Chicago Defender
Saturday, December 19, 1925
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
THUG MURDERS BATTLING SIKI
EXTRA KU KLUX VOW REVENGE ON ALICE
GOES ONCE TOO OFTEN
THE PUGILIST
Battling Siki, the Senegalese boxer, shown here at height of career shortly after arriving for a tour of America.
BATTLER AND SECOND MATE
Battling Siki and his second wife, Miss Lillian Werner, whom he married in July, 1924, in Memphis, Tenn., after the legality of his first marriage was questioned.
THUG USE CLASSIFIED ADS FOR QUICK RESULTS
USE CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR QUICK RESULTS
TRA
EXTR
KILLS BUDDY AT PLAY
Clarkton, N. C., Dec. 18.—Benjamin Pone, 14, was stantly when his buddy. Prince Albert Whitted, 12, load of No. 8 shots from a double-barreled shotgun head while the youngsters were playing in a store of Tobermoy. Bladen county. Neither of the boys of the gun being loaded.
Benjamin Pone, 14, was killed in
Albert Whitted. 13, emptied a
ele-barreled shotgun into Pone's
playing in a store a mile south
Neither of the boys was aware
Clarkton, N. C., Dec. 18.—Benjamin Pone, 14, was killed instantly when his buddy. Prince Albert Whitted, 13, emptied a load of No. 8 shots from a double-barreled shotgun into Pone's head while the youngsters were playing in a store a mile south of Tobermoy. Bladen county. Neither of the boys was aware of the gun being loaded.
MEMORIAL FOR SOLDIERS
Washington, D. C., Dec. 18.—A bill to create a law of nine to "secure designs, pick a site and erect memorial in the nation" Hospital for our soldiers who fought in the wars of our country and the late has just been introduced into the first session congress by Representative William R. Wood of In resolution appropriates $50,000 for the immediate commission, six of whom are to be appointed by the Half of the $500,000 will be raised by subscription
—A bill to create a commission
to take a site and erect a $500,000
total for our soldiers and sailors
country and the late World war"
the first session of the 69th
diamond R. Wood of Indiana. The
50 for the immediate use of the
to be appointed by the president.
used by subscriptions.
Washington, D. C., Dec. 18.—A bill to create a commission of nine to "secure designs, pick a site and erect a $500,000 memorial in the nation"imental for our soldiers and sailors who fought in the wars of our country and the late World war" has just been introduced into the first session of the 69th congress by Representative William R. Wood of Indiana. The resolution appropriates $50,000 for the immediate use of the commission, six of whom are to be appointed by the president. Half of the $500,000 will be raised by subscriptions.
CONFESSES SHE LIED
Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 18.—Mrs. Joseph Berry (to told policemen last week that a member of the Raid her husband with an ax as he lay sleeping, and to tacked her, has just confessed that the slayer was named George Robinson. She confessed also that had been "very friendly" with her. Police now kni had framed the earlier story to save her white love
rrs. Joseph Berry (white), who member of the Race had killed lay sleeping, and then had at that the slayer was a white man confessed also that Robinson her. Police now know that she save her white lover.
Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 18.—Mrs. Joseph Berry (white), who told policemen last week that a member of the Race had killed her husband with an ax as he lay sleeping, and then had attacked her, has just confessed that the slayer was a white man named George Robinson. She confessed also that Robinson had been "very friendly" with her. Police now know that she had framed the earlier story to save her white lover.
"WORK OR TROT" FOR AFRICANS
(Available to the Chicago Defender)
Cape Town, South Africa, Dec. 18.—It will be v for the South Africans if the penal bill just made p minister of labor is passed at the next parliament s measure provides deportation to a penal colony for Under the vast powers conferred by the new bill ment can ship away to a labor colony for from years any man who applies to the state for a j refuses to accept what is offered him. Men acc and then not living up to their contracts will also ha GROCERYMAN TRIES T KILL SELF WITH REVO
Dec. 18. It will be work or trot
penal bill just made public by the
the next parliament session. The
a penal colony for all vagrants.
led by the new bill, the govern-
or colony for from one to five
to the state for a job and then
red him. Men accepting work
contracts will also have to leave.
TRIES TO
WITH REVOLVER
Cape Town, South Africa, Dec. 18.—It will be work or trot for the South Africans if the penal bill just made public by the minister of labor is passed at the next parliament session. The measure provides deportation to a penal colony for all vagrants. Under the vast powers conferred by the new bill, the government can ship away to a labor colony for from one to five years any man who applies to the state for a job and then refuses to accept what is offered him. Men accepting work and then not living up to their contracts will also have to leave.
GROCERYMAN TRIES TO KILL SELF WITH REVOLVER
Despondent on a long period of ill health Carthen, 10 years old, a groceryman, residing with Mrs. Jamie Carthen, in the rear of his store at 5 Ave., attempted to commit suicide in his bedroom morning by shooting himself through the head.
period of ill health. Daniel L
ryman, residing with his wife,
r of his store at 5016 Wabash
side in his bedroom Wednesday
through the head.
Dependent over a long period of ill health. Daniel L. Carthen, 10 years old, a groceryman, residing with his wife. Mrs. Janie Carthen, in the rear of his store at 5016 Wabash Ave., attempted to commit suicide in his bedroom Wednesday morning by shooting himself through the head.
The bullet entered over his light ear and came out through his jaw. The Third district police, summoned by Mrs. Carthen, took her husband to Wilson hospital.
Dr. Merwin R. Bibbs was summoned. His prompt first aid treatment prompted police to turn life. The police were unable to learn the motive Mrs. Turner had for wanting to kill herself.
BETHESDA CHURCH
BEGINS REBUILDING
Under the supervision of Charles H. Duke, well-known architect and civil engineer, reconstruction was begun Monday of Bethesda Baptist church, where the church was wrecked by a bomb placed in the 3rd St. entrance early on the morning of Oct. 16.
The church carried bombing insurance to the amount of $25,000. This insurance was paid to the church and its pastor, Rev. Ely T. Martin, following its first bombing last January shortly after the congregation moved into possession of the church. At that time the damage was slight.
According to a statement issued by the pastor of the church, the insurance company will rebuild the church, the same as it was before. The money covering the estimated damage is now in the First National bank.
VOL. XXI. NO. 33
The bullet entered over his right ear and came out through its jaw. The Third district police, summoned by Mrs. arthen, took her husband to Wilson hospital.
---
Mrs. Carthieu told the police that he was preparing her husband's breakfast when she heard the shot. When she reached the bedroom she saw him on the floor endeavoring to retrieve the order, which he had dropped. The sun was several feet from where he was. Carthieu was the only witness to the shooting. She was held at the station while the police made further investigation. She was released when Officer McMeeley reported the finding of a written message which read: "Please don't hold my wife. She is not to blame." Questioned as to why he sought to kill himself, Carthieu told his wife the details of the condition. At the hospital-physicians said he may recover. Carthieu is well known in fraternal circles and is member of St. Paul C. M. E. Church. The third district police were summoned to the home of Mrs. Pauline Turner, 25, 835 E. 48th St., St. Paul, MN. The minutes of the apartment in a state of excitement, for Mrs. Turner had
BATTLER AND SECOND MATE Battling Siki and his second wife, Miss Lillian Werner, whom he married in July, 1924, in Memphis, Tenn., after the legality of his first marriage was questioned.
COPYRIGHT 1925
BY ROBERT S. ABBUTT PUBLISHING COMPANY
RAKU
PAS
BATTLIN
IN STREET
AFTER E
New York, Dec.
champion pugilist
of undetermined C
He was found lynin
of 354 W. 41st St.
KU KI
PAST
BATTLING SIK
IN STREETS O
AFTER BRAWI
New York, Dec. 18.—Battling champion pugilist of the world of undetermined character su
He was found lying face down
of 354 W. 41st St. by Policema
PASTOR HAD 'TORTURE POST'
BATTLING SIKI FOUND SLAIN POLiceman Is Killed IN STREETS OF NEW YORK by Man Who Stole AFTER BRAWL IN CABARET Estranged Wife
New York, Dec. 18.—Battling Siki, former light heavyweight champion pugilist of the world, is dead as a result of injuries of undetermined character suffered early Tuesday morning. He was found lying face downward on the sidewalk in front of 354 W. 41st St. by Policeman John Meehan of the W. 30th St. station, who had been conversing with the boxer about four hours before he discovered his body lying in a pool of blood, bleeding from the nose and mouth.
Meehan said he believed at that time that Siki had fractured his skull. Subsequent developments led the police to believe that Siki died either of knife or gunshot wounds. He was wounded in the back. An ambulance summoned from New York hospital brought Dessner to the scene. Dessner said that Siki was dead, but a hurried examination failed to reveal the cause of death. There was no indication of a fractured skull. The body was removed from 30th St. body station on one occasion. Dessner said await the medical examiners verdict. The opinion prevailed that Siki had been shot to death. A 32 valleier pistol was found about feet from the body. The discovery of shots had been discharged from it and the police theory is that the murderer discarded it in his flight. Detective McNamara picked up the body for the fighter's body was discovered.
departed. The shooting theory is bolstered up by the statement of a porter employed by the New York Telegram who was on his way to the police station. The Siki is thought to have mutilated his mouth.
The porter states that he and a friend were walking on W. 41st St. when they heard a single shot fired, immediately after they saw a man in one occasion. The man was in the wrong way in W. 41st St. toward 10th St.
The section of the city in which Siki met his death has been an unfortunate one for the battler. He has been embroiled in several scraps of theft. Kitchen on one occasion was stolen. Billed in the time in which his adversary shushed him with a knife. Although the cause and other details of this last incident have always been obscure, the story of Siki's involvement in the attack is in a strictly private quarrel in the role of a self-appointed peacemaker and was shot for his pains. His last appearance in this country was against Lee Anderson at the Fourth regiment army Nov. 13. He was outpainted and razzed because of his down antiles. His last encounter with the fighter's body was discovered.
Talked With Officer
Policeman Meehan said he had last seen Sikl, with whom he was well acquainted, on his body. Four of his friends, he had met the fighter, he said, at the corner of 41st St. and Ninth Ave. Sikl had told him that he was on his way to his home, where he met the police with his wife. He and the policeman exchanged words regarding the antics of a monkey which was one of the suspects, and continued on his round. He heard no disturbance, and on finding the body of a man on the sidewalk thought he merely another drink, he immediately recognized Sikl.
Wife Goes to Station
Shortly after Siki's body had been brought to the police station his memphis, Tenn., before her marriage, entered. She had waited up for him and when he did not come home she then went to the inquire about him. She had a preamble to something was wrong. After questioning by the police she immediately shot and shooting Mrs. Siki informs the police that her husband had eaten in a restaurant in the neighborhood and that she missed the evening previous and that his overcourt had been stolen. He said that he knew who took it and that he had not noticed the brief would be there. The police believe the suspect was found, an argument ensued and that after she lowed and shot in the back as he
AT THE HEIGHT OF HIS RING CAREER
Photo shows Battling Siki when he won the light heavyweight championship. Oct. 5, 1922, by knocking out Georges Carpentier, the ring idol of France. Siki, with his newly won riches, launched into a life of dissipation which often caused him to go broke. His manager, long ago, gave up hopes to reform him.
CHICAGO, ILL., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
departed. The shooting theory is bolstered by the statement of a porter employed by the New York City police, who worked about the time that Sikh is thought to have met his death.
The porter states that he and a friend were walking on W. 41st St. when a single shot immediately fired from a light court running east in 41st St. toward 10th Ave.
The section of the city in which Sikh met his death has been an unfortunate accident, and has been embroiled in several scraps in "Hell's Kitchen" and on one occasion was nearly killed during a shameless drive with a knife. Although the cause of and other details of this last incident have always been obscure, the accepted story at the time was that a police officer videotaped a quarrel in the role of a self-appointed peacemaker and was shaded for his pains.
Sikh's rising appearance in this case has been a reminder that Anderson at the Fourth regiment armory Nov. 13. He was outpainted and razzed because of his clown antics. His last encounter with the Commonwealth Sporting club on Aug. 5 against Joe Silvani, when he was disqualified by Referee Andy McGee, ordered to break clearly the clinches. The latter part of July this year he was found stabbed in the street and rushed to a hospital for treatment, where he refused to remain.
Held at Ellis Island
The latter part of April last year he was detained at Ellis island by immigration officials when the Ward when Sihoney docked from Havana when Sihoney arrived in French quota had been exhausted The French consul intervened and he was admitted. On Nov. 7 he was taken to the person and suspended from boxing New Jersey ring by Chief Inspector Platt Adams of the New Jersey boxing commissoldin. Only a short time later he made application for his first visa and followed alegiance to France on the same day that Rudolph Valentino applied for his first papers. Bob Levy, his manager, also the manager of Jose Lombrida boxes, when called on the phone at his office Tuesday morning said that he was dumplied by the news of the murder of Sihli and that he would be sent to the police as assistant. Levy said that he practically had Sihli hooked to appear in a skirt with Jimmy Cooper's revue was scheduled to open in Washington, with Mrs. Sihli, will arrange for the burial. The funeral probably will take place on Friday. The news of Sihli's murder spread through
With a locked door between them as a shield, Police Officer Albert C. Parker and Arthur Jones fought a revolver duel on
With a locked door between them as a shie Albert C. Parker and Arthur Jones fought a the third floor of an apartment house at 4055 Calumet Ave. Thursday morning. The trouble is alleged to have been over the estranged wife of Parker, Mrs. Ida Parker. The policeman died at 6 p.m. Sunday at Wilson hospital. He was shot through the chest.
Mrs. Parker confessed to Sergt. Owen Ward that she had left her husband some time in September, and had moved from their rooming place at 4356 Indiana Ave. to the home of Mrs. Laton Stokes, 4208 Calumet Ave. She lived there until a month ago, when she moved to the home of Jones, where they had lived as man and wife for the last month.
She stated that she married Parker five years ago, but was compelled to leave him
KU KLUX VOW REVENGE ON ALICE RHINELANDER
Fort Pierce, Fla., Dec. 18.—The Ku Klux Klan of the entire state of Florida is on the trail of Mrs. Alice Rhinelander, who had been reported on her way here, vowing revenge upon the woman who dared to violate southern "established customs," which President Coolidge has already given orders shall not be interfered with.
eye which he had given her five months ago.
"I have asked my husband ever since we have been married to make a home for me, but he refused to do so. I have told him to self badly. I met Arthur at the Polly tea room in the Wrigley building, where we both worked, and we was kind to me and offered me a gift to me and to live with him," she confessed.
Hears Sheeting
"The morning of the shooting I was in the kitchen, making some coffee when I heard the door bell ring. I told a rooomer. Miss Beulah
KU KLUX VOW ON ALICE
Fort Pierce, Fla., Dec. 18. — state of Florida is on the trail had been reported on her way woman who dared to violate s which President Coolidge has a interfered with.
Kluxers guarded every highway leading into this city, and met trains all week, on the chance that the bride of the millionaire New Yorker might make this her destination.
Meenwhile, white hotels throughout the South were yielding to Klan demands that its wife barred should she apply to rooms. Mrs. Rhinelander was resting safely within 50 miles of her New Rochelle home, and within easy halling distance of Ky. She reappeared New Rochelle for a few hours at Tuesday. At no time, said her at-
Officer Parker
Coleman, that if anyone asked for me I was not there. Pretty soon I heard a voice say I am a police officer or a friend. My friend I asked my husband, don't let him in. When I heard kicking on the front door I ran out the back door, for I was afraid that my husband was going to throw. Then I heard shooting. The lady next door would not let me in, and as I started back in my house Archer can pass me and told me that he was shot and ran down the stairs toward the alley. I went in the (Continued on Page 2)
REVENGE RHINELANDER
The Ku Klux Klan of the entire of Mrs. Alice Rhinelander, who here, vowing revenge upon the outhern "established customs," already given orders shall not be torment. Lee Parsons Davies, has she been more than 50 miles away from her honey and most of her family has been spent with her mother's sister in Brewster, N. Y. Kip is in the same neighborhood and it is common rumor, according to the reports reaching up from the northern city, that the two are reunited.
Prominent Klansmen here have sworn to "make it mightly unhealthy" for Mrs. Leonard Rhinebeck, a former soil soldier. Committee meetings of klan organizations were called in every community as soon as word was received that the central figure (Continued on Page 4)
SIKI, WIFE HE LEFT, AND CHILD
Battling Siki, his first wife, who was Gertrude Amphier,
a native of Holland, and their only child, a son. They
were married a year before Siki won the championship
from Carpentier in France,
NATIONAL
EDITION
PREACHER GETS 20 YEARS FOR HANGING CHILDREN TO TORTURE POST BY THUMBS
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 18.—"Rev." James J. Johnson, who said he received a degree of doctor of divinity from an American correspondence school while he was working in a diamond mine in South Africa, was sentenced to from 10 to 20 years in the Eastern penitentiary by Judge Smith after several women and children at his "church" at 1721 Oxford St. told how he had tortured them by hanging them by their thumbs to a post.
"You are the type of man who should be sent to prison and the key thrown away," said Judge Smith in sentencing Johnson. "I don't know what you do, whether you hypnotized these women and children or what you did to them, but be your crayon in your beacon a king in your eyes and instead of using this influence for good you use it for all the devilry and evil you can think of."
"I am sorry that I cannot give you more than a sentence of 10 to 20 years."
Johnson burst into a hymn, singing loudly, who was led away to the sheriff's cellroom to be taken to the penitentiary.
Johnson was arrested on Nov. 21 after the county detectives heard of the murder of the manner he conducted his "church" on Oxford St.
County Detective John J. McGettigan was the star witness against the manner in the cellar of the "Joshish Baptist Mission of Africa," which Johnson conducted and to which the children and women in the church were hung together.
WOMAN SLAYER SENTENCED TO DIE ON DEC. 28
Makes Plea to Judge for Mercy
Samuel Washington, 25 years old, received relief and found a lawyer in Judge Harry B. Miller's court of first degree murder, must die on the gallows Dec. 28, unless a stay of execution is obtained from some source.
Washington was convicted for the slaying of Mrs. Minnie Davis on the morning of July 1 last, at her home, 414 Calmet Ave. She had formerly worked at the 55th Indian Ave., but because he would not work she broke with him and returned to
McGgettian said Johnson had nine women subjects and between 20 and 40 men subjects. The second floor was a throne room to which he summoned his subjects by a series of gongs and bells in all rooms in the house. Johnson recorded McGgettian made his subjects take an cath "to obey their king" before joining the cull. He styled himself the King of McGgettian. McGgettian, who said Johnson was driven from Washington, D. C., two years ago for practicing there, some other people wore wrist rattles each other with copper wrist rattles and then put liniment on the cuts.
Mechanic. Who Killed
FAMILY OF 2
X Philadelphia, Pa. Dec. 18, For-
mer of the three persons Oct. 25, Fred Thorpe, a mechanic, was sentenced to from six to 12 years in the Eastern penitentiary, and was posed by Judge Charles Y. Audenreld, when thorpe pleaded guilty. Gerry G. Brock, a wealthy clumman, is now serving a sentence of six to 10 years for an offense almost identi- fied by thorpe. Brock was posed two years before and was—really refused a pardon
22 PAGES
PITFALLS
T, AND CHILD
who was Gertrude Amphier,
only child, a son. They
won the championship
SIKI
NATIONAL
DITION
* PRICE TEN CENTS
ALICE
POST
TS 20 YEARS
CHILDREN TO
T BY THUMBS
"Rev." James J. Johnson, who
actor of divinity from an Amer-
cle he was working in a diamond
enced to from 10 to 20 years in
edge Smith after several women
WOMAN SLAYER
SENTENCED TO
DIE ON DEC. 28
Makes Plea to Judge for Mercy
"I have no education, Judge, and can't express myself as I desire, but I can," he said. "Give me another chance," he pleaded. After his plea for mercy, Washington listened unmoved to the solemn announcement of the court that murdered him.
53 KNOWN DEAD IN ALABAMA COAL MINE BLAST
MAGGIE JONES
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PART 1—PAGE 2
GRIM SCENES DISCLOSED BY RESCUEPARTY
THE DEAD
CLAUDE ODUM.
GEORGE THOMAS.
IKE HILL.
DLEW WHITE.
DALLAS HARRIS.
SIMPSON BOYD.
TURNER WILLIAMS.
ED SMITH.
JONIE WILLIAMS.
REV. C. COLLINS, pastor of the White Hill Baptist church.
CICERO JACKSON.
DICK PRATER
C. R. COLLINS.
WILLY WANDA.
CHARLES MICHELL.
HENRY CUMMINGS.
RICHARD SANDERS.
GLIFF SANDERS.
RHEE QUEEN.
GORDON TOLBERT.
TOM LEE KNIGHT.
MANNIE PERKINS.
ROSCOE JONES.
JEO JONES.
WILL JONES.
ROBERT CHAPMAN.
GABE POWELL.
ROBERT HENDERSON.
WILL FULLBROOK.
ROBERT LEVLEY.
CARY JONES.
CHARLES MITCHELL.
Birmingham, Ab., Dec. 18—With a death list of 53 believed to have been killed in the fire, the men made their final efforts Friday, Dec. 1, to remove three bodies reburied in which was partly wrecked by an explosion of gas Thursday, Dec. 10. The bodies are those of two white men and one member of our group. Of the bodies already removed 33 are of our group and 1 member of our group. The work of rescue practically completed, the surrounding community was relieved. The help it might give the bereaved.
Minister Is Victim
One woman who heard the blast while she was about her household duties and knew its meaning, never for a moment left the mouth of her baby to her boom through the cold to protect it from the cold.
Mule Saves Miner
One miner owes his escape to his mule. Back somewhere in the mountains, the conditions appeared darkest for the enmeshed men, but the mule, not gnus, Climbing to the mule's tall the man, who had been blasted, took this means of saving himself. He said he knew the mule would get out if there was any gettter.
AEROPLANED TO THE BIG GAME
—Photos by John Lampion, Guthrie, Okla.
Above—Simon Berry's eight-cylinder Swallow airplane in which he flew from Tulsa to Langston, Okla., last Saturday to witness the Wilberforce-Langston intersectional football game. Mr. Berry brought along J. L. Northington, a business man of Tulsa. Reading from left to right: J. L. Northington and Simon Berry (both seated in cockpits of the Swallow); Dr. Isaac Young, president of Langston, who welcomed the aviators on behalf of the university, and Frank Young, sports editor of The Chicago Defender, who was field judge in the game. Below—A group of students and children from nearby farms. Who rushed to the cottonfield when Berry made his landing after circling over the university grounds, which is seen in the background. (Story of the game on Sport page.)
THREE INDICTED
Vickersburg, Miss. Dec. 18—Willem Chimes, Shelby Green and Will Dixon, who engaged in a gun battle with police here Friday night when the latter raided an illicit still on the edge of town, were indicted by the grand jury and when arraigned Chimes and Green pleaded guilty to the following charges: Concealed weapon; assault and assault to kill. Dixon was not arraigned with the others, as he was so seriously wounded that he may be dead.
Kentucky Votes to Nullify Its Separate School Board
Louisville, Ky., Dec. 18—That the maintenance of separate school boards in Kentucky functioned to the disadvantage of the educational system was brought out in the sixth annual state interracial conference which held its sessions in the Jefferson county courthouse last Friday. A resolution favoring the abandonment of a plan calling for the unification of the governing board in educational affairs was voted on. Phillo C. Knox, chairman of the interracial commission presiding over the outburst, before the conference.
Other Resolutions
Other resolutions voted on were one favoring consolidated schools for our larger counties, one favoring sectional high schools for groups of counties, an yone of which would not have a large number of schools to support such an establishment. Dr. James Bond, director of the interracial commission, opened the report to the public, and the annual report. The report declared that people within Kentucky were learning to think in the language of, and more familiar with, the state, ever, declared in his statement that both educational and health conditions for the race in Kentucky were better than those in other southern states. He brought up the subject of separate school boards and separate taxation for the counties.
Appropriations Small
He declared further that under the present system there was but little cash to be expended on our schools, to be expended on our relations for the normal school at Frankfort and the so-called agricultural college were far too small, statistic statistics ever made to those schools was $40,000 to the Frankfort school and $15,000 to the Paducah college. He was also the board of education at Frankfort then presented a general and comprehensive survey of the educational field in Kentucky. At the close of his speech, he said that he had the number of schools, high schools and rural schools open to our peo-
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
which he flew from Tulsa to Bangston intersectional football man of Tulsa. Reading from bed in cockpits of the Swallow);仪ators on behalf of the univer-er, who was field judge in the baby farms. Who rushed to the university grounds, which is
to Nullify
the School Board
Hold Funeral Services
Last rites for Mrs. Nettle Hines, wife of Robert Hines, of Winnipeg, Canada, who passed away Saturday, June 16, 2015, of cancer of Mrs. Laura Green, 627, Earlham Place, Wednesday afternoon at St. Thomas episcopal church, Interment in Lincoln Cemetery. Mrs. Hines came to the city three years ago, where she had been under treatment for the Maye brothers, Mrs. Hines was her sister. She was Improving. On Saturday she was suffering from a relapse of her regular walk, she suffered a relapse of several hours later. Well known in Chicago and Winnipeg, be a member of the Princess Hazar chapter, Eastern University, and club of the Ott Chief Companion, Foresters. She is survived by a brother, Walter Lax; a host of other relatives.
Gets Three Years
Tampa, Fla. Dec. 18—Charged with the murder of a jury member was convicted by a jury and sentenced to two years in prison. Judge Petwaya last week in criminal court Robinson was arrested within two weeks after the occurrence to Pearl McLeod depicted the occurrence to Pearl McLeod depicted two months ago.
NISS STEWART JLL
Extend Courses
WASHINGTON WOMAN GAINS LEGAL POINT
Washington, D. C., Dec. 18.—Mrs. Ruth A. Osborne, 1920 10th St. N. Washington, D. C., 1920 10th St. N. in her legal battle with her husband, Jerome B. Osborne, of 766 13rd St. N. Washington, D. C., 1920 10th St. N. McCoy granted a motion to strike two paragraphs from the cross bill for an absolute divorce filed by her chicken paragraphs alleged that Mr. Osborne, in view of having suspected his wife of infidelity, inflicted on her the first time that she had misconducted herself with Benjamin B. Pinn of 712 Kenwood, W. Va., resulting in her physical condition which necessitated an operation. In the other paragraph Mr. Osborne, in view of having misconduct during the year 1921 and between the dates of Aug. 16 and 25, the motion to strike out these two paragraphs from the cross bill of 712 Kenwood, W. Va., resulted in Thew Wright and Philip Kierchner on behalf of Mr. Pinn, whom they represent. The motion was allowed to be approved by the cross bill to amend his cross bill to the grounds that the two paragraphs were irrelevant, indefinite, uncertain and improper. The cross bill will be amended.
Counsel for Mr. Osborne also ahanced a motion county of year-end to award the child a wished award to Mrs. Osborne on Nov. 27 last. Mr. Osborne was given the right to visit the child a reasonable time upon proper notice. Mrs. Osborne is suing her husband for cruelty and neglect. Mr. Osborne denied her charges and filed a cross on cruelty and neglect. Mr. Osborne will Mr. Pinn as the correspondent. Mrs. Osborne is represented by Attorneys Raymond Neudecker and Bertrand McCormick. Mrs. Osborne is represented by Attorneys Lambert Yeatman and Canfield.
POLICEMAN KILLED IN HUNT FOR WIFE
(Continued from Page 1)
house and called the police. The house and called the police. The door had remained closed. I did not see my husband, as he did not gain entrance to the flat. I was instructed by Miss Coleman. She added that she had lived in the apartment, where she knew Mrs. Parker as Mrs. Jones, standing at the front door with a gun in his hand, but had closed the door to her bedroom at Jones' com-
Jones Arrested
Jones was traced to the Wilson hospital by Sergeant Jesse Griffith and Officer Jesse Mutter, where he was being treated around the house, where he was inked to the Third district police station, where he stated to Sergeant Patrick Gallagher that he had shot five times, and that he had shot the outside outside the outside had broken the panel of the door and began shooting through the door into his home.
MISS WIGGINS WEDS
DR.MAURICE WINSTON
M. and Mrs. Grantland Wigens, 517
E. 42d Ph., announce the marriage of
their daughter, Martha Austelle, to
Dr. W. Maurice
Winston on April 15, 1925. The
noun cement
comes as a sur-
prise to their
friends as the
wedding was
scheduled to take
the day of the
Tulteide season.
This comes as a
double surprise
to those who
thought Dr. Wigens
to the city in
October was to
the city in June,
which had
already been
tied for once
Mrs. Winston,
Winston on April 15, 1925. The an ounc ement comes as a sur jure friend as the wedding was scheduled to take place during the palate season. This comes in surprise for the couple though it Dr. Winston's visit to the city in October was to which had already been tiled for the Mrs. Winston, father of Atlanta university and Bryan & Stratton Rushi corporation of the agency department of the Liberty Life insurance company. Her husband was discovered two persons of world-wide renown in Cole-Talbert and Clarence N. Nuse.
Dr. Winston, who is a graduate of the University of Illinois and is now serving as the chief medical work at the University of Illinois and is now serving as the chief medical work at the University of Kansas City, Mo. As a liaison of the undergraduate chapter of the Omega Phi Beta fraternity, Dr. Winston has very good work toward the betterment of the chapter and it is reported that he is working on the chapter in the graduate chapter of Kansas City.
50-Year-Old Man Shot
to Death by Stepson
Texarkan, Texas, Dec. 15. I-Abo killed instantly at his home seven miles northwest of town last week, receiving a full charge of a horrific hit. His 15-year-old son was killed the Texas side jail charged with the shooting. He held Bland was beating the boys mother and when he protested attempted to get a gun with which to attack the boys, the police was sitting in a corner of an adjoining room and fire dose shot. Accident first time Bland had attacked his wife in seven or eight years.
Boy Fataly Injured
Fordyce, Ark. Dec. 18—Robert Jones, a former last Friday, when he fell from a wagon on a hill, told the youth was ruling on the wagon-board with 3,000 feet of lumber; the wheels passing over his head, the wheels passing over his head, the wheels passing over his head, the acid-occured. John Manning
Urge Masonic Members
Members of Oriental lodge. No. 68. Free and Accepted Masons, are urged to bring Christmas cheer to the inmates by sending them cards of greeting and by sending them cards of greeting and a cash donation of one dollar. The lodge has adopted its "holiday slogan,
"Bat" Siki Is Found Dead After Brawl
DESCRIBES CULTURAL 1,000 DELEGATES AT RISE AS REMARKABLE MASONS' MEETING
(Continued from Page 1)
Harlem like wildfire and most of the dailyanners got out extras.
Sikh had a stormy career. Probably no more colorful fighter—and ever stepped through the ropes. He was born to the best of his knowledge, J. O. B. Moseley and Senegal in September 16, 1907, and in his earlier years as "Baye," a name invented for him by the French home. He was a child of the jungle. When he was about ten years old he adopted him and dressing him in a gaudy uniform installed him in her villa on the Riviera in the role of a maid. He was thrown on his own resources.
