatchting the lead away from the Olympian Minton ran a beautiful time-timed last leg and left the favorite to finish a pennant. A G. C. runner from Toronto, was second, that showed young Minton in the best off at a killing pace, when in startoff off at the second lead and forced the field, Minton, with Dellow and Cuthbert, plecked to win, and Minton broke away from the field. He home stretch, but was never headed, to Toronto runner by 50 yards at the tape.
COHAN BEATEN
PART 1—PAGE 9
ATLANTA IS VICTOR OVER FISK,39 TO 0
Tennessee Men Drop Another Game
Bv F. A. WALKER
Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 15—The Atlanta university team defeated the Fisk eleven on a mud-soaked field, 35-0. The Atlanta backs were slowed up by the heavy conditions of the field, but managed to pile up enough touchdowns to make the victory a decisive one.
Atlanta scored three touchdowns in the first quarter, Yates, Brown, Perry managed to pile up enough touchdowns for the three tails. Atlanta's fourth touchdown came in the second quarter, when DeLorean, Green, Melherson managed to shove over a marker, Perry carried the ball over twice, Yates once, while Melherson added a goal twice. The score stood 26 to 0 at the end of the first half.
Fisk presented in strong defense, Yates once, while Melherson added a goal twice. The score stood 26 to 0 at the end of the first half.
Fisk presented in strong defense, Yates once, while Melherson added a goal twice. The score stood 26 to 0 at the end of the first half.
After Melherson had made it first down for Atlanta on her own line, DeLorean and Green added both yards, and first down for Atlanta on her own line. On the second play Melherson skirted left end for a touchdown. DeLorean
With only five second remaining to be played in the fourth quarter, Atlanta scored three arms of Lang for the sixth and final touchdown of the game. This play was the outstanding event of the game. The pass was made from Fisk's left wing, Lang crossed the goal line untouched. Fisk made only three first downs, Seay, Fisk quarter, and Captain Lang. The Fisk offense, while Atkins, giant center, was a bulwark of strength on the line. Captain Collum, Atlanta's leader, was on the sidelines because of injuries.
Sumner Plays Phillips
St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 15—Summer High school machines was too much for Columbus, Mo., and the locals defecated the latter, 12 to 0, on a soft field, several times, only to lose the ball on funnels, and the touchdown came only halfway, notwithstanding pass and straight-armed his way 40 yards for a touchdown. This hap-penning half notwithstanding Summer's tight pass and straight-armed his way 40 yards for a touchdown. The second well-earned pointer came in the third period, when Cox caught a Parker, Green, Baker and street ploughed their way to the point from counter. H. Green place-kicked for the Baker plotted his first full game and Gordon made his debut at end for Sum-mer, then finished by Bradford, who stole through the Summer defense for several gains worked like veterans. Piper, Hays, St. Charles, Mo., comes here Saturday for a tilt with Summer and Wendell High of Chicago on Turkey day.
Summer (13) Columbia (0)
Gordon L. T.
Braey L. T.
Harris M.
Rankin (captain) M.
Kelly M.
Higgins-bham R. T.
Higgins-bham R. T.
Taker Q. R.
Taker Q. R.
M. Green R. H.
Hare H. H.
Substitutions: Summer—for location, Erwin-
Mayer, Umpire-Schwich, Head Erwin-
Mayer
LOST VIGOR RESTORED.
IN 24 HOURS
*Glands Awakened in One Day* "the Amazing Statement of a 76-61 Lost vigor, deadened glands and nerves, and that weak, worn-out, deformed body, was deformed any longer since the discovery of a well-known chemist. Now it is purely old to become 'rejuvenated' and regain the vital force of youth; the musculus, is the amazing statment of one of the famous discovery is bringing 'renewed youth' and 'strength' to thousands of women and men; I want to say that my 'lost vigor' is strong and I want to say that my 'lost vigor' is twenty-four hours," says D. B. Peake of Kansas City, Mo. "I today at 76, I am taking the treatment I felt I started taking the treatment I felt I am enjoying a remarkable 'kland restoration' and an convinced my rejuvenation and God's blessing rest on the discoverer of such a boon to humanity," prepared by one of the largest laboratories in the world, is easily used at home and seems to work like magic in its rapidity on peo-
No matter how bad your condition,
no matter what you have tried, if you
are lacking in vision" and the "total
no matter what you have tried, if you
are lacking in vision"
Mando Formula will restore you that
amount of money you need only $1.85 on 10 days free trial. If the
results are not satisfactory and you are
not satisfied, you can add a
address to P. L. Carlin, 602 Baltimore
Blide, Kansas City, Mo. and the treat-
ment is extended to the simple directions. If at
wonderful improvement" and "resolution"
just send it back and your
treatment is extended to the simple directions. This offer is fully guaranteed, so
write today and give this "remarkable
formula" a trial.-Adv.
17:45 AMAZINGLY LOW
PRICED 1924 MODEL
GOVERNMENT
TESTED SIDE
MOLLEL
JUST received. Limited
famous "TROOPER" Side
of the three foot carbine. Shoots
paired with essential guns. Shoots
paired with secondary guns. Special
specialty price for about
time. Only one gun to a customer.
$17.45
32.20 or 36.60 - shot - box
portraits. Moore back promptly not satisfied.
WILLIAM WARD KO. Dest. OYSW
“ANNUAL CLASSIC” TO DRAW RECORD THRONG
Fcc, ee ea, ee oe, pee oll
ai ig * ;
Thanksgiving Night WAS ON
om Convention Hall “Stoo” |
| MEET EVERYBODY AT THE ONE MAMMOTH =
Football Classic Reception |
| PRESENTING :
THE PEER FORD DABNEY AND Mis =
BenaRERe fees
beaten F Fae?
Bi ReeTbRS one teaaa |
THE PRINCE OF WALES says: “They are dispensers of the swest. =
TINE ERINGE OF WALES sere cont, Arne hs satan |
LINCOLN VS.
HOWARD ON
TURKEY DAY
ry |
History of the
Annual Classics
1892—Howard, 5; Lincoln,
1904—Howard, 0; Lincoln, 1
1905—Howard, 0; Lincoln, 5
1907—Howard, 0; Lincoln, §
4908—Howard, 5: Lincoln, 5
1909—Howard, 5; Lincoln,
1910—Howard, 5; Lincoln, 0
1911—Howard, 0; Lincoln, 0
1912—Howard, 13; Lincoln, 4
1913—Howard, 0; Lincoln, 0
1914—Howard, 0; Linco!., 14
1916—Howard, 26; Lincoln, ©
1917—Howard, 0; Lincoln, 6
4918—Howard, 0; Lincoln, 13
1919—Howard, 0; Lincoin, ©
1920—Howard, 42; Lincoln, _0
1921—Howard, 7; Lincoln, 13
1922—Howard, 12; Lincoln, 13
4923—Howard, 6; Lincoln, 6
Washington, Nov. 21.—Fully 25,000
fans, the largest that has ever wit-
neseed the “Annual Classic” will Be
in hand ‘when the referee's whistle
Mimes. starting the Lincoln-Howard
Fame, Thankectving afternoon at 2
selec at’ tho American foagve Dark
incthis elt
‘Dr. WG. Alexander, representing
Lincoln university's athietlc depart-
tment, and Dr. Emmett J. Scoot, Kec-
tenar-treasurer of Howard unlver-
Site have eft no atone unturned to
take the 1924 fame the greatest In
the annuals of our Race.
‘toward enters the field with no
Aefeats having Been chalked UD
againet her this year. No team has
crossed tho Howard goal line. Iow-
heq@and the North Carolina A. and ‘T-
colleze played 0 to 0 tle game at
the opening of the season. In this
game Jiaywond Johnson, & Howard
ond, wan fatally injured. Howard
then, “aut of respect for, the dead
Bhiver. canceled the St. Paul game.
Tioward met and. played West Vir-
pinia Collegiate Insutute to 40 to. 0
Hie. Witherforce was beaten at Wil~
Lierforce, 7 to. 9, and Hampton fell
efor” the onrushing blue and white
Marvlora ¢ £0 3. Lincoln oa the otter
Hand has been having things her own
kay, Thee ran Up a big score on
Pententown ana the Harrisburg -
MC. A eleven, Defeated Va. Sem=
inary, 21 10 0, was played to 2 0 to 0
He be Talon in the rain, defeated
IWunpton, 7 to 3 (same. score. Ak
Howard atl two weeks later), and
then fan ever the St Paul college,
in 0, in Baltimore.
In ever game but the Union Fame
Trera"eut loose for two or three Tone
min, ‘averaring from 65_ yards on
down. “Coach. 5. Faun han been
aseiated iy Trown, late of Tufts col-
Wee and a playing mate of Dr. Sfor=
rison af toward, Coston, 1824 cap~
Calne Sty Wonds, *2€ and other form=
or Tincatn ends.
Howard {x touted to have Just the
punch to put aver a vletare. Morrie
fen with tho assistance of Joe Trice,
Inte of ‘Stracuse and Dulldox Wille
lame, former star end for Howard, f=
prevte shrewd, He didn't. uncover
ansthing inthe Hampton game and
when he sende his cliarces in arainst
the Pennsytvania ‘eleven ‘Turkey day.
all Howard ana her followers will be
Proud of the team.
In Lanesster and Crudup, Tinestn
hat a fast pair of ends, Lincoln's
Maekfiold I fast, Gondman, Lee and
Nerd re hard men to handle, once:
thew zeta poing,
‘nile Howard's men. haven't rot
off for nny Tonk starring seneation’]
Tuna’ this year. It fa likely that the
Seteran center, ‘Priestly, sill tar
Morean, Tinesin's conter, hasbeen
‘ut ef many eames thia fail, owing to
finv injure and it Ia helleved that
Conch “Younr preferred to ‘hold him
in readiness for the big battle.
