Chicago Defender
Saturday, August 14, 1926
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
CRAZED FORTUNE TELLER RUNS AMUCK WITH GUN
NATIONAL
EDITION
GREAT LAKES LODGE LOSES HEADQUARTERS
Banker Acts as Funds on Loan Are Due
Stripped of its fine furnishings, with padlocks on its telephones and with its outer doors tightly locked, the pretentious new home that the Great Lakes lodge of Elks recently moved into at 3672 South parkway is now a "No Man's Land" for Chicago Elks. They have been forbidden to set foot inside.
Jesse Binga. South side banker, entered the padlocks installed Aug. 14. A formal notice on July 11, Mr. Binga, said for the Chicago Title and Trust company, insists that the lodge cannot reform until it has seen him and made satisfactory arrangements for its rental and use. He says there is an unpaid share of the lodge him on one stage of its financing.
The lodge members deny this debt and have taken legal action to block the banker. They assert that his procedure against their home, in the first instance, in the hope by Judge Hingo M. Friend, places him in contempt of court. Through Attorney A. L. Williams, the lodge members assert that Mr. Binga is now collecting and has collected all the rent and profits from the property, but has not applied the money collected on the indebtedness. He has now in his possession, the Elks declare, funds greatly in excess of the amounts which he claims are due
---
Take Court Action
The tanned story of financing will probably be sired in all its details for the benefit of court fans goon, for the case is slated for early trial before Judge Foley. Mr. Binga and the judge will fill in the details by Attorney A. M. Hurroughs. They will be asked not only to show cause for their procedure against the lodge, but to explain to Judge Foley why they hooked the Elks out from the fence junction issued by the judge restraining them from the very nets which the Elks say they committed. According to the petition filed by counsel for the lodge, the defendants removed from the lodge, piddocked the telephones and barred access to the premises. On Tuesday, the petition asserts the doors of the building were locked. All this, the petition alleges, was hidden in the defendant order handed down by Judge Foley on Aug. 2. The petition asserts that the Great Lakes lodge bought the building from Mr. Binga Feb. 1 at a cost of $27,000. The lodge was at $23,000 was accepted in trade and $1,000 cash was paid, leaving a $40,000 balance. But there was a $2,000 mortgage on the old building. It went for $10,000 net. Six thousand dollars was paid the lodge with $1,000 to be paid on the second mortgage.
Quote Records
This amount, the bill charges, was offered Mr. Binga on July 15 by the lodge's exalted ruler, Dr. Merwin R. Bibb, but the banker refused. The records, however, according to the bill, do not show and auch balance. It was later discovered. Attorney Williams asserts, that after the banker had sold the property to the lodge he had obtained a loan of $5,000 in cash, then the property recovered to him by a trust deed, then threatened to oust the lodge. The bill charges that July 27 the lodge was ordered by Mr. Binga to give up the property to Mr. Bibb. Title & Trust company in the following letter to Dr. Bibb, the exalted ruler:
You are hereby notified that your occupancy of the premises at 3672 Michigan Ave. will terminate July 31, 1925, and you will vacate same unless satisfactory arrangements are made with me for rental and use of said premises after said date.
The letter here signifies the signature of the Chicago Title & Trust company by Jesse Binga, as agent.
DIXIE JUSTICE
Birlingham, Ala., Aug. 13—Sid Hurts, chauffeur for Henry Upson Shin, prominent white attorney, was handed a $200 fine with six months' hard labor for driving along the street in front of a white woman, who was accused of "disorderly conduct." Arlington Judge Tom Gosse was the southern justice who cause this new definition of "disorderly conduct."
RETURNS FROM ABROAD
After a four months trip abroad, where she visited Paris, Home, the Italian lakes, Switzerland and other points. Miss Mandla Owens is en route to New York. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Owens, wealthy residents of the western city.
After graduating from Fisk university, this young woman devoted her life to Los Angeles. She the Y, W. C. A., rendering efficient volunteer service in every capacity on the management committee, leading up to her present position as chairman of that committee.
In January 2005, she was elected to the board of directors of that association as the only member of our Race to attain that distinction in Los Angeles.
Miss Owens and her mother, who accompanied her to New York, presented a guest of Dr. and Mrs. A. Willerforce Williams, 4940 Grand Boulevard.
U. S. MISSION GIVES REPORT UPON MEXICO
(Special Correspondence)
BY PAUL E. BAKER
(Chaplain, Fisk University)
Mexico City, Mexico, Aug. 13.—The religious dissensions that are showing Mexico into the center of the international stage were this week studied at first hand by the visiting American Good Will mission, which wound up its two weeks' tour of this country. The mission was sent here to investigate religious, industrial and political conditions in Mexico. It set out 25 strong, under the leadership of Dr. Alex Tayler of Boulder, Colorado. The Christian Century, to make a survey of Mexico that would determine that country's contribution to civilization and progress. Because the party included 10 ministers, it devoted special attention to those religious problems that Mexico in international controversy.
The party was held one day in Laredo because 10 clergy men were in the party. The ministry is under suspicion in the republic. The state seeks to free herself from the state's control of the religious system opposed freedom and progress. The old church must be moved out of the path before the country can climb the hill of education, economic independence and public freedom. The state admitted its help from President Calle, which shows the nation favors the right sort of religious life.
Land of Contrasts
A national railroad official in Laredo represented general sentiment when he said: "We are glad to have visitors, but we want them to represent us fairly in their reports. So often they photograph our worst acts, for a time we had to refuse the use of lotkaks. Tell of the good things you see and you will do us service." The restaurant man and fruit vendor charged the company too much for food. But why not? The website down by poverty. Labor returns are far too low. Americans flashing their money give the home-born a chance a realize a living standard. Mexican life presents valid con-
BATHERS KILLED CROSSING R.R. TRACKS
Dudley Must Pay Alimony to His Wife
Washington, D. C., Aug. 13.
—Shortly after Justice Jennings A. Bailey in the equity division of the supreme court of the District of Columbia signed an order awarding Mrs. Desdemona B. Dudley temporary alimony, both she and her husband, Sherman H. Dudley, left the city.
Mrs. Dudley went to Atlantic City, N. J., for recreation. Mr. Dudley went to Cleveland, Ohio, to look after his racing stable.
Temporary alimony was fixed at $150 a month. Mr. Dudley will also make a second advancement totaling $500 on a second trust note on the Dudley home at 1219 Sixth St. N. W. on behalf of Mrs. Dudley, making the entire of tenure alimony he will have to pay average approximately $200 a month.
Seek Compromise
This low amount was agreed upon by counsel for Mr. and Mrs. Dudley order that the relations between the bureau that he counsel for the further strained. An effort will be made to effect an agreement between them and avoid a public trial of the case which counsel says, will in the future correspondent, Policeman George Davis, and the dragging of both Mr. and Mrs. Dudley through the mire. He will also have an absolute divorce charge; culinary. He names Policeman George Davis as the correspondent. Mrs. Dudley denies his charges of misunderstanding, countercharges or unkindness, cruelty and deserction against her husband.
Since the filing of this suit Mr. Dudley has been living in an apartment house at 1216 U. St. N. W., Dudley, N.J. Mr. Dudley, counsel will make an effort to sell this home. It is one of the most beautifully furnished and decorated in the city. It was purchased at a cost of $20,000 and before their separation Mr. Dudley charged his wife with demolishing
Counsel in Case
Attorney Benjamin L. Gaskins and Robert J. Bowler represent Mr. Dudley. Assistant United States Attorney Raymond Neuducker is representing Mrs. Dudley and Attorney Eric Emmons, Jr. is representing the correspondent, Policeman George Davis. The suit was filed on May 5. The case was referred to the court* auditor on May 28 last for a determination of Mr. Dudley's income in order that temporary alimony might be paid. The court* auditor was ready to report, counsel reached an agreement and the report of the auditor was not filed in court.
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THE ONE REAL "SHOW PLACE" OF CHICAGO
HIS DAY!
NOV
2
1928
ELECTION
DAY
THE BALLOT
UNFULFILLED PROMISES
FAILURE OF
ANTI-LYNCHING
BILLS
SEGREGATION
LAWS
JIM-CROW
BEACH
AT
WASHINGTON
FAILURE OF THE
ADMINISTRATION
ENFORCE THE
ISLE MAS AND
AMENDMENTS
NO ACTION
AGAINST
MOB RULE
Veteran Runs Wild; Shoots 2 Policemen
Philadelphia, Pa. Aug. 13.—Ashley McLinden, a World war vet and police gas victim, 4217 N. 83d St. was shot to death during a gun battle with five white policemen after he shot two of the policemen and probably fatally wounded one at 83d St. and Tinticum Ave. early Sunday morning.
McLinden, who was 40 years old, died from a bullet wound in the heart. Policeman George Wiegner, 20 years old, of 6237 Elmwood Ave. received three bullet wounds in the groin and two in the leg, and Patrolman Michael Croskey, 28 years old, was shot in the right leg.
The three were taken to Misericordia hospital. Physicians say Wiegner's condition is critical.
The shooting took place in Shutten park, 83d St. and Tinticum Ave., and followed an outing held in the park on Saturday night.
During the night McLinden passed the park several times, but was barred, on duty at the Patrolman Barrett, on duty in the police said the picnickers had exclusive permission to use the park for that date.
He passed there, again shortly after midnight and picked a quarrel with Barrett and Patrolman Rosler, who was off duty, and then drew his rifle and pointed it at Rosler turned in a riot call to the 65th St. and Woodland Ave. station
**Captain George Fetters dispatched Sergeant John Bulmer and Patrolman Bill Chasing car. When they reached the park Bulmer rushed into a direct line of fire from the bullets coming in the revolvers of McLennan and the police. Bulmer was about to knock the pistol out of McLennan's hand he dropped dead at his test, after he succeeded in wounding the two white police-
JUDGE MAKES PASTOR CARE FOR HIS CHILD
Washington, D. C., Aug. 13.—Justice A. A. Hoehling last Friday awarded Mrs. Lucy P. Sheafe, 905 R St. N. W., temporary custody of her minor daughter, Doris Elizabeth Sheafe, and ordered her husband, Rev. Lewis C. Sheafe, for her maintenance, Mrs. Sheafe is suing her husband for maintenance of their 13-year-old daughter. She and her husband entered into a separation agreement May 15, 1922, where some property and discharged him from all obligations, but she later became physically disabled. Rev. Lewis C. Sheafe is the pastor of the Seventh Day Advental church at the corner of 100 and S. W., formerly the People's Seventh Day Advental church. He is also a chiropractor. He lives at 1509 Fifth St. N. W.
EATS POISON PILLS TO CURE HEADACHE
Suffering with a severe headache following a nervous breakdown, Mrs Marcel Tolliver, 24 years old, wife of George Tolliver, 3711 Vincennes Ave. went to the medicine cabinet in the basement of the box of tablets which she believed was a headache cure and took some of them Sunday evening. They proved to be bichloride of mercury tablets instead of the headache cure. Mrs Tolliver realized her son was ill and the monsieur mediced. She was rushed to Wilson hospital, where the poison was pumped from her stomach. It was believed at first that Mrs Tolliver took the poison tablets with sulidal intent while dependent over her husband assert that it was purely an accident. Mrs. Tolliver is recovering at her home.
Find Baby's Body Hidden in Newspaper
Police are searching for the person responsible for the death of a 9-month-old boy, whose body wrapped in newspaper was found in Washington park Saturday afternoon. Frank Kavanaugh, 357 E. 70th PL, told the police that he had been strolling through the park when he saw a woman sitting on a bench, 38th St. and Cottage Grove Ave., and upon investigation, discovered the partially decomposed remains of the baby boy.
Third district police, notified immediately, removed the child to the county morgue. That the boy had been murdered was adduced from the fact that a rag had been red fed the smooth and nose, leading police officers to have something to do with its death. It was believed that had the child been kidnapped from its relatives a report would have been made to the police, and a search of the records fulled to disclose such a report. The coroner's jury at the inquest, held at more morgue, ordered the slayer be captured and held to the grand jury for murder in the first degree. No clues as to the identity of the slain baby have been found by the police.
D. C. Physician Leaves
Washington, D. C., Aug. 13.—The entire estate of Dr. Silas B. Thompson, who died on July 24, is left to his wife, Mira Violet A. Thompson. The will of Dr. Thompson was died for probate last Thursday by Attorney J. Louis Taylor, who is the executor under it. It was made in August, 1925, and was witnessed by Arthur S. Smith, who was the executor under it. Dyre, 101 O. St. N. W., and Raymond B. Thomas, 2005, 13th St. N. W.
Mrs. Violet A. Thompson was the second wife of Dr. Thompson. She married him when he had second wife from him for five years. Elizabeth in Ina, New
Two Shot as Soothsayer Wields Gun
London, Ont., Canada, Aug. 13.—Drury J. Russell, 61-year-old "soothsayer and healer," ran wild with a gun here last Friday night, threw a crowd of pleasure-seekers at Queen's park into a panic, and shot down two white men before
PETER H.
Victim May Die
Michael Fay, 7 Linden St. Boston, Mass., was the first victim. He went down when a bullet plowed through his left groin. He was carried to the Victoria hospital, where only scant wounds were found. Richard Dykman was the second hit. He was struck twice and bore bullet wounds in both cheek and hip. He was taken with Pay to the hospital. Both men were employees of the Boyd-Linderman shows, operating the carnival here.
It took a concerted rush by carnival employees to overpower Russell. He was taken in tow by policemen, who were charged with stealing the Macristine Glindman, and was charged with shooting with intent to kill. He was remanded for one week for a preliminary hearing, at the request of Crown Mirage Albert Judd, for a minute. Mr. Judd told the court that he wanted to wait until hospital authorities were more certain of Pay's condition. Russell was not asked to plead. The courts say that his mind was upset as the result of a series of unfortunate experiences. He will be defended by McEvoy and Henderson, local barrister.
The man who threw the Friday night Midway crowd into a panic, he said, was styled southward and crystal-sizer. He has given his address as 51 Ting St. Waterloo, Ontario.
FORMER TEXAN WINS FOR MO. LEGISLATURE
St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 12—Attorney
St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 12—Attorney
last week an annulment he made
could have entertained in his southern birthplace, where he nominated on the Republic ticket for the state legislature. Mr. Davis, who is one of the most known lawyers in this section, is the second member of the Race in the history of Missouri to re-enter the nation. He will run from the Third district.
tertained in his southern birthplace, when he was nominated by the Republican ticket for the state legislature. Mr. Davis, who is one of the best known voters in this section, is the second member of the Races in the history of Missouri to receive the nomination. He will run from the Third district.
John A. Davis has practiced in this city for five years and has taken a leading part in vying for the University law school and college. His election is regarded as assured, since in the Third district the Republican nomination is supposed to carry the election. In all that Mr. Moore was the number one candidate for the nomination. He has been re-nominated.
MAN DIES IN VAIN EFFORT TO SAVE WIFE
Young Couple on Way Home From Beach
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BULLETIN
While the funeral procession of Mr. and Mrs. Watts, consisting of 18 cars, was on its way to Lincoln cemetery Tuesday, a State St. car struck one of the autos carrying relatives of Mrs. Watts at Wentworth Ave. and Vincennes Rd. inuring two women. Mrs. Adj Moose of Cincinnati, Ohio, stopped at 3330 State St., sustained a fractured jaw in the collision. She was brought to Provident hospital. The auto, slightly damaged, was able to proceed to the cemetery.
The vain heroism of a young husband seeking to save his wife from the wheels of an electric train brought two instead of one to a horrible death on the Illinois Central railroad tracks at 36th St. at 9 o'clock Thursday night, Aug. 5.
Benjamin Watts, 31, for five years a well-known grocer in this city, and Mrs. Florence Watts, 25, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Sumner Jackson of 3635 Vernon Ave., were the victims of a tragedy that set a gruesome climax to a pleasant eve.
The couple, well known in Chicago's social circles, and recorded by their dozens of friends as singularly devoted and happy in their married life, had been spending a couple of merry hours bathing off 35th St. According to the information which was presented at the coroner's inquest at 11 o'clock Friday morning, they were crossing the 36th St. track at 36th St. on their way home when the accident occurred.
Caught by Rail
Husband and wife, hand in hand, were picking their way over the tiles when Mrs. Watts' laughter was cut short by a cry of pain. Her foot slipped, beaten, bruised, and rushed a rail. In a sudden movement to wrench it free, it is thought that she caught her foot tighter. Mr. Watts bent to free her, and with a slackening horror found the black shadow of her foot on the train bearing down upon them. With no thought of his own safety, the young husband to savely to loosen the hold of the steel rails on his wife's foot. In a second both were struck. The woman was found side by side along the trucks. Mrs. Watts' neck was broken and it is thought that her back was broken. Mrs. Watts had died instantly. Both the husband's legs were cut out, and the body was crushed to the county hospital, where he died three hours later.
Mother Prostrated
The body of the young wife had been carried to the undertaking parlor of Charles Crook at 3533 Cottage Grove Ave. After Mr. Watt's death, his body was taken there also. It was not the young couple who were identified. The findings of an inquest held Friday morning at Crook's parlor have not yet been announced. Mrs. Jackson, mother of the young wife, is prostrated at the Vernon Hall, a double funeral Tuesday. Grieving with her niece a sister of Mrs. Watt, Miss Blanche Jackson, and two brothers, Charles S. Jackson, Jr. and Joseph. Dr. Jackson is a well-known physician with offices at 259 51st St. The Jackson family came here from Cincinnati. Mrs. Watt was born in Springfield, Ohio, and came to this city 17 years ago. She attended the public schools of Chicago and was graduated from the Wendell Phillips high school in Mr. Watt is a native of Alabama, where his mother, Mrs. Mamie Watt, still lives with one of his brothers, Fletcher. The other brother, Leon, was a partner of Mr. Watt in the grocery store which they conducted at 31th and Deerborn Sts. Mr. Watt was a teacher at the home of Mrs. George Boarman. They were married three years ago last May.
PART 1—PAGE 2
UNIONS SEEK TO CLOSE UP D.C. THEATER
Jazz Band Walks Out on Performance
when the jazz band with Drake and Walter's "Go Get 'Em" show went on a strike at the Howard theater in compliance with a rall call which has been issued against the Howard theater. Notwithstanding the Howard of its band, which was the big feature of the show, Drake and Walker's "Go Get 'Em" company played the Howard theater for the remainder of the week. It drew capacity audiences. A partery between A. C. Hayden, representing the American Theater, and E. L. Eichman, who is running the Howard theater, at matinee time last Wednesday, the theater then midday, indulged Henry Drake and the Drake and Walker show, that the Howard theater was unfair to organizers with the show could not play in that house. Mr. Lichtman ordered the house orchestra into the pit and Drake and Walker went on with the
Refuses Union Demands
Mr. Hayden demanded that Mr. Lightman sign an agreement to put in a union stage crew, moving picnic tables and orchestra, Mr. Lightman refused. According to representatives of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators and orchestra, the Howard theater is listed as unfulfilled to organized labor because of its employment of a punition stage crew, moving machine operator, and orchestra. There were labor troubles at the Howard theater a year ago when the stage crew struck for pay for fireworks, a working agreement; between the International Alliances of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators and the American orchestra the union orchestra joined the strike. A union stage crew and an orchestra was not put back into the Howard theater and after Jimmie Lammel left it. Mr. Lammel Cooper closed the strike. A Jimmie Cooper closed the strike. A union stage crew and an orchestra was not put back into the Howard theater and after Jimmie Lammel left it. Mr. Lammel Cooper closed the strike. A Jimmie Cooper closed the strike. A union stage crew and an orchestra were not put back into the Howard theater on April 5 last
Issue Road Call
The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Road call insured against the Howard theater on April 18, effective April 22 last. This road call prohibits any operator from working in the Howard theater as long as it is listed as unqualified to organized labor. It also affects because of the working agreement between the two organizations. Organized labor made no aggression after until Thursday, July 22, when four union musicians with the Ethel Waters company, which was playing the Earl Duncer, head of the Ethel Waters company, would not permit his company to fill its engagement for the Earl Duncer, head of the Ethel Waters company, would not permit his regular musicians. The Howard theater was forced to remain closed until Drake and Walker opened there. The Howard theater brought a suit for $2,500 damages against the Ethel Waters company for breach of contract. It is the district of Columbia
Body of Unidentified
Swimmer Is Recovered
Swimmer is recovered
The body of an
unidentified man mourn
loved to have drowned in the
bastard's boat. The swimmer,
was recovered near that point,
marine police.
The swimmer was described as a 5 feet
3 inches' tall, weighing 160 pounds, with
black hair and dark complexion." He
lived in a house with brown canvas tents, slippers.
Harlem Men Held as
Pickpocket Suspects
New York, Aug. 13 — Arrealmed before Ministrate McGregor in Washington Hightops court on a charge of grand theft and Edward Johnson, 31, 71 W. 123d St., are being held in $1,000 bail. The pocket of Clyde Ellis of 21921 Sventreme Ave. of a wallet containing $900 while he was in a candy store on Lenox Ave.
That Baby You've Longed For
Mrs. Burton Advices Women on Motherhood and Companionship
"For several years I was desired the blessing of motherhood," writes Mary Margaret Burton. "I adored my subject to perforce of terrible suffering and to be a beautiful little daughter and a true conjoined and inspirated to her husband. I be aware the secret of my happiness, and I will know the secret of my happiness, and I will write it now." Mrs. Burton offers her advice entirely without charge. She has pointed to Margaret Burton, 300 Miles south, to Mary Margaret Burton, 300 Miles south, to be strictly confessant. Correspondence will be strictly confessant.
U. S. MISSION GIVES REPORT UPON MEXICO
Fisk Chaplain Studies Conditions There
trasts. Those of exceeding wealth—the small majority—the educated, the middle class—the many. There were many small adobe houses along the way. There were also thatched huts. Poverty was shown by brittle walls, low ceilings, and underwood bodies. A few goats furnishing milk constituted the village herd. Very small patches, only cultivated fields. The plow made of wood drawn by a voice of oxen. No roads were visible, no highways, only foot and mule paths, and no roads. There was the greatest simplicity in life, clothing, eating, farming and living quarters, but in the face of stress and determination in their faces.
In contrast to the poem was the large incidences, the great landed families, the great groups of pasture and farm land. Large herds of cattle, roosts and horses roaming the mountains were watched by the overcrofts, the rock fences of careful construction, made by the palmstaking toff of the poor class, stretched about the estate, the overcrofts, the castle, the sheoling of the overcrofts, the village occupied by the vessels, made up of one-room, dirt-room idaho cabins, the vessels in the labor of the serfs on his estate. He maintains a church and a store for his groups. He and his family live in poverty. He lives in the land and now holds them in subjection. It stands among the people in vicious expense, imposing, fortress-like built by poets who were built a仗望. It demands obedience, manication and hard life. It occupies the people ignorant, poor and in subjection—a part of its real program.
On the high mountain we see the shrine glittering in the sun. The village of peons in the valley heals the sick and is devoted to worship. The favor of God is not in loving service, but in climbing hills on knees to the wayside shrine.
Need Irrigation
The valley through which we passed was filled with cactus, measured in small portions and a small portion was under cultivation, though there was evidence of good crops where the soil had been properly prepared during the wet season. We thought of how the valley would bloom and fruit if the water could be conserved or better, if there could be better agricultural education and governmental conservation of soil and water be opened to the common people:
CHICAGO HOST TO KNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS OF AFRICA
Knights and Daughters End Greatest Meet Here
TO TAKE CHARGE OF CITY COUNCIL POSTS Y AT DES MOINES REWARD FOR SLAYER
13—fordon in the
the reverberator
resembled to be
a reverberator
history of the
Dee Stain in the
history of Dee
Toledo, Ohio, Aug.
Kitchen, director of
Douglass Community
Molner, Iowa
and 25 served in the
World war. He is a graduate
situte, where he was a leader
of the football team
and coach of the football team
leaving Tuskegee Kitchen matr
matlated at Grinnell
four, where he won honors
and won the
G. H. Kitchen. Also won Basketball and on the athletic field. He was a football player and on the basketball conference and holds record in track.
During Kitchen's college career he was the sole representative of Grinnell campuses, where 35 nation were represented. Kitchen being the only member of the Grinnell Business and Social Science clubs, secretary of the Gonzalez society, and member of the media honor "Faternity." In Toledo Mr. Kitchen has been the principal in the Chicago Defender. Mr. Kitchen was at Tuskegee associate college in the Chicago Defender. Mr. Kitchen was at Tuskegee associate college in the Chicago Defender. Mr. Kitchen was at Grinnell college for local publications.
The Longbase center, have been added to the Longbase center, under Mr. Kitchen's direction, among which may be diversity sports, organized baseball, city and interest handball, football, boxing coaching the institution promoted junior city and intercity championship basketball team and a championship team with interstate honors. Kitchen's Center Data was the most versatile of the 41 in the Toledo CIF federation.
THE PEYTONS IN SOUTH
Mire, Dave Pettion of 441f South Parkway left Wednesday for a week's visit to the music studio. He be the guest of her brother and sister-in-law, the musician Dave Pettion, the well-known musician and dramatic editor of The Chilterns, who will be his wife the first part of next week.
WIFE STABB HUSBAND
During an argument in their home at
Davenport Shire, the Cermelite
was held on the ride by his wife,
Katie, with a knife.
Chicago Defender
European in successor class under Feb. 1, 1000.
European in successor class of Chicago, IL, under age of
birth 10.199.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION (Parable in
Adversary) 1-year. $300; his mount $178.
(1) 1000.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
D KNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS
Daughters .
test Meet Here
The following officers will serve for the next year: William Elliott, Md., national deputy grand master; Dr. Goo M. Cathrall, national grand secretary; Dr. Lee Queen, national grand secretary; assistant national grand secretary-treasurer; Lillian Anstey, Leonard Bixon McKenney, national grand auditor; Virginia McIntyre, national grand princeease; Mike Lucchetti, secretary to national master; Nestle Burdleigh, national housekeeper Hadley White, national grand secretary-treasurer Juvenile department; E. L. Westbrook, national grand
State Grand Queens
Mrs. Eliza Jackson, Illinois; Mrs. Ada Colin, Indiana; Mrs. Alicia McKinney, Maryland; Mrs. Linda Northwest, New York; Mrs. Hattie Baldwin, California; Mrs. Linda Baldwin, New York; Mrs. Lolita Brice, Massachusetts; John A. Morton, S. G. M. Kentucky; Mrs. W. Hallaby, L. M. James W. Fisher, Wisconsin; Mrs. Hortiella Iosan, state grandmother of publicity department, national council, and John A. Shackelford is major general.
CITY COUNCIL POSTS
REWARD FOR SLAYER
Boston, Mass.; Aug. 12.—A $200 reward for the arrest of George Farley, 21, the white southerner who shot to death Eugene Crawford, 31, was worth last week by the Cambridge city council, an instance of Mayor Quinn of Cambridge.
Crawford, whose home was at 108 Howard St. Cambridge, was employed at the same bench with Farley in the Atwood & McMahon box factory in the University city. The police allege that Farley, a native of North Carolina, shot to work at the same bench with a member of the Race. The shooting occurred July 11. Crawford was on trial on July 15. Since the affair Farley has not been been, the intention of adhering a reward for the aggression of the alleged murderer, Mayor Quinn has not been. In their attempts to locate Farley, Farley home is in Holloway PL. Cambridge. He is the brutal murderer by the white North Carolina, a gang of prominent citizens last week made up of a man who has been asked to ask his aid. In bringing about the arrest of the southerner, the governor is broadcasting the shyer's description of the broadcasting the shyer's description of the league mate Mayor Quinn, and in uncovering the virginity.
Woman Employs 20 in
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Aug. 12—One of the services performed by the institute was providing to the laureate not only its potentialities in the commercial field, but also its expertise in the commercial field, which have hereforego gone unhindered. In a recent survey of business consultancy firms in Texas, branch of the league it was directed to much larger number are engaged in, but the league had suppressed. R. E. Berbis the Waco, this "this was a revelation to the home of man to othery. Many of us did not know it in which our people are engaged.
In Texa one Race man has won several cotton growers of the Southwest. The discovery that one of the larger cattle inspectors and purchaser assemble a woman owner and Pennsylvania city business that employ 20 workers
Beatign with a milk bottle and a chair by his playmates' parents in his own house, he was arrested by a 19-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bishall, 4741 Walsh Ave., was rescued by the Third district police. His skull was fractured and his left eye was wounded by the Third district police. Mrs. Bishall said she was attracted to the scene by the screens of her son's video. She loved to be her husband because the toy with a milk bottle, and a club. The police arrived they were told that the trouble grew out of a boy, who had been playing together. No arrests were made.
Major Tucker, 2010 Bardstown St, of boys near his home, died from a coroner's inquest was held Wednesday at Graves Ave.
LAWYERS END ANNUAL MEET IN CHICAGO
Attorney Calloway to Head Body
The Chicago Bar association closed
its second annual session Saturday
during the Chicago Bar League's
festival.
at the National U
4427 Sun parkway,
after holding the most successful session in
the organization.
PETER A.
Prominent lawyers from different sections of the court gathered here to put over a big bleak program that serves themselves in one solid body to fight legally the criminal justice system until a discriminatory prejudice and segregation issue arises.
Such is the object of the association, as explained on the opening day of the meeting, that the Phillips of Washington, D. C., the national body contains legal talent capable of meeting the heat of other courts. The rights of members of the fuse can and will be better protected through its organized legal body that through its legal body being wired for justice, was the opinion of Mr. Phillips. These points were emphasized at Thursday's mass meeting held in the Vocalist Fellowship and multiorlam. It was crowded with Chicago citizens who turned out on the day to face discussions on race discourse and prejudice crimination, residential segregation, the power of the ballot, the citizen involvement in the lawyer to the community.
Stabbed in Fight at
Boston, Mass., Aug. 13—William Hayes, an employee of the Phalxon club, was taken to the City hospital early today, following a fight with an unknown man in the hospital. The hospital Hayes was treated for cuts about the head, alcoholism and a possible fracture of the skull. His name was played on the dancer list. According to the police of the Dudley with his assistant over a woman. It is not known definitely how he was cut and what he thought he was struck with a knife.
The police have a description of the
rectangular hole in a few hours.
The police have a black
flooded hole.
The Phalxin club is the former Black and White club.
