Chicago Defender
Saturday, September 26, 1925
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
GEORGIANS BATTLE FOR 'LINC' JOHNSON'S JOB
The Paper That Goes Everywhere
VOL. XXI. NO. 21
ASK CO
OFF TO FRANCE
VERY LATE
MRS. NOEL HELPS
Montclair, N. J., Sept. 25.—who confessed to the murders of the state when another long list already imposed upon city. Police Commissioner The Police Chief Heath to close up white girls to dance with China. Authorities object to having the with the white dancing partner.
BAR RACE MIXI
Los Angeles, Calif., Sept. 25.—of reducing to a minimum the dents of the state when another long list already imposed upon city. Police Commissioner The Police Chief Heath to close up white girls to dance with China. Authorities object to having the with the white dancing partner.
DR. POPE'S BOY
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.—years conducted a drug store appear in police court Wednesday filed against him. Judge Schulfeited. Dr. Pope, who was for men's hospital, was arrested in sale and possession. He is a man here and is now reported to be a
GEORGIA LEA
KEEN EDGE
FOR JOHNS
LATEST
L HELPS PIERCE
Sept. 25.—The mother of the murders of little Mary Muxicab driver, recently has children. She contributed $200 money, Mrs. Noel-said, was her son drove on the day of thece mixing at I.
Sept. 25.—California sho minimum the privileges of do when another restriction imposed upon Chinese and Commissioner Thomas Foss tha to close up all dance face with Chinese and Japan to having the darker-skin dancing partners.
PE'S BOND FOR
C., Sept. 25.—Dr. Harry drug store at 1319 H St. court Wednesday to answer Judge Schuldt ordered his who was formerly a pharaon arrested in April and chal. He is a member of several reported to be in Bermuda.
A LEADER
EDGE IN DE
JOHNSON'S
Left—Mrs. William James Yerby, who left Monday for France, where she will make her home with her husband, who is U. S. consul at La Rochelle. Miss Louise Arnette Williams (lower left) and Baby Clementine Yerby Church accompanied her. Miss Williams will attend a girls', finishing school on the Riviera. Clementine will live with her grandparents, the Yerbys.
--Defender Photo.
VERY LATEST NEWS
Montclair, N. J., Sept. 25.—The mother of Harrison Noel, who confessed to the murders of little Mary Daley and Raymond Pierce, a taxicab driver, recently has aided the latter's widow and four children. She contributed $275 to the fund for the widow. The money, Mrs. Noel-said, was realized on the sale of the sedan her son drove on the day of the crime.
BAR RACE MIXING AT DANC
Los Angeles, Calif., Sept. 25. California showed its intention of reducing to a minimum the privileges of dark-skinned residents of the state when another restriction was added to the long list already imposed upon Chinese and Japanese in this city. Police Commissioner Thomas Foss this week ordered Police Chief Heath to close up all dance halls which allowed white girls to dance with Chinese and Japanese men for pay. Authorities object to having the darker-skinned men socialize with the white dancing partners.
DR. POPE'S BOND FORFEITED
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.—Dr. Harry S. Pope, who for years conducted a drug store at 1319 H St. N. E., failed to appear in police court Wednesday to answer liquor charges filed against him. Judge Schuldt ordered his $1,000 bond forfeited. Dr. Pope, who was formerly a pharmacist at Freedmen's hospital, was arrested in April and charged with illegal sale and possession. He is a member of several exclusive clubs here and is now reported to be in Bermuda.
GEORGIA LEADERS ON KEEN EDGE IN DEBATE FOR JOHNSON'S PLACE
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25, that either Benjamin Jefferson secretary of the Republican stat or John W. Martin (white) of Henry Lincoln Johnson as the woman for Georgia.
There are any number of candidates for the place. The most prominent of them are Dr. W. J. Gilliam, state chairman; W. R. Tucker, vice state chairman; Albert S. Anderson, who was in the lily-white organization headed by J. L. "Lumber" Phillips, but after the Republican national convention in Cleveland last June supported the regular Republican organization; Charles H. Adamson of Cedartown, Ga., who gave passive support to the Johnson organization, and Clark Grier, who was one of Mr. Johnson's chief lieutenants.
Others Named
Bernice Mr. Davis, there are two other Race men who serve for the office. They are Dr. W. H. Harris of
Others Named
Left—Mrs. William James Yerby, who left Monday for France, where she will make her home with her husband, who is U. S. consul at La Rochelle. Miss Louise Arnette Williams (lower left) and Baby Clementine Yerby Church accompanied her. Miss Williams will attend a girls' finishing school on the Riviera. Clementine will live with her grandparents, the Yerby.
TEST NEWS
MIS PIERCE'S WIDOW
The mother of Harrison Noel, of little Mary Daley and Ray, recently has aided the latter's contributed $275 to the fund for Noel said, was realized on the eve on the day of the crime.
ING AT DANG
California showed its intention privileges of dark-skinned resister restriction was added to the Chinese and Japanese in this Thomas Foss this week ordered to all dance halls which allowed these and Japanese men for pay, the darker-skinned men socialize.
ND FORFEITED
Dr. Harry S. Pope, who for at 1319 H St. N. E., failed to day to answer liquor charges did ordered his $1,000 bond formerly a pharmacist at Freedom April and charged with illegal member of several exclusive clubs in Bermuda.
ADERS ON IN DEBATE SON'S PLACE
The prediction is made here in Davis, newspaper editor and central committee of Georgia, if Atlanta will succeed the late Republican national commit-
Athens, Ga., and Joseph H. Watson of Albany, Ga.
The situation is controlled by Mr. Davis. Sixty persons compose the committee. Forty-one of them are of our Race and only 19 of them are white. It is said that with one or two exceptions willing to be guided by his judgment.
The successor to Mr. Johnson will be selected by this committee at a special meeting called for that purpose, for this meeting has been disqualified.
Must Be Ratified
The choice of the committee must be ratified by the Republican national committee at the present regular meeting. If the committee does not indicate that the national committee will hold a meeting until the next convention, it will fix the time and place and issue the call for the next Republican national convention. If there will be a determined that there will be a determined
(Continued on Page A)
YELLOW CHARLESTON' PAYS DEATH PENALTY IN CHAIR
GIRL TRAPPED WITH DOCTOR; SUES HIM
INJURED
HERBERT JULIAN, famous stunt flyer and parachute jumper, who barely escaped death when the propeller of his plane was started too soon while he was standing in front of it. ninety-five thousand persons broke a plane game York witnessed the accident at which Julian sustained two broken arms. (Photo by Defender staff photographer Story on page 3.)
LIEUT. HERBERT JULIAN
POLICE STAGE A RAID ON SHAM RESTAURANT
MURDERER DIES IN CHAIR
New York, Sept. 25. — Strapped in the electric chair at Sing Sing and as the guards were affixing the black mask over his head. Julius Miller, alias "Yellow Charleston," slayer of Baron Wilkins, leaned forward and asked if he could speak. The request was granted and just as he was about to utter a word, the powerful electric current was switched on and shot cracking through his frame. The body shifted as far to the right of the chair as its bonds would permit and then crumpled. "Yellow Charleston" was dead. This occurred at 11:08 Thursday night.
Execution Stayed
Miller was to have died a fortnight ago for the killing of Wilkins, who was one of Gotham's leading figures in business and sport life. Due to a reprieve granted by Governor Smith his execution was stayed. Earl Carroll, the theoretical producer, is said to have obtained intelligence to have obtained firsthand knowledge and the former was killed during a pistol battle. The evidence, however, did not justify clemency, said District Attorney Banton.
While confined in the death house, "Charleston" evidently reconciled himself to death and remained calm. He was later taken from a slight attack of nervousness as the day drew near for his execution. About a week ago he accepted the Catholic faith and was taken to the former John McCuffery, Catholic chapel.
Wife. Children Visit
Miller was visited frequently by his wife and three children. Mrs Miller broke down on numerous occasions, but was comforted by her condemned husband. I now know of his death, a piece appeared to be nervous, but tried to be composed. He had a splendid appetite. For dinner, his last meal, he requested broiled chicken, mashed potatoes, peas, lettuce salad, ice cream, and fruit. He and then said that he was ready to meet his fate. At 11:06 he entered the death chamber and was pronounced dead at 11:13 p. m.
HAS TO MAKE PEACE BOND
HAS ARM AMPUTATED
Montgomery, AL, Sept. 25.—Amputation of an arm was necessary to save the life of Sam Swainleah, who was injured when the machinery of the mill where he worked was broken. It offloaded to St. Margaret's hospital, however, declared that he was not in immediate danger.
THE FLOWER GARDEN
CHURCH FOLK ASK WRIT TO OUST PASTOR
Dr. Canfield Cole Cited in Court Petition
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 25. Defeated in a test vote that showed that an overwhelming majority of the congregation of the Union Bethel A. M. E. church wanted Dr. Canfield P. Cole to continue as pastor, a small, disgruntled minority last week made a final and futile gesture of protest. They applied to Supreme Court Justice Selah Strong for an injunction restraining Dr. Cole from occupying the pulpit from which their previous efforts had failed to oust him. Justice Strong refused to give immediate decision.
Favor Dr. Cole
Badly worsened when the vote of the entire congregation demonstrated that Dr. Cole, formerly a presiding elder in this district, was the favorite for the pastorate which he had been holding for the past decade, a minority which appealed to Bishop W. H. Heard against his pastor has now turned against Bishop Heard. Charged because the church meeting called by Bishop Heard to air their grievances had only proven the congregation's lack of the minority group led charges against Bishop Heard. The exact nature of the grievance was left vacant.
Locked Church Doors
The protest against Dr. Cole's filling the pulpit of the Bethel church began almost with his appointment at the last conference and is supposed to have its background in alleged (Continued on Page 2).
010
While a whole nation bowed in mourning, the body of Henry Lincoln Johnson, political warrior, was carried from the 19th St. Baptist church, Washington, D.C., to be interred in a grave on the slope of a hill in Mount Harmony cemetery. Above—The country's notables gathered at the flower-banked grave. Floral tributes costing more than $7,000 were wired from all sections of the country. Members of the Race were forced to patronize white florists for the flowers with which they honored their dead leader, simply because Race florists had not yet co-operated to develop a system for telegraphing orders. Below—Rev. P. James Bryant, Rev. Walter H. Brooks and Major Oscar J. W. Scott heading the funeral procession entering the church.
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 25—Because he was instrumental in preventing the escape of Neal McKennon, convict, and possibly in saving the life of a guard, John Scott, inmate of the Maryland state penitentiary, will be paroled as a reward, according to a statement recently issued by Gov. Ritchie. Scott's marble will become effective immediately.
Scott has served two years of a
tenure as a member of the
Republican recently, tried to escape by
a car.
NATIONAL
EDITION
saulting a guard with an iron bar and making a break for liberty, Scott McKennon, the governor who shot McKennon. The governor explained that in the way the guard's life, and that of the governor, McKennon was armed, "Gov. Ritchie further spoke of Scott's action as exemplary." In Washington will also be paroled; for good conduct after serving ten months of a one-year sentence in the Carroll county, jail on charges of insulting to word from the governor.
20 PAGES
'S JOB
NATIONAL
EDITION
* PRICE TEN CENTS
ULPIT
PAYS
HAIR
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PHYSICIAN WILL FACE ACCUSER
Little Rock, Ark., Sept. 25. —Despite the fact that consent judgment for $900 in settlement of a $10,000 suit was rendered against Dr. A. A. Womack, prominent local leader and Meharry graduate, in favor of Miss May Yocum (white) in Judge Marvin Harris' third division court court last Friday, persons "in the know" still discount the girl's story that led to the arrest and judgment.
Girl Gives Alarm
According to local residents, who have been in position to know of frequent meetings between Dr. Womack and the white girl, the incident no more than another of their not infrequent trysts. For a number of years, these persons assert, they have kept company. Dr. Womack was arrested and involved in a assault upon the Vocum girl after police officers had found them together at the spot where they were accustomed to meet. Frightened by the police into denying her harmlessness, the girl raised a cry that the doctor had "assaulted her," these persons say, and brought suit against him.
Doctor Indicted
She told the police that Dr. Womack had deceived her into believing that he was an Indian, and had led her to the place where they were hiding, and then to her. He threatened her, she testified, with a gun. The doctor was first indicted in the first division circuit court. Dr. Womack, who was roughly the same police who the arrest was made, is well known in this city and has been prominent in professional circles.
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.—A fictive from justice for two years, during which time he wandered over the country, James Jacobs, 25. was arrested by Chief of Police Hamilton and charged with kidnapping. H. Henderson (white), which occurred at Weeksville in April, 1922, Jacobs was returned to Elizabeth City, N. C., by officials of that town to await the next term of court. He has been sought by Pascagoula county officials since his escape.
Jacobs is alleged to have confessed killing Pendleton, whom he said owed him money and refused to pay him, threatening him when he said that he used a club to do the killing, immediately after which he fleed the country and went north. Since July of this year, however, he has been farming at Gmelmshead, where he was only detected when he came to town here and was loitering around the docks.
CHECK FORGER JAILED
El Dorado, Ark, Sext. 25—James Blue, teammaster from Norfolk, was charged with forging its office, charged with stealing forged, the name of his employer. A man was being held in the country all in default of bond.
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CALL FIREMEN TO TAKE BODY FROM WHEELS
Three Women Faint at Gruesome Sight
New York, Sept. 25—Mrs. Anna
Lamk, 64, 200 W. 141 St. st.
was knocked down and dragged in. If feet
drove away, she was at 2:15. Thursday afternoon.
She died two hours later at the Harlem
hospital. The accident occurred
directly in front of the home into
which she had moved just 24 hours
Fireman, responding to an alarm sounded by a corner fruit dealer, backed up the street car and removed the body, horribly mangled. The body, which was missing, gave the elderly woman first aid before carrying her to the hospital, were forced to attend three spectators who fainted at the sight.
Mrs. Lamm, onlookers said, was rewarded for her bravery by the butcher shop when the accident occurred. She was about to cross 141st St. to her new home when the street car stopped at the corner of Eighth Ave. Mrs. Lamm stopped for a moment, but said, "I was going to cross before the car could start up again. A front wheel had crushed her body and held it pinned beneath before the motorman could stop the car.
She leaves a daughter, Vivia Polia Brown, wife of Albert Brown, owner of a restaurant at 302 W.141st St. The body was withheld several days pending official investigation. Mrs. Lamm was a four-figure member of Charleston City. She had been living in New York for 10 years.
Attorney Scipio Jones
Little Rock, Ark. Sept. 25—Attorney Seiple A. Jones was the principal day school convention of the African Methodist church, which recently met at Shore college. Almutaneour with the opening of the institution Bishop Judine Arkansas, opened the gathering. Among other speakers who addressed the convention were Dr. S. I. Greene, former president of the college and chairman of the H. E. Dr. W. Eskridge, Dr. O. L. Moody of Hollesa, Dr. T. Sims of Fort Smith, Dr. T. Sims of Fort Smith, Nelson and Dr. J. W. Whiteside of Pine Blow. Bishop Ross announced that the Shore college out of debt would be continued, announcing that $1,500 had been sent to 2,000 delegates attended the convention and Dr. W. T. Pope, state senator, sent 1,500 Sunday schools. 10,000 Sunday school pupils. 1,500 teachers. of the A. M. P. church in Arkansas.
Held as Suspect
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 25.--Following his arrest in the 2004 block on Bolton Hill, he was jailed for 10 days and given jewelry in his possession. Coleman Hill, who gave his permanent address as Birmingham, Ala., was held at a military police station. Hill told police that another man had given him the valuables.
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Under a new administration and with a change of policy, Roger Williams university, Nashville, Tenn., said to be one of the oldest universities for members of our Race in the South, will throw open its doors on Friday morning, Oct. 30. The enrollment this year is expected to exceed that of previous years.
church, fraternal and political leaders have been graduated.
The faculty has been strengthened greatly and many new courses have been added. Among them are business, commercial, industrial and physical training, and a compulsory commercial lecture course offering lectures from prominent men throughout the county.
alumni association, will culminate on Tuesday evening, Oct.
Friends former students and graduates of the university, now living in all parts of the country, will call upon for aid.
Members of the alumni committee to have worked overseas during the drive are Mrs. Margarita Ransom Samuels, president; L. H. Harlan, Judge William H.
Roger Williams has operated as a
leader in the development of
which time many prominent
DIXIE MOBS KILL TWO IN 6 OUTBREAKS
New Albany, Miss, Sept. 25. While its fields were burning under one of the worst droughts in its history, a week ago the white South knelt in terror in its churches, holding religious services in every state to pray for rain. For one brief 16-hour period Dixie was Christian; Dixie was good. Even the lynching mob remained quiet.
Then came the rain. It came last Sunday, but the strain of being good for 16 hours had told on Dixie. The white South had been Christian for too long. Hardly had the rain clouds let fall from heaven their drops on Dixie's parched soil when Dixie sent back to heaven curling smoke from a lynching bee. Sunday's extremes were broke in the churches here to overcome a sheriff's pose carrying J. P. lvy, tinker cutter, to jail. The mob burned Ivy at the stake. Five other outrages followed in five other parts.
(1) Sunday, night in the adjoining state of Georgia, Sunday night in Milledgeville and snatched an insane man, William Dixon, from his ankle, tied him to a tree, and beat his head. (2) In Douglas county of the same state of Georgia, Sunday night maman had yet been found of alter Teague, who had been taken from the hands of a white mob and spirited away. (3) A white mob of 2,000 bore down on the porta received here, only to find that Albert Mansell, prisoner there, has been removed or protection to parts unknown, searching parties and set out in the directions which they thought the sheer might have taken their intended
(4) While the shock of unacustomed godliness was leading the North Carolina team which Ashville has seen in 20 years, in Marshall, Texas, where mobs are less violent than in other cities, jail and demanded the release of three prisoners, Pete Riggin, his son Alfred, and Jordan Phillips, the white South's reactions from the 45-hour novelty of being Christian found white woman as a victim of the violence, feathered and run out of town by a Jacksonville, Fla. mob. mobs was learned here today. They were charged with intimidating associating with members of the Race. In the Inchings, where members of the race were charged with the time-worn charge of "smiling at white women" as its excuse, where any person was given in the case of Pete Riggin, his son Alfred and Jordan Phillips no charge was laid.
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church, fraternal and political leaders have been graduated. The faculty has been strengthened greatly and many new courses have been added. Among them are business, commercial, industrial and physical training and a compulsory commercial lecture course offering lectures from prominent men throughout the country. A financial drive, which has been conducted by members of the
Montgomery, Ala. Sept. 25. -Failure to identify the body of an unidentified man, drowned recently in the Alabama river as that of Jessie Black, escaped convict, brought to a close the examination by county officials who had the body exhumed some time ago. Some clue of identity. Comparison of finger print records with finger prints of the dead man, however, revealed that the man was Black escaped a cotton field at No. 1 prison Sept. 19, while serving a sentence of 10 years for a statutory conviction of both offenses Jan. 29, 1917, in the Dale county circuit court. The man convicted of both offenses Jan. 29, 1917, in the Dale county circuit court. The man hanging to a trotline in the Ala. county jail, found the dead body of the unidentified man hanging to a trotline in the Ala. county jail, discovered to Coroner J. J. Diffy, who promptly made an investigation. Coroner evidence on the body of the deceased, who he stated, had apparently been found in the river. Coroner gave orders that the remains be interred at once. He also made a report to the court department at the copied.
Believing that the body might be that of Black, the escaped convict, state of affairs, remains dislintered so that an examination might be made to determine this. The convict was with the request and was present together with Dr. F. B. Flair, physician inspector of state prisons, and other ex-convict. The body was exhumed Saturday afternoon.
Police Hold 2 Men for Murder of Car Salesman
Kansas City, Mo. Sept. 25. After a grilling, during which it is said the third degree was given him, Al Brown, 26, is alleged have applied force to the head of the third degree in the murder of Eugene Shrake (white), motor-car salesman. He named Sonny Thomas as his accomplices and claimed that Leon Johnson was in the murder. He actually participates in the murder. Shrake's body was found clothed in only underwear on the railroad tracks beneath a vladuct Sunday morning. Brown was arrested while the body and Thomas was taken into custody when it was found that he took the clothes Shrake was wearing and put them on himself. In his alleged confession, Brown in the case said he and Thomas stripped the salesman and forced him at the point of a revolver to leap from the vladuct rail, remarking at the time, "I am going to kill the third man in the case, as named by Brown, was also arrested."
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
OCT. 30
alumni association, will culminate on Tuesday evening, Oct. 30. Friends, former students and graduates of the university, now living in all parts of the country, were invited to attend. Members of the alumni committee who have worked ceaselessly during the drive are Mrs. Margaret Ransom Samuels, president; Dr. H. Harlan, judge William H. Holliday, Kenneth Yerbey, Mia Macon Nevils and George Porter.
HEAD OF ODD FELLOWS IN TEXAS DIES
Texarkana, Texas, Sept. 25.—Last rites for Prof. Harrison Gorce, for 12 years grand master of the United Order of Odd Fellows of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, who passed away at his residence Monday, Sept. 12, presided illness, were held Sunday from Oak St. Baptist church. Rev. Dr. Edwards and Rev. Dr. M. B. Bibrow, Dallas, Texas, friend of the deceased leader, officiated, though suffering for a number of years with asthma, the immediate cause of his death, physicians say, was cerebral hemorrhage.
Born in Georgia
Prof. Gorce came to this city from Atlanta, Ga. He received his education in Bishop college, Marshall, Texas, and Williams university at Nashville. For 20 years he was president of the convention and was later made congressional chairman of the Republican party in his district, which he represented at
It was upon the death of Grand Master H. C. Bell that Prof. Gurgee was called upon to be said that the Odd Fellows did some splendid work under his administration. At that time he ordered showed assets and resources in excess of $500,000 and a membership of 28,000. Ten years ago the membership 13,000.
Jackson Made Leader
Prof. Goree is well known throughout the country as a (raternal) church and political leader. While in Georgia, he was a teacher of the Bible. He was deacon in his church in Atlanta and here and was a former superintendent of his Sunday school. Prof. Corsicaan deputy grand master of the order, will succeed the late Prof. Goree as head of the Odd Fellows. Prof. Jackson is a former principal of the Corcissana high school.
Woman Who Shot Hubby
Held Under $5,000 Bond
Mrs. Emma Williams, 39, 3825 State
St., was held under bonds of $5,000
pending the condition of her husband,
Edgar, who is in a serious condition
from gunshot wounds inflicted by his
wife.
EXPERIM
Born in Georgia
REV. COLUMBUS BRAGG VICTIM OF PNEUMONIA
Noted Historian and Orator Dead
---
Bragg, writer,
scientist, died at
his home. 3001
Walshag. 3001
Friday morning,
Sept. 11. Death
was caused by
pneumonia.
Rev. Columbus Bragg, writer
orator and noted scientist, died at
his home. 3001
Wabash Ave.
Friday morning.
Sept. 16. Death
was caused by
pneumonia.
Columbus
Bragg was born
in Burlington
Ga. April 12,
1875, and was
educated in Litt-
le Rock, Ark.
Hillman, who
was an Austra-
lian burn Abyss-
sinian, took him
from Arkansas
and together
they the
Columbus Bragg was born in Birmingham, England, April 12, 1875, and was educated in Little Rock, Arkansas, where an Australian born Abyssinian, took him from Arkansas and they found the orient and Europe. In 1895, young Bragg was known throughout Europe as a famed actor and writer, and he quickly gained menting with a small atcam engine and his utter deafness in later years was said to have been the result of this according to 'Chicago from abroad, he rapidly gained fame as a lecturer, but his rise in scientific fields was halted by his deafness. This famous character was always present at meetings of literary society, known as an authority on history. He studied intensely the ancient history of the darker races. Four languages—Spanish, French, Latin and an expert shorthand writer, and was an
Rev. Bragg contributed several articles to The Chicago Defender a few years ago.
He was a member of the Oliver Baptist church and was ordained a member of the gospel on March 29, 1823, at the Lilly Grove Baptist church.
Funeral services were held from
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SOME "CELL" PIE
St. Louis, Md., Sept. 25.—A new kind of pie has been discovered by Mrs. Martha Trappie, who operates a bakery shop at 5511 Pershing Ave. Despite the difficulty of preparation, its means of distribution is easy.
The new kind of pie is what Ralene Martin, an enthusiastic customer, designated "money pie." Martin, according to Mrs. Trappie, entered the bakery late Friday and said he wanted to buy some pie. When he had desired, Martin drew his revolver and requested that he be served a generous portion of the "money pie."
Martin emerged from the shop with $35 worth. The polices are still searching for him.
the chapel of Kersey, McGowan and Morsell's undertaking parlers Sunday morning. Soap. Rev James van Wesley, his favorite song. Rev James presided at the piano and two of Rev. Bragg's favorite songs, "Holy Father" and "Jesus Is Coming Soon," were sung by J. Jordan and Mrs. Josephine Powell, the original tributes surrounded the casket:
The mourners included his wife Mrs. Lena Mai Bragg; daughter by a former marriage, Miss Lumie K Bragg; nephew, Dr. Edward Wilson Bragg; sister, Mrs. Mary Bolden, and niece, Mrs. Nollie Johnston.