‘Miller, the ‘bie guard. Parne at
quarter ‘and. McLain. a former Lin-
cain nlaver, are new men that Hows
‘ard. will ‘tend inthe game. Miller
fames from. Cushing “neademy’ in
‘Massachusetts and played last vear
at Vaton, “He haa a bramher alxo on
the team, Pane was Siiller's team=
mate at Cushing and he played fresh-
nan foothall nt the. University. of
Yermont last fall, “MeCiain ts a Rood
Kicker. Cantain Dokes will start the
Fame at tackle.
"The social side of the mame fx
drawing the blerest folk In the
sountry, among whom will he the Mae
Janes af St. Fouls, Abhotts and Bin
kar of Chieage, Du Rols of New York
and thousands af others.
‘Alderman. Flemming ef Cleveland,
anda party. sill be on hand. Chie
Gages quota thie sear will reach 199
fr mare. ‘The Pittsburgh fans are
comins bs special traln.
The game this year ie enlivened by
2 Name-ceming celebration which wilt
fing the campus rounds Muminated,
AIL sanctioned fertivition and dances
Sader the management of the univers
Biller who Jointle are working for the
Suerese of this eame, will be Held on
the bill in the dining reom.
"Among the other eventn schfch well
drawn cand deal of attention ts the
‘Aitioa Dail and tite dances of the fra
Atta bal
BORDENTOWN DEFEATS CADETS
‘Bovdeniown, X. J. Now, 21—Dieplay-
for a powerful nnd arind attack, lor:
HEcovbe“Sianuat Teainine aches) “des
ferted the Jewdentonn Bilitnrs. Insti
[oteron ‘Armisitew aay and oversehelmed
the famous cadet tem hy s score of
[ee the worst defeat ndmainiotered &9
TRevcndete in srars
‘Spine te running hieh for the Cheney:
parame gnithe sania Wer ran
ig expected i
GETS HIS CHANCE AFTER WAITING |
THREE YEARS TO STAR ON GRIDIRON
&
Mn eo cate cS
. Vee
Pees
IN THE SQUARED GIRGLE
BBs MULT UONES UR. oe
AA ae ee
SRR NS:
ace
ee nS
ee
fae nce
eh
ees
aN
ee
bene
Ye eee
eae
Be Ae
NORFOLK VS. GIBBONS
‘Tex Trickard has matched Kid Nor-
folk and Tom Githans for 12 rounds
for the popular Christmas fund for
‘Me poor, This contest doesn't look
Rood to this writer for two Eo0d Tes
Pons, “Why ds ft Gilbbons, who isi
‘Along turned a deat ex" to the tea
Of fanting the broker, dreve the cal
Bing with good white paint? And
road one at that, All at once he
has changed. “There are two. good
reasons, Twill sy azul. Tom has
the lew down on the Kid's ability.
The ‘Kid “has not shown In 3. tons
time that he has the kick which spel
JO" reconds. Jie fight with Sik
homed every one that he can’t hit
fo kin any more. On the other hand
that gentlemanly agreement might
have teen reached. Everybody knows
‘what that means. On the other hand,
Wo old umers don't put up a real
Rood tiem. It takes an old timer and
Scoring Foungster, who will do any
thing to get a reputation. O14 timers
Piay. ther same so safe that i tok
ike a fake—they won't take a chance
‘Take Gibbons’ ight with George Car-
pentier at Michigan Clty. He’ ptased
fe'ao close that the fight looked bad.
He'was afraid. Jf the promoters
want a Feal fight, put Tvetenback and
Tiger Flowers, oF Larry Estrings and
Mickey Walker on. Cut out the to
‘old timers. ‘They iinow too much.
AL BROWN MISSED
Al Brown, the sensation of Harlem.
minted this time. Not because ai
was not a8 g00d as ie has been, but
Ir'mist be remembered that Al once
Knocked this boy out
"There are very few fighters. no
matier how simpife thes may le. who
Seould stand around and allow a. man
Yo do the same thing twice. It must
be ‘remembered that this. bor. Tony
Rintn, ts no eucker.. Ho has, gone
Along and won from a Tot of” Rood
Gora since Brown fattened him. te
proves two Road points In Al's favor.
That Milton wa no sucker Aghter
And that all of Al's knockouts were
Ret eet-uDs
Brown has the epotlisht of the tit-
tie men today. If he" doesn't. bura
himeelf out, he may ket, somewhere
and nome iron men. - Don't forget
the ending of that great Mttle boser.
Danny Edwards. “Ie vurned hinself
jefean out.
JACK JOHNSON AGAIN
‘q dack hag gone the cat, one better.
‘The cat'a limit Is nine Uves. "Jack
has passed that and Is now working
hight and day on bis tenth life. This
Is ifrom heursas, Ine i emunds cood,
Tack conceived the Mea last summer
Use he would get somewhere It he
would fay aside the gay life and go
Dack Into the folds of the Baptist
church. He made his desire known,
When the Baptise convention wag In
session in Chicago last summer. Jack
Sas snvited to step to the platform
And maken tte tale, Iie addrene
Wan no Warmly reesived that Jacke is
ae ae ere an sree tenn mae
gee 11 Veen. an a ee aa
oe ewer 1 © es ¢ ce See
ei Se Sin pa ect es eo Ney ee ee
Bi pte Se | ie ee eae te Ae i tit y
ee ae Sa rs RNA ee
ee Ne ees eee See a (eee
ee foe) lah, Nie bee bec a ae
Bear <! MVEA. 6 ibe: F Be Ree
Feet ee ey Vere Scie ey aa ee ee Ve
Pere ren petamees) RVR aeuy piernt cain niu iwi cel cain Wei ei
ee rey) baa ce ee ory
Corie gear Fe ee Omi lee cee, tay a) haw a
Be ee Eg gh SR Say a
Reteare Mee Pe Ty at encagers Se cee eae CMM te toe eRe Pe eae]
igo SOR Rego SE ea cM aT ie cues eran Sea Se A RE Si Don SR
CHAMPIONS OF THE MIDDLE WEST : -
Tie, 400 AC fotbal tat eharalans of the vate West have en open date Neve 8 ged sould Tha to heat tr the (onewing teams Pitan
verses SucadeeghistTactareta” huMt ue eM Mba tnd ce, Byes ektigl te A ate aah uo a RnR APB
ra ea ee ae i He ges og a OM ISL EB Se Mags it Aha ar i or
3. HAMLET B. “KID” ROWE
‘Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 7.—Cen-
tral high schoo! defeated Edison
Migh teday by a 12-7 score. win-
ning the preparatory title of this
city, Central went trouglt the
sennon without a defeat inthe
six amen played aril the greatest
eontriinitor to” Central's muccess
Sens Charles Told, 2528 Chicago
Ave. son of Mr. and Mrs, EL.
Bord, the only. Race momber to
play ‘on any of the high schou:
‘teams this season.
‘This Is Teld's final year at Cen-
tral but fs Ils Mest opportunity: to
play ax a regular. In all proba:
Initty. Rela would have tinished
schoo! without having a ehance to
make geod on the gridiron, had not
Providence selected Joe Markley: to
coach Central thie season. The
former coach for ohvlous reasons
Kent Told on the Neneh for three
yeara, hut Markley. who's resttise
ite "Was abliity, “not natonality,
AulekIy" discoveved Unis versatile
player after afew workouts. and
placed him. on the regular team,
Jn'the halt dozen games. played By
Contral this season, It was. leelds
Individual playing that brought vie-
tors to fin team. Tt dda Gike
Reid long to demonstrate that, he
possessed seal. stamina, accur=
hess an alert brain and a fshuln
spirit that wold. net. he denied
For the past ve ‘weeks he hax
heen ‘pletured In the sport, scetlon
Of the ise dailies of this elite.
‘Shorty Eaitors George A. Karton.
wawand W. Walker and” Charles
Johnson of The Minneupalts Prib-
une, Jouraal and. Dali Star, re-
spectively. agree that Reld is the
Ereatest football star ever uro-
ced from the local hich sehouls
elthy the one exception, Parl Mar-
tineay, sho. was selected on Wal-
ter Camp's All-American team (Wo
seasons. A. Wonderful compliment
When Wwe ‘stop tO reflect that. the
Breat Dobby. Marshall was a prod-
Met of a Tacal igh school. ACter
radiation tis wear tins star halt-
Back, who Ie only IT years of age,
will enter the University of Min-
esata where In athletics and other
endeavors he promises. to make
ame for himself that his parents,
the Race and Minnevota will view
fais Pare Sh
{aa different way. | Jack ts studying
Hue histors’ tn Gnd_n Rood potnt on
John the Hantist. There are thot
Sind “upon thousands that will pas
owl imeney to see snd shake hands
Sith Jack down home.
