Chicago Defender

Saturday, August 20, 1927

Chicago, Illinois

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MINE BLAST KILLS EIGHT ```markdown ``` USE CLASSIFIED ADS FOR QUICK RESULTS VOL. XXXI. NO. 16 FREE REE FREE SINGER SUES HUSBAND MADAM Charging that her husband has bitions, although he advised her to Lillian Evans Tibbs, coloratura soprano Madam Evanti, filed suit in the District against Roy Wilfred Tibbs, professorship, for separate maintenance. T Sept. 10, 1918, and have a son, Thurl. DR. MOTON AGAIN HEAD OF E MADAM EVANTI that her husband has abandoned her because he advised her to seek cultivation of Tibbs, coloratura soprano, who is known for a fitted suit in the District supreme court. W. Fred Tibbs, professor of piano and organ, rate maintenance. The Tibbs were married and have a son, Thurlow Evans, age 6. TON AGAIN ELECTED HEAD OF BUSINESS THE WEEKLY NEWS Charging that her husband has abandoned her because of her ambitions, although he advised her to seek cultivation of her voice, Mrs. Lillian Evans Tibbs, coloratura soprano, who is known professionally as Madison Hawkins, a matriarch of theatrical music in New York City, will be Wilfred Tibbs, professor of piano and organ in Howard university, for separate maintenance. The Tibbs were married in Gary, Ind., Sept. 10, 1918, and have a son, Thurlow Evans, age 6. DR. MOTON AGAIN ELECTED HEAD OF BUSINESS LEAGUE By: LOUIS R. LAUTIER (Staff Correspondent) St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 19.-The 28th and National Business league came to a close a noon. Members who have attended every since its organization declare that this was meeting in its history. This session was trend away from the inspirational type of Io. Aug. 19.—The 28th annual mss league came to a close here lasts who have attended every sessionization declare that this was the m history. This session was marked on the inspirational type of meet St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 19.—The 25th annual meeting of the National Business league came to a close here last Friday afternoon. Members who have attended every session of the league since its organization declare that this was the most successful meeting in its history. This session was marked by a definite trend away from the inspirational type of meeting, in which members simply told of their achievements in some line of business. Emphasis was put on the carrying out of a constructive program. Included in this program are the nationalizing of Trade week, the gathering and distribution of important information to business men and enterprises, the publication of a monthly bulletin and a survey of business. A number of substantial leaders in business were in attendance. Perhaps the outstanding business men and entrepreneurs of the Douglas National bank, Chicago; John R. Hawkins, president of the Prudential bank, Washington; D. C.; C. C. Spruelling, president of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance company. Durham, N. C.; John L. Wobb, supreme custodian of the Woodman of Union, Ft. Spruce, N.Y.; Dr. Charles D. McGee, president of the Insurance Life Insurance company, Chicago, Ill. and P. B. Rausom, manager of the Madame C. J. Walker Manufacturing company, Indianapolis, Ind. Dr. Moton Speaks Dr. Robert R. Moton, president of the league, delivered his annual address Wednesday evening, Aug. 10. He reported that there had been a conference of business men with Wall St. financiers in New York city last week, and that experience had to do with the problems of financing our business enterprises, he stated. "There is room for further progress," he said. "There are larger fields to cover, there are greater things to be done. It is our duty and one obligation to action that our place along business lines as well as along religious and fraternal lines can co-operate among themselves for the best interests of the race as a whole and thereby gain the respect and the confidence and co-operation of other groups and organizations." On Thursday morning Allen W. Clark, former executive secretary of the national clean-up and paint-up campaign bureau, presented cups to (Continued on Page 2) --- 799 EET EVANTI abandoned her because of her am- seek cultivation of her voice, Mrs. Viano, who is known professionally as dist supreme court, Washington, D. C., of piano and organ in Howard uni- the Tibbs were married in Gary, Ind., now Evans, age 6. N ELECTED BUSINESS LEAGUE the 28th annual meeting of the to a close here last Friday after- ended every session of the league that this was the most successful session was marked by a definite type of meeting, in which AARON MALONE IS DEFENDANT IN LAWSUITS St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 19.—Aaron E. Malone, divorced husband of Mrs. Annie M. Malone, who utterly failed in his insidious efforts to destroy Poro college and to "capitalize his popularity," is now defendant in a series of lawsuits totalling $31,603.68. A suit for $5,000 was filed Monday in the circuit court against Malone by Rev. Garfield W. Brewer, Methodist preacher, who alleges Malone owes him that amount for services he rendered during Malone's illness. Brewer was Malone's nurse, servant and companion from Oct. 2, 1926, to May 2, 1927, and served in that capacity continually and faithfully the petition states. It was definitely understood, according to the petition, that Brewer was to receive $5,000 for his services, but he says Malone has refused to pay him any part of the amount. It is understood that Malone has absented himself from this state so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served on him by the sheriff. In order to recover the amount which Brewer says is due him, he asks in his suit that whatever property Malone owns here become attached by the court to satisfy the debt. TWO IN POISON CASE THIS PAPER CONSISTS OF TWO PARTS - PART ONE PYTHIANS INVADE CHICAGO CITY PUTS ON GALA ATTIRE WHEN DELEGATES ASSEMBLE FOR 24TH BIENNIAL MEET BY J. BLAINE POINDEXTER Chicago has thrown wide her gates with a hearty welcome to the thousands of delegates and visitors from various parts of the country attending the 24th biennial session of the Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, which opened here Saturday, Aug. Aug. 13. The convention will last seven days, closing Aug. 20. Registration of delegates began Saturday morning at 4311 Indiana Ave., convention headquarters. At Camp G. A. Nevels, 55th and State Sts., the uniform ranks of the order have pitched teents. Beginning last Sunday, daily exhibition drills and dress parades by the companies will be given at the camp grounds. The supreme lodge sessions being held at Forum hall, 43d St. and Calumet Ave., while the Court of Calanthe, the women's auxiliary of the body, are holding forth at Metropolitan Community church, 41st St. and South parkway. Twenty-eight states are being represented by the delegates said to be one of the largest delegations in the history of the organization. The main body of the Texas delegation arrived in the city Saturday night in two chartered Pullman cars. A part of the order arrived in morning in a large bus owned by the Texas order. Texas Delegation Large The advance guard of the Texas delegation headed by W. S. Willis of Dallas, grand chancellor of the state, arrived in the city last Friday and established headquarters at the Trener hotel, Oakland Blvd. and South parkway. They immediately opened the museum of history for a biennial session of the order to Dallas, Texas. The advance guard is composed of the following Texans: Dr. E. T. Hamilton of Dallas, grand medical examiner of the Texas order; Dr. A. S. Jackson of Waco, commissioner of education of the A. M. E. church and member of the Pythian board of John V. W. Dallas Exposits, and C. F. Elkardson, editor of the Houston Informer. Among others who arrived in the large Texas delegation Sunday are Dr. A. N. Prince, Sherman, grand medical registrar, Texas Court of Calanthe, N. W. Kinchin, Benton, grand chancellor, Douglass, Fort Worth, Wells, Dallas, grand attorney; I. E. Smith, Dallas, grand keeper of records and seals; George M. Guest, Paris, grand master of the exchequer; Col. Carl Walker, Austin, grand master-at-arms; John White, Houston, grand inner guard; Brigadier General John Bogle, Fort Worth, Dr. George M. Munchus, Fort Worth, assistant surgeon - general; Col. Charles T. Brackins, Dallas; Mrs. F. K. McPherson, Gainesville, grand worthy counselor Court of Calanthe; Mrs. P. E. Davis, Calvert, grand recorder of deeds; Mrs. N. A. Kirk, Waco, secretary-treasurer; Mrs. A. W. Kirk, Waco, worthy counselor of deposits; S. D. Norris, Dallas, past worthy counselor; Mrs. A. E. Boswell, Dallas, grand worthy inspectors; Mrs. A. E. McPherson, Waco, supreme representative; L. B. Williams, Bonham; Mrs. Gussie Harrison, Galveston, and Mrs. M. V. Powell, band directress. More Texans Other Texans here are Mrs. W. S. Willis of Dallas, Prof. and Mrs. H. T. Davis and Miss Irma McCullough, Galveston, Mrs. C. F. Richards, Prince of Loon, Will Runnels, Fred Alfred, Samuel L. Haynes, Mesdames Lillie Ferguson and Austin Brooks, all of Houston. The special sermon to the supreme lodge, Court of Calanthe and visiting knights was delivered Sunday afternoon by the Rev. L. M. Murphy of Kentucky, supreme representative. Seated on the platform were Sir Smith W. Green of New Orleans, supreme chancellor of the lodge; E. G. Tildingham Brunswick, the late and supreme chancellor; Dr. A. A. W. Chicago, grand chancellor of Illinois, and Dr. W. D. Cook, pastor of the church. The Rev. Mr. Mandy delivered an able course. He urged the seeking of our enlightenment fraternal and spiritual lines and pleaded for a closer bond of Christian brotherhood. The welcome reception for the su- More Texans er gates with a hearty welcome and visitors from various parts of the 24th biennial session of the America, South America, Europe, which opened here Saturday, Aug. last seven days, closing Aug. 20. MINE BLAST FATAL TO 8 N. C. MINERS Robbinsville, N. C., Aug. 19. Four men are dead, four others are reported dead, and three others are injured, probably fatally, as a result of an explosion that occurred in tunnel No. 11, which is being drilled through Yellow Creek mountain, about six miles from here. All are of our Race. Their names have not yet been posted by mine officials. pawer by hine oncils, when a heavy charge of dynamite whole of the tunnel been tumped into the upper tiers of the tunnel was detonated by drills used by the crew of workmen. under the directive of Claude Kings- land, a white man, who was working on the lower tier, the help of rock were blown down upon the helipad. Three apparently caught the full force of the blast and were literally blown to pieces as the dirt and rock covered them. Several hours were required to remove the bodies from the tunnel as the point where the explosion occurred was deep within the area of the mountain that is being destroyed by the ter tunnel" being constructed by the Tallassee Power company from the Santeeah Creek dam to Rymers Ferry. All of the men were employed by the Conner Brothers Construction company. According to those who were near the scene of the explosion, the bulldozer had been tamped into the upper tier by the "gunnery crew" and the foreman of the outfit had warned the men in the lower tier to work very carefully because of the presence of several hundred pounds of explosives. Apparently this was either not handled or else the explosive was more sensed than the jar caused by the rock drills than the jar expected, because the terrible explosion without warning and only those men who were within the tunnel, all of whom were terribly injured, knew what actually happened. An investigation of the cause of the explosion is being conducted by officers of the company, in an effort to determine just what happened down in that thick hole before fire and rock belched death upon the workmen. Falling Six Stories New York, Aug. 18.—Scalp lacerations and contusions on an ankle are the only injuries received by Larry Graenach, 30, 83 W. 128th St., when he fell six stories to what appeared certain death last week. The Germanman, who was taken to Bellevue hospital, was a nonconscious condition, was employed as a concrete worker on a building under construction at 345 Seventh Ave. near W. 39th St., when he fell down the air shaft from the sixth story of the 18-story loft building. The story and the crowd that quickly collapsed were astonished that the fall did not result in instant death. MRS. SYLVIA NIX DEAD Rev. N. C. Nix, supreme prelate of the K. of P., who is in Chicago attending the Pythian convention, received a telegram Wednesday notifying him that his wife, Mrs. Sylvia Nix, had passed away, and he left immediately for Orangeburg, S. C., his home. Nix is professor of the University of State College. BULLETIN SACCO' AND VANZETTI ACCUSED OF MURDER SEVEN YEARS AGO AND SENTENCED TO DEATH, AFTER SEVERAL TRIALS AND HEARINGS ARE GRANTED A NEW HEARING ON THE EVE OF THEIR EXECUTION. ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF BLACK AMERICANS LINCHED IN THE U.S.A. U. S. MEDIATION BOARD DROPS PULLMAN PORTERS' WRANGLE Washington. D. C., Aug. 19.—The fight started two years ago between the Brotherhood of Pullman Car Porters, organized and headed by A. Philip Randolph, and the Pullman company, came to an end Friday of last week when Hon. Edwin P. Morrow, representing the United States mediation board, dismissed the case with the statement that the board, failing to bring about an arbitration between the two parties involved, was forced to drop the action. Mr. Morrow's letter to the Pullman company follows: Chicago, Ill., Aug. 12, 1927. The Pullman Company, Chicago, Ill. The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, New York City. Gentlemen: On Aug. 9 and 10 I advised you that my efforts to bring about an amicable adjustment to the controversy existing between you had been unsuccessful. In compliance with the law, I endeavored through letters of said dates to induce both of you to submit your controversy to arbitration. The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, on Aug. 10, signified in a letter as well as in a dissent and desire to submit the controversy to arbitration. The Pullman company, in response to my letter of Aug. 10th, requesting that it join the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in arbitration of the said controversy, abiding by the law, in the matter was that no dispute existed, and therefore, there was no cause for arbitration. sponse of both parties thereto, are made a part hereof. Yours. EDWIN P. MORROW. Member U. S. Board of Mediation. The trouble between the Pullman company and its porters and maids dates over a period of two years, school with the company of Pullman porters and maids into the brotherhood, and an agitation for recognition by the company. This, the Pullman authorities refused to do, stating that there was already in existence an organization through which the company dealt with its employees. This organization was working agreeably to both sides, the company maintained, and made the other union unnecessary. Ends Long Fight During the wrangle many men were dismissed from the company, it has been charged, and others, disgruntled, with drew. The Pullman company in reprisals threatened to discharge all porters and replace them with Japanese. The specific case in which the mediation board was called to act grew out of an attempt by the brotherhood to force the company to grant porters in a regular monthly wage of $100 that they could eliminate tips as an important part of their scale. They also demanded 100 percent of the wages. You are, therefore, advised that my final required action, to wit: to induce parties herewith to submit contractions to the arbitration accordance with the provisions of the Railway Labor Act has been unsuccessful. Copies of the official correspondence, including the final parties' rosting arbitration and. sponse of both parties thereto, are made a part hereof. Yours, EDWIN P. MORROW, Member U. S. Board of Mediation. The trouble between the Pullman company and its porters and maids dates over a period of two years. It started with the organization of Pullman porters and maids into the brotherhood, and an agitation for recognition by the company. This the Pullman authorities refused to do stating that there was already in existence an organization through which Pullman plowes. This organization was working agreeably to both sides, the company maintained, and made the other union unnecessary. Ends Long Fight During the wrangle many men were dismissed from the company, it has been charged, and others, disgruntled, withdrew. The Pullman company in reprisals threatened to discharge all porters and replace them with Japanese. The specific case in which the mediation board was called to act grew out of an attempt by the brother-in-law to force the company to grant porters a regular monthly wage of $100 so that they could eliminate tips as an important part of their pay. The company ended different working conditions, and for the time the porters spend on "dead heads" and lay overs. This the Pullman company refused to do, stating that the organization headed by Randolph did not represent the sentiment of Pullman porters. The matter, submitted to the board of mediation, created by the Railway (Continued on Page 3) NATIONAL EDITION BY ROBERT S. ABBOTT PUBLISSION COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1927 T A TRIAL" ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF BLACK AMERICANS LINKED IN THE U.S.A. 