He found employment as a bottle washer in a Toulouse bar room. He worked in the kitchen, pre and decided to enter the rink, where the earnings were slightly higher. He had the number of dollars earned a total of $60. Then he found profitable houts to pick and went back to the bottles. He worked in the bar room, broke out in 1815. He enlisted in the Eighth Colonial cavalry. He was commissioned to serve in the military and heroism, receiving the cross de guerre and the medalion of the Legion of Honor. He was discharged with a special recommendation from the commanding officer. As a discharged soldier with decorations, Sikh found a special recommendation from his adopted trade of pugilism. He worked himself up through the ranks and then the idol of Carpenter, then the idol of Prince, for the world's champion lightweight skate. In 1922 Sikh defended gorgeous Georgian skates and carried out Carpenter to ribbons in doing so, and immediately charged Georges with the idol. He stated that he agreed to lose to Carpenter and then decided to double-cross the champion, and his title was taken from him.
He was reinstated in time to meet the team. He was named captain of St. Patrick's day, 1293, and Mike heft him in 20 rounds on points, winning 10 of them. He came in 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, and engaged in real houts with indifferent success, winning 10 of the fighters, including the present
By W. F. McDERMOTT
Much has been recorded of Race matters, and the attention has been paid to the increase in wealth, while comparatively natural side. As a matter of fact, the advancement of the Colored race in this field is just as striking as that in white. The contact of most white people with Colored is with porters, housemaids, and other of various types. Little is known those who have made more substantial great throng. More than fifty thousand of the Race in the United States today are engaged as ministers, law officers, druggists, editors, architects, photographers, bankers, engineers, cotton mills, dry goods stores, insurance companies, theaters, wholesale houses, undertaking establishments, and their dealings. Their dealings are almost entirely with their own people, hence white their own people, and the advancement of this phase, with Race progress.
In the field of art, science, music and literature the Race is making important life. Some of the highest paid singers in America today are members of various groups, and various sorts they have done notable work. Their contribution to music is said by some authorities to be that of any single group in American life.
In cultural and social activities the Race is advancing rapidly. In Chili's south and some in the central social centers devoted a little to the Race. The Y. M. C. is thronged with young men who are educated, organized, affiliated, but also social and mental betterment. The number of musical clubs, educationally classes and improvement organizations affiliated to the Race over the country Y. M. C. A. reports its Race work steadily gaining with others in 30 of the 88 American cities of more than 100,000 population. Not long ago the writer was in the court of the 88 American lawyer. His private library was worthy of a professor of literature. Complete sets of the works of the Racial Law were in evidence, together with a numerable other classic and popular editions. Evidences of refinement and culture were all about, signifying that the Race was well equipped with material achievement alone. Just recently a group of Race people were in the Gulf coast in Mississippi and plan a huge development. It will be a center of chauquilla culture devoted to Race uplift, education sciences and of educational gatherings.
Nothing is more indicative of utilize satisfactory solution of the race problem than that the Race are ear-ringed, the people are selfless and that the white people are more and more endeavoring to afford the needed opportunity.
SUSPECT TAKEN AWAY
Little Rock, Ark. Dec. 18—Fearing violence from a mob of 4,000 men, warring peacefully at home, Mrs. Leah Bleving, who was slain Friday, Sheriff Homer Adkins of Pulaski county Sunday night, marched to George Washington Martin, suspect, to an unannounced destination.
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"He was a good boy. A little mischief on the never mind any harm to anybody, but he did an idea it. He came to me two or three times. His name is Jimmy and he healed me. He came to St. He's a little fellow with a cruel face. He said to me "Skii over me going to get him." We (Skii and rMx. Skii) saw this man on the other night. He approached the other night. He approached Skii and asked him for the $20. Skii said he'd pay him when he had his money. I last saw Skii last night about 7 o'clock. He went out for a later, when I went out to buy him for him. As I passed Skii in front of our home, I suggested he go upstairs to the store. He agreed and stared to leave a groom of men with whom he had come. In Eighth Ave. I passed a picture house that was showing a film in the theater, coming out and home at 11 o'clock. Skii was absent. I went to bed, only to be awakened to the noise of the house, who told me of my husband's fate.
"We hah planned to leave New York today. Sikl was going to Washinton to visit a memorial. I was making a trip to Memphis, Tenn. to visit relatives for a few weeks. It was in Memphis that I met a friend, and I slept with both of us. Later I went to New Orleans to see him fight, then to Chicago, later to Rochester. I came to New York with him, where we were married in July a year ago."
Little Rock, Ark. Dec. 18- Lum John connected with an attempt to burn down the house of a woman at the foot of the street, where he have thrown kerosene about the walls of the frame house and seized it, gushed the blaze, and gushed the blaze. That Johnson had stored a quantity of whisky on the floor, and that he be was attempting to take revenge upon the woman, whom he had and gave the police the information.
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BUTLER HERO WHEN FLAMES WRECK HOUSE
Montclair, N. J., Dec. 18—The courage and presence of mind of the firefighters on the morning of Dec. 8 from the second floor of their burning home, and Mr. John Johnson, the healthy widow of the firefighters, at 6:15 in the morning in his room on the third floor of the home, and Mr. John Ave, and although he was choking from smoke he dressed and ran down to the second floor where he was sitting. When the three sought to escape from the rooms they found that flames and thick smoke enveloped the second floor. Booker dashed down stairs through the flames to turn in a firehouse. Meanwhile the Millenkens had opened a window and called for help. Herbert, "Ellie" their neighbor, and the fire department. Firemen raised a ladder to the second floor and the Millenkens. The fire, caused, according to Fitz Chief Jethro, by spontaneous combustion in a pantry on the first floor, with electric wiring, was extinguished after an hour and a half of work by the firemen. The damage was about 10 feet.
The butler was slightly burned in his dash through the flames to turn in an alarm.
**PROWLER SENTENCED**
Nine sentences totaling 30 years were given to Henry Horn, alleged prowler, Saxon county criminal court on two counts. Horn was found guilty and given a sentence of 15 years on the murder J, W. Littrell, 1504 Kirk St., on the night of Sept. 10, and was sentenced to 15 years in the penten-
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SATURDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1925
ALUMNI WILL KEEP UP WAR ON DURKEE
Washington, D. C., Dec. 18—Because Howard university's trustee board "merely whitewashed" alumni against their management, brought against President Murray at its special hearing last Thursday Howard alumni who are still dissatisfied with the Durkee regime announced carrying their fight for his removal into the United States congress by demanding a congressional investigation of the conduct of the school. "We don't want to carry the school's ard's money, but we're going to secure a federal investigation by asking congress to consider the advising the university as apprehensions, rather conducted" seems the general sentiment of the General Alumni association while the Howard officials will be supported President Durkee in the controversy retort. "Go ahead. In a showdown we can muster as many of the alumni as we can investigate as you can for one."
Trustees Exonerate Durkee
The special trustee board meeting Thursday which climaxed a conferred campaign by a powerful funion faction to oust President Durkee from office. The campaign lasted until 7:30 in the evening. It was held in the board room of the Carnegie library on the campus. It resulted in a complete exoneration of Durkee from office. He preferred against him, while four professors whom he had summarily discharged in June were voted a year's leave of absence with pay, during July, 1825. The men were from the office of pleasure were Profs. Larry Leye, Monza H. Brown, Metz T. Z. Lochard and Orlando C. Thornton. The resolution which cleared President Durkee expressed the board's
During the hearing 50 faculty members were called to testify their approval or disapproval of Dr. Durant, the former faculty member. The older faculty members, Dr. E. P. Davis and Dean D. W. Woodward expressed disapproval. Dean Kelly Miller, Dr. Ernest E. Just, Dr. Robert H. Hunt, Dr. Tunnell, Dr. Dean Dwight O. W. Holmes, Dean Lucy Slowe, Profs. Roy W. Tibbs, Charles Wesley, Will Oleman and Miss Lulu V. Childen, those who criticized the president.
Bring Serious Charges
Emmett J. Scott, it was testified, had told Carter G. Woodson that 10 students missed before any action had been taken. The meeting was called at the request of five board members, and among the chargees against President Durkee are "incompetence, hiring and firing professors arbitrarily, overcharging for verifying funds, and deliberately insulting the Race by accepting the presidency of a school that barred the Race while yet president of
Present at the meeting were the following trustees: Dr. Charles R. Brown, New Haven Conn, president of the board of trustees; Dr. Sara W. Brown, Washington; Rolfe Cobleich, editor of the Congregationalist, Boston; Boston; Dr. J. Stanley Duske, Washington; Victor R. Doeber, president of the Second National bank, Washington; Dr. Albert Bushnell Hart of the Massachusetts; Mass.; John R. Hawkins, president of the Prudential bank, Washington; Dr. Thomas Jesse Jones, of the City of C. H. Pine, vice president of the Munsey Trusti company, Washington; Justice Stanton J. Peel, Washington; Dr. Ulvesss G. P. Washington; Dr. Stuart C. Washington; Dr. J. E. Moorland, Brooklyn; Hon. James C. Nauplier, Nashville, Tenn.; General John H. Sherburne, Boston; Dr. Marcus F. Sherburne, Boston; Dr. C. Summer Wormley, Washington.
Representing the General Alumni association were: Dr. George Fraget, president of the association; Thomas R. Drett, New York; James A. Lightfoot, Atlantic City; N. J., and George A. Hollins, president of the Nohle M. Quander, Rev. W. D. Javis and Thomas Walker, all of Washington. W. Bouth, dean of the schools of law. Howard university was requested by the board of trustees to sit with the board to guide it about orderly and established administration of the schools of law, appeared during the proceedings by consent of the board because as Dr. Durkee's personal counsel.
Woman Stabbed Fatally
Little Rock, Ark., 16, Mrs. Bertha Mohr, 414 E. 17th St., was discharged on January 16, to be pieck by Mrs. Emma Famun, it aligned, at a dance hall at 56th and cousin St., the two women was discharged. The two women were receiving medical treatment she was discharged. The woman alleged to have discharged could not be found by the police.
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Scene in the city council last week when aldermen of the city took a stand against impure milk that has been coming into Chicago. Standing in the rear, center, is Alderman R. R. Jackson of the Third ward. On the right, standing, is Alderman Louis B. Anderson of the Second ward.
CHICAGOANS RALLY TO SPREAD XMAS CHEER FOR POOR OF THE CITY
With donations of $190.75 from last week's matinee benefit performance as a foundation, The Chicago Defender's Christ-
as a foundation. The Chicago Detroiter's Christmas basket fund is every day growing nearer the figure that will be needed to give the kiddies of this city the Yuletide greetings that they have become accustomed to expecting at the hands of the World's Greatest Weekly. The dollars that will bring dolls to gladden little Nellie's heart, and the pennies that will bring crayons for orphan Jimmie are alike acceptable, and brought into
has basket found
the figure that wi
of this city the Yi
become accustom
of the World's C
that will bring a
heart, and the p
for orphan Jinn
both are being brought into
both are being brought into the Defender office each day.
The Chicago Defender inaugurated a new office spreading some Christmas joy each year into homes where boys and girls who would otherwise be left to spend all their time was all about. And today there are scores and even hundreds of young children crowded in rear rentements on the South side and huddled in the North side of the West side to whom Christmas and The Chicago Defender are almost synonymous. The Race in Chicago has accomplished much, it has much to be thankful for, and the Defender is the form of generous donations that in this Tuleide season the more prosperous of the Race have not forgotten the less fortunate. Children going to keep faith with the kiddies.
The line for the "Good Fellows" forms in front of the Defender office, and will stretch into every office and every home within falling or mailing distance, for all Chicago is eager to see it. The basket in the church has been one of the donors expressed it.
Hundreds Cry for Aid
But there can be no "hustling point" in this fund, for long as the line of Good Fellows may become in
Arrest Girl for Theft of Clothing, Necklace
New York, Dec. 16.—Miss Gertrude Bush. 16, 2412 Seventh Ave. was taken into custody on a charge of grand larceny by Detective Johnson for arraignment in the Bronx children's court Saturday. The case was adjourned when she tailed to appear. The $1,000 bail furnished by an insurance company was forfeited. When found she was accused of having stoles $500 worth of clothing and a pearl necklace belonging to Rue Schacht, 213 Miriam St. for whom she was a nurse. She pleaded not guilty.
Painter Killed by Fall
From High Scaffolding
New York, Dec. 15.—Edward Torsley, 35, 105. Ws. 158. St. was instantly scaffolded. Friday St. was scaffolded second floor of 1219 Madison Ave. where he was painting. Torsley lost his balance in from the fire escape where they could assemble. He was raising the scaffold. Dr. Tora, who was summoned immediately from Harlem hospital, that Torsley had fractured his skull.
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front of the Defender office, there will always stretch in back of the Defender office an almost endless collection of toys, some of them hardly old enough to understand why fortune breaks so hard for them; girls, many of them doing a woman's work in some neglected corner of the house, struggling to fill the dual role of homemaker and breadwinner, and men fighting desperately to keep together a family some seem to wish to leave the world—all of them make up the well-nigh endless line of deserving poor that stretches away from the Defender office. The Defender's basket fund may grow large enough to bring to each of them some sign at least of Christmas cheer. Are you going to be a Christmas helper? Will you help us grant their prayer?
The following donations to the Defender's Christmas basket fund have already been recorded:
Defender matinee benefit. $130.75
Adderal Louis B. Anderson. 5.00
Charles R. Travis. 5.00
La Reine 500 club. 5.00
Philomath 500 club. 5.00
Lou Temple, L. B. P. G. E. of W.
Celestine and Florine Bundy
Atlantic City, N. J.
Mme. Drusilla B. Hagan
Full dinner club
MontClair Couple Found
Montclair, N. J., Dec. 18—Brought to Mountainside hospital early Friday morning suffering from poisoning. The patient was Washington St. were said to be in critical condition by the hospital authorities. The man who lives at the same address found the couple lying on the floor apparently in great pain in their bedroom. She notified the police and the hospital ambulance was dispatched to the scene. The couple must make no statement at the hospital.
Police Court Each Week
St. Louis, Mo. Dec. 15—John
Gustav, Mo. child, charged with
fined $25 in police court for speeding,
told such a pitiful story about his
dependent wife and children in Little
Rock, when the case was heard on
appeal last week, that Judge Gayer
waved to continue the case generally.
But Green was ordered to appear
in court each week until March 1
to answer charges. He was able to his wife on each occasion, under promise of a workhouse sentence 'or failure to appear.
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
U.S. EMPLOYES ASK MORE PAY; GET MORE WORK
Washington, D. C. Dec. 18—State department officials in President Coolidge's Republican administration have just shamed the door on a rebellion that they have been calling the messengers in the department. The Republican officials not only declined to act on the petition for bribery but warned the men that unless they were not working that "some very drastic action" would be taken. In a petition addressed to the secretary of state, they said that they were without extension the very lowest paid employees in any of the federal executive departments in the capital. The reply was that the administration was "Work harder."
Reminded of Rules
From the office of Chief Clerk E. J. Lewis, the department were handed a letter ordering them to pay stricter attention to department rules "to the end that the department procure the exacting and rigorous performance of a satisfactory performance of work." Old 1923 department rules governing the conduct of messengers and laying down restrictions on their freezing were included as a part of the letter.
"The attached copy of instructions to messengers dated October 12, 1950, certain provisions which all messengers have been directed to strictly comply with. A copy of the report shows that these instructions are not now being satisfactorily complied with." "No Tigs"
Among the rules which messengers will have to observe hereafter are the following: Messengers will arrive at the department not later than 6:15 to complete their duties. A particular prior to 9 o'clock. They will be expected to remain on duty until such hour as may be deemed necessary. Messengers will be worn and coats kept on during office hours. Alertness and attentiveness will be required at all times. Reading of the instructions and letter is strictly prohibited. Acceptance of this is not permitted.
whose petition was turned down:
Lloyd Sharps, Rufus R. Burnett,
Edward Faintow, George F. Harris,
Ralph C. Walker, Isaac Edwards,
Bradley C. Walker, George F. Harris,
George A. Thomas, Alfred Jackson,
Warren McBeth, Howard H. Early,
James O. Holmes, Charles Reeder,
William W. Hawley, Victor Jones,
Lurence C. Hawley, William L. Miller,
Parker H. Hoe, William
Williams, James W. Hardy, William
H. Dorsey, George Scott, Frederick
A. Dodson, Louis A. Myers, Augustus
Lee, Colbert S. Syphox, Edgar
Jackson, F. Syphox, Edgar
Jackson, George Morrle, Edward J.
Tobin, Paul A. Simmons, Clarence
Compton, Clayhorne Tennille, John
N. Savage, Herbert Savage, Christo-
niel B. Savage, Christo-
niel S. West, Harrison Q. Williams,
Arthur J. Smith, Thomas J. Delaney,
Henry R. Hawkins.
PROBATE WILL OF EX-SLAVE,
ONCE IN VANDERBILT FAMILY
PROBATE WILL OF EX-SLAVE,
ONCE IN VANDERBILT FAMILY
Brooklyn, N. T. Dec. 18.—The will of the late Henry Hillard, an exsult, who was for years an employee of a member of the Vanderbilt family, was dated at age 96 occurred Oct. 11 last, was admitted to probate in the Surrogate's court on Dec. 5.
An interesting feature of the will was that it was filed by Lefteris Lefferts (white), a member of one of the city's oldest families, which tells how Mr. Hillard, who was a slave during the Civil war in Virginia, ran the farm. When the war ended he came to Brooklyn and found employment in the Vanderbilt family.
The estate of Mr. Hillard amounted to $576,000, bequeathing to his two grandnieces, Mary White of 567 Quincy St. and Emily Johnson of 512 Clement Ave.
During his lifetime, Mr. Hillard supported the schools towards the support of the Y. M. C. A. churches and other institutions.
[Special to the Defender]
Paris, France, Dec. 18.—Dr. and Mrs. Ulysses Grant Dalley of Chicago entertained several affairs designed for entertainment by persons prominent in the social life of this city. They were the dinner guests and were later entertained at the theater last Monday by Dr. and Mrs. Auguste Cassous.
Sunday afternoon Mme. Salomon gave a dinner in their honor. Mme. Ulysses Grant Dalley lectured attainment, who has on more than one occasion been hostess for members of the Race visiting in this city. Among those Americans who attended were Josephine Mae. Miss Jessie Faisset of New York city; Mrs. Lillian Evans Tibbs of Washington, D. C., the capital of the United States; teacher of Cheney, Pa., and the celebrated tenor, Roland Hayes.
The Hampton club of Chicago is planning a holiday celebration of unusual interest, to which all Hampton students are invited. The Hampton dinner, at the home of Arsa, L. B. Carey, 4118 Prinnie Ave. on the evening of Dec. 23, will be the center of attraction. A special promenade will be set up for the evening of music, whist and dancing. P. J. Slimma, secretary of the club and head of the committee, arranged, asking each Hampton student aside the evening of Dec. 23 for a reunion.
Nab Boy Bandits
St. Louis, Mo. Dec. 18.—The bulging pocket of two 15-year-old school-boys at Grand and Lindell Blvd. last week caused detectives to halt and find 747 pennies and a screewdriven. The boys, now in the house of detention, said they had riffed slot machines on Market St. and Lacade Ave. near Grand Blvd. and the detectives to a shed behind 3315 Law. Avenue, are a quantity of chewing gum, pencils and salted peanuts are cached.
-Photo Courtesy Chicago Herald & Examiner.
12-Y E A R-O L D
BOY STEALS 12
ANTO MODLES
Memphis, Tenn., Dec. 18—If any of Memphis' numerous automobile thieves wish to take lessons in the art of getting away with some one else's car they might talk to Louis Tally, 12, who was arrested recently after stealing that car for贷. For the car's record for November, according to Deputy Inspector Bishop and the boy's statement, is 12 automobiles, 10 of which he was the victim of a theft bureau have recovered. None of the stolen cars were sold, according to the boy. When he got tired of one he would park in a garage and steal, so he told the police, "If he happened to be in that neighborhood again he would have a car to ride in." He has been turned over to the juvenile court authorities.
In every instance the key had been left in the car by its owner, making the boy's easy, inspector Bishon stated that fully of the car owner's due to keys being carelessly left in the cars.
CORTEZ PETERS WINS HONORS AS A TYPIST
CORTEZ PETERS WINS HONORS AS A TYPIST
New York, Dec. 18.—Cortez W.
New York, Dec. 18.—Cortez W.
the competitors with class 2 and
class 3.
the only representative
his leave in the
2014 international
typewritten
Aoedon hall
Saturday night,
Dec. 12, won the
gold medal, for
having written
18,966 strokes,
3,779 words, at
the rate of 118
words a minute
of a half hour.
PETER J.
Peters, who is 13 years old, is a 1923 graduate
of Dunbar high school of Washington. He participated in several events conducted by typewriter contest winners and the food show contest awards, which include a certificate, bronze silver, gold and diamond medals from Underwood; certificate, a gold medal and a typewriter from the Food Show contest; and a gold jewel plum from Woodstock. The young man is employed as a representative J. W. Selson of Wisconsin, in the house of representatives. In class 1, George L. Hossfield and his wife, Kate, were inducted both white, scored a tie each, and 35,000 strokes in an hour period. Hossfield, former world's champion typist, was endeavoring to regain his position from the first place he held the championship for two years. To determine the winner, another contest was held for them. Minnie former world's amateur champion, former world's amateur champion, won third prize.
Woman Washing Dishes
Mesdellie, Pa., Dec. 18—Mrs. Ruth Tagertt. 99 Poplar St. was taken as the result of having been conditioned as the result of having been upon with a shotgun while washing dishes in her home last Saturday night. Scattered shots were removed which had inflicted painful wounds. It was discovered that the person firing the shots had entered the garage the rear of the premises and had fired the shotgun at the police. The charge of shot shattered the window pane. Mrs. Tagertt's husband told the police that he had no theory regarding the shooting, nor did they know of any enemy who might have been seeking vengeance. The family has been responsible since 1920 were considered respectable, law-abiding citizens.
State's Attorney Crowe
According to a recent announcement, State's Attorney Robert E. Crowe turned over to County Treasurer Carr $1,258,143.19-fines, for the loss of $1,258,143.19-fines collected by the prosecutor's office. This amount is $600,000 greater than any sum ever similarly acquired by the county treasury in one year. Carr fined $105,809.50-fines to $177,079 and interest to $1,024.49. Mr. Crowe explained that the comparatively small interest was due to the fact that he had from time to time turned over parts of the county treasury during the year.
Gets 7 Years
St. Louis, Mo. Dec. 18—Charles Pope, 25 years old, living at 2712 Mills St. was sentenced seven years in Circuit Judge Landwehr's court on a charge of having stolen $45 from participants in a dice game on Oct. 17. Alex Sheblow and Ernest Williamson, the alleged victims, were said to have been held up as they emerged from the game at 2629 Lucas Ave.
Many people who drop into poetry often get in over their depth—Birmingham.
Reminded of Rules
"No Tips"
GOV. PINCHOT
MAKES LAWYER
A MAGISTRATE
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 18.—An announcement made by Attorney Edward W. Henry, president of the Citizens Republican club to the post of magistrate to fill the vacancy held by the dead Amos Scott. Governor Gifford Pinchot gave this information out from official headquarters last Tuesday. For five years Attorney Henry has served the Republican club as his president and is now a nominee selected by the second Race to hold a seat in the minor judiciary in this city. He will preside over court No. 2 at the courthouse and hearings in the 20th and Fitzwater St. station. His term expires in January, 1328. Attorney Henry is held in high esteem by the local bar and is married and has one son.
WINS FREEDOM WHEN COURT CRIER ERRS
WINS FREEDOM WHEN COURT CRIER ERRS
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 18.—A woman found guilty of manslaughter was freed last week by a queer quirk or fate.
The woman, Miss Alberta Morgan, 29 years old, of Darien St., was on trial before Judge Smith in quarter sessions court for the murder of Miss Annie Freeman, a neighbor, on the night of Sept. 2. The woman was charged with bible charging first and second degree murder and manslaughter.
When the jury returned to the courtroom, after delibering, Harry Beaston, the crier, asked them if they agreed upon a verdict.
"HAVE I have," came the voice of the foreman.
"How say you? Find Miss Albera Morgan guilt or not guilty on this bill of indictment charging her with murder?"
"Not guilty," announced the foreman.
Then came the strangest misunderstanding ever heard of in the history of the local courts.
Forgetting the other bill of indictment the manslaughter, and in which the jury had found her guilty, Beaston and Judge Smith had the verdict recorded and the woman was set free. She left the courtroom with her. A half hour later one of the jurors went to the crier and asked why she was released when they had found her guilty on the manslaughter and told him what had happened, and then summoned Bernard Lemisch, who represented Miss Morgan.
Attorney Lemisch pointed out that the woman had been freed and under the jurisdiction of the judge and she could not be tried again on the same charge. The jurist agreed.
IMPROVE RULE FOR VIRGIN ISLANDERS
New York, Dec. 18.—Distinctly improved government in the Virgin islands under the regime of Naval Hamilton Jackson and Jean Hestress, members of the colonial councils of St. Thomas and St. Croix. Jackson and Hestress committed in this country, working for an autonomous civil government for the islands, went to Washington Monday to begin the conversation with Mr. Hestress has just returned from a brief visit to the islands and reports a change for the better in the attitude of the naval authorities owing to the success of a general comment in the islands, particularly coming as it does just before a vigorous effort to bring conditions in the islands before con-
The Virgin islands have been without a civil government since their establishment in Denmark in 1911, the United States from Denmark in 1914, the European province made at the time for the institution of a representative government and the Virgin islands have been withholding their sovereignty, the government of the navy department, Previous campaigns for an autonomous government have been marked by much complaint against this arrangement, and alleged misconduct of judicial affairs under former governors.
New York, Dec. 11.—(Special.)—While arguing justice for Japan in a speech before Eilhu Root, John W. Davis, Dr. Nicholas Murray Murray and other prominent trustees of the National Peace at the Carnegie corporation's rooms. Thomas Burke, former supreme court justice of the state of Washington, collapsed and died Dec. 4. A apoplexy caused his death. Mr. Burke was a prominent jurist urging "justice, courtesy and kindly treatment for Japan."
"They All Look Alike."
Complainant Tells Judge
After, positively identifying James
Gov. W. 1922 S. W. 1927
person who sat snatched her purse, Miss
Helen Evers. 6340 Union Ave. dece-
dent in Judge Allegretti's court
Monday that she could have been
mistaken, adding that "they all look
alike, anyway" to employers came to
the trial and vouched for his employment
record of more than two years' dura-
tion. The case was dismissed.
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210 W. Eighth St. Dept. 266,
GIVEN FIRST LAW LICENSE IN VIRGINIA
Richmond, Va., Dec. 15. The state of Virginia has its first woman lawyer of our Race as a result of the December examinations of the Virginia state board of law examiners held here Tuesday and Wednesday. Among the 55 successful applicants for admission to the bar was Miss Poe, who was the first woman who passed the examination. She is the first Race woman to be admitted to the Virginia bar in the history of the profession. The secretary of the board of examiners, Miss Poe had completed three of the necessary four blocks on previous examinations. She has a number of Race lawyers, but the presence of a woman practicing in the state will be an entirely new experience for Miss Poe, who does not even show that a woman of our Race has gained the right to practice before the Virginia bar even though she has been a Three Race women attempted the state board examination this week, but Miss Poe was the only one who was successful. Among the four white women who took the examination were included among the successful applicants. Eighty-one applicants failed to pass.
MINISTER SLAIN AS HE PREPARES SERMON
MINISTER SLAIN AS HE PREPARES SERMON
Stirrat, W. Va., Dec. 18.—Police are searching the city in an effort to capture the slayer of Rev. Dr. E. D. Howard, pastor of the First Baptist church which was mysteriously killed Sunday in Dec. 18. Rev. Howard, moderator of the Guyan Valley association, was shot to death while at his desk preparing his sermon for the Sunday morning service. He was later in the back of his head and lodged in his forehead. Neighbors, hearing the revolver shot, rushed to his home, but he died before aid could be administered. Rev. Howard was well known throughout this section of the country, being a member of the Masonic and Odd Fellows lodges. His funeral was the largest ever held in this country. He was one of the country in attendance. Rev. Howard's body was shipped
Four Cops All Wrong.
Philadelphia. Pa. Dec. 18.—Even though four policemen declared Benjamin Robinson. 30 years old, 918 Walnut St. was drunk when he was arrested after his automobile had skidded over the curb at Second and Third Avenues, and scurry to safety. Robinson told Police Judge Cleary in Camden last week they were all wrong. He said he was merely excited in that he was taking a taxi. Another officer said he "acted drunk." Another said he was "driving giggle." Another declared he was "holoserent," while a fourth officer asserted he was as an indian." All of which resulted in a 30-day sentence to jail for Ren.
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SIDENT
KLUXERS' FIERY EMBLEM BLAZES IN QUAKERTOWN
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 18.—White white-hooded Klansters in a high-powered auto pointed rifles to ward off possible interfees, other armed and set fire to a huge cross, 12 feet high, at the intersection of Jefferson and 24th St. late last Wednesday night. Police officers in the area sponse to hurry calls, could find no trace of the Klansters when they reached the street corner. While the fiery cross was illuminated, the white-hooded knights of the behemoth attributed literature ordering all who were not white to move out of the neighborhood, which was once an exclusive white residential area, the behemoth peared more amused than alarmed at the proceedings. The two cars disappeared west on St. Joseph St. No attempt was made to interfere with the clues. While the cross was not covered with rags and saturated with gasoline before being ignited.
ATTACKS TEACHERS' APPOINTMENT LIST
ATTACKS TEACHERS' APPOINTMENT LIST
Washington, D. C., Dec. 18—Teaching positions in the Armstrong Technical high school are being occupied illegally, declares Paul E. Lesch, an attorney representing Miss Mabel Jackson, 1834 Ninth St. N. W., in a communication to Garnet C. Johnson, first assistant superintendent. The positions to which he refers are being held by two teachers of domestic art. One was appointed in 1913 and the other in 1923. If he was appointed, the deferred vacant Miss Jackson would be appointed, as she is first on the elizible list. The requirements for high and normal school teachers are a college degree, a normal school and at least five years' experience as a teacher. Neither of these teachers, it is said, possesses the necessary qualifications and their experience was in direct violation of the law.
Miss Jackson qualified by examination in February, 1924. Her heredity was that of Mrs. Loisen 1926. Mr. Lesch reminds Mr. Wilkinson that "a serious and irreparable injury will be done to her if the vacancies to which she is eligible for appointment are not recognized she is first upon the eligible list." Miss Jackson is a graduate of the old M. S. high school. Miner normal degree in college university. She also received a degree in education in 1923 and a teacher's diploma in household arts education from Columbia university. The whole question will be referred to corporation counsel for an opinion.