TIGER FLOWERS
Speaking of men burning them-
selven ote 1 Tools to me 28 thounh
Howers has done five years of fait:
ing in one year, When sou compare
the bouts he has had with out times
‘our champions have zone to the post
here's mot-a one of them that" has
had three bouts this year. Tiger did
the ali Hob Fitzsimmons and Corbett
‘aunt the other nisht. Allied two bind
Inthe same ring. It was. ‘e4ld Ie
Knocked one scold “with the. test
‘wallop that the other went out Crom
the ght
PAUL QUINN. 10; TEXAS. 0
soyten, Texan, Nov. Mo The,« Paul
‘gunan college, seven ot Waco." Tema
Uaiterca the toca! erioters into sebmiae
Hots Seeder MPS
pectatlons ant proved the. whole show
Moutiise laektield | stars — Sedherry,
refi utters aa “Shepard ened:
onal Wrench Tonner sere fargas
osnunainie for the win
ee deias 0) Tar
reese cteave decent Wan
Ree SILER IIE Wie
Ripe Scclccicigecooceegi te
Fekeged SISA Hae
ietapae sstiticw Reavccensaensaee et
Signa ccicidaiecmcncegs Bam
(Slemoes -cesvesesoyPlciocscocsssee Mae
eset atieeseeak ee
Sota Ae metic, Rie
oe SAvaatien® Uhlaleee for Sbepnare” Mefeare
‘escent wihertgeets tte tee
Feustistmnnys esd Taeamas aa mae
shite
BATTLING OWENS Wins
trovtdonres Mf Now. 21 steteling
aanents Nraviwelght linttier of New Ore
feane wea Sahe deckslen “oer Waly
Fackcon'af’ sew atk Sou.°3S inn Hoe
Found bout. ie was a yeppy cera
WILEY DOWNS SAM HOUSTON
“WHEN BROWN GRABS FUMBLE
AND RUNS 35 YDS. TO SCORE
Tuskegee Institute Trims
Alabama State, 28 to .7
400 A. C. FOOTBALL TEAM
‘Marshall, ‘Texas, Nov. 14.—iistory
repented fiselt in Wiles felt this
stternoon.. Huwever: this tine Wiley
‘ase ott the better end uf Danie POr-
Mines favor. Laat week, ngainst
Prairie “View, tie Wilteata were
eaten by'a Uropiciek In the hist ni
ute of play. Voday, with: lea than
tivo iinutes to plas. Raleigh. Drow
picked up a Suan Huston camble and
faced, 33 yards. for. a touchdown,
Gruzeing three Sam Huston teklers
heros the goal for the deciding
tmarker, the Mat count standing 14-7
Mu favor of Wiley.
Wai “auother” betlant game and
keene “ite fame at, theleiiighest pitch
{itreghout he contsnty The Heat, doar
for was evenly cantented, melther eleven
shay antic to auivanes the bikin. of
Feetleriy. due to areat svfensive seurk
fe tntt gentn. Fine puting 9. oa
thee "Goeatana’ genestlon. wid “Owens:
tire Gttinme’ Sete ttaseem quarter
[litt the row tlime ai aesting te
the scrondl jugrter the Widest took
he ffeniver and: & serlee at ond Fons
fini real anne amon placed the, ball
tin" the Sam iluston eighesard tw,
{feo "wehieh Quarterhack’ Gite, alded
fetome splendid interference,” eltcled
Sim Hquaton'e tet ‘end. for a touch=
own. Wie cry fe a pot Was ee
Seastin, "Scores Seg, "Samm hase
‘Thee remainder of the anarter was
seiner Hiuhen” the: driving. Sam
Histon hate intereepted a Whey nae
find ‘Tun ‘at yatiy a the Wile Segal
tin. here The ate topned yy alert
tind’ Stott sth halt ended.
Huston Fights Haed
am Hunton cme bacie strong. 1, the
seca "hwtt. | Summe teitiant “hrokem
chi" rinming te owen mm Pestundes,
{eilnuted a sospued yes, Gen
fuckon, hated the, Vall an Witey's
iamesfgnt tines trom “where the Mougti=
ng Wanton ‘drove’ ennter_ for dhe Fe
miainkng statanee “Owen dean” Kick
Hlea the counts "Score: Wiley #: Sam
Heo, ©
‘Ae thls pelnt the quarter was Just
about ‘Wuit"ever, ‘ond tun plas after
fhe iickun(t the eiewent chated gual
fer thes final ‘iuarteg, with the dl
ACideS Neweosttan eg her own go-sard
ines) Ietacan here that Wiley faved
fhe mort hehitant, ifenatvetigaaseel
1s" dhe "Willen this fi Wied Tien
Thyhie hunks Wary: fined, etpnine
1g oben Im the Same Musto Vine anal
sklecing Mele enue almost at wile a=
fd iytaome finn driving he orden, Mot
fer, “Giram sina SHC, "the Bogailtes
Ted soon rushed the lalla the Sant
Fisteon Soceaed:sereak. cn tn lone the
figpsee <O-rare streak. aly tn ieee te
Montgomery, Ala. Sov. 34-—Atter
holding Tuskegee Institute, high Wd
ders for the southern champtonshty,
Scorelens in the fext half and making
A touchdown themselves, Alabama
State Normal crumbled under the at-
tuck of Jorner, Stevenson, Dailey and
Wooten'in the second haif and were
Aofented, 28-7,
Within three minutes after the
kickoff, the Siaters worked the tall
to Tuskeveo's Jo-yard line by a bril-
Hane running atiaek. Were Captain
Hall changed tacties and hurled x
30-yard pes to Johnson, who ran Un
molested aver the goal line. "Gilmer
Gropikleked forthe extra. Holnt,
In the second quarter the State
eleven, though tunable to score again,
held “Tuskeyee for downs on severai
oceasions. At cite end of the period,
Geach Aho called his men tozether
and, when the third quarter hezan,
An almost new Tuskegee eleven faced
the Torals.
Earls in the third nerlod Steven
gon eireled the dunks, Dalles crashed
through tackle, Wooten went aroun!
the end and Mobley ran through cett-
ter for consistent gains, making Orst
down afteg Mest down until the ball
Fested on the locals’ clght-yard tine,
with four downs to sake the score,
On the frst play Wooten smashed
through the tackle for the tuochdown,
Stevenson ted with a goal from
placement,
"As the theld period ended Stevenson
made a spectacular. run of 4 yards,
faving the ballon State's throe-yard
Tine ns te whistle blew.” Batley, on
the first playin the fourth quarter,
Went through tackle for the score sind
Stevenson'n educated toe booted the
extra point.
"AE this point Mobley, Tuskesee's
ae-vear-old quarter, was replaced. by
Joxner. Alahama was again held (or
downs, after which the Cour horse
men set Up another iEhtning ride,
jeaving destruction fn ita wake, Woot
Cn'a deyard end fun. wax followed
ty Tralley's six yards through tackle,
Jovner went around. the end for 18
Sarda and "Wooten annexed the ro
raining six for the Institute's third
Score.” Stevenson's too was’ again
Intatlivie.
“After tla Conch Abbott benched his
racers and sent in another Fow of scc~
end stelag men in” Levd,. Morgan.
Whitiow "and Jones, “These ‘heks
continued the attack. unhalted by the
State teeklera. Jones went through
center for four yards, Boyd ‘around
endfor 14 sarde and Morgan ws
Stopped on ‘the ‘six-yard. line. only
after he had made 1 ards through
the Alabama ‘defense. denen fated
At center, but. Whitlow carried the
latlvaver’ for. the Institute's fourth
touchdown and Faulkner Kicked Kea
fnst as the tinal whistle ended “the
game.
‘Cummarily, Wooten, Stevenson,
ping 15 garde through right guard, Sam
Hoon ‘nash for dinghy ea
funted. over 85a the Wiley Sas
Fant Hines Dati ponte out of found
are tne Sam fied Sn ie
fe antceraee ieee imam Ain ‘ie
imigutes to tas Sa itusioiy tat, the
Tall'om the Socsiaéa. ling, On the next
ae the ites Yorearie tackled, San
Hsdeon for a W-sned lost, nd tive et
outta‘ "the Witte a2'¥nn fine Do
Hunted fo the sum Huson 40-yard tine
Bh ‘Svtne wa oped hin tracke
Gn! an’ stomped ferwand pane Cant
Walsh “thin elee "theta Amd
tucked, the iit Wasser with ah
force that neared the atl and ne
IRGgN town nuteiat nn dhe aa nd
Since te" the koal (ue the ‘deviding
iaeker.
Play Olshop Now. 17
“apg Aad veg were the ain
ne Heda ie Se Nita eae
‘Rhanaltedng tie ad havens ean
recta n ne l ine. he
nit ty dhe twat cuter in the cumter:
Shee aie” sion As" aa ‘eer
She! iadaatog Wiley lasts “whe
See amie or ake Aarti Seow
foaghe faitentiy, “ben “taster was tees
frat the "outataning Witcy > star
Bites tine the Sigrabait now tonk the
Sori Matt hem nae
ine intceterenee. Va aeates aii ant
Beran ee Wety ne anaes
fine Sean Meow weak, Is ne oe
tg hte he Sen ae ene
Aktung Walon and cher aricing chick
iting Walton sad ahr siving chi
Riteven of the Texas fowtball_ world
agente arnt” aocthe (Witeee alsin
Sieaalen “unkegiving’ ung lato
ae ae as
amt > ws" OHy
Keine cE oa i We
BU sinihsccctgeccccec
Sec eee
Jette ccersseiiscckbccctetitiiaar Mae
Hight Scales sii
Wate 1222 2S ioe
eee tale een: eh: San Pevaen i
fie tat nes dor South nace
| Mere eat ela bute Eb
erable tons
RUST COLLEGE
HANDS LANE A
7-T0-0 BEATING
Monty, Springs, Miss, Now. 13—
Grippted hy. the tose nt White, star
Iratfiack, “in ahete most tinporcant
Fame, ine. aleze eleven” was
Stoned ‘bythe Hust college. touch:
Gown machine, 720. Tihs ie the fre
Morea the Lanites have sulfered sive
ie.