OBJECTED TO THE "ONCE OVER"
Without a word of warning an unnerving sight occurred. 2022 State St. as he was standing and asking what he was looking at, clumped a knife in his side. He jumped and made his escape after the assault.
Several hundred delegates, representing every state in the Union, are in Chicago attending the 19th annual encampment of the Ancient United Knights and Daughters of Africa which opened its grand council session Monday morning. Above are shown some of the crack uniform units on dress parade. At the extreme upper left are the staff officers. In the left center is the Columbus, Ohio drill team under Captain Brooks. Below, A. U. K. band from Indianapolis under Captain McClain. Upper left, Cleveland women's band. In the lower right is Major General J. A. Shackleford, head of the military division.
MAN KLAN PUT OUT SAYS HE NEVER WAS IN
Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 13.—Congressman W. D. "Willie" Upshaw of Georgia chooses to heat his office with a breast with the Ku Klux Klan. In Birmingham for a temperance lecture, Representative Upshaw insisted that he be eschewed from the bed sheet order at a meeting in Atlanta, supposedly attempted by 1,000 Klan members who condemned his record at Washington. "They couldn't have expelled me because I am not a member." Upshaw declared. "Walt. Better have fired me because they had fired me because they had no opportunity."
Guest From Honolulu
Nolte Smith, prominent business man of Honolulu, T. H., is visiting Editor candidate for the legislature there and is burrowing back to work in his camp. He has been entertained by a number of friends while in the city. Man the charming affairs have been given in his honor, Sunday he was the guest of Editor Michael. This is the first time in 20 years a time with those of his race. Hawaii being made up largely of Oriental businesses in the islands, employing a large number of men, Mr. Smith sells and Oklahoma.
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U. S. DAILY IN PARIS STIRS RACE STRIFE
The editorial in question was sent to the N. A. A. C. P. by Charles Edward Russell, a member of the board of the University of Europe. After speaking slightly of the changing psychology of the French following emancipation and the tion of the slavery period, to "the grateful humility of the period immediately following emancipation" and rights, the editorial sincerely speaks of Clarence Darrow as a "champion of the Negro." Mr. Darrow said in his recent speech at the Chicago conference of the N. A. A. C. P. "bioshy sentiment and mercurious stand which he (Mr. Darrow) now takes is partly against the continuance of the social distinctions that race, Race, and partly against the continuance of Negro disfranchisement in the southern states. Great abilities throw down social barriers. They are erected and maintained by unwritten, intangible laws, which time can change."
The writer then goes on to compare Mr. Darrows uncompromising views with the recent statement by Senator Borah of Idaho that the entitlement of our people was a grave mistake, mailing Mr. Borah for his secrecy. In his letter to the N. A. A. C. P. sending the editorial Mr. Russell said, "The attack is obviously malicious, spiteful and without occasion. There is no issue about Colored people in Europe, outside of Great Britain, in the United States, or in home. Americans in France have no reason to indulge in attacks upon Colored Americans. It is plainly the work of some man who is greatly gratifying the Colored people with an exhibition of petty meanness should not be allowed to go unrebelled." Advancement association, in thankking Mr. Reeld, has requested him, in view of his statement that the editorial did not meet with his requests, to prevent the repetition of such malicious attacks.
Kills Woman Who Kept
St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 13. "She just wouldn't let my husband alone" explained Mrs. Lizzie Ziggler, 2030 Middle St. 23 years old, when she was arrested for the fatal shooting of a 16-year-old girl Saturday evening at High and Carry Sts. The Lodge woman died Sunday night in city hospital No. 2.
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Ridicules Darrow
Attack Malicious
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1926
EATS POISON
PILLS; GETS
BRIDE BACK
A domestic quarrel led Mrs. Christine to the house three days, to knock her trunk and move from her home at 112 E. 46th St.
Thursday, Aug. 5. A few minutes later her home was 90 swollen mercury poison and was rushed to Wilson hospital by R. Sandlers, 3112 Indiana Ave. He was brought out of danger by physician. He told the Third district police that he could not live without his young bride. His attempt to kill himself afflicted Alice, brought heart and she returned to him. A reconciliation was speedily effected.
TEACHERS' SOCIETY HOLDS ANNUAL MEET
TEACHERS' SOCIETY HOLDS ANNUAL MEET
Hot Springs, Ark. Aug. 12.-Hundreds of teachers from all over South dared by the new Woodman of Union building July 25 and 29 for the 252 anvail of Teachers. The meeting was also attended by a score or more of white men public schools or an teachers or administrators in private colleges. The meeting was awarded by President Dr. R. S. Grossoy president of State college, Derv. Del. voted unanimously to double the budget of Studies into conditions in schools in the South, touching school attendance of schools were reported by several committees that had been gathering Teacher meeting, conducted by Mrs. Leslie V. Garnold of Little Rock, had as supervisee of education.
Oklahoma Lawyers Here
Among the prominent visitors to the city this week are Attorneys John A. Young and Joseph D. Muskosee, Oklaho, who have established a reputation for themselves in the handling of oil claims, and graduates from Yale law school, was for two years head of the Omega Pal Dulli Law School, and Northwestern university. They are spending a week in the city visiting friends, week alternates Chancee Twins and O. B. J. Jefferson, also of Muskosee, were visitors in the city.
FATHER BOKER IN CHICAGO
The Rev. A. C. Roker, for 15 years the only Enticipated minister of our Race in Muskegee, Oka, but now assisted by Chicago with Mrs. Roker. The couple are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jennings at 365 Waltham Ave.
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SATURDAY. AUGUST 14. 1926
HOLD JANITOR FOR KILLING OF HIS WIFE
Couple Quarrel Over Kiddies' Support
Washington, D. C., Aug. 13—A customer's jury last Tuesday held Roy Otis Henson, 26, for the grand jury in the shooting of wife, Eileen Henson, 22, in the juniors' quarters in the Irving apartment house, 1731 T St. N. W., Monday.
Responding to a telephone call from Henson that some one bid for the wife, police found a bloodied girl in the apartment of blood. She had been beaten to death with a pick axe handle which was found near her body. Henson was arrested and taken to police headquarters, where a call to have confessed the crime.
He told police that another man had been running with his wife. He had asked her about him, he said, and she had refused to tell him anything going to kill him. Last Sunday afternoon, he stated, he went to her place of employment, 1426 21st St. N. W. to meet her, but she did not show up until 10 p. m. They had an next morning at 4 o'clock, when he struck her on the head with a window stick. He then left the house and worked at 15th and S. Sts. N. W. until lunch time. He returned home, found her dead and telephoned the police that some one had killed his
Tell Different Story
Witnesses at the inquest, however, gave a different motive for the crime. They testified that their husband fundled the maintenance of two children of the Hensons, who were cared for by Mrs. Bessie Shaw, 2455 (Three weeks ago, Mrs. Shaw stated, the young mother came to her and asked her if she would care for her two boys, aged 2 years and 9 months. She said that she cared for her husband was worthless and that she had to support the children out of her earnings of $12 a week, Mrs. Shaw said that she agreed to take
Threw Money Away
Sunday before last, Mrs. Shaw resumed, the dead woman told her that she had given her husband money with which to say the children's hurt, but the woman's Mrs. Henson came to her home Sunday night, Mrs. Shaw stated, and paid the money, Mrs. Henson then told her that she was afraid to go the hospital. The dead woman was last seen alive by Mrs. Estelle Moore, who lived in the apartment above the janitor's quarters. Mrs. Moore said that she had heard the couple arguing over the morning Mrs. Henson called to her that "this damn fool has got the door locked and I can't get out."
POLICE HOLD WOMAN WHO KILLED MATE
New York, Mt. Aug. 12.—Arrested in con-
vention with the husband, husband,
and father of the victim, G. K. Hist St. was held without bail in
honorable homicide, court Saturday, May 26.
Hist St. was held without bail in
honorable homicide, court Saturday, May 26.
An additional charge of child abuse
was imposed on the woman by Defective Harris and Len-
when they found a cat as a caliber receiver
in the kitchen of her home, immediately
after the shooting.
The woman told the police of the Rathatee Ave.
station and Asht. Ave. station and released from the
fentilent only last Tuesday, after servi-
ing a pet or slashing another man
her husband had beaten her several
times, but supported her Mrs. Chibbalm
sak. She rented the Hist St. apartment
for her husband, but found a frame
in the front door Tuesday night.
He had threatened to kill her, for
Chibbalm then left the house, but re-
lated him to the crime and the wither
bladed knife.
The receiver from a burrow driver-
opening the door, her husband rushed
bler and she pointed the platoon at
He refused to leave and foulished the one shot went wild, but the other two struck Chishulam. He dropped to the ground and shot the one apartment, was unconscious from loss of blood, and the long man was carried to the drug store of L. Vankowitz. 1420 Washinton Ave, and given first aid by the ambulance. An ambulance rushed him to Fordham hospital, where he died on the floor a short afterward from loss of blood.
St. Louis Woman Pays
Up With Butcher's Knife
St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 13—The killing of two men of the Race last week, the total homicide this year, is the worst in the city in a month for the first seven months of the year.
The attack, on Saturday, 252 Lawton Rhod, was stabbed inside the heart with a butcher knife in front of 7 N. Ewing Ave. by Helen Rush of the same address Saturday. She claims self-defense.
The police are seeing Charlie "Bill" Lowe in connection with the killing of Charles Cowan, 252 Ft. Lauderdale Cowan was shot to death and Danielle Olmham, 252 Holt Ave., was shot in the breast in a hallway at 360 Ewing Ave.
BABY BOY ARRIVE 5
An 11-pound baby boy arrived in the
hospital on July 14, 2014. Bath 11, H. 114, Aug. 11. The fine-lines-
ing stranger was joyfully welcomed by his
mother, who are sharing congratulations
to their many friends.
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THE
—Picture by Defender Staff Photographer.
There was no thought of the much talked of color line out at Armour Square where Harvey A. Watkins, one of Chicago's best pop, ice cream and fun to 5,000 kiddies in the Armour Square district. It was estimated that more than 100 children would reduce the number of "good eat" were white children, many of them accompanied by their parents. From 10 o'clock that morning to 10 o'clock the next day, together, ate together, swam together, and then tapped the day by engaging in athletic contests. And everybody had happened to have happened in Dixie. Hungry white children might be contaminated by eating with hungry child groups, and the group Mr. Watkins is presenting pop to Annie Zivalich, 211 W. 29th St.; John W. Dotson, 305 Painsie Ave.; Louis Vivalich, Annie A. Dotson, and Annie Mac Dotson, sister to John.
D. C. WHITES BEGIN THIRD JIM CROW SUIT
Seek to Oust Another Family
Washington, D. C. Aug. 13—A third court action to check the invasion of Hace people into the Bloomingdale section has been tried in the court of the District of Columbia.
It was brought by William S. and Elizabeth Sill, 132 Adams St. N, W. Yard, W. W. and Ceil E. and Ella P. Custer, 116 Adams St. N, W. through Attorney Harry A. Grant and Martin P. O'Donough. The defendants are Kirk Bibbler, a real estate salesman in company; William C. Roberts, an employee of the Columbia Title company, all white, and Mrs. Jula Branch.
The court is asked for a mandatory injunction compelling the defendants to abide by the provisions of a restrictive covenant which provides that the property shall never be rented, leased, sold, transferred or sold under a penalty of $2,000.
Ask Court to Act
The court is also asked to order Mrs. Branch and any other persons who may be living with her at 120 N. W. N. to vacate the premises.
Upon a final hearing of this case the court is asked to enjoin permission to move the Rare persons and to declare null and void the deeds to this property conveying it from Kirly Kibler to William C. Roberts and from Roberts to William C. Roberts, alleging that the possession of this property by Mrs. Branch is confe- catory, degrative and absolutely ruinous to real estate in the Bloomington area. They charge that Kibler sought to evade the restrictive covenants by conveying to Roberts, who conveyed the property to N. W. N. to move it into before it was brought
Covenant With Land
The property in the Bloomingdale section was developed by Ray E. Mildlauch and William E. Shannon, both of whom lived in houses in this section, they sold the property subject to a restrictive covenant running with the land. The court of appeals of the District of Columbia in June 1, 1925, unheld these covenants. In two cases recently filed with respect to property in this section, the judges have granted an injunction in one case and refused an injunction in another. In the case involving 139 Admins St. N. W., bought by Russell K. Lyle, a letter carrier, of 141 Fourth Avenue, granted an injunction on the authority of the court of appeals decision of June 1, 1925. In the case involving 72 Randolph Seymour, a letter carrier, vexed by Edgar T. Newton, Mrs Sarah P. Newton and Robert H. Peterson, Chief Justice Walter L. McCoy refused to grant a monolytic quelling them to vacate the premises.
When the courts reach these cases for trial it is probable that the complainant will be accused of occupying almost entirely by Race people as was St. between New Hampshire Ave. and 15th St. N.W. when the supreme court of the district of Columbia reused in verses a decision of the Court of Columbia in the District of Columbia in the Curtis case upholding the supreme court of the District of Columbia in granting an injunction prohibiting the sale of property in this block to Mrs. Helen Nelson.
USES BRICK DURING EIGHT
John Anderson, 26, 2547 Dearborn St. wended his way to the hospital to have his blood transfused in a fight with Robert Jackson. Jackson was in his forth, which cut a deep gash in his forehead.
WOMAN AGAINST WOMAN
During a quarrel in their home at 2007 La Salle St. Miss Jolie Henry, who was cut across the head and arm at Miss Corinna Meadows with a razor.
[Illustration of a battle scene with soldiers on horseback, possibly depicting a historical or mythological event.]
A. M. E. Zion Quadrennial Convention Closes in D. C.
NO COLOR LINE HERE
A. M. E. Zion Convention
Washington, D. C., Aug. 18, The quinquennial session of the Sunday School held at Episcopal Church, cities, daily variation church schools, and other agencies of the religious education system. Episcopal Zion church began a five-day session at the John Wesley church Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2000 delegates enrolled, including representatives of the women’s home and religious missionary organizations, 12 episcopal district including the British West Indies and the triplet提督institute of Sunday schools. The general theme of the convention is “Reconveneion conferences and a meeting of the convention executive committee were held. The conference welcomed to the city by St. Wlad, L. V. Covell assistant engineer commissioner, by Christian Endeavor union, and by Dira, Dale Tucker for Sunday schools, Dr. J. Francis Jr. of Charlotte, Dr. E. Francis Jr. of Charlotte, and Dr.
Faith In Youth
Carter G. Woodson addressed curricular health church on "Hace History in the Church's Lesson Material." Forrester were discussed by S. M. Dudley and Mrs. Emma G. Clement. An address was made by Mrs. Adaline J. Guebert. Miss Margaret Barnes led discussion on the history of the church nursery. Church kindergarten lessons and kindergarten activities Hannum and Mrs. Banshe Ridley.
Discuss Methods
Bishop George C. Element addressed John Wesley church on "The Church and Jesus Relations." The theme of the address was "The Church and Bay preached was" "The Church and the Social Order." Addresses were also "The Church and Christian Citizenship," and by Fridge Blaychetell on "The Church Sunday night." The convention adjourned Sunday night.
Make PilotImage
The convention alterimage to the Lincoln memorial Thursday afternoon at the University of Virginia, Jones, who, enobbing Lincoln, declared: "The immortality of Lincoln will cluster upon his citizenship of the United States than the preservation of the Union." A future of last Friday morning' session was the reading of letters to Lincoln from his friends in Virginia, West Virginia, Iowa and Wyoming, feliciting them on the work of the convention. Another session of the convention were baltic while pilgrim-
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Quadrennial Closes in D. C.
ness were made to Arlington and Harmony cemeteries. The grave was placed on the tomb of the Unknown and at the grave of Col. Charles H. Young, a West Point graduate, who attained the rank of a member of this班. Rev. Thomas W. Wallace, Rev. A. H. Hutwood and Rev. B. C. Robeson, who were three of the class of 1915. E. F., were delegated for this duty. At Harmony cemetery the graves of Bishop Sincleton T. Jonger, Mrs. Jarry J. Jones, Melylyn McKechan and John
Open Air Service
An open air service under the nurseries Christian Endover league Sunday evening was one on closing events. The event was in charge. Following the league in charge, Following the open air ceremonies, the 2,090 delegates attending the convention from the church for platform services that closed the meeting. The delegates were devoted to a morning hour at the John Wesley A. M. E. Z. church, whose members of the convention attended a Saturday afternoon, in which it was estimated 1,300 took part. Fifth and Corcoran St.; went up 11th to I. Wenceslae to Sixth St.; down 11th to I. Wenceslae to Sixth St.; down 11th to Pennsylvania Ave. The parade then went up Pennsylvania Ave. past the third bishops reviewed the line of march it disbanded at the Monument ground, delphia and Washington church team had been scheduled. A heavy downpour of rain, however, prevented the name. Bishop J. S. Caldwell of Philadelphia, Bishop Edward D. W. Jones of Bills city, Bishop John W. Jones of Bills city, the line of march of the parade. Morning services Sunday were opened by the senior choir of that church, under direction of Prof. George E. Chapman was preached by Bishop Caldwell.
The afternoon services were featured with selections by the Glabrath church chapel, and the Sunday address. Addresses were delivered by Rev. F. M. Jacobs of Malden, Mauz: Rev. S. Curtrothers of Newark, N. J.; L. Schmidt of G. Shaw and Bishop William L. Walls.
FORMER PHARMACIST
DIES IN WASHINGTON
Washington, D. C., Aug. 12. - Funeral
McGulfer, a retired pastor, were
a clocked Thursday afternoon from his
home in the Bronx. Dr. F. Bivers, pastor of the Beren-
Baptist church, officiated. Interment was in
congregation,墓地. Home last
Monday at 1:15 p. m. He had been ill
only a few days. He suffered a stroke
and was later laid in the
Lanham. Md. Saturday, July 24. He
was immediately brought to the city.
Dr. McGulfer, 56 years old, was
born Md. M. Jack. Oct. 25, 1954. He came to Washington 40
years later from the Howard university college
macy, Nov. 1, 1953, he entered into a
Board and they conducted a drug arrest.
St. until 1912 when the partnership
Washington, D. C., McGulfer opened
McGulfer's pharmacy. N. W. He conducted this business
until 1922. Mrs. Julia
W. McGulfer's son, Dr. Robert G. McGulfer,
usher-in-law, Mrs. Virgil
W. McGulfer, and a grandson, Robert
G. McGulfer Jr.
GIVEN BON VOYAGE PARTY
GIVEN BON VOYAGE PARTY
2376 S. Parkway, entertained Dr. and
Lewis, with a guest of special
preception' Wednesday evening.
Lewis are leaving soon on a Euro-
car.
---
NEEDY YOUTHS TO GET ELKS' SCHOLARSHIPS
Lodge Plans Aid for Education
Cleveland, Ohio, Aug. 13.—On Aug. 19 the first annual session of the board of education of Improved Semenovel and Protective Order of Elks of the World will be held here, according to plans now being perfected.
This department was established last year at the annual session of the grand lodge at Richmond, Va., and has for its purpose ultimately the full and complete education of the American youth of our Race. And in order to aid in obtaining that object the Order of Elks levied an annual assessment upon each member of the order. In addition to the annual assessment, no solicitor charged by the department, Judge W. S. Hueston of Gary, Ind., asked that each Elks lodge make a voluntary subscription. This lodge is the only one by many and as a result of the assessment and contributions the Elks will have for educational purposes to the education of the children of education for scholarships, and other educational purposes more than $18,000. This fund, according to the commissioner, is to be used in child and women in attending college.
To Help Students
It being the opinion of the board of education that the one thing necessary to able young people who, having finished high school training, find themselves literally up against the wall so far as their desire for higher training is met, is finance. To meet this need Judge Hueston introduced and fathered the legislation at the Richmond convention which has produced the above result. The board of education meets just preceding the annual grand lodge meeting, and considering of considering the many applications for scholarships and to provide rules for the granting of the same. Commissioned out and is sending additional愿aires to all sections of the country to deserving young men and women who desire to be awarded scholarships and these are attending the coming session in Cleveland.
Held Educational Meetings
Cleveland Promises to
Protect Dr. C. H. Garvin
Cleveland, Ohio, Aug. 12.—In response to a letter from the N. A. A. department of public safety in Cleveland, has written, giving assurance that given to Dr. Charles H. Garvin, who has been threatened with death if he does not vacate his house, which has the object of two bombing attacks. "We are mindful," writes Director of the National Citizen Service is a citizen of the United States and entitled to his constitutional rights and given plain details of the bombing. You may test assured that Dr. Garvin will not be incited. C. A. letter was occasioned by the report that police protection to Dr. Garvin would be discontinued in its communication pointed out that the trace throughout the United States in which the residential and other citizenship rights were involved. The N. A. A. C. I. also referred in two similar letters to Dr. Garvin in which the residential and other citizenship rights were involved. In which full police protection had been entirely suppressed; the other case being in which the absence of proper police protection brought about not only the death of a man, but two trials ex-
"We (se) sure," said the N. A. A. P. letter, "that the city of cleveland want to adopt a more determined attitude against firm and unequivocal stand on the part of the authorities against winnatt attacks upon Colored citizens will result." The letter also mentioned persecution in such cases, in the cessation of such lawless actions."
Gets 10 Days in Jail
for Annoving Woman
New York, Aug. 23—Walter Bell, 25 years of age, just in the city from where he worked, before he returned to the workplace before Wednesday morning the lone Star state. Wednesday morning the workplace. Ferrall sentenced him to the Bell is charged with annoying Alex. Bell was walking about 14th St. and 15th St. She told the court that while she was walking about 14th St. and 15th St. Bell approached her and said, "Ge, but you." The woman told the court that when she ignored his remark Bell walked to the sidewalk.
The woman called an officer, who arrested Bell. Bell pleaded not guilty to an assault statute Farrell that he had been here two weeks. He denied being drunk.
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PART 1—PAGE 8
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PART 1—PAGE 4
PYTHIANS END
GRAND LODGE
34TH SESSION
一
Return to Charleston, W. Va., in 1927
Charleston, W. Va., Aug. 13—The 52th session of the grand lodge, Knights of Pythias, and the 26th annual session of the grand court of Calvinite of West Virginia were held in Clarksburg Aug. 3-5, and were said to be the most constructive and interesting ever held by those organizations. Delegates and visitors attended the session Sunday, Aug. 1, and continued to come until the session closed Thursday evening with a big ball at Norwood park. Just outside of the city were the barkers in the session began Tuesday morning, with the public session at which time the city managers and representatives of the local lodges and courts extended hearty welcomes. The opening exposition was held on both the grand lodge and the audience was regaled with much oratory. On Tuesday afternoon the officers of the two bodies made their reportings, and both the grand lodge and grand court enjoyed a very prosperous year.
Reports Large Fund
The report of Grand Chancellor T. G. Nutter along with that of the grand master of exchequer and the keeper of records and seals showed a cash balance of $170,000 the investment had grown from $14,623 in 1, 1925, the year Nutter succeeded J. W. Robinson as grand chancellor, to $170,000 $6. Aug. 1, 1926. His report has been paid during the Pythian years, amounting to $24, $16.61. This is said to be the largest amount ever paid by any secret order or insurance company under Race management. The report shows any 12 months in the history of the state. The Pythians pay on a sliding scale, beginning with $50 and continues to increase yearly until it reaches $900,000 of the order, including the Pythian Mutual Investment association, in something over $900,000.
The reports of the officers of the grand court of Calcutta showed that the court had a cash balance of $13,000.
Hold Grand Encampment
One of the most attractive features of the session was the grand encompment at Burke's farm, about three miles from Clifton, New York. It was a sunny day. This is the first grand encompment ever held by the Pythians in West Virginia, but hereafter it will be held annually. The encampment was unimproved and the general Joel II. Taylor of Charleston and his staff.
Among the features planned for 1927 session to be held in Huntington, West Virginia, the various cities, towns and villages will select a princess to represent them the first night of the session. The most popular princess will be the last night of the session and will be the guest of the grand lodge and grand court of West Virginia at the supreme lodge session to be held in Chicago in August. 1927
The following officers were elected by the grand lodge: T. G. Nutter of R. H. McKee, ninth consecutive term; T. R. Jenkins, Huntington, vice grand chancellor; R. H. McKee, Bramwell C. G. Kearney, G. K. of R. H. McKee, G. K. of R. H. McKee, S. D. Dr. H. H. grove, Beckley, G. M. R.; Rev. Geo E. Fountain, Logan, G. prelater; H. Wood Sharon, G. prelater; Hillill, attorney; G. P. Porter, Charleston, G. M. A.; C. H. Rice, Northfork, A. Robbison, Wheeling, and G. E. Haskins, Wheeling, and G. E. Haskins, Innerer guard; Alex Lyles, Landgriff outer guard; C. E. Mitchell, Institutes E. L. Morton, Beckley, J. W. Shell Parkersburg, finance committees
WHIP WIFE BEATER OUTSIDE CITY JAIL
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
WHITE' BEAUTY REVEALS RACE ON DEATH BED
Woman Spurned John L. Sullivan
Mars. Mass., Aug. 13. — As downtown New York's most beautiful city hospital, Mrs. John Willingham known for twenty years as the "most beautiful woman in the South end" and for a decade looked upon as the wife of the most famous of them, told the nurses and doctors that she was of the same face as her husband. A few moments after her whispered confession she died. She was a leading role in sporting circles and is said that champion prize fighters and wrestlers of the past have sought her hand, and she told police on different occasions when she was questioned. Her name was Mary Wardell. She landed in this country a gift of 12.5 million dollars on the street to look at her. She had a Spanish type of beauty, with intrinsic dark eyes and a mass of jet black hair. It was not hard to see the curly notices of John L. Sullivan and the coterie that surrounded him.
Spurs White Admirers
She was teld and entertained by
there she was. She had many offers of marriage
and at least one to go on the space.
But at the height of her conquests,
one night, she declared to a large
gathering of friends that she would
be married to the man. She
admitted that there was not one good
enough for her.
Williams, who was one of the best
known men of the race in the South
end, was seen after this many times
provided a house for her on Bradford St.
and they were married.
Mysterious Figure
Friends she met often spoke of the proud way she had of introducing her mother, the widow she had, and the South and lost forever her grandmother the day she, she was seen less and less upon the streets, she became a figure of mystery, a woman whose children were always those of a creature from another world.
Children upon the street asked her for a picture of her, and lady was with the black hair and skin. Never through the years did she lose her striking beauty, and to the position she always maintained the position which never left her for a moment.
Her friends were informed that her married life was very happy and as she grew older, so she kept her house well and Williams provided well for her. There were no children. She was not seen about the district. Her husband informed those asking for her that she was ill. On the night of July 20 she was in the city hospital, suffering from a stroke. There she told doctors her race.
SHRT AT DANCE
Lundale, W. Va., Aug. 12—A dance in Saturday night might resulted in the hand, the other in the stomach and one in the shoulder. The quarrel came up over a woman. The man who was the woman was Claude Cook. He is still at a bar.
SHOT BY OFFICER
A call was sent to the police station that two boys were on the roof of a building, and they were tempting to enter it through the roof. Lient. William McCarthy sent Officer Mortimer Goldstein to investigate. He found the boys in the leg as he tried to escape.
Musicians Win Praise for Success of Annual Meeting
Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 13—The National Association of Musicians, which recently, is receiving praise from all sections of the country for the excellence of its art, is conducting an art program. The national artist's program is the one event when an admission change is made and had been the intention to allow a student to appear as a solicitor upon that occasion. With the new constitution mid-adopted at the time, the director is directly under the control of the board of directors, which will eliminate much of the manifestation in the chapels of artists.
Win Applause
Close With Cantata
There has been a great deal of dis-
cussion about the choreus should be used. We must
gather information.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
NOW!
—Photo by Defender Staff Photographer.
Echoes of 1917 rang out throughout Camp Grant Sunday where the 33d division, Illinois National Guard, is spending two weeks in summer training, when thousands of visitors from Chicago and other points in Illinois poured into Rockford to see a battalion of soldiers who was visitors' day and nothing was too good for the large crowd that began pouring into camp before laying out the ground. The upper photo shows Col. Otis B. Duncan reviewing his regiment, the "Blue Davia" (Old Eighth), at the 6 block dress parade ground at the First battalion mess to get their Sunday dinner of chicken and ice cream. This mess kitchen was decorated Sunday with the Leonard Ball of Chicago was in charge Sunday as mess sergeant of Company C, of which Capt. Benote Lee is commander. Captain Lee was officer of the day Sunday. The moment "breaks camp" Friday night.
PRESS GROUP CLOSES FINE 'PHILLY' MEET
Next Year's Sessions in Chicago
Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 13.—The National Negro Press association was in session here last week in its 21st annual convoitation. The session was well attended and complete harmony characterized the meeting. The enacted and a spirit of goodwill and co-operation controlled the convoitation. D. J. Davies of Atlanta is the president of the association and presided over the deliberations of the meeting. The meeting inaugurated an era of co-operation and ethical inspiration in the roof. The president's annual address was the outstanding feature of the meeting, and the association was merely a high standard set in by the president.
The address of the corresponding secretary was a practical and helpful document and will be included in the increasing their circulation and in rendering public service. Membership in the association was changed from persons to public librarians, congregation or partnership. That is, the newspaper, magazine, partnership or corporation is the member and will be represented in the newspaper or corporations engaged in newspaper work as the member paper may select.
The following personnel will constitute the official family until February, 1927, and their successors are appointed. J. Nelson, first vice president; J. B. Huss, second vice president; Henry Allen Boyd, corresponding secretary; I. Willis Cole, recording secretary; J. M. Chiem, secretariat; M. J. Chiem, McLennan, secretariat; E. Mitchell, chairman of the executive committee, and Miss Jeanette Carter, auditor.
The association nojourned without an official will meet in Chicago in February, 1927.
The president was authorized to select for the government of the association some recognized authoritarian laws; to uphold the laws for the temporary organization and a code of decorum to govern the conduct of the members and the deliberations of the body.
The association authorized the committee on the state of the country to issue an address to the American people setting forth the irregularities in the enforcement of the American people so we suffer untold misery and unrest.
Prominent among those who took a leading part in the meeting were responding Secretary Henry Allen Boyd, William O. Walker, Robert J. Johnson, William W. Colea, K. Washington Fred, Fred R. Moore and J. E. Mitchell.