Knife Wielder Will
Get Chance in Court
A mugup is promised when the case of Rt. Smith, 2033 Cottane Grove Ave. is called before Judge Joseph L. McCarthy of the 48th St. police court.
The mugup was arrested by Officers Olsier and Morgan and charged with cutting William Hollman, 20, 4520 Evans Ave. across the cheek and on the hand.
The court said the trouble occurred at 47th and Dearborn St. when the men fought over Miss May Crawford, 4863 Federal St.
Just what part Robert Valentine, 4600 Cottane Grove Ave. the mugup was not established, but all four will have to appear Oct. 5.
MOTORMAN IS ARRESTED FOR GIRL'S DEATH
Several Were Blamed for Crime by Police
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 25.—Andrew Redell (white), former street car motorman, was arrested last week for the murder of his cousin by marriage, Florence Kane (white), after police detectives had sought vainly to pin guilt for the crime on a member of the Haze. Several times he entered the house, and the trumped down Redell as the probable shlayer, members of the Haze had been dragged in and held as suspects. In each case lack of evidence
Chief Assistant District Attorney Sylvester Sabbatino, who had refused to follow the usual motto for the real dark skirt—"Justified his own course in insisting that his office lay a net for the real slayer. "Even when they insisted on bringing in, theseus he has hessed, refused to be scared of the practice, all too usual, of arresting a man just because his skin is dark. A white milkman, near the scene of the murder of May 29, said that he seen a white man leave the vacant lot where the body was found. I had my office get busy on that clue and looked for a white man of a change. A pair of gloves, according to Attorney Sabbatino, led to Bedell's arrest. "Gloves like those used by motorists explained. "had been picked up neatly and laid on and I based my investigation upon this find. I found that Bedell had been a motorman on the Flatbush and Norstrand lines, up to the time he was arrested. He gave me an alibi when summoned, but his alibi didn't fibe, so
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925
ET CAR
I had him watched. We had his story checked up and last week this office decided to arrest him."
Bedell, police asserted, got his alibi twisted. The white man with whom he claimed to have been when the crime was committed told the police that he had not seen Bedell in two years.
Bedell was held after arrest at the Liberty Ave. station for questioning by District Attorney Charles Bedell, who was called in from his vacation to take personal charge of the case.
Steals Dresses Then
Wears Them to Court
There was no doubt left in the mind of Mrs. Ella Whittaker, 3601 Dearborn St. as to who stole her dress when Thelma Sanders, 3417 Brownsville, was held in Mrs. Whittaker had Thelma arrested for taking her dress and coat and Thelma appeared clothed in them. Her case was continued until Sept. 30 to allow Dr. Hickson time to observe Thelma.
CHARGE ASSAULT AND BATTERY
Newark, N. J., Sept. 25.—Two assaults on a man were alleged violation of the motor vehicle law were lodged Sept. 17 against Henry Hemmer and Detective Wangene. The man rested in Washington St. by Sergent Hemmer and Detective Wangene. The jaw of Lola Price, 119 Barclay St. about two weeks ago, at headquarters Detective was a man wanted alice about a year ago on an assault charge. He ran away after an accident. William Harris, 72 Livingston St. was driving on a learner's permit and the car struck a bicycle, with him, him, ran away after the accident.
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Black and White Ointment, and Soap, are doing almost miraculous things for people who had tried many other ointments. They rid of plumps, blotches, bumps, eczema, "breaking out." That more than two million packages are being used a year just proves its wide use and tremendous popularity with people whose skin it has cleared up.
Any dealer can supply you with both the Ointment and the Soap. So there is no excuse to keep using it with plumps or skins. The 50c size Ointment contains three times as much as the 35c size—Ads.
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HERBERT JULIAN BADLY INJURED BY HIS AIRPLANE
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925 HERBER
LARGE CROWD SHOCKED BY NEAR TRAGEDY
Aviator May Lose Use of Both Arms
(Picture on Page 1)
New York, Sept. 25. - Stunt flying for a crowd of 95,000 at the games on Jamaica race track Saturday cost Lt. Herbert Julian, aviator and daredevil jumper, two broken arms and a narrow escape from kicked back" when a photographer, who was helping him start his plane, set the ignition too soon. Lt. Julian was buried in graves. His arms were broken in five places.
For the past two years, at the special request of the mayor, Julian has participated in the annual post-Christmas multitudes with his daring stunt flying and perilous parachute jumping. Saturday marked the final day of the great police festivities and more of his stunts, track. Four other noted aviators were to take part in entertaining the huge crowd by their thrilling stunts and Julian was first on the program. Lt. Julian had just returned to the city after a long absence, where earlier in the morning he had released a series of loop-the-loops, tail spins, leopard leaps and spider crawls. His plane was a beautiful speed and stunts, as he had not room to carry a mechanic, he was forced to wind up his own engine. Scores of daily newspaper photographers and moving picture men crowded about him making pictures.
As the time neared for Lt. Julian
to start flying he asked one of the
cabin and set his ignition, on signal,
while he spun the propeller to start
the engine. As Lt. Julian selzed the
blade to spin the propeller the photographer set the ignition soon soon
the propeller "kicked" (similar
in an auto).
Both of the leutenant's arms were caught in the spinning blade and nearly harked off. He was hurled 20 feet with both arms broken, the water was placed in an aviation ambulance and rushed to St. Mary's hospital in Jamestown. The broken bones were set and arms put in plaster casts up to the shoulders. A presiding state that he attends will never be able to do any more parachute jumping, though he may never sufficiently to fly again.
"BROKEN OUT" FACES ARE NOT IN STYLE
The girls who can't wear clothes which are in style because they have "breaking out" where it would show are more to be scolded than pitied, because there is no need for them he unattended in style dresses which they can see of these skin troubles so casually now.
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Fannie Porch, 57, and Cornelia Brothers, 60, both of 1117 State St., were brought into the morals court they were found in with their mother, who was found with Otto Rest, 656 Clark St. after they had brought him in from the street. Best said he went to the house at 1117 State St. and said they had some good home brew. In spite of their age, both women have made many appearances in the courts. They were both sentenced days in the house of correction.
Memphis, Teen, Sept. 25. —A roomer in his home is being sought as the victim of a found dead at his home just west of the entrance to the North Memphis Driving park, where he was held, as it is believed he can shed some light on the killing.
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WOMAN ORDERS THIEF OUT OF GARDEN; SHOT
Danville, Va., Sept. 25—Mrs. Polly Holman, living in Almargo, lost two teeth and suffered painful injuries when she ordered a stranger off her watermater patch. The man whipped out a revolver and, fired at the woman from some distance. The builder was nearly spent, but it made an ugly wound in her lip and carried away two mollars. The stranger fled and his captain did not recognize him and could not give a good description of him.
American gray squirrels, imported into England have driven the native British red squirrel from the parks. In America the squirrel is considered the favorite of the foxes.
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
SLEEPS
NEALOUSIES.
CH HIM FURTHER
HENRY LINCOLN
JOHNSON
BY
TRUE AMERICAN.
ST. LOUIS CHILDREN TO GET
$877,000 SCHOOL BUILDING
St. Louis, Sept. 25.—Announce has been made by the board of education that a permit authorizing the building of an intermediate school for members of our Racq to cost $877,000 has been obtained recently. The school will mark the culmination of one of the greatest projects in local education circles. The site of the new building will be on the north side of Market street between Garrison and Cardinal avenues and extending northward to Laclede avenue. It will accommodate more than 1400 students in its current name its name has not yet been chosen.
The building will be two stories with the front portion three stories thus giving it a well-broken skyline. The second floor will be four science rooms, two mechanical drawing, rooms, two art rooms, two sewing rooms, two cooking rooms, a "household art suite" of three rooms, an appearance bed, clothes and linen closets, dining room, pantry and kitchen, reception hall and bath; two manual training work shops, a printing shop, a sign-painting shop, a music studio, an auditorium seating L500, two gymnasiums, a music and lecture room and a lunch room. Comfort facilities will include showers. The construction is contemplated. Mention is made in the plans of its utility for community social functions.
CHURCH FOLK ASK WRIT TO OUST PASTOR
(Continued from Page 1)
hostility between Dr. Cole and Dr. Montrose, Thornton, who succeeded Dr. Cole as presiding officer, made a lock the church doors against Dr. Cole, but the majority of the congregation insisted upon keeping him as pastor. When the test vote resulted in his Bishop Heard refused to consider further the protests of the disgruntled, and referred the matter to Dr. Thornton as presiding elder. Heard arbitrarily removed Dr. Cole and appointed Rev. T. H. Lawrence in his place, but upon learning of the regard of the Bettel congregation for Dr. Cole, Dr. Lawrence, who is the world's famous position of New York annual conference, refused to accept the appointment.
JOHNNY HUDGINS BUYS LOTS
Flushing, 7, Sept. 25, Johnny Hudgins world’s famous position, current star of the Club Alabam Revue, 41st St. and Broadway, New York, purchase at $3,000. Mr. Hudgins contemplates building next April, and according to the new home it will be one of the show places for the curious to gaze upon in
New York, Sept. 25.—The 162th infantry of this city took the year's record in a seven-day war. They were qualified as hayonet experts in tests at Peekskill, N. Y., Saturday, where the outfit has been in camp for three months. The home Sunday morning and was received with one army by the Harlem population.
VOL. XXI. No. 21. Sept. 26, 1923
Published by
THE BOEBAH COFFIT PUBLISHING
COMPANY (Incorporated)
CHICAGO - 3453 Indiana Ave. Tol. Doug. 1067.
Entered as second-class matter Feb. 1, 1908,
in Chicago, III. under act of
March 6, 1919.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION (Parasite in
Adversary year, $3.00; six months, $1.75)
Flushing, L. I., Sent. Huducins, world's famous recent star of the Club A chased six loss here last at $3,000. Mr. Huducins the architect drawing the new home it will be one of this section of the island.
NJUREI
EVIDENCE NOT ENOUGH FOR CONVICTION
Judge Investigates a Woman's Charge
Newark, N. J., Sept. 25—The power of justice prevailed in special sessions court Wednesday, Sept. 9, during the trial of James E. Clark, 158 Malin St., East Orange, and the entire court was thrown into a state of astonishment when Judge Flanagan declared he did not believe the story of a 60-year-old white woman who claimed she had been brutally heaten and robbed in an alley by Clark. Judge Flanagan reserved declaration of the case, and in order to form his own conclusion, said that he would visit the scene of the crime himself.
Msiss Missella McCarthy (white), 60, 240 Henry St., Orange, who testified that Clark seized her by the neck in S. Day St., Orange, at 5:56 a.m. Aug. 23, as she was on her way to the courthouse, dragged her 250 feet down an alley and took her handbag containing 75 cents and her rosary heads. The elderly woman swooed and lay in her hand, so she regained consciousness she had never identified Clark as her assailant.
Hearing the woman's screams, two newshoys are said to have run to her rescue. While they were there the scene ended and the scene from the other end of the alley. One of the boys claims that Clark had the pocketbook in his hand and that he turned it over to the police and the scene. Miss McCarthy is said to have told the policeman that Clark was her assailant and he was arrested. She on the stand Clark is said to have testified that he heard Miss McCarthy scream and ran down the alley where she lay. He did not see her, but noticed three men running and they scaled a high fence, cut his hand. After the men Clark claims he returned up the alley and found the pocketbook lying on the ground. He picked it up, and by that time a large crowd had gathered to see what the troubled was. Because he had the pocketbook he was accused of the crime and arrested.
REGISTRATION LARGE AT PHILANDER SMITH COLLEGE
Little Rock, Ark. Sept. 25.—More than two hundred students were registered last Wednesday when Philander Smith college opened her fall session with a very auspicious outburst according to President Taylor. Four hundred or more are expected before the school year closes and the president of the school expressed much satisfaction with the new subscription by popular subscription and endowment appropriations. Opening chapel exercises were held in teachers, local friends of the school and out-of-town visitors in attendance, and in addition, a senior school and also gave a resume of the work of the alumni clubs throughout the endowment and expansion movement. The new program for the school includes several permanent improvements, a new library, and a constant improvement of the curriculum of the endowment for the college and a constant improvement of the curriculum of a standard senior college.
Dr. I. Garland Penn, Cincinnati, Ohio, teaches and activates activities of schools near the Methodist Episcopal church, and H. J. Mason, his assistant, were visitors at the presentation of Philander Smith college to one of the educational boards and the enactment with the endowment movement. All members of the faculty met with President George C. Taylor to effect an endowment for the college. New oral new teachers have been employed, including Professor Hamilton, graduate professor of education, S. S. Morris, Dartmouth college, history and economics; Professor Kennedy, founed university, principal of high school; Professor Baker university, education; W. H. H. Riley, Philander Smith department of education, Baker university, education; Erie Bush, Oberlin conservatory, department of music, and G. Pridge, Philander Smith, high school science. The faculty totals 23 members.
Officers Graham and Thomas gave Alberta Freeman, 2943 Wahashave Ave. and Rosa Lee Ward, 3010 La Salle St., a chance to stop fighting and go home when they ran across them and refused to give the kindness. They each fined $2 when arraigned in court to answer a charge of disorderly conduct.
Gets Jail Sentence
Norfolk, Va. Sept. 25. - Reading guilty to a charge of petitionary felony, four years in cash from the Moran pharmacy, 1002 Moran Ave., while he was emancipated 18 years old, was sentenced to 20 days in jail by Police Justice Spindle.
COLLEGE STUDENTS CAN EARN EASY MONEY SELLING
The demand for the Defender by students in the schools continues to increase. The columns of this paper are read and student. To obtain the Bible, and all look upon it as an institution vaging an intelligent, forceful fight for fifteen million loyal American citizens.
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SLEEPING CAR PORTERS HOLD MASS MEETING
Pullman Porters Hear Labor Officials
- Washington, D. C., Sept. 35. The fifth big mass meeting of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in this city was held in the Abyssinian Baptist church on Thursday evening, Sept. 17. Over 500 porters and their wives were in attendance. A. Philip Randolph, general organizer of the new union, presided. The porters were Hugh Frayne, organizer of the A. F. of L. for the state of New York; James Weldon Johnson, secretary or the National Association for the Advancement of Women, activist treasurer of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Frank Crosswash, executive secretary of the trade union committee for organizations Negro and Caucasian workers; the staff of the Messenger magazine.
Hugh Frayne was the first speaker and he delivered a brilliant talk on the rise and growth, function and development, ending with a plea for the organization of all Negro workers and the affiliation of the Pullman porters. In which, he explained, would accord them the same services and protection given all other labor bodies affiliated with it. He was on occasion the Messrs. Roy Lancaster, Frank Crosswalth and George S. Schuyler stressed forebly again and again that the organization was the only remedy for deplorable situation in which the porters and themselves. Another series of meetings soon with the porters like Washington, Pittsburgh, Boston, Cleveland
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YEAR-OLD BABY IS SUFFOCATED DURING BLAZE
Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 25.—While his mother was working on the first floor, Willard Cobb, 1 year old, 4552 Chusman St., was suffocated in his bed on the second floor Friday. The boy's mother did not know that fire had broken out in the room, where he was sitting. Jesse Wendt, 3345 Browning Ave., who was passing the house. First attempts to get through the smoke and flames were unmade. He made their way to the child's crib after extinguishing the fire, he was suffocated and burned. The origin of the fire was not ascertained. The damage to the house and furniture was estimated at $1,000.
MRS. W. J. YERBY TO LIVE IN FRANCE
MRS. W. J. YERBY TO LIVE IN FRANCE
Joined on Trip by Little Granddaughter and Miss Louise A. Williams
(Pictures on Page 1)
With Mrs. William J. Yerby, 4756
Champlain Ave. for years a leader in Chicago's social circle, when she she was a first lady of the family home with her husband in France, was her little granddaughter, Clementine Yerby Church, and Miss Louise Arnette Williams, daughter of Dr. Rivers and Mrs. Williams, will formally introduced into the diplomatic society of the French capital by Mrs. Yerby and her husband, Hon. Joseph A. the United States consul at La Rocheille. She plans to remain abroad two years.
In a beautiful la Villa in La Rocheille, which Consul Yerby has purchased in 1911, there last April, the Yerbys and their little grandchild, Clementine, will make their home. Clementine, who is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Robins, will be educated in French schools.
PILGRIM PROGRESS BAPTIST
CHURCH HOLDS, DEDICATION
New Orleans, La., Sept. 25.—Several thousand persons were in attendance at Progress Baptist church, located at Foucher and Franklin Sts., of which Dr. Dee Guilbert is pastor; those attending the church were held, at which time the following ministers spoke: Frank G. W., W. Clark, Rev. O. B. Quinn and Rev. S. G. Green, Mrs. Marv Whitefield and Miss addresses, Rev. Dr. D. Norman as master of ceremonies. The excercles Msw Baptist presented the pastor with a handsome communion set valued at more than thirty dollars. The pastor is one of the finest among the members of our Race in this city, cost approximately $20,000.
Two Men. Charged With
Fordyce, Ark., Sept. 25. —Charged with having shot and seriously wounded four officers while on a drunken runnage, James and Robert. Shelton were shot and wounded by officials last Friday. The shooting affray occurred Wednesday and Thursday. The Sheltons are alleged to have ordered King out of his car and after beating him considerably, shot him in the face. The officers continued and P. Bailley was shot in the left shoulder. No motive for their shooting, the men could be found by police officers.
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PART I—PAGE 8 PLANE Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Kansas City and New Orleans
Among the big labor officials of the country who have indorsed the Brotherhood of. Sleeping Car Porters are W. G. Lee, president of the Brotherhood of. Sleeping Car Porters, T. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America; L. E. Sheppard, president of the Order of Railway Conductors; M. S. Sullivan, president of Sleeping Car Conductors; W. G. Orr, special organizer of the New York; district of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; Morris Felstone, secretary of the United Heavy Industries; secretary-treasurer of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America; Abraham Baroff, secretary-treasurer of the International Ladies Garment Office; William Green of the American Federation of Labor has consented to address a big mass meeting of the new brotherhood immediately after the coming convention of the federation.
Court Rule Halls Sale
of Washington Property
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25—Albert P. Johnson, said to be the owner of the law firm where he was directed by Justice Hoschling in equity court to show cause on Sept. 23 why a restraining order should not be issued to prevent the sale of his property. A temporary restraining order was issued when Carrie M. Garland, 1737 First St. N. W.; Amanda J. Bishop, 1737 St. N. W.; and Lillie M. McAnn, 80 S. St. N. W. white, filed suit to prevent the sale. It is contended in the petition that Johnson is about to violate a coveted agreement with this immediate neighborhood from selling or renting their property to Race persons. This sort of covariant was held to be against the court of appeals of the District of Columbia in the Curtis case, which is now on appeal in the Supreme court of the United States. A number of other suits are awaiting the Supreme court in the Curtis case.
Newark, N. J., Sept 25.—The Essex County Colored Republican association in the county committee rooms, 45 Academy St., at which the speakers were held. Walter G. Alexander, former assemblyman. The appeal was made to ministers of various churches to urge their congregation to attend October 21, the last registration date.
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PART 1—PAGE 4
THOUGHT HE WAS STILL IN DIXIE LAND
Court Ignores Pleas of "Home Folks"
Ft. Wayne, Ind., Sept. 25—Hiram Altman (white), a native of Georgia and formerly employed by the Nickel Plate railroad of this city as a day laborer, and two months on the state penal farm and fined the sum of $500 for flogging and shooting Hazel Harris in the yards of the Nickel Plate company on the night he young man of 23 years came to Ft. Wayne from Buffalo, N. Y. May 11, in search of work, and with a white man, was found in a woods where he claims that he was invited by a nightwatchman to spend the night there. Soon two detectives came, and Alfred Swick of Indiana took the white man, while Altman, the Georgian, took Harris into custody. The white hobo was quickly dispatched to jail, while Altman sent Swick for a heavy board from a nearby wood pile fishing. By forcing the man to lie in a guillef face down at the point of his pistol, Altman had little trouble in controlling him. Harris was flogged unmercifully, and deliberately shot him in the hip. Altman Confesses Crime
Altman, when brought up for a preliminary trial, made a full confession of the flogging case and declared that it was no more than the bigger, deserved one. The defendant would not mote out punishment for his crime, justifiable in the light of Harris' race. At the trial before Judge Sol. A. Wood, Altman said he just wanted to prove that he was guilty. W. H. Connor, president of the local branch of the N. A. A. C. P., testified that he visited Harris at the hospital and that he found wounds from his neck to his hips. William L. Briggs, attorney, assisted in the prosecution.
Georgian's Petition Refused
A petition, signed by several county officers of Worth county, Georgia, and other prominent citizens, was presented to Judge Wood in the hope of getting sentence suspended. Attorney Briggs appealed to the court to have the judges waive: "This petition signed by men of Georgia when a Colored man is the injured party should have no weight or affect, in that this man might have committed the same offense in Georgia with good reputation for peace and quietude." The Judge took the same view and said that he would not suspend the sentence and that the act was one of brutality and one which the state will not tolerate without punishment. Harris, who came from Buffalo, N. Y., a material witness, has returned to his home. The arrest was made by the Court and evidence procured by him and Patrolman Arthur Williams.
OLD PEKIN CABARET NOW COURT OF JUSTICE
THE FUNERAL HALL
A new branch of the municipal court was opened Monday morning in the same building which years ago housed the famous Pekin cabaret. Judge John H. Lyle was selected to sit in the new court of justice. Friends of the judge gathered in the new courtroom and impressive ceremonies preceded the routine work. Rev. John Thompson is shown shaking hands with Judge Lyle. Grouped about the judge are Rev. William D. Cook, City Prosecutor Sam Pineus, Chief Deputy Balliff George Wood, Editor Robert S. Abbott and Attorney Andrew R. Sheriff, who represented the Bar association.
MAN IS SLAIN AT PICNIC OF HODCARRIERS
Deputy Sheriff's Shots Kill Assailant
St. Louis, Mo. Sept. 25—Albert Davis, 28 years old, of Elmwood Park, was instantly killed with a bullet through his right ear while attending the hockey carriers' Wednesday night, Sept. 16, at Elmwood park. He was shot by Deputy Sheriff Charles Cohen after the officer, witnesssa said, had been attacked. Sheriff Cohen, a member of our Race, reported that Davis was intoxicated and threatened to whip anyone who would accept his chalice. The officer, also signed to keep order at the picnic, demonstrated with him and sourced to induce him to go home. Davis knocked me down twice and self-defense. Cohen stated in his report.
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"Music Hath Charms"
Music may have charms to soothe the savage breast, hit it did not seem to have much of an influence over the temper of B. Brooks. His wife, Mrs. Fannie Brooks, is in the hospital suffering with a possible skull fracture which she received from the doctor. She head with an ice pick when she wanted to play the Vetrolta in their home at 25 W. 53th St.
GIRL FRIENDS START BATTLE AFTER PARTY
An argument, heated by an over-abundance of moonshine, resulted in a threat to attract the attention of Officer Roscoe Johnson of *Stanton Ave. station Sunday night*, Sept. 13, 1946, at the Johnsonboro St. and Miss Stella Evans, 3406 Indiana Ave. were good friends when they left the party which they had attended, but on the way home they fell ill. Ellen invited the officer to act as referee, he said, only holding that her opponent he searched, as she did, for the wrong person. The way had become fast friends by Monday night, when they appeared before Judge Hugee and declared the whole affair was only a tally. They were both billed $5 and costs.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
AY MORNING in the same building to sit in the new court of justice. And the routine work. Rev. John William D. Cook, City Prosecutor, Andrew R. Sheriff, who represent
JUDGE MAKES NEW LAW FOR HIS BENEFIT
Uses Office to Help Race Prejudice
Redondo, Calif., Sept. 25.—Because of what was characterized as "undue friendliness" with white girls, Justice Moodie sentenced to 100 days in jail Max Shaw, James Strang and L. E. Hampton, members of an orchestra playing at the Pavilion dance hall. The jail sentence was imposed when the men refused to play an alternative fine of $300 each. Despite the incriminating testimony of Policewoman Eva Kopp (white) and Detective Sergeant Alder, also white, against the young men, it was brought out in the questioning of Louie Lee, orchestra leader, and other attendants of the dance hall that the girls had frequented the hall and had invited the attentions of the young men. Justice Moodie, it seemed, however, was more concerned, fact that the girls were mimeers.
The acquaintance of the girls and the orchestra members dates back to the band's foundation, tended the hall, it is said, and wrote notes to the jazz players, asking them to call. Since that time, it is said, that the company of the men and, according to Police Chief Henry, had attended liquor parties with them. In the case of Shaw, Strang and Hampton were fruitless, police reported.
GA. LEADERS ON KEEN EDGE FOR JOHNSON'S PLACE
(Continued from Page 1)
effort by the ill-ly-white, faction force the siege of the white man. This was foremost the visit here last week of Clint W. Hager, United States attorney for the same district; C. D. Gorce, an associate of the Akerman, United States marshal for the same district; C. D. Gorce, an associate of the Akerman, United States marshal for the same district; Marion O. Dunning, recently appointed collector of customs at Savannah, he supported by Joslan T. Rose, collector of internal revenue at Atlanta, and Dr. Gilliam, state chairman.