'Hard Boiled' Carroll Now Out of a Job 'Hard Boiled' Carroll Now Out of a Job Capt. Dennis J. Carroll, former commander of the Stamton Ave. police station in the Second ward, who gained the sobriquet of "Hard Boiled" Carroll because of the spectacular raids he made throughout the ward last March. Lost his hard drive and lost his job, he was discharged by the civil service commission. Mayor Thompson has made good his promise to oust the police officers who rode rough shod over the South side and other districts of Chicago in behalf of Dever. intimidating voters because of their support of Thompson. Captain Carroll was the third commander to go. Five policemen of the Chicago Ave. station were ousted Saturday along with their commander. Capt. Daniel Murphy. The dismissal of Capt. John Stege, former chief detectives, was also around Thompson. Mayor Thompson, during his campaign last March, promised South side voters who were victims of illegal police activities that he would take care of all the officers who were responsible for the many outrages practiced in the name of Dever. The mayor also appointed Captain Carroll was charged with using illegal methods in his support of Dever and failing to close vice resorts in his district. All of those discharged will appeal their case. Hangs Self on Telegraph Pole; Rescued for Jail eliminate of their commanded and pay end on This, to do, to be headedent the board railway Baltimore, Md., Aug. 19—Joseph Loveday, 48, a cripple living at 1494 Ward St., last Saturday took a length of rope into an alley, climbed part way up a telegraph pole and, after fastening the end about his neck, jumped off. He was saved by Charles Williams of the 1400 block, Ward St., who saw him hung and cut him down before he had suffered any injury. Loveday was taken to the Southwestern police station, where he was locked up on a charge of disorderly conduct. Mr. and Mrs. Booze Win in Court Rosedale, Miss., Aug. 19. "Case dismissed for lack of evidence" was the brief decision of Justice of Peace Robert Arnold, sitting in the county court here this week, in disposing of the now celebrated poison-murder case in which Mrs. Mary C. Booze of Mound Bayou, national committeewoman for Mississippi, and her husband, F. P. Booze, political power, big planter and member of the executive committee of the National Business league, had been charged with administering poison to Isaiah Montgomery, founder of Mound Bayou. Others Named Named with Mr. and Mrs. Booze were 27-year-old Postmaster C. V. Thurmond and his wife Bottletrice, as well as Ben A. Green, Jr., 26-year-old mayor and Harvard law graduate. The five defendants had been arrested five days ago, resulting in affidavits filed by Estelle McMorrow, one of the three living sisters of Mrs. Booze and S. H. Branch, a detective from Little Rock, who had worked up the case. The decision was rendered within two minutes after court had opened and District Attorney Miss. Rose, rose and notified the court that he had gone over the evidence and found it insufficient to "travel on." He, therefore, with the consent of County Prosecutor Fred Clark, asked that the defendants be released. Side interests had been developed in the case which started the entire country when the charges were filed last week. The arrests took place on Thursday. Each of the defendants gave bond in the sum of $1,000 and denied ever hearing before any intimation that the aired Montgomery, a county in the state of Indiana in March 1924, had come to his death from other than natural causes. Break in Family Citizens of Mound Bayou attributed the charges to the bitter fight which Miss Montgomery, who resumed her maiden name after her separation from "Dick" Kent, widely known poolroom, baseball and taxicab owner in St. Louis, had waged against Eugene P. Booze, administrator of her school, having been involved in which opinion of the people of Mound Bayou has been sharply divided, with partisans on both sides, has marked the family dissension. She chargee Booze with booting the estate and permitting white people to get control of much of it. Originally it was estimated to be worth $150,000, but is still have been poorly invaded. Miss Montgomery and Detective Branch still insist that their story is true and contend that the failure of their effort was due to a change of front on the part of the doctor who attended Mr. Montgomery's body, examined and examined. She is mild to be without means and rumors in Mound Bayou life that hereditary are being financed by white political (Continued on Page 3) The general public and visitors to Chicago are always welcome to inspect the plant of the World's Greatest Weekly. Chicago Artender 3435 INDIANA AVENUE ```markdown ``` ; ant T—PAGE 3 THE CHICAGO DEFENDER 1S WANTED IN | PREPARE TO WELCOME KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS | GEORGIA FOR RN es ‘Sheriff Seeks Vie Pie We Oh ees Po | for Dixie Justice |]: Te. / ey Fo gees ee eee ee : JE. Ivey, a deputy sheriff of Madison, Ga., is in Chicago seeking to take back to Madi- son Samuel Kennedy, 2954 ‘Prairie Ave. a5 the man who ts wanted in the Goorgia town for breaking jail after he had been sentenced to 18 months on the county road for “slap- ping” Ray Davis, a white man, who had assaulted him. At- _torney Harold Tyler, retained “by the N. A. A.C. P,, is repre- senting Kennedy. *Hfo was trio, found guilty and sintenced on tis charge in. Senteme Sen Toss, “With ‘outside. nid. Ren: nady escaped from tho Sfadicon. jal tie night of the nane day he seas Kencenced, ‘according: tothe. deputy sheriff's ory In Judge Emanuel Eilers courtroom "Thursday morning ‘The fugitives: whereabouts wero unknown, Ivey aid, until the Modis tom authorities recoived letter from "woman in Chicago. telling. the: Kennedy was heres the woman fers merle worked for the Mtadican ‘hie! St police in lis Heine ana wae there frnen Kennedy broke Jull ‘and fed, The sherift sald, She now lives: in tie building at Kennedy's Prairie Avo. ‘address. The Georgia authorities wired the "chicago “police ‘and. Kennedy. Wak farested In tile home, uly” 40, bv Senet. John Seott ot tie. detective iiurenv,” We appenrod. with his attor= nex before Judge Wiliam It. Beizer Of tie, Harrison St. court, and. ater Several continuances, Judge Fetzer Glamissed the warrant and remanded him to the custody of the sheriit ut oor counts “ha a result, of this action, Ken nedy'e" counsel “Is ‘now “seeking hia ‘lscharse ob, writ of halveas corpus fled in the Superior cqurt. ‘The wilt Sas reuurned belore Judge Eller. A hearing on the writ was heard Thurs: day and continued to-Aupe IT, Ans Sujer continuance was granted then $e Aux. 22, pending a hearing before ide \povernor in. Sorinniteld’ onthe sWersani, Attorney Tyler, communt= Saved with tho governor over lon Giftance and had the fugitive war= e revoWed, “Another Habens oF Bus writ wilt be Aled for Rennedy. Kennedy declares he 19 the wrong "man and has never been In Georgia In his tire. He toll the court ‘he same to Chicazo trom South Bend, Indes and can prodice wiinenses t6 prove tls iors. Sie it married, sis Rite in Mx. Emma Kennedy.” She aprensed fears of her husbard being feboneaTanoutd “he "ber mene to the ee eens LAST RITES FOR J. A. JOYCE, Ty Gleveland, 0. Aug. 18—Jamen A. *Qoxce Sr. for more than 14 years designer af steel bridges, died at his home, 2223 F. 80th St. Saturday at the age of 61. Three daughters nnd ton nurvive, Forty years ago. Mr, Joyce moved to Cleveiand, where he fnecama hten= Med with tho atiaira of proxeera of Alte clty, He wan Interested in evess “movement for elvic and racial’ bet= ferment. Tis largest plece of work was de- signing. the Datsoit~ Sepertor hie Jetel bridze, “He wan In charge of gourds builiings and machinery and inspected” all metal work for the counts. Before he Lecamne assistant fadnty. bridge engineer. xr. Joyee Sue chief ensineer and director. of the Cowing Envineering Co. During Tat Ume he designed the Cieveland Hippodrome. ce. buildin, Teftereon Se Ute bride, Saginaw (Mend wing bridge and Kinsman road ‘ia Guor over the Penaesivania railroad, ‘Follows to Grave Six -~ Weeks After Husband re, Pertemouth. Obie, Ang. 19-—fis “iyeries utter the death of her hus- vsband, Victor Ja Venn, are. Anan Belle: Penman” ss. passed avesy at ‘hor hoe, 1213 Firllay st. She hid ‘gen Ml heaely a year ‘Mrs, Penman was widely’ known “ibrourhout the city" and. stato and ‘was an Important tieure in the civic, \ peciad and religiius activities ft ‘eenmiaunity. Sie seas a member of the allen Chapel A.M. H. church, _ where funeral vervicee were conduet” SaSaturday. Rev. A. J. Allen offciat= the. Ehe ts survived bythe following “ guildren? “be. and Teussell Butter Eeatetce snzibeth, Derethy " Starie Zand Joka Oscar, snd a ntepson, Fred- “erie DG. all of thin city. Ske ts ‘also survived by «wo. sisters, Sire Armia Price of this chy and Mrs, isha. ohason of Huntington, ‘snd 930 brother, Osear Layne, of Cleve Tea. ee eae EUNT MINISTER'S RELATIVES T.Any person knowing the Wwhere~ ‘Riaute ‘or the wife, children nnd -brother of Nev. Dr. Jesse. N. lrow- Jer, who dled Aus. 15 in Chicago, ure catiind. to eomminicute swith. Oy Th Daniels, 325 1 Persiing itd, Chicagu. ‘Rev. Hrownies was formerly’ of Ate Janta. Gay und was well-known in featornal find busiresn circles. VISITING SON Stir sna Bee, Carter, Sunes of Knstes Bite erin hie eye fora visit ct tos Bars wiih hel ‘sch sinds doughs rte LThies Mend Sires cant aoe ot 3965 “Uptiage Grove Ave. sreeneeree of women have coed the Semmens “erate sonic omer oN es eS ee Bess Mee nea Tae aigtetad eee alee a tae ial Cas ANS Steet a Baie St cerca ar ERS TOM Mactatr ke Sey ed Shar ta Uy ante Bit est Se ea ne a lady 1D Tebinsiyasig wsitca:” “1 sy Sea ea SaaS a cee ran dai aa Fe Merraae aath eos Bia BE cater dee Be 2, Be Soy way ‘yeu eins F toech roo agua Fa . HC ne cre ot oti a ie eet ttn TS Settee See ene a Exalted cod'wanes steer wean Yo ony ie goes eatin tea Gi rarer tating, Gene B Eset a Shedim coat Se Shama ct date gas Sober Sis ir Sl te tt EES Se es ae ee eS Bah Sore, Sage Pe oh es Bo) SUR SOG “PIR oe Sate: Ee Pea <1 2c ever ae ne eee aa a Dp Nap ed IR NS: gay oA Ee PI a ; wigie Uete Pianeta MEU EG Sa gee Pe ae cy 4 ; Be ee Ga : we TR Se a J SO eee. x ay pay mS ef i Soe ae ese ie RP Nee: lit fcpeee ty as RR ee creak ed i ce a] bY eg Oe ee Ee a ay E ? rE PERG Sg oe Oe a ORM ae as Sie ae. pee 7 I a oka 4 iz — eee eres a ae A jae ae Pie ot Ep Re 4 AE OM eS ate eS Li a NG gh: ay ae ; os ETRE SS BY 4 Sousiarng a ened ee 4 8 we ety la ate Chicago, famous for its convention facilities, its beautiful boulevards | and “its phenomenal civic’ iapravements, welcomed. the delepaiog and Muitore #0 the Bith biennial season, of the Knights of Pythias aa it has one. no ether lodge. Out on the South side the watchword was “The Bythians Are Coming,” ond vusimesa men are bending every elfort to make this the most sucessful and by far the best convention the erder has ever | MRS. CANNABY P* Moton Ag B Freprowntatives of Cinelnnati, Ole, [Rostevitie, Kr. end Atlanta, Ga [Phare shiee ‘chtes ware avneded sires for minting the bert showin — itn ett aeeeke q 1 ae iS itoante wap, ie sue Says West Casi, Us ir. (iatucn: seine xuionat ated: | ; Sal sctanetation, fallowlay the ava Setting Pace iben tecing af "economie, value te} pero ot health sma urged ‘he Wet Hees set to nan ld of hee . ficiuties Ne S80 “es Gia ae Wihaes Banik - The people of Poriturt, Ore. are really doing things Ina bis wgy, ac- cording to Mrs. E. D. Cannady, one of Portland's most prominent women citizens, who stopped off fa Chicago for a daz en route to New York where tha {a to attend the Pan-African congress, Mrs. Cannady, a puctleing attorney, Is also associate editor of tie Porsland Advocate. She ieft the Weat coast 10 days ago and arrived In Chicago Sunday nize steer © trip up through Vancouver aud the Can: adian Mockies. ‘The few hours she spent ft: Chteasso, she ilevnte:t to fauk= ing over the ely and renewing ac- quaintances. Wer hostess ke: was Mre. Loyd, £333 Marsiand Ave. Things’ ara really Fappening In Portiaud,” Mea. Cannady informed Euitor Abort, while being escorted through the Defender “plans. “Out thera we have solved the ace ques- Ucn to the satisfaction of evervone.” Some or ihe ndvasiazes lordand has ctisleved wver utkes cline a peinzed out by Mrs, Canned”, are s0- Cia? mutherines herween te river al Which discussions ave. entsred. Sutin “phese twos, ae we eet teva edd Mrs. Cannady. "are hehl ai tinal one of our Htiies, and then at the heme Of mnie oF the white associates, We on’ meet in baila where we miist be foruial ane xreet each uther across rabies, bus in the homes where we can vet near eneh ater. And the gud thar tx reauizing from these 62s nen burdiy. be catiinated,” ‘Mrs. Cannady also poitited out that Porticnd “hus esrternd seriously fie0 the study of “Nees Histurs.” She eelired itt she hax given 100 lou (ures to Witte eruupy already this sear, and thie she i howked solidly for lectures upon her return to Fort andl from New York. ain’ interesting “sidelisikt on the manmer in wileh Mrs. Camiady Is v= garded in Vortland was demonstrated i this faet that ste wag not ferinittend ww buy a alnsie garment for her enst= eeu rip, When te was learned that she way going to New York, all de- partment. sures “led with each other fo OULHIL e> Zor hee Journey with No most in herscif.. Her entire wardrobe was donated, ‘wish the compllments of Portiand, ther elts's contribution tothe. Tun-African congress, Stes Cannady state. She prank t roiusn home by way of Texas and Mexican. Noted French General Predicts World War Marie, Vesnes, Ang. VB—Marea Foch, coramanier af tie sliled. forces during Ue World war. Tuestins. pre: Glezed that there wit he another ‘sori war weithin in next Atteen twenty years, ote predicts: cxesy country will take part ated the comiatanin Wil iekice not only the men, bet the women an Phitiven of esery nation. Hatten Wl fie foe net ns bye hail amd sea hut‘in the sir, where planes wilt thi not singly er In sqiadrons. but I Basten, New “nal mare. qawertel Neapona of dewirieciom will bein Showt more Narrowing features of death. : —— Mob Threatens Alleged Attacker of Young Giil Denville, Va., Aug, 9.—Joha Dun can, 33, charged with « erimaigal as- fui” against s minns pick, was Shirtiad atery for ‘satoseeplog. last Saturday after a mob of 30 white jue attempted to seize Dunesn treat a poitcemmn, Duncan Was arrested by ae Spoliceman. who had. feast nejghbotioud gossip. ‘The, officer Sabi that he bid near Duncan's home dnd Watetied the pice. ip. charzed Terean lured the giel into hig home, Tho priconer was carried away (02 sirfety aud way bleeding freely’ from a sealp. wound which had heen {n= fhieted by the policeman with Dia club, Ea NOT ACCIDENTALLY egecn taiiee wasnae ote ae friend, “Mise. Hitznbethy Stewart, 29 4734 Federal “St. wax shot in the Haht leg Saturday when the weapor exploded, iss Stewart way iiker fo Provident hompital by Mrs. Ethe Willams. 3145 “La Salle St. He friend was WIN Herst, she told th ‘Whird district polica, PREPARE TO WELCOME KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Dr. Moton Again Elected Head of Business League ee tt cnet | Trove three cites were awarded rem pie Bishop Jones Talks peacceons the Shaan em 2 eee the, fasinates ae See ee Comme’ OE Ses ec ane eas te ante Sanlened Woduerdas in was hed in the Tabernacle Dép- hed eer bane na, Hae ac Pee ada se a le RH Be Wishing eer Hache malca eche Heid Eympeciam mar See at ae [Gon inanazement of institutions. Don Sie udeia Mood ikea Winn Carty at Seve ark Ie ee iar ree Me aratictide Bini ae tase PEE Hevho the Sete eH een ee eae toneges a Ae ie ae ge me ge Feat, ht estates rece WP Roady lee nrenlent ef The Meet Nea See aes by Shs ar eciage Leaders in Attendance so eter ermine es gatas Serine? ones nt rem Eee Piacoa aaa aes Wah Ree eee en had. Photo shows 35th St. beautifully decorated with colored flags and gmblems bearing welcome to the visitors. Similar decorations are on State, 3d and 7th Sts. Our business men have been asked to co-operate with ‘the reception committee by decorating their stores and extending Welcome to the visitors, (Story on Page 1) an Who Buys Expects of the Man Who. Selis." "Other speakern. wer Dry. 8. Clark, president of South: crn university, Baton. Koue, Lett W: S"'Hate, president of Tennusse> State Kormal, Nashville, ‘Toang. Prof. NU Young, Bishop W. J, Walls of, exe Afean “Methodist Epiecapal- Zia dure, Charlotte, Ne ces Witthun Burch. Atiantac "Ga ‘Samuel i Reading, Philadetyhia. aur BY. Wheatmn. Toledo. Ohf: H._H. Starks Milwaukee, Wis. afd Charles 72 Golen, Chariotresvitie, N.C thor persone attending ‘the meet- tage Incinlded thon Ia, Heian. louse eesta, “Tuskewve “Taetite, Ate Melvin 3, Chism. feta avererary. Na: Uonal “Nerve” Prnsit association: Ghaude A. Harnett, rector Asselat: od Nenre’ Brean, Chicago. WW: Lester Walton, correspondent New York Wort: oT Ro Shekson, Awwoctuted Press, Chicago, Wa Te a. Ferguson and. br, Wf Bnddic, Atianta. Gas Au a Levin, Jacksonville, Flac: De Aaron ©. Toudie, Detrelt, Sten. Pre Te Moore, editor. of tho New York Age. New York elt; V. i. Tulane, Montgomery, Ale? C._ 1k James Chace We Var’ 3.8. Williams Shreveport. Laz Tiers" O'Kkalls Bethod. N.C.) Maj. Alien Washing Ton. Hampton, ‘Vaz OG. Hardawas: Huciestnes, Mlst: Sugene DP. Roose Mound Bayou, Miser We Hi Hote chart, files Inatieure, athiat a Be 3 Sato," president Florida. agriesivaral And’ Mechanical college, Tailahargee Fin; I Willis Cole. Laulsritie. se GF, Hichasusom louston, Ter. a Enter Manuel, Sbuskonen, Oka. “The social affairs given for the vs: toes included. a funeheon by. Nee Naioe atop. the Toro coliere roo! ganten Welnesdas afternoon anit dunce. at the Peopie’s Fiance hulld- Inge There was lio sight-seeing ton. cece POINTED PEALE CLERK ‘main Lite eck" wteke: seein, Ralph Eiupe Inst “week “appointed Eat Gein mercies iy ane iene ap aeace clare oaiees Jats Takes i, ree Saeeatasted hy he cate fe Berit Yor fisieg um fecnar ote a eaapatem mine? “Peta ae Seg oe eee ee, ree ae fiat ‘Suck ‘am apis has ees ce ee 2 ad es MS Reet CON a Sec mae ee ee Save Weare 4 a gs eT cs ee een Caer ee So eee pager ee Ee ss RE bo ae cares ete eee a as Oa: axe He wee ee See Se coc Canes. RN } ers oa ‘ : Bee ee Si % @ oe .. a oe “J think St. Joseph’s G.F.P. is simply wonderful,” says Mrs. Sarah Hardin, who lives at 1049 Melrose St., Memphis, Tenn., “and I want to let every woman know what it is doing for me. “I was in such a terribly weakened and run-down condition, it was almost impossible for me to get the few things I had to do around the house done without becoming exhausted. I never felt like going out and having a good time like my friends did. “Then I began using St. Joseph's G.F.P. I am on my sixth bottle now and I am so strong and healthy it is no trouble for me to do my work and I have so much strength left after it is all over, I am able to go out and enjoy myself. I have gained several pounds in weight, too, since I have been using G.F.P.” 7 MRS. SARAH HARDIN ma PAYS TRIBUTE world's igreat finanelers and anterna~ Two Brooklyn Patrelmen Charged With Robbery Treoklyn, Ne Yu Aue, 29.