ASK RECEIVER FOR ST. LOUIS COMPANY
St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 12.—Suit asking the appointment of a receiver for the St. Louis Underwriters association. 2583 Pine St. the holding company. 2583 Pine St. the holding company, which has been forbidden to operate by the state insurance department, was filed in circuit court last week by William C. McMahon. 4133 a. W. Belle PL. a director, of the company, who owes him a balance of $27,142.65 commission for the sale of stock. He says he received only $11,000 out of $64,222.65 that was originally owed him. He says the company has not done anything to maintain an office force and dispatches its assets. The suit states that the defendant company has sold 15.30 shares of stock on a basis of $15 a share. Its total assets do not exceed $120,000 and has been sustained since the organization of the company in April, 1925.
FORESTS IN FRANCE
Past cover nearly $25,000,000 acres in France and a fifth of the total area of the country.
If you suffer from dim or blurred vision; infiltrated, weak and watery eyes; blindness; his lips, and various other eye troubles, you can now get a liberal test treatment free and postpaid, by writing the E.E. Ryne Laboratories, 210 W. Eighth St., Dept. 1552, Kansas City, Mo. As this book will show, you can go on to write for it today.
that the very lengthy "Hawaiian's Reparture," the contagia by S. G. Ledergerode, program. It was too late when it started and was in contrast to the production chorus was small and not thoroughly familiar with the number, and it is a familiar with the number, and it is a when well cueled by singers who are used to singing together. Alfred Johnson, director of music of the deserves great credit for carrying through the task placed upon him, which was to conduct the chorus which Mr. Johnson is well known throughout the East and it is unnecessary to enourage the soloists. The soloists were Marie Thomas, Lillian Trytle Franklin, James Byers, George Dohdins and Carl Dillon. Following the concert the delegates were guava of Miss Marion Anderson home and a delightful time was enclosed.
As the reader and musicians expect a critical review of the proceedings of the final events and radio concerts this issue, correspondence in the National Association of Negro Musicians should now be directed to Miss Caroline Nielsen, Howard university, Washington, secretary. Miss Nielsen will assist in the piano department and teach in the department of theory and teaching.
DOMESTIC TROUBLE ENDS IN SHOOTING
While working on his car in front of his home at 3135 Rhodus Ave. Monroe, NJ, he shot and seriously wounded by his brother-in-law, Edward Davis. Edward Davis caused the separation between himself and his wife, Mira, Laudie Davis. 3312 Giles her testimony was that he had nothing to do with the estrament, but that she had left her husband and attacked upon her and his repeated threats upon the lives of herself and others. Witnesses in the shooting were Grantee K. Paxton, 2371 Indulges Ave. and Griffen's car when Davie came and deprived both men told the Stanton's police that they were standing near Griffen's car when Davie came and deprived both men told the Stanton's police that they had none Davies began injure. One of the shots took effect in his home. He returned with a gun a few moments later, but Davies was heist. He is still at large. The wounded man was taken to the county hospital.
Panama Treaty
Washington, Aug. 8.—A commercial and general treaty and a claims convention with the republic of Panama have been signed at the state deposition. The treaty supplicants the "Taft agreement," signed by the two countries in 1903, to cover the period of construction of the Panama canal. The Taft agreement was abrogated in 1924. I understood the new treaty gives this nation the right to acquire additional land for defense of the canal at any future time. It also gives the United States an air navigation and radio rights over Panama. American claims growing out of a fire in Panama City in 1853. The lack of adequate police protection is said to have resulted in large prosecutions of the Americans. The treaty was signed by Secretary Kellogg and Francis White, former chief of the Latin-American division of the state department, for the United States, and by Senor Don D. Kellogg, who served to this country, and Sussebio Morales, Panama minister of finance.
---
800 HAITIANS FOUGHT TO HELP FREE AMERICAN COLONIES IN '76
BY REV. THEODORE STEPHENS
In the founding of nations, more extraneous material enters into the fabric of both than future generations are ever willing to acknowledge. Our aim is not, however, to impose impossibility of material entry, but to more clearly rather concerned in establishing the fact, that little known to most people, the fact, that little known to some time or other the assistance of colonists, helps them with sympathetic circumstances. It is a well-known fact that the British American colonies in their native countries, by France, Poland and Germany. It seems, however, that a chapter in which for some unknown reason remained sealed to the generations which have been affected, an agent, an agent, so very important at the time, has remained an unwritten page of his writings well as to reveal the incident for the benefit of readers of The Chicago Desert, as well as for present readers.
Translation: The society called Translation, Bldg. of Washington in 1577, was backing with the weight of its authority the legitimate claims of its authority in the city of Washington in 1757 at the amoual of the count d'Estaining, 500 blacks, freedmen, almanacs, and hastened to right side by side with the soldiers of Washington. At the time, the militia had itself intrepidly shed their blood for the independence of the United States. In 1757, distinguished such characters as Marital Hesse, Benacute, Chauannees, Gilbert, Torreaux, Person, Mars, Bley, Charles
MISS ELIZABETH WELS
Never Say
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C. M. E. CHURCH IN DISTRICT CONVENTION
Delegates Hold 4-Day Session at Danville
Danville, Ill. Aug. 13.—The seventh session of the district conference. Sunday school. Epworth league and missionary school. Champaign district, southeast Missouri and Illinois conference convened at the Metropolitan C. M. S. church. Rev. W. M. Wart, presiding elder at the district Sunday school superintendent, Mrs. Besaile Harrison of Georgetown, Ill. The following officers were elected for the ensuing District Council: Mrs. Louise Wade, Champaign; assistant superintendent, Miss Peal Boy, Carboneale, and secretary, Miss Helen L. Lee, Danville. After the election the annual conference missionary presi-
Thursday evening welcome addresses were delivered by Reva, G. Brewer of the St. John's Church, J. Burch of the Union Church, I. D. Martin of the Second Baptist church and A. D. Hays president of the Daniellia Business League of W. W. Whitney of Champaign, III. The second day's session consisted of the Enworth league work with Robert James, district president, presented introduced: Reva, I. W. Evans of Lane's Tabbernacle, W. T. Moore of Seruga Memorial church, St. Louis, St. Louis, II. M. Evans of St. Louis, II. M. James was reelected district president. At 8 p.m. Rev. Evans, St. Louis, Mo., preached
Friday was Woman's Mission
sionary day, with the district pres-
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President Mrs. F. S. Waterford, Rev. W.
T. Whitsett and Rev. W. T. Moore.
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---
MAKES BRIDE WAIT
3 HOURS AT ALTAR
New York, Aug. 12—Owen Simms, 21, a cook of Peekskill, was supposed to have been married in New York at 8 o'clock Wednesday night. But he wasn't at least, not at 8 o'clock.
Owen figured he should have at least one more fling before he stepped up to the altar with Miss Lillian Stanford. He was married to her, before going to the home of his prospective bride, where the ceremony was to have been performed. Simms had her party given by some of his friends.
There, among the bottles of ginger ale and mineral water, Owen had his first fling to a man he left the house and started toward the altar.
Then he began thinking: One fling to his married. He must have one more. And he did.
At 11 a.m., almost three hours later he stood in Magistrate Farrell in Night 'court and said, "I'm guilty of that he stood of disorderly conduct which a politician had preferred against him. But when he was married, that was to have been, the court said, "I shall not impede the progress of rote learning." Sentence is appended.
"Holy samples!" circulated Owen,
want the great cah in New York.
"What the hell can I do?"
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"DADDY COME BACK!"
ROSA HENDERSON
with the
FOUR BLACK
DIAMONDS
VOCALION
RECORD no 1025
Here is a blue ballad that is filled with heart throbs and feeling that wins all of your sympathy for Rosa. Her good man has packed his grip and said he was through, so she pleads with him to come back. Don't miss hearing the way she does it. On the other side she rings, "I've Got Somebody Now," another big hit.
Ask Your Dealer to Play These Big Vocalon Hits
Ask Your Dealer to Play These Big Vocalon Hits
Here Comes My Baby
Chicago Picasso Blues
Ron Henderson with the Three Hot Eagles
Vocalion Records
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PART 1-PAGE 6
STEWARD'S STEWINGS
STEWARD'S STEWINGS
By SMILING BILLY
Frederick, Md.—This writing finds the old show making its last stand on this side of the line for some time, and we right about face here, and march back for Dixie, making our first stop down in southern Virginia and with one or two more stops we will land in the state of sunshine and flowers. The midway folks have been enjoying these hots and have been spending their time mastering to Washington and Baltimore, C.andy Mansell also worked here, having been spending his time painting up the merry-go-round. Colorado Charlie worked on the painting like the big Yellow was right there and helped. Purl Shield has the gang working on his ministries front and back, but he too bad, and the show will be just when it hits down the line. Kid Ked and his Claremont High School class Bee, beep, beep last Sunday in Washington, the guests of Gladest's mother, Mrs. E. Webb, have some fun with "Fear."
Miss Hintie Tace shows how she can sell hern, all in a tight place she sings her "Deep Elm" song for the first act to get started. In the band Toe Jam Miller with his bass playing, George Coleman with his drummer, Kid Rod with the drums and the standouts in the band. Don't mean to say that the rest of us are not good, but these are the ones that we want to look at well, we have not got the best but look out for us down the line.
George Coleman will soon spend some time with the madame, so she will be with him. Toe Jam Miller gends hello to Dock Anderson and other friends. Got your letter, Lonnie; After this week mail will reach the bunch at Chatham, Va. Let us hear from you. All the bunch join in best wishes to the profession. After this week 15 will find us at Chatham, Va.
THE MUSICAL BUNCH BY DAVE BRYTON
Things in General
fox trot. Robert also sent a box of Florida mangos, for which I thank him. Well constructed harmonica, too. He also many composers lose sight of the fact that melody must be properly written. Any tune that comes to the top is not necessarily Evidently Sir, Cloud know what he was doing when he composed "Florida Rhythm." I feel proud to say that the number of concert programs in the near future. Mall will reach him at $23 N. Second Ave, Miami, Fl.
Parisian Glover
Glover Compton of Louisville in the big noise in Paris. Never before has a musician from American made music been so successful in Paris. He can generally entertain, a fine composer and clever pianist. Mrs. Compton (Nettle Lowly) will join her husband shortly in Paris.
Jasper Taylor, nationally known "washboard drummer," has opened a new studio in the county on $5th St. in Chicago. Jasper has something else in his head besides music. A tip to the bunch, he says, is to make making money. Some day he will be rich. You musicians can do the same thing. Use all of your idle time. Finance your business with the money you can earn by playing music. Lovie Austin at Home
Lovie Austin at Home, the well-known pianist and musician in her magnificent home on South parkway, Chicago. His father, Prof. Calthoun of New York city, and his mother, Prof. Calhoun of New York city, are public schools of Chattanooga, Tennessee, entertained by Mrs. Austin.
Mrs. Austin will make a continuation of the playing gang, playing all of the principal cities. She has been the leader at the Monogram theater for many years and will be missed by the patrons there.
Tommy Ladiner, the jazz king cornetist, has arrived at the port of New York. He has been playing pond for two years with Sam Woods' orchestra. The gang will be pleased to learn that Tommy will join Lovie Austin on her tour.
Jimmy Bertram
The pianist has a triple trap drummer in the business. Jimmy Bertram, now an important factor in the Vendome theater orchestra. Chicago, Jimmy has studied under the musician who hasn't stopped studying yet. Jimmy is modest about his talents. He won't admit he is good. He is a symphony expert, bells and xylophone player.
Cook Cleans House
Charles Cook of Harmon's Dreamland fame, cleaned house recently, offering four players from his orchestra. Cook he claimed it was for the good of the organization. Jerome Carrington, formerly with the Sunshine Band, the new pianist with Cook's orchestra.
Bill Tyler
Chicago's Bill Tyler, the well-known violinist, is now located at the Beaux Arts cafe, New York City, with the first chair in a laureo orchestra.
Louis Armstrong and his wife will return to the city next week. They have been up in Idaho. Mich. musician and conductor of the active musicians in Chicago. Louis radio's "Hello" to the bunch.
Jazz Cornetist
Roy Bowling, the jazz cornetist in Bay Jackson's orchestra, was the first jazz organist in Newport, Rhode Island. The occasion was the presentation of Mrs. Haines' revue. Mall will reach the jazz king at 66 Kingston Ave. above burg.
In Ciney
E. L. Coleson the cellistist, in playing lead in the pit of the Renaissance theater, Cincinnati, Ohio. In Coleman's line-up are the following players: Core Neighb, pianist; Corne Neighb, bassist; Coleman and Gertrude Dickerson were married Aug. 3 in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lew Henry. The Dickerson makes the newly-weds, a successful journey over the sea of maritime.
Walter Lee, an old acquaintance, formerly a player in the old Elite, Chicago, and a good cornetist at that, played for the Chicago Defenders. On the show Walter likes our musical column and says the entire gang on the show looks forward every week to getting the Chicago Defenders. On the show Walter likes our musical column and says W. Payne, Mr. Payne's brother died last Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. He left the show immediately for the band, which he details. His son Elmer is directing the band while his father is away. A chip off the old block. The show will soon be in Illinois, playing Freeport, Ill., and Dayton, Ohio. Kings of the West. The Race's pride of the West is Dan Desdunne's famous band. Well seasoned, this organization has made its mark. Popular and in big league, Dan Desdunne's annual fair season Aug. in Hamburg, town. Charles Green is a feature with the band this season. He was formerly with the Fletcher and also Jeff Smith, a very clever musician.
Dan Deadues and his bunch have a national reputation and the writer longs for the day to come when he will be well-heralded musical organization. The headquarters of the band are in Omaha, Neb.
Washington's Agency
Howard C. Washington, formerly of Glenwood, is doing much these days for the performer and musician. He has established the Howard C. Washington music museum of amusements in the country. Mr. Washington is also a composer of note. The famous Peer-
The good news comes from Atlanta, Ga., that Eddie Heywood, one of the fine composers and musicians in the city, has broken loose from his mordings. He will lead the orchestra with Jimmy Cooper's Black and White revue the coming season. Glad Eddie is leaving the South, but his work is not appreciated. Up this way he will realize a break with the natural talents.
S
One of the things that make
things that make Dave Payton a first-class or-er, and together, I have known of several organizations harboring mediocre musicians, but the persistence of playing together molded them into a finished musical
When you get a good bunch to together, boys, stick it out. This way you will in time feel one another, which will make you feel better. It'll always make the crack musician that makes the organization. A good leader with good business players has a fine chance to rank with the beat. I think the best way to do that is Leroy Smith's orchestra. Of course, I am speaking of the variety dance orchestra. Only a few changes in his personal in 10 years—and they were all the same—made the entry of all in the East. Stick together—that's what makes it.
Imposing Leaders
Too many leaders of orchestra impose upon their players for nothing. Thanks for the union, which protects the members and leaders alike. The laws are neutral. You are punished for wrong-doing. Hit the rockbook wrong and you get the laws owed. Leaders should set the proper example for their players to much fervility with your players. Try to impress upon them the necessity of constant rehearsing, try to them the importance of their role as Christian and wholesome. If the leaders are cross and deal unjustly with them they will form a hateful dislike for them, brotherly love be the watchword.
Teddy Reverata
Terrible Teddy Weatherford, the demon who hitted his years into reverse, and backed up from his trip to China, for Teddy. We need him in China.
The Value of Theory
Knowing the theory of anything makes for perfection. Henry Ford built the Ford Motor Company in a little店 in Detroit before he built them. With this foundation he built the musician. Learn the theory of the instrument you play. Study difficult pieces when you have finished them. You will what's it all about. There are many authorities on the theory of music, and you can buy them, and become enlightened.
Energetic Lady
In Chicago, the progressive center of Middle West America, is a young lady by the name of Cornelia Seneco, a native of New York and lady. She has formed a musical class with banjos and Hawaiian tukes. She is turning out expert string physies from her studio. She has also come to her studio for instruction. Miss Seneco is also an expert musical director. She has directed many performances throughout the country, her performances have lent her her due publicity.
Joe Jordan Agalo
Joe Jordan, the well-known orchestral conductor, will have charge of the music the coming season on the tour. He will also over the Columbia wheel. This is Joe's second season with the show. While spending his summer vacation in New York, Joe was on the arranging and clarence Williams Music company.
Young Composer
Robert H. Cloud, an arranger of natural ability, sends the writer a score of his largest composition, "Florida Rhythm" is the name of the
YOU'VE HEARD THE TUNE—WHY NOT BUY THE RECORD?
Parisian Glover
In Business
Lovie Austin at Home
Jazz Cornetist Back
dimx Bedram
Cook Cleans House
Bill Tyler
Vacationing
Jazz Cornetist
In Cincy
Gold Medal Band
Kings of the West
Washington's Agency
(Continued on Page 8)
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
FULTON'S LETTER
FULTON'S LETTER
New York—Capt. Dave Foyton,
Hark, here goes the second edition
of Fulton's letter and its nothing
of importance.
The Lincoln theater presents a
great miniature musical comedy,
"Zigaballand," and is packing 'em
in matinee and night, and sending
it to theaters. It's too bad for words. Garland
Howard, Mae Brown and Speedy
Smith are the feature attractions of
the Whitman sisters, with their
big new production, "Step Along!"
are proving that they offer nothing
but the best in amusements. They
are not only entertaining, but
though the juveniles are not work-
ing, Troy Snapp is tickling the ivories
and making personal
direction. Not how they work.
"-11-44" is now in rehearsal at Humber & Seamur's 125th St. theater. The show is headed by Eddie Hunter of *How Come*' fame and the director of *How Come*' cided hit or a complete failure. It is scheduled for opening Aug. 21.
We hope it is a success for the season. Williams is presenting to the burlesque theatergrafes a trawsy on "Uncle Tom's Cabin." In this show Clifford, our well known comedian, and Bob (Monk) Bramlett are featured.
"Lucky Sam" will have the final week of their summer run week of Aug. 16. Ernest Whitman, Joe Byrd, and the rest of the cast are it is. It is rumored that the Five Crackerjacks have signed for the season with Himmel Cooper, so that's Dewey Coran, brother of our famous Willey Coran, is doing his at the Earl Carroll theater with his dancing hot and keep the boards asmokin.
Gold and Goldie are resting up a bit before taking up their season's role. Cam are looking fit and no fouling.
Willie Williams, the bird, is about to get set for the season on the cover of that bird. He will fly away from you every time. Be it here known to members of the staff at Miss Margaret Johnson, Okeh record artist, has become the wife of Fulton Alexander, writer of Fulton's letter. Thank you. He is the chiefly of Jones and Chattman, will get her mail at below address, as she is stumping with the newlyweds. The point, Fulton's unanticipated point, Fulton Alexander, 153 W. 135th St. New York City.
COMPOSES 'IDLEWILD' SONG
Major N. Clark Smith, one of the best known conductors of music and orchestral conductors, has composed a song called "Tidewild" and it is dedicated to the famous summer resort of the same name.
1930
One of the intre sting things a bout the song is the one made in composing it. He made a trip to Idlewild Mich. to see the band July 25, at the request of Willem B. Lennon, manager of the company. The mission of this
N. Clark Smith
trip was to look over the ground
preparatory to writing the song.
Major Smith returned to Chichester Tuesday, July 27, wrote the words to the song Wednesday, July 28, music Thursday, July 29, made copy of song, August 1, song was accepted and approved by the Idlewild Resort company Monday, Aug. 2.
This is a signal honor for Major Smith, who was submitted over many that were submitted to the company for the official song.
Idlewild is the pride of our group. It is situated in northern Michigan, surrounded by beautiful lakes. Only recently started and today it is fully inhabited by those of our group who have built beautiful hungowal cottages and have made it their haven for music. We are ready for distribution in a few days and will grace the home of every music lover. I had the pleasure of reading the song and from an art-handpoint it is well constructed.
Chorus
Idlewild, my Idlewild. I hear the
birds, a calling.
other's calling.
I feel the dew drops falling, to Idle-
Dear Idlewild, the candle lights a
burrowing.
BELASCO'S TRIBUTE
A great tribute was paid to actors of our group by the world famous David Belasco, the producer of the movie *Never Has such a tribute been paid to our actors before, and coming from such a genius as Mr. Belasco, we know that our group takes the lead in creating a dramatic art. He tells the world to watch the Race actor. He lauds their ability and backs his contentions with an art that our group shows. Belasco says that our group shows a dramatic talent that surpasses that of most trained and experienced white actors and actresses. Next week's issue of Liberty magazine
GIVEN ROADSTER
Uncle Slim Butter, well known to performers, is now located at the Caps club, Brownville, Pa. The boys made him a present of Dart Sport, a local amphitheater that amites over the gift. Mall will teach him at 1 Brown St., Brownville, Pa.
OBSERVATIONS
At the Top
tors chosen without regard to their race or color. The conflict between rich and poor is evident in the stomach and a bunch of eccentric intestines has been raging within my interior, and it has made me want to eat a white of an egg diet for three weeks. Add to this three a day and tropical fruit and you can bet I don't eat the three weeks one. It may be true that we eat too much, that the most of its dig our graves with our hands, and that the three weeks one (eels like exclamation. Who in the heck wants to starve to death to live?
George Tylor
Journalist and author was a welcome visitor to our dressing room. He is an earnest young man who is rapidly forging to the front in the city. Observant, has an uncanny scent for news and writes with a facility that is sure to hit him over.
At 1402 Druld Hill Ave., have opened her beautiful home for the accommodation of show folks who know how to appreciate the home at home, clean and the cooking is the best and the treatment all that one could desire. Dr. Walter Jackson, one of the residents of the called at the house to pay his respects to Allie Mash Ridley, their families having lived side by side in the old home town of Augusta, Ga., and the meeting was a happy one for
Is off the press at last. I have just finished looking over the first book I have written, the *Mellow Musings*, binding is attractive and the printers did an excellent job. The poems contained in the book were selected for the intelligent revision. It will prove an interesting and entertaining book of poems to whoever buys a copy. The book is published on and after Aug. 15. *Mellow Musings* was printed under the supervision of the Colored Poetic League. The president, was compelled to make a hurried trip to the West Indies is the only reason that the distribution of the book returns to Boston the 15th of August and the many orders that are in with the honored immediately. So many people worked with our companies at different times and who have been anxious to show their appreciation can now receive a copy of the opportunity and purchase a copy of *Mellow Musings*. I also certain that my many friends who have urged me to have my poems put in the press, have sent me the copy next week at the Howard theater, Washington, D. C.
The Wallick shows opened the season at Trenton, N. J. Aug. 3, to a landlord business. There are Sugare Foot ministrel show alone. Little Lorenzo Walsh is a new act on the minstrel, doing what the troubled trout man, would like to hear from 1837 East St., Alton, Ill. and Happy Jack Ferguson. Mail for them at Haskler, Neb. Aug. 9, and Cambridge, Neb. Aug. 16.
West's World Wonder show is cleaning up in the state of West Virginia. William Flight has shares of the land. Walter Modley is the stage manager. Joe Jackson and Giles Benson, comedians; Tufus Wilcox, the straight man, and Sally Max Hunter, leading body. There are five dashing young ladies in the chorus. Mall will reach the gang week of the 9th at Elkinsworth, W. Va.
OKeh Record No. 8343
going big and after they will go into Gibs Philadelphia.
The show is being bled two to two and a half big feature is to be the only licensed fire company and a s Felle' written with M Miss Ulric, Dancer as Schooler as the Frene
Where to Buy OKeh Race Records
At the top is the top is being suffocated ever attains "the heights by great heights and kept" usually looks about and finds that he is saw a man perched on the top of a flag the extreme height of a New York skyscraper to say was all alone; on thouands on the streets beaten him there, courageously defy-
"the heights by great men reached and knew looks about and finds that he is all alone. I most perched on the top of a flag pole situated on the roof of the height of a New York sky-scraper. Need that he was all alone; on the streets he looked at him there, courageously defying death, while his frail percheyer 200 feet above the snow. Hundreds enriched him his nerve but none was anxious to unleash the training of eye, nerve limb, courage necessary to displace him.
I receive many letters from young amphitheaters for stellar honors asking for the top. There is only one way: leave at the bottom, study, work and persevere. There is no short cut. Strive for an unfaltering faith in one's ability to succeed. A friend of mine testified remarked: "If a guy wishes he can do it, he should require thinking." The truth underlies the above statement is self-evident. The average person is all-powerful. He is willing to do most anything he joins to do, one else should do his thinking. Why should newspapers be such potent factors in aaving public opinion, politicians placed in office? Because people allow the partisan newspapers to away their opinions. Several newspapers pugnulate Bres. Tennessee Warriors we played a little town in Illinois dropped with a white family. At a party, newspapers entered a coeruleous object instead of chion. The good woman was much perturbed by zugesley entered a coeruleous object instead of chion. She had never met any Colored people before and thought that was the occasioned. We also learned that of the good people of that little town locked up their chicken coops stories told of us in the newspapers they thought that all Race people were stealers of chickens, eaters of meats and connoisseurs of water melons.
The advertising pages of every magazine contain illuminating and fascinating methods illustrating just how much dollars and cents is the bait used to spur or to lure the ambiguous one to an acceptance of the method advertised. The most unsuccessful lives are to be found among the very rich. The number of solides among the rich is enormous, and the satisfaction the consciousness of a life completed, that we who have to struggle so hard for our dreams can buy pleasures but it cannot chase happiness. Money is a false standard of success. It is this false standard that creates bootleggers premium upon consciousness and inaugurates an almost universal contempt for law and order. The unprinted slag of American is "Get the money you get, but it get."
In show business, when a hotrode can buy a car, he has reached success by the cost of his car. Bill Hirgens, the popular comedian, was the theater talking to some friends, when one of our latest crop of comedians Bill looked at the boys then at his friend and drawned: guys been in the business 15 minutes and got a car. I've been in the business 15 years and can't and won't wonder what kind of cork-ups I use."
Success rather savors of completion. No life is complete until it reaffirms itself. You must be fit to reach the top as it is to stay there. Like the man at the top of the flag pole, it was not so difficult to reach the top, but would find it. Very uncomfortable trying to stay there. There's always room at the top, but don't make the mistake of thinking that money only always signifies that you has reached the coveted position.
Ermie Puggalay
Associated with Drake and Walker for more than 11 years, is a competent musical director and a clever bassist. He also abmed him to write and arrange the music for the Drake and Walker shows and also to stage and direct all Puxley is a tireless student and will go for in his chosen profession.
Dr. Hughs
Of Baltimore, Md., gets our vote
scientists of that city. After a diag-
nosis, one dose of the medicine he
then the treatment of five other doz
HERE'S a record that sure will "Gitcha"—if you like red hot jazz music. Louis and his boys nearly brought the house down at the big Chicago Coliseum show of OKeh Race Stars. In "I'm Gonna Gitcha" and on the other side "Don't Forget to Mess Around", they score two smashing hits. Hear them today. Both for 75c.
OKeh Race Records
GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
25 West 51st Street, New York City
George Tyler
Mellow Musings
WALLICK SHOWS
WEST'S SHOWS
On the T. O. B. A.
By W. R. ARNOLD
Nashville, Tenn.—According to a letter reaching the writer under date of July 30, having come from Louis Azorsky, who not so very long ago was handling the management relaits of Irvin C. Miller's "Runnin' Wild" company, but up to the opening of his office, he produced of "Connie's Ann Froler," finds the popular manager plotting the aforementioned show over a tour of New York. The writer has learned, the New York production, since its initial presentation, has met with nothing but the press and public from both
Referring to the show itself, "Connie's Inn Proles," although being diligent night club, buots an excellent cast, among which are such names as Emmett Anthony, Mantan Miboreland, and the army of names which undoubtedly will aid it in advancing to a far higher class of museums. Still other names, such as Sam Cross, Jim Jackson, Johnny Dancy, Jenne Jenne, and Billy Young and Baby Lee. This brings the cast up to a high pitch of excellence and perfection in the show's "Ten Sweetheart Dolle," one of the shapelessest of shapey choruses. Not one of whom wouldn't with envy. And as for wearing an array of dazzling costumes and knowles, "Ten Sweetheart Dolle" can turn the trick. And as one newspaper expressed itself, the show is international. A regular Rolle-duce, above.
The company consists of twenty-five or more people, and kind you hull and whistle, in addition to packing mirth, melody, music and merry mood by lyrics in infectious. A regular ocean of fun with a laugh on each wave. The week of Aug. 2 to 7 finds the team playing the more theater, Pittsburgh, Pa. one among the large chain of T. O. B. Jubilee halls. The show playing the Globe theater, Cleveland, Ohio, where, according to reports, the audience was concerned, proved to be the one one in every respect. And safe to say, those among the theater's audience tended its initial presentation, went on record as giving it their stamp of approval as far as mert was
Among the cities to be made by Manager Azorsky's show follow: St. Louis, Memphis, City, St. Louis, Memphis, Shreveport, La. New Orleans, Birmingham, La. New Orleans, Birmingham, with others among the T. O. B. A. theaters to follow. In addition to the T. O. B. A. theaters will also be played. From a theatrical standpoint, in the presentation of "Connie's Inn Fruits," the show will be in high favor wherever it is booked.
EARL DANGER SUES
The Howard theater of Washington recently sued the Ethel Waters promoters for $2,000 damages for failure to carry out its contract, now Earl Dancer has turned the foke by suing the Howard for $25,000 slamd $1,000 in lieu of their contract. Dancer states that the show is still going big and after a week's rest into Gisborne Standard, Philadelphia. The show is being built to do from two to two and a half hours. The theater and Hoenon worked out for the entire company and a satire of "Lulu and Hoenon" was Vaters as Miles Hiltzman as Goo, Hiltz and Scholer as the Frenchman.
Id No. 8343
"Gitcha"
sing and His Hot Five
that sure will "Gitcha"—
jazz music. Louis and
the house down at the
now of OKeh Race Stars.
"and on the other side
Around", they score two
term today. Both for 75c.
RACE RECORDS
MAGPH CORPORATION
Town, New York City
Keh Race Records
Scott's News Service
451 Sewickley, Indiana, Wis.
RECENT SENIOR
Delux Music Shoppe
2234 Market St., St. Louis, Mo.
Pastime Music Shop
2339 Market St., St. Louis, Mo.
McCarrille Drug Store
Centreville
A. Gressett Music House
Meridian
J. A. Abrams
Gutport
J. A. Abrams
Columbia Music Shop
451 Michigan Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
Brown Music Store
4614 Central Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
6912 S. Clair Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Cedar Music Shoppe
3907 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Sol Gerahumy
544 W. Sincerich, Indiana, Ohio
Rosenberg's Music Co.