Warrt Race Man
National prominent Republicans, many of whom are anxious to have a man of our Race elected to succeed Mr. Johnson, are anxious to have a man who might influence in having any man who might be selected by the Georgia commissional committee. Opinion among them was well-night unanimous that Mr. Davis ever, that he should deem his election inappreciable, they think that he should support another man of his Race for governor.
Mr. Davis, who was here for the first time that he had not fully made up his mind whether he should be a candidate or not, said he would be a candidate for him, he said, of whether he could exercise more influence in national politics or continue as secretary of the gate committee and selecting someone who would normally responsible to him for his election.
Patrdnage a Question
It is probable that the Republican state central committee of Georgia will act very soon in the selection of a successor to the governor who requires this. Several vacancies in major offices will occur very soon. The term of the present United States attorney, and the northern Georgia is expiring in November, as is also the terms of the United States attorney, and the northern Georgia. The term of the postmaster at Atlanta is expiring in January.
Want Race Man
HARRY RAISES
CAIN WHEN HE
GETS ANGRY
When Harry Palmer, 3907 Grand Elvall, becomes angry, he tears up everything in sight, in other words, he runs wild.
According to Officer Roy Chestnut, he found the flat looking like a cyclone had swept it, when he answered a hurry up call Sunday night.
Pictures were torn from the wall, furniture quarrel, clothing scattered, dishes all over the floor, dishes and glassware broken into bits, and even the telephone box was knocked from the wall, the officer said.
Half of his wife, Mrs. Palmer, was shedding tears from eyes that were black and blue and badly swollen. Palmer usually vents his anger on his wife, it is said, and the landlord has asked him to move in before the officer can testified that it was necessary to almost pull down the door to get Palmer out to the wagon.
"Just a little family quarrel," Palmer pleaded to judge Hugeen, who was discharged after his wife failed to appear against him.
Detroit, Mich., Sept. 25—Following his successful examination under
Van Lowe of this city has been admitted to the court to attorney Van Lowe's entrance into law work here is common and is asset to the legal profession as well as to the progress in this section.
A. E.
Since his school
Lowe has shown
himself unusually
shrewd and is at
present conduc-
cated and digu-
nified leaders of
the dearth of
decomposed
places in this city
Atty' Van Lowe lawyers of our race in this city and section. Attorney Van Lowe fill a much needed place in the community of his very great popularity it is expected that he will be guaranteed success as part of his friends and fellow citizens. Attorney Van Lowe will begin work at telling influence in Detroit courts.
Find Deserted Children
Asleep in Fish Barrel
Philadelphia, Sept. 25. -Police are searching for the parents of two children who were found in a fish barrel at Doe St. and Delaware Ave. last Friday morning. The children, who gave their names as Walter Hart, 6, and Florence Hart, 4, are believed to have been abandoned. Covered by Policeman Simpson of the Seventh and Carpenter Sts. station, they them from a town in New Jersey, they told the police, but were unable to give the name of the town. They had been in the barrel and told to go to sleep, they said.
SHOT BY WIFE
Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. 25.—William Morgan, who lives in the Bushtown area, is in the Erhanger hospital critically injured as the result of having been shot by his wife, Mattie Morgan.
Thin Men Run Down Men Nervous Men
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RESPECT YOUR OWN, EDITOR TELLS CROWD
Throng Hears Pioneer Chicago Publisher
Chicago Heights, IL. Sept. 25. "The Race is too often its own worst enemy," asserted Robert S. Abbott, owner and publisher of The Chicago Deender, in an address before a special Newspaper afternoon gathering at the Payne A. M. E. chapel, 1808 Central Ave., 1808 South, the importance of Being an American Citizen," was the subject upon which Abbott, a life men-
oather and publisher of The
Booker, in the Fountain,
in an address before a
special Sunday afternoon gather-
ing at the Payne
chapel, 1508 Church,
last week. "The importance
of Being an American
Citizen" was the subject upon
Abbott, a life member
of the Field Museum and a
leader in the Lowden race commission, hold the attention of a crowded house.
An excellent musical program, with sales, Mrs. J. Johnston of Chicago and Mrs. C. F. Fountain of Chicago Heights, was arranged for Mr. Abbott's coming.
In a thoughtfully worked-out adduction the pioneer figure in newspapers endured the fierce hearers against the fatal error of self-condemnation. "In the very worst sentence which any judge can place upon us," he declared, "there is no fact that the law upon which he buses his sentence prescribes a limit. No more than a certain penalty, the judge knows, is within his power to punish a second person cannot be guilty. But the judgments which many of us are all too prone to pass upon ourselves know no such limitations. We are merciless when we pass judgment on our weaknesses in the law in the lowest estimate we places on our own nort may have.
"Self-respect is the foundation of achievement. If we have not as a trace a full measure of respect for our own worth, we cannot expect others to regard us highly, nor can we expect others to regard us with attainment which would he ours did we but judge ourselves more favorably."
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JAIL SENTENCES
Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 25.—Two motorists were sent to jail by Judge Yeatman in traffic court on Saturday, when convicted of driving while intoxicated. In addition they were fined and lost their rights to drive for varying periods. They were James Jurter, 27, 50, 1 Seventh St., 30 days in jail, and James Quinn, 27, 50, 1 Seventh St., and Jinks Belt, 33, 1132 Lincoln Ave., 30 days in jail, 41 and costs two months, driving suspension. Police claim that Barber took a parked car belonging to a friend early Friday morning and collided with three parked taxicabs in Sycamore St., damaging the machines. Belt's machine collided with a automobile and locked Luckenbock, and although one was injured, both machines were damaged considerably.
HOLD CITY HEALTH OFFICER
FOR SHOOTING MAN TO DEATH
Chattanooga, Tennessee, Sept. 25.—I. M. Ivins (white), city health inspector, is being held pending investigation into the slaying of John Henry Browder, who was shot and killed by Ivins at 16th and Carr Sis. Saturday night, Sept. 12. Describe the fact that Ivins pleaded self-defense, stories of witnesses pointed to a case of cold-blooded murder. Ivins was called, it is reported, by friends of Browder, who wanted the officer to interfere in a quarrel between Browder and his wife, when he attacked the officer for his continual drunkenness. Instead o offering his assistance, however Ivins began to abuse Browder and the latter, becoming enraged, put the officer in the face. Ivins then drew his gun to shoot Browder, but several of the latter's friends took the gun away from him, and the latter, being enraged, drew another gun, which he carried him instantly. Browder's wife and Palma Lewis, a companion of hers, were arrested and he to be held as material witnesses.
FOLKS DON'T THINK
BLOTCHES ARE PRETTY
You can't expect people to say you are "good-looking" as long as your appearance shows you are careless with skin care from blotches, plumps, rash, "breaking cut" and eczema.
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Black and White Ointment and Soap are economically packaged. The 50c size Ointment contains three times as much as the 20c size, and both the Ointment and Soap—Ady.
QUARREL OF WOMEN ENDS WITH MURDER
Shoots Her Assailant Who Used Knife
St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 25.—Mrs. Bertha Durant, 30, 2213 Market Street, St. Louis, death at 11 o'clock. Rts. Sunday morning at 11 o'clock by Rose Jackson, 40. Mrs. Durant stabbed the Jackson woman in the abdomen, whereupon the woman attained assault through the heart. The cutting and shooting was the result of an argument between the two women. The Jackson woman was taken to the City hospital and held as a prisoner until friends furnished bond for her release. The body of the Durant woman was found at the morgue pending an inquest.
Convict, Who Escaped
Prison, Nabbed by Cops
Just two hours and 35 minutes
after he had escaped from Joliet,
where he was serving a sentence of
one year to life for piracy. After
Lomax was caught by Sergt. Eugene
Burry's squad at 37th and Federal
Sts.
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SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 26. 1925
PLAN DRIVE TO COVER SCOPE OF Y.M.C.A.WORK
Increased Interest to Find Echo in Wider Range of Activities Next Year
New York, Sept. 25.—In keeping with
throughout the United States and the
advance made in
industry the problem
of expansion
dustry for untouched by
the Christian association
is uppermost in minds of its $2,000
minds of its $2,000
minds of the officials of the
Colored work department
in national council here
declared to be on a path of the
Colored people to
Y. N. A., and
Y. N. A., and
need for remedied
needs for encouragement
needs for unprecedented
business and industry, and expansion into fields heretofore by the Young Men's Race members. The institution is uppermost at this time in the nation of the Race members. Officials of the Collegiate institution of the nation declare that, the reason for the program of the M. G. A. and L. G. A. men need for such service, whole leadership to plan for unprecedented campaigns of expansion. In two fields, notably, the association's greatest opportunity for growth is building among men and boys. These areas building among men and boys are the areas of the South and the hugeropolitan areas of the North, where concentrated areas of the M. G. A. in Harlem are the single Y. M. G. A. in Harlem are the central area in the United States, if not in the world, for example, finds its needs for the needs of the 200,000 residents of the district. A similar problem can be addressed in St. Louis plans are already under the construction of a second building.
Big Increase in dMembers
"The Y. M. C. A. next to the church, the Tobias, senior secretary of Colored work of the national council, is making the development of the Colored man and how in America. Our membership has last year, two new buildings at a joint location, and two new dollars have been added to our equipment and more than two millions of men and love have been served through our hard work. We have hardly scratched the surface of our facilities, and our transportation and other services whom the helpful services of the Y. M. C. A. Comparison between the figures of the Negro book and the Y. M. C. A. there were 566,650 persons in industry and agricultural associations serving about two plants and 6,136 members. Our diversal associations exist in the fields of transportation and agriculture, which engaged the attention of 2,175,858 Negroes in 1920. Community service both operating without building facilities. One of these is the department for boys on Long Island
One Railroad Branch
One railroad T. M. C. A. is mainline although in numerous city accommodations are provided by the association book shows that in 1920 more than 6,500 Negroes and 111 as Democratic firemen. The question of expansion is expected to be the main theme of the 21st national conference on the issue of Washington Dr. C. where the first Colored T. M. C. A. was established 12 Tremont at, the conference will be the national council and the international committee of the American Y. M. M. M. secretary; Dr. John Hope, president of Warehouse college; the general board and generally regarded as one of the States, and Dr. R. M. Moton, chairman of the Colored department committee of Booer T. Washington as principal of several leaders of the Young Women's Christian association also have been in contact with the men the prospects of use of equipment in the smaller fields.
WELL ONE DAY IN BED THREE
Wyndotte, Michigan. — "After my baby was born I did not do my own
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Dr. L. R. Hill, a Leading Citizen of His Home Town, Is Doing Much Good for His Race
BY NETTIE GEORGE SPEEDY
NOTE-This is the 50th of a series of articles that I will publish concerning the work of Dr. Leander R. Hill of St. Paul, Minn. is a graduate of Morristown college, Walden university and the dental school of Meharry Redder College, class 6000. He was son of Rev. I. R. Hill, M. E. minister of Wichita, W. Va. While a student at Morristown, Tenn., he was the warden for the school in 1912, and was president of his class. He also directed and managed a quartet for the same institution that studied the Middle Wort. That quartet was in Chicago and appeared at the Northwestern university and some of the largest churches, including the Free M. E. church of Evans, Ill. on the occasion when the late Booker T. Washington spoke there in 1915. Dr. Hill was at one time a member of the famous E. S. Thainner Concert company of Cleveland, Ohio, filling lycum engagements in the Kansas City Ware. In state in the employ of the M. W. Savage company of Minneapolis. At Meharry he was prominent in all student activities and a part in the establishment of Delta chapter of the Omega Phi fraternity, which elected him to its head in 1913, and as a delegate to the national convalescence in Boston, Mage, of the same year.
He was elected a member of the grand council at this meeting as a half of his fraternity. Here he met and became closely associated with the late J. Charles Young, who prior to his appointment vention just prior to his departure for Africa. Graduating from Mebray in 1820, he returned to Minnesota and successfully passed the state board examination and took up the practice of medicine. He succeeded in establishing Xi chaturion of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity at the university, having the credit of fair ability, having to his credit several short stories. He served as contributing editor to one of our race weeklies, having to his credit several individual tours. He contributes also to the National Medical Journal and others. His latest work, which was published in "Minnesota" (Lettle du nord), a
Raleigh, N. C.—Miss Marjorie Edwards, a trained nurse and sociologist, taught at the Wake county board of charities in Wake county an Race welfare officer, under the direction of the Wake county board of charities. She is working in co-operation with the new training school for social workers at St. Augustine, and part of her salary is in contributions from individuals and organizations throughout the county also go to the expense of maintaining the county welfare department has assumed the remainder of the expense. Duties will extend both into the county and city. She has been connected with the city missions in recently studied social work in New York at a social service school.
Chicagoans Attend Reunion in West Virginia
Orangeburg, S. C. Sept. 25—On Wednesday, 66th year with the largest enrollment of her history. Registration began through the week, and has continued through the week. Students in jotts were out to witness the first chapel exercise and hear the welcome from his address he told the new students. In his address he told the students spirit they would find at Claflin. He then introduced the strong faculty to graduate coming from some of the leading institutions of the country, such as the University of Colorado, Denver University, University of Colorado, Denver, Fisk, Virginia Union and others. With prospects for the brightest year in his career, he has set himself to the task of developing an A class college activities of
Miss Laura Smith, East Orange,
Miss. who has been spoiling the
summer with her family, and
renewing childfriendships, left
for her home Sept. 13.
The daughter
of the late Mamie Meredith Odum,
was much fed while sojourning
among her, and her popularity was attested by
the many theater parties, dinner dances,
breakfasts and luncheons given in
her honor.
Wins High Honor
Pueblo, Colo., Sept. 25.—Miss Roberta
Kincaid, daughter of Mrs. C. Y.
Kincaid, of Centennial high school, who
recently finished from a nurse training
program at the University of Richmond, Va., passed the Virginia
board of the board of the blue seal for
the St. Phillips school, Miss Kincaid
up her duties as a trained nurse.
MRS. GEORGIA THOMPSON DEAD
Mrs. Georgia Watts Thompson, wife
of Russell T. Thompson, and sister
of Roberta T. Thompson, passed away Friday
morning, Sept. 13, at Providence high
school, more than five years.
Funeral services were held Monday
at the Providence High School
undertaking parterns, Rev. C. M. Tanner
with her father, a member for a number
years, officiating. Interment at Linden
cemetery.
LADIES:
Her much sought after
daughter, a graduate and safe, guaranteed
her a life of success for over 20 years. Recommended by thou-
dor. Miracle Milieu National
Museum.
Dr. L. B. Hill
copy of which is on the in the St. Paul office of The Chicago Defender. Dr. Holl is a member of the Mussonies Kills. He is exalted ruler of Gopher lodge of Elks in St. Paul; also a member of the board of the N. A. Kills. He is exalted ruler of 14th district of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity. He is a member of the St. Paul District Dental society, Minnesota State Dental association. He is a member of the National Medical association and the National Geographic society.
The following table demonstrates how a man making $35 a week (about $152 a month) can so manipulate his income to own a comparatively short time. The budget is based on monthly expenditures. By mixing fruits, poultry or meat to ovine, the livestock can be further cut down. This is the suggested allowance:
On home ..... $40.00 a month
For food ..... 30.00 a month
For clothing ..... 25.00 a month
Furniture ..... 7.00 a month
Fuel ..... 8.00 a month
Gas and electric ..... 3.00 a month
Automobile ..... 3.00 a month
Cars ..... 3.00 a month
Church ..... 3.00 a month
School ..... 3.00 a month
Amusements ..... 8.00 a month
Tailor ..... 8.00 a month
Saxophile ..... 6.00 a month
Downstate Doctor Finds Services in Great Demand
Dr. B. E. McClain-Springs and her husband F. E. McClain have been visiting their aunt, Mrs. Lizzie J. Jackson, 200 N. Oakley Dr. McClain-Springs is a graduate of one Chicago medical college. She is the tenth president of the Madison Coal Corporation, where she has rendered valuable service to the miners who are often offered medical attention to her many patients from the surrounding country and district in which Dr. McClain-Springs dwelt, she was at her post of duty in the night, after the mighty tornado had left death and destruction in a pathogenously reviving unconscious ones, submerged burr bars, setting broken bones and removing small and large pieces of the flesh of the patients by the terrible force of the storm. In the weeks and surgical attention to hundreds of patients already immense practice, which caused her to work far into the night, the home department of the red Cross in her district. Her led cross memorial, collected several truckloads of flowers, collected several truckloads of flowers, collected a large sum of money. These they distributed to the storm victims and led the people destitute Dr. McClain-Springs bu an office at the Maine marine. Patients come to her for treatment. All express their satisfaction for her treatment and gratefulness for services rendered to the people sacrificed and devoted to her chosen profession that she is busy from early morning to late evening. She splendid opportunity to serve humanity.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
MRS. BEVERLY HONORED GUEST AT CARD PARTY
Mrs. Jamison, Mrs. Watkins Joint Hostesses at Afternoon Affair
North Carolina A. & T.
Begins 31st Session
Greenhorn, N. C., Sept. 25—Stressless leaders. President-elect D. F. Blauford exhorted the students of the Agricultural College to greater preparation in his first address, following the beginning of the California to greater preparation in his last Thursday. The president expressed appreciation for the work which he considered an index to the great work which must he done in the field of agriculture, notably advanced by the late president, J. r. J. R. Budley. We have been made in the faculty, Prof. T. E. McKinney of the department of agriculture, to be appointed to the position of acting dean. This vacancy was filled by the president of the former dean.
Prof. J. A. Grimes, who has been appointed as the ordinator of the rehabilitation men, has been promoted to the position, of dean, of the school because of the growth of the student because of the growth of the student to be responsible for the young men to be following the teachers have been
Prof. F. Marcellus State, B. A. borehouse; S. F.ormore; B. A. college; S. F.ormore (the agriculture) department of South Carolina State college, will be the director of agricultural prof. W. B. Harrison, R. S. South has been (arm demonstration agent in Anderson county, S. C. will be the director of agricultural prof. S. M. Broderick, B. A. borehouse college, Westerville, Ohio; A. H. Columbia university has been added to M.
Prof. W. A. Oecomy, R. P. A., Boston department, will head the commercial department. Plans are now being made at the dairy barn at the farm and the purchase of a thoroughbred dairy herd, for the last legislature appropriated money.
Grace Lyceum to Open on Sunday, October 4
The 12th season of Grace lycum will have was the most successful in the history of the lycum and some of the most successful in the history of the organization upon the programs and most of the outstanding organizations of the year. It is the plan of the program chairman to arrange opportunity for students to obtain a date last season to render programs at the beginning of this year. Students will again till that office. William Kelly, secretary and chancellor of the institution, patrons with an excellent group of ushers, Judice George will continue as the president and will now arranging the programs for the season and will continue as program chairman of the organization was founded by Mrs. Carry B. Lewis 12 years age. He will be given in the next issue of the Defender.
Mrs. Armistead, Hoosier School Teacher, Is Dead
Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 23—Mrs. C. H. W. Armistead, prominent physician and civic leader, died at Henderson, W. Va., on August 11 for several weeks. She is the inspiration to hundreds of young perennial years. She was a source of inspiration to many sons who have now made their mark in life. She is a beloved church at the Wendell Phillips College, the unfit of the race youth. The Armistead residence in Cornell Ave. Sunday and funeral services were held by her husband and a daughter. Miss Lacille Phillips, a public school teacher in the public schools of this city.
FLORIDIAN ATTENDS CONVENTION
Dr. C. Frederick Duncan, Jacksonville, Fla., who has been in the city at attention since September 2013, American Therapeutic association which convened at the Drinko hotel on Sept. 16, 2013, in city, where he will remain for two years. Dr. Duncan, said to be one of the most prominent doctors in the Florida city, where he will remain for two years. Dr. Duncan, said to be one of the most prominent doctors in the Florida city, where he will remain for two years. There tendance at the association. There physicians in attendance. Dr. Duncan has been a member of the association. Here here he also attended the annual association which convened at the Wendell Phillips high school last month. Dr. Duncan, Ms. Doca Barton, 14153 Calumet Ave.
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The conductor, I should say, had a race, urbane genuine pride of race, and an intense pride of race, pride, so little confidence, in the integrity of his own race that he believed in the association. Pride of race, pride of individuality, true sense and manliness, youth. When one vents such unkindness—such blatantoorliness such untenderous usurability, poor taste, wretched manner, the world needs better taste and intelligence as much as it needs better intelligence. Indeed they are related.
FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS HOLDS MEETING
Sends Message to "Line"
Johnson's Widow and
Elects President
The City Federation of Clubs, of which Mrs. Clair Horton was president, held a meeting at St. Mark's M. E. church Monday, Sept. 11. Principal business from the local clubs of the State reperson from the local clubs of the State federation of Women's Clubs and the Northwestern Federation of Clubs, all of which showed progressiveness. Reso-rontee Reed has served as an efficient corre-cretary; Mrs. Heila Brasher, corresponding secretary; Mrs. M. Calinar, man of ways and means committee; man of ways and means committee; Joanne Dworter, organizer; Mrs. Chara McAdams, chairman of the ex-cess board, and Mrs. Elizabeth Lind-Dee Dworter.
FETE MISS GANTLING
Mineola, N. Y., Sept. 25.—One of the season's most pleasant social events took place here last week. Way Michele Arthur Benton gave a reception in honor of her Gandling, a graduate from the Teacher Training school at Washington, D. C. There were more than 100 guests. Way Michele Brooklyn. An elaborate musical and literary program was rendered during the outing of the evening. Very many, William Martin and Walker Lev, more than 100 students. Misses Ruth Delkman, May Dedmars Geneva Martin, Margaret Troodman, Tremaine Pratt, Danielle Schuster, Mr. and Mrs. Hunter, Mrs. I. Hall, Mrs. H. Gandling and sister. Music came were also enjoyed at night an elaborate reapst was served. Mice Gandling will enter Pratt Institute this fall.
---
Dear Princess: I am terribly worried do help so many others. Now, dear Princess, I am a single man—never been able to do help so many others. Last winter I met a young woman and fell deeply in love with her. True, I meant very little to her. I soon found her and loved her. I kept her. I worked for eight months at that job and then we left town. We met her in city where we first started. In three months she gave me a good job. Now she has gone again, left our little home, all nicely dressed, away with one of our roomers—a man friend of mine. Princess, she is very my heart I do love her. Could she love me make me humble to her? Could she mean well to herself and me? Please, how some hearts are made to sob and ache?-Blue
Do you realize how some hearts are made unhappy and are crushed and bruised by the unfaithfulness of others. Should any other person any more hurt me, first of all, he lashed on honesty, happiness is the result of compassion that understands, and through this the laws of man are transgressed there is material penalty attached, when spiritual penalty attached, when both spiritual penalty attached, when both finish but misery? You started wrong, consequently you could never finish to make good endings. You lived with her against the least, the very known lady, let her go. She is broken in to the free and love now and she will have her fill.
Dear Princess: I have been reading your wonderful advice to others. Now
To beautify bobbed hair, keep it in place, sleek, trim and naturally pretty requires no little amount of care. Haste, neglect and inferior preparations positively will not do. Frequent massaging, thorough shampooing, cleansing, rinsing, drying, occasional pressing, curling, waving, marceling, all done with care by skillful Madam C.J. Walker agents using Madam C. J. Walker's World Renowned Vegetable Shampoo, Glossine and Wonderful Hair Grower is the secret of beautiful bobbed hair. (Some women correctly care for their hair themselves, others choose to have it done, in either event, take my advice, to enrich the scalp, thicken, soften, silken, easily beautify bobbed hair, use only
COLOR PREJUDICE
UNKNOWNABROAD
CLAIMS SOLOIST
Distinguished Parisians Understand Us, Says Madame Evanti
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25—In an interview today, Madame Evance-Mira, Lillian Evance Tibbs—who has recently been appointed to the study in France, told of some of her experiences in Paris, where, she made a prejudice, especially among the upper classes, of meeting M. and Mine, Joseph Salmon, in whose salon she made a prejudice, especially with the Marquette of Casse Fuente, a violinist, who met Roland Hayes in England and induced him to visit Paris. It was also presented to Parisians. The Salmons, Mrs. Tibbs started in America, family, socially and musculately, "I feel that every thoroughly the race question in America. She has made a special study the general progress of the Negro. She is a great love of the race and the great unyang of the slave songs." She made preparations for a number of concert appearances before returning to France to fill grand Carlo. She will most likely sing in Washington, Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Chicago and Denver. She is a coloratura of remarkable qualities.
Rev. R. J. Johnson, Noted
Missouri Baptist, Dies
PART 1—PAGE 5
GOOD NEWS FOR PEOPLE WIT! BLEMISHED FACES
GOOD NEWS FOR PEOPLE WIT! BLEMISHED FACES
No better news could be given people who suffer the embarrassments disfigured faces subject them to than that the use of Black and white clothing causes a positive decline in such skin diseases as pimples, blotches, acne and White Soap, and Ointment, are already selling at the unprecedented rate of more than two percent of the population everywhere are enthusiastically recommending them to their friends and mentors and Soap, are economically priced, in liberal packages. The 50c times as much as the 25c $c Adv.