FIRE DESTROYS SCHOOL
Conway, Ark. Dec. 18.—The Rosenwald school at Preston, five miles south of Conway, probably the most valuable schoolhouse in Faulkner county outside of Conway, was deferred for the first time, and origin last week. The building was completed during the past summer at a cost estimated at $13,000, the district being assisted by a contribution of $1,400 from the Rosenwald Insurance of $5,500 on the building with $1,000 on the furniture was carried.
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ASK SENATE TO REMOVE TROOPS FROM HAITI
SENATOR KING|#® car we one, om. rnesipenr |Howard Student’s Election |SENATEGETS Thousands Crowd Orchestra
MAKES DEMAND “Uy, _Nreris Work Court Mest” NOMINATION | | a Co Hest Relay Heyes
Washington, D. C., Dee. 18—Sen-
vor Witlum H. King, Democrat of
Crab, introduced wo resolutions per-
taining to Haiti in the sonate “last
week.
‘One of these resolutions was rela-
tive to the relations between. the
United States and Haftf, The ther
fs requesting the secretary of state
to inform the senate concerning. the
activities of Brig. Gen. John H. Rus-
sell tn Halt, Both resolutions were
feterred to the commities on foreign
relations.
‘The resalution with reference to the
relations between the United States
and Hatt fs a8 follows:
“Whereas the relations hetween the
United States and the republic of
Haiti huve assumed a condition
which 1e unsatisfactory to the in-
habitants of said country and other-
Wise disadvantageous to the United
States, which condition {8 due in large
measure to the presence of the naval
forces of the United States in suid
country and the exercise by the
United States of the contro! of the
finances and revenues of sald coun-
uy; and
“Whereas the purpose of the inter-
vention by the United States in the
political affairs of sala country, the
Girection of their revenues | and
finances, and the police of the same
by the ‘United States naval forces
has boon accomplished and there is
Ro further advantage elther to the
‘United Stater or sald country from
‘any continued intervention tn its af-
faire; now, therefore, be it
‘Withdraw Marines
“Resolved. That tt ts the eenso of
The senate of the United States that
the president should withdraw the
aval forces of the United States now
in Halt! and should arrange an abro-
gation of any treaty, protocol, or
Other agreement providing for” the
contro! of the revenues of Haiti by
the Tntted Staten, or providing. for
the intervention of the United States
inthe political aftdirs of said coun-
try, and that it 1s the senso of the
senate that Haiti should bo free from
any external Snterforence with Ita
domestic policies or internal admin-
istration.”
‘The resolution requesting the sec-
retary of state to inform the senate
Concerning the activities of Brig.
Gen. John H. Russell n Haiti ts as
follows:
Define Duties
“Resolved. That the secretary of
state is Featested to advise the sen-
ate ng to what powers and functions
Biig. Gen, John H, Russell 13 exercis-
ine in Halt! or tn relation to the
Haitian government, under or by au-
therity of the secretary of state, in-
cluding the number of troops under
the command of General Ruseell tn
Haith and the military powers exer-
cised hy him for or on behalf or under
the @irection of the secretary: that
the secretary transmit to the senate
the text of alt instructions fesued by
him to General Rugeell and the toxt
Of all correspondence between the
Haltian government and General
Russell and between the Haitian
government and any other officer or
arent of the state department re-
shecting loans to the Haitian govern-
sient by American banks: and that
the secretary further transmit to the
senate any end all cotresnondence
between the secretary and General
Russell and between General Ruseell
and any oficlals of the Haitian gov-
ernment respecting the holding of the
election of the lesislarure and gov-
ernment of Hatt, which ts fixed by
the constitution of Haith to be held
4m January next, and to advise the
fenate whether oF not Goncral Russell
has been’ instructed to take steps or
to use his influence to prevent. the
holding of such election oF to post-
‘one the same or to retain the pren-
ent president of Haiti in power in
Gofauit of the election of a successor
‘ennn the Ante Gana
Mrs. Louise Harding
Dies at Age of 80
3, Louise Harding, of 6240 Prairie
ave., for more than 10 yeara a renident
ee this city, and widew of Rev. 1.
Can tunica
‘ile, Tonm., died
Tar einany
Sorting, af ah
rate me
ee
Sanaa Aa
Soca “Se
Aor Set
Poets
MOLTEN
Hien’ “itn
Bitding td
Sina sie
xe Bee
ol iia ERE
Eerie
fervalt for ears
coe ee
oe eae
ie eats
permanent reai-
‘Wille, Tann., died [PF Zcoea
ae “ast Suncay [EV Meu
morning, at the [| es
age of 80, Bhe fics ye
Teaver atx enti: [20 yy
grea ware. aaate [B35 WS
Modowat “ew Ee 23
Annie Stout, Mra. Pella: |
Matte Maxey, Eee
Bm Lavinis | echieeeoae
Vines, Witla |e
Harding and ss
Charlee Harding. |
Mrs. Harding 5
ded bean foakng 3
Sako at ber ta 5
fervale for Yenre Es
for iS" aie
hen she came ,
Reve to tae un
Permanent. Feel Mra, Harding
Bence. On ‘neve
GN GecaAtone he, had. come Neca’ for
Sintts of warving aration building ep
The circle of friends fn which ste wes
teia’in turh ‘high eenra at the’ time
Funeral wervicen for Mew. Harding
Teed the ate, Olle "Bante
Ee cleritint che Elometrer Bandist
churehprenchea the funeral Farmon:
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Widow Loses Husband’s
Estate by Court Action
Mary Kelly Wheeler wes found
Bullty Inst Thursday of Turing Ber
faned husband here in 1923 from Bal-
more and forcing him to. change
his will while on hie deathbed, there-
by giving hersclt hie entire estate of
$50,000.
“Tho verdlot was contained in the
answers to five questions put to the
fury by Justice A. HLF. Seeger tn
bie charge. ‘The case was the mom
tensatlonal contested tn the courts
here and during the etght days’ hear-
ing the courtroom was packed to ca-
pacity, The case commanded much
futention due to the allered wicked-
ee of tw courptracy of tho Pep
lie Mrs. Wheeler and her slater, Sra
Georgine Kelly Smith, head of the
Community center here and active
is ‘many civic leagues. Doth the
widow and Airs, Smith are slatera of
the well known Dr. Joseph Kelly o
Chicago.
‘Will Changed by Fraud
William Wheeler, former proprietor
‘ot & prosperous barber shop at 114
N. Howard St, Baltimore, dled here
it the St Francis hospliat Slay’ 4
xd "ar tho age. ot Ten” His. attop
‘hey. Clark L. Sith, one of the tead-
Ing temeroof Now York clit. whe
had made al hia provious wills ans
Who fo et preseot counsel. for the
Aeceaned's. stater, ire, Martha &
Powell 1819 Adiatio Ave. Atlantic
City, aitaged ‘that. undue” tnduence
and teaud were used in procuring Mt
Wheelers signature to hin ast wi
hich was made on his deathbed and
Introduced evidence to show. that fn
fhe unree previous wills he had tet
his ‘ite. only, aa ttle, an tho. fave
flowed’ and’ bequeathed “the. major
Share'o¢ hig eatate to hie slater. The
Barber ‘shop ‘ie sald to. have been
fort to Charies E. Jackson, nin life
Tong fiend and manager of the shop
for more than 25 years.
fe ig claimed that Str. Wheeler and
hig wite wre not on good terma for
Thang years, thougn they liveo. under
the ‘seine foot. “Disseasion In” the
home had made st unpleasant for the
Rged man end because of this he i
BEd. tovhave. cut tly. wite off with
Gower tights only. "However, inthe
Sew will Mra Whovler Ie ‘said "to
Rave arraiged' it so, that inetend of
the “sinter ‘getting’ the major’ share
ofthe estate ahe wan left only $20:
Operated Shop 50 Years
According 29 reporta, Mr. Wheelor
was one of the wealthiest buelness
men of Baltimore: He waa born
thers aad operated for more than. 80
veers a barber. oiop in an exclunive
unitess nection and catered to white
trade only. it was one. of America’s
Tendiog shore snd known through:
out the coumtry. Wheelers place ‘aa
ono ‘tat. held “the. same. remutation
an'the prenent Myers harber shop in
ihe “faehionamte ‘Hollenden ‘hotel in
Cleveland, Onto.
Gharies’ Sackson seas Wheeler’
hent frend and, business manager
They both bulle the Duniness and an
WhGeter wan getting oid he repented
iy remarked {hat he Intended xieinn
Yacknon the irinese ns "compenens
item Tor Mim faithful aesoctation with
im, ‘rie’ ts sald. to have” bean
Aupolated in hin prestoug, wits.
‘ho the years roliea. by ‘Wheeler Is
salt? to have muttered from. sovera!
Stroker, of narairein and old. are.
Sti inieeter. In eld” to, have. teen
Welt With her" sister, ‘Mem. Smithy
In Oils sity and abone April 10, 132%
thes both want to Baltimore and tak
Ing advantage of his Infirmitier ‘and
Relpterrnaes,, villainousiy conepired
ta induce him to.elve to hie wite the
Hower of attorney to manage, bis
Pronerts.
RPaeTrale that Mem. eneslr cone
vated mont ot the property. to her
Naish, Sura: Smihe who held tite
iby the bretenied deeds and made
Srent efiert to dirnore of It aw noon
aneportia.
shorite after helhee enmmitted to
the "Yonplial “Stn.” Wheeler” became
tnrse and. died Sing 4. 1983. "a few
Save before hie death, it i" nalds Ms
Wheeler and Sire. Smith wrote out
2 new wil aad forced the old man
fo sien tt
‘he juri's verdlet indlentes tt was
he Tanker Rind of fraud and: thn
the ‘conspirators ‘were. greedy for
Buin. “The new will fend x allows:
Martha E. Powell (his sister), $50.
Stella Ash, $50. eee
Foreach of her children, $50.
Efiag Wheeler (widow of hie
brother John, $60.
Peli: “Wheeler (widow of hia
beh, Joo sea,
illtaen Wheeler (hie brother's
son), $50.
Bau Ci word was Inserted
vertically "along the "edge ‘cf the
will) Charley W. Jackson my! bar
Ber shop entire, situate at No. 31a
and 116 Howard Sts and Charles
Skeagen of Baltimore, “"e
“Albert “and Georsine Smith
cache {hires Wheelers slater and
Riaband
Free own free weel. and se:
cord, Talthout. tele ‘sereuaded “or
Sncouraged by anyone, I hereby
make. this 25 my own free will
nd give my wife, Mary I, Wheeler,
bowar ‘ae attorney in full to. sign
my name and | leave to my wife
ail ghe residue,
(Signed) W. H. G. WHEELER.
Apel ti. joes
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
P. St hereby change all
‘other will or papers made by me
St any other time,
(Signed) W, H. @. WHEELER,
Witnesnes: Albert E. Smith (Mrs,
‘Smith’s husband),
G._ ‘Bisco’ (Gwendolyn Sisco of
‘Chicage). =
Attorney Smith Starts Injunction
‘After the "new will was made
known, the deceased's sister, “Mra.
Powell, and his brother John’s, ‘son,
Willa ‘B. Wheeler, fled an injune-
Yon ‘through thelr’ attorney, Clark
Smith, and at a ‘hearing in June,
3923, in Baltimore Judge Durty ap-
Roinied a receiver for the property.
Attorney Smith at that time was a
prominent Baltimore attorney but ts
how In New York. “W. Ashby: Hawke
ing was attorney for’ Mrs, Wheeler.
ec Wan in October, 1923, that Smith
won ‘a brililant victory for Charles
Sackson and the barber shop was
awarded him when at a epecial hear-
ing before Judge Duke c. Bond the
Judge dismissed tho case of Mra
Wheeler, who had made & plea for
an accounting and possession of the
$5,000. barber’ shop.
‘Friday, Nov. 9, 1923, Attorney
Smith brought here hefore a com-
mission testimony of the frst stages
Of the ease and for two ears. the
battle has waged. After elght days
of bitter contesting the sult came
fo a temporary close shortiy_after
S°p.'m, ‘Thursday, Dec, 10, 1923, and
a jury returned x verdict in favor of
Wheeler's aged sister.
Rhinslander Significance
It was a remarkable victory. for
Attorney Smith and bis associates,
Ho was ably snisted by Attorney
Warren T. MeGuinn, prominent lat-
year of Baltimore and the 1aw firm
Of Aldrich, Morchauser “and Haan.
Tneldentaily: Attorney Joseph Mor-
achauser, Jr. iq the fon of Judge
Morsehauser of White Plains, before
whom the famous Rhinelander an-
pulment suit was heard.
Now, that {¢ was found that the
Jase wil was obtained through fraud,
Mrs. Wheeler, under the Maryland
jaws, will get one-half of her hus-
band’s estate. ‘The rest will be dl-
vided "among the holra of law,
- Married 35 Years Ago
Mr,and Mrs. Wheeler were mar-
ried is veare ago, "It wap indeed
fashionable wedding, an both were
Prominent’ soctat leaders, Mr.
Wheeler wan one of the richest men
In Baltimore and they lived in, great
splendor for_many Years at 1808 E.
Monument St. ‘The present Are
Smith, Mira; Wheeler's sister, ta said
to have lived there for a while with
them, but wna Teter asked by Me.
Whesler to Kindly keep away. tram
hin home. Friends cinim she was
trouble maker.
Sirs. Smith wan the former wife of
Dr. William ©. Harris, deceased, cel~
chrated surgeon of Marvinnd.~ ‘They
were married in Raltimore about
twenty-five years ago. It Was a sen-
antional marringe and a near riot
ensued, It te claimed there wan a
third woman’ inthe cave. Ars,
Smith ts said to have left the doctor
about eighteen’ yearn ago and he
died four: yearn Inter.
‘The then Mrn Harris in sald to
have tapinht school in Baltimore and
tater went to Cincinnati, She ig a
Eraduate of the University of Cin-
cinnati, She taught school in Cov-
ington, Ky., and also in the Cincin-
nati public’ schools. While in Cine
cinnati, che te sald to have married
Albert Smith, who was a postal em-
ployee. They came here several years
ago and Mrs, Smith sas placed at
the head of the Colored community
center.
Out-of-Town Witnesses -
Many out-of-town witnesses were
placed’ on the stand. One of the
Brincipale, was the charming Alon
wendolyn Sisco, brought here from
Chicago, She fo strikingly attractive
about 2a. She was ono of the wit-
nesses at the signing of the lant
Bill. Mise Sieco ten former Yonkers
Fir! and. also worked here until
about @ year ago at the community
center, Sho testified on the stand
that the was pow employed in Chi-
cago by Dr. Kelly, New. Wheeler's
brother,
Other, witnesses wore Reva Mar-
sunil, Charles Jncknon, Wililam I.
Wheeler of Waltimero, Marthe i
Powell nnd Entelia Mail of Atantle
Ch. Morence Seritfee and Nannie
It, Groome of Balllmore. the. lute
ter twa towtied for Mex, Wheeler.
* IDENTIFIED A8 ROBBERS
Four men chirged with robberiew
In the ‘Wilson Ave. dlntelet were
arrented Saturday mt 669 Irving Park
Riv Three were tentifed by
Genren J. Stevens, Jeweler, 1200, Wit.
fon Ave, ax having. robbed him of
Foo In jewelry nnd-480 in cash, Tho
mien are Benjamin Holl, Cecil iohn-
fon. “Hester Lewis and ‘Thornton
larper.
Howard Student’s Election
Wrecks World Court Meet
_ Princeton, N.\J., Dec, 18—Hardly
nad a Mudent federation of repre-
sentatives. from 248 Ametiean uni
versities been organized to pledge
support to President Goolldge'a worl
‘coure proputals tthe Natal Cal-
Tegiate World Court conference hero
nse Weak, when, the lection of
Race Sonien tere cantante. coms
|mittee wrecked the federation and
Sautea Thee seithaentnt oe two hie
jsouthern delegates.
seatieanmenicernent thal. ite
sianel Holloway, delegate from Tote
aa tanicratas het Bega cet t
tepresent the’ entite. Sew on uh
eshoutiey conmmittes’ of seven came
Bee ince whit delegate: from
Fuliona State universiseand Wi
liam Wend, delegate rom" Brenas
alge at ainestiie, Ga tn nik
set'df the semsloeas "A hubub arose
fhkeStouna ‘lt’or the delegates trys
Ingtto tang atonces wna Inthe ton
eteche contation the conterenee Was
jolted “wrlttout "dae afer. ihe
ncoiters’hag tesvenuly waited in the
Tana praver.
oCindllas an later carried-asking
tne: pecretary OC the conference te
Uae ap eegalitions expressing’ re:
greus tha the aoutherneer had Seth:
Herwatnns teviting teen’ to teunt
Sinton an" heyy cout, feel" anch
ation pessibler 'nwe entire oman
Steatlod eae an euample. of. What
Hfeaident Coolldye mens by: not
ferfertng: sith antnbianed customs
Scie, ei arama Sune
Gitte “own custome
| Forbid Discrimination,
The federation nad been frst or:
ganised “Sntardny Niche Been 12. snd
Sr ecbeatiea cptanites te represent
tach section of tha countty sus: se
ing’ eosen when the stor Yreka
ihon tae tne acuthers reprasesta
tives wideraves the coutorenes voted
te havo two euuthernern et the execs
Bee e.ttn cen gas Se nsec
of this motion, Edward Duffy (white)
of "Darisouth “universe dcclures
Sheu action had’ tolged acal ies
Unction and he’ would take no, par
inthe" student organization. Hobs
crc Lewin (rnite) of Leland. Stan-
Fora “aniversity." also. ‘opposed the
trenaure, “Sur. did mat teeeuien ‘ts
Tahara, na lover" Duty eithdeey
from hs’ stand.
The vonference then voted to have
ag members on the commtttee tne
Sead ot the tember originally
Dlannod’ each section to bo repre
Fanted by tee mcnibers:
Hache? Dunaieny white) of the
‘university’ of Tesan oatoring. she
Feprosentea ‘the best element st the
Baath aided ithe Miss: Htottowns
Sho worked with Say Wolloway. Gh
Ee ereculve Coteallse, shiek ade
Sidra tor ther onterance ae aie
Eiueoala eaully to hor abil
Explains Position :
After the adSournment Kizer eeued
tne following statements “T withares
Pouisiann’ State unlversiy, trom ch
‘Proposed student union becduso |
Could Rot go back to my Universi
sed uae tadente te support aa
Grmuntacios of waien cone ot thet
sfclata: ag roprescrucd in the execu
{ive commiten, would be a Negros"
“Poo Arse ablection to attest.
aye. fepretentation wag, that ate
Gia hot. pepresent the Souths wine
she attended am fnsthtation Wash
Man Deon” Lowe Box cabal
fasiding offéer tuted. that ‘Wash.
Reese Sas puseehly octtheret
Bera” southern cig Gpon’ see
ong. tp hie Fullng he appeated i
the Gonferenee aneine members us
Enea as:
Washington, D.C. Dee, 18—"
really think that race, prejudice Was
ealth ‘severe: blow.”
“That “was the tetee comment, of
Msp Stabe) Holloway. senior. iineral
arte studont at Howard university
hong, election ‘aa a member of te
txccutive committee. of the. Nattonal
Stidenta federation cated the with
drawal ‘of the Loiisinnn. State uni:
Sersits: from the federation.
‘Miss Holloway tailed freely about
the. national ‘collegiate world, court
conterence which wax held ac tinco-
fon university at Feiday-and Satur:
‘Sau: at tho close of which tho Nation.
a 'Studenta federation yas. Cormed
She was a member of the ‘executive
committee that. planned the world
Court conference. But. he avoided
filing “about. the atiering. drama. tn
Thien sho was the principal Aavre.
Tt'waa Alien Station” Thompson, 2
finlor' liberal aren student. and one
at the Howard university representa:
von at the conference. who gave a
detalled story of the affair.
"At. the closing. session of the na-
Ulonal collegiate: world. court confer:
Shee lat Paneston unieeraity Ins
SAitrdaye nisi the fensibilte of ea:
iablishing a permanent federation of
Kmerieng. “studentn was dlncunsed
ana it wan dechted’ to form much an
Srgnnization, The_principal officers
ore elected, G. H. Goodman of
Tancoin university was a member of
tho committee that drafted the con-
stitutton,
Ghosae Executive Committee
te iwas, decided "to. ahige the
unlted States into neven regions and
te'ssiect a porton from exch region
tS fenrencnt it as a member of the
Sxeculive: committee,” Nominations
ere made bra nominating commit:
teers The dologazea had the priviege
of making. additional ‘nominations
from the Boor.
Te (neimiuating committer nominated
satan Haloway t@ repreaeae the s0uth-
AN Hine ont the executive committer.
$F gente Oe Eoutaiana State univer
HisCwns nominated from the Hoot. fe
SP ornae oe Creinin Cnion university
Finedratlention-te the tact What south:
sree acermcadente alvendy Red a fopre
Bhs ie the person et PS, organ
SURG alerts? of Genrelm, cho had
Seaenenen viet prendent oC the fea
Biillont NS. Denlels declared’ iat 3
SEGON of sir group’ ohould Ge selected
inorder to link up our students with
tReateentatn, alee Rooney as
sieeede
MERIC” che solection of zepregentatives
trot ne Suherreplone, Sry lane tel
{Eereatotge nat He GhovE, he Bur.
woeFtorcnfen he iad come fad, Been
BertatCh, and" ne withdree Lautalane
serratdaacereiey foam the. conference.
Bie tgnforance voted Un aceune hit wie
‘Kina’ Thompson tol, tha, conference
thn she wan proud of the fact that ate
Sool Maurae este Howard. niveraly
Saag ae wet tne atudente Gare tha
se"Petanitacton, had beer, formed tba
lead forthe prince op gomocract
‘eter nok fn Geo ony
A.rencensniniicn atone nnd In a wave
ofSeRtion "vated hate eters
Which" bed not heen rentlaed. He res
Ted tine motlon te mceane the wth
Groom of Meiners deciarad Win
fiasstLi tary oheale’ be ianteaeted hy
vote’ sf tan conferences to rita to Lain
Uehe Bante Soneertty ‘and anton, th
reeves gongevence at fede
weroMhad dang Te necegeney Con wilh
FNS. Gna extend the univervity” an In:
Sitotion'to"eoine eek ns the conten
ene thin tne septemnpiaticen af
<>) APicture No Artist Can Paint
st Peta al
ey
ey
Ee ge!
WOLLAND REMEDY 60,
A child with weak bones or rickets is malnourished
and usually susceptible to colds, coughs or other compli«
cations and particularly needs a body-building food
rich in vitamins, To serve this need nothing quite equals
the ideal food-tonic: rich in purest cod-liver oil for a
child of any age “Those with weak bones should
|‘ receive its rich vitamin-nourishment’ every day.
Scott's Emulsion is tastes good and is
the effective food-tonie for all ages:
~ Reokt & Bowne, BloomAeld, N. J. 25-70
Spin te eke deamata
ie :
son tan ea SNE
atten va, ie
Gules Sr nptonharne Oh
Pats ot tho alert ol
Fis aha Sgt yea net
Spain
Dying ne decane ul
ESoren hire as Gee
ce caret beat
tea As nrenr
nantes h
fee anteater re re
sale Racin ae Si
Se ne Re ene
scant Se anal tl aes
Ba aS iota Gl
Fer pl a mete ees
crate 1b CPs ele
ae. af Brinceton ntinivers'y take
Gum play wag staged In. the home
of Weg Gra Cainer teat intans
Shear Sunda? Geening” Whoa Nas
aver’ Wilings Spinks, 32 ‘years id
Sho roomed inthe ‘Cameven nome
with his wife ang tre ehildren, was
That tn'ehe Suemmochs
‘Sincere Going ani Sweeney of the
stanton Ae, satin. repent t
the setniems Tor the ‘polon: baeas
ebearah for Levin He Meche f26
Tnalana’ Ave. alter ies were tol
that Les had" done the anooting.
hes ‘found: hi wo" hous wie
nding under he hed in abe home 8
Mes"igtte chaeston” 428 Tada
iis, Mater ot Stee Cameron weer
‘thoin "ihe shone te sah Whe
Sastre” sechury ws Wekel up
The toid “the. pollee “that he shot
spine in selfeqatense, afer the Int
fer elacted at Mim with @ knife when
he cemotrated with" sri
fheakine nbusively Co hrs Camoren
Rechte ana Sire “Comnecon ar
felenda, Sunday evening he accom
faslad ner te fer bome'tromn's oan
oS Gasriesione he sie,
he Cameron nome sie Wes ata
ine an argent wien'anotne® room
ieee :
‘Nith. Cameron told im. aceording
to the pote: that he an he Eas
Mould Ban io move. becntse of hi
constant dieturhngees tr the houke
Sing angered Spinks ata We iad
tor hnse ett eurting Wie fina
SeGhate incerteruin'® Aknlie wes
denen, then ‘carme ihe gun" piss.
Spine was shor in he ‘wesene
of hin we and entiaren. amen, age
Thi" Anmies Bana (Genores 1a He
trig site frxt-aid rennet by Be
Tk" Rurell and taker to the counts
J. W. Bu
Now York. Deco 1R—At, the Sunday
mane. meeting. in the Seman Me
thureh"where an, overfiow maze cot:
ing haa ‘toh 'addrensed Inthe. ase>
ment ot the Shurch. hy Clarence ‘Day=
fore, and. m thousand people vainly
Fougne tor ‘admission, cha am “oF te
fegal defense tund” eine raised A ARS
sAticHal Astatlatton (oe the Advances
ment "of Colored People, ‘ana vft.sa 50
Sig Blgenied eke. sueesinge THO
The SoA. AL C.'h. miso. announced
that "on “Monday Snorntme: Deer te in
Therma from Chicngo entie n check tor
$500 trom "the “philanthropist. Sutles
Réonwald™ who, pledved “tia nui a3
Seon ae the SADA. C, Be tad ralser
Ehe"larae $24,606, {Secarad Teg $50,000 fad.
fhe ham pledge Arathor $1,000 aa so
ne the regond. $24,000 hike been ralved,
Officers Stage Raid on
“BHigh-Powered” House
“Little, Hats" of the Third alates
was hata Hit nda SBoume Olivet ad
Heteuy dqicened upon the venders of
Sotspy alike, 720 Federal St. was
tied fubo and costa and sentenced te
0 daye tn the noute of corractfOn when
the offeere tentifed tine they hed found
artesian lame 10 paves of Maoh
‘are, "Howe Capute, 4045 Fedorat St.
2 tated Sat thar haa" ded" 2
gallon aul cour: hareete of rurh and 108
SENATE GETS
NOMINATION
OF WHARTON
ae tshington, D. C., Dec. 18—Prest-
ene ‘Cookies at” Tysons tee
‘ited to the genute the nomination
of Ciitton Te Wharton of Massach-
fotia to be secretary of the -diplo-
Mintle ‘servieg of the United. Staten.
“This snomination recalls. the coup
of the state department last spring
to Fld tteelf of the only person -of
ie hace In” che" foreign. servic
eet ae tat Ameen, atoms
slioula be trained In all the, wiley of
international. diplomacy before -be-
ing 4ent abroad, a bill was passed in
the laat congress for a forelizn serv
ice school im the state department.
‘an examination “wa mele. last
Jantiary. Among the successful can-
Uidutes for admiesion tothe foreign
service school was str. Wharton, who
wna sirendy'a cleric In the state do-
partment. Only 19 others passed the
Examination, :
When the school was about ready
‘to start there were objections to Mr,
Wharton on’ account of hla color
Here was a diplomatic. problem of
major imporiance to be solved before
the students. had ‘even learned. the
first prineiples of diplomacy.
The veteran diplomats of the de-
partment were tailed together In
folema and secret. coneuttation. A
aiplomatie coup wns quietly achieved
Mr. Wharton ‘wae graduated. forth-
with, Without taking 2 day of the
Tequired year's training he was sol
hinty andl offeaity decinred. el
Nedeced diplomat, given the depart.
nents blessing as"the ‘Arse alumnus
of the forelen service school and
sent to Africa He Was piven a te-
cess appalntinent ax secretary of the
‘Smveriean legation at Mtenrovia. Ll:
fReria. A month Tater with the’ only
sligibie safely out of the country, the
Tensinn carvios Ghee Wana
KU KLUXERS SEEK
- ALICE IN FLORIDA
In the nensational New York annut-
ment trial might be coming to Flor-
Tag. tor ariel ata.
Bote Teslatera. wore searched tor
her name:® Hater proprietors, were
auenloned_ and managern ot ans
tere ortered to report the presence
ge ang stranger ‘who. right” answer
Sirn"htinelanders description. be
ian nas reed notice that an hoa:
teiry thag trien to accommodate her
‘Sie dente eh marshy
Tne white coned nights went even
to tur au te Fait we exclusive: Palm
Beach howls shorty after: midnight
Mondays ‘its a warm velimate
hac weiman’s after.” the chief of
newrhy Kian’ quene. was qunced ns
toring, “wen soon make Uh piace
hot "enovsh "for. her. and. it "hms
Rhinelander woman ‘ever. lands "it
Florida, wou" give ans example ot
just how we handle folks of her
Hina, hag Ure to marey no wise
famiten
ea
| Several well-known South Side
phystelans were severely: reprimanded
by the coroner's offce for failing
report the cutting of Mra, Ethel
Binders, 25, 59 E. 26th St
The suspicious circumstances under
which she died wre ordered invest
Rated be Cape Johw B. Mccarthy of
The Second idistitet.. He assigned. Of.
cern Sutton af Joneph Brown <0
Investigate the case,
‘Thess found that Mrs, Ginders had
lived 'n: 58, B. 23th St, aa Ue common
aw Wife of Willlnm Glas. He stabbed
her ty the alitomen and tes when he
fond ‘hor at 2813, Calumet Ave
under suspteloud elrcumstances, so he
stated.
‘She dled soon afterward from her
wounds, One physician issued a cer-
Ufleate that she had dled of “peri-
tonitis. ‘Fle failed to notice the’ eut
Another doctor posted. the | bode.
ciaiming that she had dled. of 0b:
truetion af the Dowels,
Oftirera Sutton and Brown learned
tine the woman had. deen fut. They
roneh? and found William Clas, who
confeaved to the killing. te was held
to the grand Jury without bonds on
a charge nt murder.
Here Is Man Who Pays
$100 Fine and Smiles
eet, AB feharated me fram my
NougGring men fo "By "Spwremet fe
The to entertain and when. tad. but
sre fin ma es," Sou
Know now gold T'was Sacurday mighty"
apisined, Stes “Lathe "Coleman qe
inline “ave io dudge Jonsph i. Ste
"Mle “struck me over the head with
a, pintol an thestened "to "eit mes!
Pad addled
ean Anas At tea, good case, fr
pandering’ ‘added ners attorney. Rich
Ard. E. Weatbrooks.. “shall produce
Sifatisen to snow that thie! womans
"GRontas “Hemingway, 4602 Ind!
Aster wan the mam accused: He wns
fined $100 and’ coats by the court. which
he’ wmilinaty bata.