1835 Canton St., Toledo, Ohio
2
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1920
NT
THEATRICAL NEWS
THEATRICAL NEWS
BY BILL JONES
New York,—Ed Peat, the comedian, will join the Georgia Minneapolis stage manager. He left for Chicago Monday. Address all mall for him at Mike Jackson, the clever entertainer, by popular demand has resumed. E. 125th St., New York, with his assistant, Eddie Gray, tenor. The patrons seem never to tire of this art form and vocal. He is among the best here and is also still broadcasting be heard on phonograph records.
.
Rube Chamberls, the young pitcher of the Lincoln Giants, is now a star. He played since Brown, and were Brown and Chamberls on the Lincoln now the other teams would not have a chance. He is a wonderful pitcher good for many years yet to come.
The Musical Spillers are an added attraction to the Uncle Tom's Cabal, Sam Williams' black and white show.
---
The Harmony Kings are at the Ardwick Empire, London, and are a jazz club and Brown are at the Delaney St. theater, New York. Rucker and Perrin are at the Loeh theater, Montreal, Canada, this week. Joyner and Foster are at the Keith theater, Newark, N. J. Harris and Holley are at the Harris theater, Newark, N. J. The "4-11-44" show is in rehearsal at Hurtz & Sonnenshäner in New York and is expected to be the big noise on the burlesque wheel this Billy Jones, the famous veritable nirrit, has a new ballad hit in "If You Can't Tell the World She is" Joyner says. Noeling at All, which he has been singing with great success.
IN OLD KAYSEE
By CHARLES O'NEAL
Kansas City, Mo.—To say the least, the theater-goering public was ing of the Annie Mae Cox "Georgia Red Hots," which played the Lincoln last week. Freddie Clarkson, who played the circus, is really the only one of the company whose work was worth consideration, and the show, 40 minutes, had a depreciating effect, as the usual time is one hour. There were six numbers by the chorus and the audience are minus a change of pace. Hence no light and shade. The voices are without strength or quality, and the show has no present strength. lacks finish and finesse, but with hard work, difference and patience they want to be troupers that bad.
The Elbon Theater
The "High Steppers," a picture dealing with the way newspapers and other organizations, accepting gifts for her diademed war victories and widows, grafted huge sums of money and other valuables during the World war, Mary Astor and Lloyd flushes hold the Reading roles. Another picture of merit was Douglas McLean in "That's My Baby."
ARIZONA DRANES
ARIZONA DRANES
OKeh Record No. 8352
"John Said He Saw a Number"
"My Soul Is a Witness for the Lord"
OKeh Record No. 8353
"It's All Right Now"
"Sweet Heaven Is My Home"
(Piano Solo)
ALL the Race loves the stirring spirituals of Arizona Dranes. Some mysterious power seems to compel her deep resonant tone. Her singing irresistibly thrills you. You will sense the inspired genius that has produced these four new numbers. You will marvel at the originality of her piano accompaniments. On sale today. See your OKeh Record dealer. Full-size 10-inch records, two sides, 78 cents each.
Okeh Race Records
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
* General Phonograph Corporation,
25 West 45th St.
New York City
MOROCCO BLUES
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1926
The
RYAN MINSTRELS
Danville, Ill.—The Fashion Plate ministrel on the greater Sheesley show on Canada and for special dates on Canada and for special dates on leave Canada, but it could not be helped, so here we are at our first fair in the good old States. We did not need a mess on our return to Windsor. Quite a tew of our bunch had a wonderful time in Detroit all of last week and we were a friend, Mrs. Willie Jackson, who owns her home in Hamtramck, and Mrs. Jackson is a weekly reader of the magazine. We always open to any of the profession, Mrs. Jackson and her sister gave our bunch a farewell midnight party just after trip 10 weeks ago. Phill Dorsay, our former reporter and agent for the W. G. W. has left the show to play in the play. We sure did hate to see him leave. But we all hope him good luck. Manager Ryan and the writer dropped in at week and had the pleasure of seeing Florence Dotson, one of our Race boys, put over his act. He has a red hot 15 minute act and sure does not put his act over in grand style.
The writer also visited the Hopkins theater in Detroit and reviewed Shufflin' Sam from Alabama and she better now than when she last saw it in Cincinnati early in the spring. At the close of our fair season with the Sheesley shows Manager Ryan and our our fair season with the Inner Circle through Florida, playing at some of the leading three houses. Albert Conley, who was nicknamed through Canaas as the Dancing Dot, is still holding his own. Conley is still holding her own. Evelyn Reddling is featured as a break down blues singer. Our gang is all glad to know that Coy Hernandez is able to play the lead role and we will hope he will soon be able to hit the road again in a short while. The bunch all send their best regard to all in and out of the profession. Greater Sheesley Shows, Dantville, NEXT week Decatur, IL.
LA RUE BATTLES
The following was sent in by our theatrical correspondent telling of an unfortunate affair which happened in the city of Chicago. La Rue seriously cut his wife. Both are members of the Gilson Chocolate Box rescue: Detroit, Mich.—Last Sunday night, wife members of the Gilson Chocolate Box were gathering at the Michigan Central depot to board a train for Chicago, John La Rue, the comedian in the show, severely cut his wife, Zareela La Rue, with a razor, infiltrating several wounds. Mrs. La Rue received several severe cuts across her eye, which may cause her to lose her sight. She is now con-
treated with a razor his escape. It in said domestic-
problems was the cause of the affair.
SHUFFLIN' SAM BIG
Gardener and Barton's Shufflin
Sam From Alabam are hitting every
dates everywhere. Week of the 2th
will find them in Youngstown, Ohio,
at the Princess theater. Next on the
route is Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Wash-
ington and Newark.
150 FILM ACTORS ASKED
Universal
Film corporation-casting office has
put in an order for 150 additional
types for screen tests, according to
the film industry. Manager of the Cinema Aux-
lary organization which is supplying
all of the race talent for "Uncle
Toby." Two months ago this organization
supplied some 200 motion picture
actors to Universal for tests. These
actors ever played in years.
BROWNIE CAMPBELL
Brownie Campbell just closed a pleasant week at the Royal theater, where she will receive life mork of the 8th at the Mid City theater, Washington, D.C.
WANTED
For E. D. E. Lee's Creele Belles
team, aquatice and chorus girls; also
nancy acts. State girls in first inter. Join on
D. L. D. Durk, N. C. W. of August 14.
MORC
BLUES
played by
JOE JORDAN
and his Ten
Sharps and Flats
Here's a new brand of brand new dance notes that sort of get in at the sole, creep up the spine, and the first thing you know you're dancin' all over.
If you ain't danced to
Joe Jordan's Ten Sharps
and Flats, you ain't
danced to nuthin'—yet.
14144-D 10 in. 75c
Morocco Blues
(Talking by
Clarence Williams)
Sansegalese Stomp
Fox Trats
Columbia Phonograph Co.
1819 Broadway, New York
THE NICE MAN
By SALEM TUTT WHITNEY
His smile was a beautiful smile
For the sun-light and
And never a friend that his g
And never a foe that its beam
Twas scented with perfume
And everyone says: "A
He worked at his dreams, but
The ache in his heart when t
He never complained if his pl
And worked harder still when
That rightly was his, he just
And all the folks said:
He gave of his best, but he t
That the world absorbs much
He yearned for the fun that
And maternal love
When Nature foreclosed, he j
Then everyone said: "A
The brave things he wrote an
Refused to stay buried, they
Refreshed his memory and bl
In letters of gold on the ramp
Poor heart-broken dreamer, f
Now everyone says: "A
His smile was a beautiful thing to behold,
Pure essence of sun-light and unaltered gold;
And never a friend that its glow did not warm,
And never a foe that its breath did come true.
Twus scented with perfume and flavored with spice,
And everyone said: "Ain't he nice!"
He worked at his dreams, but the world never knew
The ache in his heart, but he would come true.
He implained if his plums tumbled down,
And worked harder still when some one lifted the crown
That rightly was his; he just smiled at the dice,
And all the folks said: "Ain't he nice!"
He gave of his best, but he then lived to learn
That the world absorbs much with but little return,
He yearned for the fame that he never could reach,
And mourned for the lesson his love failed to teach.
When Nature foreclosed, he just smiled at the price,
Then everyone said: "He was nice!"
The brave things he wrote and the kind things he had said
Refreshed to stay buried, they rose from the dead,
Refreshed his memory and blazoned his name
In letters of gold on the ramparts of the city,
Poor late brother of the king; "He no late,
Now everyone says: "He was great"
A NOTE OR TWO
Neal Parker wants the world to know that the malleman will find him at 746 Kenyon Ave., Clinton, O. Edward Gordon will take his at the Harbor Inn, Henderson Harbor, N. Y.
Clarence Rogers, formerly with the Sparks Rivus, circus, one of the most famous informes us that he will take his mall at 3066 Giles Ave., Chicago, Ill.
Clentonia Babb is getting here at 253 McCalluch St. Rutledge, Mo. Eric Walt will take his eye to 359 Indian Ave. Toledo, Ohio.
Lawrence Bruce tells us to shoot his to 1710 South St. Philadelphia, Pa.
Mary Robertson tells the world that all mall will reach her at 3023 N. Central Ave. Dallas, Tex. Leona Maek and Leola David, write. Manatee will his forwarded to 1743 Lydia Ave, Kansas City, Mo.
Bee Freeman, formerly with Brown Skin Model and Handmade Needs, will need rest in the motor city, Detroit. She will take it at 550 E. Adams St. Russell and Ginna are playing in
Albert Jones would like to hear from Ena Taylor. Shoor it to $80 Fordham St., Bronx, N. Y.
Ellluor Playmates, is visiting in Detroit, Mich. It is rumored that she and Jay Golina of the team of Golina and Russell, are to be wedded. The Scribe wishes them get married in Huntington's Minstrels will reach them Aug. 9 at Greenwood, Miss.
The Woodens, one of the fastest bicycle acts in the game, are stopping their circuit, Unit Show 484. They are splitting the present week between Omaha, Neb. and Cheyenne, Wyo.
Dekey Scott is back with the Dekey Walker Co. after an absence of eight years. She would like to hear from her friends in and out. Royal theater, Baltimore, Md. week of the 5th. Dekey says the mallman will take her to Camden, N. J., in care of the Tip Top shows.
Slim Butter has closed with the Orange Blossom minstrels. Mall will reach him at 1 Brown St., Brownns-
The S. W. Brunndae show is playing Peoria, IL., the week of the 3d. Mall for the "51" theater, Atlanta, Ga. Miss Straline is now with Hotkamp's minstrels and the mail man will find the show this week at New York City. Chelia Wilson radio's that she is well and happy and is getting hers at 104 W. 132d St., New York, Idle Carrier and Carlier and wife, Lilly, are with the World's minstrels. Mall will get them at Beaver Falls, Pa., J. E. Jones and Dinah Scott, write, from Burster. Lee住些人, Write to P. o. box 1159, Greenbush, N. C. Chelle will need will take at Liberty Bldg., Greenville, S. C. will knock em dead with his single on the Toby time. He recently closed with the Alabama minstrels. Mail
OCCO S
try to behold,
unuseless gold;
now did not warm,
did not charm,
and flavored with spice,
'n't he nice!"
at the world never knew
they failed to come true.
nuns tumbled down,
some one filched the crown
smiled at the dice.
"Ain't he nice!"
en lived to learn
with but little return.
his wife could teach,
his love failed to teach.
he smiled at the price.
he was nice."
and the kind things he had said
rose from the dead,
azoned his name
arts of Fame.
or him 'tis too late,
he was great"
will get Davy this week at the Globe theater, Cleveland, Ohio.
Julia Reese will take hers at 412 N. Rosemary St., W. Palm Beach, Fla.
Leslie Roussel radio that she will hear at 425 Patterson Ave., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Robert Underwood is working the sun time. Mall will reach him at 1912 Brush St., Detroit, Mich.
Fred Jenkins is getting his at Wilkesboro, Pa., in care of the M. J. Riley show.
Call for members of the Johnnie Berger Band will reach them if forwarded to Rex theater, Charlotte, N. C.
Clemo's Dark Americans will get theirs the week of the 9th at Brookport, Ill.
Harris Hits and Bits are doing the work at Washington, D. C., week of the 9th.
Mail turm members of the Alabama minstrels will reach them this week at Andardark, Okla.
Walter Motely is with the Dixie minstrels. Mall will reach him at Baltimore. Beulah Glins will take hers at 139 Clinton St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Williams and Hughes Hottest Toteey Co. have closed a successful reaason for the show, needing rest and would like to hear from the gang in and out. Mall will reach him at 303 W. 131st St. N. Y. Lionel (Shuffy) Moore is now with the needles and would like to be coed by Co. They are playing Albany, N. Y. week of the 5th. Lionel is doing the comedy in the show. Herman and Eva Brown will play the junior theater, Columbus, Ohio, week of the 5th. Charles S. Chavers is with the Gold Medal shows. Mall will hook him in care of the W. G. W. Hattie Hunkins is getting here to 619 E. Ole St. Savannah, Ga.
John W. Cooper, the ventilator, and his dummy are busy in the East playing first-class vaudeville at 119 Wickford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Shake Yo Feet Co. closed the season Aug. 1 in Jacksonville, Fla. The gang will take a month's rest, then start rehearsals for their fall opening. Mall for members of the Paradise Five will get them at 755 N. Second Ave., Miami, Fla. Herbert Cowen is the manager of the group, consisting of G. G. Gouwes, G. Jones, Harry G. Walker and Sylvester Lewis. John, Gertrude and his Dizie Flyers Co. are flying high in the East with the group. They reach them this week at the Grand剧院, West Palm Beach, Fla. Roscoe Monnella will not hit the road with his Radio Girls next season. He will join Chance Muselz in the studio and hold down the stage mummer J. Mail. Will catch him at 1717 Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md.
LEONA MACK WRITES
Washington, D. C.-Friend Dave:
Just a line or two to let you know how the Harris Hits and hits comes in the capital city and we are living there and with the show, hot and peppy. We have a chorus or six red steppeers.
It is featuring Alletta Harris, the dainty little snbret, and Leona Mack, the bronze wonder.
The line-up is as follows: Alletta Harris, James McBethers, straight; Kila Jalin, Charleston dancer; Jill Cain, Chicago dancer; I must mention those two funny comedians, William (Sparrow) Harris and Italph (Dusty) Brown, Chorus; Leona Mack, Jalin Johnson, Margaret Drysdale, Thelma Theophelia, Band: Sylvester Irlsson, a sensational trombone and correct player Walter Allner, saxophone and drum with beer wishes to all in and out of the profession. Mall will reach us at 1233 Seventh St. N. W., Washington D. C. Hello everybody.
T.O.B.A.
(Theater Owners' Booking Association)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES AND
THEATER MANAGERS
Communicate with T. O. B. A., Suite
1222-1215 Volunteer Life Edge, Chast-
lanogus, Tech., Same G. R. Ravlin, Mgr.
Washington, Same G. R. Ravlin, Mgr.
Washington, D.C., Martin Klein, Owen Bleg,
3821 State St., Chicago, IL.
PHONOGRAPH
DO YOU
SAVE I
Don't Delay—Write
THE BARGAIN SU
168 North State Street
VIE and STA
FROLIC THEATER
By BILLY CHAMBERS
Birmingham, Ala.-Five acts of
vaudeville-prevalent for the week
of Monday, Aug. 2. A fair crowd
patronized this house during the week
Hoaler and Peoples
A man and - woman opened in "two" with a song and made them like it. The man, with his talk and dance, golt over just fair. The lady, was under cork, came on and kept throughout and pulled an encore with "A Brown Skin Gal," etc. Some more talk and the act closed with "What a Time," which was funny. To our mind the man is not needed down the hones during their sixteen minutes on the stage.
Dukes and Dukes
Male and female, with the woman under cork and the man at the piano, opened on full stage a telephone act called "Crossed Wires" and hit with a hammer "Blues." by the lady, hit the auditors and knocked them a "huster" and pulled an encore. The man, who is an ivory picker, rendered one of his own songs, accompanying Why All the Girls Are Crazy About Me," etc., and with a planologue this gentleman received heavy applause. Some more talk and the act closed. Fifteen pleasing minutes.
Joseph Jones
A man who is well known to the profession stopped in and split his jump to the metropolis, and is full of pride. "This city, "Jonesy," as he is known, took his audience by surprise when he opened with a "straight" mummy suit, and then with a "suit" suit. Then after giving the audience a chance to peep in on the actor and watch him do a "makeup," he changed to his famous "suit" on the stage rendered for a closing, "I'm a Hustling Jew," etc. This gentleman stayed on the stage for twelve full hours and left an applauding audience.
Williams Sisters
May and Josephine Williams, two clever girls, opened in "two" with "Dishin' and hit, and after some talk Josephine sang "I Love My Baby to Me" and "I Love You to Me" and a man's attire and ruddered "What Can I say," etc. Some more talk followed and the act closed with "How Come You Do Me Like You Do," and the audience put them back for a second and four minutes.
Lee and Wright
Another man and woman, who are favorites here, came on and received ovations from the audience. Some street comedy, with Russell in the lead, was performed. The man rendered "Some Time" and the woman a good song, and both divided the honors for the evening, and with a double song the act closed the vaudeville bill after it finished. "Stop, Look and Listen" was the feature picture that was a riot. It was a comedy.
HUNTINGTON'S MINSTRELS
The well known Huntington minisatchest played Durant, Munt, on Aug. 12, 2014. The show engaged in a ball game. During the game Frank Mallory, the drummer, slipped and severely hit the ball, and able to perform his drum feats with the show.
The same night Frank (Dusty Trotter) took a break from some unknown source which inflated a slight wound. Fiecta Gibbs, a member of the show, lost her mother, and she was hospitalized July 21. Miss Gibbs left the show immediately upon hearing the sad news. The company sent a large form piece or the ball to Huntington to play Greenwood, Miss. so radios Mildred Scott.
RACE ACTOR WITH MIX
Glenwood Springs, Colo.-Tom Miz
his famous horse and a bunch of
cowboys are shooting the atmosphere
scenes for the "Great K. & A. Fein
Film" a big Fox special for fall
release. For the comedy thrills the well
known Fox comedian, Curtis Mc
Henry, the director of Fox as "snowball," is here
having the time of his life, getting
all shot up and everything.
MAIL RADIO
Alicia, Buck
Adams, T. W.
Barris, Billie
Allison, John
Brown, Amy
Brown, Anna
Bryan, Anne
Battle, E. W.
Bradley, Fa
Blakemore, Flord
Bradley, Jack
Baldwin, Allie
Baldwin, Will
Carbell, Hunt
Carbell, Hunt
Cunningham, Threes
Cunningham, Threes
Carter, Paul
Carter, Paul
Christian, Greg
Christian, Greg
Jenkins, J. T.
Johnson, Helen
Jardon, Dylaine
Kendrick, Darrell
Kendrick, Darrell
Joseph, Jesse M.
Joseph, Jesse M.
Namble, Namble
Long, Carbella
Long, Carbella
Lay, Bertha
Lay, Bertha
Meana, John
Meana, John
Mark, Mary
Mark, Mary
Mitchell, A. Vallia
Mitchell, A. Vallia
Makeney, El
Makeney, El
Moon, Vilian
Moon, Vilian
Matthews, W. D.
Matthews, W. D.
Moon, Moon
Moon, Moon
Moon, Moon
Janece, Janece
Nathaniel, Nathaniel
Junkey, John
KOPPIN THEATER
By H. D. GARNETT
Detroit, Mich.—The first time in the annals of this house has a musical comedy company by special request, been called back to play a notice. It has been just seven weeks since this place, "Shufflin' Sam From Alhamh," played this house before a real box office attraction, with plenty of music and company with plenty of music and numbers, carrying a fast and pepper chorus, and a real up-to-date jazz band of seven pieces. During the show is Zudora De Gaustad, the show is Robert B. Robertin, Robert Houndtree, Harry Navy and Ioyen Krains, comics: John Churchill, Carousel of the Race; John Woods, J. Johnson, Elmer Moore, Peewe Campbell and 12 Darrell, dancing boys. The show is Emma D. Berry, Pauline Crowley, Laurn O'Brien, Georgette Walker, Florence King and Barbarn Moore. Also a seven-piece jazz band, uninterrupted.
Mr. Barton, the owner of the show, has gathered a bunch of real classy and talented performers together, all working hard to put the show over, and to bring the company singing "Hello, Everybody," with a Charleston finish, a good opener, Mr. Churchill, with his faintest tenor voice, singls himself right into the hearts of the entire crowd. "Shuffin' the Sams'" quartet, namely, Churchill, Nay, Moore and Johnson, puts over several good numbers. Miss Roundtree, assisted by girls puts over "Blindin' and gains many friends." Churchill, well known, dances de luxe, work well as a team. Cabaret, but was a serenade.
"Goin' Home," by Miss De Gaston, comes the biggest hit of the show, Johnny Woods and Little Henry in an array of high jinks that then a N.Y.C. band called Bay, Nay, Jenkins and Moore, is a laughable one. Also "Race Track Hit," by the same principals, are the songs of Care of by Messes, Nay and Jenkins. The singing is good, costumes up to snuff; the jazz band is better than the band of the bunch. The show closes with the entire company...singing "Georgia Brown," a good number, with the band of the bunch. The show selves as well pleased with one hour and ten minutes of fun and amusement. The show is a remarkable one, far exceeding many others that have played this house.
SILAS GREEN SHOW
BX JOHNSON BOOKS
Montgomery, W. V., The Silas Green show is sailing smoothly through the coal fields of West Virginia, playing to fair business despite the fact that dum show has gone long without being sweetened by the Harmon of the little ones, Silas Green from New Orleans.
Charlie Collier, the owner, is a shannon of rare ability, keen judgment and modern ideas. Five years ago Mr. Collier took the Silas Green show from the dum pile of hashes and now has placed it on a pinnacle of the river's rapids to owners. His policy: Give the people a run for their money and not take the people's money and run. A policy, if adopted by all show owners, would be to change titles every season.
I drove into Thurmont to arrange a date for the 27th ult. and my consternation was saw minstrels in the Sugar Foot Greene" "Shufflin' Sam from Alabama" "South Before War" and A. G. Allen's minstrels all for that night. Hello, I said, what's Shufflin' Sam doing in this little hung. Congratulating myself for being in time to see the fun I strolled down the railroad yards to look the different cars over and see I1 knew my own name was Sugar Foot Green's and Jim Green who is playing the title role. After shaking hands I said I see you have opposition tonight. He asked who was I1 in this hung. I said and after telling him of the different shows billed there for that night he laughed and so did I when he said they were all one and the same. There is something in a name after this name, the business is adding another name.
The Sugar Foot Green from New Orleans is a blend of the foot of New Orleans shows. Some towns the agent tells the people its the foot of the green show changed names. So you see a rose by any other name will smell just as sweet but from reputation doeorkinking. Sugar Foot needs doeorkinking.
DELEGATES FROM DIXIE
What a peculiar name for a show,
"Delemetes from Dixie," but guess
what the name is. Lonnie newspapers give the show fine
praise for their stage endeavors.
The bunch is headed by Arthur Bokin
and Willie B. Young. Young is a jazz band
of seven pieces, the Memphis quartet,
Thelma Lavizzo, a great blues-
singer, Richard Courtright, a jazz
singer, Harry Serrings, the child
wonder, is a feature with the
show. Mail will reach them at the
following stands: Heather Jeffersonville, Ill. Aug. 13
and 14; Mexico, Mo. Aug. 16, 12
and 14.
YOUNG STAGE MANAGER
Three years ago William "Dick" Taylor was a property man at the University, there, learning the stage system under Jimmy Barrett. He had occasion to go to Cleveland, Ohio, with a show that the manager of this well-known theater. Dick was a boy who would always listen to advice. The writer said he was a man who could talk to him about progressiveness. Dick has made the grade.
LONNIE FISHER'S CO.
Louis Fisher and his tab show closed a successful week at the Rex theater, Charlotte, N. C., week of the 2d. They are in Washington, D. C., this week. Aside from the show, the show carries a hot jazz band, Geo. Tifford wants to hear from Thomas Dorsey and S. H. Dudley, Jr.
BILLIKEN AND LAURA
Billiken Grimes and Laura Bailey will open with their new act at the Mid City theater, Washington, D.C., Aug. 9, so rallies Billiken himself to the Scribe. He says the capital is run over with acts, all hoping for a banner season.
WILLIE ELDRIDGE'S CO.
This well-known musical comedy company is at the MID theater, Atlanta. Ga., going fine, as usual. Memphis Lewis is doing the show to head from Tank and King and Walter Flichon. Shoot it to King.
Chicago Theatrical
Sammie Lewis and his Bomille revue went over in great fashion Monday, Aug. 9, at the Grand theater, Chicago. Chicago's jazz band hit big with the packed house.
Connie's Iffrokins come to Chicago week at the Ruth. They are looked at the Grand.
The Hollywood Four, an up-to-date metropolitan, Chicago, last week. Marime Moon, contrata solotat, is the stage attraction this week.
The hot summer weather has caused a slump in the theaters all over Chicago, many of them running at a loss.
Brown and McGraw are breaking them down with Paul Anb this week. They will leave for the Ethel Chicago. They will leave for the Keith next month to take up a Keith route.
Small and Mays left this week to open on their Orpheum route.
Harry Jenkins, former showman and stage manager is connected with Winga Real Estate company of Chicago.
Dreamland cafe, Chicago, is putting on a colossal bathing beauty contest. It started Monday, Aug. 9, and will be held at the beautiful Pine Beach. Pretty girls are nightly on display in bathing costumes. The elite of the Windy City is eagerly supporting the event. He is giving a free trip to Atlantic City and will be entered in the national finals.
Percy Venable, the energetic little producer, has added the Town Club and the Garden of Allah to his books. He is producing floor show revues at the same position as has held the same position at the Sunset cafe for the past two years.
Norman Thomas producer and manager of the Plantation revue, Chicago, will put on his new show Aug. 17. Dave Peyton is writing special music and Johnson and King are making the wardrobe.
George Dewey Washington, the popular California bartone, is taking nightly between the cafe and large picture houses.
Chilton and Thomas were the hit of the bill last week at the big Harding theater, Chicago.
Chick Johnson, the dancer, will do his single on the big time. He is now in Chicago preparing his next season, which will be a novelty in Dixie atmosphere.
The Sunset Four is in town. I met at the quartet, on South parkway last Sunday, just emerging from the doctor's office, where he had just had his tonsils cleaned. After a few weeks' rest, he began to head east to pick up a Kelth route.
CHARLIE RUE RADIOS
Charlie Rue, interlocutor and bass drummer on the F. S. Wolentt Hahnen, will be playing still going big in the state of Arkansas. He sends regards to the entire profession. Malt will reach him at Port Glison, Miae.
BESSEMER
1000 mi
DIXIE HIGHWAY
emer B
by Ma Rainey
woke up this morning, looking for my
own home shoes, Cause Cotille's going
home, singing these Bessemer Blues."
Alabama—as fast as her down-
take her. Up North may be all
down Bessemer way is the place
you hear "Ma" Rainey sing this
swe, you'll know just why. It's a fea-
r dealer's, or send us the coupon.
Bessemer Bound Blues and
by "Ma" Rainey and Her Ge-
bies and Got the
on Jefferson.
Blues and Corrina
on Jefferson.
and Adam's Apr
and His Ragmuffins
xie Smith.
20341-Mobile
Senter and
Delux Orga
Beautif
12314—Where
Eild Ri
12364—Broken Hearted Blues and Jealousy Blues, "Ma" Rainey with Her Georgia Band.
12375—Up the Way Bound Blues and Four-Eleven Forty-four, by "Papa Charlie" Jackson.
12366—The Judge Cliff Davis Blues and Mummy Nummy Blues, "Papa Charlie" Jackson.
12353—Do Lawd Do and Night and Day Blues, Ida Cox, Acc. by Lovie Austin's Serenaders.
Paramount
The Popular Race Record
"NOW"
By TIM E. OWSLEY
Indianapolis, Ind.-Vacation time
shows is nearing an end, in some
cases.
for artists who who shows is nearing a career many have been notified to report for duty already. Some may make the mistake the efficiency of their offering to entertain the public will lower the standard of their past reputation which comes in life, because every man has the right to his own money.
A few members have been notified to report for duty already. Some interactions will make the efficiency of their offering to entertain the public. Wife officers will lower the standard of their past reputation of which comes in life, because every man has the right to his duty as the right to spend his own money.
"Major Daniela"
now is all man's life can hold. Somewhere beyond the vail of death, you can find God lent your voice with you to man 'till your earthly work was done.
123217 - Ezebeli Saw Dew Wheel and Cry-
lumber to the Lord, Norfolk
Jubilee Quartette.
Send No Money!
News
PART 1-PAGE 7
ACROSS THE POND
BY IVAN H. BROWNING
London, England.-Greatale and Drayton have returned to Germany where they have their revue. They expect to return to London in the early Spring and will reissue and sell Woodin and his band.
Jones and Jones are winning their way with the populace over here. They hit last week at the Victoria Palace. They have returned to Paris.
Rolph Robinson (Bolanges) is the biggest thing on the continent. He is the big noise everywhere. He stopped the show every performance and Cafe "De Paris" he was a riot. Bill has many offers to remain over here, but his American bookings will not permit it right away. He will arrive over Bill's life, a very charming young lady, who is enjoying the trip with her husband. They will pay a visit to Paris before returning to London. He will arrive in London the same day Mr. and Mrs. Ivan H. Brownling's little daughter was born. They were among the first to see the little queen of the Harmony
Jack and Jill, two Race boys from America, are going big over here. They are with a white revue and an art gallery. The Versatile Three, just back from their successful American trip, were given a great welcome by their many friends on their return. Mr. Jill and her husband, the beautiful "Villa Haaston." The boys speak in glowing terms of America and of the wonderful way in which they were treated by their friends. Victoria Palace last week with the Stoll route to follow. Florence Mills still holds the honors in Paris and Josephine Buker held the honors in New York. The Four Harmony Kings are still holding their own as a feature attraction on vaudeville and cinema stages. They are at the London Royal Opera House, and the land for two weeks, returning to London to play several weeks in the big picture houses. Ivan H. Browning has named his little daughter Browning and her husband, Haroldine Browning.