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(THEATER OWNERS' BOOKING ASSOCIATION)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES AND THEATER MANAGERS
COMMUNICATE WITH
T. O. B. A.
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E. N. W. Smith Street, N. W. Smith Street, G. M.
MARTIN KLEIN, Oyster Bank Blog, 5025 St. Blu, Chicago, Ill.
PART 1—PAGE 6
The theatrical season of 1955-25 is off to a good start in the acts on the huckleberry wheel are in the lead. "Seven-ten," "Sandra," "Danke," and Walker and several other diving pretty just at present. Occupies, the only large show making a brieftime, net with an undergraduate after weathering and going down of an eventful Louis Azorky and Kidd Hunter would likely to avert disaster and de-velop auck. However,
A. T. Whitory
Every season there are a number of business. The experience is entirely new and they will need all their will to set the temptations and avoid the pitfalls that they will encounter. Brud This is not meant for a sermon on business but for a brief set of same advice and if it is followed all managers and promoters thereby or therefore: Girls and boys just entering the business are prone to some indiscretions as some of the old men are not so careful in the cabiary of cuss words in order to be one of the gang or to be recognized for hard work and study and a general sentiments for advancement in show business—the things that all self-respecting businessmen think in show business is to see some beautiful soul hopefully possessed of habit and like a wounded butterfly, grave. I don't know that show business presents more temptations to store items or several other businesses one might mention but they seem to Flattery seems to be the chief weapon girls—flattery disguised by a semblance of sincerity that makes it difficult to business as is important to success in show business as is important to other occurrences. Bad behavior entroys the troyers. The formula is very simple—inability and achieve success.
It is well for the promoters of the theater to educate the audience about Colored theater to know that there is a story going the rounds to the effect that the manager makes for what is termed in theatrical performance a day's notice, when the manager has an opportunity to book a performance at the quality of this cheaper attraction may be. Personally, I know of three companies that template putting out first-class tapes Colored performers, acts and shows playing the Colored time should be shown the same consideration as it is shown the same consideration as it is Orpheum time. This cancellation clause should be strictly regarded by performers given to secure another engagement on another attraction. Mr. Arnold, put in charge to be contemplated for the clever way to be presented before the audience. The philosopher
WANTED
Attractive Young Ladies
WHO CAN DANCE
Long Engagement.
Apply 1 o'Clock.
CLUB ALABAM
44th Street and Broadway
New York
MR. WELDON
”
THEATRICAL COMMENT
By "BILL" POTTER
IT SEEMS that there is always something happening on the part of some of our would-be professionals which reflects most discreetly upon them as they work.
1 of our would-be professionals which reflects most disrespect and the professional group at large. Somewhat has been said that the Miles Dewey bunch were arrested at one of the beaches there for enforcing a law against them, and around the section for other professional groups, to the extent that a patition has already been sent the chief of the beach. It does not take much to start trouble in this respect, and those who are guilty of this bum piece of business have been a very successful territory for other groups of professionals who would be guided by common sense and do not have the skills to be in territories where no ill feelings have been attired. These men are guilty on two points, not so much on account of the lack of experience, but on account of the count for much, but on account of the crime they have committed against the professional group in ruining their business.
profession must be saved from such black eyes and cannot afford to lose the ground which has been won by hard effort and plugging.
Rumor is a very peculiar thing, not at all dependable, therefore, we don't want to hear so many rumors, but what we do want to see is that the audience is not the best view. This is the effect that the Metropolitan theater is to have a Race orchestra. This theater is the largest on the west side, causing the majority of the Race audience to be buying music, but they were not our musicians. We can't see this theater will not use a position—leaders capable of conducting as fine an orchestra as one would care to be entertained by. There is no excuse for not giving them employment. We are not the leaders of our group. We see our musicians kept busy and we want to see them in the theaters and movie houses that are patronized by large percentages of our group. Talent we have is not the best we can live. This holds good anywhere in the country—not only Chicago.
"How Come" going to the map two weeks ago came as a great surprise to many not acquainted with the theatrical game. Many of the boys and girls in the film were keen to finance to see their way through to their homes. It was said that this production was to have been taken over by burlesque interest, but the villains in the film were keen to the principals made a smooth getaway the choir was left to perform. The principal opened up in a most pretentious manner at the Grand theater when it landed and business, that is as far as the house was concerned, was good. The principal managed the management cause to flip faucets in the Windy City. Managers are playing their tricks on their people should certainly be blackballled when it comes to getting their one-up together. They usually come back to try their luck in the next session. When playing with the road shows. Walking is not at all easy on dancing feet, and positions are not easy to find in towns where one may be stranded, so they have to find employment in local shows. But others were forced to set the best way out. It is hard. And presents another very important thing for a Race equity association to look out for. Unless the members of such com-munity are getting back at such promoters, the condition will always remain the same.
A NOTE OR TWO
Miles Dewey writes us of a very diverse group of members of a band playing the Coast. It is just such things that make it hard to believe halfway decently. James Strong has made it bag for all Race bands on the Coast. Drake and Walker's band, doing White burlesque show, are still getting up-to-date criticism. They are playing a thing on the circuit, what that is taking her mail at 1012 N. John St., Goldaboro, N. C. C. and his Wild Cats are now playing Micheir's his house in Buffalo. Mail will reach them at Oak St. Tim Owaley of the Georgian Minstrels sends in the following route for this week: 1012 N. John St., bunch at Wooster, Ohio St.; 24. Saturdays at Wooster, Ohio St.; 26. The week of the 5th they will play the Emore theater, Pittsburgh. Pa. Micheir writes that he is still doing his and that he will do his this week. Micheir writes that he is still making his and that he will do his this week. Bill Stewart writes that he is getting his mail this week in Washington, D. C. Ed J. Brown, Inc., Society orchestra has been making a hit this season. No, no says Karleo Cook.
Brown and DeMont are doing their thing in Houston, Miss. They are booked over at Blooton, Miss. They are playing over at Doyle and White are playing the first half at the Majestic theater, Jersey City. Fulton Alexander has at last been named the manager, Mexico, but where, nobody knows.
Clare Campbell wants her friends to know that she is doing hers with the Joe Sheffell Revue and they are playing Pantheon theaters, Winnipeg, Canada.
Guss Smith, who is doing his with the half in Edmonton, Canada. The show is coming in West November. Being with the George L. Dolphin shows, is playing this week in Binghamton, N. Y. Four, who are doing thethes with the Sliding Billy Watson shows, will open the Gayetey theatre, Rochester, N. Y. Bert Chapman, single, is doing his with the contages theatre, Seattle, Seattle.
Harris and Holley are doing their 12th show at the 12th St. Theater, New York city. Bill Robinson is playing this week at the Buschweider, Theater, New York city. The Dixie Four made the first half of the annual theater, Allegheny, Pa., this week. The Four Chocolate Dandies are the theater, Boston, Michigan.
Moss and Frye are at the Shea Theaters and they are the art goer over in good form. The Shuffle Along Four are doing the same in 10th St. the theater, Cleveland, Ohio. Julian Arthur's entertainers made the musical at the theater, Harrison, Pa.
The Exposition Four are playing the theatrical Majestic theater, Johnstown, Pa. Wibur Swateman and his bunch are playing the imperial theater, Montreal, Can.
The Four Harmony Kings are play-
ing in the Capitol theater,
New Britain, Canada.
The Dixie Four are moking the sec-
ond day of the Rathen theater, Reading, Pa.
*Forence Mills Revue is the Orchestra theater, Wilkesville, Mills. Billy Parler Company is playing this theater, Dyreum theater, San Francisco, Calif. Billy Parler Company is playing this theater at the Fulton theater, Brooklyn, N. Y. The musician and the Fattings are playing this week at the Fattings theater, Canada. And Taylor are doing this week at the Fattings theater in Spokane, Wash. Playing is playing this week at the Fattings theater, Seattle, Washington. Playing is playing at the Audrey theater, Billingham, Wash. Harley and Hollis, two boys with an interest at the College theater, New York city, are not nearing their over the week play at the Parler theater, Boston, Mass. Is laying his mail this week at 893 Convert St. Norfolk, W. Va. Is laying his mail this week at the Knickerbocker girls company, making it at the Fulton theater, Memphis, Memphis. Le Petittford was forwarded a bunch of girls we caree the Sias Green theater, play at Yazoo City, Miss. For mail has just been received at this department Dorm St. Indiana, Indiana.
The Huntington Minstrels are doing well in Mississippi, the State of Mississippi. They will play at Ralph Dombard, the nifty single, to win. He recently entertained Mylan Hylan.
Joyer and Foster are playing this week at the Palace theater, New Haven. Conn. These boys are hitting things in a hot and fast manner.
. . .
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
IN OLD KAY-SEE
RU CHARLES; CINEAL
In keeping with his high standard the Ehon will present for the benefit of its fans "Why Women Were Troubles," Monday, "The Red Lily," Tuesday, "Capital Funishment," Wednesday, Contraband, with "The Black Bean," Brian Anan Crossland production.
L. B. HOLTKAMP WRITES
Theatrical Editor's Note—The following letter has been written to the office of the theater's editor, "It becomes necessary that in the future we attempt to knock another show not be published in the Chicago Dept. because a medium for the setting of arguments or plays becomes a medium for the setting of arguments or plays. We need to be handled directly by the editors, and criticisms will be handled directly by the editors, and necessary in the future for correspondents to be careful of the type of material that will be published. The kemp feels that an injustice has been done in the instance mentioned in his letter, and the same. No answers will be published in the future. Mr. Hottkamp letter: "I was very much surprised to see the way you addressed to Herrden, a senior manager of his filmmaking week's issue of the Defender in regard to Huntington's show, all of my people, as well as myself, were surprised to hear that Cox Herrden would take the word of Mr. Walters's errant boys' battle, which we won with our hands."
"In Jackson, Miss, we both showed up and compiled to close my ticket on an account of having over $200 paid admissions and 500 reserved seat taxes to the internal Monday night I showed in Jackson. "Now Mr. Huntington show how much we were paid and how much Ursula Sant. "That will tell you who put in 'In Canton we beat them two to one, and we were on the fair grounds and had 30 like 30 in Canton. After they had gone to the moon I came by with my band, and when I got on the opposite side of the street people left to play to and they had to go in 'In Brookhaven, where they got out the driest handball that anyone could love that I was J. C. Orton Georgia internets and gotten some mail and satin costumes and gotten some skirts and costumes and now starring in the Georgia, and that I guaranteed to give the money 'back if not satirized for me I couldn't be found, and a lot of Brookhaven did not believe—I had over 450 paid admissions and the Hunter College colored on their putting out 200 passes to them. "Northfield on Friday, where we did sit up 6 o'clock in the morning and I was the only town they beat me."
JOE JORDAN WRITES
Joe Jordan, who is in charge of the show, wrote a letter to let us all know that the show is doing good business, seems to like it. His band is known as "Joe Jordan's Sharpz and Flatz" and that his tita player, Mr. Burgin, is the proud father of a bouncing baby boy. The girls are going great. They are Marina and Vincent Florence Laucher, Edna Davle, Luice Taucer, Louise Warren, and his shapar and flats did a little broadcast while playing Cleveland Browns' picco. "a great hit" The bunch send regards to all friends in and out of town.
---
REVIEWS
SEVEN-ELEVEN
Sam Cook, featured as a Chinese cook due to illness, thereby causing other principals to double, with A Young place of Cook and doing it notably well. The place of Cook and doing it notably well has doing his usual compulsive-character with the sameizable mannerism emphatically humorous and laughing. Smith makes a change of comedy. The entire company, individually and collectively, are singers in a choreographed wisteria wisteria that can read lines distinctly and work in scenes like thoroughly acted scenes. In new, novel, unique musical numbers and in new, novel, unique musical numbers and in the show more than last season, and it is now fully entitled to be programmed as a comedian. Specially in the show this season that lends additional class to a man's change in aging, harmony. There is also a man's change in aging, harmony. This is the production and presentation in its entirety. It has passed the exhibition and reputable addition to Columbia barquee, and gives to the patron a degree of performers whose talent and ability are only equated by their admirable doings.
This is an attraction that can take its place on any stage, burlesque or broadway, with credit allee to its producers and presenters. The Billboard
JACK REID'S SHOW
Reviewed at Orpheus theater, Pateray the fastest moving production in the barricade world, made its return super Saturday, and a scoured a tremendous hit Jack Rack, producer of the show, and who will be congratulated for turning out one of the most successful shows ever listed in the Columbia circuit. The major part of the opening hit right from the show the shows begin to hit on all six when the remaining members of the cast make their appearances, the vehicle fairly leaps along under a barrage of dancing, singing and clover. Among the white members of the cast, make-up and funny snares is a stream from the back of the theater. Frank Scannell, Will Ferry, Perry, in the role of a loa, gives the finest exhibition of contoction and acrobatics in all-around entertainment who Merry the week will miss an unusual Miss Mildred Austin heads the women in the all-around all-around clever performer. Betty Rory and Miss Peggy and Benita Indulge in the
William Drake, Henry Sambro, William Collins and others are among the guests. The attraction, *Surf and Jazz* dancing and keeping the guests dressed in the garments, keeps the guests almost in a spirit of fun. The dazzling zanzibar dance band, which the show curries, is really a treat by itself, and among the additional features. The attire, worn by the guests, is week with popular prices prevailing. Mannequins to handle the food of reservations expected during its stay here.
CHOCOLATE DANDIES
Reviewed at B. S. Mose 'Franklin the
at this house (the Franklin as a tryout
within the past eight weeks and then
have been routed solidly for almost a
year. The four appear in autobiographical
hits, making a neat appearance. They
playing the piano and another the banjo,
the latter instrument being used to
only one slow number, this being a
spiritual. "Let My People Lone," this
song, "Let My People Lone," this
Gold Chillin Got Wings, to a fast, snappy
dancer and had them yelling for more.
The singing is very, good, the vocals
score in any house, big or small time.
MOSS AND FRYE
Reviewed at Kelth's theater, Cincinnati. Moss and Frey, 1992. A large threat to stop the show. Thend rendition of "West of the Great Divide" scored heavily on the minutes. in one; encore and few bouts.
THE GEORGIA BROWN REVUE
Graham and Jenkins and their Georgetown week on the Dudley end of the T. O. C. in a very good show that has made a hit with the fans Sammy Graham, Graham the man, Jenkins, part owner, playing the comedian, Pearl Lee, speciality, Kid Piedmont, features, Ellenbeth Evans, Alma Evans, Emma Young and Marvie Evans. All mail will reach the group this week at the Palace theater, Norfolk, Na.
"SMARTER SET" OPENING
The aceration will appear Nabel Ridley and tril and Marvie Watts. The show has a long route booked, dominated by the owners.
Sara Martin
moans
"Come Back
Daddy"
SARA's in again, folks, with a brand-new set of high
riding majors called "Come Back, Daddy" and
"Ease My Aching Heart." They're the real grade A
blues and, of course, you'll find them on a red labelled
OKeh Record. Tell your OKeh dealer you crave
Record No. 8231—that's the lucky number!
GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
25 West 45th Street, New York City
OKeh Race Records
THE GEORGIAS
By TIN OWLESY
After playing Fremont Volio, Sunday
at the Globe theater for a week's run
We opened to standing room only. Not
so and many in a street
show. The bus! is
through the week.
Cleveland
and Hutchison and
home for a week's
stay. Elmer
also lives in Cleveland,
and Moore
home, cooked
also lives in
Cleveland, and is
music game, game.
Oh, lo-
the camp did
man minstrel
kept up to eat
kept up to eat
week, Cleveland
hutchison and he
was glad to get
stay, Bimmer
and he lives in Clive-
woods, Cleveland
did eat much
a home cooked
honey also lives in
Clivewoods, Cleveland
doing fine in the
music game, Oh,
and the gang did
have been several
chances in the personnel of the show
one of the Georgia Monday, Johnny
Woods is a still favorite
and Jones made them like it from start to finish
made them like it from start to finish
and Smith received their share of up-
plays their knitting, guessing his
sex until he removed his wig, then
I am proud to say Cleveland still says
he has played and played the Georgia
and conedian. All managers where
he have produced for this manager sur-
Munzie Campbell never falls to leave the stage. Frank Brown has shown Cleveland what real tenor singers can do. Billy Burrell, the lead singer of the land audience. J. Nelson Anderson and Bob Anderson, ususn't let the audience sing as in the days of yore, Jack's land and they sure did make it pleasant for Daddy Johnson and other musicians. Woods Mande Campbell, Mrs. Helen Owley and other musicians, Mrs. Bob Johnson cannot be forged by the Georghis. The gang with her visit to the show and she and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mr. J. Owley. The gang says I am all in.
"Rarth" to Go, "the black and white band," has many old timers in its cast, Joe Forrester McClain, Tim and Gertie Moore, Jimmy Ferguson, Gladys Simcoe, and a chorus of neat, pretty browns, Larry Attrey, Edna Davis, Louis Larwer, Patrice Albus Flaherty and Alain Sutton. The musical numbers were staged by the band and I saw "Lucky Sambo," too. The better advantages to display ability and talent, and dox. Act at town to town. Nat Cash on his way East. Beesley in her day, is now the radio queen of New York for broadcasting, and now leaving for New York to make a record for the job as orchestra leader at the Globe, has indeed made neat and clean music, having remodeled the ensembles.
We are headed for a short distance, and the managers who failed to land this attraction tell you why. There is one great thing Georgia ministries, it is the original and most well-known, a year on a board of weekly, and always in milestone form. But after it is just a minstrel.
THE 101 BUNCH
Well, we are well again from old Archie Wheeler was late last week and he had some news to let across. He wrote in William Stewart, and he says it is some news he has had since he was in Mason, band leader, and a few other musicians had the pleasure of visiting pans and they bought a few instruments, too. He wrote in Mrs. Jasper and Mrs. Corrine Jauch and Jerry Martin. They were plazy Dickland Minstrels. At Milwaukee, Ki. George Christian was not a Negro. He took a trip home in Iowa, but he is now in New York to hear from Shotton Kramy. He says that he intends to get married and they say hello to all friends. Slim Bit Chick Shimson is getting some hot tunes out of his trombone. Charlie Couss has his home town, Buddy Helma in Couss says he wants Hello, Jillie K. Davis of the town, Mrs. Bessie Alter, wife of F. Alter, the sleepover man, was taken to the town to watch the bunch all wish a speed recyco Carrie Methode Sarah Methode Tillman, Battie Jackson and Baby Moose, who have had great success this season.
EMPEROR JONES IN LONDON
"Emperor" Jones premier aumpied
graded as an artistic triumph by the
newspaper. However, and despite Paul
hardly survive, West end box office
support to give it a run.
Where to Buy OKeh Race Records
COLUMBIA WHEEL
LUCKY SAMBO-Whitman and Leggett. Gaundre. Saunders other students. We will be presenting this week. Gayetty theater, Buffalo, N. Y.
RARIN' TO GO-Black and white recite with half of cast of the Race. Play on week at Empire theater, Tolio, Ohio.
JACK REID'S SHOW- Black and white recite, with half of company of Race members. Playing this week at Drake and Walker's bunch with this outfit.
SEVEN-ELEVEN SHOW-Full Race members. Playing at Academy theater, Richmond, Va., and Academy, Norfolk, Va.
SLIDING BILLY WATSON-Brooks and Blank's Whirlwind Four. Open week.
We will be pleased to hear from any Race artists traveling over this circuit. We desire to compile a full listing of our artists and will provide routes weekly.
LINGOLN THEATER
MAY CHANGE HANDS
THE FLORIDA BLOSSOMS
Drew, Miss.-Florida Blossoms Minneapolis, MN. Drew was a member of Delta of Missions. We have got a good show and a real band. Prof. E. Nelson's men's team from corns to drums. Robert Ferebee, stage manager, has added some men's team from corns to drums. Rustus Smith is knocking 'em out with his song and dance. In the Jail, Daniel Daniel, with Rock Markham, Daniel Daniel, with Rock Markham, Lucie Nelson, leadin' lady, and Theresa Nelson, Jeffie Williams, Jenna Carter. That closed the last act, which allowed all to friends in and out of the progression. Lamarri Buck, Nelson says hello. Wendy and Elonzo Williams write sometimes.
KNICKERROCKER GIRLS COMPANY
Amnee Johnson's Knickerbocker girls are playing the Palace theater. Mr. Johnson is the owner of this group, leaves the show from this stand, to speak at the Milton Museum, now attendling school in Boston, Mass. Signs of Houston, Texas.
The company is now traveling in Walter Rector's Packard touring car.
Walker Thomas Furniture Co.
1013 7th St. N. W. Washington, D.C.
Goo. W. Thomas Music Co.
1428 Brownsville, IL.
Rialto Music Shop
330 S. State St.....Chicago, IL.
Dachtera Brothers
1601 W. Lake St.....Chicago, IL.
Burdette Brothers
1117 Cohort Grove, IL.
Rittera Music Shop
1654 W. Madison St.....Chicago, IL.
Vito Lunette
403 W. Oak St.....Chicago, IL.
Oden Music Shop
1344 S. Halsted St.....Chicago, IL.
Jay Lunette
4509 Alexander Ave. E. Chicago, Ind.
Dixie Music Co.
609 S. Rampart St. New Orleans, La.
Morris Music Shop
746 S. Rampart St. New Orleans, La.
Music Shop
2318 Davison Ave. Detroit, Mich.
Melody Music Shop
1529 Hastings St. Detroit, Mich.
New York Music Store
2341 Hastings St. Detroit, Mich.
B. & F. Music Shop
1510 Chene St.....Detroit, Mich.
Madison Recorder
325 Mt. Madison, Detroit, Mich.
Sara
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925
BY BILLY E. JONES
T. O. B. A. NOTES
MAGGIE JONES TO T. O. B. A.
is helene,
Williams,
Nashville, Tenn. (Special to the De-
partment of Maggie Jones, Columbia re-
cord artist, will be presenting the boards of
the OKH Race Records circuit. This information has just been
given to him. President Jones, Nashville,
having been out of the city for the past
long, large interplanting circuit
the show. Miss Jones is a newcomer on the T.
Rocky Mountain Railroad Reporter,
Miss. Moss, Columbia record artist will
only be a matter of time when the
popular Columbia record artist will be
touring the big circuit. And there are
many, all of whom are making huge
successes season after season.
OKH Race Records
Co.
n.D.C.
Russian Music Store
3507 Hastings St., Detroit, Mich.
igo, Il. Harmony Shop
igo, Il. 2604 St. Antoine St..Detroit, Mich.
igo, Il. Bailey Song Shop
igo, Il. 1913 St. Antoine St..Detroit, Mich.
igo, Il. Pastime Music Shop
igo, Il. 2339 Market St..St. Louis, Mo.
igo, Il. Centreville Drug Store
igo, Il. Centreville Mississippi
igo, Il. Gressett Music Shop
igo, Il. Meridian Mississippi
igo, Il. J. A. Abrams
igo, Il. Guitport Mississippi
igo, Il. Columbia Music Shop
igo, Il. 451 Michigan Ave..Buffalo, N. Y.
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 26. 1925
W'EN
(Hy Request)
Wen ah hamm hawny, let me sing
Ma sunshine eeah eeahthing,
Jes let me laf laf dance, shout
Jes let me laf laf dance, shout
distribute ma gladness,
Shake the hand down on me
'N cloud de dawn sadness.
Wen ah hamm lazy, let me lean
Ma line dandelin in de dream,
Feel de fish, or graph肌!
Jes feel de fish, or graph肌!
What more could he be within?
Jes so kins kins ah fish肌!
Wen ah workin' workin', de da way
Don't poster me wild questions
Ah needs to dismimm,
N needs to dismimm,
Oh debil, salir sin nim肌,
Ma only prayer is to be spared
Wen ah hawny, let me re
Side ma hann-made cabin,
Wen ah hawny, let me re
Side ma hann-made cabin,
Wen ah hawny, let me re
Side ma hann-made cabin,
Frequent Bilious Attacks
"SMARTER SET" COMPANY PLAYING TO BIG BUSINESS
Tabloid Led by the Kings of Laughers to visit All Important Cities
Nashville, Penn—Labor day, Sept. 7, 2013. Theaters, the Lafayette, housing such an attraction as the famously known Turtles, whose number some or many, whose artist number some or many, whose seance was nothing short of being a unanimous success, and the reviewer criticism on the show spoke a word of high praise for it, going so far as saying that it had secured another season's success. In addition to this the city of Nashville's theater beautiful, secured the show for a week's run. Here again the press came out in high praise for the show's show in the New York Amsterdam Theater, which followed in the Sept. 10 show. Tutt succeeded in assembling a fine team should meet with favor wherever they appear. What Waltney and Tutt should meet with favor wherever that has ever done into the Lafayette theater, and some day we hope to see
The show will play the following episodes: *The Maker*, week of Sept 28; *Hilary M. Miller*, week of Sept 28; *Broadway*, Feb. 14; *Filmore*, week of Oct. 12, and other prominent cities to play.
W'EN
Sh distribute ma gladness,
Sh distribute ma calmness
Sh de day de warm sadness.