—Ywo rglicemen, Joven: “‘Bournier of the (latson aves jrecinee amd Tose Cinteen at she WW Sach Nt. precinet were field in. 82.500" Dall each when thes were armaimned before Mazis- Mate George B. Folwwell in Utes Ave, Court on charges ‘at robbery. “Phow were arrested Satuesay, night on compltint of Jamex Stecauley, eros Asian 2, Brooklyn, sho ale feed “that om “Ate 4 fast dies tniered his home and domanded $100, Eneusing him of opreatin a. spraks Re Ee eee tabinbeee WOMEN NEED ABUNDANT ‘STRENGTH AND ENERGY FOR OUT DOOR PLEASURES ‘Our Women and Girls in All Parts of the Country Are Now Using St. Joseph’s G.F.P. to Invigorate and / Strengthen Them These beautiful summer days are full of pleasure for our women and girls who have the strength and energy to go in for out of door recreations. Thousands of women who have never been able to enjoy these out of door pleasures because of a weak- ened and run-down condition are now using St. Jo- seph’s G.F.P. to invigorate and strengthen them. St. Joseph's G.F.P. is a rich vegetable compound which is pleasing to the taste and easily assimilated by woman’s system. It contains such roots and herbs as Blessed Thistle, Blue Cohosh Root, Squaw Vine, Life Root Plant, Helonias Root, Star Grass, Cramp Bark, ete., which have been used for over a century to in- vigorate and strengthen women. Dealers everywhere sell the big $1.00 bottle on a positive money back guarantee to give satisfaction. St. Joseph’s Antiseptic Powder used as a douche with St. Joseph's G.F.P. will be found very soothing. Write Box 1507, Dept. DEF-82, Memphis, Tenn., for FREE Health Book. 2 3 ~ TST VOSS Yyomen nave i \ ; for more CO ON GW ion" N , VS FF Oe gy tran TEXAS COPS OUSTED FOR BEATING MAN Dallas, Tex. Aug. 19—Police Com- missioner Clarence Parker last week ‘temporarily: suspended Officers J. W. Hitt and P. O. Davia, both white, pending an Investigation of charges ‘fled against them by Jesse Morrow. 28, former janitor of the Sanger Brothers clothing store, lm and T.2- ‘Mar Sts, who alleged” thac he was Yeaten severely And nilstreated when arrested last week and acter he had Ment placed in the city jail. ‘The eus- pension followed Gie appearance of Mayor R. EL Burt, all’ members of the elty commission and the chief of wpolice before the grand fury. Mor- row In the presence of the county Probera and ‘city oMeiale exbibtted Licerations on hls head and face and lash marks across lis shoulders. Given Brutal Beating Officer Davis testified that he went to Morrow's home and waited. there to arrest hin on charges of robhers fn connection with the disappearance of “Fonts fron the elothing store When ‘Morrow arrived Davis tol nim that he was under arrest and Yorrow tx allezet to Nave reached for his pistel, Davis explained that Ihe seabed a'stioe anit drove Morrow From the drawer where a pistol, was located. OMtlcer Mite sailed to Ble report, althoush Commisstoner Parker ‘Sali Ivo had demanded one. “Morrow stated that he was. beater at his home and ain with a hose AL the ety jail. Photographs of the man. stripped. were taken inthe county Jail.” The prisoner also satd that his home was entered by the of- ficers without « search warrant, Jake I Newherre (shite), Morrow's at dorney, testified thar’ when he wes called to Uhe city Jall to arrango for the release of Morgow, tho man could not hear and could hardly talk. The attorney sued out a writ of habaes corps and Judge C. A. Pippen or. dered the prisoner released when the city” pollee authorities failed. to pro- duce any evidence azainst Tim. Com- missioner Parker said that he would not tolerate officers beating prisoners te a eflntt to chain confausions, ‘Says Mother Tied Her to the Bed Every Day New York, Aug, 19.—Little s-yenr- out Anita, Daima, Tae W, Istse ft, Tho, according tv an agent of the Suildren's beckery, was Hed. to. bed Sehile her mother: was At work. Was In chitdzen'e caure hetere Justice Famuel i. Levy ast week on. the tharge. of hein a nezizeted chill ‘Tho case was adjourned. ‘According. ta dosern Boyer. an agent for the soclets for prevention oe cruelty to. children, "nelibors ‘Compiained ghar ‘the RoI bal been ‘Reaten and ‘asked. sin investigation, Going. tothe house, Boser. waited Untit the mother returned from Work And upen entering found the. ehilid Featell on a stool, her hans. bound fo the bed ‘with tine, her ter ated to the bed by a. rope and her” ese Danaarced tor tivo. handxerchiers. ‘Tike mother. Mes, Mary Palma, sald the ‘child hail een in the hatie- of eating anything. se found. eausine Her to he fit moet of the tine. —— Detroit Mayor Welcomes Medical Association ap etrolt, Micit.. Aus. 19.—Huasdreds of pitsaicians aiid visitors arrived in thet ele Sumutase nil Mondase to at Nand’ tho 48 annnal soasiog @ the Nntionat Siedical mssociatlon, hte Ineetsr with its auxiliaries. Monday Sh continted thrmusiy Fede gh Fike convention wav welgumed tertne Gay Stondas night. hye Maso Joke ATsinlth ae te format exercives t= Shient to she guthering of srure ti ‘ituo ‘delegntes irom Sal wectiona. ot She wetmntes. the sensions weil he a= firessed cit {ho. ynedieal sciences bs noted anthorition. “The selegsses wil be imhitessed a the hedieal reitwres Dy nted snithorities, The. delegates Wit! he entertained a she Sorthieess- tr Hise shoot, ne the Boll iste a sho, aid atthe Arena_-Battens Us 2 eliizense comimitien and an serie fief eanatatioue uf the wives vt er hi any coneesing + ALARM CLOCK STRIKES ON MAN’S HEAD New York, Aug. 19—Charged with) "stetilug! a tlattee” cer the Ret with an ‘alarm clocks” stew Rous Aemstrong, at, 59° W, 18a Sty wes hela in 81.000 ball or tor= ther” etamination by —Sfapgrtrata Rlogenbiuth fn Waghtngton detshts Court on a ehige of felonious 337 SSAerorling to Merman Ree® of 22d Tad St, he Went to seo sive Armstrong abowt sa alarms clock, eral ot thor clock Heca charges tiave aire. Arvustens ruck Hie Fite sfeies "wore taken fa the st AFTER YEAR'S HUNT | New York. \Aug. 19.—With the arrest of Matvin Taylor, 38 years « age, of 2391 Seventh Ave, federal oficers here helieve that they have found the man who has been steal- lug cheeks from the mails, [According to Detective Flinter, o: the W. 125th St. station. who made the arvest. le was informed by tele- phone “thir “x man. answering. the Nescrintion of the one wanted hy he federal authorieles was attempt. ing to cush-a check, belleved to be Lojeus, it a Mariem mpeakeass., tluresing i. the “address “atven, Filnter said, Wie fond. Taslor hate: Inga. cheek for Stl, which he wes jeneavoring to have cashed. “Upon hein questioned, Pastor claimen that the check had” been siven him by Mrs. Matte Israel, 251 Ae tise Ste whove aie anpeared thereon. Piister communteated with Mee Jstuel, fhe ‘Suid. and. she dented Ai Knowledge of the check. It 49 alleged that Taylor forged Mes. Tarael’s Mane to “checks on three previnus’ ston. Taylor wax arraigned before Magis- tate Rosenbluth inthe Washington }Heights court on charges of grand larceny’ and forgery, He was hell without hall for further examination. ball for furtive exat Interracial Good Will | QOutine by Georgians Woodland. Ga.. Aug, 19.—A practt. cal test of the interracial spite wa: held last Friday wien moro. tha: three thousand persons of Ents races attended an outing and Vaile. cue given by the white citizens Talbot county. ‘The entertuinmen: ‘wan given Co strengthen the honda o: amity and good will between the tw Fees in the county, Prominent men. Uors of bor racex delivered a dresses emphasizing the frlendshit Qf the two in this yart of the suse Tho occasion was Planned primarily that the white pople of the county might manifest thei" appreciation the lovalty and industey of the citi zens in the eounts. few of whom m!- rated to the Nertk. — Siam: Gihih ae Lenin: Miss Lena M. Ridley and Metle cousir: Fa Frankils, of St. outs, Mo. ape the city visiting her hrother.” Ofer Rldiey. and uncle, Witla Bostte, 6 Prairie Ave. ey * GUESTS OF SON Mr. nnd Mrs. Henry M. Higgins cinciomty, “Ohio, are” guceta SF thet fon, Dr, Henry St Higgins, and. family an iti Chamelain Aver : LEMONS WHITEN THE SKIN | | . ee Better than “Bleaches” for | Freckles, Tan, ete. S_ Freckles, Tan, ete White, and it only takes a mizute tw SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1927 | Bilious ? siene Toute ata ie" by ae aroeocinecmeee oo ‘Safe, mild, purely vegetable |_ seee | Try '||Breakfasts that - P ||| "stand by” you <i] Say Business Heads If i Dragay Mornings Hold -| | You Back—Qyaker Outs CH Widely Urged ECENT commercial Reger tor te alee of y's important werk in offers, stores, etc., falls into four short, bee fore-luncheon hours. Likewise, 80% of the day’s important classes in asarig every school and college in Americy fall, too, into the same period, ‘Thus breakfasts of well-balaaced, complete food—food that “stands by” you through the morning—are being urged widely today by expert, Quaker Oats, containing the exe cellent food balance of protein, car= bohrdrates, minerais, vitamine “B® and the essential laxative “bulk” of ats is ideal food for that purpose. Ko other cereal grown compares in food balance. Delicious and ea~ ticing, Quaker Oats corrects the mistake of inadequate breakfast a Start now with Quaker breakfasts, Note then your mornings. Grocers have Quick Quaker (ccoks in 2% to ‘S$ minutes) and regular Quaker Oarn, ae (7a — oe \\ BLACK TK MDOTIOM aka Hose OD, Wea Ore sucrasron WS Q Rese are a the si 2 2 ee Beis AS Sires A ae ee Soe Sarit See mo maven Braga Gasca eae Evrae Sieh Giada eartome Sewetsteie ee SENDNOWOREY sr colic es || BEWARE of SUMMER |) STOMACH DISORDERS Whether you go away or if stay at home, keep a bottle | of Green‘s August Flower hands and take feat the fet signof trouble. This 90 year slteeshidirwetdrinoel orge Sheer teeta wetee ee a TREE Rice eters sobstheie ue eesterrsorier Sitoon telineatoa ex an 28 Teingeh ack Rentecherdisaees saletstiet and toe the, Soy Suubatiserersanre eases iEseecatnot getitwitedsectss G.G.GREEN Tae, Wola, 2, GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER Sf Weaith Health ~==8 Happiness SOR MOLT RU Res Ea Regn naga ae Eee Spat ene ees ee ira wien ewan, ee eer ae de nem | EEhe arias Gea ancnbunivare Uf Grol Tack ant Rip Sto aSee™ as heen Say EOE Neate SE sky ir ete ein Dealt SEE RRA Si atehel SR aM Wash Your Hair Strait NOTHING LIKE !T A Shampoo Hair Straightener WONZER Hair Strait Send 50c for Small Jar $1 for Large Jar 0 160 nd the nama your dros: Seeks tae ae ene Se ake Wonzers Laboratories: vorgere,thoratari sor State Set EE, a, hg LUCKY KURO Ane ee CIS SSS ESD eet QS) fee fone eo eh ee ae EE aa soe AUER “Se ene St MEELIS cui iret Tan as aera mae eS Sat a pe ee cnteano See Tease TE oe. eat are Posten of Chictass Li Cnlat oot ESPs gr a - _ aoe “THE ‘CHICAGO DEFENDER — _ _ FART f | : \Terpaicur plac MRS. BETHUNE KNIGHTS WHO LEAD, TRAIN AND PLAY GIVEN TERM ee STARAT SUE HONOR GEST. | FOR FIRING (-———— || na AT BANQUET, ——- ON RELATIVES Tees a | S¢ See ab ale ek Se gE eka ie po TER gp” any Jct Gothamites in a: Py i. a a i ce . A 4 v t i * : i y [shooting a Result “| ‘ee fr :] Mookisi StRan to Club Woman | | INR ala — ‘ ol J ff old Quarrel = |] * [PH PEE SAEE ana MeLeod Bethune, presitent sof | th Bethune-Cookman collexe, sind wf th Nationa Federation of Colored Won: en's Clubs, was honured at a. tun- fuet at Taurel garde. on Monda3 evening, Au. 7 In honor of her rv: tum frm Europe, hy the eitizens committes of New York. TL Wax wile af she mest noted trib- mes ever ped to x Woman of Ue Trace ‘in this eouniey, amd brought ToRether ove of te most distin Euished sitherings ever assembled There. About 30 pues avery present many of them caming from cities 2 far away ae Waskington, Chicas. Paitinore, Macon, Ga. ASanta, ‘and Other elives. to. present atthe Tea quiet, “The vitizens’ committer, mae Up of the leading men and wonwen 6! Now York, was headed by Dr. dul: DoH, Caleman, she felt that follow- ing hionars titi had been accorded 1 Mrx, Rethune cderoad that the eiti- gens of New York should tender he: A banquet ax a recoznition wf he: Jeadershipy in the field of education anid clubs werk among wemen, The banquet clearly showed ‘the place tint Mrs. Rethune hits mute in tha hesrts of the race, and af th Wille intluenee she has ax an edu. eator anit missionaray to the youn: Dr. Coleman welcomed the guests tn paying honors to Mes, Bethune, sans then presented J. Egert, \llen. presi dent of the Juinivon C. sunith Calver- aly club, as the Ianquet teaxtmaster Praised as Educator Mrs. Bethune was prulxed as 2 ploneer educator. for the noted carees ehe had made despite obstacles. for her work among women of the, icy and country as club warker, for the Aine inyression she made alvro:td, sand tailed one of the famous. women 6 Americs, Her career wis deeckired fy Rpeakers wo he ime of the most re- Rrarkable dnade by ‘any women in America, “Those who. paid, tributes Yo Mrs, Kethune were Charles = Johnson. editor of the. Opportunity Magazine: William H. Ferris, news paper corresponient; Eugene’ Wink! Tones, of the Nathmal Urben Waste: Dr. We E, Pe Dubois, editor of the Crisis Mrs. MC. Lawton, forme president of the Empire Stite Pet eration, iid Mise Nannie Burr-arch President of he National Trains school at Washinzton, D.C. Mrs, Hethune In responding iv ty tributes toll of the impressions. sii Rained while abroad, ste said that 1 Bae one of our women who mde i possible for her te zo alread. Is ending her a eheck “for $1,300 tn that purpose. She sant “Via ttn women Hf the Hace all uver the caus try had contributed to the cunifor of her trip, and wride it possible fo: her fo have such an enjayable tour Sho wid that she snd hier piety had visited nine nf the Eurapea countrivs, and in each of the coun: teles were she had passed she hex geceived many. eourtesies. Tn Ens: Tand shy Was entertained at a ear: don party. where many distinculshe persons were. present. While i Home, Ors, Hethune said she ans her party vislted the pape, <The pope paid her special atten: tion she sald, nd engaged her in a conversation, She fold af the places the visited, "+s the catacombs 6 Rome. the A Way, the St Pau cathedral, the ollecunt. Pompeii, ane Rhine river in Germany, Mrs. Beth une said thar In kaly the wom Were the burden hearers, sind diy tn hard work. Mrs, Teiiune sald tha after see fng this condition among tie womer fn Hale, ghe exme te the conehsien that Ainétien fe the uly county; where women have aa equi sive In closing her address Mrs, Hethun: ead: "Negroes wre better aif i Aimeriea, and the masses of the Hee have better appertunities here. Thy Yauilevitle people are mut ghe mies Pepresont the Tae in Europe. 2m Rive the best impression, They itak the Race tue inuch ast Joke, - Den FO to Europe in lee numbers.” sh raid, “hat in partios, say of 10 or TS, ‘Makes Address While aboard the ship Me Bethune addressed an audience of 29 women on the rice problein fit Amer dean “After her address presentation Jeere made hy several uf Ue wonten" Qranizitions, Mrs. Ont row Stokes made a presentatinn on he half nt the Southeastern Federacie ef Women's Chile: Mrs. Willie Har Fis, representing: the Seatia cinapter Presented to Mrs. Hethane i pan for her school; Mrs. Matnie 1. Prat made 4 presentation on behalf uf th women «€ New York. Musteal numbers were given ‘Andrew Copeland, tener: Mist Mar guerite Avery, soprano, ‘amd Mis Rovetlo Mecrorey, qeantet. The inn ‘quer Was the firs: to he sendesed Mrs Trethune by the eitizens of New Yur and was recarded as at fitting. clime: Yo her Luropean tour. Mrs. Perhun expressed her great delight wit France and wat highly lmpresse with Paris, Mrs. Hethune was bor on a sinall frm in South Carolina She. war edyeated at Scola eollez in Concord, N.C and Moody: Tbh Institute in Chieaze. She began he work in Florida, where she founde the Rerbune-cookman college. | T 1924 she wax elected president of th National Federation o¢ Colored Wo men's Clubs. ‘The members of the anquet_com mittee Were! Dr. uli PLL Colonna chairman: Miss Pearl Vincent, sev retary: Mrs. Emma De Len Leon ard, treasurer: Miss ‘TS. Alexamle! Anancial secretary: Mex. Rora Lam kip, chairman of the prearen com mittee: Mra, Sarah Jenkins, publiedty and Atthur Schomberg, ehalraan ¢ the “committee on arrangement: Adour “00 inen “and women wer Sponsors of the Innnquer. Sh the ne Draws Year Sentence for Purse Snatching Kermit Lee, 27 years old, $447 Cate niet Avew, wis sentence ia one Year In the Rekdewell privon snd tired $10 and costs Tuestty hy Judge Joseph Seltuliman of tite a8ih St. couet, after ‘eing found guilty wh # parse-shatel- Ing chanze, : Sirs, Athertin Carlton, 3247 Mrai~ rie Ave. Hlentified Jee as the man Tha. foiiowed. her mnt seized “er Purse oe dst St, anal South putekwey, Me was arrested tunmediately by Of ficers Callahan, Lahart and equal of The Thitd slistviet pollee, bur sented the erime. Tee sai he was walking on the on= posite sid of the street when the f= Beers seized him and put a hat on iis head, taking “the ‘cap. he. was wearing. | Mrs, Carlton said her as fullant wore a bit She positively Sdentitigd Ieee us the thiet. ee JAILED ON “LAZY” CHARGE Louisville. Ky, Aug. 1.2 Joseph Watker of 722 Toseland St, termed Py the qwlice as the “Muziest myn in Louisville.” swag fined {19 and. sen Yonced to ten days In Jail when he appeared in police court Saturday ona vagrany charge. Police xis thar Walker. wehw welzhs 270 pounds End stinds ix fect two inches, Bis Sean weekced S0r four peaek. | ot, Fe RR a i (eae eee: Uv fe ee eee oe sk = pe a oe ve! RD Co ge Mose Ver Ie) ee A ay Gt Ure - oe “i