[Editor's Note—To Mr. and Mrs. Browning, in behalf of the publisher, Mr. and Mrs. Chicago Defender, we congratulate you both on the new arrival in the family and wish you oceans of map-pieces.—Dave Peyton, Dramatic Editor.]
SMALL AND WAYS
Small and Mays have landed the Orpheum circuit and will open on the route to the festival Sunday, Aug. 15 at Wimplim, Manitoba. The boys have played many weeks for the Band K circuit. Western Vaudelle and Junior Orpheum, and the boys have played the Scribe congratulates them and wishes them a mountain of success.
WANTED
For Juice and Rockwell's Famous Georgia Minstrels - Land and orchestra leader, hard-working singer, pianist, Arthur Clay, white, show queen Sept. 1st, Myrtle Opera House, Janetville, manager start Sept. 1st, Wm. Campbell, manager, box 47, Erwinville, Wm. until Sept. 1st, Glad to hear that, all people loading contracts and that are going with the show, report Minstrels - Box 47, Erwinville, CAMP, Box 47, Erwinville.
Sound
Blues"
"No" Rainey
Future Paramount record
and Titanic,
Georgia Band.
Blues, Clarinet Solo by Boyd
St. Louis Blues, Chicago
theatre.
Ful Spirituals
Shall I Be and I'm Gonna
light on Dat Shore, Norfolk
harritte.
of the records you want
below. Pay postman 15
cards plus small C.O.D.
records. We pay
events of two or
New York
Recording
Laboratories
Park Washington, N.Y.
Send metherecords
checked 1 below.
Sending records
( ) 12374 ( ) 12384 ( ) 20241
( ) 12354 ( ) 12375 ( ) 12234
( ) 12387 ( ) 12366 ( ) 12217
( ) 12378 ( ) 12353 ( ) 12073
Name
Address
City
State
ADDITIONAL STAGE NEWS
Put You in Good A
"You Are Invited to Partake of The Chicago Defender Splendid Values"
EVERY advertisement you read in The Chicago Defender extends a hearty greeting to you to partake of its splendid values. For all your needs, for all the family, you'll find just the merchandise or service you desire at prices that shout from the treetops of better values. Get the "read' and then shop" habit-you'll get more for your money.
THE
Chicago Defender
WORLD'S GREATEST PAPER WEEKLY
PART 1-PAGE 8
"JAZZ-LIPS" RICHARDSON
"It all started with childhood minutes," said "Jazz Lips" Richardson, when discussing his stage career. "I was a little girl, and that whose swift feet are one of the stellar features of Ed E. Daly's" black and white show, "Harri" to the show, which was assigned to the little Richardson fellow. Then started days of attentious training under teachers not so diligent as the minstrel audiences, and rigid diets faithfully adhered to. Since then, he says, "life has been one series after another of swift stepping." His impassioned poems were accompanied by their breathtaking, the music racing and his feet tripping in rapid cadence.
MUSE IN BALTIMORE
Chrence Music, the actor-producer, is in Inhillmore, Md. He is producing a show floor revue in the Royal Palm Theatre, a night life place in Baltimore. At the same time the little producer is getting together his company to tour the T. O. H. A. next season in Baltimore, well known star performers: Roscoe Simmons, Dolly Allen, Roscoe Montella, Tauline Montella, Marle Gonzales, Sweetie Winston, the Chicago theater and a chorus of pretty dancers.
PLANTATION REVUE
Leonard Harper's Plantation retires after Newark, N. J. Clinton (Dusty Fletcher is doing the principal comedy band with the revue doing his comedy clairvine speciality. The revue recently closed in New York. They will go into the Plantation room next season, 50th St. at Broadway, New
"DO THAT THING"
"Do That Thing" is the title of a musical comedy show that will go into rehearsal next week in Philadelphia. Mrs. Marcus Garvey is the director. Paul of New Orleans will look after the production. Arangements have already been made for a Broadway booking of two weeks after which the show will go to South Central America, Cuba, and then back to the States.
MANAGER RETURNS
Martin Klein, manager of the Grand Prince's location and reports a very pleasant trip, Mr. Klein says that he the Grand Prince's greatest. All of the attractions booked so far are new ones and up to the minute in production.
JOHNNY HUDGINS
The famous little comedian is still
himself. He wrote a letter to the Scribe
he wrote a letter to the Scribe
giving all is well with the gang. The
gang didn't know when they will get away
JOE FRAZIER UNIT
Martha Wilson broadcaster that the Joe Frazier unit is going along nicely. She wants to hear from Chelia Wilson and Winchin. Shoot her mail to 2700 Warwick Ave, Newport News, Va.
CLIPTON AND DRAKE
The team of Clinton and Drake is going great this week at the Royal theater, Baltimore, Md. They radio records to the bunch.
Frank Hutchinson and his orchestra will take their mail at 911 Sixth St. San Bernardino, Cal Dorothy Ingram is the pianist in the orchess
THE MUSICAL BUNCH
By DAVE PEYTON
Jess Ladie's quartet is booked out of this office. Last week they were a slot on the bill at the Pythian theater, where Michelle Smith, Ruth Baltimore, Irene Griffin and Carrie King. Washington's Famous Kentucky quartet is booked for 35 weeks over the Keith Thurston. Frank Terry's Chicago Nightingale orchestra is under the management of Washington. The Campus De Knight orchestra, now engaged in Washington's management. This bunch of musicians are all students of Howard university. Washington's Ensemble from South Carolina is booked for 40 dates during August and September. This man is doing something. I well remember his start. Hard work, mental commitment, all effortfulness, rewarded Howard Washington for his endeavors.
The first planos were made in 1710 and 1729. Cristofori and Schroter were the inventors of the first planos, which to all intents and purposes were designed to form and construction. At the end of the same century the Silbermanns of Freiberg and Stirasburg and Stein of Augsburg built excellent examples of it. At the beginning of the 19th century Broadwood of London, Erard at Paris and Strelcher of Venice made improvements which permitted a more musical and poetic tone qualification to a high state of perfection.
Sebastian Bach was the first real pianist. He used straight fingers and played at the very edge of the keyboard. The piano was short and considered useless. Bach made a careful study of the piano and gradually improved the style of the考级 instrument and finger style of playing, making use constantly of the thumbs. After Bach's information was out, the outfitting of furthering the perfection of the piano. Today American leads in the production of the finest pianos in the world. Bach also was the first pianist and the first man he had mastered the piano along andante styles of playing; the passages were all slow and drawn. Harrington painted a thread of melody. Liest composed his own compositions; they were finger gymnastics. He mastered the on already popular piano by adding the black keys, which made rapid technique possible. All over the world today the works of Bach are musician who also take his work very seriously. A work of art is his "Second Klangspiele." A Letter
Greensboro, N. C.
H. Dane Porter.
Dear Sir—Ferdon my introduction on your valuable time, but I have just received a copy of the Dordrecht, and in it I will present first every week. I want to congratulate you on mentioning the importance of being a versatile musician, which article appeared in last week's issue of *The New Yorker*. Your welcome advice. It would do some of the so-called jazz kings a whole lot of good. Some of them do not know, just how far they are called upon to play real music they would be lost at sea. Yours professionally, GEORGE CHRISTIAN, Leader Ed Lee Crowe Delles.
Notes
Robert Miller, the young cornetist, who was confined all winter in St
(Continued from page 7)
(Continued from Pane 6)
The First Piano
A Letter
Notes
Luke's hospital, Chicago, is up and about. Robert has thrown away his old violin, and he is now well well. He will soon be playing bass, so fast is his recovery.
Captain Preyce formerly bandmaster at Tuskegee Institute, is now playing with Elgar's orchestra at Harmon's Dreamland, Chicago.
Robert Waugh, the earning young violinist, was a caller on the writer this week. Bobby, as the Chicago musicians call him, has and the beat of his own accord been one of the shining lights in the violin realm.
King Joe Oliver and his Plantation orchestra are still the big noise at the Plantation, Chicago. The recent changes in his band, which includes the musicians don't seem to stay in tune. This should be remedied, as the organization and made an enviable reputation for being a little discrepancies are looked after.
Summy Stewart's orchestra is quite popular with the movie fans. They are good singers. Dave Smallwood, the singing drummer, Earl Morg, the good-looking sheik musician, Doug Streaks and Liline Tindall spank the ivories in the pit. A novelty, to be sure.
Hugh C. Swift's orchestra is the talk of the far South side. It is playing at the Beverly gardens, just outside of Chicago. In the combination of their business, the old master, Hugh Swift, knows what to do with an orchestra, and it will be the pleasure of the writer to pay them a visit in the near future.
Little Raymond Whistle, the concertist, is with Jimmy Add, and his band is the talk of New York, and it is rumored that they have signed a contract for another year.
Jazz bands and their leaders should hear Swainz and his band, now playing at the Grand theater, Chicago, with Sammie Lewis and Bamville with new features in jazz music.
Tate's Vendome orchestra is the pride of Chengio. If you don't believe it, just watch the house emmy finish it. The picture is secondary at the Vendome. The people go there to hear Tate and his wonderful orchestra.
Sept. 6 is the date of the opening of Dave Pires' orchestra at the Grand Chicago theater. The performers will come to the organization picked from the cream of the profession. Unusual novels will be the aim of the orchestra.
A runner is affair that the orchestra will be dispensed with at the 20th Century theater, 41st St. and Pratt Street. The orchestra will supply the music. Will the public be satisfied with this change of affair?
Orchestras have done much to increase business in the theater. They have brought new life to the Macon Opera, the Indiana and others. Tate and his orchestra made the Venture. The Grand theater was built by an orator named Reeves, the famous three-piece orchestral of long ago. People would come to the little Grand 12 years ago from far and near, just to hear Wilt Chamberlain put over peppy mutes. Those were the days of real Jazz. "Sweat" could cry, moan and sing on that charcter, a tremendous war the business that had been built.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
A REAL I
When the twin 5 Packard town of Chicago, undertaker, turned over no Aug. 2, it contained Mrs. Chas. Jacke Washington, 4022 Vincennes Ave. Kenneth, age 3, and Curtis, age 6, and a car driven by a woman and on the jammed on the brakes, causing the big three knees on the wet pavement and Mr. Jackson's car out and the passer Chicago. The car was only slightly
"DARKEST AFRICA"
AMERICA'S I
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When the twin 2 Packard car belonged to Charles Jackson, the Chicago undertaker, turned over near Pine Beach, Mich., on Monday, Aug. 14, contended that Chas. Jackson, the Washington, Kenneth, age 3, and Curtis, age 6, and Chauffeur Miller. To avoid hitting a car driven by a woman and on the wrong side of the road the chauffeur jammed on the brakes, causing the big machine to turn completely around. The driver was taken to the hospital and Mr. Jackson's car out and the passengers re-entered and were driven to Chicago. The car was only slightly scratched on the left front fender.
"DARKEST AFRICA" IN NEED OF AMERICA'S HELP, SAYS BISHOP
Africa, dark Africa, the rich country of gold and diamonds; widest Africa with its estimated population of 100,000; tallest civilization; Africa with its vast areas where heathenism in its most degrading degree, warfare and superstition was particularly portrayed Thursday evening in the library in West Africa, at a microbibliary mass meeting held at Quinn Chapel A. M. E. church, in apparent appeal for easy light into darkness, as it was, and was one of many which are now for religious launch by Dr. E. H. Collins of New York, general missionary to South Africa, and the minister to Liberia, West Africa. Bishop John A. G. Goege, missionary in South Africa, and the minister to Liberia, West Africa. Defender, presided at the Thursday evening meeting. Mr. Abbott told us to see his own people come together to do something for themselves. He recalled opportunity open to them in America and told them that the African government Negro in Africa because he knows too much and would teach the natives how to be the white man.
Mr. Abbott obliquely pleaded for the officers and liberal绞警 to the cry from the dark continent and for more sympathetic Brooks. Hibbing stress and other brave masonaries who are their lively neighbors of the courthouses. He then introduced Hibson Brooks. The Hibson brought tears to the eyes of the officers of African life and customs as lived by the Hibsonian native trapping in the miles long and Looe miles wide. No froe never wore, no froe never wore, wild birds and reptiles. No houses, only improvised huts with the ground for a floor. Nothing to OHIO PROFESSOR INVENTS DEVICE TO END STATIC
Although Prof. Dana J. Demorest of Columbus, Ohio, is not a radio fan, he has invented a static eliminator which. If it proves to be practical, may be halled as the greatest
Professor Demorest merely smiled when he was asked about recent disruption in working with the窥镜 him. He mistakenly is the designer of the invention, but details for the time have been withheld because he considered it a final patent. He is awarding final patent papers. His invention is a small apparatus comprising two aluminum electrodes and a soldered wire. "My invention is designed that it offers resistance to the passage of impulses greater than critical intensity, but does not impulse less intense. Demorest said to his interleaver.
Set Anywhere
"It may be fixed anywhere between the antenna and the set or in the set itself."
Devices are said to have proved the device cuts state until it is no longer a nuisance and even harsh reception generally, without reduction in volume. Demorest worked on the invention, off and on, for a year, collaborating with Charles Woodruff, also of Charles Woodruff, and Robert Ponsch, an engineer.
According to his story, Professor Demorest was attracted to the field of chemistry and was the troubles of his friends owing radio sets. His private laboratory is a place where his friends are accustomed to work in the scene of almost constant research work. The problem appealed to him, and he set about finding a solution, attacking it from a new angle. The result is his invention.
**Easy to Install**
The device will not require the user to set it up, the engineer for installation, for it can be attached to a set by a novice. Furthermore the device will be inexpensively approached by manufacturers for rights to the device. A number of his friends are interested in the project and eventually arrangements being made to bring it into the commercial world.
During the World war he was a major in the chemical industry and a manufacturer of gas. His father is superintendent of schools at Marysville, Ohio, and two brothers are teachers, one a high school teacher and the other a professor of French.
His invention is not his only one, as he was one more in the same goin' through the office, which he considers as having greater commercial possibilities than the elimination of those he has been used publicly. If, when Demorotea's invention is made known and the device is given to a person, he is then prayed for the Ohio professor may be claused with the immortals and be accorded a place in the hall of fame for what he has done, prayed for the device which would kill the bugbear of radio-static?
Form Farmer Colony in State of Michigan
A Race colony has been established at Elmwood, in iron county, Michigan, by a land company or Chicago. Sixteen members of the Race arrived from Chicago in trucks to get on the land. They expect to purchase trees from timber and various forest products.
the building of the present Grand theater. So you see a first-class orchestra is a commercial asset in any price of entertainment.
W. A. W. (Bo) Kelly is leading the orchestra on the Beek and Walker Show.
Detroit Shannon is leader, vocalist on the Shillam Funk from Alabama show. I have predicted that this young musician will be in the front rank some day. He is fast working today.
The report is in *He that the McCutechone* that says-playing violinist, is to return to Tate's orchestra. Glad to see it. There is nothing in reaming round, Teeldy saw the point, and good for him!
China may be all right, but give on the dear old U. S. A. How many children can understand American jazz?
News comes in this side that American musicians are to be or are barred from performing in the country are to be given preference of the work there. A good example for some is the song "To Follow" to follow those at home he fires to perform should be in the foreigners' chata in Loop theaters. We are real American musicians are barred because our skin is clean.
WITH J. A. COBURN SHOW
Hank Whitman and Zim Walden, the owner of Nobleville, Inc., have charge of the bank's strike. The show is now in rehearsal. Hank has been with the show since 1000 except for two seasons when he joined the company. The show will open next week, going as far East as Maryland, then into the Southland for the win-
THREE DANCING MARVELS
Julius C. Hall and his Three Dancing Murrays are playing the week of Aug. 9 at the Lincoln theater, K.C. C. Hall, with them is the Jennings-Baldrich trilogy. Mr. Hall would like to hear from Chippeh Hill and Jones and Chatman.
LEE'S CREOLE BELLES
Let's Creole Belle show can be reached at High Point, N. C. week five. We show fine with this ganz. No radios Goo Christian, the musical director.
FRANK QUKES
Frank Dukes, singer and eccentric dancer, is in Philly, Fn. Mail will reach him at 4003 Fairmount Ave. Ted Pope, write.
Phones Unknown Man
A man who spoke no English appeared at the Salt Lake City passport service at an address that nobody could understand. The chief operator the central office the name that was all he liked to hear the name like "Hissled" as he pronounced it and finally located at Eureka. It might that might be imputed to what the caller gave. A request to this Eureka man to answer and if possible disclosed that the caller was the Eureka man's nephew, just over from Norway, and stranded in Salt Lake through some ticket mistake or loss.
TAKING VACATION
Larretta Wynn, formerly of the Miller and Shyler company, is taking her vacation at home in Atlanta at 230 Auburn Ave., above hwy.
BABY ALICE
Baby Alice McDonald is now with Johnville Lee Long's Dixtana company. Baby Alice is well known to session as a first class performer.
NEW HOME
Gladys Kirkland will make Detroit. Mich., her future home. She would cheer her farem from all friends in and out. Mall will get her at 680 St. Catherine St.
Petrong Lazzo is getting her at 301 N. Holliday, New York, N.Y. She is resting for the summer and will be soon the stage next season.
A Baby Of Your Own
One of the most remarkable results really attained in the use of a medicinal product is the correction of functional weakness that causes women to be children. A baby is the most interesting of life's hopes and ambitions.
If you learn for this baby arms reaching up, you love it if your home seems ample and lovely. Little ones, you should bank which is a big cost Free to download
Mother and Child
This book contains the list of New York apparel stores and all the country prices for it in another book. All over all the country prices for it in another book. The prices of merchandise is the greatest treasure in the world. What little book price, no charge or obligation. Just send your name and address to THE NERVANO COMPANY
204 New Milton Bldg. Kansas City, Mo.
BIG BARGAIN.BUNDLE
Great savings
For those who
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20 Yds. New Dry Goods
Not Remnants
In good less than 8 weeks.
In good less than 8 weeks.
In good less than 8 weeks.
NORMAN ROBEKES CO. 700 N. 42nd St. N.C. 62602
A synthetic system of reading the
a story. Wystart your friends—interlace
Mystify your friends—interlace
Evaluate full of fun and
instruction, not just on your name
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Bv J. BLAINE POINDEXTER
LOVE'S
The
Design
A myster
attracts and
it touches
poor allike curren
fragrance and gende
and lingering as love's
the elusive charm your
social life. Since ancient
exotic power of perfume
The
for his only one,
in though the patent
address as having
possibilities than
of these
publicly.
A invention is
device is given
and is successful,
and be accorded
FREE
Exquisite Gold En-
trusted Moisture set
with orders for
two bottles for 13.50.
MAGNUS, PERFUMER, Dec 12.
any of Chicago,
the Race ar-
t, the trucks to set
up, expect to pay
up to the cales
ous forest prod-
ucts.
GURE FOOD AND WHEAT, NOT GO-
PUT UP BY ONE WHO IS AN EXT
AND SCALP; PRICE $1.25 2-OZ. J
by return mail. Address Mme. Mme.
var, Colo., or BOLDEN'S HIGH CLA-
Denver, Cola. Agenda wanted.
---
Set Anywhere
Easy to Install
LOVE'S DESIRE
Desir d'Amour
The Irresistible Perfume
A mysteriously, affuring perfume which attracts and fascinates all who fall under its exotic spell. Proud and humble, it does not possess any magic. As reductive fragrance and gentle music. As polish, sweet and lingering as love's first kiss. Remember? Lends the elusive charm you need to win success and social life. Since aromatic fragrance you have known the exotic power of perfume to further their happiness.
FREE
Exquisite Gold Encrusted perfume set
flight of two bottles for $3.50
The fragrance of a thousand flowers distilled in the finest perfume bottle you ever saw—a must exquisite gift—lusting for months. Send no money. Pay postmany only $2.75 and pay per bottle in cash. Complete instructions included.
MAQNUS, PERFUMER, Nov. 12. W. York St., New York
Best. D. D.
Just because the hair is cut is no reason why you should neglect the hair roots. Use NORMAL HAIR AIR GROWER AND STRAIGHTENER, which not only straightens the hair quicker than any preparation on the market, but cures dandruff, stops falling hair, nourishes the hair roots, and keeps the scalp in a healthy condition without so much BOGUS as WELL AS DRY CLIMATES. Very easy to use. GUARANTEED UNDER PURE FOOD AND DRUG ACT. CONTAINS NO STRONG CHEMICALS. PUT UP BY ONE WHO IS AN EXPERT IN THE CARE OF THE HAIR AND SCALP. PRICE $1.25 2-OZ. JAR. 4-OZ. $200. Goods shipped by post mail only. For delivery to Denver, Colo. or OLDEN'S HIGH CLASS BARBER SHOP, 235 19th Street, Denver, Colo. Asks wanted.
Defender Phobia
eat with, nor to eat from; the natives
use only their hands.
Bishop Gregg exhibited pictures of his territory, showing the lace solids and teapots, with their hands, feet and perimeters of their face open away. It is fully examined and if no sign of fecundity is found, the mother who inserts it again the bishop said the meeting of the sweeting $150 was announced by Bibion Brookes as the collection taken after his elequent appointment. The mother met me as it should be during this chancel drive he said. The results will be in St. Louis, Mo., Sunday.
PROPOSE ONE
WAVE LENGTH
FOR "CHAINS"
The assignment of a single wave length for chain broadcasting, although widely discussed at present, is so far a scientific possibility, and so no serious consideration is being given to proposal by the department of commerce. As soon as radio engineers have learned how to control, absolutely the frequency of a broadcasting system, they may transmit the same program on the same wave length, it is possible that certain wave lengths might be reserved by the department for chain programs, on which all stations participate, and broadcast would be required to transmit.
The suggestion of the chain length was first advocated at the fourth national Baker, owner and operator of station KTNT, at Muscatine, Iowa. It was answered at the time by engineers of the Manufacturing company, who explained that so far they have been unable to broadcast one program on one wave length from two similar stations. Since the conference Mr. Baker, through the organization of a group of class A stations, of which he is the leader, has all of the broadcasters of the country, as well as congress in an effort to bring about legislation that would compel all chain broadcasters to transmit together. It is pointed out by Mr. Baker that the 12 stations of the American Television Network are formed at present, broadcasts a single program on 10 separate wave lengths, that for all practical purposes, completely covers the broadcast band.
Monosquite, it is said, were introduced in South Seas by an aggrieved whaling captain, who sought thus to get relief on the natives. Dearborn independent.
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LATE STATE NEWS
MASSACHUSETTS
PITTSEIELD, MASS.
FLORIDA
WISCONSIN
CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
11
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1926
en route to the federation meeting in Oakland. The Jude's wife, the Jude's summer outings at Manhattan beach, where they atook swimming lessons, were at Kelk Atkinson. Twelve visitors were guests of Kelk Atkinson and Mrs. Kelk Atkinson, and Mrs. Zella Scholl layer were the committee in charcoal Kelk Atkinson and flailier entertained with a dancing party Thursday evening in Electr. Dr. George Offutt, Dr. Emily Childress and Dr. Annie Lazegg were guests of Medical Professional Women's club at the Federation of Women's Chubs in S. Compton Ave., died July 22. The funeral services were held at the Serenity frithilith officiating. Interment was in Evergreen cemetery, Rex Skinner in Skinner; one son, Fred D., and two sisters and two brothers, a host of relatives and friends who mourn his death.
MINNESOTA
Miss Irene Gooden, MH P厢 Ave. and San Diego, Calif., at a card wrist party Friday afternoon, in which 20 cars were used to drive the first prize. The first prize, Miss Ethel Craig, the first guest prize, Miss Alerta Adams, the first prize, Miss Martha McLean Mac Moss congratulation prize. Mr. and Mrs. James Toliver of Carnegie and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Greene and Mrs. L. Casey M. Chicago. Ill. sponsored at Zion Bowl church Friday after a two weeks' term with an enrollment of 100 students. On Friday evening was highly anticipated. The exhibit will be sent to the United States. The union plenic of the Twins Cities was a wonderful success on last Wednesday. The union members themselves and nummies chats were present from all over the United States. W. D. Lofton, a member of the law firm of Graham & Lofton of Houston, attended city attending to some legal business.
SOUTH DAKOTA
SIQUX FAILS S O
No doubt we refer--
re to the Seld-foil mounted, with b
in the base of the binder.
The binder is the very bull-
erion binding. The binder is
made of metal and glass, with
many holes for mounting. It is
made of alloy in the Seld-foil
S. C. P. M. C. P.
GOP
THE
WOMEN'S
WEEK
WEEK OF
FRI
WEEK OF
FRI
The PEACOCK
Paradise Peacock Ring
E. O. H. Printing Co.
Maryland and Appalachian
artificial and appalachian
quality your band. Your band
will be sent to Maryland.
Seal No. MARYLAND 987
and will be withdrawn at Washington
Lancaster. Bradley, P.O. Newton, Mass.
LUCKY GLASS
THE BUCKEYE STATE
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 19267
{_ CLEVELAND NEWS __(
By ALEXANDER 0. TAVLOR
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Pose Randel Ee
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ian Porter ord and anuanter,
uige amntcen’ Gutta, hone Mek
at Rertn Onin, and ies, Cen Manley
Sf Curie ilo, cae islors oe Ste
Sh Hea Whim Wet
ico Wilamwon, Weal owers, Cell
Sete "viitans tn youn Sunagy, Seed
ea Saree ‘aie de i
aetmtaenar aye nny
garnistaERewrcay Miche LeU
Fireat “tun Baptist Chureh,o was alte
* Livthe Virginia Xen Winston has heen
PE at her ome, hut" Is aomvewhnt
1 Haze Sut of Cleveland, otto
yee Thee’ ‘sinters Stes. Earl
ce ay Galanns I6tt Thursday for
‘camphen Uiaener returned home fonm
Senlan Gin, where he attended the
Era Tala Rentt han been visltin
srgndmbther Inittlianae se” inte is
Send fen Late een ttt Wednen-
dng by tonto (oe Tetetnn Sinee
Nin” sfondent ar Were UNS stated
nig\tiaugiter sien, Wiliams Stet
atin buntgs Hrce hae"been ee i
Wiitea number ot people fram Lakin,
gals ‘ania eke Ta tees
Sutias “Mtending one oblast
Cee! Willem SeClendon han retuened
ME Lal het Sat sth
Malal Hrceman of Cleveland, wut Tors
Merit of Paanetos sere uid tat mae:
Thee Stara at ihe a MUST! are
Seenprieecs thse MeCiondon the
Sl wit tontny fo ge hy Ceeeeten
Jamies amit ok Sain 3
nioh Chet Rowell of Athens wert’ via:
Sieg es and Sex Vawrehee Ginn a
Se wn Sra, William ane, Me
walle an erqiddaughter Tosti Wats
Iyer thames pent Sone
irs dna "King af iluntington, 3,
int tee a Uinin of tree Be Gh:
fieinne tamil Thureang” oer Ae
Sae"ty vlan er apemr, te and 37m
Chine at wer hte
CAGE tithe of heen, Ono, was
yi Tsieh of thes wae m week-end
LANCASTER, on10
The unlatanan rometneges of the
Retr Ohi Sunda © arr eam Meld
fn Ciicdanath ctw, able ae tm St Mom,
age tibia cise pean deve SI
Alan Alin nd Sea! Sa Sisen wre
Rinne ppavie,tgomTaneantec ate
fending the Ie nr Fortonveuting: held
ig 'Nrins bts, ‘recently Se "sarah
engi sna aoe Were treat the
Eome ita. Tet gear eke
Sooke, witht her. mother: stew. “Sarah
Rete nt 08 ie"Wneciing’ Si “Sex
Ta iat al atortntned inh an te
Steen ea" ane’sRown re misters
Io" Fork anil other pointe of Ine
Weeant tees Rtneat'Shate nnd tts
AGueheer Bet rae nf fst ae las
URE ET hese atthe ee a
cot. Mr, and See Gober Toandat ni
Fioettanal Shoe apeniing er seek
fon atte ome econ ty
Pei Eu ars A hae
Shieday” evoninetnpomor nt her sister,
Sitm SlarsaretNiekine® of chicago
FRENGET. omic
Blew cate Wala OMG ow, ten
ining aimee ached ter Aincineat
sha A SAE nd nu
Fen, Masmenu And accede mtorr tn
Ban Oh, eet and Stix won
Treker af Pact’ eliatnn wees tne the
Tiga "hie, Nasa “Esai? ‘of chleate
in Rom Wien hey nmrente Sit and Se
f ENlohinanny ok tay ee ars
Be Fiatle tnnteey ft "te hee inl ah
Eg ate ad hire, Rican ie
inet wat 2%, lintie denawon ef Foe
iereop aod unite, "Pesae HE
Sith Geiracta ies, Exe Tham
af Cuesatand Catt welin Sie and Mie
Minit prenehed SUnGay mogaine in pee
spires pantey meine tte
Meat Met Mauen of Kontn
mand Stes WW, Parke, Uist wate
Shen “Cretan, Vioitend Pleectamd
winted wlinethuine Ranh eahaes ht
{oa and evimned Rome wil her int
iNEcdeeicland and ste. and. 3
akg un a P A SA
Mi Sie an Stee! 3 toh
Tite aha Sen Se i, Rane ana Stem
aE Sehwoan wre alnnee” eureas Th
dhe" name ot Sie and "Sons torte
Nii Fred Schulte and slauchter, ace
Poems Mert a
Slits eran Elion of eit: nigel
loft for Nashite. Tepes where ahe wi
Sand iw meee lle with "noms
IE amt Stes, Georse Sacre “were
sini the ie OF Sia ster Ee
“damien Adm fs Mh,
Bien iar" Tatin te titty tm
the auns renple's whole sane wens
aerinty well far tue, omentos Services
Sandat Sklen tytn Wahiaes ie pingict
Sirti atta tani Rely OY Soe
sate laesataneh carom and
“Fane wit daeer nae See Orie Boner
Thursday evening ‘and hate. moved to
ZU "Rirbont Age, where the eapeet
tae Meine aap
cyattn ‘inet with. Proihee “igiveatee
anchan"ip who home af Ske, aad Ses
Mina Friday” exeninet St~ RET
“rite Talon” Ala Societe” met tp, the
bere am Te Ras! ly
CSTE ama sen 3, A, Newry and
sa Tad hah ed
“Sitn, karah dobawn nent the rec
coi ty, tana. with Kew ant “See.