N 'watch de sunset dabble;
N 'watch de sunset dabble;
De wounds 'n hils wild coat we gol;
De wounds 'n hils wild coat we gol;
N 'tek a skew twilight knot not hot;
Please, night! give lack mae mverin';
Wherne but, but God kin heaam;
Wherne but, but God kin heaam;
Dore let me poah out all ma wee,
Dore let me poah out all ma wee;
Ser I use done Iarned folks ain't con
To bother wud ma sorr;
Dore's all got troubles joes lak mine;
Dore's all got troubles joes lak mine;
Wen al ahm passin', please do ask
Me how ane (eena 'bout dyn';
Wen ane alhm passin', please do ask
Dat shall be tired a fryin';
—S. T. Whitney.
BAINES BROTHERS CLOSE
SUGGESSFUL FAIR SEASON
The Gaines Brothers' novel act dates this season for the R. F. Ketch offices, which will be Conticoook, N. J. and have worked fair dates for the Keth offices and they have met with guests who have already signed fair dates for them their fair date on Sept. 25, after which time they will start on their forty-ninth theater, Haverford, Mass. Their cast will be recent milenium and they are now ready to start over their new routes. They will play in a layoff, which means more for an act especially a pretty act. They are always glad to hear from their friends and addresses: Gilden Olympic, Iroston, N. J.; Bloque Theater, Bangor.
---
"I suffered with severe bili-
lious attacks that came on two
or three times each month,"
says Mr. J. P. Nevins, of
Lawrenceburg, Ky. "I would
have nauseated. I would have
dizziness and couldn't work.
I would take pills until I was
worn out with them. I didn't
seem to get relief.
"A neighbor told me of
Liver Medicine
and I began it. I never have found so much relief have found so much relief be without it for anything. It seemed to cleanse my whole system and made me feel like new. I would take a few minutes to have my usual clear head, feel full of pep, and could do twice the work". "Seasonal" are "seasonal" with many people. Millions have taken Theodore's Black-Draught to ward off such attacks, and the good news is that should induce you to try it.
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SOLID gold efforts
20 years. Likely an
adult. Advised for
a basic arsenal.
William
dollar, dollar.
A NOTE OR TWO
The Plantation Days company still meets with success. They are playing this week at the Pantagore theater, Naomi and her Nuts are playing this week at the Pantagore theater, Kansas Gulfport and Brown are doing their week at the Pantagore theater in Jalmah and trade are playing this week at the Trolli theater, Chicago. Their act—meeting with actors from the largest photoyal剧院 in the Windy City. The Southern Harmony Four are playing their show in the Hip-Hop theater, Cleveland, Ohio. The White-Wind Four are playing their show with the Sliding Billy Wagon show and are meeting with the Star and Garler theater, Chicago.
Sadie Montemory writes that she
was a member of the Akin
theater, Saphnipha, GA.
Ralph and Tekes McNease are doing the show. Shu Shi shu company and are playing Washington 1. C. They wish Capi Mace Kemp a speedy recovery. He is doing this week at the Strand theater at the Grand Central hotel, Sint and Michigan. Mr. Charles Anderson has been so badly treated in these columns because he was a Russian - 1 rush in and 1 rush out. However, in the future he may rest asleep. Brown and Slinken are doing their show at the State of Oklahoma. Miss Brown is doing hers with her snakes - too long to watch. Things over. They have been playing to Duke Johnson wants it understood that he does not own Perris Family's control one theater, the One-Man Quad theater. The Dialy Syncopeurs were a big hit at the California fair last week and can make a hit wherever they show. Bill E. Jones, the New York yodeler, is doing two new parks - N. J., introducing two new shows and "Sweet Georgia Brown." He is making quite a success. The yodeler and Oke record star, is doing his this week the Hippodrome theater, Richmond. W
ALABAMA MINSTREL NOTES
This week brought us both its joys and sorrows. We played Monroe, La., and away business of the first right the management deemed it wise to cancel for a second engagement in Monroe. We had a night's business as good or better than the first. This being the home of the business, we had that he went over with a bang. The two days spent in Monroe. The writer met a few old friends, among them the most nearly furnished drug stores in the city. He did not fail to quench his thirst with soft drink—we never take the strong soda we used in our New Dodge sedan to air around in. After we had tramped under the rays of Old Chicago we were some. So Dave Watts, hostess Stirner, Upton Williams, Vernon Hughes, Dilk Jackson, Terrence Erickson, personalists extraordinary, all went over great in Monroe and left a lasting impression.
Carlton (Rastus) Adara Wedded
Ed Lee's Passing
BOB HAYES ON ROAD
Hib Inyay, Chicago, one of the chief players of the World's Greatest Weekly and one of the best plighters for the defense for the Actors' union for His Honor has many friends both in and out of the profession and is known through Bob. Bob is missed at his usual post in the Windy City, but nevertheless we wish
JOHNNY HUDGINS, COMEDIAN,
LEAVES CLUB ALABAM REVUE
New York, Feb. 26 - Versatile Johnny Holiday holds the win, which for six months has been stunned in the Clint Eastwood film. The film will not for a while at least -entertaining Broadway night pleasure guests with the performance. The performances -Sunday night term-
A
JOHNNY HUDGINS
This fact became known after Thurday's announcement in his resignation and immediately announced that he had signed a contract in a review at the famous Cotton club, 142d St. and Lenox Ave, which is to be paid for a $500 a week. The club, which has been closed for a period, will open early. Just what caused Mr. Hudkins to suddenly suspend his contract, but it is known that Ruth Cherry, Hazel Coles, Amy Maytes, James Bean, and another employee have been employed there since performers of four group invaded the club, resigned. Among other performers scheduled to perform at the club are Mildred Martine Hodge, wife of Mr. Hudgens; Blanche Thomas, Maud Thomas; four quartets; and Clarence Robinson.
BECK AND WALKER'S MINSTRELS
Pewes, Williams writes that they were born in September 12 at Pochau. They played to a full house. The orchestra with the tenors they laid off on Sunday in Grey Belfast, the symphony orchestra to a most appreciative audience. Tuesday at Worcester we had the few face people getting ready for the show. We had a large audience of Mexicans, all through the stage. They had good business in Loveland. They took over at the high school auditorium, played at the high school new theater. Here they marked them in like sardines and business was good. They here and pointed out a number of old landmarks and places they had been and the march after the show and the boys really stare at them went along. There were a number of folks who were really out there. In Loveland the gang stopped at a home-cooking bake doing magic. Pewes says he would appear like these folks. This show made that grub fade away. Mail will be sent to all at 41 W. Slim Street City, Iowa.
WHITMAN WITH "LUCKY SAMBO"
OUR STAGE FOLKS
An artist playing in your town?
Come, and my performance see;
Let not your face upon me frown.
A. Good. Wibber.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
MUSICIANS ARRESTED AT
REDONDO BEACH, CALIF
Residents Petition City Officials to Withdraw All Race Professionals
Los Angeles, Calif.—Three members of the Redondo Beach Ballet dance hall at the Redondo Beach dance hall rallied to delinquency of several minor white girls.
Residents Henry of Redondo Beach is making an investigation to obtain additional information from other white girls concerning the three incidents and G. L. Hampion. The men are now arrested and the court ordered the arrest was brought about by an investigation carried out by Police. The girls exchanged notes with white girls at a rate in Redondo Beach afterwards in Los Angeles. The arrest says that he men can take the girls to take the girls in Los Angeles.
Residents of Redondo Beach are hurt due to the condition that has arisen, and refuse permission to lice bands and entertainers to play or entertain in Shaw, Strange and ifampton; when arranged before Justice Moyle, phased the minors white girls and were sentenced to one of the men confessed that he gave the girls liquor and that frenewed the girls' grooming of white girls on the streets.
MAIL RADIO
We are about to call your attention over it carefully and see if you have any mail. We will return a bunch of mail called for this week. We must make a call to keep the department up to the minute, one is given a fair chance and four weeks is sufficient time for anyone to keep this department up to the minute, and for promptly. Please be sure when sending for your mail that you allow a few days when forwarding a letter to this department in case the letter is not called for. These are all important items coming through this department. Now if we can't do a little better this week.
Albert, Mary
Anderson, C. R.
Craig, M. R.
Gunn, R. R.
Brommer, Helen
Brommer, Helen
Raker, Josephine
Bush, Ralph
Bush, Ralph
Bomask, M. Alice
Bomask, M. Alice
Brown, Betries
Brown, Betries
Basketball, Jimmie F.
Basketball, Jimmie F.
Right, Jerry
Stacey, Jerry
Boklin, Arthur L.
Boklin, Arthur L.
Interbanks and Susie
Boklin, Arthur L.
Brown, Herman
Brown, Herman
We are about to call your attention over it carefully and see if you have any mail. We will return a bunch of mail called for this week. We must make a call to keep the department up to the minute, and for promptly. Please be sure when sending for your mail that you allow a few days when forwarding a letter to this department in case the letter is not called for. These are all important items coming through this department. Now if we can't do a little better this week.
Albert, Mary
Anderson, C. R.
Craig, M. R.
Gunn, R. R.
Brommer, Helen
Brommer, Helen
Raker, Josephine
Bush, Ralph
Bush, Ralph
Bomask, M. Alice
Bomask, M. Alice
Brown, Betries
Brown, Betries
Basketball, Jimmie F.
Basketball, Jimmie F.
Right, Jerry
Stacey, Jerry
Boklin, Arthur L.
Boklin, Arthur L.
Interbanks and Susie
Boklin, Arthur L.
Brown, Herman
Brown, Herman
We are about to call your attention over it carefully and see if you have any mail. We will return a bunch of mail called for this week. We must make a call to keep the department up to the minute, and for promptly. Please be sure when sending for your mail that you allow a few days when forwarding a letter to this department in case the letter is not called for. These are all important items coming through this department. Now if we can't do a little better this week.
Pohlen, Anna
Pohlen, Anna
Cockburn, Lily
Cockburn, Lily
Climson, Lily
Climson, Lily
Chamman, Ada
Chamman, Ada
Cobb, Iora Mae
Cobb, Iora Mae
Cormier, Theo
Cormier, Theo
Crousey, Lilie
Crousey, Lilie
Carter, Marie
Carter, Marie
Dutton, G. W.
Dutton, G. W.
Hudson, J. Jr.
Hudson, J. Jr.
Reppold, Anna Mae
REV W. A WHITE
Send-No Money If your nearest dealer hasn't this Paramount record, check No. 12302 on the coupon below. Send no money! Pay the postman 75 cents for each record plus small C. O. D. fee, when he delivers them. We pay postage and insurance on orders for more than one record.
Paramount The Popular Race Record
REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.
THE MUSICAL
BUNCH
By DAVE PEYTON
Walter Dyatt is the leader of the house of the Mills, a group ofrons of this house well supplied with his tools. Will Volder's hand is doing its stuff. He is also sharing house with Miss Florence Mills.
IN NEW YORK
'MONSIEUR DON.' A NEW PLAY
New York. - Florene Ziegler made an contract with the playwright, who is now working as an employee at the New York theater. The day that Mr. Ziegler returned from Europe he was surprised to have been told that he was a man a playwright, carefully tried and set up in conventional form. "What?这 asked the "Folies" product.
"It's a play that I wrote. Mr. Ziegfeld," said Edwards as they passed between floors—"a serious play."
twelve floors" so serious play
"Mr. Ziefeld, 'to musical cinema'," add
Mr. Ziefeld, "to musical cinema"
"I know, sir," persisted Edwards, "and
I wish you would read this and give me
the signing of the correct today is
the result of Mr. Ziefeld's reading
The hero is a great musician. The
author got his inspiration from a
book he read near the stars." Mr. Edwards has another play entitled "The Third Ride."
TWO SHOT IN THEATER
Pank reigned last Saturday night at Cincinnati, Ohio, when a pirate who jumped to his feet and fired five shots struck the truck by the flying bullets and Free La Joe narrowly missed death when he hit his head and gave him a permanent brain injury. He was seriously injured. The wild man and as yet has not been arrested.
Something Special!
12301 — Somebody's Always Talking About Me and Sit Down, Sit Down, I Can't Sit Down — a wonderful new spiritual by the famous Norfolk Jubilee Quartette
You All Know "Preacher White"
THOUSANDS of you know and love Chicago's noted pastor, Reverend William Arthur White. Ever since the old days when he was the "boy evangelist", he has been "Preacher White" throughout the Middle West and South. Now, in his great Paramount Record No. 12302, he solves the question of evolution — the great religious topic that so stirred the country just a few weeks ago. Be sure to get this record — you'll never grow tired of it.
12292—You Must Have True Religion and Walk In Jerusalem Just Like John, Sunset
Four Jubilee Quartette.
12285—Oh Lord What a Morning and Hand Me Down The Silver Trumpet, Sunset
Jubilee Quartette.
12274—Twenty Third Palm and Lord's Prayer, Rev. Cook with J. Wesley Jones and Community Choristers and Lift Up Your Heads, Prof. J. Wesley Jones and Community Choristers.
12234—Where Shall I Be and I'm Gonna Build Right On Dat Shore, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12035—Father Prepare Me and My Lord's Gonna Move. This Wicked Race, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12073—When All The Saints Come Marching In and That Old Time Religion, Paramount Jubilee Singers.
[Iay Brothers]
McKenna
McKenna, Sheila
Mountain, James
Morris, Morris A.
Morris, A. A.
Nering, Miss Wille B
Neering, Florence
Pearl
12302—Divine Relationship of Man to God and Prayer, Rev. W. A. White.
BRAGG'S BRAGS
The doers are not the dreamers,
The dreamers are not the dreamers,
Men who think much dream little.
Day dreams come from day sleep-
one cannot think and dream at the
one can dream the happenings of
one What some people call dreams are
not dreams, but are thoughts and
I never dreamed even of a sweet-
heart, neither matter of the things he
is thinking about before he goes to
My most recent dreams came after
I had eaten a large dinner of heavy
Dreams are not the result of a clear
body, but of a disturbed mind or
body.
Dreams are sometimes pretty and are generally sentimental, but who wants them? Do not confuse thoughts with dreams; plan your dreams, but we can confuse thoughts.
one who occupies his mind with leisure, one who takes good care of his health well, sleep well and little. A reminder that dreams come not when one is sound asleep, but come when the mind is passing through a state of consciousness to consciousness, a state of consciousness in old days that were worthy of thought and consideration, but we need not be so concerned when we need to join in Biblical days we need not today. Some people claim that their dreams come true. Even at that the percentage of dreams that come true is large that it does not pay them to think about the few that occasionally come. When I had cchaismatian I dreamed of a pleasant night. Every time I would awaken after a pleasant nap, it would have a terrible dream, something shocking, that would make me feel awake. That I could not feel when asleep, but I could not be untreated to the real-Thomas C. I. Ranger Washington, D. C. Office Manager
STEWARD'S STEWINGS
FATS HOLLERS
WILLIAMS & TAYLOR IN LONDON
Word has reached us on that William
Halliday, England, cleaned up with their
London, England, theatrical empire theatr
last week, week after the empire theatr
appeared in front of the house hoteler
with a good reputation and it is safe
with a good reputation and it is one of
the most successful for them.
SWANEE SYNCOPATORS
The Swance symcoopators, which is a white organization playing the Kelvin's role, are the organizers of Davis, is some organization. They are using two kids of the group, who are the following to say regarding the kids: a 6-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy, and women, is mentored by his sister of about the age of everything stone cold.
"TOO BAD." NEW SHOW FROM COHEEN'S WORK
**Book by J. A. Shipp and Abbie Mitchell With Music by Basha and Haywood**
What has been renamed a musical façade, and tentatively called "The Rod" is being made for stage presentation by the musical group Octavus Roy Colen that have appeared in serials like "The co-work of J. A. Shipp and Abbie Mitchell" music by Louis Collins, and "The comes by Will Marion Cook" lyrics by Leslie Collins, and "The semiches by Will Marion Cook" dance by Louis Collins and Leonard Harper, and producing and staging the concert, now is staged to October 26 in Incheon. The show is going to have a little of everything, according to the presidents of the festival, and dancing and choreography, a "super-jazz" orchestra, plantation songs and ench
WALTER RICHARDSON
CHIRPING IN CHICAGO
Walter Hilchardson, the bartender at the Hollywood club of New York city and the Hollywood club of New York, where he demonstrated the new song hits, after closing his company, is holding his own at the Entertainers' Hall, many friends in the Windy City—and his comedy, "Moldyland," which will be the theater on Monday evening. Sept. 25.
ORPHEUM IN NEWARK
The Orchestra theater in Newark, N.J., is hosting Whitney, who is going over the top and putting on a show this week. Whitney and Turtles now show "Nonsense," went over big, big plays. Whitney's New Revue, which is credited with being played in turn-away business, Oceans and Jetties and Bob Bramlett all good hitters and come in for a share of the best this season, and it is easy to state attraction this season.
NEW ROAD SHOW
A vaudeville road show, assembled
conjunction with Jimmy Cooper, former
barrissaw producer, is being
theatered of the country at 20 cents o'clock.
Feature billing is divided between
"Sally" Shammy, the kid actor formerly
with "Our Gang" comedies. Six other
compete the remainder of the
show.
BROWN AND MARGUERITE IN N. Y.
After a successful season if ten
women win, the team moves to
City, Brown and Marguerite, the whirl-
dance dancers, motivated to New York
Swimming club for an indefinite stay.
Swimming club for an indefinite stay.
week. They report a very five season
at the shore and send best regards
to their coaches. In addition, they
fession. Mail will reach them at
13th St. New York city, care Davis
LEWIS THOMAS DIES
Mrs. Jennie Woods, pianist at the Star theater of Pittsburgh, has the starred role in her book in and out of the profession in the recent death of pianist Jennie Woods of San Antonio, Ohio.
DEATHS
A telegram to the theatrical department this week advises us of the death of actor Elijah Ehl, D. L. Elo, the veteran showman, owner and manager of the famous playwright's home in Alexandria, Ia., on Saturday. He was stricken in Lexington, Ky., the show was playing last June. He was to close his show, to close his show, sending all his prope to storage. He was rushed to hospital. He had operated in his time house in Texas, Louisiana and other states and had been a redline showman in the business.
BROKE UP HOUSEKEEPING
"We had to break up housekeeping because of my wife's stomach trouble, more than a few hours. On a visit to Oshkosh a friend praised Mayra's wonderful Remedy so highly my wife of health since taking it." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the throat and inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One all drugstores have money refunded. All drugstores.—Ady.
PART 1—PAGE 7
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Fall & Winter
BARGAIN
SALE
2.98
ForAll
Three
Three-Day
No Extra Charge
for Stouts
Sizes 32
to
53
BUST
Made of
ARTIMA
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3 Gowns for Only $2.98
SALE
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URINARY
‘St. James Beats Detroit Church Champions
UICAGO DEF FENDER SPORTS YOUNG DUDLEY |28&Stamcing/CLEVELAND IS.
; * x * * a : * cs : Californian Puts Up SWEET FAILS : Sohmson Whitt 16 to
‘Kansas City and St. Louis Split) °°" | TORETURNTO| “|
RAIN HALTS
TEAMS AFTER.
GAME PLAY
Bt Louis, Mo, Monday. Sent. 20.
—Rain halted tho third famo here
“petween the Kansas City Monarchs
and the St. Louis Stars, who are
“fighting It obt, the best five out of
nine games ta decide which of tho
Two clubs shall meet Willdate for the
orld series, which opens in the
West, either here or in Kansas Clty.
jon Oot 1. ‘
On Saturday Mendez sent Bullot
* Ronan against the heme club and
Kaneas Gity left tho field victors,
Bto 6. The car-barn wall in short
let. field, instead of proving
hamper to the visiting team, wae
more of an aid to them than to St.
Toute. Allen, Moore and Duncan
of the visitors knocked homers on
top of it.
‘On Sunday St. Louis, with Mavis
pitching masterful bail for cirht
Grames, packed him up with some
‘of the most superb flelding ever seen
‘fn "any diamond, Wells, Bell and
Flarsell taking the most desperato
- chances 10 make play,
The play by play wilt be found tn
-gnother column. ‘The box corre:
SATURDAY'S GAME
KANSAS CITY
AB. RH PACE.
Yohnaten HF vaseaca 8 9 19° 9 6
Aiton 2 riot 8 33-26 0
Moore #8 cvssase 8 22730
Soreph Sb cts 40 00 5 O
Mothell cf casas 3 12:10 0
Rogen p sccm. 3818 2 8
MeNainrisccsnce 2 01200
Hawking 1b cccs 4 0 016 0 0
Dunean'e sta. $215 10
Totals ....---/-- 35 81027 7 0
—— St Pos.
; AB. RH RAE,
Bel cf eesescemee FES TO
Wells se ssccsce $2 2.2 5 2
Bobo tb 223) 4 0 243 0.8
Barnes Csaseel 411210
Greacy Sb"weiaus 31:04 2 0
“Russell rf ccas 401705
Redus Wf .lco=q 4 1110 8
Watts 26002 301474
Hensley pias. 00.0 0-40
Sots secon 7 8 0 9:0 0
Miller p'csccc 2 9 6 9 10
Murray Lic 7 8 0 8 Oo
Totals 1.2... 34 6 97 18 8
“Batted far Hensley in third.
“Batted for Watts in ninth
Kansas City 201 100 121-3
Be Louis .7-2:000 303 110-8
~Fwo-base hit—Johnston._ Three-
{base hite--Moore, Barnes, Home rune
‘Hore Allens Walle Struck out —
iy Rogan, 5: by Honsley. 1: by Mil-
Tey, 2 "Bases on balle—O# Hogan, 2:
-of Hensley, 2: off Miller 2. Hit by
‘Sitcher—-Rogan. Double plays—Watts
49 Wells to Bobo (2); Allen to Haw:
Kenai Moore so. Alle, to) Having
jie—Off Rogan, 81 of Hensley, 41
oH Miller, 2
+ toe SUNDAY'S GAME ____
io RANSES CITY.
“ ‘AB. RH. P.A.E,
Wonneton Was $F 11 OO
‘Ailen 2b os 000 2 8
dweph Sess 43 8 8 3 0
‘{Mothell <f “3 1 210 0
IMeNair ff 4 0 230 0
Hawkins 15 7o— 3 0 11 OG
Foreman o---—— 40 0 5 0 0
Dean’ p a 1 9 00 Oo
Mendez Parc 0 0001 0
Drake pos 211070
SRopan wc © 100 OO
Folate wesscsseee 3 392610 4
No
i AB. RH PAE
8. Boll of 225 0 6
Ruatle’ om. 3 8 E SF 8
{Bobo 1b ows 3 3 3:8 0 0
[Moray "ns 411-6 2 0
HGreacy Secamen $8 TTT 8
iRussell ef => 2:00 20 0
|Redus tf cosa.q 4 0 27 0 0
Watts 2b"-osna 4 1 1:0 00
\Davie pasos 40 1:07 0
Miller p Tonsss=as 0 0.0.00 0
Totals -ovenzcong 38 61127 11 0
Batted’ for Wendez in aixth
|Kaneae City 000 070 077-3
nt, Lovie ---- 0.02 121 0078
<< Two-base hite—Watin, Hawking,
rpree-base hit—NMgore. Home rune
Murray. Drake. Stolen brecr—Bell
(2). Struck. cut—By Davis, 3: by
Bean, 31 by Drake, 2: by. Millers 2
Bases cn. balle—OW Davie, 2: ‘off
Dean, 3: off Drake, 2: off Miller. 0.
Wild’ pitches—Dean, Brake, Double
lays—Wella to Creacy; Moore to
“Fiavikines Allen to Mosre to. Hawking.
Hite—OW Davis, 9: off Miller, O: off
Dean, 7: off Mendez. 1: off Drake,
Galloway, Star Lineman,
Last to Towa Eleven
Jowa Cl, Sept 2—te Drow at-
"Jon ats Gla" to ave: been one nf the
‘eat Yinemen on the Criversity: af tesa
SESE Sear and Te pronaby mie
fogged, sospeaing fe rivticne 7
Breakdown and hax heen Srdered te
‘ie a long rostat an Arizona san!”
from
“Fils will no doubt prove a errat ext
pack to" coach Burton Ingwersa wits
Bia noned cop the Dig Fen tie Te
Seiioway was one of Mis mist pony:
» ng Huemen, er
NG during, the, Manton
Son" rarwe for htmselt ua’ played
Frnporiane part in alding ‘his team tw
important Ter
At Maquoketa, Jowa, Sept. 16.
wna:
J Gitserson Glantn 019 680 ROR TE
TRE SN ceton ono dorm t
Geweries—Waiker and Young: Be-
eer ee chadienberea®,
KANSAS CITY-ST. LOUIS GAMES
PLAY BY PLAY
Oe Ez
aN : You"CAN BRING
RUTH WITH THE
* RUGEER TOOTH
GUT Don't GRING/
ee
o f Sty
tip eerk ¥Z
A = phe
Ss t
es
’ 7
B® ge fA iki
ep EIN cree”
SSS aS
SATURDAY'S GAME.