| ‘The Rust team played minus the
serena fa Region hn
Ea eated ee cacy ein ys
Zend foniball, Gitek. Sameon ad
Rove were thor stars for the” Atlas
slsaipt combination,
Nelson, Ersant. Aud Merviwether,
lasing thelr weal good ame, were
the beet for ane, "Phe feust backs
ounded the tine for’ feat downs,
Mite ‘the "ane: ridaers haul to. be
satined with Tee
ase eee tt cores het
Big cccleccriB ccc:
Hint COITIIIIIER SST agen
ferme ccc ay
foie ci Re
Camnate Lrten
Bointnits aerate As ion Fae A
nate irene a oF sts. “Cri
ee ae
Joyner and Captatn Duncan were the
Mars forthe wiattors, whtle Capra
Thal, Johnson, Camphell and Glinyer
[were ive shining Ughts. on the 1oeal
mee ee Oe Bee ne
So cn Bes ee
dig ociictiscidgmeccec fe
Pearce heat
Pees cocceccieer rca a
Fg Gaia. Wig
Nonide SAR eo We
Soi SSC Mice ae
Bae ec ee
Aeon te tea ek te bee we
Srectiarery, Welguiel, ”" fundeet=: Watire
‘Aingntoah.” ttent Hacmmawetterore AW
sean =
| LOUISIANA HIGH TEAMS MEET
inten Rowse fa Nex. St-—taton
Rewer Aisi sete! NH meet the
Shreveport. Meh tay tn "a states
intersettional iatzte. “Coach © smitiry
Warriors of taxon Rouge have not heca
Scored na the Kive three Sears. and
Senet inte tor ice rere,
Prairie View Beaten by
Fast Bishop College, 6-0
Howard Tramples Hampton
in the Dust, Seven to: Three
| yhralrie View, Texas, Nov. 15.—Thz
Bishop college (eam defeated the stron
Tat ue om and eee th
heen “SaaS mus
Iie ot, eve dri
ee te at ogee
Siew" ronovered the tall and gained 1
Eek “igi Meh ee Pia
ROUSE GME ne ct
fie the “loraia an” hele "Susyard tine,
Tifshon Feeeived a "nunt. recuraing it
gi ie aaa ates
Fehr Gath alata i he
Miyard fine. Another aa
“LORD JEFF”
gg Waetington, 0. C.. Ser. t4—-ta vain
no ae.“ Seahorse of Hae
om Stake tye Vowtard ivan atthe
Nmevicua stexsate” uml evan
iene Fridays Sows 14 Seven fo three
Sst the ft roma, ut A hn on seme
Inicates the cumplete superiority of
the itive Sina White team over” the
Wem
Cinch Mertivon. scouted aa he was
nc tive staff uf the Cinco Cao wean
ered, Wr ping hie charges “uniter
‘Siro darling the entire contex Wes
Sone" ein, however Howard out
nh, cageneraied, outhased inde
‘hs inal pera ver onthe the
ass from Cieginis, Hampton mae
ai one iret dawn to even by Hlow=
de Tgaimptoa hd noth tat one
"Shinn amd ‘reriew of etfectat
forwart tees. nf whieh “only one
fete a Sinai icin, “The Setsiders
‘iveing the riasinge iments of dare
ttoct aim Seca thw fickle odes
‘Shae with vase pate fore
sete ane hag_the Indliferent Sung
ube bev thet. not.
rie in the ise quarter. Haran
ton rinyed the, Baers hide, teh a
‘ito trom ner sCunae" paced on
he" d0syar ing The Senter et
ihciendetngy however. the. thied
sisareer stems ith te ball om Hama
ine Vo-yard line at the result of
Henatey dor holding. the catire.teant
fe nucken wert the lett side. of
Tex'ine hart deeptive formation, foe
Inve by short evinaceroay pase
from’ aleLein: staining penind the
fight Mae of ene Biton line to the
{fe en Frown, who went aeross Cor
ite sole touchdown tally of the cons
wee
‘um Blackman at quarter tn. the
ties Ucar potion chs {rz tiwe tenn
incited spibi and balance and ee work
(ign fenlete: with ashing tack of
argc “Chumuiness am alownest
Ci tout wore everywhere evident. and
eanngs marred plays, again” ad
nuns rhe sturdy rustung ot SMe
Samy Howards aa “the
Stonewall defenses ated. by" Haut:
fenve,Tack “ot angen hae In ny
‘ay resetnbied real ph, saved the
Tg Blue ant White tauehine
sft iene substituted at auarter
or [ackman tn the final hale Hove
EN Mee a tifferent tearm “Genel
‘Ship'a inparent on eer band ep
IM? Seton irked the tena work
it was during the fumbling of the
fir two quarters that this hack ot
Aterinest of toward endastewe a feast
Zien good ‘chamcer to scorer tn the
Scone starter atc from Gunn was
‘inckea “on ‘Hamptons d8-saed. tne
ut he sas allowed to, recover und
‘tan Duel about 1s yards. The det
ite clean at the time of the Ambic,
[ior tinmpten man being daeks At
lore enor secondary” defense i
fon fhove “bent Gunn to the punch.”
Scomed’ up the uall and. then
Showpeet
Traamton seas complctels outcinescd
and. in the fast falling ese te con
iat Gloced ‘with the all on Harn
{nn tworsnrd tine fn the second
duwn. At last the Bison herd had
‘Sampeded ana-tramled ts stalkers
Avdetatied account ue the game fol
Firat quarter
Toward ikea off te, Hampton's 20-
sori Wishthush fic Ve ln a=
iRine chre ae ad ana
nd Spellman IvoKe ‘through. Howes
ind hice is on Hodaane iow:
AMEN whe rama the tat fora
inate Enric "Howat ante
tuntonte ksa tues Selman ree
THERE The pues) firia, eter thfee
HERS Ait ae a ey
Sard"ling Yor fTamnton's fest anf only
Pedals cee men, Shane
Widtcand Taken oo. Hiamptan for
eqn ecting tine, Since Tey aa
Rings hte tne geetce emied Eh
he Raa ot owe Seeburg in
rman powsesion
Second Qauter
“eft tng Shine af eons che tat
Tir Te hate enn, arn
Witeof the tur foils 1S feet. Hampton
AiGhdT a afte ie” ya "Boome
at cool die i toh
funailged, fe "sarin and. kivked to
Tignes “Sata ting" Selima ce”
iene the. nk Se gard, Howat as
Henntihed“abitn foo 46 gare Gul te
penalized, again or 19 yards. | Gall in
ANNUAL MID-WESTERN CLASSIC
Wilberforce University
VERSUS:
W.Va. Collegiate Institute
Neil Park—Columbus, Ohio
Thanksgiving Day
Tickets may be pur-
Reserved Seats... . “1.50 chased from either
Box Seats......... 2.00 school.
Behe, Ce Waly Che
pases Maly Ae as ed 8
Hee ion aa NE
6: Pratrle View, 0. 7
EA GEE Cit 4 on
Ree iat marta oe al
Cat Se Tee ieee ee wich the:
Haemcnats yoeurtelnn. “Sevres Hemme
jeans aah Nai oe cae
teasers laren
Stas penalize TS suri? Teal in ae on
rourth varer
“its ‘ame clams, award
faassen ute ea Pts
(erie eee Bret ocr
iiecormerenistaer gar fie:
Shetlman retuening the punt at yams
ity Sothtie talR pt
Rieriate Sa Hated na
Bees ie Sih, Auras ees,
Hentai, tra rk hin ie
ae
he oar
soft Oo ae
See aie
Ecotec reek mien ae
| Hie” Gmc Sut as, Latte
| WILLS AGAIN IN
| NEW YORK AFTER
ALONG VACATION
New York. Nov. 21—Harry Wills.
bearywrizht Boxer ani wsleat eon:
toniles for the crown howe. wenn ls
Jack Dempses, necampunted by Stes
Witls, returned to his Harter home
fast "weelt ufter a lenstiy “vacation
ce hie farm near Iehmond, Vay
Where he and his wie Went imme:
diately "atter hig contest with bik
Ansel Firne at Hotes Thiet Acres
axe September
‘The bis fellow apparently: $x in the
best of phystent condition and Tonks
asit he has been doing some training
Gh ix own accord during his vnc:
Hlon pected, “Whether Hares. intent
isin ile “until. the outer season
est sear remaing to he seen, “here
{fy probably ane match for him around
vise potrte during the winter months
And thar is with Faek Tenauit. An
Attempt ill probably be made “ta
Mick It tn Madison” Square Garsen
tunlesa the jwowers that be decide. I
woul ten better Investinent to. walt
Until mexe summer. when the contest
Woul assure tnore bucks.
In cave things don't shape ap right
for at least one out here this wits
ter, Ie would not bs surprising: to ter
Marry ‘wack un tie belongings. with
Mra ‘While and, hike oi to Califoras
nth spring. Smee he new law went
ite effert in the Golden State, allows
ing’ 12-round bouts, instead of Cour-
round contests, and aw there ‘tre two
or ‘three aspiring heaves. wut there
Whose press agents are swamping the
countey with all surts of dope of thelr
browese, ete. Paddy Mfuilina, Harry's
Manager. haw figured they ialghe hy
ahle to pick up sone easy duh:
Marry has not "been tute far West
tor duite a while and there ig) no
question about ‘him being a big at-
fraction out there In case he should
make up his mind to make the tip,
‘NEW ORLEANS GANS WINS.
Panama, Nov. “2. The eciginal
youn Toe [Gina 96 Mew Selanne
inthe sist round of Geir bogt af the
foton, Athtecte elute Young Joe i fi
{he erep boning’ under the ‘auspices of
LIVINGSTONE
COULDN'TSTOP
VA. SEMINARY
|p Lanehburk, Va. Nov. 15—Loaing
heir test gime of the reason on a
Siiay held the ‘Livingstone. college
jcloven of Sullsbury. Ne fOURRE
Hird vite were’ unitie’ to "stop the
Ninsinis seminars warriors. who
cried ghem under thelr ey at
Rie 31-0. Genuinary e mupletely Out=
aged thelr ienviee.sivabe allow
Tire mnt a_sinite Rest down, ene
Lrown, Watson and Lanier the ie
intand hardsnieting backReld, galned
at wil
credit. must he etven the North
Carolina Tors tor their eameness.