i on Oe it v2 ey a pee ee eas a a) / ki Be aa, oe ae ana eS a: Ber CORI SEG as SS Rae eg t OU TN ‘Courthouse Closed During TADS . fi Aged Citizen's Funeral j msm, la as, tavie| Hie Aue, © sae Gite of ts PRAISED FOR BiG HE Al n eH BPT ie Sa SEY i C' Bell GHAK fa a ee EM a ee Karsas City Medic Is Called te Chicago Kansae iy, Mo. Aus. 1%—The dcpartinent uf inal of Ranae Che. Uren ihe direction ng Dr Rens ge a | ie viernan ie pe EY I een Fen Pay immer ne chi aS face wees Fe se BY eo ect bur Bee, ME inne ty Page 8 28d tite vity he for- pam 6 | Saved ck mer. Aa Turnover pan eee De. Thompkins fC llowed on: ears Eze my ee “" Dec Thompuins that Kansas City ts to be given credit fort soncuctsie ies moet, extensive Stugy on communicable diwatses, The Sing a entered. yeuptiraigly on irealtih condicions siwong mae Tear In Shieh special empiuusis’ iy placed om Housing amt siaitation, Thotseapiie evidence in the report Inustrutes tnd. strewes. the. need. fur Stricter suhermnce to health es, al Ee ntoreetatent af the same hy elty sittorleien: ter fark jeture ts.n Cltation. from the cite heatth cade Snel what peartieuise ante he oe Solute, Thix ie rexarded aan im Mecttune-tnvation kr health survers fine ‘tw the fet that ieansas ets eaten’ tees ane simftar ts those fe Touts ata ike pupuiaton vr over. And wit he applicaiies eee: say” te Saprertion of such esisting ells aps files aluttaris to utlie elton Great for, the, compton of thts jaaiuee sire oem to Des” Wea Se incine neces wurdlaten ae distant omuslectower of heath ot Rauene Clues amd asshened to the de partment 6€ hysatene an csmanmunte Aide daeasre, -Ehie ie the tee time time this position hiss bec. filed inemher of our (alee, and tte Work covers the rwinhlsitng tf clues st Jsmerzenriew theouehoe the cts. i chia all eniienies tid the esta Hishment we-apeciat ellates for tuber cul hn ind uric, iteattn! conultione of ait school enh ren Tie. Thomplsins fe resarded ay sin of thie hein vurgeone in thi west nud the recent Harveys aneurin te iting: mecieal ‘awene ces ie tie tient “ranit ae an autiority an Sanitation sand quboreiioria ite Le the elt thia weerke Uy OMT a persona conference ith be. Bondesen st ch Sao aad white there will conduct 4 clase Int nuewe-ttaining abd Bet al Groataent nthe eure of tuberculin Tettents at die Kalghis, of byUita fneampmnent. "Wanen composing ti lua Wil cping frm various SecUoh Se Sass Highway Auto Accident Fatal to Algie Coruthers | Fetus ius injuries received white return fom tive muitary encamps nent st. Hockford, Ml Auk. 75 Algle Hi. Caruthers, S129) Cotge. Grave Ave. died ‘thursday. at the Iighway inospitaly Hoiwidere- Mle The secident ‘wis the only one ‘ondinee fatally. af the inany.toported, ‘Aloe io the blinding Fain storm whieh Invoke up all aciviies at camp. and Murad hack a stands seream of Tourists who caine for the ds" fe Uvittoss eT Cornzhens with a group of frienits ina err Were tnaleing thelr way over the slippery highway, Mean dark, When a Fur toning: ear sped from Ywound 4” curve. Instead. of turning to the right as they expected i drave wireetiy inte the side of thei automubile esusinge fe to tumble dese du cntiankment, ‘The 'slde on which Mr. oruthers “sat. wax completes demotishen, Ite was iaken 10 the less Dual where it wag found. that his Skull Wag fractured, “He never re Fulned ranscionsness, None of the Sther oceujanee were seriously In: jured, “The driver of the Font eu Shed away without offering assist: ance. Mia, Coruthers was 29 years of age and eine to Chictgo eizht years ag from Washinzton, 1, G. Te was. member of the ‘Tuskeezee printer of cihieag9, and owner of the de. Vaux Printing offiee At 3129 Cottage Grove Ave a wife and danghte ore KNIGHTS WHO LEAD, TRAIN AND PLAY > teas Ved N (VK »VWAQE/ Le G | \ ae ean = 4 - i ANA GA) MA ihe fa\ Ps i Q wee eal cam BAYER) 7 See i ay) WAN Ww ae Sa i F ti | —<2= ea i , Vi) TIN “cc ” e SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” -Gonuine Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you aré not get- for Colds ting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physicians and Pain proved safe by millions over 25 years. Headache DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Neus Toothache ‘Accept only “Bayer? package Neuralgia e which contains proven directions. Lumbago Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Rheumatism Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Courthouse Closed During Aged Citizen's Funeral Hirmingham, Aki. Aus. 13.—Wi- Jaane Macey. poner citien of ths Hits niat shan We many frends fh oth mews, died at his home, Colles Stu cuit ave Aye, luxe Stmidage te inait toon ty head health for mnasiy two years, The funeral serviers were hetd ve the Metropolitan A.M. Ee Zion church, where he had heen 2 faltheul Ineanbor for more chan thirteeiive yous. Pastor Fe We Alstork elie: Tod the funeral oration, and exires: Slons. Were made From whee elena fhe hac Known Bim for years, and he aUtended the funeral in ktrse humlerss dudes and. lawyers gh reputation in the ely and state Jeb hw grave wibute Durie “the, funerad sercives the atiices in the rourtiunuse were closed in respect to Mt. Masses, who. Nit Teen eanployed tere for more thet forty Serre. He wan fc veteran, fea" Ternal onder sivin. a moniber ye the Masons and Kaiglits of Pethtas 0 this state, anid his body wad in ohare Af thee tu onanization, _ Warship- Tit Master, WAL. Darby spoke uf hin hea falthtul member of ‘Priune lode Noo 430, aul retermuces to his. Ht Rete muide by), S. Darnell, aeerets be his tndger and Oxeae We Adams, Imetnber oe the sine. order. Te Surcived by hits wehdow. Mes. Lend Juoust Massey his festersson, WD eater, vad of ef Wh Lave know hin intimately seo nian Sine W ‘oman Under 6 Months | Sentence Freed on Writ Through a habeas corpus weit Med in the eriminal court by Attys, Jen- King and Turner, Miss Reheces Verrs. B10 Dearhora St. was, freed from the Bridewell prison Thursiay by Sudge Emanuel Eller, The woman Was given a six months’ xentence In the. Eridewell prison ons kareeny charge last May. The complaint failed 6 se: tert the property stolen, ‘Therefure, accord ing to the haieas corpes. petition. she was being egally het in prison, Judge Eller agreed swith the point alsed ul ordered abies! Perey dls ehearand, 1 t . ‘The Knights of Pythias are noted for their A many splendid bands, their famous uniform rank and the able men of the Race among them as leaders. Here is shown one of the prize win- ning bands that participated in the Mardi Gras |] parade Tuesday evening, Below is a portion of |] the uniform rank now in camp at 95th and State Sts. On the right is wo of the lodge’s most 7 prominent figures—E. G. Tidrington (at the ree left), supreme vice chancellor of Indiana, and “seca || Sir S. W. Green, (at the right), New Orleans, SOT supreme chancellor of the order. s Vin hy tenor Sta Matera. [wot wt taken tothe heatguarters TABORS PLAN items thes Will he cessitieal thelr es Shtetive stopping paves ee the bearse Thee eonnaltier ot whieh anna oie Ces is ehutinan, Suge at the nest ia "in tlevedinsd have heen opened [fon the" sccuimmundation of the vis j Ment tae been reeetved by: Bhawan BA | witsen secretary nf the general conte Faniiee, tivising. thstt Hinge dele [ins Shag he exbectedt feu Miser CLEVELAND es [ei be under the supervision af Mot- (ie B. hebeutn, ehetinay of the enters scr atts paras meh Triennial Sessions to sss id's vise tn ahe uote Gir i Mees iecnreslent Draw Throng [oie Tulbbasd, chier grand mentor PSO Madahel gr hen Bit an Mr aogg Meiecat Cleveland. Ohiv, Aug. 12.—The whole city is agox over the opper- tunity of entertaining for the feat tine the International sexsion of the International “Order of Twelve Knights and Daughters of Tabor. which mocts only every three fears This order wax fnunded by” Kev Muses Dickson follwing the lv war, aad has the distinetion of hes ing ‘one uf the few fraternal orders Which is not aH offshoot wf send White order. Is vhief business enn Rist af the dispensing of ehavits through relief tu the sik and the fc Inilies of the deceased menhers. “Manounventent Is made tis week by Josephs H. Drue, general chatrman of tie committee wvranging for Ue convention, that headquarters have heen established at Mt. Zion temple, East Sath st, and Central Ave. from nuw until the clase af the eanvention, Sessions begin Au, 16 to Ts, inetn= sive, Sellers, grand. high proveptres: Of The Ohiw jarisdbetion, bx chacrenan of the rommnlttes in charge of head- quarters. Will Meet Delegates Upon their arrival in the «ity, wll cers and delegates will be met at The Siglan Wy the transportation uta faliter headed by Charles obinson, tnd will be taken to the healyuarters Whore thes Will he assigned thelr Fe spective stopping, places lee the hose Ing remntattier of whieh Emnia Hole cra is chairman. Sune at the tnest Inoue in Clevekind have heen opened fon te accommodation. «thy vin tis, Word las been rvevived I thous | Wilswn, soeretars at the general coms jiutiee, advising tht large. dele tease tags bye experted fewam Missute, Uhnwis, aekiosie ane other staten, OMI cntestainment for. Ute visitors [soll be under the supervision af Mate de E Dehoutn, ehsairiat of the etter HCaiument womiinittes, Shy sates tat jationg the events sebeduled are a te- Seis, hntuntet, pstrade, ewmnneitive /Mu!it ivuainetin riley hall ae Ces Catenion auido jay BE ae meted Cle ain layers, uf whew Bliner J. Meeks ie president CTE Tiudhbasd. chie? geand mentor of Obie and Jurisdiction. Is espected tw arrive im the city this week from Pisisiurgh to see that everything jn teadiness for the ehitertaininent the ‘sisitars : Mound Bayou Party Not Guilty in Poison Plot éCeniinasd trom Pane) enemies of Mr. Hunze. in order to em- ae onde 10 Gentereak anid ae Bur uct yon Wied Cosel mete teem iscary attempt ter beamtech ang eta at punter the Conk et ate yaaa Ne actin ie ilies of dine ema tector: cer hueyind eke nis wife tes wet A Indetdete te teem fact aRt Hat Maral ni sates he Messer: eta” aust he remand ae ee rn, Me eles Gar ne eigen ee tans eeeaite as Aint ituees caraman of the ee Cee ee ae toe Rae cee lee, cee elem iad Stra 0 Mores vice inna ee ee ee eee _— — . — —r—=C Br a oe 3 og _ << os 3 — aS sg Soe es ce S fa ; -. oe So — oT oS q pa’ oot ee te aN 85 s ee sid. ; i pos efor } a \ 3 , . Wate Pr. aes x i is i i by this hygienic toilet soap—purifies pores IN. busit . well ially, only purifies body pores—it Tima wasemet Jase ee pes oo iecping donable offense—a real handicap Complexions clear, smooth an standing in the way of success. glowing with healeh. And the worst of ic is that we Better still, it removes unseen may be guilty-—without knowing ft. germs from hands, as well as dire Don’t take chances—use Life- helps safeguard health. buoy. Sorjreshing millions bathe _Lifebuoy's clean, hygienic scent with it daily—for it gives lasting —which quickly evaporates atter Ficcdom from embarrissing odor, nging—cells you it gives greater safety. Yet it costs so little. For healthy complexions’ Lifebuoy is orangered, a big pen erous cake. Get some today wher- Lifebuoy’s mild, antiseptic lather ‘ever soap is sold. Lever BrotsCo,- Cabri, Mam, Ke l HEALTH SOAP Ul for face-hands-bath oe removes germs, too Se 14000), oN ) 10,000,000 HEADS Bula oe Wd orat Se — Pen 9 as CA SD yf.) r CCT ae Taare Oe 3221-COTTACE GROVE AVE = a CHICAGO. ILL MENand WOMEN ay; GIVEN TERM FOR FIRING ON RELATIVES New York, Aug, 19.—Pleading sults to attempted assault tn the Shird. degree, after shooting beth his Cuthersin-law ‘aud his mother -h-Iaw {iter they. bid interfered In quar- fal he wag having with his wife, Ahage Allen in jeneral sexsions Sat- drday. ‘sentenced Claud Martin, 21 Sears of axe, 2 Janitor, to serve froin Six and one-fourth to Seven and one- hale years In Sing Sing. ‘Martin’ shot Albert Jones, "hls father-In-law, just under the heart Mia Maygete Jones, aia mother-ta-huw, inthe left hij on Nov. 14 last, Tie squared that resulteat in the shooting was, the culmination of a Tong peried of hard feeling between Martin, police said at the time, snd Reid, who was a boarder at the house. Decides to Leave Martin and his wife, Lillian, ted qwen tiving swith her” parents, but shortly before the shooting: he ale- Hued to leave, Kolng tu the home UC his parents, 124 Wy 1ddth St, neat Yenox ave, Hier to Martin’s leave-taking, the police Investization subsequent to the Khooting reveated, there was no Itt wounle between Martin and the rest be the housshoid, including Meld, Martin, it was said, was extremely Jentous’ of Red. He tinaliy protested the boarder’ presence In the house te bis wits’ Parents, but they Informed him that Keeid was Permitted to stay becatts the money" he pald for voard und Fonm wax needed, “They aise informed Martin hat his Jealousy, Was entirely. unfounded When Marti’s demands for Weld’ fjectinn Were to nv avail, hie decked to Ioave, From then on his relations With his wife were those uf a cusua caller. Mis. telephone communications However, were Of a different nature paillde Tearned. «Detective Hattle 4 the WW. 135Uh St. station, whe. tn: Festixated, stk he learned that Mat tin, on several accasions, hal threat. ened his wife ont the telephone, “rhe night of the shooting Marti was pavhig one of hie castal eth atthe Jones home, Reid and Mrs Martin ‘were dn the parlor toxethe when he entered, polles learned ‘Tike neenoed Metin, ‘and he, said to have whipped it 2 revoive And figed three shits Me close eae a Tteid. Ouiy one took effwet, but Tek fell to the Moor, apparently mortal wounded, Parents Rush In Jones and his wife, Margaret, 01 herang, the Shots. rtished inte” th raum. ‘Chix was ‘the sigue], policy Bverred, for Martin ‘to apet fire o then, Only one buller struck Jones Iwit ie was sufficient to stretel hin ‘on the oor. ‘A second bullet struck Mrs, Jone: fn the abdomen, amt she fell to the Howe beside her hushand. Martin flee to the front door, actually dived dewr the stairease, and apparently unhurt hailed. passing taxieals, Martin ‘exeaped in the excitement bu was captured kater. In route Ih admitted the shooting, People We Can Get| Along Without ae | [ J] U. S. BOARD DROPS PULLMAN PORTER ROW (Continued from Page 1) Labor Act, wats Wwought to the atten- tian tie Putin cums eh Tatrds with reuuent that the Pal meet din as the Hens “te neta at Ue Nase ra et anche adapt wh ar Siac aed" an oe EMERGENCY BOARD tes 1OaAt a dipets bats cartier ‘ond ify ‘emmloyees, be not Saeed act Se netasing pre: Sees ete ee sea nese te UEGdoment ot dhe vonra'et media: Seer etontially tine Hen, Siiersente semmerce tos Segre suck as ts deprive sty Sect Sear He Stacie of srsental Bet tired ian service, Soe bourd at aerate teeta president he moe thereupon’ in hey dacre: he me ne Bey £0 Investigate Hep creat” capection cue sisscte Seay EES Desi ee, semmstes af | such number of persons as to the | Sach soaets Sn detirables ates Pidedh Nemevees hat na. member wechnaed shall be bectniariy oe shpcictta (Rerestea fn any organs Henan et plants or any ears a a iS Irembers of ‘any such, board. aha sores oF WE ecdent’s Suen oar shal be Created separately in ce eee ee eA aean ieee CR iaeeaees A, Taste ay tothe Sasts Pema me's capa thereen Siete aoe ident wilin’ 90 ase Prom? 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Lighy Ancient Birth Stone | ee ee eee ) oh, seater cee | Fae isk ; AMOSEA SALES 4856 Forteswille Aver Chicago, IC DROPSY sarge Week FREE Short breathing relleved In 36 to48 hours: swelling Fetuced in 15 te 2 Jdaya. Regulates the heart. corrgs the liver and. Kuancya, “Curitey the entire system. Collum Dropsy Rem- edy Company, Dept. 14. Atianta, Ga. FITS Attacks Stopped ) eee neceete ee Sei STA Sieas SS gap, Sate hots eee SS Tineteigy "weactagh \aonavonus OD REAEARCK LABORATORU PYTHIANS DEDICATE MILLION DOLLAR TEMPLE ```markdown ``` HUNDREDS OF DELEGATES TAKE PART IN CEREMONIES With their hearts filled with pride over the crowning achievement of the Knights of Pythias in the construction of the national Pythian temple at 37th Pl. and State Sts., several thousand members and friends of the order assembled there Monday afternoon to witness the ceremonies of the laying of the corner stone of the $500,000 building—the pride of the Pythian world. PART 1-PAGE 4 Sir S. W. Green, supreme chancellor and chairman of the building committee, was master of ceremonies. He was introduced by Sir S. A. T. Wivalee, attorney-investigation was led by the Rev. N. C. Nix, supreme prelate. There prelate followed the address of Dr. Walter O. Tayler of Boston, supreme repre- pent in Massachusetts. A. S. S. After another musical selec- tion, he predeceid. of South Carolina, grand attorney, brief, but splen- sid address. He was followed by another son, West Vir- ginia, grand kuma. yranda. Dr. W. O. Taylor Iron. Then came the laying of the cor- ner stone with impressive rites by Chancellor Green. Outlines Object of Order "The laying of our corner stone today of our national temple is but a capability of Race leadership," Dr. Teresa serted. "In laying this corner stone, we would remind the non-Python that we have not built up our Pythiae code, and that we have been ever mindful of the duties we owe to our government to which we belong and to mankind about us," she added. "A plea for more buildings and business enterprises of the Race and Jesu, buying of costly churches was mankind's greatest achievement." "Aslae from exceedingly costly church buildings, according to his economic standing, the Colored man bought the churches, and put his money co-operatively into those things which have a definite and tangible relation to the race," she added. "Changes that mental attitude, he may he wants to for the recognition due him as a citizen of this country, but he be heard," Sir Frederick maintained. Need of More Business few more buildings" he continued, "like this one scattered over the city, with its production of money, will do more to give the Colored man real standing than all the fine church edifices that erect or buy in the next half century, or the clam of the church. But we have got to put our money where it can talk for that is the one voice that is heard