Kanean Clis—Rabe made a nice top
of Gotinnon's Ermer and Neat Se
C6 Ane Rae or She dete ons Aiton ot
ioe icles 9 foil then singted ce
tee, ehh ie ea tee ana ane Stoo
Itltved to rights ering ‘Alen doen
Ment out, Watts to Basher white Mfonte
Trammell’ Wate’ crete out "Mothel
Be ninealten threw nue felt Well
touted of Bvo. Seatehed, 3 ball Haat Ws
StSamoeds Reson caneared Teh
Efounier'se’ uc hounded yn ka owe ni
ead'ana thee him eu to Slawkinee
‘Second Inning
Kansan, City—Rocan bent out a RI
tel Wel in deep ehort, Ste Nate macet
Reeds bremaing” 30" Roby Ifat
Fargo" Rene? whe." fumbiea
Feeder” nunrtn yarged shartty ts
atin, and! Warts to Wells. te itabe
led “tinwkinn at second ‘and: Domest
ataaie
I auleatoore ta Hawking, die
pened “Gt Rramess ‘Gene lea
Biota “and “MieStabe went” BACK and
ite in Raseeltn aie.
Third ening
aneag cts_Wattn throw out Soh
stares Salen poted ane: om top ot the
Car barns a Jet field. for a home rh,
Sidon Fame eketl hack. at ten rhe
ier" his delves weaen ‘was Iapeied Thre
bases, but the Stare’ outfielder bung
Shrew ane ball er the ‘earch Joeenh
SIT auliceMeNate took tn Redus®
Sit aulimaTeNete took in Redus* fi
aeatie Sincica fo Were he Batten 1
Hareb "and “nonce. nts ala
Fourth Inning
Kansan cigeMiler pitching for St
Inuis, ‘Stothel walked and stole second,
Ueeaes ares cue Hasan Crency ren
Sue sities Wale creca on Haein
Geligr ana atethel scored Huw
Eenthed spoon gate thea Wat
ironed Rarnes pe Diincarr hit shar
to vWelts nnd Tiawkine was. out te
Genes,
SEL ute Moore theese aut Rett
swelis eiquted ea tole, Moore mea beat
Taser Wells stealing: and” Koko hi
Ferouch short. ‘Rocanveaugh Tint a
Hated off rst on a say tient ta Taw
Kine “Barnes "einie, which Sea
could suet Rarely ct his Aer tine on
Soored Welle Creare walked, ose
Sound tp rien and arnow nnd Creacy
SSoreds Siten threw: out Reds
Fitth Inning ‘
| Kansan citz"Jonneton fanned. Wells
to Reba" led alten Watte to Boh
tnged Stoore, :
ee NiieeAlion, threw out “Waite.
Jeseph throw out Miller, Bell was
SicR oat Sh atthe
sixth. inning
Kanean, Gxs—tosenh Miedo Ted
austhel singled to ernten theca hi
Ita daub neta Weetie to Robin
"Sule irene hik’x hate ‘run om
ten ofthe ear arn im lett eld and
la Sho 'seore. “Bao ‘enced. Mogan
Since tuo eteatgne ontrikes over van
Einrmes who, then he ttn x anuble nin
3Yeore’ to cAllen. to" Hawkins. Soren
thew’ ouk Gress.
aoe “Seventh inning
Kakineas Cly—AMcNalr angled to tel
ami’ ale” secend "atier. Tnwinn” ad
Rpned’vy Wars. “MeNaie rot ered
For't'tsoton base’ ghat didnt icon to
imbue for the’ slownees of Sheri
We the Giuent <ft hese’and Miter tg
Hope to, Walia: cot, tera in mente 6
Teme whan wee Went to te MeN
Eitean jure Where Seale wares, Retine
Nia atouna im unean forced. Sez
Rahs ae Meds Weile to eeaey om n
Pant play: ohinaton doubled eff ine eat
Ehen?ieaih ang ibunean, neared, ohne
Hon was out tying to strekch it into &
Upeelbager,
Se Pable Russet wae called gut on
aifiken’ Redan aaieds, Salen Bie te
oranh who amadn'a lee mine to gee
HeSdrad hin an tne Se. Fb
Ioan ae tats nea made
Zant “Sulier nit'te Allen, Who Touched
Eremd and unren do iiawkine Tors
Sounte nis.
Etahth toning
Kansae Cig Sttien” rneied, to, rizht
ech ad en eta nec” Mona
ica tha ballon top of the car varne
Tor a home rin. senrie Allen Antal of
Riincele afer “threte oan “een
RE nied en we Roan whe
SieXate Meiked: “eli ronted Duncan of
SGN ance eaten fn center
8 Oe die Belh heat Soke hi to
sane! Heit reached daecend wile Joe
BERR newt un Wes teh went eo
ining, enn, wit tek’ and scored” ng
Hote ringio im cemtat. “loseh toreed
tot Rntnee.” Creney was eniiad ot on
ae ee
Inth Inning
Kannan u—inineam fated a homer
ont tapnt the ear atm in eter, Tone
Stan cWae out when fie ome tothe wal
For?wis' agin comer Allen Seen mit
Shute’co Robes Men ‘led co tones.
A funeesiawiane Ienocked Hove
rela tote an haw him og ae
wat Hedi vent out dosent ta Hawes
dine. "Murray neten, for Watts and
Meanie made. mise MAY of hin rele
And tare him cut’ to Wawkine, enelng
he sere game of ye seriew In favor of
Winans City 8 to 6
tall eleven fepresenting the Huntsville | Harti
path ee falas, aura
at the ‘Nerth Alabama Colored Pair, {2nd
Biri Sane raret cee | on
Cc, |. GIANTS. {Wr the
City Island, N.Y. Sept. 25.—The |Attorn
cigs Spina Bands’ norea out the: Pree= [ho
sie hs anne TAP e [ets
EASY PAYMENTS AREN'T EASILY COLLECTED By Rogers
Es, ; i SSS
EyTHAT Nous eee: Youre Moose on Yes | ——=
EILAST NIGHT =1 WAS PaSsiNG 1 REMEMBER Now {TSS AND THAT NOSE
HLeY, AND suc encxtn ceone Ly siknow 1 Boucnt A EESI] 2 eg MOS Just THE
FROM YouR PLACE SOUNDED LIKE #200 RADIO SET- ON 08 : gy OR TRYING To
A GANG oF unipeny 'E EASY PAYMENT at > OLLECT MIS
S RAD Plan ———__— 29 EASY PAYMENTS!
BROKEN Loose — A Ip * Dt
ZZ ANG QB i Orit, é
CA Pr; om = Wa ey? We
es : i se — Ze BO, : crt
be et ee 2 eS gree al Ch |
ia a? Bae eae) Se Z ae aE
eee 2 Bir; ase rr. 5
GA oo i ey oe FUR ~ SAY y MER Ro A BE
ee eS | ] 8 CS, ) ey Tse 8
oe ee SSS sss | —— Be ail ee EY %
SER et pra Ateneo eS ae eee *
‘SUNDAY'S GAME
Kareas City—Wells threw out John~
sie ae fag okt a Mk
Besa ane at thd ath elRe aca hat
Hae atts "tt. alten
Muezed the Eround. Joxeph filed to
Saree tos krael: etah” all alt
ike SAE ANDAR ROR Se
alk eer am ah dak
HET Ce aE GN, a Se
Beatty Sek
Ieanaan, cle catatne seen for
stfSiehe SUE lan dled eating Sees
Segre tat IR le CR ck
tel tr oot" ha" rile GSE:
RineMegas sghel AS TENE Seats
eae ‘Third Inning 7
amine city faremam fanned: Dean
nitcame inst hr the Pinte and haunted
Maa eawmih eS Sa ate
itacal ie hrf ont es wee also
Me et naa neat outa Wt to, ey
nse aah Maatoeat helt ale
wets Tel, ae eee ea etna
HOHE Aas Tide ee thas eee
HL Nats itch Tne hl So tom
TREN gATCM Le tee ate i
eee: Bs Aelea LeR aad
Baked wale: Bone stewie scfs oe
Beatin, NEE, ot
WaiPiand Wone scored after the each,
Rateaanned’
Teurth tnnleg
Kanane Cltecditen went ext, Tele
eRe, See SHE SH
Baked er APRIaE i Mle ty wht
Saeed dete Gece ted
Sou bad Wi fon betare WO the
rae" nate cdlben teed oat Ted:
wat digg te ate oa, He
Moore. a wan doubled up with Davis,
Noms aetna
Fifth Inning
Kansas cuesethet wae alte, ut
oh ANRe CME aT a" Dea ts
ae He ea ate
Fras Mc AEE aled_ to. ohnston:
ets Weg alee ates to heater:
ah HEE SA aM thot
Bere ace” waked Nae
etree matte eae oe ence
Rr et tte each ney
Ree arc ai, ha ae Tal
ean toning
Kanne chreWelln ihren gt Fores
mane Rogan’ batted” for ‘ender and
BaRLegt atte iad Ta a
THe ied Ae ne NS atte
Hg SE ee ees,
fire! wells, who touched second Fore:
as Jaouts Drake pitching, fo the
eteeanee See ent le:
Tone RUsgMete HORI 1 WDE
HOMRalen ie Hoare TaN
Seventh inning
Kennas ch Sothe! ins to ret:
Meee aaticg Wits nid fee
MSANG MER aeat saga
Ree NPE rena nes ge ae
Ebi Bade evened: Wale Sse
eT ener: rar out ais tated
wks eae Sees Mato an net
Pe hake eee tae,
Se a
Fakeg' the Sate due ey ae
istadtaate Suede: gan Ea get
od Ueeah treet ae, rane ats
Sea at
Eighth toning
Kanaan city natn began to. come
sttiae oRe Taty beeen ots tae
Ser eee aie en Tae,
RO
Seog eee am rare oe
Salty Rota rel ronda eR
Sern eae a i ale ace
‘St, Lawis—foreph threw out Bell:
aekaad tae Wie SH Te
Bane eal bate nek Se Bahanr
int ting
Kanan cs attal BER ee ect
gS GRE teres ees the, Mat
REM Eauea stems Facey alee
Rar het oneal Sa
Peas ten a ae
a RN
Greacg thre out Foren
‘Hartford Racquet Club
| Wins in Tennis Meet
Rartford. Conn., Sent. 25—The ties
round for tha tennis champlanshin of
New Enzland was played at Colt park
fist Saturday’ afternoon, when the
Hartford Racquet chub defeated the
New Haven County Tennis cluh br 2
Score of 7 to 6. talking both the singles
nid douldes matches.
‘The tennis wlayers of our Race in
IRoston, ‘Providence, New Jiaven and
Hariinrd aro members of tho New
england Colored. ‘Tennis. association
and by virtue of thelr victors. the
Hareford hors, will play at Boston at
jan early date Zor the New England
ite.
Fottowing the zames, the New Ha-
ven nlagers Were tendered # banquet
ius the focal cli, whieh te. headed
Atornere Howard. Drew and Wood
Scho are largely responsible for It
faeeee
pitas Sas eorecnuc—tieer de: | heeh yenen: daring whic ie tei
ectttnety Ors setae At Tine ml: | heen fara, whe te ei
Fea en eee ae RNS cae ee, eet
rae seme en Ste se (Rl ede tae eat a
of ti or free, Romie ear (em, hen tae earynetea At
seams ler saree fem were [none ceria,
ee ee a ee ee aT ce caigetating
te Egat ase] inte Matcha stnan ssa
atcha local aby dar, fn) iy aus naar eni, Sehneee
oe Sree ang noms igclete 3 mich, within
fan tan teen getting on an| grin na aang Lor aha
Pa ag gay cate ried on ent
foci coe a roel for nenrty) (hs elegiensiene wartte, ue
F ing to get the signature of Greb to
ee oes she cpmaiurs of Geb ts
eteh tt Bleace Or te
Fe oan matic he her aramtite
Beas Beat on GEC
Mee oe iy
schtarts Saniora, sale
St eee alta ae
Thathend ot Serene 9ea'ha et
a beret bertenbact and We rs
Gi
reat Sbenea the aap andes given
| FiStere hs lone equator cance
are We fone agua for rcs
| course, Greb accepts.
| course, Greb accents, 9
| Waco, Texas, Sept. 23—The Paw)
quinn ‘igers: tive chainpions of th
Feann conferences nung tte. netto
Ftharsday" on dackron ied.” When
Conch Lone ented tho roll he fou
arse nutmber at hs resuars iis
ngs A hed task confronts the Tce
ese in huang a. formidable. ti
Jehine. from. the aaterial on hand
Store. followers of the Paul, Quinn
ichamilont Are yredicting ‘tila year
tise the former fereelous Benzale wil
bob nieve targets for hele opr
Mien lost by graduation are az fol
lows: 'Morgasy 20-pound. tackle:
Re bykeee iclian ingenary and
Fhomasy reserve quarterback: The
Champicne could “have. seen’ these
tmen''Go without much. griefy But
hen ‘wow reached tho camp that
Saiders, AulSoushwestern Center,
haa gore to Linen university. g
mighty gap waa tet in the forwar
Gallet the Tiperse
Eaptain Nickols of the °24 Tigers
‘also will be enlasings This star has
decided to cast hie lot elaccrhere.
Seaberrys star holt, proved's bene
dict and’ wae claimed by Dan Cus
pies "Hub" Finsiey: alto. will be
Enable to participate this year bes
Enuse of Guciness interests in the
ey.
‘Blithe ‘champlons stil have he
sreatest droyciieker and. open Ae
Pinner uhe South, has ever produced
nthe person nt Shephard” Sheppard
fin the Pink of condition, hing
ist" nnfshed"s, suceeestal campaign
fith the Defra Stars
Gaptin “Hallet” “ickson donned
the Imoleaidng and ig “shewcing "th
Sime form. that vehnvacterized His
Sank ot ant Yen.
Birven, “aiven™ the _AN-Amartean
taekte poatdion by the several Bast
fesvcriiess to back ty the Eiger Tat
lana promises to repent his Hast per
formances:
Tncalne veteran. ond, ie” working
tie Acreotan and Shout We tends
Ie“hertersone tagt year's tackle si
Sag nding by a inure shoul
* Rtexander, sturdy varsity. alt of
Inet ‘eeneon, gives alt Indications,
selon ink tts tego a
jew men showing up well dicing
the early’ sections! are Peper Ge
Weston Righ sehoct fullback: Web-
Sere Wace high schoo! centers. the
Uomibert orethers at «Beaumont
igh school, Ctadings, last: year's
subr is alge showing splendid form:
Tapio, ast scare sue alas thee
Ing geod and: promigea to fll San-
ders’ shoes. :
“Tie initial It o€ the zcazan wit be
with Bishop ales at Marshal, Tess
ma Oct TR Te ie tn be remembered
that the Wishop Tears emplayed te
Tigers inst Fone sna seoreiesn te
Denting Bishop fe quite an undertake
Inge fOr ang tam, inten Teas arcen
teain, The ‘Tigers realize thele ek
tne’ {9 the wit hut: nevertheless, Wil
inake A'sievermined hit fer The "2
Chaviplonship ef ‘esas, and. despite
the gloomy. progpeets it present, ctl
helleve thes’ will he In the serine
for the flag when the curtain is Tune
EASTERN CUBANS WIN 2
ORR, ee See, TAM. iT RO
Cuban Siaee Wefeated the Has’ Tldge
eam in both ands of a twin bill, FO 8
Ana tao. :
Cuban stares... QO 2010 A 23
BarRiageees I A 6 nO As
Gahan Staresi222" '9'a'a'3'o 2 Pi—ip
‘eer Rite Osha areace
three years, during which time he has
efented ail opponents. sctected. fo
iu be promoters: from ‘the: ona
Hiche heavy and heavyweight” ave
Hlons—eacepting. the to “meeting
weit olan.
anager Miler ie _negotiatin
with Matchmaker Jimdty “ohnsan
Shd' hopes to close'a mach within
Sew days that wid give the =
er" his tong sought for chagce at
fhe middleweight world's “tie.
Matchmaker Jobson is endeavor:
Ing to get the signature of Gres to
Srlicies'for's. tSrround. chaywpions
ship, match ‘with "Blowers" forthe
fg" benefit match, he fs promoting
lune Boo Brands on 060.5."
ieseny, Slattery was “originally
scheduled tov mest, Grab ie this
fateh, but hig recent knockout at
ita hands of Berlenbach and his re:
quest to the New York Boxing com:
| falstion to. bo allowed to fake "a
feat, opened the gap and has given
Flowers his long sounht-for chance
Bt the! word's titles provided of
| Sourae, Grob accepts:
Statchimaker Tourney of the mag-
uideent new Stndiaon Saunre Garden
is nino eying aectira the sianauure
fo Dan iiekey to nctietes celine. fo
Se tnateh.betieeen Pau Wertewach
find (owere on'n date 200n after th
Tremendous edifice ef swat opens
December
SSowere hind met and deteated abou
levers outatanding lathe: wnt Wa
Restyweleit of note autos Wis pet
three years of azgresaite Uniting, es
ene ainms. Sitters, Paul Berien-
rach, Mike MeTigue, furry’ Greb ad
tack’ Delaney, cach af whom are Nev
Mork attractions, Ch to the present
limo-Delaney- ie the onl one this
ombingtion thie ould are to mee
fie senrationat*Cotored midatewel gi
ot Conran
oF Manager Miller says he thinks he
has preven that Flowers iy entitted
| torar"chance” athe midglewelght
Mute and that he ‘expects. to allow
hing te'remain idle and take a rest
Gat Cuchi as he shal be ste
te close a'match between one of the
four outstanding men above named:
Since thane tat this Sear. Mowers
nas enocked! out. Joe Loman, Bill
irtean. *romn’ ‘Robson, ‘Ted "Moore,
Dan Dowdy Jack Stone, Bile Savaze
Kattting’ Mme, Sailer Darden, Jack
Ciaeke, Jamaica, Kit He has detented
Pat Reed, Pat McCarty. Lou Rogash
{G), Jocks Malone), Sallor Baeden,
{ice “Anerson “t).Allentover Jos
lee Anderson | (:
‘Twenty-fourth Inf. Reds
Feted by Army Mates
py p, MATTHEW TACKETT.
| et Benning, Gan, Sent. Aeron Wéd-
nesting afternoon St Inge Week the oft
Segue fhe 2th Intantey fete the Ste>
Serious Reda with a” blz bariceus.
Among, the Yisilogs ‘yreeant were, the
‘on “Genrge, Fonter’ Peabody or “New
Work aint rte Gen, Grlgnt 102: Wells
Sominaidant Nag. Et. lienning, The
encrat inne, R Sera” exeetient tate to
finn’ Heed and \cangratiiated them on
theie nuenleeportneaanshiy as. yee ee
their "phenomenal plaving..~ Cotonel
Hehincon "ao" made” an sneohrasing
(Aho affatr was elven In honor of the
Rede) Racine Won the nest hanebal
Sanam csaine positon ti
‘owed, mntat the.teading position in
the “rst halt of the intermulral Seneve
eo che tant .°S, ‘By mine, the actin
Kean alsplaxed “superlattce sett tn
Hhevsecond hale and clased ieewitt th
Sirah Wine for”.1000 percent stands
Tino iitte, world series. letween the
seinnera of th frst and: second halves
awe them, hoeked cup with thelr ed
Feuue "Gt" ute infantry Rehoal ‘Getach-
Toe two dase they continued ‘hele
junheatabie ‘netivities, hue slumped in
The third and fourth, losing. hott and
Making the fifth content necenars,
Which “was played aft on Tabor aay
Tetore thre Maraest_ crowd ever tn Wit=
esx a tolier same ta Et Henning.
i “irene at hard Miging, ted bor the
seniatlonal Dowsing Kine’ and errors
cng havehatt, these forced. then wag
AR cvenunal consent hain br fee
fant pitching’ atthe towering Elmer
{reginmel," winning the self’ teas
* ho post championship’ fe theirs anit
the ‘neimmit and, Ure haricewe “ertes
naued the rite tron eeventee, Sars
Seaton plage fo the’ vigor aid aiiMl oC
SSinning combinations eee
——
15 cote as ea ys BOURMAE:
Toronto, Canada, Sent. 25-—Ne, Mart
auntie werlis realest oad hi
cr and sprinter, was fefeated iu inches
St ‘the “Canadian. national “exhiutt lone
international track and felt meet to-
sie in he oven iti-yard Randtean,
‘The Nandleaps were toa iuch for ths
former University of afichizan athlete
tn overcome. He ‘wax given great
Se ee the erewa:
YOUNG DUDLEY
IN DRAW WITH
GEORGIA WARD
Newark, N. Ja Sept. 14—In one of
the greatert siting boxing contests
seen around these parte in. many
months the reauit was a draw he-
tween Harry (Souns) Dudley of Call
fornin amt? Georgia. Ward Gatite).
focal contendes: far Mlekey: Waller's
hampfonsiip crown, at laurel Ax C
tonights “The dontle whieh seas &32-
toon ata that Saimined “the "ai
trent, Sun hats contorted from hs
Bipniie to end wich ety Iad scoring
S hmockdown:
eee Dudley Surprises Fans
| Dudley's elortg came ata, sur-
prise to the fans besiuso Ward wna
Expceted’ fo make short werk of
COR! Fiymn's newly. acquired
Esttler ‘and ‘started olf that woy.
Ward” iit’ Dudley” shalt dozen
tracks on’ the chin in ‘the inital
Edie before he: reesived return
Shahn in the sccond. round the
ite bey seat Duley down fora
Shore cette the Ward falwers
PreparGd ‘cr ‘an carly getaway.
TiSed Rept on "hie" bomtiardment
until the end of the fifth.
Pit when utnat were going bes
tor Wart Budiey sci the Arat pach
fect the we in ae ‘stro
Reored Ward, and George remained
flown for the. count: S€-Snines the
Sgt of tho Ebabeth bor resting on
UE one was an usiusuat one andthe
Scneic fon ‘could hardly welleve
fein eves
M"from the afxth period on, the tablor
turned in" eevee of the Californian
Buty ‘anened a eve over.” Ward
right eye inthe eighth Found hat
bled profusets.
| Program Dull
| sthe Ward and Dudley encounter
wai the emis bright mpot on rather
iiult program. atte probabilictes
firm they Wi be Femtatched it aed
fan, herahown the bright aide of tl
fng-anogher ebance with fgsntn tats
ice who has the earmark o€ Fl
cher, “She
‘
ew York. Sent, 20—The Lincoln
Giants broke even in a double-header
At the Catholle Protectory Oval.
‘They defeated tho Raslyn team by
fa score of 19 to 4 in the first game,
But Teil before’ the pitching of
Sock” Seibold of the Philadelphia
| Professionals in the second engage:
ment and suffered defeat by a score
OF 9 to
"rhe Lincolns batted “Ble Shoes”
Hammons hard in the flest same, col-
Tecting 20 ‘hits. " Young made” four
hits and Hudspeth, T. Gee and iay-
ward each tree.
“the Philadelphia team batted Har-
ner freely trom the start in the see-
Gnd game and_in the ninth inning
Put the game far beyond. the Teach
SC the Lineoins with a four-run rally
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CUBAN FLYWEIGHT LOSES
New York, Sept. 17-—Black Dill,
Cuban Ayweight, war defeated | by
IGCorperal Tay Schwarte In A. ten=
Found bout, which wae a part of the
program of the Catholic. Ble Brothers
Benet show staged nt the Xew York
Velodrome tonight. 1c was Bill's sec~
jond Wefeat since coming to this coun-
ioe Ral Peak’ Bekue Gromaed ono foun,
; 2.
THe Standing
EASTERN LEAGUE
| W. L. Pet.
IBACHARACHS: eeeeee 26 26 © 500
LINCOLN'GIANTS 11733 “is2
}_ Wilberforce, Ohio, Sept. 25.—The
ace see ucts at wien poate
er vitertgcs has beer eset
con een aan orto
Sere a Se eta lat ae
SEAR ah es ea
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i ee eee sce casos
there are-about 25 ather new men
who Inter on in the season, through
Inraetice. may shaw goed form,
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pesatingen De Go it meet Hoe
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By Rogers
CLEVELAND IS
WINNER OVER
SCOTT CHURCH
Cleveland. Ohio, Sept. 19.—The St.
samen A. Sf. & teavn champtons of
the City Church league, met and de-
iced ine Seote MEET cee ae Bee
Bele cinters at uke base Cees
Scucnigantins im bean esas ofa
sega oa
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ore ct eee ae Noses te
earn an aie te ee ae
econ te mess tan Satenea SE oe
Hite ane Merah of Det, “fom
eo tare arte hard eet
ienite ienats
TE Ene waned in tte
soit nan ret eae Ses
Rutcninan hit fee doubles Cene
Sete Tomer Son ee Siete
Sore ther Simei ceened he
fees whan duaeaiae winigl Soorieg
ones
Thcreatter Terrell, who’ once
urttd tat the Sette Se, Peis
teeta teat nie nth Ee oth
eer ane tense ae gen Bere
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Beas Sees ah Terese ole
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renee ci rane ee
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tac ears eke Pinal oe eee
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| Fuqua Giants to Play,
Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 3-4
James Davis, formerly of Columbus
oft niteselthconsh the city Jase weet
fa Fett to Coltmmue ‘ateer having
Shent’ the, simmer ty Sianiten Spriness
Coin, “Wile it Cnleaae, Ar Tae
| mide arransements to ance the raie
Fania Glanto.c meet” the" Columba
feadue club.en Oct s and't, The Chants
any teotleg Ghroughy asrthern sand
(haves a record of aciur slaved aT
pave, 4
Kansas City Plays St. Louis at Chicago
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925
TEAMS MEET AT SCHORLING PARK SEPT.26
Victors in Series to Meet Hilldlae
The Kansas City Monarchs and the St. Louis Stars will finish their Hildreth to determine who will move to the Eastern League, right here in Chicago. That's the way things look at present.