‘Ther fought seubio ety fron the bee
Binning until the list whiwtte ended
an zame veth the ballon their one
{Teamwork was charseterlatic of the
‘cictora, hut the work of Seote and
Grown was outstanding. | Seutt, was
4 pnwer on ‘the tefense, fant down
the"Tield Stier punts. a sure. tackler
stu posensing un UnicanRy ably CO
teccite and gab on forward. pases,
Tiinen“Seia a consistent ground
[kuiner: whe nixo punted well, He
so received “a SOssued psa fur
incr and raced 25. satus. for &
teuehitown.
Toe kavhngstone. the work of Smalt
anit Shaye way worthy of note. Small
Lake up_veweral ne” plays. while
Shave curried the burden of the of:
iense.
Whidbee. star quarter, Wingtteld,
cere and” Walker were benched. by
the “Seminary coach, due to minor
Injuries and in order £0 be in good
shuve for Seminary's anelent rivals
‘Vinsinic Normal. o€ Deversburg om
TThankseieing aug. With Wwhidbee
dit, Willams showed. woud generale
Sine tn running the team.
Tie Solan Gb, Lvienione,
Wither ccc iciccccccocsene ame
StU, SOSUSII AR cco ala
finger Scocicnfeccc ea
Rout iscescceeiaiscceescee ent
| oat -ccsccsenaapedbeccsreececeace Ae
Beat SSSSCeTSISSOES I actsacccs at
Page ese eeseen ieccrrnecmeer ies,
ee eee ger eta:
ES ie
Douglass Hi of Evansville
Beaten by Owensboro
Orenshorn, Kn Nov, inthe are
etna in Pacts AA
neve cat las ab the nds
TOMI? GL Saar cita fe
Bosna Rea tnt BS
INGice'minutes ntter, the zame started
wonder ud panes eePaiy MS
a eee
Canchdows fXe Scena quaetst opened
BRME NL dha aie rt eects
Settee ree ie ee
he ae a td
me ee aes Se Se pate
Sei area eae aint eee
See a eee see cee tes
Fes ethece, ei clad ee eet
ibe sire Gulecine sores, Se
See a eee ey ane ice geet
Be ot teneer Se eects te ae
Seen tee eeneerain os eee
Borie nar rnin See
Boe eel rhe uetars
Seas sitar or te wens
idea ite ea RLS sity, stowere
cane a: tier saetta Sret
Whtern, “The faring of, Urooke. for
Bootes coe oa else St eae
peels Sacis” Ree eens
Srna ae ee meee
ey
See A ee
Gales terrence are
Piegg SIE
Sete cst
eimai ss
er conan
GSE vsshesrarsarectirenesstoninsn Zee
Smeg cscccorsjSyecsccccacecee dey
eae oS SPECI ne
fares Woccoittep itcstroneess ens
Regt secre sore Ibsercrreccroee tae
leo SL Ren eeeie mele
| Knoxville 6, Simmons 6
_ Knoxtilie, Tenn. Nov, 18.—-Out to Bet
icin ite Siewmone universe tant ovate
Pretichosile itee cleven “tied” fe
sé theitle formed hy hoth levers.
rn tisimine (0) Reo
Mop SST SSCS pee
Hike gciicsstecobwcscccc. Uae
tet eae fPeewccconccys eat
ot opal ropes er
ese ee
tiie IE Sia
iii cic Aric Wea
Balt SS02200S ESS Migenen
AED SSO
cover fina ate, Wah
Roigglte eat for Relat wrtnce
Eom toe Pematen bred Jit Toe Se
or
| a sa aie
Miles Memorial Wins
tena, Ia gl alten
Rear SieshSia taoateud cole
area ae te Steet Nica
ERNE 12 coli The Acai were heloe
ita. Wore Strachan” tact wills
mts Si Sco So cat the ens
A forward wnsine nt TWeame and
ine fuchdine of White at Center veatured
ts Feonsiteted Sut of Ti. “hese” mand
ot, tachiajene after successive puns
eee ang Sande” Sree ad Dune
ig vstarved for" the walters, thous
Tels “sturred fur the visitors. | though
ees cetag tes soeRM ccentdocce: a
Ae aaah Ie ecce e n
inhi SSriieeesiegsc cS cc20202" Oe
pe ties arctic Pam
Aig CISTI Weer
Se ee
| (ap iibeaaieseneel a manenenesaetiy ~~ 9
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1924
Wedding of Rhinel
Startles Gothan
Wedding of Rhinelander Startles Gotham Society
(Continued from Page 1)
quits, they discuss, a fashion apartment building on New Rochelle main street.
socially debu-
sy lukewarm, "lucky" in the ocp "the ocp" in the fashion apartment building on New Rochelle as witnessed the marriage had crea-
ted a age as 23. The elander left the bride at the parents. Mr. at 763 Felix with the necklines worn in treatment in the fashion apartment building on New Rochelle was asked. "Reply, we are indeed very happy. What difference does it make about her lazer." At the time of the interview Mr. Rihlender had not known of the marriage, although he had made an effort to get in touch frankly and telephone. He spoke frankly and telephone.
Four Yards of Poiret Twill With Every
Order of More Than One Dress of This
GENUINE WOOL FINISH $2.49
HAND EMBROIDERED
SERGE DRESS
Size
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
Frankly and
as the pl
tears because
that was be
Her hush
room,仕 d the
placed him
Never wi
you worry
I
As the photographers were taking pictures, Mrs. Rhlander burst into tears because of the undue notoriety that was being caused.
H her husband hurried across the vaulted hall, where his wife and placed his arm around her. "Never mind, dear," he said, "don't you worry about anything." This is our own affair and I love you just the same."
Seek Seclusion
The marriage created such a stir after publication that the Rhineland-based author wrote that they were seen as they left the bride's father's home in a big limousine. Later in the evening they could not afford to leave, and he said that they have gone to Boston. It is also alleged that they expect to go to Paris soon, where they contend.
Send No Money
Pay the postman on arrival
at 11 P.M., plus postage.
Examine dress.
If you are pleased TELL
YOUR FRIENDS.
If not fully satisfied in every way, will府请 REFUND your money at least once also your postage.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Monston Bldg. 800
BILLIARD CORR
When Ordering
plate spend
tired real est
never hastil
fortunate fortune
valued at $3 is
said to be
Kyler Rochelle
There are
than she, O
Mrs. Jones
questionably
All this being
believed
"Why. All made for
en peace, per se."
The bridge both born to
America wha. The people and thought of New Rochelle district.
Mrs. Rhinelander's father is a retired real estate man. The Jones family fortunes were always modest and they own property in New Rochelle valued at $2,000. Mrs. Rhinelander lives in New York. Her parents moved to New Rochelle when she was quite small. She was the daughter of her than she, Grace and Emily. They were educated in the public schools. Mrs. Jones, a motherly woman, unquestionably the best person to talk comes from people being jealous of Alice. That's all. "Why, Alice and Leonard were jealous of theunion is perfect, and they are happy."
Just what action that formidable family conclave, held in the offices of Rhinelander, the girl's new father-in-law, is a member, decided upon was not intimated. The discussion took place behind barred doors.
Lawyers Issue Statement
A formal statement, however, was made by the newly sworn in which might be taken as evidence that nothing at all would be done. It read:
Mr. Rhinelander states that his son, Leonard Kirk Rhinelander, who is over 21, was married Oct. 14 without his knowledge. Mr. Rhinelander never met the young lady whom his father-in-law informed she is of English parentalage.
Name..... Address..... City..... State..... Write Plainly in Faxell
BE LUCKY
JOIN the charmed circle of the fortunate ones. Your longings for good fortune will be greatly amplified by your WEALTH and POWER
Jane Rihlender method the marriage
"Mr. Rihinlander further states that he has authored no other book, nor his attorney will make any further statement."
Jones' Racial Record
Census records of 1925 list the census district where Rihinlander lawyers were seeking methods through which to dissolve the marriage.
Jones' reports had it that the Rihinlander lawyers were seeking methods through which to dissolve himself a white Britisher.
On these records, the only mention of his name declares himself a white Britisher.
That his father also was white. Birth records of Polham Manor, where young Mrs. Rihinlander was born, among those of 1201, her birth year.
Concerning the marriage itself, Mrs. Rihinlander is said to have instructed the girl and boy as to the proper method of seeding the lawn, helped them get the necessary paper, and wrote a letter to the owners of the Pintail apartments, which on the newlyweds to rent a suite there.
Naturalized as "Colored"
On the naturalization papers of George Jones, Rihinlander's father, the newlyweds to rent a suite there.
The declaration of intended citizenship.
"George Jones (Colored man),
died on June 14, 2013, do declare by my own
fide intention to become a citizen of
the United States, of my own
fide intention to alliance and identity
to any foreign prince, potentate, state
or sovereignty whatever and particu-
larly England, of whom I am a subject.
("Signed") GEORGE JONES.
The marriage license of his daughter,
Emily Elizabeth, who married
Robert David Brooks, a Pelham
Manor, on March 6, 1915,
mothers to:
"Emily Elizabeth Jones of New
Shelby, a Pelham Manor, and Colored; father,
George Jones; mother, Elizabeth
Brown, born both in England,
Colored, born in Virginia, Father,
George Jones, 22 years old, Brothers
of Pelham Manor, 22 years old,
Colored, born in Virginia, Father,
George Jones, 22 years old, Brothers
of Pelham Manor, 22 years old,
both of the United States."