in America from our white brothers." ```markdown ``` "Individually, we haven't enough to make much of a sound, but co-operatively we have enough to rival the black citizens of the embattled farmers; that was hard to the world. And so, this building will stand as a monument to co-operative efforts on the part of the Race—an effort to understand what is possible when there is a need for purpose and a clear conception of the necessary steps of progress. "This great enterprise points out to the black citizens of America that they co-operatively in a big way in their endeavors than those that have for their objects spiritual dividends. And while spiritual dividends are not to be disregarded, it is material dividends which give us his rating and standing in America. "I sometimes think that our white fellow citizens adroitly encourage us to take the money we can rake and scrape into the bank, and we can only hope for idealistic dividends, well knowing that 35 long as we a race are weak in the material thinks we are the more easily co-operative to contribute to their prosperity." Easy to Get Churches "Why is it so easy for a comparatively few of us at any time to get a church edits ranging in price from $10 to $100, the best and easiest kind of terms being given us? Have you ever heard of any group of us being expressed to obtain such an edits even when the price was out of all proportion to the economic standing of that group, let that same group organize our business purposes, for commercial activity, or for the manufacture of goods for financial help and we will know how fast it will come." Sir Frederick concluded. The resume of the history of Pugnismian was given by Sir Jefferson in his address. He paid a glowing-tribute to all the leaders of the Thomas S. Stirling down to the supreme chancellor. "Great ideas are the dynamics which force into our field of vision and inspire us to behold here today." Sir Jefferson began, "This magnificent structure, shuffling four-square to every wind that passes over the greatest prowls of the West, is the apex of all the pleasing dreams of the great Pythian leaders from Thomas W. Stricker to Smith W. Green, Uncle Sam, and fearless defender of the principles for which we stand, the Order of Knights of Pythias has grown by leaps and hounds until today it encloses the world," the speaker declares. ```markdown ``` At the conclusion of Sir Jefferson's address, Supreme Chancellor Green, trowel in hand, proceeded with the presentation of the conclusion of the ceremonies and his address, prayer and honoration were offered by Rev. J. M. Mundy, Kentucky, supreme representative. The conclusion of Supreme Chancellor Green's address is here event: Chancellor's Address Sisters of the Order of Calantha, Brother Knights, Ladies and Gentle- ```markdown ``` We have met upon this occasion to lay the corner stone of a building which we hope may serve as a memorial of Pythian knighthood for ages. As the solid walls of this great building pierce the skies and penetrate the ethereal blue of the heavens, proclaim to all the world that the knights of Pythias is the living embodiment of the great principles of the ancient world. May the traveler who has lost hope and about to sink down in despair, catch a glance of its towering sight and struggle on until he shall have reached the goal of his ambition. May the young man whose feet come to the paring of the way gain fresh courage through reading the history of this building—choose the better path and have his life prove his glory in his time and generation. May Help the Aged May the middle-aged man whose feet have not followed the path of rectitude catch a glimpse of the warning it offers to the gifted, the gifted of this building causing him to turn from the path that leads to destruction, and choose the road that leads to righteousness. May the middle-aged man spent his substance in riotous living learn from the sight of these solid, substantial walls that the only things that enlighten the elevation and the betterment of mankind. That it is never too late to do good. Then the boys and girls of a Race that is known only poverty and want, and who have drained the bitter cup of disappointment to the dregs, shall stand within the shadow of the aspiration to higher and nobler things, shall it be known that the sacrifices made by the founders of this order to spread the enobligation principles of charity, charity and benevolence, shall it be known Represents Theft This building represents the thrift and industry of the Knights of Calantha, a branch of the Order of Calantha. Yes, it represents more than that. It represents the struggles and the sacrifices and the hopes of a people who have been tribulations—a people who shall never rested content until they shall have found a place in the sun. It represents the Homoans; Jerusalem was to the Jews, and as the temple of Mahomet to the Mahomeans—so may this temple be the shrine, the mecca to wandering and Calanthae for ages to come. Mrs. George S. Williams of Savannah, Ga., grand worthy inspector of Calinthus of Georgia, Republican member from Georgia chairman of citizenship for the National Association of Colored Women, Mrs. William T. Reid of Macon, Ga., are in the city attending the biennial session of the Knights of Pythias and Knights of Ganthe, which is now in session. During their meetings are guests at the Mrs. Williams committed women from Georgia and chairman of citizenship for the National Association of Colored Women, and Mrs. Walter E. Conon, Ga., are in the city attending the 24th biennial session of the Pythias and Courts of Calanthe, which is in session during their visit here they are guests at the residence of F. E. Ash, 4428 Parkway, and have been the recipients of many social courtesies. Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Reid are well known in political, fraternal and club circles and are doing construc- Mrs. Williams has the distinction of being the first national committee-woman in this country. She is honourably named Chair of the Committee of Colored Women's clubs and founder and organizer of the George S. Williams courts in honor of her husband, Emma Beardsley, founder, Mrs. Williams congratulates president of the National League of Republican Colored Women. After attending the K. of P. convention in New York for the Elk conclave which meets next week. Officer Williams Dead: on Police Force 17 Years Officer B. W. Williams, 47, member of the Chicago police department, died Wednesday, Aug. 10, at his resilient age after a illness of 15 days. Death was caused from septic poisoning. The funeral was held Saturday afternoon at Congregational Church 65th and Iroquois Church 68th officiating. He was a member of Prince Hallodge, F. & A. M. 52, and also the Police Mutual Benefit association to the church. Active pallbearers were brother officers. Officer Williams was noted as a good conductor, an ideal father and home builder. He leaves a wife, Currie Williams; a mother, Mrs. Harriet Williams; a sister, Emma Williams; an ideal father and home builder. He leaves a wife, Currie Williams; a mother, Mrs. Harriet Williams; a sister, Emma Williams; an ideal father and home builder. He leaves a wife, Currie Williams; a mother, Mrs. Harriet Williams; a sister, Emma Williams; an ideal father and home builder. He was a resident of Chicago for the past 23 years, coming here from Topeka, Kansas, in 1904. He was a member of the Chicago for 17 years. Interment was in Masonic plot at Lincoln cemetery. Lt. and Mrs. Gordon Announce Marriage Lakin, W. Va., Aug. 19—Friends of Lieut. Sieman S. Gordon and Miss Rhoda A. Wilson received the announcement of their marriage last week by Rev. J. Thomas Reid Aug. 4 at the home of the bride at St. Albans, W. Va., before the immediate members of the two families. The bride and the English department of Garrett high school of Charleston, W. Va. Lieutenant Gordon served in the World war as a member of the old Belfast Army as the 3700th. He is now superintendent of the State Industrial School for Colored Boys at Laklin, W. Va. at home. Mrs. Gordon are at home at Laklin. --- Children Cry For Fletcher's CASTORIA There are many ways a baby has of expressing any pain or irregularity or digression from its normal condition of health and happiness. A short sharp cry, a prolonged irritated cry. Restlessness, a constant turning of the head or of the whole body, freeful. In these and other ways a baby tells you there is something wrong. Most mothers know that a disordered stomach, or bowels that do not act naturally are the cause of most of baby's sufferings. A call for the doctor is the first thought, but in the event of any delay there should be ready at hand a safe remedy such as Fletcher's Castoria. Castoria has been used for baby's ailments for over 30 years and has merited the good will of the family physician in a measure not equaled by any other baby's medicine because of its harmlessness and the good results achieved. And remember this: Castoria is essentially a baby's remedy and not a cure-all for every member of the family. What might help you is too often dangerous when given to a babe. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Castoria. Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. OFF TO PARIS JOHN B. BROWN DR WESLEY JONES One of the most prominent physicians of Omaha, Neb., who was in Chicago this week en route to New York, where he sailed next week for the region. The region convention. He is a delegate, elected from the state of Nebraska, and representing Theodore Roosevelt post No. 30 of Omaha. One of the interesting visitors to Chicago this week was Dr. Wesley Jones, one of the youngest and most popular physicians in Omaha. He visited left the city Thursday morning for New York, where he has reservations on the Celtic to sail next week to attend the American Legion convention in New York. After the convention Dr. Jones attended three months studying in Berlin. Dr. Jones, who represents his post in Omaha and was elected as a delegate-at-large from Nebraska at the 2016 Republican convention, also act as official correspondent for the Defender while on his trip. One of the greatest embarrassments he received was the unfortunate gathering, the Defender representatives, was when a delegation of Race ministers met them at the station with the information that they were being interviewed. Dr. Jones says he promptly refused informing these self-appointed committee that he would be locked after along with all other delegates, and that he would be his headquarters at the Lincoln hotel with other delegates, he said. West Virginia Institute Is Host to Y. Workers Institute, W. Y., Va. Aug. 19—The West Virginia college institute was host recently to the community conference consisted of the Y workers in the cities and communities large enough to afford branches of the Y workers. Twenty delegates were present at the meeting from 26 different states. Miss Mabel Brady, registrar of the conference, form the records in her office. Committee meetings, conference councils, group meetings, lectures and recreation programs. On the closing night of the conference, a spectacular pager was staged by the delegates on one campus, the beauty spots of institute's campus. Among the prominent workers of the general association who were involved in the conference were: Miss Eva D. Bowles, educator of Race work in cities; Mrs. B. A. Johnson, hostess; Columbus, Georgia; George Papadopoulos of Athens; Channing Tweed of the National Council, Young Men's Christian association; T. Arnold Hill of the National Urban league, and later of the National Department of education department. Those in charge of the accommodations at Institute were: David A. Lane Jr. dean of the superintendent of buildings and grounds; Miss Essie J. Anderson, director of home economies department; superintendent of halls matron. West Virginia invites the conference to return next year at the close of the conference. Aged Man Arrested on Charge of Killing Youth Amiston, Ala., Aug. 10—Harry Young, an aged man, was placed in jail here last Thursday in connection with the killing of John E. Harrison, a former police officer, with his skull crushed in a cow pasture near this city last Thursday morning. Young was arrested on the testimony of May Holt, 9, and Robert Lee Irwin, 7, who alleged that they saw the body of the officer and the authorities are holding the two young witnesses in jail also, awaiting the trial. THE CHICAGO DEFENDER 100,000 VIEW PYTHIANS IN BIG PARADE New Orleans Mardi Gras Outdone By DAVID W. KELLUM With torches burning, with goreous colored lights, with bands playing wild music, with sir knights dressed in their grotesque uniforms together with hundreds of other harlequins, the entire South side was filled with joy Tuesday night, when 10,000 Lythians and Calantheans marched in the biennial parade that featured that day's largest session of the order now meeting near The Mardil Grus parade riveted the far-famed original of New Orleans, Policemen, beautiful women, jockies, a few gentlemen, and everybody else state in the union were on hand to make the event a gala one, as thousands lined the streets to watch the picturesque scene. The event was without its form of toy-makers. As early as 6 p.m. the bands and participants began forming on Paiire Ave. at 41st St. Shortly after 3:30 p.m. the band moved north on Paiire Ave. to 33th St. Traffic on the busy thoroughfare was suspended for the time being. The band reviewed in review. Reaching 39th St. line of march was west to State St., north on State to Stlst St., east to Pyriac Ave., and again south on State to Stlst St., then moved eastward to Giles Ave. and north to the Eighth Regiment armory, where a mammoth Mardi Gras carnival and dance was held. He then took a tour of the car carrying Maj. Robert R. Jackson, alderman of the Third ward, and commander of the 15,000 Pythians now encamped here for the eight A squad of police followed. The honor position went to the Boston board of Chicago, holding old-style familiarairs in air true Marilid Gras fashion. In rapid succession came band after band, their lodges and women members, in a group of women to receive applause was that representing the Overton dresses that were dressed as butterfly and Japanese, each carrying a lighted lantern. Clowns Amuse Crowd All along the way clowns were busily engaged in amusing the crowd. in the second division the delegation in the Kansas City, Mo. made the best shirtless Missouri of the U. F. of K. P. is headed by Brig. Gen. W. H. Butler. The Kansas City delegates were dressed in white and carried lighted hats at the bottom of their trousers. As the parade marched on one could see many funny spectacles. In one section there was a group of Indians representing the Indianapolis, Ind. delegation and so on. Notable among those to receive praise from the thousands who lined the waterfront, which was a veritable flower bower of white and pink blossoms. Six pretty girls, dressed in summery costumes and representing each demeanor, were drawn continuous appreh. Preceding the float was a mammoth truck directing a vari-colored spotlight on the beautiful float. The back truck were made up of special Pythian editions of The Chicago Defender. West Virginians Applauded The West Virginia delegation, dressed as miners, with burning torches on their heads and picks and a splendid showing. Spectators were loud in their praise for them. A youngster riding in a miniature aeroplane, bearing the name "Spirit of City," attracted much attention. The crack Second Regiment band of Columbus, Ohio, headed by W. C. Elks. This band will also mention this concert next week in New York. The band members are both Pythians and Elks. The Juvenile Tuggle Instruments also shared honors with the Second Regiment band. W. B. Driver is principal of the institute and Mrs. Fannie C. Blavins is president. This band is the center of Calcuttaheme. The band gave acert in front of the Defender office Thursday evening before a crowd of several thousand persons. The Ft. Wayne Community Center of Washington Community Center band of Louisville, KY, also made hits. The Pythian exhibition drill will be held at Soldier's field Friday, at 10 a.m. at the museum for $25,000 will be distributed for excellence in military maneuvers. --- PASSED AWAY A. SHEPARD S. PAUL Chicago lost one of its oldest and most respected citizens last week when Shepard Saul passed away at 11:41 a.m. brief illness. He was buried Monday, Aug. 15, after the funeral at his late residence. Shepard S. Paul, Well Known Chicagoan, Dies Shepard Samuel Paul, one of Chilonga's most respected citizens, died last Friday at his home, 611 E. 41st St., at the age of 73. His death came with friends, even though he had been failing in health for a long time. When him when the end came was his widow, Mrs. Julia Paul, formerly a teacher at the school, years ago. Mr. Paul was born in London, Ont. He has resided in Chicago for more than forty years, and is survived by his wife, the Brown & Stevenson Falloring company until 10 years ago, when he retired on a pension granted by his employer. General was held Monday, Aug. 15, from his late residence, Rev. Moses Jackson, pastor of Grace Presbyterian church, officiating. He is survived by his widow, he is survived by a sister, brother and other relatives. Washington Photographer Accepts Post at Tuskegee Tuskegee, Ala., Aug. 19.