FIRE DESTROYS CHURCH
Brenham, Texas, Dec. 18—Fire, the
origin of “chick is not yet. known,
completely” destroyed the ‘Mt. "Roat
Giaptise church here laat’ Sundas
morning. while several hundred bors
girls, men and women were attending
Sunday school. Bverybody was able
fo. leave the building without in=
Thousands Crowd Orchestra
Hall to Hear Roland Hayes
ina eet Go ae aS Sa
‘AL wens One of the great Fecitul sue: | wrfe,gIOeers upen Nit, Hayes and tie
cevses of Chicago, as only Mine, Gulll| jn better volek and the cust audience.
ever achieved by our Mace and is| hear him.
compliahigent by @ group of women| 7
mene of oda ave, “tense: "ac| HEARS HER “PQUTING” HUBBY
Boe bain | LANGA: TAKES IM TO COURT
The nancial “saphort et tne iste ———
should be. mentioned, “Mra, Georxe| ._TPe,Privilece of “pouting”, helonsy
tras Jotned ‘by Mea. George: C- Ha| excUnively to women, and when men
in
Soe
ANE
‘wee
ie
ane
(dea ne
ee Dd
ery
a ad ites
signing the contract with Mr. Hayes’
Tunagers and Jesse Bingu, tanker,
paid the deposit upon tie hull and
Rave hia financial uaenmg We ine
“Stn day, Sunday end Monday th
Sti day, Sunday end Monday there was
a ‘ine "ot people, for Wiecets nu onty
feage seats could be, purckisel Mone
iy veal the earl? persona got the
{ex femaining sesis and honarads were
fined was ‘Teopie ‘had "come. tu.s
nlghborine owns aid Nee anon Sta
fone of St Louis came te the city 19
ee useamonli, even though Atta
So “anveat. i Sts Loutereana was on
Ui, the Bos holder’,
‘rhe HMetropettian board of the Y. W.
CLAY gave hearty: covoperation to. the
Féoftar and ‘the following nates ay
cored an nagroneatess, Staves: term
"Baud, William C esueny dow
Bjrwelt litterd” Warnes. Stases_
WeontiransNhem te Sates
Helos Ronere te Koss, 2 Olt
Mt ie Vioudmane 3, We icemphall: Wit
ion iqubibards Aiding Pe Hatelie acu
don We Seabee Carson Pere, Sout
Ste aad Rich
ie gtady stream, of high-power
auturnotios and eanie sented beter
thedeare te the theater were sper an
ihe nena eave “ana "ee
ape we nthe Germany attire “oe th
Fentlemen. mae a’ pletuee. tone tot,
ESmesuiereds pen entering the ha
She ae abge uh handed get
Gpon the stage nnd the wrapped atten
Won mils ther lene tha eelfscousetam
nese Gf rng’ fener cane wal
free, but’ all eras were centeard me
the artist. Me Heese The Nevatdeds
ainimer gave @ healing sera the par?
Feeurding she, erined whieh ie ines
Keteibnte so" the singer ax well Ak ti
Svereetie commie.
‘Hox holders Were Mex, Wittians
Faden, Mes, “Sided Berawne ae
Hien” atea,inerewes tanner, “3h
Eatinga 10: rarrg. Mrs, Viator Coen
See Elbert ERASE tee thn eee
iweli, George, fe, Garner di Mrs Alb
Ie George atta Mange’ Chettand teat
Aivert’Tevin, Mies. Ophelia. Lindson, Stes
im nites, Siva Maude toner rs
Anton Matume wf St. LowegSire” Mee
fe "Mawn, Sines tne Wagers, Hons
WERE! Aine, “Walter ‘Sheedy “Mies
Mirvee A Wataine, Mes, Laise Waller
Bnd Ts, Nae Wines,
‘Heeminent wns these seated in
hoxse gre Falter and’ Sirs, Tonert. =
Abu Sie. and Meet be rindense ae
gad te A. Restakson: Be. fing Phen
Mrs, dense nen, Stra Fiebesta Dest
Ceaiviven, ecard Mest Lene Jonney
De. “and aes ‘Chevien’ Hhanisom Me
ana Site. Enis Re Lewin Mee "brah
Eitlesnle:
‘Arare artist we Me. Haves was.
fottuahe, artise tiwe Mr. Hares was i
847% AIR
Beats Electric or Gas
‘A new off lamp that gives an amnz-
ingly brillant, soft, white lights even
better than san or electricity, nna been
tented by the U. S. Government and
35 leading’ untveraittes and. found to
be superor to 10 ordinary off tamps
Te burns without oder, amoke or nolse
<no pumping up: ie simple, clean,
tate. "Burns 04% nir and 8% ‘conn:
Ton kerosene (énul oll).
‘The inventor. E. G. ‘Johnson, 609
W. Lake St. Chicago. Ul, ly offering
to send a iamp on i0 days FREE
isl, or even to give one FREE to
the first user in each locality who wil
help him imcroduice tt. Write hiin tor
day for full particulars, Algo, ask
him to" explain how you can get the
agency. ‘and without experience ‘or
Sees aah 450 ce Shae
Beautiful
! TTS
Pee Tain BEAUTY
The Double “Curve Comb
smooths it out inca jit, Dee
aigned for right or Teft bande
dove the work quickly tind eas
fig.” "eoth are curved out at
Ceater cs shown and are sands
heavy ao.as to hold heat longee
Gomes in varloun sizes: “wood
and wire handles, ‘which Keep
oat. Made of finest quality bears
writh hole tn center to hang over
icobot or cae flame. “Ask for
the Double Curve nnd You are
tke of having straight bal
At your
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jMODELC, 15 COMO BLUG, CHICKSO, LL,
Merry Christmas from the RECORD STARS
Okeh Race Records
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
A
Sara Martin
Exclusive OKeh Artist
Here she is, folks, wishing you the season's best in notes sweet,
blue and melodious. Some of Sara's winning records are:
8248-10 in...75c
Old Fashioned Sara
Blues
I'm Sorry Blues
6231-10 in...75c
Come Back, Daddy, And Ease
My Arming Heart
Papa, Papa Blues
8226-10 in...75c
Pour Me Blues
Some Blues
Laura Smith
Exclusive OKeh Artist
You'll know what real holidays are
when you hear Laura Smith singing
to you as only Laura can sing. A
great OKeh Record by this star is:
5246-10 in...75c
Humming Blues
Disgusted Blues
Charles Anderson
Exclusive OKeh Artist
Shows you the best
the season with
8206-10 in...75c
Dirt, Mistlewing Blues
Easton and Stewart
Exclusive OKeh Artists
Are here to gladden your heart with
5116-10 in.-75c
Fast Away
Window Shopping Blues
#
King Oliver's Jazz Band
Exclusive OKeh Artists
King Oliver sure is a Jazz King, and he and his boys rage out a holiday greeting that you'll never forget. Hear their OKeh Record:
$235—10 in.—75c
Mabel's Dream
Sweet Baby Doll
★
Laura Smith
Exclusive OKeb Artist
You'll know what real holiday are
when you hear Laura Smith singing
to you as only Laura can sing.
A great OKeb Record by this star is:
5246-10 in...75c
Humming Blues
Discussed Blues
Charles Anderson
Exclusive OKeb Artist
This you the best
the season with
5206-10 in...75c
Dirt, Michigan Blues
Charles Anderson Walking Blue
Irene Scruggs
Exclusive OKeh Artist
Sends you her holiday greeting with:
8142 - 10 in - 75c
Everyday He's Blue
Why He left me I Don't Know
Blues
Virginia Liston
Exclusive OKeh Artist
Her name is Virginia, and
she que will win you with:
8247—10 in.—75c
Make Me a Pallet
Monkey Jungle Blues
A
Original Tuxedo Orchestra
Shake your feet and let's go! With the
Original Tuxedo Orchestra on the job, you'll be
dancing long and loud. Get this OKeh Record
5198—10 in.—75c
Careless Love
Black Rag
Shelton Brooks
Exclusive OKeh Artist
In that smooth, smiling way of
his, Shelton Brooks brings you
the season's greetings. Laugh
with Shelton when you hear his
OKeh Record:
40355-10 in.-78c
Woyk Don't Bother Me
The Spiritualist
are rag out a
Keh Record:
Doll
★
```markdown
```
AND it will be a holiday season all year round if you brighten your days with OKeh Records made by this galaxy of stars—these moaning, droning, syncopating, fascinating, fast-racing, gloom-chasing artists! Just step around to your nearest OKeh dealer and let him gladden your heart with these k. o. OKeh Records—they'll help you celebrate the holidays in bang-up style!
GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
25 West 45th Street, New York, N. Y.
★
Sylvester Weaver
Exclusive OKeB Artist
Wants you to hear one
of his OKeB Records:
8207—10 in.—75c
Weaver's Blues
Making Them Up in "C"
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
STAR
Holly, evergreen and mistletoe! The merry-making team of Butterflies and Susie gret fun with these cheerful selections:
8241-10 in...-75c
Cold Storage Papa
Bow-Legged Papa
Don't Start Nothin' Here To
night
You Ain't Talkin' to Me
8232-10 in...-78c
If You Can't Bring It You've
Got to Send It
I'll Put You Under the Jail
8244-10 in...-78c
Jazz Band
8254—10 In—75c
Squeeze Me—Fox Trot, Singing Chorus by
Eva Taylor—Clarence Williams—Blue Flie
Santa Clara Blues—Vocal Trio, Arrange by
Plano, Guitar and Cornet—Clarence Wil-
ham Trio
Love's 10-10 in 75c
Everybody Loves You by Eva Fox Trot, Singing Chorus by Eva Fox Clarence Williams' Blue Fire
Of All the Words You Done to Mr.-Fox Trot, Singing Chorus by Eva Taylor Clarence Williams' Blue Fire
in 75c
Clarence Williams' Harmonikers-Eva Taylor comp. by Clarence Williams' Harmonikers
Clifford's Louisville Jug Band
Exclusive OKeh Artists!
Clifford and his jazz boys just cut loose with their holiday music. One of their liveliest in 8248-10 in 75c
Mammy O'Mine Blues Louisville Bluesz
Yo
th
8243
Sutrage E
Muncher's
Crime
Davenport and Carr
Exclusive OKeh Artists
"The Low-Down Pair" are mighty, twitch up when it comes to spreading happiness. One of their best OKeh records is:
1944-10 in—75c
He Don't Mean No Harm
Good Woman's Blues
George McClennon
Exclusive OKeh Artist
Makes you laugh and be
merry. One of his best is
385—10 in.—75c
Angry! Are We Want to Try My
Calmness?
Home Alone Blues
Miller and Lyles
Exclusive OKeh Artists
The funniest team in the world will
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house. Just put on their OKeh Record:
0073—10 in.—750
Forty Below
The Three Halves
Horace George
Exclusive OKeh Artist
*Has nothing but good news
for you in his selection:
8164-10 in.-75s
The Meal Is Low in the Barrel Blues
Emancipation Day in Georgia
★
A
STAR
Sippie Wallace
Exclusive OKeh Artist
You just wouldn't be happy without a greeting from Sippie,
that singing, sighing, soothing star. Just listen to these:
8243—10 in—75c
Suliere in Blues
10 in—75c
The Man I Love
I'm Sorry for It Now
Sociedad Island Blues
Munner's Gonna Be My
Crime
Parlor Social De Luxe
Billy and Mary Mack
Exclusive OKah Artists
You can't be blue when these
two arrive to drive the blues
away. One of their brightest
OKeh Reens is
800 811-750
Black But Sweet, Oh God
My Heartbreak! Gal
Ippie Wallace
Insive OKeh Artist
happy without a greeting from Sippie
soothing star. Just listen to the
8231—10 in.—75c 8231—10
Man I Love Section Hand
Sorry for It Now Parlor Social
"Sloppy" Henry
Exclusive OKeh Artist
Brings joy on
hits OKeh Record
8178--10 in.--78s
Tom Cat Rat
Cannon Ball Blues
Margaret Johnson
Exclusive OKeh Artist
This smiling lady is smiling
the season's greetings right
at you and when you hear
her sing blues, you'll smile
just as happy.
8230-10 in.-75c
I'm a Good Hearted Mama.
But You a Telling Mama.
I Love You, Daddy. But You
Don't Mean Me No Good
Hociel Thomas
Exclusive OKh Artist
Does her share in bringing holiday happiness. Hear her in.
8222-10 in-750
Fish Tail Dance
Worried Down With the Blues
Owen's Kansas City Orchestra
Exclusive OKeh Artists
makes a merry holiday, and that
if music handed out by these bl
Bennie Moten's Kansas City Orchestra
Exclusive OKeh Artists
Merry music makes a merry holiday, and that's the kind of music handed out by these blue artists. One of their smallest OKeh Records is:
8255—10 in.—75c
South Street Blues She's Sweeter than Sugar.
high
heat
best
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PART 1—PAGE 5
eting from Stipple.
listen to these:
8231—10 in.—75a
Section Hand Blues
Purior Social De Luxe
★
```markdown
```
ity Orchestra
lists
ability, and that's
by these blue
The
RIALTO MUSIC HOUSE
330 S. STATE ST., CHICAGO, ILL.
Thanks
The readers of The Chicago Defender
for their business in the past year and
wishes them a
A Merry Christmas
and
A Happy New Year
Most Complete Stock of
NEW COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RECORDS
in City of Chicago
PHONOGRAPHS, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
RECORDS (SACRED OR BLUES)
PART 1—PAGE 6
FLORENCE MILLS IS PLANNING THEATER
New York.-Some twenty-odd years ago there appeared, before Lady Amphiphae, wife of the British ambassador, and before Washington, D. C., a little 5-year-old girl of our race who more than delicately the exclusives with her melo-stringly impressive waist, strongly implying was the acting of this only performer that Lady Faunceola presented the little to with a beautiful gold bracelet. Florence Mills, our greatest performer. Though Florence was just 6 years old, she shook her head and bunged, and was awarded two bracelets, and an award, and an now, everybody was crazy about her. In day that Baby Florence was on her way down to the big white theatres, many of her little friends went down to the showhouse with her, but on the stage. However, at the door refused admittance. Little Florence was as greatly displeased with her but no "collared folks" spirted little star, and with an upturned chin she deliberately turned with her friends. The management Hazel, her chum, and her two brothers were admitted that the ferry little miss
AL ANDERSON PASSES AWAY
AFTER LINGERING ILLNESS
Albert E. Anderson, widely known in the news for his work with Anderson and Gina, died Tuesday, Dec. 8, at home in Keokuk, Iowa. Anderson suffered a nervous breakdown last June and go to a rare care sanitarium in Pennsylvania, but finding little comfort there, to his home. Anderson was born Aug. 25, 1888, and away. He started in the show business and Tom's Cabin. He was rather tall and large for his age everyone who knew him. He was being with several miniature shows and doing a knockabout song and dance with his brother, Morrilla York. he later joined Ben Payne and formed the Eclipse quartet and worked the variety theaters in the old name for themselves. This quartet company when they but, the old "Wash Day on the Lake" scene in he married Marianille Bayle. For 15 years under the name of Al and then lost her health and retired. He then went with Bill Briggs for a sea-
His last partnership was formed Jan. 14, 2013, when he reunited until his death. His last appearance was at Ketra thaater in Jersey City, New Jersey, where he marked things about this team was together there never was the slightest disruption between them. Two sixties and seventies.
"STEPPIN' HIGH" STEPS
The "Steppe" High" company claims
peared in all the principal cities in the
United States from coast to coast. This
houses in Newark, N. J., with a com-
munity of 1,000. The museum is sec-
retary. Hazel Myers is featured and
Billy Perman and like Thomas are lead-
ers. In Iowa, Lafayette theater, New York,
wedge of the 21; Howard theater, New
York; Duphar theater, Philadelphia, Pa. Jan.
Salimilier Md., Royal Douglas theatres.
HOWARD AND BROWN
type of the late George Walker is like nimble Ann Pennington, copy side of life with other men-which opens an engagement at mere next week.
VATIONS
MITT WHITNEY
TROTTO
Garland Howard, prototype of the late George Walker and Mae Brown, who dances like nimble Ann Pennington, will show Chicagoans the happy life of life with other members of the city. A special engagement at the Star and Garter theater here next week.
THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT
The dental department broke up our team, excepting years truly found that they exceeded our expectations for forthcoming turkey dinners, so the dental engineers got busy constructing the dental room, deepening channels with the reamer and deepening channels with the reamer, being a chorus of greens and grunts, Watts, Bob Freedley, Ruby Willis, Katherine Hawkins, Katie Elsie, Charles Hawkins, Willie Tilson, and Margaret Whitney dry-frozen their dental work pronounced the work of the highest
Our little friend W. R. Arnold, who was born in the theater, St. Sr. president, of the T. O. B. A., has not recovered from the illness, he was president of the theater, he was there to welcome us and to be the best week's business at the Canceuse Shace who is now doing the press in "Nonsense" and "Bewitx and Between." He has an original way of among the present-day crop of comedians. Next week-Liberty theater, Chattyman, employed a Black treinin, secretary and treasurer for the T. O. B. A.
WANTED Two Connets, E Flat and Primer Aaxophone, both in Ornette Coleman must be union, with love, Write 16 K. Gardel A. Columbus, Ohio
I believe in spirits; not the kind that sneak up on one in the dark and send cold obite skating up and down one's
WILLIAM
B. T. Whitney
We show folks are still able to get a taste of the fact that the weeks preceding Christmas are the lean ones for us, half salary. Marigolds are solicited to share their lean weeks, but are quick to dissolve the partnership when the means longer hours and extra shows are needed. Years' dinners the day after. But nevertheless, the kids are busy buying home and anxiously anticipating boxes of Christmas delicacies that only mother can make. Some of the kids are home. If there ever was a time to let the old folks heat from you, now is that time.
Tommy, we met your mother in In-
terior, and I am grateful for the
moment more than an hour laughing and
talking. We met about 20 minutes
about you most of the time when she
was talking. I told her we told you to wait so long
to tell you not to wait so long. We
of these days she may not be there to
receive your delinquent letter. Write
back.
Meharry
We took an afternoon off from rehearsal to visit the college, one of the former institutions of its kind in America. Mr. Fosse escorted us about the campus and escorted us about the campus and
Midnight Shows
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
IN OLD KAY-SEE
By CHARLES O'NEAL
In regards to the picture, Manager John does a hour earlier to accommodate the throngs which were anxious to view the show, and given the screen one of the greatest spectacles of all three, as the Egyptian hosts out of the land of oppression are the epitome of all the splendors and magnificence of the land. This Biblical prologue has all the color and interest it is possible to secure in the audience, and with the best things done in everyday life surroundings. The story is gripping and development gradual and to life.
Princess Theater, Tulsa, Okla.
Just received a special report from the Prima Donna of the Blues, and Miss Ruth Ruth, pianist, have been recaptured in teners. Miss Jones, in our opinion, is best stay in Kansas City nothing but Columbia records were in demand. And others, Missouri, the 'show-me' state, and Oklahoma play money on the Blues, Penn.
The Eblon Theater
Corrine Griffith in "Classified," a powerful society game she was on Monday evening, with Mia Griffith the outgoing director and dramatic in action, and dramatic in action.
Norma Shearer in "The Shave of
Norma Shearer" and the attention that attracted quite a crowd of picture-makers. She was the subject of Cody, the magnanimous hero, who forges a great wrong done him. She played the Covered Wagon, "I" play entitled "The Shave of Norma Shearer" and the attraction o' the week. The cast, which is based on the book, is Billy Compson, Richard Cortez, Ernest Torrence and Wallace
Bo-Weevll a Hlt
"Be-Wewell," the "Washboard King" has been making videos for the like, for the like, for the like in company with Ogbh and Johnson, a white dancer with a bait with the Ofaga. "The
"7.11" Entertained
Elmer Beam, manager and owner of the St. St. entertained the "7-11" company, which played at the Beam's theatrical dance show Thursday morning from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. at Aroha Hill, Killen Barret, Hattie McDaniels and Geraldine Jones of famous Golden West Garden Symphonized orchestra. Renée Williams of the State Orchestra. Mr. Beam is noted for his hospitality and friendship by all the performers.
RUNAWAY PEN
Indianapolis, Ind.-Mamie Smith and her syncopators occupied attention at Miss Smith, who is one of the Greatest known from the usual and did not shun any of the monailnul number numbers reputation as a blues singer. At one time Mamie was the first to numerous record manufacturing companies have put her heers, some herofore unheard of, and have acclimated them as queens and princesses forsaken the blues and has parenty forsaken the blues and has evidently aware of the fact that the theater-going public has grown weary. In order to put over her blues numbers, and she has done so, the musicians whose personally captivates, sullilers, Bessie Smith. But the blues are seeing the passing of their day and but few still trying to entertain and please with that Mamie's show, which was on the review order, was rather entertaining. Ivory. The hurt-corn comedy was that it has been announced that Raymond David, a popular musician here, has been known to David is the daughter of Attorney and the Merry-Makers orchestra played at the New Era Republican club Saturdays.
Folks have it that Nina Reeves, an attorney, was the bride recently. Miss Reeves denies the allegation, but not strenuveness. George Abrams, part owner of the Hollywood estate, is an entertainer. Second president of the Sixth ward, and his executive at the cafe, Among Mr. Abrams, personal friends present were Hadley Fite, Lee Browne, and Sidney Sheldon, deputy city clerk, and Runaway Den. Everything was strictly on record.
KNICKERBOCKER GIRLS
Annie Johnson's Knickerbocker Girlsville and Paris, Tex. This group now numbers 14, including a five-piece jazz band from home and Kansas. The regulars are Johnson and Rector, face and James, Gene Collins and Willie Miles Slider.
GENE COLLINS A CALLER
Gene Collins, the popular little band from office this week and that face of his was radiant with smiles, due to the release of a batch of contracts hauling him out to the coast and back over the great best time in the country over and over the best time in the best dance singles on the stage.
---
Jive
STAGI
THE MUSIC
By DAVE
THE MUSICAL BUNCH
Verona, Bligs was elected president of the Musicians' local No. 208 at the election of officers recently. Mr. Bligs won the election by a large margin. The career of Mr. Bligs is an interesting one. Three or four years ago he was an obscure member of the organization, only voicing his sentiments when some bishops was called to the ranks have great confidence in this new president, and the road should be easy for him with such support. We have a number of reforms that are badly needed. The gang is with him and that should make his work easy for the coming year. Mr. Bligs will be a great pachyderm in the war deciding and thinking will benefit all, as Mr. Bligs plays no favorites. The following were elected on the board of directors: Wyatt Houston, R. C. Copeland, John C. Woodward, Wilwood Graham will be the recording secretary for the coming year, and Mr. Lottio Highower will take in the money at the old window in the capacity of financial secretary. Bell was re-elected vice president and Mosque C. Bucker, as the
This organization has the reputation of being one of the finest locals in the federation. It is located at 4334 S. State St. one of the finest on the street. Its membership numbers are some 600 and on the routes are some of Chicago's touchstone.
the composer follows tradition more or less closely. In the first period he omits chord. In the second he induces in a second period a second chord of the sixth which rather differs analysis. This chord is introduced into the II of the IV. Mr SVH calls it an Ethiopian chord. In the third period he conventionalizes the fourth period he repeats the first subject. In the final he makes use of the second period and not leading into any transitions, and an acute and interesting manner. "On the whole, the composition is indelicately and highly characteristic of Nero gelmo." • • •
Notes
Alice Calhoun orchestra at the Indiana theater, Chicago, has grown to
News of the Music World
Miss Mabel Sanford Lewis will appear at the understates of the Metropolitan A. M. E. church, Miss Lewis holds an appointment of merit from the Chicago College of Music in Kimbali hall, Miss Lewis also corresponds secretary Mere, Borthie Dickerson Tyree, who has just returned from a Gary Tuesday evening. Miss Lewis is glad to welcome Mine, Anita Patlain Brown back to the city after an extensive tour in the East. Mine has been Brown a Brown was accompanied by Miss Natalie Dale Brown, who is an artist of the Miss Cornelia Lampman, winner of a Miss Cornelia Lampman foundation, is now in the East purging her studies in music with the foundation like Miss Lampman to represent them, with some special home. Roland Haines, our celebrated tenor, with standing room at a premium in the North Shore Woman's club, with Marshall, Mr. Haines success was a repetition of his last year's wonderful performance of the elegant Evanston audience as the most of the many songs were added to the program.
Chicago is looking forward and pre-
pared for the summer. Have your request list writ-
ten even before. You have request list writ-
ten that the ushers may get them to Mr. Hayes.
They will be given a note that the ushers
may get them to Mr. Hayes.
three and four months after each num-
ber. Many personal friends of Mr.
T.O.B.A.
(Theater Owned) Booking Association)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES AND
THEATER-MANAGERS
Communicates with T. O. B. A., Bule
121-212-2121 Volunteer Life Bldg. Chate-
tier B, D. H. Dutley, 1223 7th St. N.W., Wash-
ington D, D. H. Dutley, Owlsburg Bldg.
1924 St. N.W. Chicago
! FREE! FREE!
75c RECORD
have to do is send this ad and we will
SOLUTELY FREE ONE RECORD.
O MUSIC HOUSE
830 S. State St., Chicago, Ill.
By DAVE PEYTON
By MAUDE ROBERTS GEORGE
Sam Wooding and his orchestra, with Sam Wooldridge, have been refused admittance to Russia. The labor company counted of color, but because they are an American company, they are Russian people, who are ardent supporters of grand opera. Tom LadyLandry, a musician, is a feature with the orchestra.
Wen Talbert and his crack orchestra were wired up at the auditorium at the theater on Sundays to make a concrete impression. Talbert used of stagecraft as well as in the art of manipulating instruments. The theater had the popular vein, and the comedy is based on the comedy of the tail, good-looking saxophone player with the curly hair. He is wounded, stopped down to the footlights and soft accompaniment of Mr. Talbert's arrangement. it was well-timed to hear. The orchestra has been as they have the real good. With the known blues singer and all-around entertainer, who chirps the blues to the tune of the dance and same song, but the feature dancers put in the pop and ginger that makes act one of the fastest in the town.
Robert H. Jordan Writer
Hero is a fine letter received by the writer of this column from one of its readers. Give it the obe- over:
Mr. Dave Peyton: Dear Sir—As a teacher of the various orchestras, I want to congratulate you and command you for the help and assistance you have provided to helpful and am prompted here to extend to you more respect and your congratulations at your convenience any Sunday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the University at Buffalo. We have been on the 'afr' several times, and I hope it was yours to have with you. From 6 to 7, from WNAQ and will give you very, very much. Your years. Vruh, Ruth H. Jordan
CLARENCE WILLIAMS' BLUE FIVE
and EVA TAYLOR
play and sing
while you dance to "Squeeze Me"
CLARENCE WILLIAMS' BLUE FIVE have made a
great record of the new fox trot, "Squeeze Me,"
while Eva Taylor does her bit with a vocal chorus
that makes everybody happy. It's OKeh Record No.
8254; on the other side, Clarence Williams' Triogives
you "Santa Claus Blues."
© GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
25 West 45th Street, New York City
OKeh Race Records
. . .
Where to Buy OKeh Race Records
NEW YORK NOTES
NEW YORK NOTES
Harrison and Green, Hammer and
Over the Keith circuit, which means
that they have the stuff and can de-
scribe success on the phonograph records,
as many of his recent hits are being
released. To play No Second Fiddle I can Play
Grammy, I can play No Second Fiddle I can
goals are going in grand style. Larkin
Johnson and his sister have a good act
of Jelly B. Jones is leaving for Prairie
Brown and Dumont are a success
to do a good deal of entertaining at the
Beach and will have all the latest sona
Brown and Dumont are a success
this week the act is playing the Keith
theater. Fortland, Me. The Little Four,
has many obstacles, but reached
four singers and always working. They are at Procter's theater, Alhambra, N. J.
theater, San Francisco, Cal. Moss and
Pryce are at the Buswell theater, Brook-
The writer caught Harry Fiddler dodd-
Newark, N. J. Very good Harry. Miss
the Orchestra at the Orchestra at the
The Rhineland case in photography
dark dark scintillant cast is due there
STEWARD'S STEWINGS
LAURA SMITH UP AGAIN
ALEX AVE, an Oakland record star, is up again after six months' illness, suffering from a broken neck. Smith will not return to the stage, but will make sacred records for the band. He also is known as Ariel. Slim Jimson.
Where to Buy OL
Walker Thomas Furniture Co.
1013 Seventh St. N. W.
.....Washington, D. C.
Geo. W. Thomas Music Co.
428 Bowen Ave.....Chicago, Ill.
Riaito Music Shop
33 S. State St.....Chicago, Ill.
Burdette Brothers
3117 Court of Appeals
Richardson's Piano Store
5602 S. State St.....Chicago, Ill.
Ritters Music Shop
1854 W. Madison St.....Chicago, Ill.
Vito Lunetto
403 W. Oak St.....Chicago, Ill.
John Szur
4509 Alexander Ave.....
.....East Chicago, Ind.
Dixie Music
609 S. Rampart St. New Orleans, La.
Merris Music Shop
748 S. Rampart St. New Orleans, La.
Melody Music Shop
1529 Hastings St. Detroit, Mich.
New York Russian Music Store
2341 Hastings St. Detroit, Mich.
B. & F. Music Shop
1510 Chene St.....Detroit, Mich.
Russian Music Store
3507 Hastings St....Detroit, Mich.
E WILLIAMS' B
nd EVA TAYLOR
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
ENT
笑
MAIL RADIO
Morton, Samuel
Miller, A. M.
Miller, A. M.
Morgan, M. E. Means
Morgan, M. E. Means
Morgan, W. H. Ward
Morgan, W. H. Ward
Morgan, Louis
Morgan, S. H. H. H. McCinnon, George
Mack, Baby
Mack, Baby
Pangley, Madeline
Pangley, Madeline
Pum, Ben
Pum, Ben
Pitton, Riff
Pitton, Riff
Ramson, Charles
Ramson, Charles
Doctor, Water
Doctor, Water
Oakley, M. Mac
Oakley, M. Mac
Oakley, Geraldine
Rice, Downey
Rice, Downey
Water, Water
Arthur
John, Richard
Amanda
Sermon & Janette
Sermon & Janette
Smith, Lydia
Smith, Lydia
Smith, Ben
Smith, Ben
Scott, Milford
Scott, Milford
Snow, Ligature
Snow, Ligature
Thomas, Kid
Thomas, Kid
Thomas, W. G.
Thomas, W. G.
Tanvel, Frank
Tanvel, Frank
Varnell, Kwetter
Varnell, Kwetter
Vincent, Rudy
Vincent, Rudy
Waters, John
Waters, John
William, Mr. Jex
William, Mr. Jex
William, Speed & B.
William, Speed & B.
Whidley, Lain
Whidley, Lain
Weaver, M. C
Weaver, M. C
Winn, A. Stuart
Winn, A. Stuart
Winn, Burch
Winn, Burch
West, Earl
West, Earl
Wear, Armold
Wear, Armold
Williams, S.