On the marriage license filed with
the town clerk, the age is given as 22 and
that of his bride as 23. He was born
in New York city. His mother was
Melinda Jones, the daughter of Isaac
Jones.
On the license appears the word "bride," which refers to the race of the bride. The young woman's mother, who, like her father, was born in England, is a
in their stunning lathing suits, they
the chief pet of the
Many of the exclusive society delu-
ntantes were envious or Miss Jones
and termed her as being "lucky" in
to "cop" the handsome Rhinelander.
On Oct. 14, Mr. Rhinelander and
Miss George, the owners of the
chelle. The ceremony was witnessed
by the city clerk and the mayor's
sample home of her parents, Mr.
After marrying, Mr. Rhinelander left
his aunt's fashionable home in New
York and lived with his bride at the
sample home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. George Jones, at 763 Pel-
ham Rd., New Rochelle.
The family moved with the
bride's parents until a few weeks
ago, when they started housekeeping
in a cozy four-room apartment in the
FREE!
This is the biggest
this is the biggest
Order-NOW
Model aown is of
hand embroidered
a pleated panel
fabric that can
frock which can be
worn for any occasion.
BIZKES—16 to 44.
DOLORS—Beautiful
brown, blue,
brown
If not fully satisfied,
will you still promise
me a y at once;
money at once;
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Muntion Bldg 800
900 W. 100th St.
When Ordering
MARVEL DRESSCO
St. D-84, 900 Chateau
St. E.
USE YOUR HEAD
In choosing a gift, select one that is last in demand and available, and will be a lifelong gift. a gift that will cause the recipient to keep it. Give 28-inch indestructible pearl with solid glass clasp. GIVE 28-inch indestructible pearl with solid glass clasp. GIVE 28-inch indestructible pearl with solid glass clasp. GIVE 28-inch indestructible pearl with solid glass clasp. Our large turnover enables us to sell for less than half price.
SEND MONEY
GUARANTEED
$15 PEARL
NECKLACE
ONLY
$6.60
We Pay Pictures
These pictures are the most beautiful of all gems.
a superb, of an
You'll be proud
a nice necklace
a gift, or happy to
buy it.
GUARANTEED
$15 PEARL
NECKLACE
ONLY
$6.60
We Pay Postage
There Are all the most beautiful of all gems
i.e. a pearl, a pearl, of an
enormous size.
You'll be proud to own a
nike necklace, a gift or happy to
treat yourself.
USE THIS COUPON
HUDSON SALES CO.
232 E. 10th St., York, N. Y.
Neat-neat one of our beautiful Pearl
necklaces, 24 inches long, gilt with a solid
gold center. I will pay the minimum $6.00 on arrival.
BELICKY
JOIN the charmed circle onet,
with the fortune one,
with the BEAUTY,
with the PLACE,
with the SEARCH,
with them come true.
Let us send you, the search Ring,
of the PLACE, the search of which
was found in the Ring Kut-
tah-Ahmén.
RICHER, SUCCESS,
HAPPINESS, shower of this
beautiful ring.
FREE CRIE
OFFER!
RICHES, SUCCESS,
HAPPENING, HAIRMOWERS
and of this beautiful ring.
FREE TRIAL
OFFER!
Just send your name and address with
1.50 U.S. Dollars to the following:
This valuable sign of Solid Silver Silver
carved and mounted with the Stamped
carved and mounted with the Stamped
by return mail. Adjustable sizes, men's
mystic symbol. Ask the malmarian for it.
Him $12.00. Cash with order, only $12.00.
ring ten days and if it does not bring
money will be sent to you at once. Un-
mountable. Expense. But don't delay. JOHN HARRIS
IMPORT COMPANY. Room 807, 64 E.
WANT
A
GOV'T
JOB?
.
Railway Mail Clerks
City Mail Carriers—Postoffice Clerks
$1400 to $2300 Year
Seek Seclusion
Lawyers Issue Statement
Jones' Racial Record
Naturalized as "Colored"
MUSIC
BY MAUDE ROBERTS GEORGE
Saturday afternoon marked the revival of Blitzes' dear opera "Holliday," which was the first time in many years that this opera, which has been rendered, the revival was given as an opportunity for Charles Hacket, but with the Cilvio Opera company last year, was taken into the regular list of artists. The opera abounds in beautiful and very fine singing. Graziella Pareto, of great success in the role of the Ceylon priestess. She was recalled many times, and dramatic proportions would have been better for the role, yet the gently exquisite sufficient to carry the audience into a dramatic proportion would have been artistic soprano. Her acting was at all times graceful and finished.
He was the role, in his host, for there were one or two times that production or a cold. I would rather think the latter. However, he did some convincing, he knew what to do, and his acting was most convincing, he knew what to do, and he expected he will be heard to much better advantage in an operatic artist as never making a ship.
George R. Garner enjoys a national reputation as a singer out the United States and Canada as well as the West Indies. Mr. Garner has lived in home city, and as usual Olive Church music and has developed a keen sense of whenever Mr. Garner is appearing himself or promoting a concert of his own music and has developed some pupils who are destined to become rare artists. This recital and his voice is a reminder of his hard work to bear his rendition of two numbers by Handel. These numbers were interrupted by a sudden and tonal beauty, showing the singer had complete control of his powerful voice. Dunn, was interrupted with great draping power. The Negro spirituals were high satisfactory and each appeared with great power. The played accompaniments that were arranged with gave excellent support to the artist.
Kappas' Dance to Draw
Washington, D. C. Nov. 21—about the growing list of social activities announced for the entertainment of the throngs expected from all sections of the country at the Howard-Island 19th annual interfaith dance of the NI and the Washington alumni chapters of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, in the held at the Armstrong Hall on Friday afternoon, Nov. 25 at 4:00 p.m.
Blanket invitations have been sent to chapter seats of all fraternities and sororities whose members may be in charge of game, and any members of college frats or sororites, with their guests, attend chapters at this annual social event of the holiday grief contest. For nearly a score of years, the Kappa fraternity holds a prominent place among the elaborate entertainments marking the Turkey day festivities, in both the summer and fall. The annual classics have alternately been sung. An attempt is being made this year to collisee the records of the fraternity visiting frat and sorority members delightful entertainment. Polenarch A. B. Thompson, of the Xi'an University, Thompson, of the Washington graduate chapter, will be in charge of arrangements, while the entire program Chairman Martin D. Jenkins of the general committee. Special music is being planned by the Fruit and Brothers blues, and rival school colors will decorate the large armory, for the event which will close the game fes-
Asheville, N. C., Nov. 21—G. K. Bartlett, a white resident of this city, has sent his check for $15 to the National Association for the Decreation of Colored People. 69 Fifth Avenue, New York, in the fight now being made against residential segregation. Mr. Bartlett is one of a number of women. Southerners who are on-oushition and faithful friends of the Race.
Before you can impress, some one of the opposite sex enough to get with you, you, certainly must keep your appearance pleasing and attire seems ten times worse to strangers and new acquaintances. And even husbands, wives, parents and kin feel the strain who suffer from skin diseases. The way to get rid of all those drawbacks, your one is to use Black White Ointment, and Soap, like thousands of people are doing. They are also sexy. The size size Black and White Ointment contains three times as much as the 25* size. All dealers use the Ointment and the Soap—Adv.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
GIRL VICTIM OF ITALIANS ON WEST SIDE
Judge Holds Three to Grand Jury
Mas Alberta Williams, 17 years old, 1232 Washburn Ave. was the mother of a gang of Italian after she had been lured by one of them to the Fiatine Ave. where they forced her to perform unnatural practices. According to the girl's story, she was a child of an unpaid, vital, where she had been employed, and was accosted by one of the girls asked if she did house cleaning. It was about 3 o'clock in the afternoon, only to the girl's answer of "Tee" the youth told her, she said that his mother wanted some work for her, and he asked him to see her. The girl followed. He took her to the pool room and said his mother lived in the rear of the house, and he was helping the youth's mother, she was seized by a crowd of other youths, and the group of them put a knife to her throat, she said, and threatened to kill her mother or refused to do their blinding.
A few minutes later the girl, half dazed, made her way to the street and reported the attack to a police officer. John McCann and a squad from the detective burial later arrested Geo. Schullo, 19, 1307 Oregon Ave.; Mike Wheeler, 19, 1307 Oregon Ave.; and Joe Allesco, 19, 1243 S. Sacramento Ave. In the boys' court Saturday Miss Wheeler was accused as the youth who first selzed her. He was held to the grand jury under $2,000 honds by Judge Edgar Jonas on an amended complaint filed by the detective. The others were discharged.
Newark, N. J. L. Nov 21—Fried
David, 76. Chapel St. who shot and
wounded David. Florence Davis, in her room at 148
Union St. on the evening of Nov. 11,
was found a suicide on the dock at
the foot of Brill St. Wednesday after
THE DEATH LIST
LOST RELATIVES
NORMA AND WILLIAM DUGAN—Want to be William Dugan. About a year after my birth my parents repatriated me to Iowa. Was born in Cleveland, Ohio. Kindly sent any information. Leavensorth, Nab. **EDWARD LEWIS**—Want to locate my niece Leavensorth, last year of In Omaha. Nb. Notify Sawyer, No. 10421, Walla Walla.
HELP WANTED—MALE
AUTO INSTRUCTION
COMPLETE COURSE in automobile repair
facilities TAUGHT by prominent
factory SEVERITY.