—Leonard G. Hyman of Washington, D.C., has photographic division of Tuskegee institute. Mr. Hyman for seven years curated the collection in the institute which he has given for the work at Tuskegee. He received his training in photography at the Bruin College photography college. City. His graduate of the Minor normal school, Washington, where he received his training in education made vacant by the death of C. M. Buttley last spring. THOUSANDS OF SATISFIED USERS KNOW Improved Pluko REALLY DOES MAKE THE HAIR SOFT, STRAIGHT, AND SILKY Use it and you will know from the quick way the first application of this hair dressing straightens your hair that its continued use will give you an abundance of straight, silky hair which always looks smooth and glossy. "ALWAYS THE FINEST HAIR DRESSING now THE EASIEST TO USE" --- Chicago Opens Doors to Knights of Pythias Crowd (Continued from Page 1) premium wodge was held at the Metropolitan church Monday evening. Chicago turned out en masse extending to the Pythianis a cordial welcome—to Edward D. Green, the former Edward D. Green, Chicago, secretary of the Pythianite temple and sanitary commission, presided. He introduced the supreme attendant, the Honorable John W. in turn introduced Sir S. W. Green supreme chancellor of the body. Resources $10,000,000 In his introductory remarks, Mr. Watkins told of the wonderful growth of the Knights of Pythias under the able leadership of Supreme Chancellor Green. The total resources of the army are now $10,000,000, Mr. Watkins declared. He explained the care that is used in picking men of ability for election to the various offices of this great body. Men who have not made a mistake in their service will be plished anything for themselves—have no chance whatever of holding an office in the lodge, the supreme attorney said. The chancellor Green's address to the welcoming through which packed the church was brief. He praised Dr. A. A. Wesley, Chicago, grand chancellor of Illinois for the work he has done for the church. For the last seven-six years ago we assembled in Chicago with the Knights of Pythias, the Court of Calanthe and allied branches," the chancellor said, and we have passed through trials and tribulations since come here in 1801. "There have been lawsuits with our white brothers and also, also, lawsuits against us," went on, "but through them all we came out victorious and taught our white brothers that we knew how to be a great example. Yetha ran a great example by winning out. We don't need to be discouraged for we know that the courts will decide for us as quickly as possible." The Chancellor Green cited cases which were won by the knights in Texas and Louisiana and in Louisville, Ky., on behalf of them were on segregation property rights. "We are trying to build for the Race—trying to accumulate funds and property," the speaker "In 1923 we planned a national temple," he continued. "With this acquirement of wealth and property we hope to show, the youth of our country, how to complete our magnificent building at 37th Pl. and State St.—a building that will be the pride of the Race, the Knights of Pythias and the Knights of Athens throughout our districts. This one makes 17 and is the father of them all," the chancellor asserted. Dr. A. W. Wesley, Chicago, delivered the address. "You have done a great work and because of that great work, we bid you welcome to our state." Dr. Wesley said. He described the many opportunities and advantages here for the Race and concluded with an outline of the progress it had made here. Dr. Tidlington of Evanville, Indiana, supreme vice chancellor of his state for 29 years, was among those Have 17 Temples seated on the platform. He made no address. Mrs. Williams of Illinois, grand register of deeds, delivered the address. Mrs. Williams of the Court of Calcutta, representing two thousand members of this branch of the supreme lodge of Illinois. Mrs. Williams oversaw the female quartet from Orlando, Fla., singing several numbers in response to encores. Their most popular numbers were the spiritual "Just Got Heaven" and the "The members of the splendid quartet are Aurora Daniels, Mrs. Ethel Wooden, Mrs. Leoa, Nikon and Mrs. John, Mrs. Leoa, Nikon and Mrs. Paul, the pianist. Others who appeared on the program were the famous Metropolitan choir, under the leadership of Fattie Brown, noted soprano singer, and Harrison Emmanuel, violinist. The business sessions of the supreme lodge opened Tuesday morning at the lanche, the women's auxiliary, opened at the same time at the Metropolitan church with E. G. Tilman, the supreme worthy counselor, presiding. Supreme Chancellor Green sounded his gavel at 10 o'clock, bringing the lodge to order. The morning service was held with the officers heading the various state grand lodges. Twenty-eight states were represented. The senior officers of the supreme lodge are S. W. Green, supreme chancellor; E. G. Tidrington, supreme vice chancellor; Dr. E. A. Williams, Cincinnati; past supreme chancellor; Dr. E. E. Underwood, supreme prelate; T. O. G. Nutter, Charleston, W. Va., supreme master of exchequer; Dr. E. E. Underwood, supreme prelate; T. O. G. Nutter, Baltimore, Md., supreme master-at-bars; John A. Blume, Winston-Salem, N. C. supreme outer guard; D. E. E. Underwood, supreme inner guard; Dr. U. G. Mason, Birmingham, Ala., supreme medical registrar; S. A. T. Watkins, Chicago, supreme interior guard; R. U. Janker, Chicago, general, uniform rank department. Lodge Open Session Confer Degrees SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1927 country. The election of officers for the next two years was held Thursday. The Dramatic Order of Knights of Omar held its opening session Tuesday at the Metropolitan church. This is the highest branch of the Pythianus saint knights have reached this height in the order. Fifty-five delegates of this branch are here. A reception for officials of the Dramatic Order of Omar day evening by the body at the clubhouse of the Fort Dearborn lodge of Elks, 2520 South parkway. Thursday, Aug. 11 was governor's day and the grandpa of the uniform rank, 55th and State Sts. Exhibition drills, a band concert and a dress parade were held. The parade and ball was held at the Coliseum for the thousands of delegates and visitors to the convention. It will come to close Friday with a parade at Grant park stadium. Prize drills will be held at Soldiers' field at 2 p.m. and at 6 p.m. guard mount. Saturday, breaking of camp, the delegates will be sightseeing tour through Chicago. Dr. Roman, Nashville Physician, Visite Dr. C. V. Roman, prominent eye ear, nose, and throat specialist of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. case during the week on his way to the convention of the National Medica association, conference, Mich. Aug. 14 to 19. PETER H. While in Chicago, Dr. Roman Dr. Rossetti a guest of Dr. Rossetti during the summer he has been studying at the University of Minnesota preparatory to organize Dr. Roman is history to organize at Fisk university, Nashville, where he holds the chair of health director. Dr. Roman was warmly received at the University of Minnesota, structured to the advanced classes there. Beside his practice as a specialist and his post at Fisk university, Dr. Roman is the biomedical and otolaryngology at the Mellary Medical college of Nashville. Alleged Jewelry Thief Held in $3,500 Bail SATURDAY. AUGUST 20. 1927 PAINTS LIFE SIZE PICTURE OF LINDBERGH Janitor's Work Now on Exhibition (Photo on Picture Page) BY EVANGELINE ROBERTS The spirit of that "feller Lindbergh" has not only touched the high places, but has reached down into a tiny basement flat at 1338 N. Dearborn St., and caused a painting spell to come over Richard Williams, the janitor. As a result of that inspiration a seven-foot oil painting of the air hero is now on exhibition in the windows of Madison Street at State and Madison Sts., a part of the welcome to the famous visitor. Knows Nothing of "Temperament" The tanfar-artist is 25 years old and lives with his wife and small children, who love to tell about his dabbles in art. "Sometimes I hate to see my paint brushes," he laughed, "and then again I love to paint." One thing that has bumbed in me off and on since I was a kid in Downers Grove, Ill., where I was born. "He hasn't yet learned, interpret this painting," he said. "That painting of Linda is the second I ever tried. I am not good at portraits. I like landscapes I guess and learned to love nature and ecstasy. I never have any trouble in mixing colors." Williams continued, "I made that flight. I was just crazy to paint his picture. I thought I was foolish to attempt such a big job, but works in the neighborhood and friend who works in the neighborhood said they thought I could do it. "So one evening I went over to the paint stone, stood outside for a minute, looked around and made my money for canvas and paint." "I worked all night, but I was lazy and made a mess of things. I started and ended with nothing else things seemed to clear up. After I got started, I didn't want to stop. "It took me about two weeks to finish that picture, working nights, copying from a brown tint is hard, as you must study out your own colors. I used my idea of a background and made the frame myself to make it look like plate telling the feat just like they do at the Art institute." Another unfinished bust portrait of the aviator in flying eggs leaves minnie mouse eyes in shock by the strength and beauty of the work. He gladly consented to loan it to The Chicago Defender for display after it is com- Made Record at School Before he left school at the age of 14, the boy had won a reputation as a reputation girl. In his way he was encouraged to spend most of his time going from room to room putting decorations on the boards and framing the school. The drawing teacher, who taught other subjects, had done a little work at the Chicago Art institute and she helped him to paint the school she hoped that some day he would be able to study at the institute. He old take a few lessons there, where he learned about 1907, but could not afford to continue. That sums up his training. He attributes what progress he has made to learning something within him. When in those moods, he has worked all night without heat or food. He has worked many a yard of canvas" he said, and the two chuckled like children over a prank. A few weeks ago he was talking with a woman who was an ad- ditional building about Land- bergh. He told her about the painting, and she promised to come and see it. Shows Work to Tenant "Here you are doing janitor work and you have made this the painting you wanted, promised to try and get it placed in some of the Loop stores. "And I was kinder delicatized." "She went to see some of the store manager and found that everything was all right. After waiting a few days, and no word came, she went down again and found that the owner and connected with a bille fall. The manager had failed to tell him, he said. "I told the lady not to bother, but she was determined and after spending all her disappointments, she came hurrying in one day to say that the Boston Store would call me. She would all a little worried up. After listening all day Tuesday for the telephone, I went out for a walk. When I came back the bid me met at the back door, shouted, "Wow, the wagon has got your picture and gone." At this point the encouraging neighborhood janitor came to join in the marrionet that followed. The wife hurried to tell this joke on her husband: "After he had worked all night putting the finishing touch on the canvas, he was sleepy making really for bed. He turned to the small room suddenly the life sized pose frightened him." "Cold chills run over me for a second. I had forgotten," he said. More. And I had forgotten. The mail upstairs got too good scarcity so she came suddenly into the room at dusk. At this stage, painting is a pastime for evening hours after the real jobs are done. For ten years Mr. Willingham's place, and things are running along smoothly. He hasn't sought or received recognition, and that doesn't worry him. But the product of these odd moments is worth the journey to the Loop. Thief Without Bail New York, Aug. 13. - Oliver Williams, 15th St. was held without ball for 24 hours, but a grand lavender when arralled before Marriott Rosebush in Washington Hale. Stephen Collins, 22 W. 15th St. charged Williams with staining clothes on his body. He was nightly ago, Collins told the court that when he returned home he found his clothes ransacked and much clobbing missing. Neighbors then told him that they Williams leave his home with a bundle of clothes this information to the police and Policeman Battle of the W. 15th St. Williams arrested Williams Tuesday MISS CANADA The hunt, started early this month by the Dreamland cafe to discover who is to have the enviable distinction among Chicago's young women to wear the title of "Miss Defender," is progressing into its final and most exciting stages. Hundreds of girls, ranging in age from 16 to 20, and PAN-AFRICAN CONGRESS TO HOLD FORUM Problems of Africa to Be Debated New York, Aug. 18—The fourth Pan-African congress will meet in this city in various churches of Harlem next Sunday and will stay in session until Wednesday. More than one hundred delegates are expected to be in attendance from all parts of the world. The purpose of the congress is to develop international financial institutions of the Rise throughout the world by exposing them fully to the world. The policy of the congress was set forth in one of the announcements issued by the committee on foreign and international (colonial) problems of Jamaica or a colonial policy problem. It is rather a great world-wide problem to be viewed and considered as a whole, and the congress particularly desires that the relations of the countries he considered to the end that greater harmony may ensue. To Hold Forum The program arranged, while dealing mostly with Africa, begins with descriptions by the delegates of countries. Opportunity will be provided to question the speakers and debate the points raised. The other topics included are the African art, literature in Africa, art literature in Africa, the political partition of Africa, the history of Africa, the slave trade and the economic development of Africa and its importance in the world and the future of Africa. The congress came into being in 1900, at the time of the Paris expedition, when a Pan-African conference was held in London. Coleridge Taylor, the music com-mposer, Colesco family, Alexander Walters and T. J. Colloway were among the participants. But it took almost a score of years for the idea generalization of this conference to come to fruition. Outgrowth of World War Just after the World War, when the political atmosphere was charged with the overcrowds of self-governing rest. Their demand for a greater degree of participation in economic and political life were let loose in the United States. Their demand for Wilson's fourteen points. Out of this general political confusion and racial unrest issued the first Pan-African congress, which met in New York in 1921. There have been the second and third Pan-African congresses. The second, that of 1921, met in London, Brussels and Paris; the third met in Lisbon, 1923. Some of the leading delegates to the congress are: Chief Amah HI of the Old Coast, British HI of the Old Coast, British HI of the Old Coast, Lamin Senghor, president of the committee for the defense of the Negro race; Paris; Chief Amah HI of au Prince, Bahlt, and Gorges Syylvain, a young Haitian physician. Dead Infant Found in New York, Aug. 19. A black bag the was left in the parcel room of the house. It was discovered Sunday, contained the body of a male baby, P. C. Klinr, outside of the room when his attention was attracted to the bag by its ooze. He recked up the bag and carried it to a secluded section of the burgage room where he was shocked when he saw the body. Its condition was such that it could not move or move, the child which was mute apparently died immediately after. The police were notified and they took charge of the case. An investigation is being conducted in an effort to identify the party who left the bag in the station. New York, Aug. 19.