‘ashaud Spent't couple or'éas% ith
cuneont
ae nec eene ae, Shae
ee eee eee ee ee bas eon
Mise Cleora Resned-. whim haw heen
tlt iat nee Sata Raa
MER at so leaned
Bes Pas aay wa oe
Sectashine tne age RaEY
BF Hees at My rhar nash
Sheinent ah! oh Bawa, See Sg
BARU EY i
SEAR tad tna a Sahar
EPR alin, Be SS, Ree
2e ead and SE Secktte oe BEE
lin Viola Sears. uno na een vite
eae OSES EGA a
'SHlerhert ‘Turner and daughter, 31
dred. and son Herbert Jp. and Mix
Pg ash Rg te
Kin ncaa ihe BEC loa
me teats tttad eS
Hee county athe
APCHENUS tmncoreg” Sa) BAL Seek
iiteer Bertha tows and Armeth
alee tad Ta! Rede enaret
raison Teaeg, reer med
Shae aa Reunion i
gr eveet rasaicta se Sa
large number were atthe Foran
cheese Sea poe athe ares
MgGeierie meetin will te held nex
seas nad ua AE Na
SHALE AR® atone a
2fMine conference wii presek at th
eet SoPtete
Bes cee oe rt ett
CEE RIA smn i
eek Suerte
at ta eek stacy stopped wh A
ee a
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
ea tained ania putas
mavavitce, ovo
20nd BI a
See ames en
IE ret aretha, Be
Eh Be eal ee artes
Honig? eens
gra wea a Pate ad Shy sh:
pa eh eg heres Ar
Rac ceaen pee aa
fe Tidhatandy Ohio sts! lath Eva
left Tuteday’ for Chicago for a. wyatt
Bae se rites Heatine ee a
eee et ae cs Hen
eae Gocaa te eee i
ee eee ree
ie ear enavranioe
Srertaath nee a roakioe
or Blnaee dete ibe
ee pram, Soe eee Se
ae ee ea
ind Site. Weoene Spears, ae ant Stes,
oe Gen ee meee
Sense ease ve
Bieter ort Beart ee
Ea pao As
Hei Rea and asks art
pa etree f donee
Beatisagr ae et ot, tte
Secret, Rand Pie's
ae Sone haere
ee nae aes
Sat or saa eS
ee Gta meee Be
Soe etree. ty
Sonne ne eee ens
Rise ees aaa that!
oneatz: emo
ee oe
Sohn Bare saena ces at
Ig thi cH ‘ax the events of SIF AM
Sho
Feo un, waanineton a
cet, ee, ah Mactan oa
gochet Sh ae ER
SS pean Castine ointnd
casaanin Sneed a
Se
oii unte Seean ot ora
FR Fae a entra tee 4
eae Lien
Beat ene ar
ig Site Frans teynette and von. Fran
tie ape eye wethe former
FRE sere snes coat
Triton ofthe trina
eeearat,cicaiete,® ote, Mek tt di
Sa PE wont ms
ees cia tear a
5 oacc ier Renee beer
ue eae ast ae:
Bey eee tae
ire BB Be ea ce
"IRs esce wdner hy Tuten fo
erie hs ee 2
Sea BAe SET Fears ot Sena
ae ee
Sree eee ae a
Mra, Settle toush. Mea, Bima’ tat.
Be Sei oe ee
Fe ates CT eases,
ear ae ae in ad
Sect Sen ae degomgtor a
She bale a tate ae
re alae eae at
ehurch, a. anending hi” vncatlan at
shetty Wraith at en
BEES el Sik i iad
Sr ae tae ee
mada onte
cai date FRNEIPS ae soy
Sfentar" tar “the, Weousehotd at” Reh
pe de eee
Se Wier Cat Ch ty ace
i a
nae ee aeons ei
ean eR ABs
coe cite dears gt esate
oth eae enema ale Seer a
Sint baste tet Can Wa
en sey
Ce a a
aes, ea Sr eee
Sen atte, i
Cag ee
ee moran, ae Char
tea wre genes ce thes
Bea a are oe
SP oe, nial deren of a
Sores ear
Bee rie ot Ponce.
Seis cee cee trees
rk emir
ee ne eee ee ene
Riera ema eters
Bie ote tie aha
Si Wen ea are
arene
Bole Uilive. stem. af _Citoa
earth SI ise
RUM Slintacy qeatet of
ee ae ae Se
BOD MERE neared
SRE ease, road, te on
gauater Nitin, imotared 6 taacestie
Se et See A roe i
soninnr aie Boiive Gite
He ae tieelcas.” While thee Aue wae
Reese tn Se ee ae
fer kaa tin eBitteene Fedward Be Rear
Fan hae
eirehed Se taartite Se
epee watt dinars
Sra og tat nb bm
Gertaet Cae
ioe gan Sears
ement ee
GALLIPOLIS. OGHID
Dre. Flurence Gariner of Cleveland
fog sti anc dies eu Si
fac ot Gee a sna
Ee dae Ahead BRE
sas al aract to ate tate oe
Se Pees arr ea
Ee ite tn, eh
Se Skeeter Heat
mother.) ary Burtle, Toeibert Then:
Steet auntie Gea nie te, Slams
Reete, ‘Shor spent’ ches week-aha wth
Sire Rusiucth snita” Ste ssean
isines, Sten iron Ketley_ ang death
ier Stajere Sane” were aniertaneg
ESE Rin ty"ste kr Sta
4 Uhl“ fal ple father on
Marie" Sirg, Sawn Jones enteral
Men Econ Kelly and anunhter sith
iin Ean Ramesh Sd Mn
toa Sande: Aertirine mgepi te week
fre sit Sie ang aire Ba Arete
BI. Bab cate Sa in Gu
ier” ateted to enone
ALLIANCE, OHIO
ayTia kt fae eld tn arate
aan ye ‘he iene ‘whan fen tae
Rttemied. iy held Waele apuad ee
fae Siege Nag at the Chea tsp
Git Huet aigh ith Yohewted bea
Hrrwiast danee Mon toning, Yom
Sila Herroctan of Thittetpht
argo the, weekend ty he Bt
Shin Corie Reet af Cana ttt
Senn aT ne ome a at at
“Siem. Nelle Mure of Cleveland, Ola
Wann Visiter at the Dasiern Star Under
Sate ona emit ‘arais vist
caeveland’ at ihe hate of Mra at
ue Here Rundag: ented fon are al
ens fawn, and Wit vine thele miler
ISG tales ahaa
Beet Meimpta emt tm Cleve
nna ast, ry ot hanks te
inSain ani ste
Tein. tatored to. Akron “Raturday
Ae tie dlemerte Urn, He all,
Soh Aisa tee et Ni
amie, Sima, Paine ral mo
Wagers Gate Recondaytin
gee Sania tna Sree Rha
Hien agin at Samed Ol, ake
iter etna ater ie te mat
A slens Shite: Rnodetang entertained th
salar voy cate at hero
iat irate gt i cr
Ma tienes Pate I
siergsinmWeneer af etn, Sit
Etching at Ree ome in honor of he
Tuan lle, of Oak. Sharm
hie Stn 2 eh Ste
Winene "oe" ucemon Sk and! Lest
aie Sera t a1 8. ter
Arad tae thie ly pean
Tie Tae ot Green 8
the rune fo ile sll on Snes
NAT aumnber of bays and clrte of (Alt
antes Sulem and:Canion chjored then
Bite Wodneatea seeming’ 4 te Shot
Toe'ehah ae ERK
Tand dlardin whe higec@ othe Jun
wa hice Moree at he “orth pa
tor emacs foree
BATESVILLE. Om,
a endera ME ie ton on
eth Gilets
erat Sete Pa
he Weta caet ful
Ei aaauahtal ote tateeg
Foie Mucha eae aa
Pratt seeti nhs ab OE
es My he hae
Feet eae” th Ra
eae Gee are Me
Tipe pated: eek IE de
a Tone Seem Me
Sst SPORT Ah ies
Eh tn Seppe a Se ten
aes Sng at i Pte
Hee amide edd eine li
iden tae me, Si
it Roe: Itasca,
, DAWIOR, oA,
stra, Rayan Cay a oom oe
gheci aE Ge tens
Bis ettatn” atten tes
REE Mis ar
resect eapiala ts de ain
fits, Meera Rl Rr
es
Cire See eal eas aaa
Shittedtips hh cana Becta
Bidet tira ada, Pe
2° inngd dated, Sara al
Feat alc Hear a ck
Rethet_Maptist church of "Americus,
Jo eee! See af See
Shia rae watt hele oPoae
Sante wre, es outa
See ee ane ene
Ba. te Wet oti and
Se Genter eet en
Beolt HEMT clin
ite i Mh etary le
pet Hs Ta, Si
Sette dey Ae PA es
Fah eat Sdn a
Renton
wneeregt. Ame. 8. tan. Sack Dare
ham ravallyarterialning the New Con:
edith tener Gon ei
Tiroake’ left" for Tutkesers’ Adare tor ats
Tea tha teadhiga! nf hee laa Sila
Tide ear ign ice Hea
Berets blegrantie tnent. ‘Stes, Tenth
Seka tet ae neF ome fn” Chat!
i Sind an vere a
PenineFhon nather ase right na
Maret Teeige” cin tats *Wetieaday”
Aee*ah alin Sieg ote Joniwene
iMesh “hata! Sear Aranda
Titman" hava after ah Tekent ee
tev Seg fin ot Stic
Sheets iat the season” wan the” Maho
Biriy al cainoan “Gn, thats preset
ore Mocdamisn” roth Mextusier “Bt
Forttanmian” Fonte eater Wiagtnos!
iaeleebée, "SIGs sateres eSeteees
te ehensn i., Annls Rented Eon
Beant ene vine, ah ett
‘Tidy ag sty re
Forme llate peguen? were Men
HiRes Mites atts Reson ston
jnged¥ pleanant aRernntns” Mras, A
este he Teas ein he
York " aes
convzie. ca.
lec Mr. Garwett of Albany, Gn. In
in'ibe cg: ‘Shen Amie Harel shaban
imam iain arate unera
rear hone, atin tom" Anerse Te
Fiatine ine Washington ee tne
Will Nidetvon, te arantlng’& few ans
IF iain ie it
spent Friday in Alans: Alien’ Foret
oF Saegenta’ AR. Ne ibe euert at See
Voret Drtts. “Mian jmvdine mre hein
cite tw er tines "Sten aNTg,P ayes
Saendons Hes el et tn
mmrey of tht’ fits neve et Jackal
Fin. amicatis Laie Gray a inline
Stee Sineper'e mater, Sie, Sieh ee
Ege Duntlan Ie henneselae tina
maior pperaginn at" thr Chien arn
rare Sie" Sanhaen Ct kat
Raaog: m:racesefal eviva at eth’
mane Tatiog“chureh were se Se
BieRiniay te paste weet. Cat
mar teatt Moadas for Anniain: ase
futon the hal of mein Sea”
ain voutn Tiare and are Sie, Carnet
Fete tn Nea Sow Be eke
iecsptri chur wey ge the
Reet returned. bem feta Atttntae foo
Setigeadag trea cbited a
tor Siew Reith het ner ite eashle
taston” ge Ste initmrs" cha” wna hi
tie ee tian are
wh, Soho at tocando ol
fea’ See hin Ste frat of Mt
Regie rhine on Aen ai
Higa Heme Becktndun’ Sentai Henry
Pnieels'eitcne hn oaper. re ba
mie Vieworn wan hettem to dhe" wit
Hone fine Rly, Neen et
AY?’ Se here Sina Ses eld as
I, the Net ar ieney woeke. ie
Ha Raat wean ek ee
Rocticin Halas Foaredags PO?
Soeuioaee. Koco,
va: tote. with ‘han wakes, eet
mas, oe tele Te mer, ior
fori Sih erie ir Seek
Kv, sie, gat Stew, Tavter’ ant Sex. W.
an 2 as mea
Bee HE Bes Sele teat
Be Mate ante eo
Pedi aac ee ea a
eure ata, edith
cat tenes denote, Sieh
Hk nae in
eu pai arth Soa
Wine wliton’ wit teacn te tte, Puneatat
Seer icen Sala ae Velen
schoe! this
ARKANSAS
s és one | sissatiask tii Sis sndithinie Sin. Sten Sein
William Steacham well-known leet
pared Stand “ie haa toc
Ee fg ana aa
ea ade ue ie
ftir ne er Se ae te
isderadmgstn td Svina
seat eae ayes
Be arth ae tenet
cnet od Wider sie e
Ric tt tle arta
who Sicet ie Sriae ecae
Sine dats, otaee "atte a
re eect Ses Me
sad Se sn dente ae es
Fh atlas erie eee
Se eek i
Wath ate Sica ais hes
Sno eee ee
tse abcess
Heal ea ay ae
Hee aun Ment nese aa Si
iether icetter a ar
Heat a igeeak ie
Rei vee Steal ste
Latch Kiera
Hs the maces a
Micnded the’ presidtag’ eltare eomt|
ine Tones, Yasaie stephan, St te Pane
Beeraead seo et
snrradiih Heit halle
Bade Suse ete Hae
Gear GUM MER UPtttli
a aab tas en eee te
fath, Ghr aaiaee a in|
Sie dian See
Jeanie Taney and Mra. Chisram Youne |
dit attr Peg aa
ree i eee Ae ag
GES Bh Metta ae
Ge esate ete
ie High lord anid
Une"hngrien, Eat iied Aral Went
ee ea ee
se erates Series tae
free Resried Gatien Se
Nia ite, Retna
be ceritened mitre
Herat tact tn ar eats oad
iirc, duped ied cat te
ese ca aa ba
it dacknean "Sten Se Steshes cand
rom sii, An.
vigoy Sree ett,
Bubeieaien Mears te
Thurteniaes Inchon Aekanean nd
coieaenros peer
Het ig tt See, Sots
Becta mite SE
dts Sime miei hate
Ges Sha Whee lle
Hie, eet cata lt ets
eddie at tal areancarats
Beha a BO! Cen
Ea Shing met
fart erg CE eee ae
Endicott ae te ae BE
se, Ae eta eae
Bac ite Sart es
RG ecg? eee an
EG hee te eee
TSR pin Became nae
RLU Saeki pa ania sa
ewedRt, Ane.
sic na aS casa
wird ate acy it eta
a atc oh hay aa
Spica ace Snare
siete nea, ae
haieehaae ale aa
Se eine fara ae
Br ABS outa Sten tormie cartes
na Haha Se ea
a rien ee a
nd: tone Skerrell of Walnnt Ren
Beis aie ial Wea das
SIE one, spe © 6
gant: Clintign Doin, wth 12 TE Ge Rae
Ca arr Gime be ae
Ftbecte lac AFP E at ll
Eerie death. Gee ate
Seite alae Sie Ace
Be Sane ehehad eae
Gren, 313 Honenrd Si, Orrentood, Mle
ferecliaP iar aa eames
Bear Wn ae
Hae adie we ket Fa
Hishor 1, S. Noor, Washington. D.C:
Rees fs eb, Bea a,
AAT eri et
AN fs foals berate te
hs Head Mere Si ee
fe neler nit Ne di ett:
at Retin Ge habe
Ela Shia catesint kena
Be te. Pier weamiae ts
Bake ie A eR
Baar Ha Mee ae
Beier ea a:
dehethaaeea aie ak ae
Recenter Ace Maha Aa
Stree Naatier™ tacts of hicensy it
arelved Wedneadae te visit her fatter
ee ora A
Se Ea a aes
Se cade Mer Ni
Sen tes ene Beate ie
Beihai aa sie at
one very. atek
ea ct Sa an
Sse re A ena
Tathe, Mia, arrived to attend the finer
Mr. and srs. Prank Jolinsen, Mrs.
ees a Mee aa
i siting ee, pave Sten Si niee
rae Sic Sipe eet me St
ee, oh ae Fasc Ne i,
Mew, Nannie Mody, Mise Inez Mz-
Sih, atid teen Had
Rite nhecine, BS %Siatn se Stes
Pe peareatlie Sai aft ale
ean evsearn id. "'Shetgurrivet ts
aati i tech" ae
Peery Ma gee Sens es
See
Dey aS a
polit. Cura Shorest and. Sire 3. W.
eter ating. Grom A” Sings
RT NR tN
Bis hie cnc we cae
BE Tech ata edt te
sth arte ae eae
ier Reta ae
He i at Sl ig Eos
Becht We Bae ee
Fat Abies” Ea
THR of Gated i, ES arrived neve
Revival nos opened Kundny hy Bev.
fh Siento nt’ Sigrtamwa gel ns
Svntlicte int Hey” 31, Be Weare,
Stee, Sula toward nema xceacat nes
Uline reiattven i Tatts. Heck ‘last
Neck.” She was accompanied home
Sone Sen tand Seat onde ue tinea
mona Sor an Sirmnal Wards of ilases
ayn nq ony
istmaee tet ta igaton Wi
Woon ag" Sea. Rodgers a
Newnile ty wining Rar" iaeenta. "sie
ere aioe ia rt
Men ts tdi JD Pit Fee Pa
ii ithe Sans read ae
ilnerty arsived ome Sunday | fem
Leesa, Se Rke Lene
sg Wie HUG at dela
frittata Ra My Hea
seannantat yas, Wate icc ie
ieee ton aban geet it
Hy ace a en ice
Usa? lacey Wetctea ts hed i
Baty un a sau ings ue
iil te attended ty Rev. $b, Barnett
EES og th ota An a
eat, ng Sarnia es ch
ff ns at ox was
Secale i ore ope
sie, SEMAKONET AME, one o
geting aa Sa,
Saran wit bop huginds Lather,
Hala ott ae ietalne "ae
Tasos atte whoa
jetties ss See aang ey
nig torce ae ectan
Sa Hive atce Oh SMtade eh
Bie (e Rln Ai pt ker te
So aie Tatty natu wh ee
ea hoatt Bake Stat
Bog tant eat
Photina apd {ohm Rosa have nse t
ae a Tera tay” ER ia
BENE Berd thier tt
ReaaherSis Satie Sue “He
bean ina Gris Ba
ae aaNet Sete ise
Lene iinrtss ee Bethe
Ler ai pt Be Rie Gas
ope a te nen EA OU
Beem sher: ita Westies eeu
We ty alt Minot Ate
from a, eacation, Bre Emme, Starehy
Shard Site ene fo Se Rant Bio! ad
ee Ade Naa ratted te ome from
Bhatt Ps the Ute
fooxed back to Hot Springs, Ara, Dr,
Seine wih ta rae ult
Re Weiataleas Sharh, erty
Fore eye geet hh
Feed A Sditas inst eas
Jeb with we Eldorade
IOWA
guamane Gta
\wacation la Cuwrans, W. lt tonne of
sienen Tponeaag. 8. "TE" Barns: of
eee ious © hee
Eire Or ata a Be
ih hier ote eh ae
tera huis algae Rather
Sxtended vist. "Rey. BM. Ge. Weight
piers Goh oh taeart abe ae
gers ioe “ane
frown” The outta and played. for
He Phar tngeacitee™ sh ae
Tchipon abd ev, C,H. Foaninin wert
on tie bce JE muni are
Hee ieee gah, Ne ena
Bite Fay Ronch Vrown and Sra. Peari
ier? Shae te ae" ia
ate AP Rae So RE
Backenn aenntianied INe Gare orem
Etomite aia
Be See tate? ae
Beach ech ete ite
Brae? dubetns, cate
Resoieh rane a Cate
ere cee area
fe Rereae ae eee
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PART 1—PAGE 9
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Wiggins Wins 100-Mile Auto Race
PILOTS OWN MAKE OF CAR TO WIN 3D ANNUAL GOLD AND GLORY AUTO SWEEPSTAKES
By FRANK A. YOUNG
Jeff then gave the followers of dirt racing race some thrills. Lawrence Wiggin, driving, Syracuse, and Carter were well in the race. Wilbur Smith of Chicago was going after his 54 mile he. He was driving a Frontier, GMC, gravel and gasoline station owner, and doing the after being forced to the pit earlier in the race. Lawrence sent him a car that was not hot for those in the rear. The other cars bad fallen down.
Jeff picked up lap by lap until the finish. Lawrence was in third place. The final tabulation found the cars thus: Charles Wiggin, Indianapolis, first; Ben Carter, Indianapolis, second; and Ben Carter, Indianapolis, fourth; Lawrence Dawson, Indianapolis, fifth. And the time—One hour, 30 minutes and 15 seconds. Last night left the mile oval in a miro, but just before time for the trials, which were put off until noon today, I must laugh at the unenough to make it safe except near the pit. The rain, however, laid the dust well and gave the spectators a good chance to see the drivers battle on
The most fortunate driver of the 23 cars that faced the starter was Bill Carson of Chicago in a stand-up race in a 500-mile grueling race. Bill Jeffries in his Frontenac and numbered one, jumped to the lead and the second, he left the soft drive driving his car for that lap in 52-5 seconds for the mile and there are four turns. Right behind him came a third, the balance of the cars were strong out. Indianapolis fans were pulling for some Houser driver to win. Malcolm of this city, winner of the 1242 national race, driving a Biles Special, was in fifth position. On the fourth lap as they hit down the stretch, Carson's car jumped into the lead, which he maintained until the 20th mile, when he increased his advantage and at 32 miles Carson was leading Jeffries by two laps and driving to close. He old man Gloom bobbed up; Carson's car went into the fence and out of commission on the back stretch to close. Carson was pulled out unhurt. On the 20th lap, Jack Sargent of St. Louis was forced out with a flat
When Carlon left the race, Jeffries took the lead with Malcolm Hannon up in the money was short. His car developed engine trouble on the 25th mile. When Jeff hit into his 25th mile, he was hit by a car at 40 miles, Jeff led with Smith of Chicago second with 35 miles and tied with Ud with Indiansapolis. He went on to the pits when Jeff made his 425 mile. Carter had crept up to the James and Smith with 42 each. He went out when his radiator broke near the stands on the leader's 47th. Smith had totaled by this mile 35, James 44, Ud 42. Jeffries had crept up to the James and Jeffries in the lead, with Wilbur Smith of Chicago in second place, having done 46 miles, and William James was done 46 miles, and the same number of miles to his credit. William James flashed on his 45th mile, while Hannon, who had returned to the race after Jeffries, wouldn't behave, had turned in a total of 37. Smith was forced to the pit at the end of the race. Winnings had gained two miles. Carter was in fourth place, four miles behind Jeffries, with James trailing him past Smith, placing with a mile better than Carter.
Ernest Stevens, Chicago, was driving a good race also. Harney Anderson, Jackson H. Woods of North Manchester, Ind., were still making the turns, but away behind the leaders. Lawrence Wiggs was hanging on, but going down with a little, Jeffries lead had been out down a little. Charles Wiggs, Ben Carter and William Jones were within three laps of the leader, Willetts, with a favorite to develop enough trouble earlier in the race, but got his machine back and started to pass car after car, but on the 56th lap he was able to pass Charles Wiggs had made 50 miles, James and Carter hitting down the stretch abreast had made 53 and 52 respectively. A 560 mile, Jeffries was a half car length in the lead of Chas. Wiggs with Smith, James and Carter fighting it out. The 52d lap found the positions
until it 65 miles Jeffries still led with Wiggs right behind by a car length and James and Carter burning up their gasoline on their 62d and 61st mile. The 20th mile, Jeffries had gained a car length on Wiggs, Carter had 66 miles to his credit. James had finished his 67th, while Smith had moved on a bit and made his total 61st. Jeffries fronted his finish in front of the stands, which went into an uprase. Wiggs passed Jeffries and kept the lead despite Jeffries to regain it until they rounded the far turn on the 81st mile. Coming into the stretch abreast, Jeff pulled away from Charles and
PART 1-PAGE 10
kept a half car length until the 75th
car length. Jeff led by three car
lengths.
Wiggins won with case.
A wild burst of applause greeted him from his home towners, some in a bunch of wild stores, women and men, running across the track despite the yells from the cooler heads, warming up and getting killed as Carter, defies, Smith and Dawson were still in the race for second, third and fourth place honors. He drove 85 miles with Joff right close behind. Promoter Earl grabbed the checkered flag and stopped the cars, giving them places to come. The crowd came too great. The police and guards could not hold the people in check. Crowd was far from what it should have been. About 6,000 saw the big race, over a thousand of which were in on passes and another at 1 o'clock, an hour after the first car had made its qualifying round, there were less than a thousand folks waiting, time it looked like a complete hustle.
Indianapolis may lose this yearly event unless the business men who profit by incoming followers of the Klan bind and boost instead of knocking the event. It is definitely understood that the Klan has a big strengthhold here and that element is against such a group and boost instead of knocking it to see it. It is understood that Detroit and Chicago might be considered next year.
The best qualifying time was made by the Klan, whom turned in 1-5 1-5 seconds for the mile, an average speed of 65 and 9-10 miles per hour. W. H. Valentine of Indianapolis in a Partner Special Odds. Carson's time was 51 1-5, averaging 65 2-10 miles per hour.
Wallace, the favorite, was timed in 63 flat, an average per hour of 57 and 1-10 miles. Ernest Stevens in a Partner Special Odds. Carson's time was 51 1-5, averaging 65 2-10 miles per hour.
S. A. Buford of Chicago in a Ray Special Odds it in 55 flat, an average of 65 5-10 miles an hour despite the fact that near the finish of his time car "twirl" two connecting rods.
Others who made good time trials were Johnny Jordan of Fort Wayne, Huenne Barries, who turned in 67 3-10 miles per hour and 53, 2 and 2-5 seconds for 64 and 74 miles per hour; Ben Carter, 62 2-5, or 57 6-10 miles per hour; Wilbur Smith, 66 flat, an average of 64 and 74 miles James, who was timed in 55 2-5 seconds, an average of 64 7-10 miles per hour.
The rest of the cars made the distinction of the showness of the time. Only on two turns, the cars did the fly and then not until 15 or 20 miles had been dashed off, enough to assemble the upper surface off. The rest of the track was owing to the rain of the night before.
Most of the out-of-town drivers for home immediately after the race.
McCOY·NOLANS WIN
Watertown, S. D. Aug. 8. - The McCoy-Noy Glants split the twin bill for the first game, 7 to 2. Sweede Risinger pitching. They won the second game, 6 to 2. Glants homers in the second game, Gonzales and Williams fed in batting with four. Watertown . . . 200 500 000 - 7. Glants . . . 100 001 000 - 2 5. Glants . . . 100 001 000 - 2 5
POSTPONE FLOWERS EIGHT
New York, Aug. 12—The Three Flowers-Harry Greb fight has been postponed from tonight until Aug. 15. The delay was granted when Walk Miller, manager of Flowers, requested more training time.
BUNGLETON GREEN
JUST WHEN I HAD A GOOD START ON MY VACATION THAT LEATHER-FACED BRAKEMAN THROWS ME OFF THAT COZY CATTLE-TRAIN!! — @ @ @ AHH—HERE COMES A TOURIST DOWN THE ROAD! — I'LL BUM NIM FOR A RIDE WHEREVER HE'S GOIN'!!
HEY, MISTER! I'M GOIN' YOUR WAY!!
IS THAT SO WELL, I'LL BET YOU A DOLLAR I'LL GET THERE BEFORE YOU DO!
CHICAGO DEFENDER SPORTS
Tennis Stars Invade Saint Louis
NATIONAL CHAMPION
23
Charles Wiggins and his charming wife, snapped after the Hoosier pilot had won the third annual Gold and Glory hundred-mile national dirt track championship at the fair grounds in Indianapolis Saturday. Wiggins dribbled the ball down the hill and then drove it down, drove it heady and steady race and when Jeffries was forced out of the lead on his 79th mile after regaining it from Wiggins, the winner then took the lead to keep it until the end of the long grind.
Jack Sharkey to Meet Harry Wills at Polo Grounds
Jack Sharkey to Meet Harry Wills at Polo Grounds
Boston, Aug. 6—Johnny Buckley, manager of Jack Sharkey, left for New York at noon today to close a match between the New England leavetweight champion and Harry Wills.
Buckley made a hurried exit from Boston following receipt of a telegram from Faddy Mullins, manager of Wills, patting he was anxious to center with Sharkey's plot at once.
Mullins has delayed signing for a tussle with Sharkey in the hope that he would be blocked and that Wills would get the shot at the champion. Paddy, like everybody else, is now convinced that he should be staged at the Polo ground the latter part of this month as the feature number of a charity boxing carnival. He is doing lean training for a week in anticipation of the Wills being signed up.
Baltimore Sox and Harrisburg Divide
Baltimore, Md., Aug. 8.—The Baltimore Black Sox split two games with the Harrah'sburg Giants today, the Baltimore Giants winning the seven-inning nightcap, t. 6.
HARRAH'Sburg
ALLEY, R.F.
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Boston If. 1 1 1
Boston If. 1 1 1
Boston If. 1 1 1
Games on 1 1 1
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Harrah If. 4 1 1
Harrah If. 4 1 1
Total: 11 1 1
Total: 11 1 1
BLACK SOX
ALLEY, R.F.
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Boston If. 1 1 1
Boston If. 1 1 1
Boston If. 1 1 1
Games on 1 1 1
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Jackson If. 1 1 1
Harrah If. 4 1 1
Harrah If. 4 1 1
Total: 11 1 1
Hitting for Ballot in the seventh.
Harrah If. 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Harrah If. 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tacklew McIlheatha. Housen. Taylor.
Tacklew McIlheatha. Housen. Taylor.
Home run. Ballot. Strike out.
Off-card. Ballot. 4.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
0-Mi
EFEND
Invad
23
Photo by Patten's Studio, Indianapolis, pilot had won the third annual Gold funds in Indianapolis Saturday. Wiggle never went to the pits for repairs at the lead on his 78th mile after the end of the long grind.
AMPSEY, BUT
IS BRONZE RIVAL
CHAMP TO ROUT
WILLS MEETS DEMPSEY, BUT CHEERS FOR HIS BRONZE RIVAL PUT DODGING CHAMP TO ROUT
Bv DAVID W. KELLUM
13—he strutted down the aisle in his
world's heavy jacket.