At this writing, Wednesday morning, the St. Louis City has won one game, that of last Saturday, when Rogan busted the St. Louis club, 8 to 6, with the help of his teammates.
St. Louis also had gained a lone ball on Sunday up to the ninth innning, when Miller relieved him. St. Louis won, 6 to 2, and the score of games Monday rain poured down about noon and the activities were halted. Tuesday had weather again interrupted.
The third game was then moved over to Wednesday.
Saturday the teams renew their right here. As it is the best five out of six, the flock to Scherling's park to see the outcome. Chicago has thousands of rooters who believe Kansas City cannot be beat and St. Louis is the lead of home town rooters to vell for the Stars.
One thing that is assured and that is unless had weather intervenes, a larger crowd will win. The St. Louis lot of agitators got together and tried to boycott the park because of the discharge of Henry Cooper, a barber, discharged by the league through its president charged with incompetence. The barber-ump is souing the league and it hurt the Stars along with the mons while in St. Louis. Friends of the barber started a knocking policy and it hurt the Stars along with the St. Louis fans, however, agree that the Costello and Moore as umplies was the best seen in the Stars' games, and that if the league is to have Colored umplies, a better grade is needed than what the league has used during the past two years with the exception of Donaldson and Jamison.
But the games here are for blood.
One of the two clubs must win and win
the series. The other series opens in the West on Thursday
of next week and that leaves little time to get advertising out
and the games are not ended by Monday a double header will be staged.
The same applies in case of rain on Sunday.
The teams will line up about the same as in St. Louis and a glance at the box scores of those games in an ordering order. General admission for these games is $1. box seats $1.50.
All games start promptly at 2:30 each
WILEY LOSES STAR END OF TWO SEASONS
Marshall, Texas, Tept. 18. -Raley Brown has played his last football game in the Wildcat team. Brilliant Wiley end of 22 and would be able to don the moleskin again this year was killed upon a collision with a senior year in the college department. His condition was found such that he cannot play. Brown was injured internally in the Langston game he underwent an operation this summer. The loss of Brown comes as a sequel to the 2012 hopes of the Wildcat followers, as no better end ever graced a Texas conference eleven. He was a unanimous winner on the all-conference eleven for the last two years. Even though Brown is unable to play, he is assisting with the end from the material at hand.
Lincoln Giants to Play
All-Star Team Sunday
New York, Sept. 27. A post-league series between the Lincoln Giants and several all-star teams from various colleges will two times play the two games of this series will be played Sunday, Sept. 27. against the Philadelphia team of Philadelphia. Both these teams are taking advantage of the closing of the regular season to have several well-known players from the big leagues in their line-up. The professions will come to the protection owl with other big leagues and on the Lincoln, expects to have a two-game series between all-star white and an all-star blue. The line-up of the Colored team for this last series may include John Henry from various clubs in the East. At Johnson, Wk., Sept. 15. KLEE, Colleen Giants.....100 100 11 - 1 2 Mahlon Blues.....500 000 140 - 1 2 Stuart - Cox and Teenary and Stuart.
WORLD SERIES DOPE
The Eastern league commissioners met at the Y. M. C. A. in Philadelphia Monday and declared Hildale winners of the league season for 1925. Andrew "Rube" Foster, president of the Negro National, league, the western organization, and representing that body, went over plans with the eastern moguls regarding the coming world series, which starts either in St. Louis or Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 1, continuing there Oct. 2, 3 and 4.
In case of rain, games will be played on Oct. 5 and 6. The series will then go to Philadelphia for Oct. 8, 9 and 10 and in New York on Oct. 11 (no Sunday baseball allowed in Philadelphia) and (if necessary to decide) back to Philadelphia on Oct. 12.
The series will be handled the same as in 1924, the first three clubs, in each league figuring in the split of the money earned after a certain percentage is taken out for the commission after all necessary expenses, rail fare, room and board, plus advertising, has been deducted. "Rube" Foster will be on the commission representing the West, Charles Spedden of Baltimore will represent the East. The owners of the two clubs make up the commission.
Players of both clubs eligible will be announced next week.
HALFBACK LEE AND LANCASTER MAINSTAYS OF LINCOLN TEAM
JOE HALL IN 10-ROUND WIN IN NEW YORK
JOE HALL IN 10-ROUND WIN IN NEW YORK
New York, Sept. 19—Joe Hall of Buffalo, Walk Miller's promising lightweight, scored a clean-cut victory over old Pete Hartley of the Bronx in the final "ten" at the Commonwealth Sporting club tonight before a record crowd. Hartley started well, but he had gone only five on him and he did secure jaws on him at the end of the walk, while Hall seemed to get better as the battle progressed. Hartley known to thousands of fans as the "Durable Dane and one of the four best players in game," had the Buffaloian guessing in the early rounds because of his head-wearing tactics. Hartley was on to Peter's style, and from then on Pete took many a smash to the head and jaw, and occasionally he cringed from the body punching Joe was dealing out 137½ and Hartley scaled 144.
The semi-final ten while slow was an interesting affair, with Bobby Riden taking the decision from Audele Gleis substituted for Irving Shapiro, who for some reason did not feel like working with Riden. Pisano scaled one pound higher.
The first "ten" on the program turned out to be the best scrap of the week, and slides it was a novelty event, half of the patrons present being there to welcome Hip Sing Lee, Leo P. Flynn's Chinese bantamweight he recently brought East from California. He wished up a cooking scrap against Irish Bobby Green of the West Side, he went down from a right to the chin nearing the end of the fifth, being knocked clear out of the ring, and knocked to the resin twice for short counts.
The weights announced were Green, 116½, and Lee, 118. For some reason, the underweight there was so similarity regarding same, as Green sized up like a lightweight, while Hip Sing looked smaller than the other. He was about the whole works after his laundry ticket had taken a sleep powder.
Jimmy Mendoza gave a boxing lesson to Gentile of Harlem in the six-sport.
The curtain rises on the program between Johnny tuber, Toby's father, and Henry the lumberman is a sizzling affair with the verdict going to Huber. Molinari the water bucket in the first two rounds, and Johnny returned the compliments in the closing two. As Johnny, finishing the judges gave him the award.
Saturday night, Sept. 26, another all-star attraction will be presented by Bill, fireweight champion of Cuba, who has dropped only one verdict since coming to the States, playing the stellar role of a session champion of the Filippine weight, when Bill boxed at the same club several weeks ago, losing on a foul in the sixth session of an event Bill swears vengeance against his opponent. There will be another "mixed" 12, a six and a four-spot that, up to now, has not been announced. The top of the bill ought to bring out the regulars.
WINS ST. PAUL NET TITLE
WINS ST. PAUL NET TITLE
bail, Minn. Sept. 21—The win in City Township by a close to a Dunning field by a above the former champion, Donald Brown. In the finals Baird Kyle, president of Brown, Minnesota, northwestern champion 124. Brown, who had fully played in the tournament, with Woodard, easily disposed of Kyle in straight sets, 6-2, 6-0, 6-1, who went to a Minnesota resident, Miss Frances Smith, who easily defended the semifinals, Miss Eachel Vasser, in straight sets.
Chester, Pa. Sept. 25.—With six hard contests scheduled and another pending before the annual Howard battle, Lincoln University's 1925 grid machine swung into action with its first preliminary workouts on Rendall field last week. Twenty-seven players, including Coach Martin, reported to Head Coach Young and Assistant Coach "Ernie" Martin for the open practice.
Halfback Lee, who ran wild on the field, was one of the first men in uniform, while Wilson, stated for a regular berth at tackle this year, was a close second. Bryant and Paul of the 1924 outfit scrimmaged, while several of the newcomers show promise.
Ted Saunders, who halls from Texas and Washington, did not fit in the position Wolls from the Lincoln university located
HOWARDITES FIND MILLER BOYS MISSING
HOWARDITES FIND MILLER BOYS MISSING
Washington. D. C., Sept. 35—A squad of over 40 men, including a number of the veterans of last year, reported to Coach Watson Monday, Sept. 14. Many new prospects from the leading high schools of the county are showing wonderful progress and are showing until college opens on Oct. 1, Coach Watson is to hold daily workouts of the most rigorous kind in order to prepare sons's his program of games. No time is being lost and no effort is being spared by the coach and his assistant, Jefferson star, to assure this year an even more formidable football machine than those of former years. Neither Bob nor George Miller has prepared these two brothers, who were expected to be used as important cogs in the 1928 machine. Bob was a former home town this summer, while George undewent an operation at Freedmen's hospital for appendicitis. Coach Watson received a letter two weeks before he would be able to play this year. Their failure to report for training, however, is disconcerting; although Coach Watson believes that if the boys come
The first week of training has been spent in getting the boys in physical form by use of callisthenics. They try to backboard drills, but Coutts Watson and West advise that the real hard work will begin next week with a few scrimmages. With the passing of Martin, the coaches are eager to develop several men for this position. It is gratifying to note the progress made by Kelly, Martin and Burrell in the seasons, the coaches are eager to join in former seasons. A number of veterans of former years were among the candidates last week. Among them Captain Long, Joe Dodd, Lester Braden and Bill Merroney.
Howard's schedule this year is quite heavy. The first game of the season will be played Oct. 3 against Morrison University, and the second, Stone college, at Washington; Oct. 17, Johnson C. Smith university (formerly Biddle university), at Washington; Oct. 24, West Virginia College, at Washington; Oct. 27, North Carolina College, at Washington; Nov. 7, Willberforce university, at Washington; Nov. 14, Atlanta university, at Washington, and Philadelphia, Lincoln university, at Philadelphia.
Harrisburg Giants Drop 2 Games to Broomfield
CURRIE PITCHES SHUT-OUT
Philadelphia, Sept. 17. Tr. Rude Currie
pitched a shutout to Lt. Brothers, 2 to
1, last night at 48th and Spurts Sea,
2 to 1, and zurbin, 2 to 1, and zurbin. Hilda got away in the
early innings to a two-run lead and hold it throughout. Dov. Swieger got
hit off Currie in the fourth
frame.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
CHICA Two Sta Ameri HARRIS, KITCHE BACK; DIXIE'S STRONGEST IN SC
Two Stars Return to Hampton Eleven American Giants Lead Detroit
HARRIS, KITCHEN AND DUNCAN BACK; DIXIE'S WONDER ELEVEN STRONGEST IN SCHOOL'S HISTORY
---
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Sept. 24 — Two weeks of daily grind on Washinton and the Clinton team, Promising new material has shown up on the gridiron and several old men have joined the squads. Teaching staff has been completed by the addition of George W. Goodwin, one of Tuskegee's greatest backfield, succeeding T. C. Myers, who has entered Columbia university; J. E. Fields, former varsity coach; and the backfield, team, will handle the reserve material, and Edward L. Dabney of Hampton, three times all-American university, Virginia Union star, with the line. Brown has been appointed assistant to Cleve L. Abbott, head coach.
The new men who have joined the squad are: Prater, Nash, Taylor, Crawford, Gilder, Kirkland, Bibb, Palmer, Shanklin, Adams and McGraw, who continue to loom above mediocrity.
The line has been strengthened by the return of Kitchen, captain of the
VETERANS TO MAKE HAMPTON TOUGH ELEVEN
VETERANS TO MAKE HAMPTON TOUGH ELEVEN
B. THOMAS W. YOUNG
Hampton, V., Sept. 24.—If 17 letter men and a fighting spirit contribute any momentum to a championship stride, Hampton faces one of her peers. Hampton faces one of her peers, and other invincible ones and establishing again the championship prestige of 1922. Coach Smith has asked all insignia men to report early, as far as possible, when they will begin on Sept. 23 when a large number of new candidates are expected to tighten competition.
Spencer Ruffin, long to be remembered by his performances on 1922, will be a veteran, a governor tackle, will again don the blue and white togs for Hampton. W. D. "Bulldog" Williams, star halfback of 1923, will also be in claim one of the backfield positions.
The Hampton mentor will find his difficulty this year not in securing enough men to compose a creditable candidate to play in the poll candidates down to the logical ten and one, Capt. Oscar Plindle will lead his followers from the plot to the victory, a worthy assistant, T. J. Coleman, playing his last year of association football; Frederick Creasy and James T. Alexander will offer plenty of vouchers; William Will prove a serious contender for one of the tackle positions held last season by R. Mundy and W. E. Lacey; the shoes tung up by Jimmy Jones, who having played his allotted time in C. I. A. A., retires with an enrolment in the college; Davis will no doubt find himself the most logical candidate for the other wing position.
Selecting a backfield present itself as a defensive force itself as the most complex problem the coaches have to contend with. "Sticky" Jacobs doubtless will be the best candidate to spellman Spellman a 95 yards for a touchdown at Petersburg, received slight injuries last spring in baseball practice, but is expected to be a season for a try at quarterback.
Kicking duties will likely be resumed by Elmer Baker, a regular quarter of the Seaside team, with the wealth of backs to work with. Gunn's effective toe, will be missed by the Seasideers, but there still remains a need for the Seasideers Edward Largove, the Seasideers' passer, will take care of the aerial duties, while Thatcher and William Beam will play the back position. Johnson will be noticeably in the race for halfback duties. However, no positions have been given to Johnson, who will big opportunities for new candidates to make the team. Hampton has a full and none too easy schedule this year, but the business from the outset and try to produce another championship team as commendable as that of 1922.
HINSDALE ROUNDERS LOSE IN CHAMPIONSHIP FRAY, 15 TO 1
La Grange, Ill., Sept. 13.—By defeating the Rounders of Hinsdale, runner-ups in the championship fight, the La Grange Bucks justified their victory in the Grange Twilight league. The Rounders were downed by the overwhelming score of 15 to 1.
RHE Bucks ..... 002 010 100—140
Rounders ..... 100 000 000—1 40
Bittersler—Walker and Williams: Snoos and Hank.
KIMBROUGH Bucks CLEAREY
Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 14.—Archie Kimbrough, the clever 113-poundighter of the Sibley Hines Health club, go at the club. Kimbrough was by far the winner throughout and coped even round. He is managed by Ernie Ferguson.
---
St. Lo
AGO D
ars Retu
can G
N AND DUNCAN
WONDER ELEVEN
CHOOL'S HISTORY
1923 team; Duncan, end, captain of the 1924 champions, and William C. Chicago, end, captain of the 1923 team. Faukner, who will slightly-fill in the early season, has sufficiently recovered to be out to prove in his kicking and at this time he is outdistancing Stevenson, Tuskegee's triple-threat man. He has consisted of neckling, the dummy, charging, wind sprints, catching forward passes, heavy signal drills and light screenages for both the varsity and rescuers. Coach Abbott, when approached for a statement, said: "We are striving to develop a fast, shifty team and basic football is being developed. Brown, who last year built the forward wall so that it would not shrink under the heaviest pressure, ventured the wankr that the team
The opening game, Sept. 26, will be played with the strong 24th Infantry $80,000 alumnum篮房, Captain Eberle, U. S. army, who is a graduate of the University of Washington and has played in the famous hockey games, coaching army team. He has a record of never having played on a team that loss and he boasts of the fact that the he has coached have always won.
Bacharachs Split Even
With Brooklyn Bushwicks
Totals .. 1 6 27 12 Totals .. 0 18 27 12
*Battled for Steel in North Indies*
*0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1*
*Barracuda's 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0*
*Barracuda's 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0*
*Streete out by Caydon, 4; by Forer, &.*
*Streete out by Miller, Marcell. 4; Sacrificio,*
Doherty Silk Sox Win.
6-1. From Royal Giants
Clifton, N. J., Sept. 20.—The Royal Gliffon nosed their contact to the Lowland Silk Box before a record crowd, 1 to 1.
"Chick" Passon, who hurled for the
Jersey game, scored three hits and the lone run of
him was a Ruthian clout by Center-
fielder Brooks. The score:
DOHL, SILLIAN
Royal Giants
AR, R, I, O
Dougman na. 4 0 1 Wasteur fr. 4 0 1
Edenon fr. 4 0 1 Wagner fr. 4 0 1
Brayton fr. 4 1 2 J. Smith Sh. 2 0 1
Brayton fr. 4 1 2 J. Smith Sh. 2 0 1
Bram Br. 3 0 1 Douglas Br. 3 0 1
Jazeke fr. 4 0 1 Hill sh. 2 0 1
Jazeke fr. 4 0 1 Hill sh. 2 0 1
L. Smith c. 3 0 7 Scot fr. 2 0 1
Pasman p. ... 4 0 1 Habbard fr. 2 0 0
Totals ... 4 14 12 Total ... 30 1 24
Royal Giants ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
Royal Giants ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
Pasman hit-jitter. Home runs-Brooks.
Pasman eats balls-Off Passon. 8 off
Floorman. Gift-by Centerfielder Brook.
Hit-by pitcher-1. Smith.
INTERNATIONAL
HILLDALE IN
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE MEETS HILLDALE IN A 3-GAME SERIES
Philadelphia, Sept. 24.—With the fact that the A. A. Minor league team has won three triple champions of the Eastern Colored league have arranged a three-game series with the Jersey City International League play at Hillsdale Park and the following day, Sunday, Sept. 27, the Dalley Salts travel to Jersey City and play the Skeeters a double head league park.
---
Oct. 10-St. Augustine, at Raleigh
North Carolina.
North Carolina
Durham State Normal, at
Petersburg
Oct. 24—Hampton, at Hampton.
31—Shaw university, at Petersburg.
Nov. 6—Johnson C. Smith university,
at Ranchooke.
Nov. 13—Johnson C. Smith university,
at Petersburg (home-game game).
Nov. 26—St. Paul, at Lawrenceville.
LINCOLN U OF MISSOURI
Jefferson City, Mo., Sept. 35—Missouri valley football takes on a new and improved schedule of the 1920 grid schedule of Lincoln University of this city. Important previous years will assure the valley piknik followers of a brand of football Outstanding among these attractive innovations is the securing of a game in November. Lincoln University Normal college in Nashville, Tenn., to be played in Chicago Nov. 7. Also the Lincoln grid schedule of the Normal college in St. Louis Oct. 21. The Turkey day classic of Quinah, Kansas, to close the season, incompete among the several new gridlish flashes, included among whom are Norman from from Tennessee, I. St. Louis and Booker, Kelly and Collins from Columbia. The following is the grid schedule of the Lincoln City, Oct. 3—Wizard Athletic club at Jefferson City, Oct. 17—Hannul high school, pending. Oct. 24—Tennessee A. and I. normal Oct. 30—Western Baptist college, at Jefferson City, Oct. 38—Roger Williams university, at Chicago.
Nov. 13- Langston university, at Jefferson City
ferson City
City, Kansas Vocational college, at
Jefferson City.
Nov. 26 - Western university, at
Kansas City.
VA. SEMINARY AND COLLEGE
Lynchburg,
Virginia. Students of new men and old
recruits who have answered the call of
Virginia Seminary and College look for-
ward in a successful future. Coach K
Hurt. Team in good condition and
with the assistance of Mellish Whidle,
all-American quarterback, is having
among those already out for practice
are ex-Capital College players.
"Bumble," Henry Scott. "Silhane," Winfield. "Old Fat
Squat," H. Hoyle. "Lloyd George Polk," Crum
Holland. H. Hoyle, Allen Brown, Philip
N. Brown, Womack, Jesse Williams.
runs and played his position in faultless style. Paul Stevens, the Hildale shortstop, will wares against Moo Berg who will play short for the Skeeters. Berg has just been sold to the Chicago White Sox for a fat farm and will be known everywhere that Colored clubs perform and is famous for his ground covering ability. Broward, the second sacker for the Jerseys, is the leading base stealer of the International league and Lana Syles, the former Athletic playmaker Holt, who played that position through the season, was sold to Connie Mack's Athletics and is finishing the season with the Philadelphia Holt. The single game at Hildale Park, Saturday, will start at 3 p. m. and the double header at Jersey City ball will start at 4 p. m. The whole will lie on as follows:
toin, Barnett Legan, Holmes McGuire
and J. E. Jordang.
and J. E. Jordan.
The card is as follows:
28-Charlotteville club.
Oct. 2-14. C. Smith university, at Glenwood.
Oct. 10-14. Hampton institute, at Lynchburg.
Oct. 18-14. A. and T. collake, at Greensboro.
N. C. Hyltingstone college, at Lynchburg, Va.
Oct. 31-17. St. Paul at Lawrenceville, Va.
Nov. 7-Union university, at Lynchburg, Va.
Nov. 14-18. Shaw university, at Raleigh, N. C.
Nov. 26-Bluefield institute at Seminar.
WEST VIRGINIA INSTITUTE
Institute, W. Va.
The grid season at the West Virginia Collegiate institute was officially opened with the first event of the light competition which 90 were ready for the "go out" on Saturday. of the rots who are at practice Sanders, Holmes, Steptoe, Stevie
Coach Humbilin and his assistant, Paucher have been studying the weakness of the bones and are leaving no stone unturned in and are leaving a well conditioned and strong outfit. The first tilt of the season will take place at the institute. The other schools scheduled to play are Kentucky Normal and Indiana University, Simmons university, Lincoln university and Wilberforce. The games with the two schools will be at Charleston. The dual game will be at Columbia, Ohio, with Wilberforce, Oct. 11-8-Biuefield institute at Bluefield. Oct. 17-Kentucky Normal and Indiana University, Oct. 21-Howard university, at Charleston. Oct. 21-Simmons university, at institute.
Nov. 7 — Lincoln university, nt
Churchillway day–Wilberforce uni-
versity
Thanksgiving week
TAYLOR AT CLARK U.
"San" Taylor, old Northwestern university grid and diamond star, for two weeks last week for Atlanta, Ga., to take charge of the athletic system to be the school's university and to direct the school's football prospects for the coming season. The former Purple all-around athlete M. S. Davage to build up a new regime of sports at the school and put Clark in the grid and diamond range.
Clark will provide no more than the 100 students he has taught this year, with no outstanding stars among the new men. In addition to his teaching, Clark was who was graduated from the Northwestern school of commerce in 1924, and who is now a professor in advanced business economics.
TENNESSEE NORMAL COLLEGE
Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 25—With nine letter men in camp and a swore or more oath, the team goes to Gettysburg to test Nessie Moore's college team into shape for its 1925 season. Last year's stitches and a flock of Coach Siggs to pick from and every indication points to a lively and successful 1925. Normal won five contests and tired the sixth and last with Simmons and Siggs. Normal will battle Simmons will battle Normal again in its final fray on Turkey day at Nashville. The entire schedule is as follows:
Oct. 24—Lincoln university, Jefferson
City, Mo.
Oct. 1—Elk scilub, Chattanooga.
Nov. 7—Morris Brown university
Nashville.
Nov. 14-Philander Smith college Memphis.
Dec. 5-Fisk university, Nashville.
HAVEN TEACHERS COLLEGE
Meridian, Miss. Sept. 20-Haven
institute and conservatory of music, leban
football practice Sept. 15 for the
lead men of last year's squad and a
number of new men which he
equivalent of last year's team.
The team is not set, although we are sure of the games with New Orleans college. Selma uni-
college. Rust college. Miles Memorial col-
lege and Livingston Training school.
AT AMHERST
Frant Field, Amberst, Mass. Sept. 24. —The Amherst squared started scrimmage with a triple threat star halfback and triple threat man-woman on the field in togs, but now towing a triple roster from the first day's workout. The fives of two of last year's first-round starters—Charles Gilmer, New year's rush—Charles Gilmer, New year's rush, former star halfback, and Amberst, former reguard, Gilmer. Gilmer did not return to college, and Davis graduated last June.
CRUDUP COACH AT ST JOE
CRUDUUM COACH AT ST. JOHN
D. Cruduum, captain of the 1924 Lincoln
university gridron squad and
left, recently to take up his post as
a teacher and athletic instructor on the
Barratt high school, St. JOHN,
Mo. Cruduum had had experience in coach
and athletic instructor in Ringe
Lindge Tech. football team in the 1925
and 1921 football seasons. In addition
he also the work in other sports, baseball
basketball, ete. star was the hero of
many pigskin engagements in which
Lincoln partook and was largely,
responsible for their win over Howard
MOREHOUSE COLLEGE
Atlanta, Ga. Sept. 25—Conch Harvey's "Bulldogs," who will battle to win the championship, and White's of Morehouse college, are ready and confident to break their own corona to compete in Morehouse college. A fast, heavy squad of Bulldogs shapes an hope of the Allentown and slain has been displayed. The team will miss South Carolina State un on Oct. 10, at Atlanta; Renedict college on Oct. 15, at Atlanta; and T. of Greenhaven, N. C. on Oct. 30, at Atlanta. N. C. on Oct. 30, at Atlanta. A. T. and T. of Greenhaven, N. C. on Oct. 30, at Atlanta.
icago
ORTS
n Eleven
Detroit
TAKE TWO OF
THREE-GAME
SERIES HERE
Clubs Go to Detroit for Three Games
The American Giants leave for Detroit Friday, where they will continue their series with the Detroit Giants now lead the Motor City team two games to one. Three games will be played in Detroit and if more are necessary, a toss in the place for the remainder of the series to determine which team will get third place money out of the world series coin. The series is the best five out of nine games.