—Pleading guilty to the theft of 11 pairs of socks valued at $1,000, 15 pairs of socks valued at $1,500, 152th St. near Seward Ave. Alger Roberts, 42.5 W. 151st St. was arrested for stealing socks from a seaside sessions. He was arraigned yesterday before Maristrate Rosenthill in Washington Heights court on a charge of theft. Roberts is allowed to have taken the socks from a counter, placed them under a table, and then observed leaving the store with the socks by George Price, store detective, at the store. Roberts, the police say, has a police record. Grim Murder Trial Brings Weird Tale of Sea Tragedy --- New York, Aug. 19—The sensational trial of Earl Leo Battier for murder upon the high seas was suddenly stopped last Friday before Judge Anderson in the dusty courthouses of the federal court when the gruesome details presented to the jury of 2004 Barclay Ave. the Brouss, so he could not appear at the trial. Spoon was surricken when Fred L. Laury, skipper of the schooner, was shot and killed by jealous rage, slushed his wife with a razor until she died to death. The unusual murder trial began last Wednesday when the jury agreed to invoke the federal attorney's defense counsel after examining many talesmen for the jury finally selected one that was not prejudiced and have no horror"at condemning Battier to hang on the gallows if found guilty of murdering his wife on the big seas. The problem of the case proposed to the jury was whether baities, miles off the African gold coast murdered his wife in insane jealousy because of her attention to a mutilated white engineer, or whether he might marry a Spanish-Indian girl. The weird log book of the voodoo-cursed schooner Kingway will be used as government evidence in an effort to send Battice to the grief. To Hang if Gullity The case has been unequaled unusual interest because of its mystery and strangeness. The prisoner is being tried before a federal court, as the Kingway on which the murder tools are stored. The United States flag. The sentence for murder on the high seas is death on the gallowins in spite of the fact that New York forges a new law that jails the ship cook guilty without a recommendation for mercy, the law provides that Lattice shall hang from the gallowns of the old gallowns not used in eighty years. Assistant: United States Attorney Simpson reminded the jury that their defense that the crew that manned the ill-fitted schooner on her cruise from the African coast, from Perth Amity on a voyage that sailors would insist had a shell casing over it. At San Juan, Puerto Rico, Justice came on board, after the cook wife of the crew, wife he permitted to ship with him, her presence, out of harmony with the credo of the sea, brought further to the court. He was friendly with members of the crew. Just before the ship reached the Gold coast of Africa in February, according to government records, he害害 frons, but was permitted to return to the ship's galley after the crew had been made ill by the food that a man had consumed, strange voodoo spirals, had prepared. A shadow came back Wednesday to haunt Battice, just as it alleged it did when the four-masted schooner Kingsway was quitting San Juan, Puerto Rico, for God coast. The shadow was that of Emily Zamot, 18, whom the government asserts it will prove, was the cause of Battice's wanting to go away with his wife. As less Attorney Tuttle settled down to the story of the terrible mutinous voyage of the Kingsway, as he told the story of the murder which left Battice curiously unmoved, a sob came from the rear of the ship, and noticed the girl, of Spanish type, simply dressed, with a plain white hat pulled down over her eyes. It was Emily Zamot with whom Mr. Tuttle said the mulatto became in love with her, saying he was not really married to the wife he later killed. He persuaded her to go to a hotel with him in No More Gray Hair LARIEUSE Hair Coloring MAKES A LUSTROUS BLACK In 15 Minutes ONE APPLICATION—GUARANTEED NOT TO WASH OFF! Hairdressers and Druggists or $1.15 postpaid from GODEFROY MFG. CO. Dept. 1, 3506 Olive St. St. Louis, Mo. To Hang if Guilty Former Layer Appcars AS THE BEAUTY PARADE representing every state in the test. In this group are present coasts—a battle of East vs. West determined when judges are given all of the beauties pass in revival. Trial Brings of Sea Tragedy AS THE BEAUTY PARADE GROWS MORE EXCITING representing every state in the Union are entered in the contest. In this group are presented the Pacific and Atlantic coasts—a battle of East vs. West. Who will win will be determined when judges are given an opportunity to watch all of the beauties pass in review at Pine Beach on Aug. 25. Porto Rico, Mr. Tuttle continued, and gained his purpose, then deserted her. Girl Government Witness But before the Kinesway quit San Juan the girl had told her troubles to Batticea's wife, Mr. Tuttle said. Then, a few days later, when the schooler was quitting the bar for her girl at the bore lore down upon it, She was shouting, "Leo, Lee," but Loo never left the galley. How the Zamot girl managed to get here is something Assistant United States Attorney Simpson was unable to explain, but she was here a few weeks ago, after he wired to the authorities in Porto Rico. Miss Zamot will be the government's star witness. She will tell, she said last night, her unhappy marriage here that covered her body here that Caruthers Ewing, Battice's lawyer, pictured a different story, with Miss Battice. The lawyer, Battice, said Battice appealed to the engineer to leave his wife alone for the sale of their children and his daughter. He also native Mississippi. On the night of the slashing, Mr. Ewing said, Battice was almost owed and hardly knew his wife alone. He also resided his wife alone with Battice in the store room adjoining the gallery. TWO MEN KILLED BY THUGS IN CABARET Detroit, Mich., Aug. 19—Hobart Harris, 30, of Beaufort and Napoleon Sts., and Godfrey Qualls, 25, of 631 Adams Ave. East, were shot to death early Saturday morning in a cabaret at 1710 St. Antoine St. by two white men, who later escaped in a stolen taxi after slugging the driver and throwing him out of the car. According to eye witnesses, the two men were 5 oclock Saturday morning with two women. Later one of the women became engaged with an argument with another woman sat on which resulted in the woman being arrested. Anderson, an employee, tried to quell the disturbance and one of the white men drew a resolver, monologuing about the assault and in the police that followed, the gun was discharged, instantly killing Qualls, an innocent bystander. White Harris was struck by the weapon, the other was stood over him and shot him to death. All of the participants escaped except Modeline Wolf, of 4180 Brush St. and the arrival of the police later. Several taxi drivers closed the stolen car for blocks, but were forced to abandon the pursuit because the driver threw the vehicle into thieves. According to police officers, Miss Wolf, after being grilled for hours, admits that she knows the drivers. However, she rejoices to divorce their names, the police said. Harlem Woman He'd New York, Aug. 12—Mrs. Madeleine Cordonzie, 68, W. 130th St. was hiked to Rockefeller when she before Magistrate Roberts in Washington Heights court on a charge of being a fugitive from justice in New York, where she wanted on a charge of felonious assault. According to the story told to the magistrate, Miss Cordoneer during an alteration in Newark stabbed another man, and the police said that city in a critical condition. The Newark police traced Miss Cordoneer to her Harlem home, where she was on duty. She was the sister of the W. 12th St. station yesterday. The Harlem woman was held without No More Gray Hair LARIEUSE Hair Coloring MAKES A STROUS BLACK In 15 Minutes THE CHICAGO DEFENDER After Cutting Affray GROWS MORE EXCITING Union are entered in the con-ented the Pacific and Atlantic West. Who will win will be given an opportunity to watch new at Pine Beach on Aug. 25. FRED DABNEY RE-ELECTED BY MASONS Vote Salary for Office; Move Time Limit Cape Girardeau, Mo. Aug. 19.—The unanimous re-election of Freel W. Dahney, grand master of Masons of Missouri, the confirmation of the action of the session of the grand master in Kansas, providing an invaluable salary for the office and the abolition of the time limit on the length of the number of years during which a grand master may be re-elected, was the answer of the 61st annual communication of the M. W. grand lodge of Masons on its grand master during the last year. On Friday following one of the most harmonious and largely attendance-raising riots, a resolution was unanimously adopted praising the constructive work which Grand Master accomplished and pledging the loyal grand-grand lodge support him in its continuance. One of the provisions of the resolution was that it should be given publicity where such use might be the jurisdiction and that it should be used in court upon any occasion where such use might be necessary. While the members of the grand-grand lodge Judge Rutledge, of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis was dismissing an injunction suit filed by J. E. One Mome Straig Murray's Superior Hairdressing Pomade dresses the hair just as you wish the moment you apply it; makes the hair lay straight and gives it that smooth finished appearance which you so desire a hair dressing pomade to do. Ask Your Druggist or Barber If it cannot be obtained, send 50c and the name of your druggist for small can; $1.00 for large jar; 60c for MURRAY'S Special Cap, or send 10c for trial size Pomade. --- MURRAY'S SUPER FOR HAIR DRESSING CREAM PRICE 50 CENTS MURRAY'S One Moment to Soft, Straight Hair From left to right: Misses Rhoda Garrett, "Miss California"; Libbon Woods, Frances White, "Miss Buffalo"; Louise Williams, Luhu Thigpen, "Miss Niagara Falls"; Margaret Gosby, Rosa Hitson, "Miss Atlantic City," and Pauline Riffe. Mitchie, in which the publisher of the St. Louis Argus was seeking to enjoin Grand Master Dabney from proceeding against him in the trial of the publisher of the Masonic editorials published. The announcement of the dismissal of the St. Louis case was greeted with enthusiastic rejoicing. Offices elected at the session of the Grand Master, grand master; G. C. Hubbard, deputy grand master; Geo. K. Ford, senior grand warden; J. W. Damel, junior grand warden; Dr. G. B. Key, grand treasurer; Dr. H. Longdon, grand secretary; Dr. H. Longdon, grand secretary; Rev. T. H. Warfield, grand chaplain; F. B. Adams, grand lecturer; Gee. Hiks, grand tyler and Rev. H. H. Curtis and Lewis W. members of the Masonic relief board. The next annual meeting of the grand bodge will be held at Chillicothe, in August, 1825. Fires Load of Buckshot Into Cafe Owner's Back Little Rock, Ark. Aug. 13.—It is alicensed that because Robert Westberry, 19, had objected to his bringing a shotgun to a dance last Friday night, near McAlmont, Andrews Rollins shot and killed Westberry last summer, more than a dozen self-defense officers surrendered himself to the authorities and was lodged in the county jail. Witnesses stated that Westberry, operator of a small café and dance hall, argued with Rollins for bringing his gun to the dance and the officers' own sense of necessity. After the dance was over Westberry was sitting at the piano playing it for the entertainment of several remaining guests, when Rollins appeared to be in a lot of shot into the cafe owner's back. Rollins declared that Westberry earlier in the night had attacked him with a pocket knife. CUT WOMAN IN EIGHT Miss Thelma Weldon, 21 years old, 512 E. 377 St., was taken to Wilson hospital Sunday afternoon after she had been stabbed in the head in a car crash. The woman was home. Both women were arrested by the Stanton Ace, police. Moment to straight Ha --- We have especially made Murray's Superior Hairdressing so pure that the mineral oils and vegetable compounds blended therein cannot possibly grease or gum the hair. CHÉCK ARTICLE WANTED MURRAY'S SUPERIOR PRODUCTS COMPANY. Dept. C.D. 810-12 Cottage Grove Ave. Chicago, Ill. Enclosed find $...$ for [ small jar; ] [ large jar; ] [ Murray's Special Cap; ] [ total size Pomade. Name.....Street..... City.....State..... AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE All Photos by Defender Staff Photographer. EMINENT SURGEON IS TAKEN BY DEATH Boston, Mass., Aug. 20—Dr. Baldy Lott Whitehead, S. 15 Yarmouth St., one of the leading physicians and surgeons of the East, died at the Homeopathic hospital, Aug. 5, after an illness of several months. He was born in Halifax, N. C. at city where he received his early education, later going to Petersburg, Va. and attending the Virginia Normal and Collegiate institute from which he graduated a two years old student. He then became a physician he came to this city in 1961 and entered the college of Physicians and Surgeons, attending same for a short while, he then entered the Boston University school of Medicine where he received his medical degree. For ten years he taught students who was preparing to take the state medical board his practice became so large he was compelled to dis He was very prominent in civic and fraternial life, being a member of the Urban league, N. A. C. B. P. He was a member of the Mount Masson State College hall, the Bay State lodge of Elks and of the Knights of Fythias, being the medical examiner of the Elks and Fythias for a number of years. 1991 he married Miss Emma Harvel, Peterburg, Va., who survives him. EDWARD ALLEN STARRED In a dispute with a man said to be unknown to him, Edward Allen, 33, 434 F. 4th St., was cut in the back of a car on a street corner. 4345 Dearborn St. Sunday night, Allen was taken to Wilson hospital. HELD ON DISORDERLY CHARGE New York, New York, Aug. 18, Doug Jougles, 35 years old, of 122 Lefferts P. Brooklyn, was sentenced to five days in the prison for conduct and was held in $1,000 ball for special sessions on an additional charge Dale in the Flambard court. MURRAY'S FOR HAIR CLEANSING Cream BLUE 30 CENTS ```markdown ``` PART 1→PAGE B HERB DOCTOR LIBERATED BY BRITISH COURT --- Accused of Giving Lead to Woman London, England. Aug. 19. — A verdict of not guilty rendered by a jury recently in the Lincoln assizes, freeing a man convicted of killing a St. Louis, St. Louis, and of serious criminal charges and of practicing medicine without a license, led the crowded courtroom to break out in prolonged riot. Lincoln for 27 years, is the owner of a herb shop where, since his retirement from the navy, he has carried out his work as herbalist and barber. The crown attorney attempted to prove that Allen gave a young girl; who was brought to his shop by her married lover, a preparation alleged to have been used in the first visit was followed by several more, with Allen giving her a number of colored preparations to take at home. In time the young woman was taken to a police deposition and a poison treatment. An investigation led to the arrest of Allen. Dr. Chaplin, public analyst, testified that the white and colored substance given to Allen was poisoned and oil, which made a lead plaster. --- Allen testified that he gave the preparation to the woman on the assurance that she was not in a certain place, and that she was, he had nothing more to do with the case. Allen's attorney, A. M. Lyons, alluded to the danger of racial prejudice, but the justice interposed that there was no question of sex between the Beloved and Justice, and he further emphasized this in his summing up of the case. BURNED IN EXPLOSION New York, Aug. 19. -Miss Jean Sutherland, a maid at the Cathedral-Batik st. 31 W. 16th St. narrowly escaped death last week when a pooled blood was exploded and burned to death 16-year-old Rose Pollock (white), 256 Monroe St. Miss Sutherland and Roslyn Stern (white), 20. of 536 W. 11th St. were given first aid treatment for burns and shock. Married Women Have Long Waited for This Protection Every woman wants health — happy, whole, healthy. Yet six out of ten are daily sacrificing in health authorities, through lack of scientific facts about feminine hygiene. Batik st. 31 W. 16th St. as the greatest modern contribution to health and happiness. Absolutely non-poisonous and harmless to delicate tissues, yet instantly effective against germ development. Abolishes risk and TOBACCO Or Snuff Habit Cured Or No Pay For coca, cigarettes, pop, chewing or snuff. Full treatment will be made by over 500,000 people. Superior Co. #74 Baltimore, NL. Under Ground Treasures HOW AND WHERE TO FIND THEM A SECRET you should know. So may need a fortune to you. FREE portraits for stump. MODEL CO. 15 CAMO PLACE, CHICAGO, NL. LUCK IN LOVE Marijuana will be prohibited in this "New Magnet R.I.P." attraction. Win at games, buy, etc. Money. Pay postman $2.30 and postage on delivery. LUCK IN LOVE Money. Squeeze. Happiness. Will soothe in this Attic. Compens. Mirrors. B RICH. Compens. Mirrors. B RICH. Give yours NOW. Send your gifts and postage on colletry. Money Back Guaranteed. MR-35, Woodchin, PL. WIRELOT FITE-FREE PROOF Attacks of kibblep. Fila. Spaces—no matter how big-scooped over night in many cases. Bring back. Tidy. Tidy. Tidy. VIDES. Try this treatment at my site. Write to me. W. 44th St. Cleveland, O. 2482 W. 44th St. Cleveland, O. AGENTS WANTED FOR HERB O LIFE Glues Vin. and Water to Weak Man and WESTERN WONDER REMEDY CO. Bax M. Station M. St. Chicago, I jae RE STEN eETGT 9 8) The Decender:- MOVIE and STAGE: DEPARTMENT && fC er —SS= le a es a -- —-* fe “SZ. eee ae e Aq Ras =r =~, A “Apo (6) ASHE 8 § EAMBOA A by Birmingham Quartet When the Birmingham Quartet get their heads together, har- mony fills the air. “The Steamboat,” as sung by these note harmonizers, brings beautiful memories of moon- lit nights down along the Mis- sissippi, with the river boat a puffmg up stream, and gay groups listening to the sweet melodies of the O!d South. oe [re Steamboat } Louisiena Bo-Bo Vocais Birmingham Quartet Reoord No. 14224-D 10-inch, 75e Columbia Phonograph Company 1819 Broadway, New York City Columbi NEW PROCESS RECORDS EM, the New Way - Efectrically - ‘Vive-tonal Recerdiog - The Recerde without Seretch COAST DOPE San Pranclitth. ee eee laa. from stition JAH, San Eranetsca, CSE, thls weeks tommay Woods and Liivsis Heney seat lowed at the Vision Rimare Auge. 5. On neat to. closing Bint mopping proceedings nichts, ‘this werk tins them splitting be- tween Turlock, Visallz and Santa Paula, headed for Los Angeles, Frank Rogers just blew in town after playing feveral weeks through the Nortinwest. fog Ackermnan _ and Harris. Frank says, “Look out, State Stu here Leama!” And what Peon, hie hag got something to make Stuse St or any other street sit up and take notice. ‘Grant and Bates, who recently’ Fe~ turned. from Australia and New Zeatand, nee dotaz a few dates around “frivea and Oakland prior to qoine Sato Lag Angeles for 2 much needed rest Thix Is ane of Ure const’s best Sets, and when L raw them in Ouk~ Jand they stopped It cold. Wateh out for them if thes ever come Fust, Cry Baby Godfrey, now teyveling Under the pom-de-plume of “De- Godfrey,” i@ back front a six months tour of Australia and New Zealand. Has been working single for 2 while, ‘pat reeenuy Jolned hands with Hon- die Robinnon as 2 team. They should te a “wow as both boys ara really clever and know what it's all about, They open on the A. and H. tour ‘Aug, 13 for a season's work, Good uch. boys. ‘Stewart and Johnson, two dancing youngsters with a bright future, were Bo riot at the Palconade dance hail Jase ‘Thursday night Resulk, they now have an armful of contracts t0 Seork all winter for West Coast. Harris and. Holley aro at the Or- pheum this week. Same old riot. Rug sed. Mansi Lorraine, Johnny mays, “Get them clothes together and Conve on out bere and duck that cold Serather Wack there because it looks Mice he i# going to be out here from now on” poAnother easterner converted to the §veee ie, Med Spikes’ “Majors and Srinure" who after playing one year At the Follies thester In Lox Angeles. Sto on cour giving dances and clean- ing up. Fotnson and Brown, meaning Duke and Tudds, are resting this week After returning from a successful tour Of Canada and the Northwest. | Ke- fiearsiog x new act for Orpheum xhowing Aug. 13, 14 and 15, Hippo- drome, Oakland, Calif, playing a few elub dates and then go into the Union Square theater, San Francisco, Aus. 30, 31 and 2% after which we wiil co Zo Los Anzeles, so Duke can sce his Iftde son (the sew quadritie dancer). ‘Hello, Sra Carter, Fount Woods. Joe