Williams, S.
Varnell, H. H.
Varnell, H. H.
THE FIRST MOVIE
Paris, France—Dec. 28 will be the 30th anniversary of the first public brothel installed their novel show a small hall situated in the basement of the hotel, where the booking offices of the International Sleeping Car com-
A table is to be placed to mark the
earliest public cinema
performance
NEW THEATER
New Orleans — the latest entrant in
New York, who retired from the police
force to erase and manage one of the
most dangerous cities. Capt. Duvalle held a contest to
majority of the patrons involved
the booze. The T. 15 is
booze will席卷 2006.
FRED ANDREW WRITE
Mrs. Charity Andrew Carroll, 265
Brake Ave. Memphis, sister of
Jimmy Carroll, sister of
cate with him at once and has
aid of this department in locating him
2604 St. Antoine St., Detroit, Mich.
Bailey Song Shop
1913 St. Antoine St., Detroit, Mich.
Pastime Music Shop
2339 Market St., St. Louis, Mo.
Worcester Pendleton Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
Centreville Drug Store
Centreville ..... Mississippi
A. Gressett Music House
Meridian ..... Mississippi
Gulfport J. A. Abrams
Columbia Music Shop
451 Michigan Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
Brown Music Store
4514 Central Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
4692 S. Clair Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Ress Music Shoppe
40 W. Federal St., Youngstown, Ohio
9097 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
554 W. Sixth St., Cincinnati, Ohio
Pickett Music Store
4921 Schville Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Polangins Music Shop
S' BLUE FIVE
TILOR
IVE
Brown and Marguerite, whirlwind (dance) goers are doing theirs at the Elmo theater, Pittsburgh, Pa., the coming six days. Sim Thomas, former comedian, will come from Saxony, will be in Houston, Miss., until March, will get it. Billy Freeman, original Dancing Dancer, will be in Hoboken, Minneapolis, will be out all winter. Brown and McGraw have had ten successful weeks, at the Cotton club, New York and are held over for the 160 Edgecombe Ave. Apr. 16, the Big City, and Wright will be found at the Standard theater, Philadelphia, Pa., this week. U. S. T. Thompson, "Tleet of Fee," is singing at Loew's State and Dubbling, John L. Porter, late of Florida Blossom will take his at 4128 Carondelet Jackson and Taylor are still scoring at all stands. Paul Patterson puts them at the Miller and Slaster are at the Central theater, Tampa, Fla., for a two weeks
Rustus Wingfield is doing his this
week at the Douglas theater, Macon,
Ga.
Great Clemons, the monk, and his Dark American' Bazaar opened at Par-
Stella Lee Jones with Sally Burns
companion in the Standard theater,
Companion Pa.
Johnde Riddick's Hundred Pound Girl company was held over for a second week at the Lilly theater, Ga. Martin and Walker's Red Hot Hot companies are going in fine shape at the Ella Moore theater with Shireeport and New York's Shireeport. James E. Strong and Mina Ranks are hitting on all cylinders with the box 1290 Monroe, La. care of show. In clara Smith and Stanley Milne, William Benbow and his hunch will take theatrics at the Pike theater, Mobile, Ala. Jack R. Johnson, who stood in the theater, will take his in the future at 224 George St. Cincinnati, Ohio until further notice. Home, 1414 Sulton St. Houston, Texas. Wants to keep in touch with the producer. Florence DeLege with the Bandanna Girl company is at the Llyric theater, Ga.
Eddie H. Edwards is planning to place
theater in the city after Jan. 11. M. Mall 2219 E. 36th St.
James H. Smith, Jr., drummer, with
theater, Louisville, is at the Indiana
theater, Chicago.
Chara Campbell with Sheffield's Revue
at the Panage theater.
Roy White and Sherman are playing
the Lincoln theater, New York city.
Harrison Blackburn is with the Georgia Minstrels at Reno, Nev.
Bowe and Lindell, meaning Robert Bowe Pere-bee and Lindell B. Arthur, will play the Strand theater, Jacksonville, Fla. Tucker and Gresham have closed a theater in the city and are now playing the Foraker theater, Washington, D.C. C. Gresham is going from the Lincoln theater, Louisville, Ky. to the Strand theater, playing with Aurora Greedy advises that mall will reach her at the Roosevelt theater, Wild company, playing with the Runnin' wild company.
4850 VOICES
ON ONE RECORD SINGING
“ADESTE FIDELIS”
("Oh, Come All Ye Faithful")
The greatest record of its kind ever recorded. Just think almost 5,000 voices singing at one time. Every home should have this beautiful record. 50013—12 in.—$1.25
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
COY COGITATES
Silas Green has his
tids to not, itself and
heart, it's best to
away away, as rail-
ing is the worst ever. The
Atlantic Coast line
maintains its silence
in my private cars.
Silas Green has the whole of Florida in his heart. In fact, if you are not pure in heart, it's best to train in the road conditions are the Atlantic Coast line maintains its silence on movements of any prince. Galeneville, Fla., maintains business. Willie Mac, a member of the Silas Green show, now living in New York has relatives there
Gainesville, Fl., business. Willie Nae McAllister, a former Green show, now living in New York, will give a talk they didn't know she showed and a Thanksgiving dinner had been arranged for her. The invited. One or us had to stay and nurse the business so we could "nursed" the turkey is where we felt the effects of the recent coast storm that nearly hit all points on the Atlantic coast, business. Holley Huchos, the wealthy little undertaker and a little party for me. Some of Ocala's most prominent Florida boom Mr. Hughes can afford to retire from business. The wife and kids can take advantage of occupying their new home, while the kids can take advantage of washing-
In the heavy rain at Ocain, in order to detail himself at the leading end of his truck, he and mud I took the swim with or rest of the canvas boys. On the beach, he and mud I took the working men with one truck, and the other with mud I took the truck was so long in raining that the our crew had to get on a platform and proceed to the car. Just before the truck got to the car on a platform with arms and legs smashed and the heavy wet canvas spread in every direction, the driver, who couldn't make the turn, so hit the A. lights being out and a little "moonshine" were the cause of the reckless
With an ambulance standing ready, he drove for the driver, who was hurt, to be taken to his home, leaving my men with the truck, using the truck hauling the show to take the driver home. I protested and asked if the truck moved without finishing the job loaded. I paid $500 and the cost of the ambulance was only $5 a man. My slats from a city police, but giving no ground and showing no fright, made ready for railroad movement. The two Silas Green boys were placed in tention. Mr. Collier didn't throw them on the ground, though they had just left another show the very same day they joined the canvas brigade and hadn't worked
Sarasota. Fla.
This little city has been broadcasted
through the Hanging Brothers, owners of the
greatest circus in the world, have ad-
dventured to play. It really is a city beautiful.
Ada Lockhart Booker Hurt
ADOPTS BABY GIRL
Margaret Johnson, Offbord record,
wife the pleasure of what she had
adopted a little 4-year-old who already
shows promise of becoming a twinkling
star, the strains of mother's voice, and the way
she runs on Rushua, Charlton is a
sweet. Her new name is Emily Johnson.
Watch her, says Margaret.
4850 V
ON ONE REC
Columbia
"ADESTE
Send no money—pay the postman.
We give prompt service. Postage
insurance paid on orders for
one record. C. O. D.
charges, 15c.
THE ALLEY RAT
(Eve Recitation)
lives rite back uv us!
made sech a fuse
they call "alley-rat!"
et wuz on'y his way
put 'play' pla!
play wuz' wid him.
wuz really a sin.
see
he be jes' played with me.
ex he looks.
one uv them crooks.
onct when I broke in
did
he before I went down,
out on th' ground.
't work enymore,
they are awfully poorl
monor ways.
to near Christmas day.
to play things nor toys
to be to boys.
'th kid is a ace.
Daddy's place.
us: "Mom, don't-chew mind,
I will find.
make money snuff
Mandy a muff.
Santa Claus.
little boys' boys."
folks turned him down
want him aroun';
Mom! you kn' t kid what lives lites back uv us!
The raggedy one! 'n you made se a fuss
'n you made se a fuss
Shuckes' yo kn'! 'h one dey call "alley-ratt"
Mom, he wun' stealln', that wun' why his
Uv try'n it gme it t cum out n' play
Uv you tme it gme it t cum out wid him
Uv with his kind wun really a sin.
Well, 'twiz this way, you see.
I couldn't play with him, so he jes' played with me
Say, Mom! he wun' t not one uv them crooks.
"N' see, he is brave! why onct when I broke in
Through 't le on 't pond
Where the red flag hed him.
I leamed
He jumped in 'n srabbed me before I went down,
"N all by himself pulled me out on 't groun'.
His Daddy got hurt 'n cap' work anymore,
He was illly poor!
His mother wuz cirn' 't sorst his
Him fer takin' a few ole last season toys
T make his word good 't the girls, 'n th boys!
T morrer is Christmas—'n now he's in jail—
'N no one in town who will go on the ball—
Mom! what's th matter? What-chew hurryin' about?
Goin' down t gil Daddy t gil kid 'hid out?
'N you'll let me, give him a real Christmas tree!
N presents for all n' say they cum from me!
Oh Mom! let me like you—
You sure are true blue!
There never wuz ever a mother like you!
—SALEM TUTT WHITNEY.
Mom! what's th' matter? What chew hurryin' in about?
Goln' down t' gildaddy t' gilt th' kid out?
'N' you'll let me, give him a real Christmas tree!
'N' presents t' give them a they cum frum me! Oh. Mom! let me kiss you—
You sure are true blue!
There never wuz ever a mother like you!
A NOTE OR TWO
Brown and Dulmont, on the Kelvin
Crown, and Lowell, on the Lakeview,
Lower, the week of the 14th.
Here's the line-up of S. H. Gray,
star of the American Theater, Honaton, Tox-
kinson, Galveston, Texas, week of the
12th.
Baby Carre and Bardu Ally, best
strutting with the Ida Cox unit this
week. Bardu says he is elated over
strutting with the Ida Cox unit this
week. Bardu says he is elated over
strutting with the Ida Cox unit this
week. The Original Dike Kids are pleasing
the critics with their dog act, which
involves cards of its kind on the road. They
lay out cards of its kind week at the
Loxie theater, Miami, Fl. The team of Short and Shorty an-
nounce the name of Wilson and Wilson is on
the original company. Said original is
duplication. The Cobalt Medici E. H. Ha-
mann is taking them wonder at Spring-
field. Team Haann informs that he
would be on another night and his way of recompense
is mutting on a special show for the
week.
LYLES A BANKRUPT
New York—Aubrey Lee Llys of New York gave himself a "broke" to the extent of his voluntary petition in bankruptcy. Llys gave his address as 626 St. Mary's in New York. He made his wife as principal creditor for $12,000. Irwin Miller (not his partner, who is Fourth Miller) paid for a $2,500 debt. Miller and Llys were out with their old show, "Wild," that did spot business.
Comedians Fined if
Comedians Fined if They're Not Funny
Nowadays a comedian may lose his job if he fails to amuse his audience. He has to pay his hearers for listening to him. It was nothing unusual about this procedure in Italy 500 years ago. Grace H. Hontley, Theresa Hancock, and John H. Glillman, who made a study of Italian songs in relation to their historical setting, said in a lección de la Universidad de Chile John H. Glillman, under the auspices of the Thursday Musical vintage time used to challenge wandering strangers to a touring show. The peasants, around Naples
Columbia
and STAGE
"Kid Charleston"
THE MAN IN THE TUXEDO
FRANKIE KIRKLAND
* New York—Master Frank Kirkland of 14 Hancock Street, Brooklyn, and 12 Hancock Street, Brooklyn. *ton Kine* by many of Broadway's theatrical stars; was accepted as National Theater Association association at a meeting held at the University. He is the first child of our group to have this honor and was imprint in a testimonial performance in honor of Mayor-elect Jimmy Walker. *Little Frank* is very well thought of by both groups and is looked upon as the emperor of the late George Walker.
UNAUTHORIZED RAID ON ACTORS
REST DISCLOSES BRIBE PLOT
and their wives. White is playing with the theatrical troupe here. The woman and two men were struck in their faces and knocked down, while White and his wife were drenched to the street and they see only after paying $10, they charge. Policeman Hogan is accused of having pocketed the money. The statements made by their collaterals and that it would be for their collaterals and that it would be for who accused the policemen were like Italian Goodner. Richard Perry and wife, Ian Goodner. Virginia L. Gray and Frank Douglas.
Policeman Reed has been with the department seven years. Three years ago he was badly burned in the face and about the eyes by fire thrown at him by a woman. Policeman Hogan has been with the department about two years. She-tion and Hide were serving their first year.
WHO ever heard of a Christmas without good music! Paramount offers you now a list of the finest spirituals and sacred records. Choose a few records from the following—either for gifts or for your own home. Enjoy the inspiration of these splendid songs. Your dealer has them, or order direct from us with the coupon.
12323—Every Time I Feel the Spirit and' Going to Study War No More, Mme. C. Mae Frierson Moore with Four Aces of Harmony.
12315—This Train Is Bound For Glory and Lord, I'm Troubled,
Wood's Daughters Blind Jubilee Singers.
12314—You Must Come In At The Door and When I Come out of
The, Wilderness, Sunset Four Jubilee Quartette.
12234—Where Shall I Be and I'm Gonna Built Right On Dat Shore,
Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12285—Oh Lord, What a Morning and Hand Me Down The Silver
Trumpet, Sunset Four Jubilee Quartette.
12217—Execkel Saw De Wheel and Crying Holy Unto The Lord,
Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12073—When All The Saints Come Marching In and That Old Time
Religion, Paramount Jubilee Singers.
12035—Father Prepare Me and My Lord's Gonna Move This Wicked
Race, Norfolk Jubilee Singers.
12092—His Eye Is On The Sparrow and Stand By Me, Madame
Lawrence (with piano acc.)
Paramount
York
Recordings
Laboratories
12 Perkinson Hall,
Port Washington, WI.
Bold me the records
checked below
REG U.S. VAT OFFY
The Popular Race Record
Name
Address
City State
THE GEORGIAS
THE GEORGIAS
Most every American, man, woman and child, black or white, love to enjoy the spirit of Christmas. How many of our ourselves: 'Will they be a Christmas cheer in the home that welcomes for, or our homes are all "Jake" for someone going to lend a helping hand to bring a blatant cheer into home where fortune has afterward come
A. B.
A little gift, ever
A little gift, ever
Yuleide means soo
guten ones during
the season
musis is the day for
the season
Washington, D. C.—Accused of extorting money from persons they arrested in a trial, four policemen, and two officers, who were stationed were suspended and relieved of their equipment here last week. They are Charles W. Reed, Jeff O. McGee, and Jeff O. McGee. Accusations were made in statements by 11 residents of the Actors' Rest, a building in the city. Among the accusers was the prophet, Carmel Wartburg, and his wife, wife
- Picked From Force
After making the statements, the accusers picked the four police officers for duty at midnight. The policemen were confronted with the signed statements. All denied any knowledge of the affair. No specific knowledge of the statements. They have been ordered to appear at the office of the United States district court, and the statements will filed against them. The 11 persons say the police were in charge and ordered Warbington, his wife and guesses under him. The officers, all were told, they say they were charged with it. It is alleged they were asked to pay $50 each collateral. This was reduced, the police would go to jail rather than pay did the police collect $21, according to the state-
Four Charge Beating
the policemen also are accused of beating Warrington and Edward White
VIRGINIAS CLOSE
Cheerful news comes from Joe Carr, a former executive director of the announcement that their engagement at the theater, Baltimore 3rd, was one of the first of many of the happy state of affairs is attributed to the manager, according to the stars of the show, the "Our Fee" company, is really a regular.
"If the peasants could amuse the visitors amused them the visitors pay a fine. A reception, a band of actors appeared who entirely outdid the peasants until the latter a hump and an enormous nose. His antics so enchanted the peasants until they fainted, his faint, his kidnapped the fun-maker for their own company, and his poor Punchinello, who ever since has stood for a certain type of painting pathes of the man who must be a perpetual jest—derived from this character."—Minnesota State.
TEXAS TATTLES
TEXAS TATTLES
BY WYATT D. J. AMES
Dallas, Texas—Among various colored menus and house filled to capacity with hundreds unable to gain entrance, the Southwest finest club, the Greater Southwest club, the Saturday event, Dec. 12, will be fully decorated the shell will find the executive secretary's office and conference rooms, library and, moving further down the long and spacious hallway to the right, the library and moving further down the railway you enter the spacious dance hall, where tables and chairs are set sandwiches, clear and oil drip department is located at the entrance of the ladies rest room and live private booths with call buttons that register the calls.
"At the opening of the hall opposite
the entrance, there is a beautiful pool room, which contains a large room with a large room in adjoining, everything is very paitant. The officers of D. Johnson, executive secretary W. D. Johnson, executive secretary H. Owensner, executive secretary Dudley Henry, gen-
room, Larry Lawrenc, head gen-
room, Larry Lawrenc, head gen-
room and smilch dispenser. Disp. Drake,
Roscoe Montello's Radio Girls closed on Dec. 14. The Moorie Hall, Moore theater, week end, closed on Dec. 14, to follow weeks of Dec. 14 and 21, respectively. For week of Dec. 11, she is the Martin and Walker company, which has been coming annually for a number of years. Many presents were there. A fine letter was received from our friend, the Rosemary St., West Palm Beach, products. A specimen of that country's letters were also sent from Mrs. Jules Weaver and wife and part of his family, who reside in the city and are working people for all the ministries. Jules says he Lizzied all the
Our friend chaufour, Norman Read,
lifetime contract, but was refused.
lifetime contract, but was refused.
LOSES MOTHER
Allie Young, 420 Humphrey St., Memphis, TN, passed the passing of his mother, Mrs. Delia Young, on Dec. 8 at their home in Ella Brier and Mrs. Vivian Thomas, who both survived the attack. He hurried to join their brother in the South for the last rites. He was remembered Allie Young in the days when the Pekin family held the height of its glory, under the management of the late Iloh Motts. It was a great surprise that he won fame for "Cat on the Wire," having won fame for his Pringle minstrels as a shack-wire artist. His many friends and admirers knew what he rightly terms "his best friend" what he rightly terms "his best friend" to him in our heart-felt sympathy.
JOHNNY HUDGINS
New York - Johnny Hudele, who
143rd St. and Lenox Ave., since last
October, has been re-engaged by the
143rd St. and Broadway, and made his
first appearance there on Monday night.
Broadway's greatest night club have
Broadway's greatest night club have
Hudele, who for several months entertained
the millionaires and near
diners and duced to return. This was done, and
by Miss Abbie Mischel and a million-
dollar chorus.
The Green River Minstrels closed its
season at 1217th. Ga., Thanksgiving,
from 2317th. Hal St., Room 298, Dallas.
HITTIN' HERE AND THERE
By BILLY PIERCE
New York—Now that the Ehleneh
the big town have settled down to
their own way, the big town has
a good many derogatory ad-
dories not into the press in reference
to their own way, clashing with
their own kith and kina and
that the above statements accrued
Also that in the 25 years that he has
passed, he has not passed to pass
for any other thing than the
American citizen of Color
Another Mother joins be one of us, now
that
Jimmy Thomas and George Cooper,
(son of George Sr. who was the former
manager of the J.B. Bangle jangles and, like his dad, jam up). He
was a great time to work. They are working the United time.
Lomax and Blue, one of our cleverest
singers, did a jam that have
issued 20 weeks in and around the Mid-
west. They report good business. They look well
and have saved their dough. Oh, so
different!
There is a tumor around that Florrie
Zucker. She's putting out a monster all-large
12258—Get On Board, Little Children, Get On Board and Every Time I Feel The Spirit, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
12301—Somebody's Always Talking About Me and Sit Down, Sit Down, I Can't Sit Down, Norfolk Jubilee Quartette.
13302—Divine Relationship Of Man To God and Prayer, Rev. W. A. White.
13306—Holy Night and Silent Night, Holy Night, Hackel Berge Trio (violin, cello, piano).
10048—Nazareth and The First Nowell, Criterion Quartette with Orchestra.
13045—Joy To The World, Cardinal Quartette and Adeste Fideles, Piano Solo by Clifford Murray.
Send No Money! If your dealer hasn't the want, check the numbers on the cover of the U.S.税. Pay postman 75 cents each, plus small C. O. D. fee. We pay postage and insurance on orders for more than one record.
people working.
Paul Specht and his famous Canadian club orchestra and play organization and popular in Hallem, will play opposite to Allie Ross and his band Christie's high school in Hallem. Specht's band is now working at the Moulin Rouge club.
Harry Thaw was a visitor to the Komedy club one night last week. By the time his name is now changed to the Hoofers club.
Last Sunday afternoon Clarence Darrow spoke at Salem M. E. church, 123rd St. and Seventh Ave. on behalf of the Sweet defense fund. A group of performers were present. Ros曼ond Johnson and Taylor Gordon sang.
PAKF 1-PAGE
---
---
Fay Names All-American Selections
PART 1-PAGE 8
Fay N
WILLIAM LEE, tackle. Hampton institute, is an aggressive, brave tackler; he is a power on both the offense and the defense. Elected captain of Hampton's 1926 eleven.
BROOKLYN
OSCAR TADLOCK. Tuskegee institute,
Tuskegee, Ala. Best center in the country
this year. Big Morgan of Lincoln crowded
him back to second eleven last year.
Makes it a horrible life for opposing
centers and rarely allows a gain to be made
through his position. Is a tower of
strength at all times.
SNIP MILLER IS MADE CAPTAIN OF WILDCATS
Bx W. G. LEE
Marshall, Texas, Dec. 14—Clifford "Snip" Miller has been elected captain of the Wiley football team for the season of 1926. Miller was regular varsity quarterback during the past season and performed brilliantly in many of the hard games of the past campaign. Miller halts from Baumann, Texas, the home of seven members of the varsity football squad, and is a sophomore in the college department. Miller was given mention for all-conference quarterback by the team. Sixteen members of the 1925 squad have been awarded the coveted W for their services on the gridiron. The captain K. W. McMillan, Captain Clifford Miller, Walter Brown, T. W. Kinnon, Indy Reed, Joseph R. Roy, Dexter Ellis, William Lorden, Bonnie Cavil, Nando Hebert, Lassellonn, Harry Briggs, and Archer above only McMillan. Brown and Dixon graduate in June and should the others elect to return. Coach Long will undoubtedly receive another win.
```markdown
```
Many of the Wiley follower are of the opinion that Wiley would have had to put up a schedule that called for Sam Huston, Langston and Prairie View in a space of eight days. The regular game and were unable to take part in the Prairie View game, which was the only points scored on the Wildcats in 1925. The complete record is as follows:
0, 12; Jawes, 0; Wiley, 15; Sam Huston, 0; Wiley, 10; Langston, 0; Wiley, 6; Prairie View, 12; Wiley, 6; Southern, 0; Texas, 10; Wiley, 0; Paul Colin, 0; Wiley, 18; Bishop, 0
COMPANY BOXERS ADRIW
CUBA
Dec. 18, 2014-Jobelle Beazer, featherweight, and Giorgio Pino, lightweight, both Cubs, arrived here just after the World Cup. The two said they have arranged several bouts for them. Pino is expected to meet with the club in the near future of the local clubs in the near future.
WALKER AND CHIEF DRAW
WALKER AND CHIEF DRAW
New York, Joe Lombardt, Willie Walker of the Medal of Honor, a member of the Medal of Honor, fourth in a flashing lion's draw at the 1918 World's Fair, Jalebian weighted 185 and Weight 185 pounds.
ELBERT TURNER, quarterback, West Virginia Collegiate institute, uses splendid judgment in selection of plays. Cool and collective. Excel- tion. Captain of Institute's undefeated 1925 eleven.
TIGER FLOWERS
TO MEET M'TIGUE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
New York. Dec. 16. After several weeks of wrangling with boxers and their managers because of their allied demands to perform for charity, Jes McMahon finally arranged his card last week for the Christmas fund bouts to be staged at the new Madison Square Garden. next Wednesday night, when he signed Tiger Flowers of Atlanta, Ga., to meet the heavyweight champion, in the star attraction scheduled for ten rounds.
Big George Godfrey, Jimmy Dougherty's ace, is coming all the way from California to do his stuff against Martin Burke, heavyweight of New Orleans, in another ten of the all-star program.
This Friday evening at the new Garden, Willie Makel of Washington, D. C., who of late has been turning in some nice performances, will meet preliminaries to the Kaplan-Herman otherweight championship contest.
FRED DOUGLASS JUNIOR HIGH
WINS INDOOR CHAMPIONSHIP
FRED DOUGLASS JUNIOR HIGH
WINS INDOOR CHAMPIONSHIP
New York, Dec. 12—The Fred Douglass of the point score with 10 in the annual indoor championship games of the Publisher, noon in the armory of the 102nd engineering. Harlem aggregation took the 650-word relay in the enplendid time of 10 minutes, and the 10-inch in the 140-yard relay. The time for this event was 52.5 seconds. The program, public school No. 9 of 14th grade, for the point score, being beaten by public school No. 8, Brooklyn, won. Just as public school No. 8 dominated the field events, so public school No. 4, years ago, was overwhelminly superior in the relay. The team decided for the little lads of our group out in front at the end of the course to overcome No. 9 long lead. They did, however, enable the ladders by a 6-10-0 score. The run-up honors by a single point.
ROSEVALE HIGH WINS
Petersburg, Team Dec. 11—Howard Lambers by a 6-10-0 score in a postseason game on Morgan's ranch.
Roseville Farewell
Woodland R.E.T. Taylor
Woodland R.E.T. Taylor
Shimmons C. Moore
J. Bermuda R.E.T. Bermuda
J. Bermuda R.E.T. Bermuda
Dartmouth R.E.T. Henry
Litchfield L.E.H. Bermuda
Litchfield L.E.H. Bermuda
Oakland O.P. Bermuda
RAY'SHEPPARD, halfback, Paul Quinn college, Waco, Texas. Best drop-kicker in the state. Handed Langston a 6 to 0 defeat last year with two field goals. Plays a whale of a game and is famous for his sweeping end runs. A deadly tackler and the fear of all opponents when his team gets inside the 35-yard line. Good punter and line plunger.
COPIES OF THIS ALL-STAR ELEVEN READY FOR FRAMING CAN BE HAD FOR 25 CENTS EACH. WHICH WILL COVER COST OF MAILING AND PRINTING. ADDRESS BUSINESS DEPT.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
HAMPTON CAGE SEASON OPENS WITH VICTORY
BY THOMAS W. YOUNG
Hampton, Va., Dec. 12—Two minutes and 37 seconds of startling passing and attempted shots had clapped before Edward Hargrove, veteran Seaside center, caged a long and lofty field goal to open the offense which proved the undoing of the fast quitter of Miner Normal from Washington in Hampton's first basketball game of the season here at the school gym. Hargrove* continued his shooting streak throughout the first half registering four field goals and two free throws, while Alexander, made known in Hampton's tilt with Morehouse last season, sank one on a speedy follow through and diminutive "Shorty" Lambright rang in a free throw. Miner Normal's passing was accurate, effective and puzzling to the Seaside*quilt during the entire fraternity shooting limited Capital City lads to three goals in the first half, made by Brown, Lancaster and Jones.
Miner Normal rallied in the final period and Jones, the lanky pivot man of the team, scored five points, dropped four shots, and Sims, a substitute, and Tinner each made one. Lancaster casted a couple of the team's best shots, the Seasiders did not tax themselves to a great extent in the last game, but with Lambricht and Alexander accounting for two each, the former sinking a long one from a hurried run to the end of the suits of rapid following up of shots. Hargrove made another and retired, and the Seasiders for the second consecutive year also registered a goal, but was forced to pull near a slight of the "Cutie" Brown, a newcomer in the Seasiders camp, sank three free throws. Hampton is slated to encounter the St. Paul Tigers next Saturday at home.
Hampton Miner Normal
Lambricht P. Brown
Harvard G. Brown
Thatcher G. Brown
Hartley G. Brown
Substitutions: Hammons - Englewood, Brown
Miner Normal - Retner - Brown
Miner Normal - Retner - Brown
Thatcher - Retner - Brown
Hartley - Retner - Brown
Name. School. Position
Caithers (West Virginia Institute) ..... End
Kinmon (Wiley College, Texas) ..... Tackle
Clemons (Paul Quinn, Waco) ..... Guard
Pindle (Captain) (Hampton Institute, Virginia) ..... Center
Calloway (Lincoln, Pennsylvania) ..... Guard
Irving (Morehouse, Atlanta, Ga.) ..... Tackle
Long (Howard) ..... End
Whedbee (Virginia Seminary) ..... Quarterback
Ward (Wilberforce) ..... Halfback
Johnson (Langston) ..... Halfback
Anderson (Lincoln, Pennsylvania) ..... Fullback
Name. School. Position
Woolridge (Wilberforce, Ohio) End
Tynes (Virginia Normal) Tackle
Calloway (Lincoln, Pennsylvania) Guard
Buchanon (Wilberforce) Center
Montgomery (Atlanta University) Guard
Grasty (Lincoln, Pennsylvania) Tackle
Clay (Atlanta University) End
Williams (Union) Quarterback
Harding (Wilberforce) Halfback
Parker (Straight) Fullback
Williams (Hampton) Halfback
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Balt Quinn college, Waco, Texas. Best Langston a 6 to 0 defeat last year with a game and is famous for his sweeping the fear of all opponents when his team扑 punter and line plunger.
ALL-STAR ELEVEN MING CAN BE HAD REACH. WHICH WILL MAILING AND PRINT-BUSINESS DEPT. GO DEFENDER
SECOND ELEVEN
School.
West Virginia Institute) .....
Bay College, Texas) .....
Paul Quinn, Waco) .....
Bain) (Hampton Institute, Virginia)
Bincoln, Pennsylvania) .....
Chause, Atlanta, Ga.) .....
Bard) .....
Virginia Seminary) .....
Burforce) .....
Burgston) .....
Bincoln, Pennsylvania) .....
THIRD ELEVEN
School.
Wilberforce, Ohio) .....
Bainia Normal) .....
Bincoln, Pennsylvania) .....
Wilberforce) .....
(Atlanta University) .....
Bincoln, Pennsylvania) .....
La University) .....
Union) .....
Wilberforce) .....
Bainia) .....
Bampton) .....
HONORABLE MENTION
—G. C. Blark (Morehouse), Bailey (Tuskegee), T. Bragg (Florida A. and M.), Beck (Clark), Morehouse), Smith (Howard), Cavity (Jay), Brown (University), Gay (Brown), Pierson (Prairie View), Martin (Union), Lane (A. and T.), Jacobs (H. McConnell), Lowe (Western), McNillian (Wiley), Weld (Wilm Williams) (Wilberforce), CKGS—Owens (Sam Huston), Payne (Howard), Brown (Brown), Bishop (Lincoln), McNillian (Wiley), Hampton, Cooper (Ta Jones) (Langston), TWiley), Robinson (Tuskegee), Clay (Avery) (Florida A. and M.), Posey (Bishop), Hawk (Hamilton), Hall (Alabama State), Archer (Morehouse), (Fisk), Bragg (Fisk), Davis (Hampton), B. a Normal), Osburgh (Dampson), Wilberforce), unders (West Virginia), Miller (Howard), Ford (Atlanta), Smith (Tuskegee), Ellis (Tuskegee), Riley (Atlanta), Benson (Lawson), Hawkins (Alcorn), Slaughter
EDWARD RITCHIE, halfback, Wilberforce university, Wilberforce, Ohio. Good at both quarterback and halfback positions. Beats Ward out because he is shifty and uses his head. Good klicker, runner, punter and passer.