In a hard-tough ten-inning game, the Giants won their game of the Giants series from the Detroit Stars by a score of 6 to 5. Jim Brown led a with a home run, could be the relief of Miller in the seventh and stopping the Stars without any hits or runs for the remainder of the game and striking out the Stars.
Detroit's first run was scored on Stratton's and Ware's errors, on Daniel's pass and a single by Morris in the third. The Giants scored two in their half of the third on Daniel's walk and Brown's home run.
In the fourth the Giants scored three runs, Stratton getting hit by a pitched ball. Ware singled to right, and Stratton started on right to right. Miller scored Ware on a single to right. De Moss scored the third run on Riggs' choice of Marsher's grounder. He back in the fifth and scored a run on Jones' double to right and Morris' single to the same territory. In the sixth Detroit scored three runs and tied the score on the second run. Stormes' double to left. Bell scoring Stormes on a single to right and Daniels scoring Bell on a single to left.
The winning run was scored in the fifth Williams getting hit by a pitched ball. Smith hit Brown's out to left and scoring on Torrienti's long single to right. The score:
| DETROIT | BILIC | GLANTS |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Press B... | 4 0 | Marlboro B... | 1 0 |
| Smith B... | 4 1 | Brown B... | 1 0 |
| Stormes B... | 4 1 | Torrienti B... | 1 0 |
| Hamps B... | 1 0 | Stormes B... | 1 0 |
| Douglas C... | 1 0 | Meiss B... | 1 2 |
| Morris P... | 4 0 | Miller P... | 2 0 |
| Gantle... | 1 0 | Meiss B... | 1 0 |
Totals: 40 5 345 25 4 118
Garner had scored for Miller in sixth.
Detroit..... 0 0 1 0 1 5 0 0 0 0 5 1 5
Kansas - Jr. Taylor, Warre, Pawell, Two
Kansas - Jr. Taylor, Warre, Pawell, Two
Kansas - Jr. Taylor, Warre, Pawell, Two
Kansas - Jr. Taylor, Warre, Pawell, Two
Stout - Run, Hewlett, Brown, Howell,
Stout - Run, Hewlett, Brown, Howell,
Stout - Run, Hewlett, Brown, Howell
The Giants beat it two straight from the Detroit Stars 5 to 1, in day of their post-season series through the airlight pitching by McDonald, who let the Stars down with five widely-scored hits. The Detroit Stars scored 10, the Smith's double and Stearns single. The Giants started early, getting a run in the second on Ware's single to center and De Moors's double to left, the game scoring four runs. Mr. Donald led off the scoring with a single to center. Marlaker following with a double to left, scoring three in the archie with a double to the same place. Torrenti scored Williams on a single to center, going to third on the throw to the plate and scored four in the outfit, pitcher to first. Jones led at bat with a triple and single.
ILLINOIS STATE NEWS
AXDXGXSCO
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925
TAYLORVILLE, FL
TAYLORVILLE, ILL.
Mrs. TAYLORVILLE went to the weekend in Palmer at the home of her husband, who is at her home suffering with malaria fever. Her condition is reported imminent. Because she was the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bacarre she was the guests of the A. M. K. church gave a suce Wednesday evening. The procession were followed by a celebration for the pastor's children's money.
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NATURE'S ONLY RIVAL
Mrs. Jennie Skipped visits in Decatur
mor. of St. Louis, Mo., have returned
after a visit to St. Louis, Mo., have returned
were the guests of Meddames Carrie
J. larry of Lane College, Jackson,
J. larry of Lane College, Jackson,
Avery Woodson, in a song recital at
to an Appreciative audience. They
were the house guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Young, in a teaching at M.H. Home School.
Yount is teaching at M.H. Home School.
were breakfast guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Hill has returned from Baltimore, Md.
have returned from Baltimore, Md.
report in a delightful gift to Maryland.
DECATUR ILL.
SPRINGFIELD, ILL.
Miss Hailer Taylor vithited her par
Jackson St. during the past week.
Jackson St. during the past week.
Dwinn theater opened on the season
and spent two weeks visiting her daughter,
left recently for her home in Caloosahatchee,
fight days in Hawaii, has returned and
instion St. Rev. and Mrs. C. M. Cannei,
S. 148, St. 148, are on their vacation,
New Castle, Pa. were visitors at St.
1710 E. Washington St. last week.
Capitol building, Art museum, Lincoln
home and monument and other his-
MARION, JLL
Mrs. Love Renfro is a new teacher at the school where he leds is visiting from Sturgis, Ky. Doe Roberts is a graduate of Roosevelt Williams are the parents of a fine boy. Thomas McKay has returned to school after visiting in Grand Chain on business. Mrs. Roberta Fields is visiting in Carbon-
NT. VERNON. UU
Mrs. J. M. Mian is visiting in Henderson, K. Miss Magda McKenzie will make her home with her father Willie Moore has returned to Augusta, Ill. Mrs. Magda McKenzie will make her home with her father Willie Moore has returned to Augusta, Ill. as the bedside of his brother, Mrs. Magda Moore has returned to Augusta, Ill. Mrs. Ludie Raaford, Mrs. Luther Wood, Mrs. William Brandon, Mrs. William Manuel of Duquoin, Ill. Mrs. Robert Foster of this city, Ill. Mrs. Chayborn, to Kearington, Kryst. Prof. and Mrs. A. Y. King and sons of the city as the guests of Mrs. and Mrs.
FREEPORT, ILL.
MATTOON LLC
Mrs. Ira Blinton has returned to her home in Chicago and Mrs. Arthur Anderson, Mrs. Julia Norton was a visitor in Charleston. Mrs. Lois Robinson of Leran were visitors in Charleston. Mrs. Will Ed Smith are sick. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Browne were in Charleston Saturday. Mrs. Miss Lois Gray, student at the Charleston Teaching Center, was the mother of her parents. Mrs. and Mrs. George Gray, Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Brown of Charleston, Mrs. J. C. Reddy, mother of Charles Brown attended church services here Sunday, Rev. and Mrs. W. J. Brown, mother of Charles Brown attended church services here Sunday, Rev. and Mrs. W. J. Blinton motorized to Charles Watson in Charleston in Charleston Saturday night. Joseph Hudley was a visitor in Murphysboro and their guest in Charleston and their guest. Mrs. Ira Blinton of Chicago, mottled to Charleston Sun.
COLBILL
DEWMAINE, ILL.
Mrs. Roxy Livingston in attending the annual visitation of her visiting son in Dugong, returned from visiting her son in Dugong, and brother-in-law in Jiaxin. Mrs. Ketelia McCormick in visiting Ohio, last week. Theodore Tidwell in Bertha Jerkins has returned from Kenyan school. Bertha Jerkins is attending school in Chicago.
KANKAKEE. ILL.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward OliverJet Satellite
visit Mr. Oliver's parents. John Carr
visit Mr. Oliver's parents. John Carr
visit Mrs. Lizzie Hardison and Mrs.
Lizzie Hardison and Mrs.
visiting with Kankakee friends, Mrs.
Josephine Evanson. Il. Mr.
Skinner, who worked on a few
projects, was on vacation. Il.
URBANA, ILL.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Miss Cressida Collins of St. Louis was here visiting her mother and friends, Jill and Michael, and Jill's Jones of Carbondale were guests of Mrs. Rondelaire, Mrs. Jones' daughter, Mrs. Keaveney, and Spartan visitor over the week-end. Mrs. Mr. Keaveney and the Mr. Rice of over Sunday. The Misses Anna, Evean and Alpena Corning and Garland Carpenter Quite a number of Chester people ate Cressida's Cabbage shot and instantly killed Lee Wallace last Friday evening. Mrs. Wallace stuck, where she spent a week with relatives and Friends. Mrs. Given Anness and Friends. Mrs. Given Anness was on Wednesday to Sunday in Notions.
CARBONDALE JLL
DUOQIN JLJ
Rev. T. J. Smith of Dayton, Ohio,
Mrs. Laura Smith, and preached at Sta.
Paul's Baptist church. E. Tabarn and
Sunday. Mrs. Dora Smith is the guest
of the Sunday. Mrs. Dora Smith is the
guest of a business trip to Colp Thursday.
Mrs. Sarah Sanders of this city and her
friend, Mrs. Adeline Fletcher, and
Louis, who were visiting here, were
the guests of the former's sister, Adeline Fletcher, Mrs.
former's sister, Adeline Fletcher, Mrs.
guest of her sister in New Orleans
Leonard and Lever Sweet left Saturday.
Larvin of Chicago is the guest of his
Larvin of Chicago is the guest of his
Haraskin left Sunday morning for
Puskali to preach in a rally. T. C. M.
Leonard and Lever Sweet left Saturday.
Anna Barber and son Leonard of
Anna Barber and son Leonard of
the former's mother, Mrs.
guest of the former's mother, Mrs.
Anna Barber and son Leonard of
Anna Barber and son Leonard of
Haraskin blondened me in Jonon
and Equilibrium blondened me in Jonon
Saturday. Miretta McCall has rammed
from Calo, where she spent the
HARRISBURG JULY
DANVILLE ILL.
The Phi Blaith Art club will meet Tuesday, March 15, at 10 a.m. in the Norden Biern, E. Harrison St. for election of officers for the enquiry year, 2015. The officers are: Stellin Dixon; vice president, Mrs. Amy Barker; treasurer, Mrs. Nancy Allen chaplain, Mrs. Flor Thompson; art club president, Mrs. Caroline meeting of the club will be held with the Lakeside, Falker club, on Tuesday, March 15.
SPASTA UU
CAIRO, ILL.
CENTRALIA, ILL.
JOLIET. ILL.
Mrs. Josephine McDonald and her mother, Mrs. Smith. Spent labor day at Chicago. T. D. McDonald has entered his fall term in Chicago in the school of Chicago. T. D. McDonald has Carrie Mason of York Ave. Mrs. Eliza Maddox Waverley of Alabama was married to Mr. and Mrs. Brady Maddox. The Mission union was formed in 1881 and fortified the Social Art club Sept. 16. Sept. 20. Mrs. Fletcher David. Sept. 21. Mrs. T. R. Blackshear and Mrs. J. P. Coates were dedicates for Mrs. T. R. Blackshear who will hold three services Sept. 30. Mr. and Mrs. W. Mason have returned from a visit in Montclair, visiting relatives and friends.
MOUND CITY, ILL.
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Kay and three and five years ago, Mrs. Catherine Brown, Mrs. Kay and family, Mrs. Webb Sunda, Mrs. and Mrs. Nathan Kay and seven years ago, Mrs. Webb Sunda, Mrs. Phile Killie dated Tuesday at the home of Diamond El. He is survived by two children. Mrs. Webb Sunda was held Thursday from the First Mile Baptist church, church. Rev. Skatte officiating.
ROCK ISLAND, ILL
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burks and family of Ms. Das Moine, l.a., moved to Island and landed in New York and family, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Brown, where they joined their family from Peoria. Mrs. Mildred Brown left for Jackson, Tenn., where she will have a baby. Mrs. W. C. Irwin and son are attending the 2014 U.S. Army Academy, the 2014 U.S. They will be back in Rock Island Sept. 30. Mrs. Sarah Sarah urdays for Aurora, Ill., where she will join Rev. Boyd, boys' school, will leave there on Sept. 23 to attend the A. M.
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MOUND CITY, ILL.
Curt Mickel of Chicago spontan
taking a photo of Henderson of Mound City, and other
Henderson of Mound City, and other
The Mt. Olive Baptist association of
Mt. Olive Baptist association of
session with the First Missouri Impac-
tation is expected. Rev. Moses Wilson
m. church Wednesday. Prof. Robo-
Sergeus of Murray City, a company
of Murray City, a company
the Jew's Henderson, motor-
ing company.
JACKSONVILLE, ILL.
GALESBURG, ILL.
CHAMPAIGN. ILL.
is visiting her mother, Mrs. Pamela J. B. Jillington, of Boston, who was the wife of J. B. Jillington, of Boston, who was the wife of W. Young, who has been pastor at St. Mary's in his realization last Sunday evening.
SANDUSKY JJJ
COULTERVILLE, ILL.
KEWANEE, ILL.
MISSISSIPPI
McCOMB MISS
WEST POINT, MISS.
Mrs. Sallie Gray, E. Morrow St.,
entertained Mrs. Jimmy Davis, Davenport
St. Memphis, Tenn. Mrs. Woodie Collins,
Memphis, Tenn. Mrs. Woodie Collins,
of Chicago recently. Mrs. Ellen Almer
died at her home. Sent. 16. Mrs. Cissie
Baker has returned home after visiting Mrs.
wood has returned to St. Louis. The
stork visited Mrs. Susie Baker and left
Ky., Ky. is here visiting her parents,
Ky., is here visiting her parents,
Josephine Dawson left has work for
the Mississippi Delta. Prof. L. Mosely
dawnson left school summer at
Starkville, Mia.
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PART 1—PAGE 12
CLEVELAND NEWS
By ALEXANDER O. TAYLOR
Cleveland Office, 2398 E. 55th St.
Phone Randolph 969
Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 25.-Dr. Ahner supreme commander of the American
Cleveland, Ohio, So
supreme commander
Woodmen, in expected
to visit the local
A. B.
Mrs. Beulah Coop
Joyce, M.D. served from
injurious sustained in
recent auto accident.
Mrs. Welcome
Bruce, M.D. survived
at the very ill age
of Mrs. Bluo. Bluo had just
returned from an
at least eight busid
band, attending
Moose conventions.
Carl W. Sengkila
murdered or
his brother, Guy
Sengkila.
Jumbo, A. A. unveiled
announcement was
erroreous.
Mrs. Richard Presley has
moved their family from
Sixth Ward, N.J. to
Woodland.
Nahum B. Bracher, editor-in-chief of *Nega Chicago* and Negro Chicago, passed away in Chicago on March 11, 2015, in a room called upon J. W.ills and other old Mrs. Wilma M.K. O. Dine, F. 5th St. and Joseph L. O. Dine, 2nd St. of her mother. Death of her mother. Death of the middle Western Mutual Benefit association was called to Chicago, Ohio, on just Monday. Quine Ave. took place from the 2nd St. to the 25th St. afternoon. Billy Quine Ave. was taken place from the 25th St. blood poisoning from vaccination was said to be the cause of death. Billy Quine Ave. was a sculpture of the Frank A. who sustained a fracture of the left hip. She fell from the second floor porch of her home two weeks ago, in recovering R. E. Fraser, 229 B. 5th St. to be about after several weeks illness of the pain of South Park, of South Bend, Ind. are in the city conducting a series of meetings at the Bay, Maya, is a brother of Mrs. M. Mrs. Burke, Burke, Washington, D. C. arrived in the city hat and the services of the nurses are the services being under the auspices of Henry Arnet. The remains were shipped to Mineral City, N. The de
Mrs. Nestie Jackson, daughter of Mrs. Nestie Jackson, mother of Mrs. Moore, M.D. and Washington, D. C. in New York, and Mrs. Burchard, barrister and in Washington the sang for Mrs. Nannie Burroughs, of great importance in molding sentiments in New York. Pleasant sediment of the city palate to the pro- war and World War Cicercl association last week. A. J. Hammond, R. Jackson, vice president; Saul S. Jackson, vice president; Paul S. Jackson, vice president; Henry Swerger, serviceman; Henry Ellen, chairman of membership committee. Merrick Jackson and Swerger represent our group in petitioned from this bunch of progressive
Dr. James P. Fonte, pastor of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, will be overseeing congregations Sunday in the morning his subject was "Women of Fount," in the evening, "See What a mock conference will be given in every piece of the Women's Home Missionary society, Mrs. Dora Hawkins, president, Mrs. Dora Burkner is in charge of the
Tom Mitchell, son of Mrs Dora Richman, Mt. Eighth S. St., is very ill in the city hall. Mrs Barty is former former mayor of the local hotel, named the geraldine hotel, named Claytonville, president of the local N. A. A. C. F. has filed his petition to city council from the local
Society
Ms Georgia Nelson made a splendid
season. Ms. Nelson is in the dawn
season. Ms. Nelson is in the dawn
Mr. and Mrs. George N. Nelson, E. 9th
half of the season. Young ladies
and Mrs. George N. Nelson, E. 4th
half of the season in Chicago, Ile.
with her son William, who she had not
seen. Ms Elizabeth Harris, sister of
her mother and family. Ms Harris is
from Dasselda, Calif. George Harris,
E. 9th of the season also spending his vacation with his
AMERICA
Rebald Lee, 5222 Central Ave., re-
lated to the University, spends the
summer with the students with
mrs. Mary E. Grant, and other
mrs. Mira Crawley, 2419 E. 5200 St.
r., nouncing the death of her sister, Mrs.
Rosa Anderson, whom she visited some
years ago.
Dr. and Mrs I. F. Turner and Clyde Perry have returned from Wytheville, Va. where they were called to attend the funeral of a brother.
Mrs. Anna Mason Mitchell, 6410 Ruth Ave., has returned from a three weeks'
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vacation, having spent a most enjoyable time in Cincinnati, Ohio, Nashville, Tennessee, Decatur and Athens, Ohio. Thomas and son Hill, Jr., married to Isidro and训牢, Hill, Jr., married to Isidro and训牢, commanded by Mrs. T. Traill. All reported a delightful time. Mrs. A. James and two sons, Alton and later after six weeks' stay in Philadelphia and after six weeks' stay in Philadelphia, were born in Atlantic City and other points in the United States. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bonner, $61 Quincy Ave., a fine baby boy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Isaey, $61 Relief Park and clearview, Mich. They spent one delightful summer, W. King of 100th St. Mrs. Ericene Adams, E. 102d St., have a guest visit F. V. Adams, Mrs Adams is on route to New York City, where she will attend a school of Social Work.
M., Irvadale, E. 5th St., was called Mrs. Irvadale by her father, who is reported to be immune to rabies and who was here from Erie, KS, as the house guest of Mrs. Walter Irvadale.
Masonic Affairs
Purea lodge No. 25, F. & A. M., connexion, Sept. 19.
R. F. B. Jackson, boston, 1954.
R. F. B. Painesville, Ohio, member of William T. Bood lodge, in 1954.
William T. Bood lodge, well-behaved master of William T. Bood lodge, in 1954, and upon the past week for stomach trouble.
The competence of Canaan Bauer at dinner, Seeder Grand Warion H. I., Adm. of the grand lodge, the chicken dinner was served by the ladies of the brother Edward Johnson, W. M., in room 250, Ward M. Lakeside
Pleasant Affairs
News of the Clubs
The Buttercup Bridge club met Wednesday with Mrs. Walter Park, 2625 I. 17th St. , Mrs. Mara Williams. Williams Park proved a most pleasing host.
Music Notes
Cedar "Y" News
Sunday afternoon, Sept. 25, marks the opening of the fall activities at the Museum. Visitors are welcome for one hour at 2:00 p.m. under the auspices of the Century Club.
During the following week several classes will be held in the gymnasium and a full schedule of gymnastics will be required. Excelsior club will present their plans and purposes to the gymnastics committee, which will be followed by a harvest home festival, the first of the season by making extensive preparations for their performances, which will be made through this column.
Membership
hair
mills-
escov-
s the
often
successful
results
air in
feefful
mussy
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colin, Neb.; Charles Harley, Washington, D. C
Luther, Luther Bowers, Akron Ohio; Lloyd Taylor, Akron Ohio; Pres. S. P. Peterson, Auga, Ga.
CINCINNATI NEWS
By L. LLOYD STONE
625 Kenyon Ave.
Telephone West 6723
Cincinnati, Ohio. Sept. 25. --Matter of
arrival on Sept. 25 in St. Louis at
nine o'clock. Born in Balmor, Ala.
Balmor, has returned home to resume
work. M. A. L. A. Gough and daughter, Jeele
M. A. L. A. Gough and daughter, Jeele
have returned from an extensive six
years of service in the Alameda
City and other eastern cities.
*Mr. and Mr. Walker Reedor of Iress-
er Valley* vacation in St. Louis, Mo.
*Mr. and Mr. Walker Reedor of Iress-
er Valley* vacation in St. Louis, Mo.
*Mr. and Mr. Walker Reedor of Iress-
er Valley* vacation in St. Louis, Mo.
Josephine Gay, 610 Mount St. Monday
evening, business a social hour
from 10:30 to 11:30.
Nadine Roberts Waters will appear on the show Wednesday, Sept. 15, in interest of the community. Ms. Mary Gordon of this city has returned to Wilberforce university to re-enroll.
Howard William of Wyoming, Ohio,
resume his studies in the college depar-
ment, Mr. Wright of Toleo, Ohio,
has returned home. While here she was
Wyoming, Ohio. Alex Williams of Wyoming,
in the city campus of Willettor university,
toured him H. Oxley and family and
toured the latter part of the summer,
Cleveland, Buffalo, Nigam Falls, Ohio,
Syracuse, Syracuse, Albany, Schenectady,
City, Washington, Baltimore, Columbia,
City, Washington, Baltimore, Columbia,
Wheeling and Zamuseville, Miss Lazy
Dhunin, a guest on this occasion.
The visit to the Cave of the Dogs in
New York, Atlantic City and Washing-
ington, which included hostes those
menus, which included hostes those
menus, and Elizabeth. While in
New York Rev. Oxy preached in St.
Maria Petty Gould, teacher of euryth-
raphy, he resumes his studies at our third annual Bluelight play.
The Ribish club was delightfully entertained by Miree Alford of Lulu
and the Ribish Club.
COLLEGE A, MIDDLE SCHOOL
Miss Martha. Winkfield has recently been appointed kindergarten teacher at Jackson school.
COLUMBUS, OHIO
Spring St. Y. M. C. A.
A splendid demonstration lecture or
phone system of Columbus was given
until the direction of the Puritan
Puritanism. This talk was given before the Bisham
Bishop, who was before the Bisham
G. A. Governor DV Domehay spoke before the meeting Tuesday, N. T. A. March at the Tuesday noon luncheon, Sept. 22. The Spring semester jointly have appointed committees that are working out plans for the spring semester and are ever held at the Spring St. T. N. G. A. on Halloween night. The public will be invited to the exhibition of the boys department under the direction of H. A. physical director, who was a life physician.
MARYSVILLF. OHIO
Mrs. William Wright was called to Mechanicsburg last Friday, June 18, 2014, by James E. Woodward, Sr. Mrs Vazir Rao-Ramam, Sr. Mrs Vazir Ramam, Sr. for the past year doing social work in Delaware. She will be joined by parents Mr. and Mrs. Caitlin Ramam, parents Mr. and Mrs. Caitlin Ramam, parents Mrs. Horton Borton of Delaware, Ohio was invited to attend a reception at Akron last Friday. Miss Alma and Ruth Embanks of Roswell, N. M., last week, on route to Willemore, J. W. Embanks of Lancaster was the guest Willemore of Mrs. J. W. Embanks of Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Park of Plain City were among those who attended the
SPECIALIST
DR. G. A. N. WEBSTER
One of Chicago's leading doctors, D.C. G. A. M. Webster, physician and sur-
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A REAL BAR
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HUMAN
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1925
WARREN, OHIO
SANDUSKY OHIO
list. Mattle Waterfield is on the sick
list. Abram Harman fell and broke one
of his legs last week. Clarence Troma
and wife returned and wife returned
to Chicago Thursday.
HILLSBORO OHIO
SANTOY, OHIO
MANSFIELD, OHIO
Borman St. school will have two very rare Race teachers this year in the personal office of C. Thurman and his wife, Able of Columbus was in the city wide organization known as the UniTies wide organization known as the UniTies several social days with friends here, Samuel Ellis of Hotel Lincoln is again friends, after being confirmed at General hospital for the three weeks, friends, after being confirmed at General hospital for the three weeks, friends, after being confirmed at General hospital for the three weeks, Willie Jackson, N. Rowman and man of Columbus, is in the city on murines week-end with friends at Cleveland.
FREMONT OHIO
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
(Additional classified ads will be found on page 7, part 2.)
IN MEMORIAM
AGENTS WANTED
AGENTS WANTED—NATIONAL INDENTITY
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Will promote a full growth of hair. Will also prevent the strength vitality of the hair. If Your Hair Is Dry and Wiry, Try
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if you are bothered with Falling hair, hairbrush, Trouble with Trouble, we must try a jar of East India
city contains medical properties that go to the pools of the hair, stimulate the skin, stimulate the work. Leaves the hair soft and silky, and the skin healthy. The skin and flowers. The skin known remedy for Heavy and Beautiful Black Eye Disease. Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iris for Straightening. S. D. LYONS, 316 N. Central Oklahoma City, Oklaho. Extra for Postage.
AGENTS OUTFIT
1. Hair Grower, Oil
2. Shampoo, Oil
3. Face Cream, Oil
4. Face Cream and Directions for Scalp Treatment. Extra for Postage.
Smooth, Beautiful Hair may be had easily with the
STERNO
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