Wills received about six times as much razzing. And the whole thing has "the earmarks of a dirty trick" elevate Stullins. Wills arrived at the garden in his new Lincoln car as early as after Dember made his arrival.
Wills Quietly Leaves
Sugars was master of the whole afale and punched the little brown man until his gras were weary. He hit with his right and punched with his left. Sarmiento took one of his knees and kicked him. Few banan and featherweights could have endured so much as Sarmiento accepted with a whimper.
St. Louis Industrial Team Seeks Games
St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 6.—The Pullman ball nine, champions of the season, like to book graves with clubs in and around Chicago or Indianapolis for the remainder of the season, at home. The Pullman nine includes Pollard, right field; Brown, second base; Graves, first base; Hopper outfield; McCormick, center field; stop; Edwards, center field; Howard, catcher; Stone, outfield; Marshall outfield; Dawson, center field; manager, manager, Address, Marshall Smith, 3972 Cook Ave.
MOORE BEATS MELAUGHLIN
San Francisco, Cal. Aug. 5.—Jimmy Moore, middleweight of Cincinnati, won a four-round decision boun
HE BUGGY RIDE"
HEY, MISTER!
I'M GOIN' YOUR
WAY!!
New York, Aug.
contender for the
weight boxing title
in the first
leggy in the first
round of a bout
of cheers stared at
Madison Thurston
Tuesday night.
The two men fought it
out outside the ring
in the illuminated
all-star bantam-
weight show
supported by Texk
Hill.
PETER B.
took the run the two
minds. Dempsey began to smile,
thinking the two
changed their minds and were
greeting him. I h im
looked in Wills
ca me a walking
him for more
lives yelled,
the fans yelled,
and cueed him for more
lives yelled.
The giant challenger
spied Dempsey
dumping and stuck out
his hand. He
smiled. Dempsey
A
embarrassed, smiled, half arose from his seat and accepted the handshake of another, then wills paused a moment while everyone wondered what the move was, the call to microphone and said a few words to the outside fans.
VANGUARD OF PLAYERS FOR 10TH NATIONAL TOURNAMENT ARRIVE IN THE MOUND CITY
St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 12. The vanguard of players and officials for the 80th annual national championship of the American Tennis association are arriving at Thompson, national champion and a Washington, D.C. resident, will arrive direct from Chicago, where he is now engaged in tennis with the Thompson and the New York state title at New York city by defeating Sitch in New York city by defeating Griff, the Dr. Downing and Dr. Griff, the West Virginia title this year, are already on the scene, as are a number of eastern and southern players. The western contingent is due Sunday. The eastern on the grounds of Sherman and Fandy parks. Several upsets are looked for during the play of both the men and the women, in all events will take place Saturday. The annual meeting of the association, the election of officers and other business will take place Monday night at the branch of the St. Louis Y. M. C. A.
Monday, Aug. 16, in the evening, a reception to the visiting lilies will be held on Friday, a day evening an informal dineing party will be given and on Wednesday a boat excursion. Thursday evening an open-air picnic will be on tap and the People's Finance company. Among the women who are expected to reach the eminials are Miss Lilian Hines of North Carolina and Miss Edna Cordier of New Orleans. The following are the national officers of the American Tennis association: Dr. Harry S. McCard, Baltimore. Md. president; Dr. D. Jisonville, Baltimore. Md. president; Dr. L. Hickle, Baltimore; Ms. Laura Y. Junior, Philadelphia. second vice president: Gerald F. Norman, Flushing, L. L. secretary: James Watson, New York, assistant: Khrickle Jones, New York, treasurer. The first national tournament was held in Baltimore. 12 clubs sending representatives. Since then the national tournaments have been held in New York, 1918; New York, 1919; New York, 1920; Washington, 1221; Philadelphia, 1224; Chicago, New York, 1225; Baltimore, N. J., 1231.
The entry list has grown to such proportions that the officials allow an entry in only two events. It has been taken under advisement as to whether it would be better to hold the doubles or the singles. The matter of a permanent place of meeting will also be brought up at the St. Louis meeting.
Midland ..... 000 200 200-9 12 3
Fern Cliff ..... 204 100 100-7 12
Batteries ..... Murphy, Abbach and
tailings; Roberts, Dillard and
Williams.
MIDLAND, 16: MINERVA, 5
Midland, 16: MINERVA, 5
Midland, 16: C, of Midland, Ph., defeated
the Minervy team, 16 to 5.
Shady Rest Will Hold Tournament for Golf Players
Westfield, N. J., Aug. 12. The Shady Rest Country club will hold a two-day open tournament Sept. 5 and will offer a tournament will be open to all members of the community and representative field of golfers is expected to enter and compete.
Trophies will be presented to the metalist in the qualifying round and the captain at 10 a.m. m. Sept. 5 a qualifying round of 18 holes will be played. All contestants must start in their course. The captain will play m. in order to be eligible for match play. Match play will begin at 2:24 p.m. and consist of 18 holes, 0 p. or 1 p. in each hole, and finals will be held. The tournament will be governed by the rules of the United States Golf Association. The Central Railroad of New Jersey.
BRONX TEAM LOSES 2 TO LLOYD'S MEN
New York, Aug. 6. About 1,000 fans saw the Lincoln Giants both games of a double-header from the first game to the second. The games were in the nature of a workout for the Lincoln in preparation for a five-game series with the Giants. The first three games are being played in Atlantic City and the final double-header will be at the local community college in Salem. In the double-header with the Bronx Giants the Lincolners were victorious by scores of 12 to 1 and 5 to 4. The team was heavy hating on the part of the Lincolners. Joe Quinn was knocked from the mound early in the first game that came back and pitched the second. George Johnson, who has been on the sick for two weeks, hit a home run in the first pitch. Joe Fulks smashed out a circuit clout in the other, tying the score at 11-10. The eighth inning when Tom Gee hit a single through the Bronx first baseman. R.H.E.
Bronx Glants .....000 001 210 .....4 9 2
Lincoln Glants.140 144 020 .....13 16
Batteries-Quinn, Doyle and Gillenk;
R. Gee and Chambers.
R. H.E.
Bronx Glants .....000 200 000 .....4 9 2
Lincoln Glants.200 002 500 .....5 8
Batteries-Quinn and Grantsz; Nutall,
Glenstang and T. Gee.
McCoy Nolans Win 2
Games in S. Dakota
Carpenter. S. D. Auz. 7-The Glants won out in 10 innings from Carpenter. 5 to 3 in a pitching duel. Glants in the Glants and Jones of Carpenter. H. R. K. Carpenter . . . 001 200 101 9 - 8 Glants . . . 001 200 101 1 - 6 Aberdeen. S. D. Auz. 5-The McCoy-Nolan Glants last to the Aberdeen Glants. Williams. Hates and Hoolowel led with the stick. H. R. K. Aberdeen . . . 001 001 001 4 - 3 Glants . . . 001 001 010 00 - 12
Evansville, Ind., Aug. 5. — The
Reichert Giants defeated the Nashville
Giants, members of the 1986
Southern league boys won the
second game today, 5 to 2.
CUBANS DROP 4.3 GAME
College Point, N. Y., Aug. 5. — The
Eastern Cubans dropped a 1 to 3
seven-inning game to the College
Point nine.
R. H. E.
College, Point ... 000 003 — $ 12 3
College, Point ... 100 007 — $ 12 3
Batteries—San and Cardenas;
Emmons and Steelneck.
By Rogers
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1928 Race
HILLDALE IS FORCED TO GO TO THE 12TH
Then Harrisburg Goes Down to Defeat
Philadelphia, Pa. Aug. 5. — In a hurried duel that waited 12 innings Nip Copper and the Hildale club turned back Oscar Charleston and the Harrison Glants by the score of 4 to 3. Each team scored a run in the试练 from the first from when Copper added his own cause with a single in the fourth that chased with both and Gaillard over up matters in their turn at bat on successive singles by Thomas. Carr and Washington and Robinson's sack. The Dables put over the winning counter in the 12th when George Carr hit the left field fence for a triple, and the Rangers scored on Robinson's slow roller along the first base line. Six snappy double plays featured three by the home team, Dirk Berg featured when he captured Warfield's fly in the seventh and doubled Winn on the plate with a perfect throw to Garcia.
REDS. 7: ARTILLERY. 1
Gowdy Field, Fort Benning, Ga.
Aug. 2- Vance, pitching ace of the
Reds, emerged victorious in his third
league, out and all of which should have
been had his teammates played less
errate. The score was 7 to 1.
"Big big gunners" whiffed, while
on two Reds were retired on
attacks. If the Reds keep up their win-
tiness streak there will be no "little world
series" at Fort Benning this year, as
this team won the first half.
R. H. E.
83d Field Art... 000 900 010 - 1 4 2 3
4th Inf. Int. 000, 301 000 - 7 7 3
First. Intest. Douglas Hunt
and Douglas Hidley; Vance
and Hampton.
REDS. 14: INF. SCHDOL. 6
Gowdy Field, Fort Benning, Ga. Aug. 3. The Infantry School Detachment were down to defeat here during the hardships of the 19th Infantry Bells by a 14 to 6 count. Thomas started for the Beds, but the Bells were down to defeat. He gave way to Robinson in the second frame. He also failed to check the oaths of the raging I. S. D. But Robinson was able to dissuade to assume Robinson's burden matters cleared up. He had but one day's rest, but was completely miserable. Not another run was by the I. S. D. Vance allowed but four hits and fanned 11 battles during his seven battles of hurting. [H. E. Bells] 430 102 220-11 12 2 1. S. D. 150 000-09 6 9 5 Robinson. Vance is Brown, Hampton; Tolle and Austin.
BLUES. 7: ARTILLERY. 2
Gowdy Field, Fort Hening, Ga.
Aug. 3. — The 21st Infantry Blues
blues went on a batting, spree here
through the city, seven innings, which netted seven
runs and the defeat of the 52d Field
Arillery.
Lewisland was on the ground for the
Arillery and allowed only four hits.
Eight arillerymen were retired on
strikes.
Seats, the greatest army shortstop
seats, had the army best feet day at bat by collecting two
singles and a trilie out of three times
at bat.
Arillery. — U.K. E.
Arillery. — 020 000 07 — 12
Blues. — 410 000 07 — 12
Batteries — Rathal and Douglas;
Leonard and Thomas.
WHERE THEY PLAY
Aug. 14, 15, 16, 17, 18—Cubans at
Indianapolis; Kansas City, open;
Chicago at Detroit; St. Louis,
Aug. 21, 22, 23, 24, 25—St. Louis at
Indianapolis; Kansas City, open;
Cubans at Detroit; Chicago, open.
Aug. 25, 29, 30, 31, Sept. 1—Deltray at
Indianapolis; cubans at Chicago;
Cubans at Detroit; St. Louis,
Sept. 6, 7, 8, 9—Cubans at St. Louis;
Indianapolis at Chicago;
Kansas City at Detroit.
Sept. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15—Kansas City,
Indianapolis at Chicago;
Detroit; Chicago, open; Cubans,
home, End of season.
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Name ..... 404
R.F.D. ..... Box ..... St & N.
P.O. ..... Rivers
Ted Thompson Wins N. Y. Crown
SATURDAY. AUGUST 14. 1926
Ted WASHINGTON YOUTH BEATS EYRE SAITCH
Finals Match Is a Real One; Goes Limit
Finals Match Is a Real One; Goes Limit
By ARTHUR E. FRANCIS
New York, Aug. 13. Ted Thompson,
the youthful little raconteur wield-
ing Washington, D. C., who
stepped into the Washington,
who spotlight last year
when he continued
the national so-
lity's ship, ran true to
form Saturday when
he defeated the
city of New York city in
the finals of the
New York state
championships. The scores
were 4-7, 6-0,
5-2, 4-4, 6-0
fans were in attendance at the
spotlight last year
when he continued
the national ski-
ship, ran true to
form S at霞城 w
when he defended
the New York city in
the finals of the
New York state
skiing.
The scores
were 4-7, 6-0,
5-0.
More than 400
fans were in
attendance at the
match, while 6
fans of the E. and S. ter-
matches, while Thompson were played at the Nassau County courts, 245th St. and Seventh Ave. Weather conditions for the five days were ideal, and officials say that this year's tournament was the best in history. By virtue of his victory, young Thompson gained the first leg in the beautiful silver trophy offered by the Savoy diving team, times for permanent possession. He also won a cup emblematic of the New York state singles championship. This title was held in Edison, known who did not commit this year. Stitch, who won the Bordentown tournament recently, went into the finals a slight favorite over Thompson, which time he defeated Tally Holmes, three times national champion, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1, 1-6 and 6-3, made a 2 to 1 favorite. Stitch was defeating Holmes in the semifinals Thompson was defeating Wilkinson, also of Washington. But Thompson's play was not impressive. He stretched himself Saturday and came out the
Miss Washington of Philadelphia, New York state women's champion, won her second game in the Brattleboro, Massachusetts, game at Boston, Boston, 6-2, 6-2, Miss Alston made a remarkable showing in the tournament.
Wilkinson and Washington defeated Gant and Giannis finals of the mixed doubles. The scorers were 6-4, 6-2.
Holmes and Thompson were crowned New York state doubles champion, when they won the Smith and Smith, 6-2, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.
The finals in the women's doubles were played Friday afternoon. Miss Washington and L. Y. Junger defeated E. Leonard and A. Alston, 6-1, 6-1.
The entry list this year exceeded the 156 mark and the preliminaries were run off in fine shape. Gilletts and D. Jison Hoag, referrer, A. E. Franklin, chief of unpairs, and B. A. Wood, in charge of court assigning. Dr. T. E. Hanson, president, L. E. Spooner, secretary, and W. Stevenson, treasurer.
Many trophies were given the winners this year. The largest and most prestigious trophy was the "world's finest dancing palace," for the men's singles. This cup must be won three times for permanent possession. The Bathwalite cup is the current graduate of the Wendell Phillips high school, Chileno, and former national women's singles champion, from the first leg in Philadelphia in 1955 and another leg this year. Miss Channels did not compete. addition to these, many small cups were offered by prominent Hibernum business men. Out-of-town players were entertained during their stay in the city. Cups were honored at a dance at the Savoy dancing palace. Thursday they were guests of honor at a cathedral party with friends and Saturday evening the champions and their friends were banqueted at Craigs.
MEN'S SINGLES
Semifinals—Thompson defeated
Wilkinson, 5—7, 6—3, 6—4, 1—5, 6—3,
E. Saitch defeated Holmes, 6—3, 3—5,
6—1, 1—6, 6—3.
Finals—Thompson defeated Saitch,
4—7, 6—0, 2—4, 6—6, 4.
MEN'S DOUBLES
Finals—Holmes and Thompson defeated
Saitch and Smith, 2—6, 6—4,
6—4, 6—4.
WOMEN'S DOUBLES
Finals—O. Washington and L. V.
Junior defeated E. Leonard and E.
Alston, 6—1, 6—4.
JUNIOR SINGLES
JUNIOR SINGLES
Finals- B. A. Bshe defeated Gene
Norman, 6-2, 6-3.
WOMEN'S SINGLES
Semifinals- O. Washington defeated
F. Gittin, 6-2, 6-4; A. Alston
defeated A. Ballard, 7-5, 2-1,
6-4.
Finals- O. Washington defeated
Miss Alston, 6-2, 6-3.
MIXED DOUBLES
Semifinals- Wilkinson and Washington
defeated Jones, 6-2, 6-4; H. Ginever and Gant defeated
Thompson and Vaughan, 9-7, 7-5.
Finals- Wilkinson and Washington
defeated Holmes and Gant, 6-4, 6-2.
GILK'S. 13; BRISTOW. 6
GILK'S, Iowa, Iowa. 7; Gillkerson's
Canton house has the last defeated
the Charles City semipro-
club. R.H.E.
Gilkeronson's Gtss. 000 561 010 - 13 17 6
Charles City ..... 000 011 010 - 6 11 1
Batterley -- Knight and Coleman
Birdseye, Vetter and Brandon.
#
Am. Giants Win Three From A's
MIDWESTERN NET PLAY TO START AUG. 12
Thompson, Brown and Hudlin Arrive.
Ted Thompson, Washington, D. C., national tennis champion and twice winner of the New York state title, arrived in the city Wednesday morning fresh from his victory over Sutch for the Empire state honors last Saturday, ready to meet all corners in the annual midwestern play, which starts Thursday on the grounds of the Pritzle Tennis club, 32d St. and Vernon Ave.
Eigar Brown, twin national champion and holder of a string of titles, formerly of Indianapolis, but now of St. Louis, runner-up to Richard Huddlin for the St. Louis crown this year, and Richard Huddlin, resident of St. Louis, member of last year's University of Chicago varsity tennis team, arrived late Thursday.
Carter of Wilberforce, E. J. Simmons, Dayton, winner of last year's midwest play, and others will enter the coming play.
Dr. Owen B. Williams, Russell State University Dayton, philips, Dr. William and Pacey McMahon, among the strong local contenders.
The play will not take on the magnitude that the national tournament, held in Baltimore, apologizes for. Jimmy Dilma and Harry Hare will be charged of the arrangements. Issues then being president of the Prairie club, to these two men a lot of credit is due, because they have spent many hours and money in building up the game in this city. They were instrumental in getting many Chicagoans to Washington for the 1923 play, each time the first invasion of the Eastmen made western players. It cost both men a pretty penny. They took up the fight to bring the 1923 play to Chicago, and for the first time the West was awarded by the national tournament play.
THE SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Memphis reports come in four and five games at a time. There are no dates on the reports, and we, of course, are not mind readers or we publishes a sign hung on the outside making an easy living. It is hard to get Memphis and some of the owners of the Southern league clubs to mail them in. We have no of the game or the morning after. They hold them until four or five games have been played and then shoot them in without date or days when the games have been played. They have been husted. Repeated requests to L. C. Sharp, R. C. Lewis and those connected with the Memphis club have gone unheeded. We believe the pub should understand. We would like to see you prepared so prepared you will know what it is all about.
HOW THEY BAT
HOW THEY BAT
BV A. D. WILLIAMS
SUGGS-SARMIENTO FIGHT
SUGGS
SUGGS LANDING
The little bantamweight boxer fr
than 10,000 fans at Madison Square
he defeated Pete Sarmiento, the Fili
star show staged by Tex Richard.
His terrific body punches were too m
slightly outweighed, won the decision
from beginning to end. The Filipin
In the first round he sailed into Su
knew what it was all about he had
Sarmiento also took the seventh round
SQUEEZE PLAY
13-INNING 2-1
SILK SOX; PLAY
SUGGS
SARMIENTO
SUGGS LANDING WITH RIGHT
— Photo Copyright New York Times Journal.
The little bantamweight boxer from New Bedford, Mass., thrilled more than 10,000 fans at Madison Square Gardens Thursday night, Aug. 5, when he defeated Pete Sarmiento, the Filipino flash, in the headliner of the all-star show staged by Tex Rickey. Sugga was shown in a fight with the right hand, but the left hand was outweighed, won the decision. Sarmiento was simply outclassed from beginning to end. The Filipino was only able to win two rounds, but he was knocked out before the second round. knew what it was all about he had been knocked around by the Filipino. Sarmiento also took the seventh round.
SQUEEZE PLAY GIVES DAISIES 13-INNING 2-1 GAME AGAINST SILK SOX; PLAYER BREAKS LEG
Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 7. — The Hilldale club staged another extra-inning game at the Darby when it took the Dapales 13 innings to gain a 2 to 1 verdict over the Patterson Silk Sox. The game was a pitcher's battle between Bullet Campbell, the Boston butcher boy, and Frank Talent, who was a collegiate star when he wore the blue of Yale.
The game, however, was marred by a serious incident that occurred in infield inning 11 of the Silk Sox when Lloyd Zinn hit the good ball against Brieza hit to Talent, who elected to make the play on Robinson at gird base. The base runner had a good lead from second, and the sliding ball about the same time and the baseman was unable to get set for the play. He retired the runner and then fell over. He was rushed to the Miskin hospital in a walking automobile.
The Daisies put over the winning run in the 12th, when Otto Briggs led with superficial intentions and dimple Eichen, who had moved in from the outfield to take Zimmier's place, fielded the ball but first flag was unintended. Thomas then laid down a bunt and squeezed Briggs over with the winning run.
HILDALE BILLA.
PATerson S.
BILLA.
Briggs ff. 1 1 0 Peter's ff. 0 1 1 0
Mackey ff. 0 1 1 0 Mairff. 0 1 1 0
Johnson ff. 0 1 1 0 Mairff. 0 1 1 0
Winter ff. 0 1 1 0 Lalapelle ff. 0 1 2 0
Washburn ff. 0 1 1 0 Zimmier ff. 0 1 2 0
Campbell ff. 0 1 1 0 Zimmier ff. 0 1 2 0
Total: 2 10 12 11 Total: 1 56 25
"Come out when winning run scored"; John Paterson Silk. 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
Hildael. 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
Washburn. 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
Base-line Warfield, Mackey, Peters.
'SPORT KING' FOUND AX MURDER VICTIM
Perth Amboy, N.J., Aug. 12 — Julius Bennett, 20 years old, 204 screws St. A., a former police officer, was found murdered in his home on Monday, Aug. 12.
In his car, his assistants had chopped off his head, dismembered an arm and other body parts. The murder was discovered when a white man, who had, some time before, fissured from beneath the door of Bennett's house. No one responded to the call. The house was boated and barred from the inside. After police had effected the investigation, the detective discovered that his assistants had entered the house. Bennett, according to the police, had on a number of occasions been armed on a charge of operating a disability device.
FUQUAS. 4; BARRINGTON. 5
The Fouqus Giants of Chicago lost a last and well played game at thirteenth H. II. The pitching of Wilson for the Giants out of Dan Benson for the Giants drew a pass and three bangles in four trips to the plate.
R. H. E.
Fouqus: . . . 010 630 000—1 I
Bouqus: . . . 010 240 000—5 I
Batteries = Wilson and Boudens
Van Dienge and Elserman
DEFEND Win Th
SARMIENTO
ING WITH RIGHT
Photo Copyright New York Evening Journal.
From New Bedford, Mass., thrilled more
Gardens Thursday night, Aug. 6, when
jojo flash, in the headliner of the all-
ugga is shown landing with his right.
such for the Filipino. Sugas although
n. Sarmiento was simply outclassed
to was only able to win two rounds.
eggs and before the New Bedford lad
been knocked around by the Filipino.
and.
GIVES DAISIES.
GAME AGAINST
YER BREAKS LEG
TOLEDO PITCHER IN
NO - HIT - NO - RUN
GAME; MATES WIN
Toledo, Ohio, Aug. 3.—Young Pellis, star twirler of the Center Pellis of the Frederick Doughns, has been reached the armchair of all baseball twirlers here today by defeating the South Side Panthers (white) by a 21 victory. He has also reached the armchair of pitcher of Toledo, did not allow a hit or run.
Phillips feat stands out more when he George H. Kitchen, himself a former star of Tuskegee and Grinnell university of Iowa. Phillips never pitched in the major leagues, but his national direction of Kitchen. Other features of the game were the busy but of Jimmie McCulligan, who connected for three doubles, triples and a home win, three on bases.
R. H. E., South Side ... 122, 000 000 — 0. 0 3
Ratlester ... 220, 000 000 — 0. 0 3
Ratlester—Jubel, Siler and Kydman; Phillips and Parks.
CLEVELAND COPS 2;
BEAT FAVORITE KNITS
Cleveland, Aug. 5. - The Elites huge "F" guns, Branigan and Branahan, stilted the Favorite Knit road clips in the Hopper field, and when the evening shadows fell the Elites had two games in the stilted sack, 5 to 2 and 10 to 2. Branigan completely mystified the Favorite Knit in the initial perch, while Branahan served an assessment of curver, drops, floaters and speed bulbs in the nightcap which constantly eluded the aggregation. Sixteen of the Knite's members were assigned via the breese route, Branigan breezing seven and Branahan nine. Milton was the day's swat King, coloured in two doubles, a triple and a circuit clutch. Hamilton Zonphil and Honner were the sluggers for the Elites.
PAVORITE KNITS
Tasker f. 2 0 10 Tyler f. 2 0 10 Tyler f. 2 0 10 Vince f. 2 0 10 Zimmers f. 2 0 10 Zimmers f. 2 0 10 Hamilton f. 2 0 10 Hamilton f. 2 0 10 Hamilton f. 2 0 10 King f. 2 0 10 King f. 2 0 10 Neumann f. 2 0 10 Wrothman f. 2 0 10 Wrothman f. 2 0 10 Hewes f. 2 0 10 Hewes f. 2 0 10 Hewes f. 2 0 10 Irbinger p. 1 0 00 Irbinger p. 1 0 00 Irbinger p. 1 0 00 Irbinger p. 1 0 00 Irbinger p. 1 0 00
Totals: 35 22 9227 Totals: 34 11 17
Batted for Vice
Hamilton out, interference
Knott out.
Knott out.
1 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 2
Knott out.
1 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 2
Tombstone hit-Trip, Millson 42.
Millson out, interference
Millson out, off-Friday.
Millson out, off-Friday.
2 by Ranahan.
NEXON GAME
BILL
Farrell Kinn, 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 - 1 0 0
Farrell Kinn, 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 - 1 0 0
Farrell Kinn, 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 - 1 0 0
NOTICE TO THE McCOY-NOLANS
Baseball games must be mailed
according to Instructions on score
blanks, after every game, and not alx
you if you persist in doing it that
you if you persist in doing it that
way. The two sport games cannot be
set in type in one day; the machines
must work on other copy. Let's
be good cause doing and give
something each day and not
all at once.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER n Wins ENDER SP n Three Fr
INDIANAPOLIS CAN'T STOP FOSTER'S MEN
Chicagoans Keep in First Place by Wins
Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 10.—Indianapolis lost the third straight game to the American Giants this afternoon, 4 to 3.
Indianapolis, Aug. 9.—Swinging their hats at everything Stevens and McCall had to offer, the American Giants came from behind to get down the Indianapolis As today, 4 to 5. A brilliant sixth inning rally getting six runs put the visitors in the lead and the extra run in the seventh tucked the game away on ice. The Giants collected 16 safe blows but not a bit was for extra bases.
McDonald started for the Giants, but gave way to Harney in the seventh when Mac was yanked for a pinch hit. Hines, in the sixth.
Giants ..... 010 036 100-5 16 1
A. B. C. s..... 002 030 100-5 13
Batteries - Stevens, McCall and Foreman; McDonald, Harney and Russ.
Indianapolis, Aug. 8.—The American Giants won the opening game in Indianapolis, 0 to 2, and then defeated the Mets, 0 to 2, count when the 6 clock Sunday baseball closing law put a halt to the contest.
Willie Foster hurled good ball to beat Mitchell in the first game and with Miller, Miller is scheduled to report to the Giants office in Detroit or in Chicago.
INDIANAPOLIS
ARABA
Taylor 2b. 4 0 1 Gardner. 4 1 0 RBA.
DeLose 2b. 4 0 1 Marcher. 4 1 0 0
Tile 2b. 4 0 1 Thompson. 4 1 0 0
Harley 2b. 4 1 0 Williams. 4 1 0 0
Bodden 2b. 4 1 0 Clarke. 4 1 0 0
Mitchell 1b. 1 0 0 0
Miller 1b. 1 0 0 0
Totals... 22 42 27 12 Totals... 22 14 27 11
Electrical for Witchell in the 11th
TUSKEGEE GRID STAR ADOPTS SNAKE AS PET FOR THE TIGERS
Steve has built a cage in which he
keeps his mascot. Together with a
number of other members of the
football squad, he is spending his
vacation at the institute, where he is
employed.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pot.
AM. GIANTS 22 1.957
ANNUAL CITY 16 2.97
ST. LOUIS 13 7 .650
DETROIT 8 15 .648
INDIANA POLISI 7 16 .304
CUBANS 3 17 .150
EASTERN LEAGUE
Won. Lost. Pot.
CUBANS 15 10 .603
BACHARACHS 25 17 .529
ANNUAL GIANTS 16 17 .571
HILLDALE 29 24 .547
HARRISBURG 13 18 .529
BALTIMORE 17 25 .405
BROOKLYN 14 10 .255
(Includes games of Aug. 8.)
NEW ORLEANS ..... 14
MEMPHIS ..... 14
GAINES ..... 14
CHATTANOOGA ..... 9
BIRMINGHAM ..... 7
AGNES ..... 8
HAMPTON ..... 8
HOMERY ..... 8
ATLANTA ..... 8
New York, Aug. 10. — When the Lincoln Gators return to this city they will have shored the Cuban out of first place, according to the theory of the local fans. The Islanders now rest in first place, just as the five-game series between the two will begin. The first three games will be played in Atlantic City at the Bacharach' park. It is there, with the seaside folks follow for the New York Giants' shutout, homes to improve his position in the league race by taking two out of the three contests from the Islanders in team return to this city for a twin hill Sunday, and the Giants are looking forward to win both encounters, such can take place the Cubans, who now leading with 15 games won and 10 lost, will find themselves out of first place. They are but five points ahead of Atlantic City now taking four out of five games won and 14 out of 15. And the percentage of a .533rd. They present percentage is .660. Should the Lincoln win four out of five, won 10, and lost column would read one win 10, and their percentage would be .605.
If the Lincolns can win three out of five they would have won 19 and lost 15 and would have a percentage of .458, and the Cubans would have won 17 and lost 15 and would have a percentage of .567. The Bacharachs having won 25 and lost 17, with a percentage of .555, would case into first place. We remember that there are a lot of "it's" and baseball is one most uncertain game. You never can tell what will happen.
ST. LOUIS TAKES FOUR OUT OF FIVE FROM THE CUBANS
---
Lincoln Giants
May Knock Cuban
Stars From Lead
CUBAN STARS ... 15 10
BACHARACHS ... 25. 17
LINCOLN ... 16 12
KANSAS CITY KNOCKS THE DETROIT STARS OVER FOR FOUR STRAIGHT VICTORIES
Mo. Aug 7. — The
ed out Kenyon. Dep-
pitcher, yesterday,
miling up five runs
in the first two
battles.
W. Bell
"Leftoft" Cooper, the Detroit star, had been called in to replace Kenyon, and he allowed only one run the remainder of the game. William Bell, however, protected the lead he headed inmates in the early innings, and the National league champions won, a tie.