DUDLEY REDD, guard. Wiley college, Marshall, Texas. A bear of a guard and one of the most finished players of the present day. Redd brings to Wiley the first mention on an all-American team. Continuously breaking through and smearing plays as well as blocking punts. Has weight and brains with it.
s. guard, Wiley college,
a bear of a guard
most finished players of
Redd brings to Wiley
on an all-American
breakthrough
ways as well as blocking
brains and brains with it.
TED LANE
Lincoln u
selected
elevon cone
quick cone
making an
up. is a
up. is a
chief of
out.
C. L. ABBOTT IS ELECTED S.I.A.A. HEAD
Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 12.—The Southeastern Intercollege Athletic association, in session at Morehouse college Dec. 11 and 12, completed the fitness during the sealsips and the time presenting the 11 schools of the organization, perfected arrangements for a coaches association with B. T. Harvey of Morehouse college as temporary chairman and S. B. Taylor of Clark university, secretary. This meeting might have the same interpretation, at which time all accredited officals will be asked to be present. At this meeting the new rules will be clarified so that all the coaches and members might have the same interpretation. Knoxville college and the Tennessee admitted to membership. The Southeastern Athletic association is one of the colleges in the United States, with the following schools as members: the University, Flask university, Florida A. and M. college, Knoxville college, Tennessville college, Brown university, Morehouse college, Alabama State Normal school. Tailgating college and Tuskegee institute.
C. L. Abbott, director of athletics at Tuskegee, is the newly elected president of Barnaby of the same institution was re-elected secretary-treasurer.
HEAVYWEIGHT JACK DE MAVE TO BOX 'THE FIGHTING LOON'
JOHN WILLIAMS, end, Langston university, Langton, Okla. Tall, rang, fast. Hard man to stop when shifted to the backfield and his punts average 60 yards a game during season. Dropkicker, passer and receiver of passes.
1930
TED LANCASTER, captain and end of Lincoln university's 1925 eleven. Is selected as captain of the mythical eleven because of his experience, his quick conception of plays while in the making and his ability to break them up. Is a close student of the game, one of the boat players Lincoln ever turned out.
WILL Quinn the m last Waco times, Plays messes shifty,
rules will he
same inter
ROCK ANDERSON LEADS CRACK
the Tennessee
were ad-
lation is one
nations of
OHIO FIVE; HUBBARD PLAYS
AL BROWN HITS
FLOOR; GOES BACK
AND WINS FIGHT
New York, Dec. 12. After taking a clip on the chin that put him down, he was applauded by Al Brown, pride of the Harlem fan community, actions of the business man, the business scrap between little follows staged the Commonwealth Sporting club tonight before a crowd that jammed the crowd with the crowd of Dafne Hughes weighed 112 pounds and Brown scaled three pounds heavier, champion, won an easy victory over Sonny McKeen, in the 10-round semifinal tilt, and won the sixth session Bill came near finishing the Scotchman with a wicked soak to his face in at this period and gave evidence but when he refused, ignoring his plea, continued his count, he immediately continued of the encounter. Eddie Zeigler, boxing his first bout over George McNally. The contest was crowded with action. Erle Peterson both weighed over two hundred pounds and the bout was crowded with action.
HALL OUTPOINTER
Brooklyn, N. Y., Ive, T. J. Izenby Hall, bananum weight battler, was outpainted by the Rangers (white) of St. Paul at the Broadway arena tonight. Hall a few weeks ago aged at the Ridgewood Gove Sporting club, at the Ridgewood Gove Sporting club, while Hall graded 113%, gounds
JATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
ctions
HODGES, tackle. West Virginia institute eleven. Member of Institute's unbaunted Good tackler, uses excellent judgment. demon or the offense and the defense.
THE BASEBALL PLAYER
WILLIAM JENNINGS, tackle at Paul Quintz* Waco, Tevas, shifted to guard on the mythical eleven. Played that position last year at Tuskegee, before going to Waco school. A wonderful player at all times, worthy of the honor given him. Plays sent through his position are never messed up because of his ability. Fast, shifty, heady player at all times.
VIRGINIA NORMAL HONORS
FOURTEEN WITH VARSITY 'V'
Etrickes, Va. Dec. 5—At the annual banquet given by the athletic association in honor of the football squad, the following men were presented with the varsity V. L. Baker, T. Brown, T. W. Baker, T. Brown, T. W. Baker, T. Slaughter, S. Royal, B. Colley, L. Lacey, J. Sayles, H. Chamberh, H. Thompson and J. Shelton. L. Baker and T. Brown will be lost to the game. The most likely candidates for the position best by Brown will be Permanent and attempt to fill the position left vacant by Baker, who is recognized as one of the most outstanding player, in the C. J. A. A. Eric Epps, star halftack and most outstanding player,
DOUGLASS HI WINE
New York Dec. 12.—The Fred Doug-
linson juniors play in the Lakers at
tores. 19th St. between Lenox and
Seventh Aves. defeated the Lake junior
high school basketball team this af-
ternoon in a close contest on the ope-
r's court by a score of 22 to 21.
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Wilberforce Downs Langston 6 to 0
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
Wilber
5,000 SEE NORTHERN
FROM OKLAHOMA'S
TEAM" IN STUBBO
5,000 SEE NORTHERNERS WIN FROM OKLAHOMA'S "WONDER TEAM" IN STUBBORN BATTLE
BY FRANK A. YOUNG
Langston, Okla. Dec. 12.-Langston threw an awful scare into Wil伯force university of Ohio in a big post-season game of football as 5,000 fans of both races looked on today.
Langston had a much better team than the visitors had reckoned they had. Wil伯force won, but in so doing, they had to extend themselves.
The 6 to 0 score wasn't anything like that 25 to 0 win over Lincoln university on Oct. 24 in in Ohio.
Wil伯force found the weather to their liking with the exception of a strong southeast wind that played havoc with their kicking in the second and third periods. Harding, Campbell, Ritchie and Redden stood out for the invaders.
as well as a blooming the They tried
the Gam wended the barbecue was passed all out. A gymnasium
the Most who are not of the count when an en the school and then lace across the It was a chine of e OXS and w
Ward didn't impress the home folks played. He seemed afraid of being tired when running with the ball, would chase clear across the field and out of bounds. For Langston, Johnson, who was a running rod, Williams, whose kicking outdid that of the visitors, and Jones, who promises to give somebody a hot run for All-American honors, stood out. But the home folks were disappointed. They came from Muskeguee, Taft, Enlil, Ollinton, Tulsa, Oklahoma City and other surrounding towns within a radius of 200 miles. They came to see Langston up. To them W. E. Anderson, late of Morehouse, had the best team in the world. Sure, the team hadn't been beaten at home in three years. In that same space of time their goal line had remained uncrossed. The lone defeat was at Paul Quinn when Sheppard's toe booted the ball straight over the cross-har between the uprights on two different occasions.
Wilberforce had been beaten by West Virginia and that was that. Was no way for Langston to lose they told us the night before. There was Price who served overseas with the 812th A. E. F. fixing up his barbecue. I will have to cause here long enough to tell you about this.
Yesterday afternoon Dr. Isaac Young, president of the school, the father to some 900 boys and girls took me over to the slaughter pen. There two hogs were being cut up, one cow had already been carved by the butchers who were school students. Then we went over to the concrete trough, where two bed springs were stretched across a space of about 50 feet. Hot embers were glowing. The meat of fresh slaughtered animals were placed on the springs, which were cleaned thoroughly after each big fry.
All night long fresh embers were phased underneath, while Price and his assistants stood guard. This morning we get up and found Price mixing the "sauce." The sauce is some fresh butter, melted with vinegar, pepper and salt. Everything is now in readiness to feed the visitors. Thirty-five cents will fill you up. Price has been careful to see that the food is well salted and turned over at the proper time.
The game started at 1 o'clock. From dawn until noon the cars poured in. The alumni returned. The laundry and the machine shops of which we will tell you about at another time, have shut down. Today is the day of the big game. Even Mrs. Young, the genial president's wife, who tips the list her, when it comes to being hostess, is talking of "her boys" and that "they're going to win."
This same woman was out there on the field between the halves urging her loyal sons of Langston on.
Langston received the kleck-off and it wasn't long before the multitude, even the white students who came over from Stillwater, realized that they were going to see a battle royal. Although the Ohioans got the jump in the first quarter, neither team let up until the last quarter, when Wil伯force was content to play the game safe, fearing a repetition of the Thanksgiving day game. Within a few minutes of closing they brought out the old-time spurt that beat Lincoln, but it was too late. As the pistol barked out the end of the tilt, Ward was rushing towards the goal line. Two Langston men crowded him so fast that the flying Ohioan went outside on the two-yard line and it was all off. Fumbles were frequent in the quarter, appearing to the nervousness of both sides. In behalf of the Langton team, we will honestly say that they put up a hot scram. They played equally as well as the Indians. They had a far better team than we had expected to see.
Wilberforce, crafty, using their wits
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as well as their brawn, couldn't do a blooming thing after the first period. They tried hard but in vain.
The game, once over, the folks wended their way back to where the barbecue was served until the word was passed around that things were all out. A social was held in the gymnasium following supper.
The most astonishing thing to those who are not familiar with this section of the country happened about noon, when an aeroplane was sighted above the school buildings. It circled around and then landed in a cotton field just across the main highway.
It was a "Swallow" make of machine of eight-cylinder 1925 model ONS and was built in Wichita, Kan., and owned by Simon E. Berry.
Mr. Berry owns a bus line, natrium and some other business in Tulsa. With him was Jas. L. Northington, another business man of Tulsa, who also owns a flying machine. This time Mr. Northington came over as a passenger in Mr. Berry's machine. That's coming to a football game in plenty of style. After the game they hit the air for home. Coming here in the face of a gale that was blowing 40 miles an hour, they made the distance of about 65 miles in 53 minutes. That's going some. Dr. Young is to be commended for his far-sightedness in starting intersection post-season games. It is hoped here by friends of both schools that Wilberforce will invite the "wonder team" north next year for a game either in Dayton or Xenia Ohio. It is also hoped that West Virginia will make an offer for an intersection game at Charleston earlier in the season when the weather is better up North.
When spring football practice starts, Anderson and Moore will whip the team in shape. The eleven remains intact. So does Wilberforce Graves looks for a championship team in Ohio. A game between the two eleven in 1925 should be worth going miles to see.
The folks here, teachers and students, were anxious to do anything to make the stay pleasant and after a trip to Oklahoma City Sunday, we regretted we had to leave so soon. In another column is the play by play of the game. In an early issue we will tell of the work Dr. Young is accomplishing at this day and time.
WENDELL PHILLIPS DEFEATS
MEDILL TOSSERS, 24 TO 5
WENDELL PHILLIPS DEFEATS
MEDILL TOSSERS, 24 TO 5
FLORIDA SCHOOL WITH IRISH
COACH DRAWS COLOR LINE
St. Petersburg, Fla., Dec. 11.—Because four of our Brace are members of the eleventh high school, Cleveland the eleventh local high school, Nov. 20 canceled plans for the school. Nov. 20, the institution, it was announced by Coach I, C. McKinney, former Notre Dame player now coaching the local high school.
**KID HOLMES. DEAD**
Atlantic City, N. J., Dec. 18—K-18 Kid Holmes week after suffering a knockout by Kid Brooks in a ring battle. It was a game with Kid Brooks and was fractured. Brooks was held without half.
BUNGLETON GREEN
HURRY LEROY, AND BRING ME
THOSE TWO QUARTS—I'VE GOT TO
GO TO ONE OF THOSE HIGHBROW
RECEPTIONS TONIGHT, AND I NEVER
FEEL RIGHT UNLESS I'VE GOT
SOMETHING TO "CHARGE UP" ON—
SORRY I CAN'T TAKE YOU ALONG
BUT YOU'RE TOO MUCH OF AN
OUTLAW—
NOW DOROTHY, SEE THAT YOUNG
MAN LEANING AGAINST THAT FLOOR
LAMP?—HE'S THE SORT OF FELLOW
I WANT YOU TO KNOW.—HIS NAME
IS MR. GREEN AND HE'S THE
LAST WORD IN CLASS, CULTURE
AND — ETC. ETC.
VERY WELL
DAD, I SHALL
GET ACQUAINTED
PARDON ME MR. GREEN, BUT MY
FATHER SPOKE OF YOU JUST NOW
AND SAID—"NOW THERE'S A YOUNG
MAN WITH SOME SPLENDID STUFF
IN HIM, AND I WANT YOU TO MEET
HIM"—SO HERE I AM—
SHORRY OL' DEAR, BUT
'SHALL GONE = JUST FINISHED
LASH QUART 'FORE YOU
GOT HERE
(HIC)
---
KID HOLMES DEAD
CHICAGO DEFENDER SPORTS
Puryar Elected C.I.A.A. Head
PLAY BY PLAY
Second Quarter
Third Quarter
Dowr
AGO D
r Elect
6, LANGSTON 0
thought Langston should have kicked here on inside under three yards at center. Brielle gained a yard at end. Campbell made it four 25 yards. Williams tied a pair on the first 25 yards. Langston jumped back three yards. Want both four yards around right end. Campbell lost a yard at right end. Campbell punted 25 yards against the wind. Brielle punted 25 yards against the wind but recovered for a fiveyard loss. Johnson hit around right end for five yards. Jones hit around right end for a fiveyard loss. Langston sewed a bit more. The stunt was doing on both teams. Williams skated to the gun ended the quarter. Willettger, G.
"Those who had watched Wilmerforce play at Columbia, that the Ohio state champion, had been on the hand, followers of the "Wonder team" know the Lancaster team's persistence," wrote the history writer. "Some begin to see a 7 to 10 win. "They'll get started in this last half" was the comment along.
Lanzington (61) L.E. Wilberforce (63)
Williams L.E. Bickey
Collins L.G. Ward
Binder Binder
Mike R.G. Kyle
Troupe R.E. Sister
Jones Q.B. Bickle
Harris R.B. Campbell
Johnson F.B. Redden
Substitution F.B. Collins Collins
for Sharp, Tervell for Lewis, Touchdowner
for Sharp, Tervell for Lewis, Touchdowner
Ward. Referee, R.A. Maubelt (Michigan).
Ward. Referee, R.A. Maubelt (Michigan).
Umpire--Kinney, line coach Oklahoma A. and
ant coach Oklahoma A. and m. College.
Field judge--Frank A. Young, sports editor. The
man coach, Oklahoma A. and m. College.
Coach--Anderson (Morehouse) for
man coach, Oklahoma A. and m. College.
Coach--Anderson (Morehouse) for
man coach, Oklahoma A. and m. College.
(Alabama Agents) for Wilberforce.
VANDALS BEAT EGG HARBOR
FOR SOUTH JERSEY HONORS
Flashes Win. 80 to 16
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 12—The Philadelphia Flashes big five won their final consecutive game in Philadelphia in 1984. The triumphing shooting of Davis, Crawford and Shields lead to record score.
**Logan Olivets**
Martin rf... 1 2 5 Davis rf... 15 2 2
Lafferty rf... 1 2 5 Davis rf... 15 2 2
Stevens rf... 0 2 5 Sinamee rf... 1 2 0
Mierig rf... 0 2 5 Sinamee rf... 1 2 0
Haley rf... 2 0 0
**Totals** 5 6 12 Totals 35 20
TOTALS... 5 8 12 TOTALS... 5 8 12
THE "SPLENDID STUFF"
I, SEE THAT YOUNG AGAINST THAT FLOOR. THE SORT OF FELLOW TO KNOW.—HIS NAME EN AND NE'S THE IN CLASS, CULTURE ETC.—ETC—
VERY WELL DAD, I SHALL GET ACQUAINTED
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Fourth Quarter
DEFEND
HAMPTON IS AWARDED '25 CHAMPIONSHIP
Frank Trophy Offer Is Accepted
Hampton, Va., Dec. 18.—Representatives of the seven institutions composing the C. I. A. A. met at Hampton Institute last Friday and Saturday and held one of the most constructive and progressive confabs in the history of the association.
Methods and plans for a general improvement of the athletics in the schools were discussed and many pertinent and timely suggestions were made through the medium of well prepared and polished papers written by the athletic directors of the various institutes.
Johnson C. Smith university of Charlotte, N. C., was admitted to membership in the association.
With Dr. W. G. Alexander presiding Saturday one of the most helpful sessions was held. Among the interesting papers read and discussed during the meeting was the comment of P. B. Young, editor of the Norfolk Journal and Guide. Other good articles were read by Coach Hurt of Virginia seminary, Coach Bryam of A. and T. college, Coach Taylor of St. Paul, Mr. Rogers of Virginia N. and I. L. Coach Harvey of Virginia Union university, Coach Smith of Hampton institute and Coach Finley of Virginia N. I. L. A. paper on "The Influence of Fraternities Upon Athletics in Our Schools" by T. L. Pursuer of the athletic department of Virginia Normal and Industrial institute elicited a heated discussion.
The timely topics of creating interest in a greater extent in athletics, of competent officials, of loyalty to school, of extending track and field programs, of inducements to athletes and other important questions were considered and acted upon in connection with the helpful contributions made to the body through talks and papers.
Football officials for 1926 were certified and the executive committee vested with the authority to designate officials from the certified list for all 1926 C. I. A. A. games. A definite fee was fixed to pay all officials in all games, including the Thanksgiving day contests, the inter-school between association schools were adjusted to the satisfaction of the institutions concerned.
Hampton was officially awarded the 1925 football championship and the official All-C. I. A. A. elevens were picked by the delegated committee.
Football schedules for 1926 were arranged so that all schools in the association will play each other during the coming season.
The offer of a trophy by Frank A. coming to be given the association team which wins the championship each year, this trophy to remain with the school for one year, school winning three times to become per cent winner with time Mr. Young will donate another one, was accepted by the body.
The 1925 tennis tournament will be at St. Paul, Lawrenceville, Va. It was Dr. Gregg, president of Hampton, gave a very helpful talk on athletics and particularly emphasized professionalism in college athletics. Major Washington-commandant of Hampton, extended a cordial welcome to the visiting delegates and emphasized on its constructive progress. The officers of the association elected for 1925 are as follows: President, E. P. Hurt; second vice president, Dr. J. W. Burco; third vice president, T. L. Baum; secretary and secretary, A. L. Whitehill. The officers also compose the executive committee. We provided that the C. L. A. A. will meet in 1926 at A. and T. college, Greensboro, N. C.
F" IS ALL INSIDE H
PARDON ME. MR. GREEN, FATHER SPOKE OF YOU JUST AND SAID — "NOW THERE'S MAN WITH SOME SPLENDID IN HIM, AND I WANT YOU TO HIM" — SO HERE I AM
May Come West—Rumor
THE BASEBALL PLAYER
BATTISTE FIGHTS DRAW WITH YOUNG DENNIS
Ft. Wayne, Ind. Dec. 10—Crushing, driving, punching power, carried by Otto Batiste of Chicago, and clever boxing skill, possessed by Young Dennis of Toledo, met at the Majestic theater last night in the wintup bout, and as is usual in the case where two fighters of opposite styles are matched, there was plenty of action from start to finish.
Boxing ability just held its own with punching power and Batiste and Dennis fought 10 shoving rounds that ended with honors even. A draw being a fair decision for both. Batiste outweighed Dennis about 15 pounds, apparently, and used his weight to send in crushing blows that rocked the Toledo scraper occasionally, but which were not effective enough to stop him. Dennis showed far more boxing ability than Batiste and made the Chicago man miss frequently with the long swings that he started on his knees.
Along about the sixth round, Batiste seemed to be tiring fast and it looked as if Dennis was going to stop him. But Batiste recuperated remarkably between the sixth and seventh sessions and came back to win the seventh handily. After that Dennis realized that he could take no chances with the big Chicago battier, and saw that his best plan was to keep out of reach of Batiste's hard swings and he content to outbox his opponent. Dennis had a left jab that sent Batiste's head back on many of his rushes. Batiste's best punch was a wicked left cross. Both men landed hard smacks to the body throughout the fight.
Batiste is given three rounds, the first, seventh and eighth. In the seventh Dennis took a hard punch on the ropes. Batiste pounding him before he had a chance to get out of the corner. Dennis had the third, sixth and tenth. The third was his best round. Batiste 'being sent to the ropes by the hard straight left, Batiste twice hit Dennis low in this session. The remaining four rounds were even. Dennis taking a few hard smashes while he was jabbing Batiste with his left, Batiste hitting Jackie Moore of Toledo fought 10 rounds in the semi-windup, which was full 12
action, but which was not quite as satisfactory for the fans as the wintry rush because of the boys' tendency to rush into a clinch too frequently. Hines had what advantage there was taking four of the 10 rounds, the fifth, seventh, eighth and ninth, with the rest even. Hines was more aggressive and a little the more willing of the two. Moore had a crouchiness style that was hard to meet, but Hines straightened him up several times with left uppercuts. Hines seemed to be in great shape and danced back to his corner after every round. He wasn't ready to stop when the final bell rang. Hines seemed to be a little heavier than Moore and had the advantage in reach.
"Cyclone" Watts of Milwaukee, a slender, fair-looking fellow, but a hard batter, met a husky, rugged scrupper from Indianapolis. "Battling" Clark, and won by a wide margin. Clark was slowed up greatly in the opening rounds by Watts' hard rushing, and lost his punching power. He was ready to give up in the fourth and went to the canvas, but Irefee Maxwell refused to count, as Clark was evidently looking for the chance to take a dive.
Larry Estridge Knocks
Krebs in Round Five
Bayonne, N. J. Dec. 7. - Larry Estidge of New York knocked out Fredie Krebs (white) of Staten Island in the fifth session of a scheduled 12-round bout at the Bayonne Casino tonight. Krebs was down in the second from a left hook to the midsection. The referee stopped the battle in the fifth when the white boy was unable to continue. Estidge seated 154 pounds heaver. Larry's victory makes his 26th consecutive knockout in New Jersey state.
HERRING HOUSE WINS
Southland, Ind., Dec. 12. - The Herring House of the West side deflected the Hoover Wildcats in a fast game. The Wildcats scored 22 to 15 in good basket shooting. Score. 22 to 15. Smothers of the Wildcats was injured.
Herring House. Hoover Wildcats.
Jason Bauer. R.F.
Tyler Bauer. Bars.
James Bauer. O.J.
Meredith Mooring. R.G.
William
RED RYAN,
Hilldale Pitcher
HERBING HOUSE WINS
By Rogers
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PART 1—PAGE 9
FLOWERS IS EASY VICTOR OVER MOODY
Boston, Dec. 11.—Boston fight fans like good sportsmanship better than they do a sizzling hurricane finish to a light and so demonstrated last night at Mechanics building, when they kept up a salvo of applause for Tiger Flowers when that annihilating Atlantan refused to take advantage of a bad cut which Frank Moody suffered over his right eye, and finished the final round of the fight which he had won easily and handily by merely tapping away at Moody's body, keeping busy, but not in any way hurting the Englishman.
The cut was opened on the lid of Moody's right eye in the ninth round. The first punch that hit it in the 10th started the gore streaming. Then it was that Flowers made it apparent to everybody in the hall he didn't intend further damaging his opponent and the fans applauded him the rest of the round.
Moody didn't have a chance. He was smired by the Plastering Parson just as badly as have been most of the opponents Flowers has had here.
The battle came close to ending in round one. When the bell ended that session, Moody was being counted out, the bell saving him. In the second round, Moody was catapulted through the ropes twice, once for a count of nine, the other time for seven. It didn't look as if the mill was to last long.
Moody recuperated in the third and made matters decidedly interesting for a few moments. As soon as the milling got rough, the Tiger changed his mutiles, boxed in his flippant and dazzling fashion.
The Englishman didn't continue his flash long. From the fourth round on it was a parade for the parson.
Occasionally Moody would keep away from Flowers' spring-like straight right long enough to cut boose with both his dukes and crash them against the Tiger. Each time he did awaken the crowd to a slight frenzy with his spurs, he suffered, as they only served to revive the Tiger and start him afresh with a new volley of all sorts of wallops.
Had the Tiger been at all victors or anxious to catch an early train out of town, he might have so thoroughly damaged his man at any time from the half-way mark of the battle on that tilt would have had to be stopped.
Of the preliminary program was interesting. Johnny Andresano of East Boston got the decision over Teil Morchant of England in eight rounds from Tommy Jones of Atlanta in eight rounds. Bennie Cowett of Nashau, N. H., won from Harry Foley of the north End in a four-round and took the Frank Brush of Norwich, Conn., in the opening four-round.
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PART 1—PAGE 10
Offer Awards for Outstanding Achievements in Things Leading to Culture
The purpose of the William E. Harmon awards for distinguished artists to creative work* "They are especially designed" the statement concludes, "persons who have made somm worthwhile achievements who have not yet been made somm worthwhile while achievements who have not yet been made somm worthwhile." 1. which is the date Lincoln signed the Enunciation proclamation and, in reply to work done or during the 1960s, June 1. preface the judges for each award. Four will be white. Three of the five judges will be persons recognized as outstanding in their particular field. Four will be present the Harmon foundation and the commission on race relations of the Harmon foundation and the commission on the church relations of the judges will be final and neither the commission on the church foundation will be in any way responsible for expenses or losses to candidates in connection with the Covera Art Field.
The scope of the awards is an follow-up. The first award—in literature—includes poetry, short story, essay, book, editorial or a play of two or more acts. Candidates for awards in music may be for single instruments or ensemble, orators or operas, or performance in instrumental or vocal music or in the
Plainting sculpture and allied subjects may be presented. The award in industry includes creative achievements in agriculture, management or trade and commercial enterprises. In science any of the physical, biological or proven utility promise may be presented. The award in religion is for achievements in the field of educational organization, content, method or practice or education. The award in religion is for achievements in religious organizations, relocation, connection with recognized religious agencies or any outstanding contribution to the field. The eleventh award concerning race relations will be given without distinction of color. The eleventh award will be made except for some achievement of an outstanding character that is not in the field, as those awards are to be given for achievements of national significance and interest in the field. Having this outstanding character, no award will be given. Recommendations for 1986 may be filed on and after Jan. 1 and must be filed not later than Dec. 31. F. H. Hay is the offices of the Federal Council of Churches, 105 E. 22d St., New York, NY 10024.
All written matter or other material
have sufficient postage for delivery or
must be propaid by express. No manag-
er or other material submitted will
be charged for delivery or express
charges are enclosed.
Further detailed information will be
available in an address in the schools,
colleges, churches and similar places.
Mrs. Annie Thomas Dead
Mrs. Annie Rose Thomas, wife of
Mary Ann Rose Thomas, employee of
the Chicago and Alison railroad,
was buried from her late resi-
tance in the Chicago and Alison
road, Dec. 6. Mrs. Thomas was a
suffered for many weeks from intestinal
trouble, worth as a woman is best told in
the words of her husband, who de-
scribed: "The rest of the journey will
be a long and treacherous and travel
30 years hand in hand. We shared
gorrows and joys alike." The coffin was literally banked with
the flowers of the Providence Baptist church, officiated,
interment was in Lincoln cemetery.
Omar F. Magee had charge of the fun-
eral.
CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY
BURY MRS. CHAVIS
St. Augustine, Fl., Dec. 15 - Mrs. Margaret A. Chishay, well-known citizen of St. Augustine, joined illness. Funeral services were held at the home. Rev. Dr. J. H. Chishay, a member of the Mother-Priest Presbytery, Rev. W. W. Ryan, Mrs. Chishay was a member of the Mother-Priest Presbytery, deceased is survived by her husband, three sons, a daughter and a brother.
---
One of our doubles reliable stat-
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165,000 patients in the world, and
we have our moments of depression
when we wonder where they live.
Columbus Ohio State Journal.
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THE STREETS OF BOSTON
Workmen have started reconstruction activities at Bethesda Baptist church, Sd. St. and Michigan Ave. This church, one of the most beautiful structures of its kind in the city, was almost completely wrecked by a bomb on the morning of 'Oct. 16. Police are still trying to locate the vandals who placed the bomb in the church. Rev. Eli T. Martin is pastor of Bethesda.
White Clergy Discuss Dry Law-Race Men Ignore It
Here Is What the Ministers Had to Say
CHICAGO SOCIETY
What is said to have been one of the most enjoyable affairs on the social calendar in many months was that given last Saturday evening by members of the Thirteenth Club. The amity brought the fall season, was held in the southfull ballroom of the Unity clubhouse, 3140 Indiana Ave. and was attended by more than 500 members of the younger set, many of whom were out-of-town guests. A young member of Winning, Canada, is in the city to spend the holidays with her mother, Mrs. Rosa Peas, 6625 Champlain Ave. Her husband, Isaac Wilson, will join her.
As startling a sensation as the church world has had in several years, the vatican's American prohibition reformer wrote a letter to the vatican asking Pope XI. head of the Roman Catholic Church to provide auring better enforcement of prohibition in the United States. Clinton N. Howard (white), chairman of the vatican's enforcement, aroused not only religious but political circles by virtually asking the pope, in Europe, to abolish the death of an American domestic problem. Mr. Howard had already drawn fire by denouncing President Coolidge for his support of the chairman of a committee which includes both Catholic and Protestant temperance and reform organizations. He wrote to the vatican president by a letter to the vatican.
Apeals to Pope
"The great body of American ciliens," the letter said in part, "have always respected the Catholic church as the unfinished advocate of every
IN THE WHITE CHURCHES
THE REV. JOHN HENRY HOPPINS. Eminent trouble one is our overergerses to get the best possible service to with us and our overergerses to listen to what they say. I condemn wholehearted the REV. NORMAN B. BUTTON. St. Chrysostom's Episcopal Church—Prelubition is an present-day diminuendo, vice and deserption. I believe in temperance but we will the REV. SIMON PETER LONG. Lutheran Mr. Howard had no more trouble than he had a right to ask the king of punishable the acknowledgment of our failure to enforce prohibition, vice and deserption which no good American would make. Life request is the REV. JOHN THOMPSON. Chicago Temple. Knotebelt Episcopal—Mr. Howard's proposition from a temperance believer.
THE REV. M. B. BARR. Oliver Institute, the American type of policy. Although
Mrs. Arvile Williams-Wilson of WI the holidays with her mother, Mrs. husband, Nancy Wilson, Mrs. husband, which they will spend 26 weeks in Hot Springs, Ark.