SLEEPING CAR AND TRAIN PORTERS
SLEEPING CAR AND TRAIN PORTERS; need for book of rules, Transportation Manual, Los Angeles BARRER EXPERIENCE 2190, W. C. Carrier, 2600
BARRER EXPERIENCE 2190, W. C. Carrier, 2600
SPRING LABOR DEMAND PREDICTED
send stamp for information, Parker & Co.
DETECTIVES—WORK AT HOME OR TRAY
EX, enn; nonessay; write, American DEMAND
LEARN BARRER TRADES—DAY OR NIGHT
write, American DEMAND
ELECTRICIAN WANTED—TO DO HOUSE
and general repair, Box 103, Dealer Defender
DEA A DETECTIVE, $20-500 WEEKLY
Am. Detective Agile, 1022 Columbia, St. Louis
FIREMEN, BRAKEMAN, HAGGAGEMENT
unmer, SS Railway Rut, E, St. Louis, LU.
DETECTIVES—WORK HOME OR TRAY
unmer, SS Railway Rut, E, St. Louis, LU.
DETECTIVES—WORK HOME OR TRAY
unmer, SS Railway Rut, E, St. Louis, LU.
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
SHADE MAKERS
EXPERIENCE HIGH PAY AND HONOR
HIGHEST PAY AND HONOR
822-8 WALKASH CHICAGO,
822-8 WALKASH CHICAGO,
EARN MONEY WEEKLY, SHARP TIME,
send 100 for movie information. New England
Made Co. 118 Aramus St., Dept. G.V., Hart-
ford, Conn.
AMITITIONS GIRLS. WOMEN - LEARN
gown making at home: fashioning; gown
making immediately; Franklin Institute. Dept.
G.V., Hartford, Conn.
EARN MONEY WEEKLY, SHARP TIME,
home, addressing, mailing circulars
Made Co. 118 Aramus St., Dept. G.V., Hart-
ford, Conn.
EARN DESIGNING HELP TOWNS
at home; experience necessary; partici-
tor for stamps. Tatsey Pain Co. box 123, La-
LADEN. WORK AT HOME: TRANSFER
patterns, 1st blush, 90c size, and 1pc wipe
State and Handmade.
ONE EXPERIENCED CUTTER FOR SILK
Made Co. 118 Aramus St., Dept. G.V., Hart-
ford, Conn.
VIEW CITIES, 429-725.
SITUATIONS WANTED-FEMALE
GOLLEGE GRAPHITE: 10 years' experience
workshop, large group learning, multiple
models of graphs, data analysis, and
algorithms.
HELP WANTED
MALE AND FEMALE
WANT A GOVERNMENT JOB? $20 TO $30
month; men, women, women age 18+ work
daytime; women age 18+ work weekday;
suitable with our coveting; paid care;
temperature unisex; full parturition
temperature; experience unisex; full parturition
institute; Dept. 76, Kochie, N. Y., D. Y.
WANTS A DIRECT DISTRICT MONITOR. EVERY
sold hush-hood products; no selling or
selling residential food items to 22,500
sq. mile. New York City.
CAREER
Education and addresses for mail order duly
complete in instructions and list of burgers, only.
Wanted, Wilson Co., BD, 1774, Leavenworth, Wash.
FREE—CIGARS
THREE CHAMPS SENT FIVE TO THREE
FRIES, ADVERTISING OFFER, AT ATT
FREE ADVERTISING OFFICE, 121 UNIVERSITY
P. NEW YORK CITY.
LAWRENCE, J. 50 YEARS. EXPERIENCE
give free advice on all local matters; handles
all cases; abstracts examined; audited;
patients. 189 X Clark st. Hours 9 to 7.
Paterson, 189 X Clark st. Hours 9 to 7.
REHABILITATE AUTOMIZING WORKS.
M. PORRASK, Prop.
WANTED FOR CASH
OLD POSTAGE, STAMP, COLLECTIONS
LINCOLN STATE BANK
3105 X STATE ST. CHICAGO
115 X STATE ST. CHICAGO
NEELEY'S PIANO TUNING SERVICE
Plays and plays piano tuned, regulated
and repaired instruments.
W. 1. NEELEY
4105 X STATE ST.
4105 X STATE ST.
SMOKE ITTTSHIRT STOGGING, EQUAL TO
ANY 200 elgir. 20 assorted strings for $1
Collegeville, No. 992, Marshall Hall Tues. their
fingers to piano. James F. Ross, P. Ross.
FRANK BOYKING, DEMATIC TENOR
TWIN MUSIC STORE - TEACHER OF VOICE
Him and all wind instruments, cornet, clarinet, piano, saxophone, mandolin and guitar
of the band. State st. state. State st.
Phone: Boulderland 1047.
**AKYN MENING FUELT** MENING IKIS
*lory, garments without thread; withstand
sand; durable.* **AKYN**, *Major*
*Major, Salt Lake, Utah.*
**DEVELOPING DREAM AND MANFACTER**
*ing our specialty; absolute forlathing; 24-
hour service; 24-hour training; & 24-
hour Specialty & 24-hour Cinema; Ohio.*
PATENT ATTORNEY
INSTRUCTION
FORMULAS
We train you quickly to make his jobs easier. We teach him the rules that appeals to everybody. This is a law that makes it easier for him to work with awnske man or woman to represent an old man or woman in a lawsuit in Chicago. Come to our office and factory.
$800 A MONTH TO DISTRIBUTE EVERY
dollar district; no money needed; moll
dollar firm behind it. Write for particul
W. G. Lake in Chicago.
W. G. Lake in Chicago.
W. G. Lake in Chicago.
MEN WANT TO CLOSER TO THE LATEST
MEN WANT TO WEAR THE LATEST
made to-make suit and be genius
to Rockefeller Tailoring Co. Dept. 411.
MAKE GOOD FAY TAKING ORDERS FOR
our high-grade calling and business candy,
samples and agenies' firm name. The House
Downing, 627 Adelia st., Indianapolis.
SALESMEN AND WOMEN-SOOK OUR NEW
SALESMEN AND WOMEN-SOOK OUR NEW
norkel on a 10-year guarantee; make
a offer using Rose Mint, J. Moore, with no
experience, experience, 31st first day.
W. T. Loos, limited to 10, J. A. Molson, with no
experience, experience, 31st first day.
TO TRANSFER TO BEAUTY TO AUTO INTEGR
bond novelties. The greatest line on canto
making plan. American Products Co., 2012.
AGENTS - $40 WEEK SELLING SHE
stocking; show sample and take orders;
acquits down sample will be sent to C. W.
Wm. Jennels, 10 Fisher are. White Park.
AGENTS--MAKE $15 CDA DAILY. SELLING
upper t-shirts for old建立 manufacture
of custom-made garments. guaranteed product; easily sold; commissions
guaranteed product; easily sold; commissions
Fowler Shirt Co. B, 49th St., New York.
SALISMEN WANTED--NEW YORK SHIRT
marketplace to pay representatives
for custom-made garments for all
stores; 3 shirts for $4.50; remarkable pack
stores; Write Philmore, 1 Unten St.
New York.
EARN $100 DAILY SILVERING MIRRORS,
painters, cloakmakers, message boards,
dressers, chandeliers, message boards,
Walker Dee Lab. 1125 Broadway, New York.
NAMED WANTED IN EACH TOWN TO WEAR
Wear funeral samples and free earl to burials.
Write an unrestricted gift and call Tullors
Tullors.
Full or Part Time Agents
For Underwrite Mutual Life insurance
agents. Ask for Mr. Wright, gen. manager, Jr.
AGENTS-WANTED BIG MONEY SELLING
every mother bake, Write Standard Company,
43 Lezoux bake, New York. Each
agent WANTED to MARK NEW YORK
market O'Neill Hair Dressing Cream,
Product Co. 3413 O'Neill Avenue,
Chicago, IL. Product Co. 3413 O'Neill Avenue,
Chicago, IL.
AGENTS WANTED TO SELL A PREPAREA-
lable Audio Products Co. $250 million aven.,
Chicago, IL.
Selling HOUSE TO HOUSE BUILDING
selling preparations and household ar-
ticles. Urban Lab. 250 Habitat aven. or
WE START YOU WITHOUT A BILLAR. MARKE
and sell clipped glass name and number plaques.
Ekberleen unseasonal. Carnegie Co. Dept.
A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN. MARKE and
sell clipped glass name and number plaques.
Ekberleen unseasonal. Carnegie Co. Dept.
EKBERLEEN, M. 250 Habitat aven. or
CLEAN UP NOW TILL CHRISTMAS! WONDERFUL
CONDITIONS products! write quick free partici-
ples! 351 Ship, 503 N. Haltedt, Chicago, IL.
EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY! EARN $500
to write to Berlin Products Co. SS 81 N. High
Columbia, Ohio.
CHEMISTRY PROBLEM ARROWS! SHOP,
pink bags, sanitary rubber bags; bafft
pom-Pom 211. 211 S. Roadway, St. Louis, Mo.
DE GRAPH THIS RED HOT HOT! $100 PER
HOUR! 100 S. Southern Box, 211 J.
FURNITURE FOR SALE
4 ROOMS COMPLETE, $185
ONLY $15 CASH REQUIRED
LIMERAL TERMS TO SUIT YOUR
ROOM
ONLY $15 CASH REQUIRED
Open Tuesday, Thursday Saturday Bedrooms
KESSEL BROS.
4011 N. SATE ST. ff.
187 ST. FURNITURE EXCHANGE STORAGE
house, furniture of all kinds, bedroom
beds, dining set, rockers, mics, dress-
rooms, dressers, closets, new wardrobes,
new line franks, suitcases, hand baskets,
open cravings, 103 E. 31st st.
4-ROOM OUTFIT
All new furniture, complete, $174.00; only
used for sale.