W. Ball
Bell struck out six and walked only one. Until the fifth, Detroit's only scoring only one Detroit latter reached in the fifth, however, a walk to Daniels, a single by Jeffries and Manager Taylor's timely single sent two runs home. Allison Monarch pitcher was in only six hits.
Five hits, bunched with a walk and a double steel, gave the Monarchs three runs in the first. The two runs in the second came on a walk to Allison Allen's fiercest hit and a single for Tortuerville.
Cooper relieved Kenyon with only one out in this inning and slapped the attack. The only run allowed by the attack was a third by eighth on Mothie's double—his third hit—a sacrifice fly by Hawkins and Duncan's pinch kick into center field. The victory was the Monarchs' 13th win and the second half of the pennant race.
DETROIT STATS | RANSAS CITY
ABRIL. B. | ABRIL. B. | ABRIL. B.
Riggs ff. 4 0 0 Albright 4 0 0
Stearns ref. 4 0 0 Torrestad cf. 4 0 0
Weiler ff. 3 0 0 Joseph B. 4 0 0
Demphele ff. 3 0 0 Monbell B. 4 0 0
Taylor ff. 3 0 0 Unman B. 4 0 0
Kegson ff. 3 0 0 Well B. 4 0 0
Cooper ff. 3 0 0
Totals 20 20 20 Totals 12 12 12
Detroit Stars 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Detroit Monster 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Joseph Johnson, McNair, Tenhase blitz—Duncan, Monster, Three-hare blitz—Alen, Streak
—Kegson, Johnson, Bell, Dell, Cooper, 1
Stars won both ends of their double bill here today against the Cuban Stars, 5 to 3 and 9 to 6, the second tilt going only seven frames.
R.H.E. Cubans ... 000 003 002-5 8 2
St. Louis ... 002 110 001-9 10
Batteries — Diaz and Calderon: Glass and Williams.
R.H.E. Cubans ... 001 500 0-6 10 2
St. Louis ... 003 141 — 9 10 10
Batteries — Pedromite: Gomez and Calderon: Ross and Williams. Mur-
AM. GIANTS IN DETROIT FOR 5 GAMES
Detroit, Mich.; August 15.—The Detroit Stars arrived home from their trip to Kansas City in which they hit a slump and lost for four straights to the Monarchs, who are pressing the American Giants for the lead in the National league race.
9
Manager Flikks got his team outt
out of the arena for a strenuous
time that lapped
six hours. He is
up in the score with
the Giants, who
open a five-game
saturday for Satur-
day Giants to do Dee
The advance sale has reached such proportions that the largest team in the league teams perform will be at Mack park. Special arrangements are being made to take care of the excursion Sunday that is coming over from Chicago.
Two Home Runs Help Brown's Stars to Win
Warren, Ohio, Aug. 8. — Johnson's
home run in the eighth with two on
the path and Smith's homer in the
same frame beat out the Washington
Board of Trade nine, 5 to 4.
R. H.E.
Brown's Stats. ... 000 103 84* ... 13. 1
Washington ... 100 002 40* ... 10. 1
Batterias — Walker and Young;
PART 1—PAGE 11
Kansas City, Mo. Aug. 5. — The
championship of the second half
Mississippi City,
Montgomery City,
the championship
of the National
championship
champions turned
back the Detroit
Stars in a double-
bounce on the heels of the
league leading
Chicago club. The
team went to 5 and 7 to 4.
#
The Monarchs close the home
the Detroit club
and then invade
Chicago for a pen-
deal deciding se-
Torrientl
Joe Mendez, who worked the last three innings without allowing a hit, was the first to score the first three innings, W. Boll, starting the game with only one day's rest, was knocked out in the sixth. C. Bell, the third inning, but Mendez stopped the stars in their tracks, retiring, the nine men to face him.
Kenyon, who started the first game on the series against the Monarchs on Saturday, suffered the same fate, being replaced by Treadwell, who was a big improvement.
A total of 27 hits were made, the Monarchs won 13, Newt Joseph, with a single, a double and a triple, was the big sticker for the champions. Blackwaters got the Stars, got two singles and a doubles.
The Monarchs left for a 10-day barnormoring trip in Kansas. The next and final league series will open in Chengo Aug. 27.
R. H.E. Detroit ..... 111 005 100 - 9 12 Monarchs ..... 031 152 00 - 10 14 Batteries-Kenyon, Treadwell and W. Bell, C. Bell, Mendez and Youn
COLUMBUS KEYSTONES WIN
Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 8.—The Columbus Keystones defeated the N. & W. All Stars 11 to 5 in the third game of a three-game championship. The series now stands two games to one in favor of the Keystones.
FROM MANILA
the Wonder
CIGAR
ISABELA
5¢
only at
UNITED
CIGAR STORES
Double Certificates every
day now. Save them!
WHAT'S HAPPENING IN AND AROUND NEW YORK
PART 1—PAGE 12
CHEMIST FINDS 20 PER CENT OF CITY'S MOON 'POISONED'
New York, Aug. 18—Doctor distillers who have failed to recapture drinkable "stuff" from automobiles anti-freeze mixtures and wood alcohol paint thinner nevertheless still maintain a portion of their experiments. J. W. Quillen, chief chemist of the bureau of internal revenue, said Samples in the government laboratory contain 20 per cent of the liquor on sale in New York speaking that some of its contents, under normal analysis, a percentage of industrial, in liquid form, is a dangerous heart stimulant. The crop of 1823 which required in the deaths in New York city in 1823, in which alcohol in soluble content beside the liquor that is now streaming from high-power wood alcohol mixtures, Mr. Quillen said. He declared further that he did not know of the alcoholic poisoning—in the light of liquor on the market today—could be Up to $3556, the chemist said, he had enlisted in five years but three alcohol. Now one cut of every experiment that reach him shows the alcohol. Now one cut of every alcohol the stuff that blends or kills.
Boat excursions in the Hudson, beach parties in Manhattan beaches, and dances for summer visitors hold the highlight in New York circle clubs. Last week witnessed many delightful affairs which were enjoyed by summer visitors. The annual forest was the annual dance of the New York Tennis association given Wednesday. The affair was given in honor of the contestants to the tenth annual championships. On Thursday evening the association entertained at a candle party timing the annual bouquet for the tournament winner was held. Dr. Iverson is president. Fate Summer Visitors. The annual recital and dance for summer visitors, N.Y. At the final complete success. Several hundred members of the younger set danced and the morning. The affair was sponsored by the New York Business academy which R. W. Justice is the principal.
Mira, Hazel Thompson Dahl, pops in the city for her vacation. Mrs. Thirea Eubanks, popular memoir writer, who went her vacation here last week for home. Mrs. Pamela Aigner, choreographer. Chichester is in the city for vacation. Last Sunday evening Mr. Wagner was the guest of honor, Mrs. Wagner of the house of his sister Beverly W. Worth. The annual boat excursion of the Metropolitan Baptist church was a success.
Gov. "Mia" Perrison granted no New Year's pardons, but perhaps there were no more prisoners left in Texas to pardon—Troy Record.
YES, SIR! IT'S A FACT! MURRAY'S SUPERIOR HAIRDRESSING POMADE DID IT IN FIVE MINUTES
THE NEW YORK TIMES
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AGENTS WANTED
HALL-MILLS MURDER WITNESS
MRS. NELLIE LO RUSSELL
Star witness in the Hall-Mills double murder muri
her testimony that the investigation into the murder
and Mrs. Eleanor Mills of New Brunswick, N. J., ca
four years ago. Mrs. Russell has sworn before the
judge that she saw Mrs. Russell, the pig woman,
had said that she saw Mrs. Hall, wife of the ministe
the murder between 9:30 and 10 p. m. and drive awa
Mrs. Russell says the "pig woman" was at her home
made it impossible for her to see anyone leave the
Mrs. Russell is shown holding her pet puppy. Special
plans holding her as a maternal witness. No arrest h
Star witness in the Halt-Mills double murder mystery. It was upon her testimony that the investigation into a murder of a few years ago was made public. Mrs. Gibson was in a sudden hald four years ago. Mrs. Russell has sworn before the grand jury that the story told by Mrs. Jane Gibson, the "pig woman", was a lie. Mrs. Gibson was in a sudden hald four years ago. Mrs. Russell has sworn before the grand jury that the murder between 9:30 and 10 p.m. and drive away in a Ford sedan. Mrs. Russell says the "pig woman" was at her home at that time, which is not where she was found. Mrs. Gibson is Mrs. Russell is shown holding her pet, puppy. Special Prosecutor Simpson plans holding her as a maternal witness. No arrest has been made as yet.
NEW YORK CITY BRIEFS
NEW YORK CITY BRIEFS
THE LITTLE FLOWER CLUB
Members of the Little Flower Club are the children of the church, of which Father Joseph A. John is the spiritual director, are most likely to assist in rabies funds to deny mortgage expenses of the St. Mary Church, and are pleased to assist in rabies funds to bless mortgage expenses of the St. Mary Church. Mother M. Thorellen is the organiser and general director.
LEAPE FOR PILGRIMAGE
Members of St. Mark's parish are about to complete plans for their annual Auschwitz camp. A large crowd of pilgrims from St. Peter Claver, St. Benedict the Great, are to attend this affair. Mother Mary Francis is directing the pilgrimage, who will carry them to the Heiligs.
GIVE SHORE DINNER
The Lifes Social club cake a delightful has a ride and share dinner last week. The club members and their friends two large horses the club members and their friends to the beach. After the beach party the members and their friends were entertained at the dinner.
NRS NAHONE HERE
Mrs. Zadie Franch Muhene of Chicago is in the city the guest of Muhene before returning home will visit Atlantic City, N.J., and Boston, Mass., Atlantic City, N.J., and Boston, Mass.
GIVES BUS RIDE
An outstanding event of Interest last
week is the St. Mark La Grande cage
given by the St. Mark La Grande cage
Eimo M. Anderson is the eldest brook-
side within a week.
BITTEN BY DOG
Little 7-year-old Lorneta Watson, 39,
W. 12th St. suffered laxations about
ten by a dog in the railway at the 12th
St. address. The dog was owned by
Richard Freeman. The child was at
age 12 and later required to be hospital
and later required to be home.
CHIGAGDANS HERE
Mir, Hered Thompson Davie, popular
author of *The Wizard of Oz*, lived in the city spending her vacation. While
she was a student at the University of
Arkansas Anderson, 200 W. 1520 St., N. W.
1520 W. 1520 St., before the
return to the Winds City,
POISONED BY GAS
Mrs. Cecia Prever, 75 years of age, 275
years of age, died Tuesday at her home. Mrs. Prever
died on her bed as she was doing
her work. Dr. Brannon of Columbia hospital,
by Dr. Brannon of Columbia hospital,
OVERCOME BY HEAT
Lee Groomer, 25 years of age, 250 Lexon Ave., was overcome by heat Thursday in Brooklyn, N. K. He was treated at the Cumberland hospital.
HURT IN JUMP
Mrs. Gates Williams, 72 years of age, suffered cuts about the face and arm, suffered cuts on the back window of her house. She was treated by Dr. Erranan, Columbus hospital.
VICTIM OF INDIGESTION
Clarence Bowler, 51, 2556 Seventh Avenue. A murderer, evening in his home, she. Bowler suffered acute indigestion.
TO FETE PARISHONERS
Rev. Father J. C. Dunkert, pastor of church, making plans to enter the members of the parish with a bus ride.
CUT ON LEG
Joseph Bennett, 50 years of age, $2,50
Eighth Ave., was cut on the left
when he was struck by an auto at 12th
and Eighth Ave.
DISEASES OF MEN
An Ounce of Prevention is
Worth a Pound of Cure
PREVENTZ
Does Absolutely Prevent
DISEASES OF MEN
A harmless preparation neatly put on
will not cause any harm. It
is avoided by eminent physicians.
Every man should carry a tube
at all times. It will save you
money and eliminate unnecessary
sufferings. Sent in plain
package.
Money Refunded If Not
Satisfied
Mail the repose with $2,000 today—
dont delay. One walk to a doctor will
cost you $3 without the cost of the
medical treatment.
WHITE PLAINLY IN PENCIL
PREVENTZ CO., Suite 300, Street A.
134 Nassau St., New York City.
I am an honest money order for $2.50,
firmly payable to the proper person.
special offer of PREVENTZ. If after
staining the student's ink not satisfied
will retain the full package and
you will refund the $2.50.
Name:
Address:
City:
State:
Miss Berta C. Stephens of Gladra
sent her vacation here. While in the
sent her vacation here. While in the
Miss Jillianne Howard summer school
student at Columbia university.
OFF TO FLORIDA
R. L. Jenkins of the Carnegie Avenue
postoffice, left the city Friday evening,
walt with relatives in Jacksonville.
HERE FOR SCHOOL
Miss Ruth Fowler, Lynchburg, Va. is in the city attending summer school in Columbia university of Iowa here. Miss J. W. Anderson, 51, Lynchburg, 19th St.
MISS ARNSTEAD HERE
Miss Anna Armstead, popular member of Chicago's socialist party, is in the city for her vacation. She is the guest of Mrs. H. Ross, 294 St. Nicholas Ave.
HAS INFLUENZA
Mrs. Rebecca Robinson, 25 years of age, W. St. Nicholas hospital. She is suffering from influenza.
CUT ON LEG
Willis Park, 25 years of age, 290 W. 123d St. was cut on the left leg Thursday when she was struck by an auto at 10:30 a.m.
SEVEROUSLY INJURED
Duella Lumbach, 25, 191 W. 11th St. when she was born this time she was an auto crash victim at 143 N. St. and Seventh Ave.
HELD FOR OBSERVATION
Mary McCormack was born September 14, 1915. She was sent to Delaware hospital Thursday for observation.
HAS PLEURISY
Les Daniel, 20 years of age, 201 W. 11th St. when she suffered from pluria.
SPRAINS FOOT
Leroy Williams, 9, 216 W. 13th St. when he collapsed Thursday. He is confined to his home.
DOG·BITES GIRL
Amanda Wyatt, 21 W. Lath St., was hitten by a dog Thursday while playing in the streets.
AT COLUMBUS HOSPITAL
The 11th floor of the seventh Ave. is ill at Columbus hospital.
ILL AT HARLEM HOSPITAL
Milda Milesd Armstrong, 21 years of age. Is ill at Harlem hospital.
First Baptist Church, E. 15th St. and
Scheduled Day, Rev. R. 15th St., Brown, pa-
sitioned preaching at 11 a. m. by the pas-
tor. Music by the choir. Visitors to
the city are invited to be present.
Friendship Baptist Church, 47 Elk-
hill Ave.—Rev. Edwards has prepared
a special sermon for Sunday. An in-
spired preaching will attend the services. Musical numbers will be rendered by the choir. Evening
services at 5 o'clock.
Holy Trinity Baptist Church, DeKalb
Pastor—Everybody knows Rev. Harvey
as a forceful speaker. He has prepared
a special sermon for his members Sun-
day. Musical numbers will be rendered
by the choir.
Mount Calvary Baptist Church, Green
and Tompkins Sts., Rev. R. W. Sim-
sons, Jerkins Ave., Rev. W. Simsons,
Sunday services: short sermons and
good music. Evening services at 5 p.
m. and morning services at 11 a. m.
Mt. Lebanon Baptist Church, Howard
and Jerkins Ave., Rev. W. Simsons,
Sunday services: short sermons and
good music. Evening services at 5 p.
m. and morning services at 11 a. m.
Mt. Lebanon Baptist Church, Howard
and Jerkins Ave., Rev. W. Simsons,
Sunday services: short sermons and
good music. Evening services at 5 p.
m. and morning services at 11 a. m.
A. M. F. METHODIST
Bethel A. M. E. Church, Corner Dean Pastor. The pastor extends an invitation to all persons to visit the services at Pastor. The pastor extends an invitation to all persons to visit the services at Special musical numbers by the choir.
Bridge St. A. M. E. Church, 312 Bridge St. B. Ray. B. F. Taylor. Pastor-Practicing by the pastor every Sunday evening services at 7:45 a.m. Allen Christian Endeavor begins will meet at 6 P. M. You are invited to be present.
St. Johns A. M. E. Church, 260 Howlway the summer the services will be short the summer the services will be short The pastor will deliver the sermon at 5 p. M. Musical numbers by the choir.
about breathing relieved in 24 to 48 hours.
He is a patient of the Heart Center, the liver and lungs.
justifies the blood and prevents swelling from
the heart. Dr. Emory Bentley Co. Dept
16 Alstrom.
LEAVES CITY
OFF TO FLORIDA
HAS INFLUENZA
HAS PLEURISY
SPRAINS FOOT
Church Notes
SCHOOLS TO OPEN THREE
DAYS TO ADMIT. PUPILS
New York, Aug. 12—On the outside public school buildings in the Bronx and Queens now prominently displayed notice informing the parents of school children of the admission and transfer of pupils on the admission and transfer of pupils. Friday, Sept. 8, and 10, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, and 1 to 2 p.m. each day. The transfer and registration of their children on those days. The admission of pupils, children under 6 years of age will not be received, except in kindergarten classes until all older children of age will not be admitted to kindergarten classes until all older children. Furthermore, it is required that children who have never attended a public school will receive a satisfactory certificate of vaccination.
When applying for transfer, children who have been attending public schools may be admitted for cards before they will be admitted to any other schools. In regard to this, parents are reminded that transfer requests must be made in the usual request of the parent or guardian.
Lands in Jail When
18-Year-Old Actress
Held on Assault Charge
New York, Aug. 13—Following an ambitional charge of assault, a 15-year-old actress, Bling, at 129 W. 15th St., New York, rushed to the hospital half Friday morning by Magistrate Doura in Morristown court, who made by Sylvester Willeon, an elevator operator of 2010 Grand Ave. He and Ethel had been arrested for late night intruding into the address. Early Thursday morning, according to the police, Miss George deceived her by asking her to have a conversation he had made on the enforcement he had made on the arrest. An argument is said to have followed when she had drawn a penknife and shaded Sylvester in the stomach so hard that she was unable to annotate Ethel. Where he nearly died to death. Detective Tracey of the Highbridge police station informed an investigation Ethel. Judge Sylvester told the magistrate "he did not mean to do it. Please let her off." The magistrate was uncontested.
Youth Held for Stealing
New Suit From Landlord
New York, Aug. 12.—Maristate Vil-
sor, 22-year-old Island Glover without
ball Wednesday. Glover was charged
that he had refused to allow him ball because
of a previous conviction for grand larceny.
According to Robert Fountain, super-
intendent of the apartment house at the
Island, he had assigned his basement apartment to Glover and after buying a suit of clothes for $50
Fountain hung the garments in a closet
he hewed on Sunday morning the suit
had disappeared undone. Glover
Winterhalter of the W. 12th St. station,
arrested the Harlem youth and
pawn ticket for a suit which Fountain
later identified as his. Winterhalter
Glover not only 12 on the 400 suit
shown.
Hits Woman With Comb in Fight; Lands in Jail
New York, Aug. 13—Mrs. Luckleby without ball for further examination following her arrangement before Nakabal Heights court on a charge of assault.
The complaint against Ala Saina 25d St., who alleged the former hit her on the forehead with a heavy metal comb.
Alleged Bad Man Is Killed Fleeing Cop
Freeport, L. L, Aug. 13—Henry Hamilton, 25 years of use, an alleged "bad man" while fleeing a police officer
Hamilton is said to have had an ally in a woman, Zeiger, fearing Hamilton had a revolver, called a policeman. When Hamilton greeted him with a few punches to the face, then fled. When told to halt and died at a local hospital.
New York, Aug. 13.—Accused of hiting a town ofown of 1984, 1987, on the ground, the officerquarrel, John Ullmers, 24, of 581 W. 10th St., New York, with the further examination following in thealignment before Maxime Vilain in heights court on a charge of arrogance.
Rioters Fined
BURGLAR SUSPECT HELD
New York, Aug. 13—James Wiles, a St. Isle student with bad hair for all his life, is being held without bail for the assault. He has his arraignment before Magistrate Court and will be held in Helps court on a charge of burglary.
MANHATTAN DEATHS
STATE NEWS
STATE NEWS
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.
George Carter passed through the city last week en route to New York City to attend the 2014 NCAA basketball vacation. He returns Aug. 17 to Sebago Lake, Maine. He will remain there until the last week in September. Mrs. Ella Reynolds of Chicago, IL, and Mrs. Fannie and Miss Mildred Bateman of Brookings are visiting Mrs. Brookings.
Jno. Patrice is now located at 410 Stain
61.
Aires, Edith Lawrence is ill at Vassar hospital.
Dan Connay passed away last week. Funeral services were held at Zion A. M. Church. He was guardian of K. P. circle, the pastor of the United Church of New York, Native of Jamaica in the West Indies, present pastor of the audience on Court House corner at Malin and Market St. last Monday night. Joshwanks lost their game in Milbrook last Sunday; score, T. to S. C. C. C. last Sunday night and perfected plans for their annual plenic at Bear Creek. Mrs. Fillet R. Coolay had electric lights at Zion A. M. Church repaired the chicken summer at Ethetenze Baptist church last Thursday night under the presence of the social workers was a success. Rev. W. W. Brown and sister are Rev. Brown will proach for Rev. Payne Sunday, Aug. 15, when he will celebrate church. Brown will proach for Rev. Payne church. Ordination services of Dragon Wheeler will also be held. Monday save reception of the pastor at the church. Funeral calls are at the C. C. G. last Saturday morning and took home things that had been made at the Vatican. The center will regien in the fall.
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
BUFFALO, N. Y.
Mrs. Rhea Rentin Morris entertained the following at her home, 581 Clinton Street, Mrs. Grace Clarke and her sister, A. McNeil and Luther Walker. Mrs. Walk-away and Winifred-Salem visit their mother, En route back they will stop in Philadelphia City and New York City. Mrs. Walk-away visits Buffalo again, Misses Reatha and Leona Retha, also their brother. They visit the United States telling the story of the "Old Burger Cross." They will be the church, 501 Clinton St. beginning Aug. 15. The first anniversary of the First Shiloh Baptist Membership society was celebrated on Aug. 15. The sermon was preached by Rev. F. J. Ehols. Jessie Lacey Ford for Clarissaburg, W. Va., is visiting the city with her aunt, Mrs. Simplins of 151 Fine St. in Nashville. Jessie Foster of Fostel A. M. F. church, leaves for his new field at Nashville, Tenn.
Harlemites Fined for
New York, Aug. 12—Because they permitted their dogs to roam to meet the streets and to enforce the law, Naglirate Arguede last week fined the Harlemites 14 each in Wash. Elliott Fitzgerald, 6 W. 15th St., who was unable to pay his fine, was sentenced to death on dept. 150. The 150 St. station, served a summons on him at 12:12 and Lenox Ave. The Arguede also paid fines for their names as Mary Roy, 275 Eligible St.; Wesley Dimin, 14th St.; and Dearle Good, 153 Eligenced Ave.
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HARLEMITE HELD ON HIGH
BONDS ON THEFT CHARGE
Health Officials Find
Smallpox in Brooklyn
Brooklyn, N.Y., Aug. 13—Health officials have found five cases of smallpox in persons of our force who live in a population but a half mile and none of them have been in our force. The first case, discovered about a month ago, was in Fleet St. He had called at the department of health building at Fleet and was diagnosed as smallpox. He was sent to the Kings County hospital, then he launched and officials learned that a woman living in smallpox but had recovered without reporting the case to the health department, then he lived in Johnson St., and he, too, had been cured of the disease without having to return to the city in Myrtle Ave., were discovered.
New York, Aug. 13.—Malvin Taylor, a friday judge, and Fridriet McQuade in Helgisle court on a charge of assault and robbery. McQuade was Mrs. Krylyn Robinson, 157. Edgerton Ave. told Malgratez McQuad the vestibule and blackened his legs when she attempted to prevent him robbing the mail boxes at that address. According to Detective Coogan of the district, Taylor after a chase over roofs, the prisoner was carrying a loaded revolver and Taylor will have to have attempted to riffle the mail boxes. Robinson appeared in court with two black eyes. After the Sullivan law charge and assault charge pending the trial, Taylor will be turned over to the federal authorities for prosecution on the Dist. Atty. Schwartz told the court.
Police Open War on Harlem 'Drug Parties'
New York, Aug. 12. - Spurred by reports of "coine party" in Harlem, a sensitive civic against drug sellers and solders of that section, the mayor, sensitive agents of the narcotic bureau was assigned to Harlem to learn the source of the vast amount of crime emerged into the community and brought there. The police filtered into police headquarters told of the existence in our district of many dues, which in column data that once flourished in Chinatown, usually hidden in treetrents, are visited nightly by a crowd of regular patrons, men and women, who are "died" of cocaine, a Vietnam is set in motion and the "coine party" is on.
13.205 Take Summer
Courses at Columbia
Flipi registration figures show that the number of visitors this summer. This is an increase over the similar registration of the previous year. The final dishes this year were more than 14 dishes per week when more than 14,000 visitors come to an end August.
CARLTON AVE. Y. M. C. A.
Carlton Y boys' camp closed Thursday, but 22 boys were permitted to remain throughout the men's period. Parents attended the men's period in the appearance and general health of their sons to the extent that they wished them to remain the entire summer. Parents attended the men's period in a way separate from that of the men and will afford the same recourse were in he had during the boys' period. Of 44 different boys at camp, 4 were in 100 feet to 120 yards. Nature and little study classes were conducted in a single case of illness developed. Men are looking forward to the daily. The Carlton Ave. branch welcomed the opportunity to serve the York, New York, and St. Phillips U. E. church, also New York. Boys from three towns with the Carlton Y group and a final fraternal spirit ensued immediately after the two organizations were men of good judgment and experience and helped to qualify for a large number of boys.
Carlton Y baseball team, while holding the ball, is showing better spirit and better form and is certainly the team that are in to follow. The several games that are in to follow. Friends of the branch are urged to play games, which are played at Prosper jork baseball field every Saturday after the season. Plays and encouragement on the part of onlookers from the Carlton side will play and determination to win.
TRI-CITY CLUB
FALLS FROM WINDOW
Mrs. Eliza Llund, 415 Carlton Avenue
ence Franks, suffered a broken left
leg and injuries about the body Mon-
teau Hospital, 1100 W. 42nd Ave.
liminum to the sidewalk below.
She was attended by Dr. Greer of
Cumberland hospital. Her condition
was stable. The woman attempted to commit suicide.
ENTERTAINS MOTHER-IN-LAW
Mrs. Marcreet Burrough Foster delicately entertained at her home law
Mrs. Foster of Sumter, S. C., and Mrs.
Lorey of Coatsville, Pa. Among those
successes were Mrs. Joe Oliver, Mrs.
Little Burroughs, Mrs. W. M. Cooper
and Mrs. Madeline Burroughs.
URBAN LEAGUE NOTES
The children in the neighborhood of Brooklyn were pricked that Monday morning when they found that the Brooklyn playground had grounds in the city. The children have failed to say "die" and are continue instructor. "at the grounds minus an instructor."
JAILED FOR STEALING
ord Baptist church, has left the city
where he, will spend his
taxation.
HELD AS DIAMOND THIEF
A woman describing herself as MISS Elise Walcott, 25, Breser St. was held for the grand jury in Copenhagen on Monday. She leaves on a consignment of Mrs. Regina Fuchs, 25, Hight Growth AVE. Mrs. Fuchs was employed to clean her apartment. Shortly after the woman disappeared, a hidden under the plane and containing a pair of diamond carvings valued at $200 and some currency was missing.
KEEP CHILDREN OFF STREETS
In spite of the fact that it has been a long time since the playground committee of Montpellier St. to close two of its playgrounds because of financial difficulties, the committee has successfully operated eight playgrounds throughout the summer, thereby keeping at least 2009 and giving them safe places to play.
GUS'T THE COOK IS BACK
Gus Abbeyre, the chief cook of this
been away on his vacation, has re-
ceived evidence. He is the deliener
Ork residente. He is in health and
health reports an enjoyable va-
lance.
FLORIDIAN HERE
Mrs. and Mrs. W. M. Burroughs have
Mrs. and Mrs. J. T. Neebow of
packaging firm.
IN WASHINGTON
IN WASHINGTON
M. Jessie Johnson, guest of her mother in Washington, D. C.
Miss Madison, efficient stenographer of the Urban league, has returned from the midwife's week was spent in the mountains.
Miss Vildes, private secretary to the mayor, will begin her vacation this week.
Mr. Yuruch, industrial secretary, was one of the delegates to the sixth meeting of the Wash. State Board of Education last week.
Church Notes
Visitors to Brooklyn have been ex- tended to by the local service services at the following churches:
BAPTIST
Concord Baptist Church, 165 Adelphin St. Rey, B. J. Adams, Pastor—Preach-ons. The pastor has left the city on his vacation. He will visit Chicago and other cities in the region he is rendered by the choir Sunday morning. Evening services at 9 o'clock.
Berenan Baptist Church, Bereen, Near Bochester Ave. Rey, A. V. C. Matthews, pastor—Morning services. Special sermon Sunday morning. The entire public is invited to attend. Music furnished by the choir. Evening services at 6:42 p.m.
Bethany Baptist Church, Claremont Ave. Bethany Atlantic Ave. Rey, R. L. Warren, pastor—Morning services. Special sermon Sunday morning. Music furnished by the choir. Public Invited.
Bethel Baptist Church, 263 Bergen Avenue the hot weather, services are cut short. The pastor has decided to make special musical numbers ordered by the choir. You are invited to be present.
METHODIST EPICOPAL
Fleet St. A. M. E. Zilon Church, Rey, B. J. Adams, Pastor—Special sermon Sunday morning. The music will be furnished by the choir. Evening services at 9 o'clock.
Boyle A, M. E. Zion Church, 537 Berkshire manor, morning services will be held at 11 o'clock Sunday. Evening services at all services. Music by the choir
ERISCORAL
St. Augustine Episcopal Church, St. Edmonds, FL. Meet your pastor and your friends are invited to attend the services here by the choir. Special musical numbers by the choir. St. Barabas' Episcopal Church, 256 Belmont Ave, New York, I. C. Dale, Pastor Presbyterian Church, 104 La Laveyette Ave, New York, inviting us to attend our Sunday morning and service. Good music by the choir.