Mrs. Nancy Tucker, 6447 Vincentnes Ave. had as her dinner guests last Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Bertrickson, Frances Young and Messrs. Robert Simpson and Cal and Joseph Simpson.
Mr. and Mrs. George Schaffer, 2358 S. State St., entertained at a buffet at Bertrickson Black, widow of the late Robert Black. The evening's gagettes Guesses were, Mrs. R. Bertrickson, Mr. and Mrs. Blanton Mosely, Mrs. Francis Williams, William Palme and Robert Price.
Mrs. W. M. Brantley, 2358 Dearborn St. will leave Wednesday to spend the day with Thomas G. McMahone, 2019 Indiana Ave. entertained Wednesday in honor of her father, William M. Jobe.
After a visit to her brother in the South, Mrs. Mamie Sugg, 3001 Prairie is taken ill and is confined to her home.
Mrs. Margaret Clark, 3238 S. State St. is home again after visiting with her mother and sisters in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Prof. W. H. Holtzdaw, Uica, Miss.
Miss. Holtzdaw, Uica, Miss.
Ava, his wife, the winter in
sacca, Fln. his wife's home, and in
Miami, Fln. his wife, the lisis
hospital, Miami, Fln. to carry the World's greatest Weekly
to and from the press.
Miss. Marnie Crawford, Portland, Ore.
Miss. Marnie Crawford, Portland,
Warring, at the Huntington hotel.
Miss. Crawford was called to the city on
Miss. Crawford, at the Huntington hotel.
Miss. Crawford was called to the city on
Miss. Crawford, at the Huntington hotel.
323 south parkway, has returned to the city after
Wilkins in Covington, Ky. Miss. Holtz
Holway has also recovered from an injury
Wilkins in Covington, Ky. Miss. Holtz
Holway has also recovered from an injury
home virtue, and one word from your holiness would be a large contribution to the moral welfare and progress of our republic. The form of comment throughout the country, Mr. Howard was not received when he attempted to call upon President Coolidge at the White House, and General George W. Bush at the Catholic welfare organization, sharply, repudiated his action.
Cleray Comment
Clergymen throughout Chicago took occasion to comment on the affair and in and all faiths the tenet tempest stirred up by the letter became a center of discussion. Mr. Browne, who was a "un-American," "silly" and "indirect," But while the white ministers, constantly abreast of the times, upon occasion joined the Race churches the same old subjects were being preached about "live one-tenth of what you have to design" and "Remember the
am a total abstainer. I am not in favor of a tainted public opinion, as laws should be. Now it is purely a political question.
IN THE RACE CHURCHES
THE REV GASKEKRALL of South Carolina,
E. Church—in the Bible we are told of the
searth of what is taken from the fields.
We should keep up that custom today and live
the REV. DAVID TITLE, pastor at
M. Dr. Bienstant Church, preached a
the REV. H. E. STEWART of the Institutional
A. M. E. Church has been preaching
and last Sunday diseased certain aspects
of that subject.
THE REV H. R. HARWEY of the Cosmopolitan Center, has been preaching a
of six sermons, he has taken his text from
the last sermon and probed on Furstuit
and the REV. JAMES STOUT of California,
visiting minister at the Metropolitan Com-
munity, he carried a sermon on "The
Christian conflict."
CHICAGO
CIETY
the most enjoyable affairs on the social even last Saturday evening by members, which opened the fall season, was a Unity clubhouse, 314th Indiana Ave. members of the younger set, many of unijog, Canada, is in the city to spend Rosa Peas, 6628 Champlain Ave. Her is a guest at the Vincentnes hotel for a brief business stay.
Mrs. Emma Houston has returned home after an eastern stay, occasioned by the death of her husband. Mrs. Janie Carter, accompanied by her little niece, left for Clay, Ky., where they will spend the Yuletide. Mrs. Mc and Mrs. James Baylor, sister and brother.
Mrs. Kate Murray, Carbondale, Ill., weekend and guest of Mrs. freeman, 145th Indiana Ave.
Mrs. Lella B. Smith and Frederick Reed, Cleveland, Ohio, visited their Sheepard, 628 E. Gl丝上, last week.
Among those who enjoyed themselves
Galilee, and the Army, Arm-
strong, Delta and Majesty Army,
Anderson, Velma King, Lyda
Kilian Rhodes, Lottery Kite,
Lachie Baird, Anna Love, Muggle,
Edgar Dellemore, Cassius Figens, Ben
Tramble, Theodore Scarborough, Her-
dard Baird, Anna Love, Muggle,
Powell, Wills, Threatkill, Lester Lee,
Albert Webster, Oliver David, Frank
Jones, Anna Love, Muggle,
Jones, Hays Avis, C. M. Morgan and
Walter Brown, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilms, Love Molsby, Ross State St.
left for San Francisco, Calif., to visit
the University of California, who is
seriously ill, Mrs. Cannady went
West in September, to help benefit
her health.
PILES
HEALED IN 3 DAYS
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER COMMITTEES ON RACE RELATION NOW IN NORTH VISITS
Make Concerted Efforts to Stamp Out Lynchings During Next Year
Detroit, Dec. 18. "While the last year interim officials will between the races in this country, a striking development is the races in northern cities," the commission at the annual meeting of the executive committee of the Federal Bureau of Investigation name. Cleveland, Kansas City and Detroit are mentioned in the trouble is
It is immensity for the churches to take up housing through local church organizations. Fourteen lynchings have been recorded this year up to Nov. 15, says the report, stressing that the victims were lynchings 1526 a "lynchness year." It is pointed out that all the victims of mobs and lynchings on our Race, so the matter is now fully a race relations problem. We will be observed this year on Feb. 16, the report states, adding, "Of special significance is 1926 is its broadening to include relations of Jews and Christians of whites and blacks in the United States, and of Orientales as well as white Americans." Plans were announced for a series of Pennsylvania and probably in Ohio during 1926.
Haskell
Champaign, IL; Cleveland, Ohio; Danville,
Ill.; Dayton, Ohio; Denver, Col;
Doe Molines, Iowa; Gary, Ind.; Indianapolis,
Ind.; Fort Collins, CO; Minneapolis, Minn.; Milwaukee, Wis.; Peoria, IL; Philadelphia, Pa.
Quincy, IL; St. Louis, MO; Pelede,
Ohio; Trenton, N. J.; Wichita, Kans.; Wilmington, Del., and Youngstown,
Ohio.
Among the men who never attend the
class reunions at the school of expere
nce are those who received
diplomas at the grade crossings—Arkansas Gazette.
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Pronential club and social worker of Berkley, Cal., who arrived in the city early last week after an attack by the murder of the middle week Mrs. Jones, who is the mother of Mrs. Noll R. Smith of Honolulu, has been the recipient of many social courtesies during her visit. Two summers ago Mrs. Smith visited the museum where the guest Chicago has had for years. Mrs. Jones formerly resided in Honolulu and is very well known. While she she was the guest of Mrs. Charles R. Starks, 4808 Vineyard Avenue, penned by Mrs. Starks, was a visitor to the Defender plant Tuesday afternoon.
A HINDSDALE VISITOR
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Nashville, Tenn., Dec. 18—Dr. George Nashville, dean, of women, of the college of the late George I. White, founder and first interpreter of the Jubilee spiritus, was a professor of Fisk university at a recent meeting of the executive committee of the Fisk university. She was a member of Fisk university's background and life-long contact with the families of the founders of Fisk, she brings to her new duties the pathy. It is the general feeling that her addition to the board of trustees is policies of spiritual, mental and material growth and expansion of the school. Sunday in Nashville, expressed themselves as being well pleased with the manner in which the school is being managed by the chief man of the board, in expressing the confidence of the board in the ability of the trustees to meet the affairs of the school at a meeting of representative white citizens in from New York, it cannot be run by Nashville; it must be run by and from the hearts of Fisk campus. Miss Elizabeth Sexton, dean of women, and Prof. Ambrose Caliver, assistant dean of the Fisk university, the interim administration committee.
Dr. William N. Dellery of Springfield, Mass., preached Sunday at the Memorial Chapel, Dr. Dellery, who is a Nashville citizen is a graduate of Fisk University and is the R. D. degree from Cherlin and the degree of D. D. from Lincoln university, Dr. Dellery has been a pastor in Springfield, where he organized and led a number of festivals which is one of the most unique institutional churches in the country. He was also a pastor at the University he was been attending a meeting of the trustees of the university.
Now that the spirit of Lord Northville is hardling the public, the Great Beyond should soon come to be a reality. New York Evening World.
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1925
The Wise and Otherwise
Princess Mysteria
married life. I married the other. You did not tell me just why the husband's daughters grew to dislike me and wanted to do them when they were small. Stepchildren, mothers are, sometimes, and the children are grown. It is only fatherly that your husband try to please his children, and you want to gift me for him. You are to the right. If he asks you to return to ob and him, and you can do so without causing him to be for him in later years, money, blood, then do so, otherwise I advise you not to, because you and he are growing old and you may not be able to or try to therefore he must depend on his children to do it. Again, it is miserable to even need maternal and children be satisfied with them at odds or not speaking to each other.
Gen. Lincoln I. Andrews has leased from his dry aides a plaque of Cersey and to be laid over a reputation enforcement. That ought to be the easiest secret in the world to keep—Life.
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1925
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Re EN ag 0. m0. of
Teper eta shale ag” Ath ae
Thala tin asaiee ites, Seaties
ESI AGRE Goes Paes
ee Sen San EMR, Ss
Sart Saas aa re
Shin Fahne Stee 9 Botte
Nalin Pama tt deer Sets:
Tat Ratoni itagenes
held "n_ teciton "Wanesdas evening”
Berea. Maree, Teme’ scare
Betas, does matte, eto
ioe Saute i Marans We
Dodd, weeretary: Sadie Warren, wens
"Slinena shamer 0.4. 0,
ENA. bcer ere, marae
Motte ku” Bai So
SEAR acer entene
Saat Rant neta meats
PEE RCE Saree itt
Bila fae eaten net ete
Soocee aces saaeaise eta
charge’of Joreph Levy.
“ith the Clo
Xi chapier Orne FGl Bh fatents
Sans Qoees Pel ee rum
EEG ah ar eae
Ehcigreranaae” e ame
Saale & Coren Lr tea
‘Tuesday, afternoon uy Mra, Ida Smith,
PES PASTE anmet Wedneniny
afternonn with Mrs, Willian, Hood, te
TSthe fuse Roe cluly of young peonte
Grotto St, Saturday evening, Dec. 26
Seite Se, Bavurday’ evening, ‘Dec, 3s
Sena ai ae Sinker Osc
TH ne mtg of dame
ae RL Tame
5a se
HRS San shina an sel
of tego mine tes at
TREE me Fe
Se ag aan a
Seems
SED ae Bln, nie, ac
siecle Baie mn Sa, a
Se Pt REE ct
aA atae. hae af se
Sri eat 30
SE eae ay Shea oe
SEETULSERG,o gannen
saree alee Te a Steet
ag age irae Sen Se
Hctegrng ue ere
uteri aie Cae,
eS Si ae toa
"Among the Sick
su, Ste Gris of
Mts See et Me
ESE aA ete
eS Se na
ANNA South cota
oe meen eh
war atietuasi eee
ioe Shite achated orig
ish ates acted oo
ie Laie ets oh ete
ssa ER. tial eh ase
ee ieee Ga
SPSS Gy ace
Sa Pt
pa iaita dGen ane Connie
EE Eman erated te Bo
mea aR, Suc EP Ey Be
Psa Minate, Michel, wife of Deter
cor cuen net Ts LPR
renusteamtte sees SER SS
splarieie a
Sa Mie, ane
ASarte thas ay uel
Soe a Sana aes
ER aaah Baia
Sel Rae oe coe
imam Sache
Soe ree Sen
Bears fe a paca
aiinreapalis, wio tiay brew autte fit &
Be Wome of er, tert Tost aul
Sear sc ir ay aeth
4g. stannous nce cm
af,.S.ltener, Ral "ae
SLR Lee ee
rhea Radtay (ae au
moat ie rikraeeat eae
Renata Widva cduee ok
Sen Rati
HEME, SUH Sn end
Bees Arslan ot eae
ame
re cet eae ie conmigo
Be Ae ic renee ae
pana. 3 “whiron, ROH. Gray and A
Our latest victlm of Cunid's bow i
Tent en SS ale tts oa
Beta ee apa!
Te gar Aas fee an
sae Uae dna EE
Bi voaaane ahs Ws
" YY Notes,
Be ane lar s e
eares mpd join us for m pleanant. eve:
Se na penitecta it Seat
Eee arccetaeinicar ea
tein cee aee he acta
Smit tea te once
Heisei ule’ tect eh
De ey meee
Se eretir Eonn ps eed
siete mean ree
Eratefulle nckmowiedge ope’ ingehued
ER doen ett
ro dha Se esi it
Bhatia oe at
Bh Maas a
TEP Ehsan ara
na aia ey
ene! Beate eden
Taised Sua agora tt te
ae ea eta
Hebert ated Ate cht
Heap gad Bcd
tn wn roofs, Turn
a a
Kier Reon th tts See
Hee ee edhe
seston atl ie
ak eta ace He
Heute ae at mr 9,2
Be Eek Sunnie ts
oor ai ee a
oat amie Rais hie
Ee Agate (tats
Bae edt vice ge
sas hme oa aes
Hea estas hace fa
Milsidercemetcey: TICFmeRe Was
aanear ae ane 2 Tet
pyle evenings "She wan a member
Bie atie Siac Samet
See RRO Wala af
MINNEAPOLIS
$_MINNEAPOLIS _)
gear, Sinn, ee, 1a
ieee ey ese
atte ane, eae ae
Serene ced,
Sree a arn Aa ae
SR setera ee
Baral ae welt Tae
FitaP aie i Gotta et
Reha ana tere
RP an Mls als ea"
ime
Beale Proce, yonget tn,
Saka, Ge oe eae
honors in’ic Innes eins “He ‘received
Hii, ant ania
Sie Bhat et hat
Fer ns i Man
Feadio “hhystelane "of Atinments
champion. of the Twin cities. Dr.
Brerayig ser of meee Pat Pa
is Wage Noten,
RIE SA SER is ot
sean thereat ena te
Rages ies Sean. tre tt
Hose os cae ar ciae
Sea es © aire
ee ee eee ee
Be ee, cee aoe ae
SEueeuliet Saath Sage ane oe"
phe eee, aah Tana ag
etree Reins ee Hate ee
Sone ee eee
‘fuests, * Capt. Sendrickson favored the
Kira Slaitingon told the story. of the
Pea Tate aetna
ye ee ae
i“sponsoring. "The “Ausiliary is ‘moat
rethactadl tang ae ita
cparneetitane ante ae hai
SS Rice eter ath
Eases Sn See eet he
Pane Sn eats
See Oo aes cae
rein es Btn Sate Ine
Feats Ue osucertits ott Bs
SF esbrn ot the Ashton
a eaciee Rice ate a
Roce einen erent
See Mega ga ud ote
Sa MOU as SM ueyatn
ee cement See
BGR gieniae Seetian es
ton sang. Sira. Mary dames fendered 8
“Throngh she kindness of Mr. Attwood
1 eee aks Madre ae Auseed
Lao ad ie ae
MPA Etdtlir canen a crowing I
saat aid bean, Bs Guan
itloe [knew “bromrang. © These, chit
Seodeeee tees bean
Bias mace hase
eee i AN eRe oy
Sen Meee as Rear i
ee a ee
Hee oRree aig ih seer
ea
rr ecey totes,
yeahh treag int caa Nt
amu ere te eet
llores ta. Smith of PAU Ave
ree a
wpa mesee ‘
sie Hint BLE GERMAN BoE
HsPUPAE ES edited ole
Dire, T. t, Brigham left Friday for
cies i eu te Peete ee
Sates igen es i
ME binE Gantt Bowpen rat
1 se tale de
SL A aac er
Bee oe ieee as
Heth JP cert tacks Sree
Sd RSE EA a
wit Thireday tor chleage co reside ee:
Ars. Harold Cowler, 241 Elliott Ave.
nee EP Sa Sa Bits
faa Oia, nee ents
‘Shes and Sirs, te 7. Leverett of
pink, Eepilede oa Lene tt
Ay Besant Ate Se eee
St AT Siro, aston of Zion
Babe rece rarot ate of Zen
Pied Masia,
reli ai eat ert,
Te aT al Sar of te
SR ASS Gite, ares
Hubtcai ts, eatin aera tu
Gator Hea Besant aves
CRE Ete te od Fea cre
seers See ae
rn er cae
|. DULUTH, MINN. {
DULUTH, MIB
vlan ee and doh
TET ake aan
eae teat ana AP ae
Successful senslon. Rew Wable has des
ieee ae ae ‘ete ant a
Fe end Mtoe td
eral etic soni BEN
Sean EAE tt at
Bpsremte aan Mets
Eee ater ce ae ace
Biss ale tae Reese
fame, Whee eeeatiene: Siese Whilarn
Rates Neate ane tad
Bee ceed Pots, Sa
Site 1H Sewrone, W's! Merry ad
ie Reece i
1 A Fs 6 veered ult
‘Mr. and Mee. Stephen Colex of 10th
sa big Ur, Shen St 2B
| ow BH oe Frome AE.
reales toi See Seed ae
He ee: meal
eae ee os ae
Weta, etd ae ot
fae Bee ae re, ee
ROPE A toate ae
Re seat aceasta at
Huet fr ste dent ot Sx, aa
Races eats en
Eecie tttinant Sach fate
BE Brownlee ‘of Pine. tut ofmenting:
Be Patel Sen ete
Sina “Jamen Higgins She team wecome
Sanaa at Sadat
ase cae” ome trom Latte ack
Shes ee areas tie ah
erat Bee ter ate
Hs eS PL a aa bg
Bat esr, ae ae Sal
SEE tanec aati Se A
Sdaas ad rede ae, 4 et,
Sarnath ath See
SOR aR cate coe at ati
ibs Seg estan eee
ELT :
sins AEE ARE
erful sefmon last Sunday by. They. A.
oe ree ee Pama
Soe. arias Peeters ae
Sorte Mibeceet aera Fi,
Peg ge a an
nN See ae
Hie mata Sets, it
HravieFras in “Cutendon Taal weske gn
Ticokiey: ist week ‘eiting. friends for
Sees Oe ome
Br ah lovte seth Bee
Bears cee ei
2. dears ade
ayy MA ERR a oan
Inet” her baie” Friday “nla, 'an "ste
Ber pelican gatan de ane
leis, Miseee Dessie Perry and Ruta
Bacitte Beal Fle "Ges
Riaatien det
: THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
LATE STATE NEWS
Sl: ae ede ne inte
ae allen srande. a fying” tte, to
Pg a
Pe. eee maeee ge
eral iis aes
fede he Bharata Soe
Staples, Str. "Teal and Mrs." Nellie For-
‘per. Stiss Rhochilea Spears, principal
Eooe ttsaarnes pe
Reset he cea er abetaee
Birra eater ae ne
he iome ee kee, ee
'E Randall, Sieg & Speara and EC.
Guth Oins Seaeee &
Snip ce an ne ga tenes
Fae thre ir Rc
ei deee oe beret Be
oral le dinars
ier Mandal Armstrong and Arter
Bay tasamls naaeanay et
Hong, SEM, 0a ie ne eli
HON Banari mea ie
Rese cas "One alee
rea ele
ietabets at aah
POR gre a a
Bes penis, seogieg cae
Wertinattnetis Saitte Wet
5 eens
TAYLOR, TEXAS |
Pt I tae ty ee
motored ty Waco inst ‘week nnd carried
Seared Une at wosk id ete
SUS Rene lee Pe
Se Rikers cing as,
Aihanaa Ceara ahs
Sieve Seer ehhh
aie sree, Seater tee
eee Dae Cieus’ Beelt
area $a Eae RAE si Den
atin ts becca an
a
ie ce eee oe ie
oe rr ieee torte
Gait “Mating the oath e¢ his brater
Ba Aen Nesichea ts Gtrbothe
eath’ Stag
BRENHATL, TEXAS
are, 7 RIA TA wo
Eee ee ae
Hae ie ethad Me
Cae fat ha cotee wre
Bos try at eet
Soe Bierce rian
erie
kr hs SEE ATS on er
Boriadtee tala aia
balla tage oer
dames: Tanner, Jr..” who Is attend- | home of Mrs, Leslie Sields. After the
InpMRS: ZURe Seis edhe “Bind: | meeting’ a fuieh eas seroud got Wal
Whi, “Spend “Christmas With hia tar- | ee conducted the services Suniay ay
Ente RE naaeee Santen 1, antes, | thet ngtay chute, Rs Sere
SUB aiots Seales iy Raa | a lie wit ter Sn ey
Ee Aietette SSE semen | MRP) tee Metta ag,
Cletewaton. Fla. "ies igwin wl] Mee Memniton, Mees Taullne. Bel dae.
SINT Wlehds at Tamia se feicemnieg | ner entertninca Mes, i Upteptove
Une GRO AF FREER i fttete:| Ne Sh ecco nr
Gieinest Wik Bun see] “noun afr.
Msn. "Ac Broyles ‘nad ‘aa her weer: | Mra, Relitom. and. Arg. Johnson nf
and ghnin ner Tne Metal We | youre wrren cha ti Sacnegage
and her daughter. Sigs. ER Willams | Violn farrety "spent the week-end. Im
arent Sis titans Siang en | Cements Sia!" ome, Jet a
Bisa Chapel 3 chest Sonus airs: ieeaice. (Pega aaa cat
Recainge Bee X: Mira Ada Site beet | Suayne’ wore ale Shoppers Saeurat
dent; Sirs. Robert “Green, secretary. | Ming Elnora Baten spent the week-end
Be caareey,igmerageg 1S ag, Si | lh les, correpee Maran Sie. ena
SranGe oreo. Theis mle] ite and ae Tonic’ were, See, a
inmitcriog” at’ Sindinie® REMY dead | eat Sundae attersson ore ee
Seniage Bets NTN Pelowtne ae | Caine aa ealing tame tt Sune
Recee”Rere tantnegs Noyes. Wate 44. | any atteengen, We tie NE ‘Cnmer-
Fowien,orthy natrons Sage Ae | ei Averdenariod” ete Wednen-
Hen Seeclaie” matron ME ue. | dy vening ice @ share Moen Thy
iueteeds? Ales. Carle Gini, nasociata firinlc Thoke sehr attenden the: Bind
NOTES FROM BALTIMORE
isa eee ames: ‘Teettuw:: weantin: Wick “kt at: Om
Baltimore, Md. Dee. 18.—Reher
Sx" Miogea’ to have taken £300 pound
Shiver from a iirm ‘be Bar’ heen con
eked ak rach aor fae mee
SStrt Re nel in bo Wail or Wh
Heat kt Beta” The See
USE. Sutter NS sat tebe, BRout gs
Wsatalegea at tims eft tne
Ler ites aUaiaities and sine sol
ST stateldea reuced "rats
“sohn Hatrinon pleaded pully to hav
apehettarnte SRN Ae es
EOS Sha ta had Wht
‘Charged wlth beating aie wife wit
a Starner crouser hele® Wihuam® sain
Santina tq al, “Agenrding to in
Moana tidy Gnd toneiQee gre ton
Radar Makert fe Atoton, Tuskegee
Hiss, aren bas. shnounced ‘tha
mdisiribuuing center for, bitte to, need
fase anil “of the south. 1
Basta hn anasto une: weneral” ub
HENS nthe Geathts Stoete, or
Miq‘inings oe Shieees “Chat
PiAtber Sevith, 20, 1500. Pennsstvanis
Ace eae Met Sea Sturn for ae
Aiden Wondten at Honan and ek
ington sieh"the Siem efor 6
eimea iin Mathne ne Rata IMC
‘Sowants ‘necket noone
Sate amas shout 2 glving et
ning noes Sohn waa ara
Bacal ie ele’ fam acne 6
Boe Sh Medan Re See
{estos Seucibed na being Sel
eared "tnt waved ie wor
{orbits Tn Ticone OC the aching, aa
\betare, she wae safely: across, the ‘driver
Barlea'tn and epee awa
‘nes tones war eld in, 3809 ball
-rinrBeay titer “pale in the tection
Fear Gate mae the bones, wih
ESSh elie tzanped i nah ao
Shon inkenGeatian fondle waa ata
fiom ama the tramt gone fv
the Hes Wak Pages
even Preterick, “eho ‘condvets
SieSitton Se, "Tapbrea to” pc, tha
two. ince met, entered hy place “Felt
iSining nad temanded Smee. Th
ren tate wh Fs i cath aaa cant
melange,
THAME, Som. noted Race, ten
oflceanger st gamete @ecia
SeMonaaagine chert! Beal
Biota age Mate renderes te selec
{ion rien Weauttan fones ana richness
UE tee hite the ebbar presentation
Schsies Collins, 72 (Shite), was. ten
tefced “to tree "months In ‘the “Balt
ore ccis, Neon hen eked po
Sire: deannette Nea} fay issued, tn
iting arene attite OF her dug
Ter iin Gertrude Nene y.cttu
Bhluin'tn Eirias say AC Fock
Seia'a'teschey ay schaok So. ion ana
aynemine of Walon Baptist ‘church
Brand, Mrs, H. 8. McCard have
feeuea Invitadions > a dance piven In
Kons? ste? tatettets Stik ian
Be Blea on Wieasesaly evening
BUG siccota Qa achabie ofS
Then etide Susie lah met Weds
at, Dees ie, atthe Teidenes ef Sie
SiR acnent aes Sonera Se
ithe sist" Ca ih “net Weantogny:
Deut’, Tat she senldente’ of ten Sia
Bison tat Anlngton avd, Five Nu
ore Wh Mast SIRE A auecs ur
Hiese “tna ‘secgna Snrizens respective
Puen Gatters isn Biniea Hb
athe Serve club met Wedneedas:
pacts hike Er? alte Taree
Pigthuc"Ate. gC Sueh Time Peper
ff the mipher sow et a the Ragen
eaten ee Se
ng thr Zeta PRT Bein, rorority, Garman
hatter, At tne Vewtudenee af * Ui
Llane: daemon, si" Srata Aly ee
‘A lasge Fepresentivion of tencher
ach ie aa ht
deren Evet, Masen A. Saw kine. pele.
IOWA.
brag a ag tm gE
eos Seah: ae rtaaae, Se
Beste ll aie pe
SUSE cate Gis Saati
Siete, che ehh ea
Ria Pom ri ata
Seite tbe Moly wi a
SRlac Se and ‘Miia Worden. award
eee tartan, seen
ef tie"denth ‘of ig father. "aly, and
Satcasees Mie Bsr “ate
Sp SES DP ahs
SoP-e ene Pa ene oh
ie EE Re ee
sent aarages Sedat
partes pee Cae Se
SAREE eat et
Battle, Surah ad nt
a erie eee
Sig sett Mas Wee Bath
Bo" Bla. SBuchall wih spone the win
Bihaey ett londay, bee. 14 for De
HEE tt ot, arate
Sie Et ts dae ting he
Sere ear ah
yeridiowa
din, ene SEIEUONA, corn vn
side Greets We a, Nee
Ee Cove ae eunetie, S
Si adice Hite athe
Palas Sues
Mo eens eid i
ie ya ails ie aes
poe hamrkm per ati
rr acttOom, 12018
witgelan ANE ants
saith Sets nea
BoA einem crea tee ee
seria kt” one
sil Oe ai Bt
Seite ee ae Ronde
Be mate htarie Sh
PRG Bid Seated ali
Shale alae eh as
Ha Ae lenceria
Ehudas? treasurers FB, Fislds, cehale
Bib tlhe tad hn ean Mee
Bhaa toe he Mec titer
fethinm nad Re. Wor. smn of Ft
ILLINOIS
2tre, 4.5 Mauplan, whe, he been
sete tu “ei anatimonla ie teproving
Ree LB Bsr seas to Elecerat
Tits stiurdae"afetnoon to attend the
bse af Sra, Ranke Was pdnsed acs
Reseda ening, daha Eats
Eisedhts Scalise Soran Enea
‘Sithaiee Evan were Gabeshure vies
Eeturdie Sien Hecena teh andi
‘Ehvertine eis eee bungee guest on
Sandan the wonty of Sica cia
oncdlnkfed iutinies “net eats
Se enicage nls a" etnte mlsaonars
Benetat aubetiavendene the Bante
Bitte content tected rane Bes
et ina Mite Siintonare ete ofthe
Secana Uapust enareh’ Saas Ste
Ronee ten Leste Shek "Actor
Rectin!sitich"was nersea” ese" Wcat
Reeletnducted” che services miata
Ue" singin church, eee Se Meet
Eras “ananassae
Ste Sind were the ouedtt aft at
Sigh Meant” Mew #aullne well Ones
ier entertained Mek. Sv Uperove ac
ihe ésimptony archesira concert on
as :
Moun “erry. it.
ra, WARM AE Nia! Snson ot
ote rein che iy Sane Sk
eaten Sora? Bow, Joho and
Ae Baha Reta is
Saal are catre Shopiers Setanta
Mice nora‘ zates spent the seceetd
ales Siee"eorcsa Bican® ME ana
Ma Chatieg Wilt, Nien Lata ph
ite apa aide Rice were, {Slrn Ea
PAE Runder fiernoon ate, ec
ae aternaeh, AE ite AP emer
Su MnerMaerarted” che le Wednea:
dng evening atter 8. shore iinet ne
fling eee cnreded! ot ientachy fo
femaing were carried to Kentucky for
Fxhlay . evening, | Deo. 16, at the
ranged, bya “contnitier wonslitine 0
Ree itl seeptenn Lyne Wittot
Benxton and “Witiam “Metard wen
Been te homlmonlat of Sateen Sn
innetel dn wf tne do dost of deta
vent tine elty' ne aes nd "eh
Ree te Seely eo
lerse, Boal elt Poreigied scaler
Hever Su anges Be Fe hurch, fel
‘Austie Wime , Bechrds outines th
falucatlinns "eareez of ie guest. 0
ton Basis, ice. princiial of the "Doug:
Ind, Attn achoen? ana ent tasnting th
recent “echoes” Witors Weecton
Juste high’ school: Marry. Bratt
slomentary cache Sad Keys Tons
Scent Torte ctr. Be, Bee
iketteiny superintendent of public eau:
Sctlon inh al nae "piled he
seliem, Baminiotrattee paetes toch
Penta yar en
Petit ah Mioferasenat ee
aerate teh
Hide SPN ee ha
huge” Nathue i Atmonatration
feacher ‘At the Tockerman school, who
Seca mee mets,
Abs heal Manton tat.