Also 3 and 6 rooms outfit in proportion
MAKER FURNITURE CO.
808 N. Wells st., near Chicago, are.
WE SAVE YOU 20 TO 50 PER CENT AND
four months' worth of furniture.
4 Dunnell, 54 E. 13th st. at Wetabuf, ff.
CASH OR TERMS: FROM 50 UP
S. & L. MOTOR CO.
Phone 800-222-2222
Phone Boulevard 0100
PACKARD TRAVELER: JUST THE THIRD
for taxi or funeral work: perfect shape;
suitable for work; $300; some bargain, no art trick; E. & G. Englewood 00131 111 E. Gardell bird. Phone Englewood 00131
GOOD USED FOOD CARS
30-00-00-00
GLENN E. HOLMES, INC.
Authorized Ford Dealer.
20 E. Lake at. Hasselton 7111
FORDS-DEST BARGAINS IN TOWN-DON-
TOWN
poly and ground light car; Ford and
dodge dealers; $10 to $200; terms.
MUSICAL INSTRUCTION
TWIN MUSIC STORIES—TEACHING OF YIDH
SHAKER, R. A. (1920-2010). *ShaKer*, piano, saxophone, trumpet and guitare.
*ShaKer*, piano, saxophone, trumpet and guitare.
*ShaKer*, piano, saxophone, trumpet and guitare.
*Frank BANK SOUND, DIAMANIC TRONIX*
Satellite voice placement; the "Bell Canon"
Satellite voice placement; the "Bell Canon"
east, also Veronica E.
FRATERNAL
MASONS, EASTERN STARS
*Read "Pacts on the Nassau Massacre" in *Mason's*
*Mason's subterfuge*. Seven months. 81. National
*Praternal Review*. 428. E. B. Stern.
Renewable material barberal. Make 500
five gallon batches of hair. Fees are
fourteen. You will have a big margin of
sales. You will have to hire a spruce and
solution to sell your hair. You will have
commission and still make a lot of money.
D. Rescuellet & Co. & Sq. IIH. Sell it. w.
a variety of hair products. You will be
any products you can want on your own label.
D. Rescuellet & Co. have many experimental
products you want to put on the market.
Your product you want to put on the market,
creams, shampoo, ointments, hair
straightener, balsa, bleaches, or any other
It will be up for you with your name
and shipped to you ready to be sent out
to you.
Offer to the cost amount of business done
give you any beauty preparations at prices
give you any beauty preparations at prices
from 1,000 to more than 1,000 of goods
or any services you put up by L. D. BENEDICT
& CO. are fully insured and guaranteed at one
of the biggest houses in the United States.
If you are interested in and will give you
complete information on how much it
there is no obligation that connected with this
we will make all of your beauty preparations
devote entirely to selling these preparations
make these goods yourself now, we can make
them up for you at a cheaper price and give
you better interest.
WRITE
L. D. BENEDICT & CO.
641 S. WELLS ST.
CHICAGO HIL.
THE
DOUGLAS EXCHANGE
SERVICE
OFFERS THE FOLLOWING
Median Room furnished house; full of
furniture; furnished office; fireproof building;
elegant interior; ergonomic lighting, steam bath;
furnished or unfurnished. Reasonable
Well established mail order business,
Excellent monthly receipts; bears investment-
ment terms with one having
small capital.
2621 S. STATE ST. BROOK 255
2621 S. STATE ST. BROOK 255
I HAVE A FIRST CLASS AND NEELY FULLY
FOOD train—with a five years and six month
drive, between Detroit and Chicago,
drive, between Detroit and Chicago,
beach with water front; the only place of
his kind. Michigan; the seat is 24 feet
for terms for balcony. Also Hotel Humboldt,
in Detroit. Mich.; with a five years and
seven months for terms for balcony. With
$1,250 per month; $400 part each
for terms for the balcony. With George
I. Humboldt, on the Michigan st., or phone Cherry
Broadway. Mich.
WE HAVE PUT OVER THE FOLLOWING
conservatives: The Plough Chemical Company,
The Plough Chemical Company,
Write us today. We can email and give
us information. Know how. No charge unless
you unseal us
REAL ESTATE FOR : ALE
SVERAL COTTAGES IN THE CALMET
MUSEUM. EXCELLENT terms to work mein
that menu business. W. K.
CHICAGO DEFENDER
DITTOON, MICHAEL Houses and Lodges
reasonable rent. R. A. Singleton. 425
McGraw street.
CALUMET GARDENS
NEAR FOER'S PLANT
LARGE LOTS IN THIS GREAT INDUSTRIAL
BALANCE IN 3 YEARS. DOUBLE YOUR
GIFT. SEND CARE OF
BOX 14. CHICAGO DEFENDER
WHEREVER YOU LIVE, YOU SHOULD OWN
a lot in the new year! summer retreat
is here. You can spend your vacation in the country, get then
a new job, or visit one of our four
only relinquished, first-class people are permitted
to buy hotels. Third, because you can buy New,
balance in 10 month payments, which
down, balance in 10 month payments, which
Fourth, because it is the only resort where
one can spend six months of the year please,
which you must secure your lot now! Address for
information for 24, Chicago Building.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
Many Good Brick Houses
ONLY $500 DOWN
Douglas 9308
HAIRDRESSING
VISIT MRS. JULIA MCGOWNS WRACK
EXPERT HAIR AND SCALP SPECIALIST
EXPERT HAIR AND SCALP SPECIALIST
4433 S. STATE ST. CHICAGO
11000 W. 44TH ST.
c-b
HARDHISTING SHOP
2847 INDIANA AVE.
Hardhistering, shampooing, manicuring, electrolysis.
We treat the hair and scalp.
We treat the hair and scalp.
Aquasens names.
MENTAL AND HARDHISTERS
to act and use MMs. Water Hair Groomer
Water, Watches, Water, Boys
diaphoresm. Pg.
EXPRESSING
Let Us Do. Your Moving
See me for reamable rates; please add your order
address to the form below. HIJR, express long distance hauling. 12. 8
812-262-1200.
THE RIVER ISLAND MOVING AND EXPENSES
to, away, shipping and unloading phone
messenger service, phone delivery,
phone delivery; $10 per head and 3044
messenger service; $10 per head, black
messenger service. Phone Vans 6256,
6258, 6260.
WALL PAPER, GLASS AND PAINTERS' SUPPLIES
FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS
6,000 AT $18 SACH-NOW ON SALE; ALEX-
don Dumas has famed novel, "The Chesapeake
Eagle," and a thrilling mystery, "The
poodlepole." No dealer or agents handle this
book. Defendger, Illinois, Box 202, Chicago,
Defendger, Illinois.
meet at 8 p. m.
UWE D STARK
SECRETES OF HEALTH AND LOVE REVEALED
Do you want look to whatever you need
you cultivate prosperity, health,
happiness?
All communications article candidata
to the course. Newer EBSO 11.00
accepted.
THE PSYCHOLOGICAL INSTITUTE
Mime. Course. Supplemental. Depth. 7
(10 hours). EBSO 11.00 accepted.
THE PSYCHOLOGICAL INSTITUTE
THE NEW
HERB
DISCOVERY
STUBBORN BLOOD
Westchester strayty, kinsny, blender trouble,
Merkle, M. Merkle, Merkle, Merkle, Merkle,
"Merkle's Rebuilding Compound and
resin where others fail. FREE Book.
Merkle Inc. Co. 227. S. State, St.
Chicago.
What is the Jupiter's Master Key? It is the ability to fill the holes in your heart, weak, suffering, unhappy, burnt, white plainly and addressed, stamped envelope, and furnished by F. D. STARK
1138 Calmlet ave. Chicago, IL
YOU RHOSCOPE
FREE!
B. GARGILLS
who has autonomous abilities of national report by his marvelous abilities in interpretive skills, and whose ability to run, free of charge, stakes its possibilities to run, free of charge, men of your handwriting, together with the use of cover postage, and its personal value for you.
B. GARGILLS, G. O. Ibox 27TH-2, Boston, Mass.
DO YOU WANT
NEW FRIENDS?
DON'T BE LOWSOME
SEND STAMP TO
BETTY JOHNSON
WHY BE LONELY?
CONTRACTORS
WIRE YOUR HOUSE—NOW!
Improve your property by removing your old
furniture, replacing it with new gas
lighting fixtures and install new, up-to-
date gas lighting fixtures.
Terms as Low as $5 Per Month
Over a period of From One to Two Years,
consider your customers on additional work, such as
installing or replacing gas lighting fixtures.
Be sure to pay any late fees with
attainment, up-to-date fixtures at small cost.
With every order for house wiring placed
this month we give electricians free of
charges the following electrician estimates GLADLY FURNISHED
RE DOR ELECTRIC CO.
PHONE DREXEL 7000
LIGHT YOUR WAY AS YOU PAY! 1f
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.
DOGG. 6413.
620 E. 39TH ST.
FLATS FOR RENT
255.50 CALMET AVE.
Pond and live pond electric lights; light
room heat; water or store heat. Rent $49.00
hot, water or store heat.
HOFMAN & BECKER
300 E. SINTE ATLANTIC 000
S. N. CURT, 41D AND S. LAWRENCE-
decorated to suit strictly modern, present-
ed needs. Rent $70 to $100,
registered or permission of agents.
Furnished, for local, out-of-town business
complete office service, light, phone, information
4633 INDIANA AVE. CHICAGO, IL.
Phone: Douglass 7244
MEDICAL
SUMMER RESORTS
Notebooks. Bodily ATCT CTC, apartments and
for sale. Judge Wade, Yale, realtors.
For sale. Judge Wade, Yale, realtors.