En fabbiaas MEUM Stn oro
gram Sas given "at Trinity Aa eS
Skagen Sindsss ote. Janne hea
Pegelati eer dee a
Eoin Sie haan iain, lene
Bihelied ae ea
Fatatan pie eligei: Sten
dent; Rev. "Thomas, pastors
sehen) Nee
Ths, dedeation ot" the, “Loccermas
pia ane ete be Sa
(ein TsieSkere no'*pahd eis
isu to Sr Soognt ul og kar
Princibal“o¢ "inaesSFeachere etnise
Eojool 4nd of 'iemantare xenon SS
ieee the Henle Harboe na
it atheniatiog” Spun at Hiei
‘Prinelnal of Douglass high “school,
Vocal numbers were Fengeree. wy ain
Be ae te aa
rchénica, “SE"Lewellsn Wilson.
a Deaths =
Theodore, Burrell 1616 W. Lezing
‘Bobbie Davis. 87, 110 TT, Bldate,
ae
davon Storrel 48, Ht Bremtn St.
find? sree, eee
Hens Johan’ 48 81 We Noman St
jyBerersy Washington. V8 "Penck
“Stewwel Davis. 55, 1802 Gough st.
get. Gaotians, 88) SEs
“iia Gittings, $2. 1635 Watson st
Sarah" sfurdocke “¥6i1 We Ean:
"iat Randotih, 95, 66 Pierce St.
eee Sai, Se SE Win
"Ee strong. 45, Soiled 3
Feel B'Sintts FAT, tan
*thoreeit Ball, 42, 1 E, Amite gt.
aati Setteaos, "3," Atay
“Wing: Jones, 2, 744 W. Saratona, St.
sfiebeces“Gareeti 16) THES bie
esr te ese
aliens Hooker," So)" Beta” tan
“Avon Jackaon, 12, £48 W: Mulberry st
Se es bee
iene Dore, iat Rita HN Av,
John Hxrrea. $3,008 Morrie St.
Horde ong. t2'o0: S°Cenarst ave
- Els Lure 38: 146 Wy, Hamburg St
Perer dimmer apr aiii 8 Glimer
‘Peres Simms, 49, 1117 N_ Olimor St
Boome wasicale gt Mounds were 2ire.
Brome Sellson aie. dane, Myce, tre
Foret neers “in, Sa fie pues
eels Pace es Se Va
Petaie: Hare gpent the, week-end: fa. 5t
ee sane aie eae
See oon oe
Gere enh ores
Bape Sore ures
So ccc mi tere
per eae Se te eh
pat eg oe Oe,
Mewndg mae Rearaee ram Guat
Brown ang atiss, C. "Hogue were Calro
pe a
Bead yeah ek ace
Reosoebamary aig? Gk
ie aime, eesti sured
HR Vai ions Cane
Here ate et eae ey
ee dis
CHAMPAIGN, ‘Ut,
| dire, acy Boennend, “elt of weit.
binding gs, WE Sth
ae ade ai nara
fe eg
Sent eee
Pap gta
BEGGAR stl
jean run down be an automobile and
Sab TBeAaa" Gaines
ae Oe ce ena aee
Eee tae a ceri ao
Kg Re dian
Sea, ae Se tet es
eee Ae HEF utente
Raesarae Seeease Manes onan
Brinpiencrae arias Bite Bese
Rate
atk
“rhe tases RHE homage
Bee Sie tee Hee ba Ae
fant Me, gen Ra create
SE (erane ARR ates acon
Mg Ge, yet ah Mane
idle Page la tab ser
eh use Maa ae ate
Cees RR lh toda Bie
NeaPang’ Boar Butteum motored to St
Beet lig Bete sone ig
a
oe
“avs, oR AMIR Ed sce
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CONNECTICUT
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sag Hae ae ei a
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tendaagihee ere at
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CONNERSVILLE, IND.“
ace, MONET ESRB a
edrichahh oat
soe ee ean ae
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Biers es he ae
Heater de ae ase a
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fein tarts, ar ie
te beesa carina ae
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gn FS ioe nae Ge
Bea ae eae a
Geeaiaaitay We ea Ale
Ee seagate, es ov
Henhine, and”; vt, Noung. were
Fiat aera tates
are near i
and Mrs. Hedgepath, and James Wins.
ia pe aaa eaten
Shine aw been rent
tech Rede te Ht ee
fapritnate emcee Neat
each aes ate
sh nile Prana
fe tat a Nae a
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seine te lanes hal
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ahaa Regence wadee
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ing pecan aae hae
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Beat eciita Rey Cth et
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ite tid Sibi, Wine are aa
TENNESSEE
Drs. Berda McClain was a visitor in
palon, Gli sungay.” Ses, "coral
Dyersburg, ‘was here visiting, Sunday.
Beni oa be oer aes
Fae ag a Roa
Sede siete aie he
Beer Aa nd ER at ta
ie Ste eee a
Scat chet at
Sehene eee oe
SEE pee ee
cpa a
See oe nie
iio woe Maltese mer
Eee Sct
fag Stine,
| 9p teeeundanemene ammanees
Chatiia Cronrany, one of | Trestan’s
Se Se aE ay Sot
Bee es ie ae Wich
ehcp Songs A EG
Ease ar teaaaeh atte
‘Taster mere quarried Sunday “at
RAINEY BACKS SOUTH CAROLINA’S ~
BILL TO FORTIFY FORT MOULTRIE
Rainey’s Ume was not-occupled ex-
Jewuatvely ‘with the necds of his own
Haco or with bis war on Souther
feito representatives for thelr oppo
sion to the riso of the Race. Often
hie zeat fer South Carolina's own ad-
[eancement brought him into a clash
Feith northern lepisiative friend His
JGovetion to hin state and to the South
[rometimes aligned him against bio
[colleagues trom the North.
iin the first neqsion of the 434 con-
gress. bill wo fority Fort Moultrie
as introduced. Northern congress:
men fougat It, but to Rainey the in-
forests of hia stato,eeemed to demaza
fe"and he took the oor to advocate
His pacsaze. Ho cilled the attention
Jot the, House to. the. fact that too
fotten the ‘South had suffered in ap
propeiatione. A measure of bis truc
Breadth cane iad from his inlo
Jence upon fair play for both sections
Soutn nx well as orth. “His speech
a officalty. reported, follows:
“wSir. Chairman, 1 renew the amend-
iment. pro. forms. 1 hope that thls
Tmotlon mado by. the gentleman trom
Ponnaeieanin, Str. Store. will “20
Preval, ‘The amount asked to keep
Fort Mouitelo in repai and tn prope
[condition is certainly very smail when
compared with the amount asked £0
some other fortiRentions tn this coun:
eye fe there re no) other reson
‘hy this appropriation» sHould
made. a sufficient one ia this: Fort
Sioutiele has clustering around tt
[great many pistorteat assoclations.
“Sits history te intimately connected
with that of this_ government init
erg Ineiptency. when the American
people were sttuseling for their na-
Rionaligy: and. it stands. now an_onc
fof the monuments of the bravery” of
fhe men of that memorable era 1
fs, airs that ie shoud be. Kept a
nearly ae possible intact. {fit be only
hat strangers mas: Ho there and sat
fists thelr curiosity by looking at I
ef bo only hat tne ehildren of the
present generation may go there an
Hook nt & fortiestion in’ which thet
fathers tought for the liberties of
this country T say. str. that this fort
[should be Kept not only in repate ul
in ‘good condition, so a9 to command
fie reapeet of sit"who’ may exam
Sram well aware that Genera
[Sherman In his testimens before, the
fcomiaitiee sald: “Let Fort Moultrie
iides 1 would not. like to. sussest
fie ‘reagon why "General ‘Sherman
rn: have made that statement, bu
e'muse be borne in mind that he was
speaking in behalf of the army. He
fis not speaking particularly’ in De-
halt of the engineers. He wanted the
army’ to keep intact. and he knew
vers) well that. ifthe. fortifications
Frere allowed to sink into neglect, the
farmy must, of necessity, be malt:
fainea ‘n'a stgong condition, Wher
ite becin to neglect our fortifications
ae Manlact Can ares aha to wimtee’
|G. 7. L- Braghorn, Prof. Ww. B. gattett,
Raw Ba Sharp ang Siiae dimmio Ben
Er diana iaseep ee fee
Beoeei tec taste aeugee
Sacer same nae
Be L, “Steavhorn’ as. pastor for -an-
an ae NaN UE tenet
in'at home to spend Christrasi with hee
Ba eemac re Optae ie
Seti Ee aerate at
pg ime
a fee cane
ie llrasen te, Sree i.
BRM, ES aa Wa
ama a ot Saat Cher Wane
OL "Dyer attended” the conference ae
Site, tae eee TaN
arene wes eleee ee
Seen, Wet ratte “St te
EAE Sane eae ee
Hbsta's Whey imate ae
Brees tate. cn’ ake he
Ronee ruthie oe ae
Bere eel sire a fee See
Ef ay ta fan pure foe
Brea ear Pa, Ses a
eet ee hecenae ar ap
Beene sD ate te ames OS
pe ea
oe aoe hart ae
Bite Bea eeettarte Sates
TRE ecHt erste nee parents of a se
[Mr and Mrs. Dotle Barnett has & baby
a
| GEORGIA .
shes on
saraauneel ee etter pe te
earns et fe eet ates
Sesortace Seaatitig ate oe ts
Fe Bek, ee cette
Bess oree aces be wees
Bre te cernecated Nec
{ite rhe emaretonion Pree
BERN BeaDly ud host
ate
Late une Lilian Gerant and Mies
yarsoraules aiinn ivan and al
Eee ng it eet
PL ae ares ae
‘from ‘Detrolt.. Mich, where he visited
CORDELE, OA.
sare 2 ane Sate,
White Rose cluh Friday. Sra. Kend:iek
Bes atta hats
a acim id
Sa teagan ae ee
Baas tess tae ese tate
fie’ iar 3 steam ai c ese
fet ata ag
Este Tonal Ton at
Re kSieey ealiege Tpursgay aight ss
Ease Rate i Niet Sat
ier topatee oe
By -— : »:
ee
S
z Sy
BX_aw Ee:
CS Fs
PEI >
FOR MEN ONLY
Tor tee, gate t, miliersd tacénes
stomach patti inieninal tcizestion
crest faut St iver ator
Bi gy lig Soe
Ege: oe
Ste aaa belie a aa
Poekandy beee a re naar
Beate tear ef ice afte
Para t Segre otte
sett es dea eens ae
eat oaceesea
ee
eee Bes pean
Neer ase? emg i
Satan!
So one c oe
BERRA caan, m.
An. amt ses Sahat
postmas $1 scbem delivered. ae
PART 1—PAGE 11
eae meee. Wawel tose: Ue ERePeRe er.
ether nations.
waGme mornett mare. T have spoken
avout bistorteat associations. ‘There
fre m great many historical vassocia~
Hons clustering about Fort Soultete.
‘Saiy ail to mind what was done We
Bert Stoultrio during the pest war, of
fine ‘rebellion. Whetner inthe do~
fense of the Southern cause or in the
stenge of the inion cause, the a8-
Soctationy of that fortifieation are in~
imately interwoven with the hisigey
ofthe Republic:
‘al hope, therefore, that this appro-
prigtion wilt be, made.
‘mand T mighe add, betore taking my
seat, that the npproprictions inal
hese ‘bills for the Southern States
Rave deen comparatively small, “The
‘Southern States have been much nez-
Teoteds donot inte to nee eurtail~
ment made in the appropriation for
here fortiflentons tor tye Southern
States. in my judgment: the appro~
pristions should be mate. eat, no
Targer for’ onc xcetton than for an~
ther, and no semalien, “Phe people o¢
the North amigthe South have beet
feicied nore elaely eocetner bo the
Feaulta of war. They are now unte-
‘Sed, never agin, 1 trust, be sepa
fated. anf one seetion oueht not to
Be neeieeted while another is favored
by these apprupriation bilig, Appro-
BHlations are neve i the Sout, to,
End (hove: they sill be made”
(Additionat_ classified ads will be
found on pane’, part 2),
‘aeeneninaans:
ho tivatene
eUtrien
Bee. Sioa?
Daye ane
stat Satine
‘aoe
oan ie tk o
Sad'*was the Boss
is ost i
=
we Toe 2, b
oat tna 3
&.
ssa a yee mace
or
all ST tm
natty
ii Te ee away
eit | oe at
Relies) mc aco an
Rtgs MEG | Aad ot bearte bine
cs | vaca we tak ot
\s al a ot
i j =
ES REM "oot tesa 3
we
a
op arse
——ee Until we all meee
Mra, ©. 2. Wiliams MO _rasaty,
Tapvennsexesrn
1 HOMES 0 eet alae of domed
IPT it SPE SNe tee
Eke ae Rew ee
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Douglas 1714
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REFRE-SHAVO ,seitig ince ie
PART 1—PAGE 12
COURT ORDERS INSURANCE CO. TO PAY CLAIM
Man Was Blinded by His Wife
Ralebigh, N. C., Dec. 18.—Walter Colby, made blind by lye thrown in his face by his wife, was declared Wednesday night, Dec. 2. by a jury to be entitled to the full amount of a $4,000 accident policy, which he held with the Standard Accident company.
Colby was formerly a locomotive driver on the Seaboard Air Line, with headquarters in Savannah, Ga. He also was accused of an accidental throwing of lye and water in his face by his wife. The insurance company alleged that he told their agent that he got, in a fight with his wife and that she threw the lye in his face. The com-
After he became blind, Cobb came to Haleigh and has been here since. He was the only one in the company by mailing a blank that had been filled out by a doctor. The com-mputer receipt of the letter, but witness testimony as to the mailing of the letter.
After much argument by the attorney, he had half dozen issues to the jury relative to the question as to whether notice had been given, whether the injury was caused by an accident. If the injury and whether the injury was caused by an accident, Cobb was the aggressor and became injured as the result of an attack on his wife, he would not be entitled to the defence and if the accident policy had not lapsed.
The jury was out three-quarters of an hour and found for the plaintiff that he was not the defendant and Johnson and Crawley and Solicitor W. F. E. Kelley. The policy was for $2,000 with 5 per cent accumulation provisions and had been in force for five years. This was not the verdict to a minimum of $4,100, claimed by the company, and a maximum of $4,500, claimed by the plain-
GOES TO FRANCE TO
REAR HER DAUGHTER
GOES TO FRANCE TO
REAR HER DAUGHTER
An ideal method of rearing children so that they may have advantage of the things worth while in life has been brought to light by Mrs. George Armstrong, a teacher, who has related how a friend of her has taken her young daughter to the girl's school and completed her education. Mrs. B. K. Armstrong of Pasdeaune, Calif., has recently gone to Paris with Mrs. Armstrong, who has established residence in the French capital. She plans to remain in France with her husband to give Dorothy the benefit of French schools, French customs and French freedom of thought and deeds. Mrs. Armstrong's husband, who is superintendent of the high school, will join her and Dorothy. Mrs. Garner, who had planned to call with Mrs. Armstrong, postponed her trip to fill an engagement during the winter with Mr. Garner.
REV. HENRY BROWNE, PRIEST OF ST. THOMAS CHURCH, WEDS
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... Irwin Shoe Store, 578 W. Sixth St.
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... A. W. Son, Inc., Winfield St.
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Cincinnati, Ohio
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Michigan
Jacksonville, Fla.
Logan, W. Va.
Newark, N.J.
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Richmond, Va.
---
J.E.BISH
K. D. GANAWAY
PHOTO
Last rites for James E. Bish, at one time a member of the state legislature and prominent figure in political circles, who passed away Saturday evening, Nov. 28, at his residence, 4520 Wabash Ave. after an illness of four weeks, were held Sunday, Dec. 6. The regular services were, held in the Ernest Williamson undertaking parlor, 5133 State St., after which the body was removed to the Union Masonic hall, where the secret rituals of the organization were performed. Burial was in Lincoln cemetery.
The deceased was a pioneer Mason, past grand master of the United Brothers of Friendship of Illinois, and an adjunct in the Military Order of Guardians, it is the mother of the resident of the city for 41 years. For 20 years he was a city smoke inspector. Previous to his illness he served as an employee's apprentice.
Several hundred persons from all walks of life were in attendance at the ceremonies to pay their last respect to Mr. Bish.
BOY DIES WHEN
TRAIN SEVERS
BOTH HIS LEGS
BOY DIES WHEN
TRAIN SEVERS
BOTH HIS LEGS
Charlotte, N. C., Dec. 18—Irwin
Edwards, 8-year-old youth of 426
S. Graham St., died Wednesday
morning, Dec. 2, at the Good Sam-
heral Church in Monkton when both of his
legs were cut off by a southern
engine, causing a railway
dam. Deceased resulted from
loss of blood.
According to the news, the boy
wished his other boys, attempted
to jump aboard a passing train,
Edwards' foot slipped. He fell
into both of his legs were severed.
OPEN FIRST OUTDOOR
SCHOOL IN ST. LOUIS
OPEN FIRST OUTDOOR
SCHOOL IN ST. LOUIS
St. Louis, Mo. Dec. 15.—The openair school for children of our race, the first of its kind in the United States, has been formally opened in St. Louis and is now in session. It will be maintained by the Tuberculosis Association to restore to health underweight or malnourished children. A house for formal opening and many visitors were present to view its accommodations. The building is located in the 4300 block of Kennerly Ave. and has a capacity of 120 children. It will be open-air schools for white children, the Tuberculosis society paying for the meals of all those who cannot afford it, and a day for each child. The social service department of the Tuberculosis families to see whether they can afford to pay. In the school for wholly or partly of the society payable to the society for more than 50 per cent of the meals.
The Defender Finds T. P.
Drives Into Creek
Texarkana, Texas, Dec. 18—Adley when on auto in which she was riding ran off a small bridge into a rock when on auto in which she was riding over spilling the occupants into the stream. Hill Harrington, collision of the car is in the Texarkana hospital suffering from sun and exposure. Both Harrington and Katrina were in the rear seat of the car were uninjured.
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HOLD RITES FOR EX-LEGISLATOR
COPS MAKE GOOD AS AMATEUR COAL MEN
A brutal assault and holdup was reported to Capt. John E. McHone, 1860 Cottage Ave., as able to tell the police that as he was in his store a man approached him he wanted to buy some older. He had seen the man in his store before and asked him to help him the wounds as a police lieutenant, because he was always grimly with coal dirt. He leaned over the keeg to draw water from the counter and struck wrench from the counter and struck him on the head. When he regained consciousness the man had gone and $80 had disappeared from his clothing. Captain McCarthy assigned Officers with the team to the case. The officers disgusted themselves and sought work in the different coal yards. The officers would persuade some companion of the day's work to accompany them to the store under their supervision they worked with William Bishop, 212 Dearborn St. They sought to have Bishop accompany them to Abate's place of business. Bishop got as far as the corner when he seemed to
He remembered suddenly that he had taken him to the store, where he was robbed. He was held by the grand jury with 50,000 bonds by Judges John H. Lee.
ANNOYS PHILLIPS HI BOYS:
GETS SIX MONTHS AND FINE
ANNOYS PHILLIPS HI BOYS:
GETS SIX MONTHS AND FINE
Curtis Mason, 21, 557 E. 43d St. was sent to the house of correction for the murder of Judge J. B. Caye 4 by Judge John L. Lange of the court of domestic relations.
A number of militiamen, including the Mason in court and accused him of indecent and immoral conduct with the boys of the Wendell Phillips high school.
The man was arrested after he had beaten and robbed one of the boys in the alley. The boys testified in court that Mason was the head of a large gang of loiterers in the boys' alley. The boys testified in court that Mason was the head of a large gang of loiterers in the boys' alley. Several other boys, who had been their victims, had feared to appear against them, and warned not to come to court.
The parents of the students are calling the community center to discuss methods that will insure protection for their sons.
The father is said to be married and the father of a child.
Pickpocket Would Act
The mystery of the legal ability of Joe Green, 525, Federal Street, was solved during the criminal record of Green before Judge John H. Lole. Officer Jones when Louis Hertstein, 525, Emerson Car on which the police were riding and stated that Green tried to pick his Green asked to be allowed to cross the street with $100 and costed and sentenced to nine months in the house of corrections.
Gien Fifteen Years
Staunton, Va. . . Dec. 18. Hirschwood
Johnson, 22, of Staunton, Va., died
after a long and sentenced 18 serve
years in the penthouse by a jury
in the sentencing for a murder
of Robert A. Whitecotton (white), who
was stabbed to death during a fight
with a man who was taken into custody
a week after the killing and after
retirement had been offered for his
capture.
Bury Schoolteacher
Memphis, Tenn., Dec. 15 — Saratoga
in the hospital, where she was treated
in the hospital recently. She had been
in the hospital for two weeks, and
been Edward Hall of California, and
Whitney Hens have not been completed.
Whitney Hens have not been completed.
Injured in Fall
Fordye, Oklm., Dec. 18—Charlie
lifts from a scaffold at the plant of the
lodgeyard Lumber company. The scaffold
fell on the entire distance, but his fall
was broken somewhat by braces of
metal. He was held back and a cut on the chin and forehead.
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
circles, who passed away Saturday. The regular services were held inasonic hall, where the secret rituals an adjutant in the Military Order of lions to his illness he served as an it to Mr. Elsh.
JUST ORDINARY WINTER, SAY GROUNDHOGS
JUST ORDINARY WINTER, SAY GROUNDHOGS
This is not going to be such a hard winter after all if the activities of the groundhogs out, in Jackson park can be taken as a true sign. These shriffy little animals that work on wood of bogged conditions have gone completely in reverse to the prognostications and other human weather experts. During the summer months the groundhogs are storing a store of nuts and warm groundhog blankets for what they indicated would be a mean winterable sources of food, while more reliable sources have it, these same animals have been seen reenacting blankets from their dens. According to these sources, jackson park groundhogs have worked hard to create blankets and nuts, a thing unprecedented in groundhog annals, and it takes as a sure sign that spring will not be far behind.
ANNOUNCE $20,000
GIFT TO ORPHANAGE
ANNOUNCE $20,000
GIFT TO ORPHANAGE
Winston-Salem, N. C., Dec. 18,—A $20,000 gift to the Memorial Hospital institution for the care of orphans for the first time announced on Dec. 3 at a meeting of the executive committee and advisory board of the organization. The gift was made in response to this request. This gift was made several months ago, but announcement was withheld in order that the new site will be more suitable for the school than the one that is now occupied. This new site has been purchased with the money provided in the gift. The new location comprises 363.43 acres, and the section between the box Mountain and Germantown highways, and is located in shadow that has recently been constructed. Forthy cotty highway commission.
Wears Stolen Coat to
Ernest McCoy, 3610 State St. is caused
on Charles Guilim and Mamille
Henry to leave the house. He had robbed him. His later found
him in a room in the basement of
John H. Leste to explain his unhiding
inquiry. He was recognized
in quality and newness in his
clothes. The overcrowd was recognized
in quality and newness in his
porter, as one that had been stolen from
him. Anderson made the man a present of
the cont what he saw what was be-
come. He left the cont at his home.
Little Rock, Dec. 18—Carrie Shelton is in the county jail charged with the murder of the girl who was killed at College Station. The woman claims self-defense. The couple had been separated and Mrs. Shelton had moved to Wichita, where the girl was to College Station, where they obtained some lumber. The couple had drawn a gun and had threatened her when she struck at him with a hammer. The man turned, insisted the man's neck.
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1 MONTHS BOY IS SCALDED TO DEATH
A few minutes after Mrs. Matthilde Detragan left a tub of hot water in the Kitchen of her home at 3615
Federal St. and
went into an
airplane. He
screamed, she heard
screams, coming
11-months-old
Houston Dotteny,
who had been
bumping about in
the air.
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Motor Truck and Auto Collide: Man Is Killed
Madison, Fla., Dec. 18—When a truck in which he was riding collided with a sedan driven by J. M. Weaver of West Fell, much earlier in the day, struck here. Ots Brown of Quitman, Ga., was hurled out of his truck and against the top of the sedan with completely severed. There were three trucks in a row en route to Orlando, Fla. The sedan was hit by a truck, his head was completely severed. Breaking its own front wheel, and collided with full force with the third in which Brown was sleeping. A verdict of unavoidable accident.
Wilmington, Del. Dec. 15—Lass-Ann Sterling celebrated 25 years of work as mail carriers attached to the local postal district in 1890. Mr. Sterling was the third man of our race appointed to be eligible for retirement next year.
Boy Scout's Leg Gets
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DELTA SIGMA THETASORORS TO HOLD MEET
Women Prepare to Invade Des Moines, Ia.
Cound City, Ill. Dec. 18—When the University of Chicago's safety校 to Des Moines, Iowa, for the sessions of their seventh annual football game mark the flow time in the history of the sport, the Mississippi ever that this organization means that it will be the second time college women of our group attend an annual conference west of Chicago.
Secretary Makes Announcement
Official announcement of the sixth national convention of the sorority has been announced by the secretary, Mrs. Erica B. Johnson, who is she directing the many plains laid by Phil chapter, the hostess chatter, chapter, the youngest chapters of the security.
West to Be Represented
From the West there are many digests of the chapter, from the three chapters in California and the western vice president of the grand chapter, Mrs. Vivian O. McCormick, from the midwestern region. Miss Martha Hall-Ross, social worker of repute in from the several chapters in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, Nebraska, Missouri have promised to be represented in large numbers. The chapter, Siena Theta, of which Mrs. Adah Hydne-Johnson is president, is being assisted in the work of the Iowa and of Iowa and of Des Moines generally, but particularly by the Kappa Alpha Psi and Alpha Phi and the social clubs of Des Moines. The sorority contemplates a heavy work for the convention and hopes to accomplish more than any other session of the convention, the working out of plans for a larger and more influential program for the discussion of civic economies and political problems of the day will be carried out in which the sorority carries this year.
Any communications concerning the Des Moines convention, account of the general secretary, Mrs. Elda R. Johnson-Bradford, 610 W. 25th St. or Mrs. Lillian Hammons, housing St. Des Moines, 1410 E. 18th St. Des Moines, Iowa.
McCom Miss. Dear. If -Although someone sent me this, has a good chance of recovery, according to physio's report, through the head from the forehead to all the vital parts, skirting beneath the palpable of a headache, commonly compiling of a headache, the nurses at the infirmary that she is -Wilkinson admitted the shooting followed her actions was done in self-defense. Prior to his death, you know who she shot.
SATURDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1925
'Boss' Abbott Misses A Whalin'
By BIG BOY
There was a narrow escape in the Daffodil store not well known to arrow escape from dwindling club and paddles. And the man who escaped was none other than the founder.
EATON AND ABOTT
OWNER, cullor and publisher of the Old Chicago Defender. Last Tuesday was thought to have been the birthday of Robert S. Abbott, and in keeping with the time, courthouse members of the city of the Chicago Defender gared at the door of Mr. Abbott's private popular employer returns of the day.
But, Mr. Abbott cooled their ardor when he informed them that some one had read the calendar wrong and had come around last month. The office force is still waiting the opportunity to help their big boss celebrate. Puddles were had aside for the walk. The age is yet a secret.
SOME FACTS ABOUT WORKMEN'S UNIONS
The trade union movement in America dates back to 1819 when the trade union began about bettering their conditions. In 1833 the first national laboring convention was held, and discussions ways and means of securing better pay and shorter hours of work. Trade unions were organized for the purpose of insuring insured action among the workers to enforce their rights. Trade unions were banners out of the trade. In some instances the refusal of employers to pay workers was followed by prolonged strikes. In addition to the strike the laborers and invaded the legislative halls with their demands for better conditions. They sought protective laws, free debtors' legislation. The decade from 1830 to 1840 saw rapid progress in inventions and the evolution of the United States government bureau. The Colt revolt was designed in 1833 and Goodyear's vulcanic process four years later. In 1836 the screw propeller which in time surplanted the paddle wheel and had become the modern ocean liner.
The introduction of anthracite coal for industrial fuel and the invention of coal as a fuel for the growth of the coal and iron industries, especially in Pennsylvania, was introduced as an early as 1855, and is used for illuminating city streets.
Four-Year-Old Girl
One of the most desirable stories related between judge Joseph L. McCarthy when he joined the jury in the death of a man placed on trial before him on a charge of rape, by Officer Morti Goldin on complaint of the years old, she told uncerterably what transpired when she applied to account of his future, is withheld. The story is not to be missed.
The baby's name, on account of her
failure, is withheld. The story is to
the grand jury under $10,000 bonds.
ABaby
of
Your Own
The misdirection of a severe
dental booklet resulted. What
was the cause of the
compiled by a retired baby
clan, be distributed by
baby bank.
MAN TAKEN AS BOOTLEGGER IN MARYLAND
Claims He was Beaten by D. C. Cop
Claims He was Beaten by D. C. Cop
Baltimore, Md., Dec. 18—Ennock Briscoe, arrested at Valley Lee last week by federal agents, is alleged to have shot a gun in the hands of Policeman Robert Laudon, a member of the Department of Washington, D. C., whose right to cross over into Maryland and take part in an arrest has been questioned, and contusions. He was held under $2,500 bail for further hearing by C. J. McGee, a charge of assaulting a federal officer, Laudon, who is said to have been one of the two D. C. officers who shot and killed Charles C. Deegan, a police officer in several weeks ago, is reported to have invaded Maryland soil to guide protection of the distilling plant at Valley Lee, St. Mary's county. Six men were arrested and a 500-callon still $0.000 was found. Also a large amount of whiskey were reported seized. Among the others Frank Cuthberten,
In an interview concerning the the that he was throwing a gun into the mud trying to get rid of it when the Washington policeman saw him and that he had head with the butt end of his gun. Only recently on a complaint of police infiltration, the policeman invading Maryland soil. District officials had promised that their officers would not cross into Maryland except on extreme cases.
PHILADELPHIA MAGISTRATE LEAVES S45,000 FORTUNE
PHILADELPHIA MAGISTRATE LEAVES S45,000 FORTUNE
Philadelphia, Pa. Dec. 15.—Private beehive at the age of 18, will of Amos Scott, the only member of the Race ever elected a magistrate, will of Claire Thelma and Myrtle, were the principal benefactaries, under the document, which was admitted to Macintosh Scott, a leader in public life in this city for many years, had early heldings before his death, which occurred Nov. 24. His home, at 1510 Christian St., was a place of unusual beauty.
ARREST CHICKEN THIEF
McComb, Miss., Dec. 15.—A. Jones, of the county, all charged with stealing a large number of chickens from his county, all charged with stealing the chickens as low as 15 of each.
Frequent Bilious Attacks
"I suffered with severe bili-
ious attacks that came on two
or three times each month,"
says Mr. J. P. Nevins, of
Lawrenceburg, Ky. "I would
have naussed. 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 nakshbor told me of
BLACK-DRAUGHT
BLACK-DRAUGHT
and I began its use. I never have found so much relief as it gave me. I would not be without. it for anything. It seemed to cleanse my whole system and made me feel like news. I would take it, make it visible and have my usual clear head, feel full of nep, and could do twice the work."
Bilious attacks are, "seasonal" with many people. Millions have taken Theodore's Black-Draught to ward off the attacks. The results they have reported should induce you to try it.
Food Favors. Everyday, you put in collapsible cups. Feways to keep them in the bed. Not in a bedded place. Not in a crepitated. But income every day.
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the price $3.97
the price postage to the
airline $4.97
DELEY. 3-11
newton, Mass.
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