Bright and Jobnson and Johnson. Hello, world. Can use 12 ood Took- fag girls who ean sing and dance, wih long. engagement and sure Jnoney, Get in touch with Mr, Gold- Tree, Hith Moor, Loew's Warlleid the- ster building, San Franelsco, Caltt, ‘So long for thin time. More next week. Regards co L. A. and the gang. Mail will reach ua at the Union Square theater. this city, until Aus. fevthe nat our permanent address, jsi1 Griffith Ave.. Lon Angeles, Calif. ~ A fine carl was received at the ‘fice this week from J. Louls Jona fon. the baritone sollsi, sfany will JTemember him as one of the famous ‘unhar “Old Time Darkies™ quartet, He ty now with the Mg Broadway how “Americana.” I.ouis sends re~ fards to all af the sung, Mall will Feach him_at 1373 Dresdway, room 308, New York clig, “Hello, Jack.” =e SWEETIE WALKER HITTING ‘The popular Sweetle Walker is nit ting big on the Miss, Minstrel, show. Sweetie says she wii be In the Windy hy when. the snow bering to fall, She says all on the show are well und happy. becaur= the host walks promiptly every week. Mull to Oswa- fonla, Kans. ee __ __ THE EOWARDS ‘Witie and f.lllan Fatwards radio that they are on the Smare Set min- fire show and dolag well, and that the mail man can feeh them at 413 Miami Si." Leavenworth. Kane. Mader Mack tr also on the same mance THE MUSICAL BUNCH Things in General Publishing Tho next move tx publication, hich i very costly 1¢ ano desires to undertake it. Itt better to. try io market suur gong with some pub= Tisher Who bay tha organization to Handi and give your song the proper publielty.. Ty all meang stay away from the advertising mune publish= er who charges from $30 to $50 for publishing your sung. “They promixe everything snd Yow got nothing for Sour monas Dut A few eoples of Your song printed. Aq a_rule, when. you zet your printed eopley the interest SC the publisher ceases. Stay away from tem und save your money. Now on the otlier and, If your sonic haw’ merit the Jeithnnw "publisher WHHL avcept It. Yeu spend no money. they pay the cost of publication and fesue You a royalty contract, If the song goes over anit sells big sou lone Will Denettt, and that with no investment to speak of. Safeguard Ideas AM composers of musle and sonz poems should safeguard thelr ideas. Have them. arranged by capable music writers, then have thent copy Fighted, You may hve something worth while, ‘The vost o¢ this is small and this weiter would be pleased to look ever, arrange and advise on your songs. Washingten in Chicago Howard Washington, the popular musician and amusement promoter, was a visitor In Chicago this week, He only ran In the big burg to give fg the onee-over for one might from Rast Chicago, where his quurtet was appearing. Howard and his South- land” Singers are having unusual success along thelr chaurauqua route this season. They “offer inodern inusteal presentations In sony and instrumental numbers, Peerless Syncopators Hawkins’ Peerless Syneopaters hold forth in Unionzown, Ca. where they have diade an unusual reputn- lon inthe dance fel. ‘They also ‘are constantly called upon to go out of the state to play. In the fine-up are the following musiclans: John Hawking, cornet “and manager: Emery Howard, piano and director: Sid, drums: James Mtinning, banJo and entertainer: Iohert Banks, sux- phone and clarinet: Lawrenee Burge, sazaphone and clarinet; Papa Paul, cornet: Floyd Bradie, - worn- bone; Mr. Parker, bass. Birds of Paradise Eugene Primus and hls Birds of Paradise. orchestra are workin In and around IMuftalo, N.Y. In thelr line-up are: Eugene Primus, traps and manager: Perey STenderson, plano; Sylvester Turpin, bass; Myron Sut- ton, sixophone:. Vernon» Johnson, saxaphone: Iorace - Miliner,. susan phone: Edward ‘Slocum, ‘trombone: Robert Wilson, violin: Walter ‘Tein ple, banjo and trumpet, and Theo, Carpenter, the one-armed trumpeter. Mail wii reach them at the New Eastera hotel, Buffalo, N. ¥.. They are now working an indefnite con- tract at the T'aradise ballroom. Shirley Oliver In, Shirley Oliver, formerly a member of Cooke's orchestra, Chicago, inl who has been atay for five years, re- turned to the Windy City this week. He has been living in Edmonton, Can- juia and lias heen playing there dur- Ing that tine with an Offay orches- tra, he being the only gentleman. of color in the Large orchestra of 25 mu- sicians. Ite plays. with the sym- Dhony orchestra and with the nine- piece Jazz hand and ts treated as one of their own, It would be fine It this mixture of are ‘was practiced everywhere. It is one thing. that knows no color line. ‘The whites Will Sccent us In art If we have the gona and are ladies and gentlemen. "fc is ourselves who are detrimental to our own sucess. "Shirley visited with this writer and was delighted to be lack In Chi once more, He motored lover with his family, his wife, young xon and little girl, ia his Big six Stu- Metaker sedan. His son ts the De- fender agent in Edmonton. He left the last of the week for home. "Fletcher Henderson's Gang The greatest orchestra of the Race tx playing now at the Conkrexs hotel, Chicaxo,” They have stirred the great Chicaze’ Loop with their fine music and general gentiemauship, ‘The Chi- caxo Iace group had an opportunity feveral years azo to hear this won- derful organization ani the attend ance was poor, but this Writer was there and iat that time pronounced Fletcher Henderson and his orche-- tra the greatest daace band in Amer~ ica. Firvadway Joven them, the lance phonograph companies bid for their records, and the entire Atlantic cvsist dunce fans rave when Fletcher THen- derson’s orchestra is billed. “His en- gaccinent in Chicago haw bee ex= fended indefinitely and he Almsclt (nex not know when he will leave here. I only hope that opportunity: will allow one Hight for our group in Chicago to hear this wonderful or= chestra before they leave.’ Tenmy Ladiner, Well kann in Chicagu. tx the Jaze cornet feature artisc with she Orchestra, Crowder’s Letter Dear Dave: 1 have intended write ings you at Totter for some time, bus having been so busy I have neglected Tolng 0. You probably by thic Ame have yeard nuiny reazona why T sutdents loft Beverly xardens. Well the main renson was hecause the management fanced me to make changes in mS orchestra that t refused to make. and hecanse uf the autocratic attiunle (aey. Wanted to assume over the Wr chestra. J demanded ther keep hands off my band and insisted on this paint until when [ aw they were getting worse in their attitude, in- stead of Heiter, simply handed them my notice. I have no regrets and no i-feeling. We just could not ayree so 1quit. He tried to break up the band, even kad some members of the Jettey hand try. to help hin, but with olrt success. “The hoxs stuck together toa tnan. T wish the boys at Bev- erly now every success. T wrote you a card some few days agn which T hope you rereived O. 1K. “Sth band anf, intact, aro now ons the St. CA. daane ciraiit wader: t0 get real money are hampered by ‘Unbrotheriy and Leaders who try far weir players the ungrateful, — double = crossing “Hama of | Mel- oly" ‘They would rather work Mieaply and go t9 work at once than fo" stand. behind thelr leader with prineiple and loy- ues, and in the fong run get 3 Jecent wayu. In a certain cane a Teader had. the Mayers workins ‘or seven monzhs at top salary: tite sontmer closed and tae orchestra and the orchestra (ac) | 4 y ee en ean: Mine eee ae Mong for anotuer fob. Tho price was rejected and the scheming emploxer Fecured another musichin to round UD tha players of the leader, olfer~ Ing the mthe fob under thin new Ieader, ow inv she Werll does the inusteian ever expect to get money for his work. ‘Tey will always be living from hand™ to. mouth. The players themselves are to blame for [ral They don't hurt the leader. they hurt themgeives. Loyalty When the time comes that players will be on the square with their leal- ery then will be the tine when all Wil he. succesful. The employers know and say that they can do just What they. want to with the nifon musicians because of this distovalty ig the ranks, But { will say this: No manager or employer ts going to break up the. musicians’ union. There are too many big men inate who Know business and adininixtra~ tion, Fhe union will in time ferret out the tares and) will eliminate them from tx hooks, Re men, play ers, you can't love in the long. run. job ie 2 Job, and T wouldn't think o¢ sacrificing principle for a cheap Job that micht bow up over night fe you have a leader stiex to him or her, and at least, 1 you Ket a line on a job get the proper understand ing with Four leader before you act. Re loyal, no matter what happens. Wise Contractors ‘These cases should te a warning to the contractors, Players of this tepe should be bincklisted ly" all, of the contractors, and they will, so far as this contrucior 1s concerned. They Will do any other contractor the same way—thee know nothing but double- cross. ‘They love it. and it 1s going f take real contractors of prine!- ple to chanze them by starving them out and finally running them out of the jurisdiction, A Bad Situation It ba too bad that the laws of, the union altow anyone to contract. This iw primarily the eaune of ail of the trouble. Nothing but dependable musicians should be allowed this privilege. Jt would stop the emplorer Who wants the best that he can get cheapest. ‘The employer likes, the contractor that will “Cnele Tom” and take anything that he (the employer) wants to hand him. I may be all rong, but aS sure as the un sets this Will be a law of the national body ‘before lone. The same condi. ton exigts among the whitex as well as our Race, In the long run thines work gut bail for thin class and all of a sudden you ee them out in the Street, out of % job, and once more asking for help. When this class of musiclang ar out of work they come to the leaders begging. saying that they aze with you. They flatter you by telling you ali sorts of fowery things: thoy borrow from you and, in fact, they almost say’ that they Will dle for you just to get 2 job. Song Composing Tam in receipt of insny letters from renders of Uhls euttnin, must all aaking aheut song composing. and sone publishing, and just what steps to take in snarketing them. First, Twill explain the vunaructuve pet Ie you have sung melody atl rane “Continued on Page 7) NEW YORK NOTES | The writer heard a new record number by Mike Jackson entitled, “Alabama Mama," on the Victor phonozraph, which tells tho story of 8 stevedore working on the levee and coming home for iis mouts tindn his reife seen trom honia alt the. time: It i then He gets Wixe to the tet that his "wife “he unfalthful, whieh causog 2 domestic argument hetween Uh two, ‘This record Ie im gree de- mand, degording to tho music trade. “Rung ‘Tang, the Miller and. Lyles new musical comely at the Rovale theater, New York, iw in its sixth week and receipts estimated at $12.- 000 weekly and expect. to mule money. ‘Anron and Violet, a clever ringing and dancing team,” ix scoring, a. bit Success up New York state.” ‘They Lire playhig the cilles of Syracuse, Gules, Albany nd, Schenectady and tho press reports of this act Is uf the Dest. ‘The team te a hit on evory’ bill in the vaudoville houses and always working. A clean, clever met. Another now song hit put over by the ‘Triungle Music Vublishers,. 105% roadway, New York, by “€ Ain't Got Nobody" by Spencer WHlums and Roger Graham. Je in on all phono- graph reeonts, and the. writer heard Sophle ‘Tucker an the Okeh Saturday. ‘the song fs heing featured in many vaudeville acts, Wonderful soni for singing orchestras. SNuricana,” with Bthel Waters, at tho Daly's tq St, Uhuater, New York, Is stilt doltyz $8,000 weekly’ and should stick for gome time, Glenn and Jen- king are in the show, Going Pack to the Country.” & new gone hit introduced by the Wang Dailatte Comedy Four; “You Will Kee geet It’ a batiad; “iad ‘Em Tut They Got Away." comedy number, and "Keep Cool.” which is Introduced by Buly. Jones, the Talo artist, are aunong the beat on Broadway" and Tor dancing smd sinking acts. These Aumbers #hould go ble with all the performers who ave looking for good Muterial, ‘The Alexander’ Seymour Musle Publishers, 145 W. 45th So New ‘Work, also has some new songn for nest season, “Gulfpere and, Brown are at the ‘Metha ‘theater, Brooklyn, N. ¥. The Exposition Four are at the Pantaxes theater, San Diego, Calle. Johnson amd. fehngon are sat the Pantages theater, Omaha, Neb. Harris and Holley’ are at the Orpheum theater, Loa Angeles, Callt. ‘AN mall should he addressed to Pally Jones, 424° Tenox Ave., New Yerk. and not to any wther addrens. Tho roster of Rusen & Hockwalt's famous “Georia minstrels. wich fipens ies seaxen at tie Litwet~ sn ter, Porn, Tod on Aig. Tis te © tically" adiveciors, of the ‘bes. sa. Mirel” tiene. in the United = ates The comedians, arr Chick Beaman Tasen Lirown,” Big Tos Anerson Wm. “Moseles. Selian “Costello and Shorty, Bnglivh.” The qnartet can Saas of Jack Johnson, basa sind i torincutort Henman Hikzes, baritone: iG Davia, tenor, and Irvin Mehard- on, tenor and choral director. ‘Suherw in’ the choral numbers. are Billie, Haskins, ‘Thomas Marshal George “Adams, Geno Crimes anda pongvehorus. “Amos. White in direc: for of the band of 14 pieces and Te Keity, thae grand old mer and. fas Ished musician, direct the nine-plece orchestra, ‘The olio containa snverat_novel- tiem, Including Fran Rit, hurteanti musteal enlus; Chick. Beaman fn hin monologue: Wm. Moseley. ven tnlonuist: “Thos.” Starshail, contor- tioniat and Wire walker, and ‘Great Adame. hleyelist and. woleyelist, This Sears Arse part te entitied “Water: Teo tine in iste amd the et fing haw een donned sami Wu hy the Schnell studio In Columbus, ©. The “Georgian play the Roonevel theater. Cineinnatl, week of Ate. $2 ami the following: route: £9, Kenton. ‘Milo! 300 Starssvites 31, (rian: Sone, 1,, Willard: 3, Wellington. Rivriaz’ 4, Sanduake: week of Sept 5, Globe theater, cleveland, Ohio. sheoter, Cleveland Dusty Fletcher and his Harlem Strutrers have created & sensation all along the show line, Managers Are wereaming for retiien engage- ments for the well-known comedian And hit show, Weel of the. 13th they are playing at the Kopin in Detroit and the following week they wit play. the Grand in Chicago, Such. well-known performs as Saule Montgoners, Pillie McKenzie, Coleman Scott, Charles Smith, Chiek De Loach and Catherine Jackson Al tp the principal cast, and in. the chorus are Adele Brown, Iova Nfor= Fis, Katherine Newton, Lucille Rays ter, Teatrice Rebertson, - Watherine Tropler, Tiney, White sind Thelma Tones,” ‘The musical director ts Alice Fields. Of course Dusty (himself) does the heavy comedy. Austin. Rove Ae Binet Hingkti, areane Ta Hoe see Wrieg. door Isranact, Te Hee te Koa EE ine: Bal te HO Hage, Hen ate: Het Here te Rice! nA reas Tet, Bove tone Pats any sae ft fast ais a en tw. Soe ta fae iam Peet ae pelt ‘Rew Ay BEE. Een Rae EARS fee: tas ie aes Pale Bi pis Pils Tate eer ieee ee Ensioly’ ly ag ee Hisar “Sangre Hubert Kosta tal EE Wie Kinnie, tired. Ee) ERS fists fae fe ‘Baer, Wile Geant. Tahbie Gow er Hianrrie, “aifotte Wet iam (ethics eat ee teat Tale Hares Horton. Clots dss, ey, Hae i Haak ee Tones, “Fmpa, : donee, Rim ane poe” ios Ee Kelley, Clarence Reltes. Kit oe i Nie Bet a Rem tat teas ie ete, Hove, ese Te etre Mee fares Me” aint” ei aa ess Seto a. sei Gi Scion. D. S. Sa Ge Sees ee, Hate Pie tite eee ane eet reer are Beree Richard Feat is ae at eee oats [eee aaa, Eset atiaces® Ean He =. Fannie ‘Basan dames We. Bue ge RE ee Hera Hie ea REE en wae ke ie lee RN eae Tae es Aialhe Shee Sia, Brice cae sie i Eee Secae Ssiend ACROSS THE POND By IVAN #. BROWNING Johns has been tn bad health fur Samo tine tnt. during = my. recent Tine (o Parla L often called on Al and. at that timo ho folt rather un Certain bot hin health, saying’ 0 yo snveral time that hie felt a Though ho would neva bo well again. Stev dohiin haw weitten some beat jong anid Lhd the plensure of hese ing him play over same of his latest timbers that would certainly 0 erat. to ‘Any real musical -coraeds. itis number. In’ Bonaa Arsen tn. ali in tho. malta of the propio and i Mat Just about ils tine 1st. year Guat ‘this henuiiCu mambor was all the: maga in Europe, APs many friends in America ‘wilt perhaps ro- fret to hear of his ilinens However, focare hoping he: will pull hrmch. “rie Intest report. te. that Willams and. Taylor. the opuine. team, wil Shortly: Ieave Piuckbins and make meet the Stell theaters, opening at the big Calfseur. Seal! over hore are extremely ayo to rel of tho aeeesstul pene Ing of Rang ‘Tang. id Atsieara, ‘There fg no doubt about the public ranting to. se komt. Negro. Shaws and revuca again Amd T do lhape these tare sliows will open tp the Held nore thin ever for Negro aptista. Tan featulate ‘Milter wand Lyles, Mis Waters and Mee Dancer and if wel ttishes mean angthing. to them 1 hepe they will apnrectace. tha "twee thet oven In far away Europe they ave ur best and sincere wishes: for con- tinued ruceess. Te Rosemomt Johnson and Taylor Gorton are playing the hie London Coliseum variety hall” this week. ‘Their Necro spirituala Are. appre: Ginted ao very much, especially at this heater, amit wos’ at. eho. Coliseum that the white American singer, Ena human ntaved six. ween sinzing nothing but’ Negro. spirituals "Jtine fon and Conon will pertapa mals & tone of the Stull houses siuging sbie- itis, ‘Quito @ very unusual thing ty han- ening: at the puputir Coliseum also Ena that Is two Colored acen on the inte bill, Josnet and Foster are a= penting and thelr net fa reported tn Roing over very big. They have Just Arrived in England trom Ameriea, ‘The Bineibiges revue. tonr Tat’ on the Mos Empire tine are July 4-and He “Altmamira, Ginsgow, | Seotlond: July 18 and #5, Palace, Sfanhester: Aug. J. anil 28, “Enmpite, Liverpool: Ring 15 find 22, Empire, Newenstie- duetyne: Aug. 29, Raval Leeds; Sept Se Aihambess Beadford The Movs Bopire company. reports that the revi is the biesgeat sirawinis ear that Ser played. thelr houses. ‘Avery interestingscaller this week fon us wast Docks Watson, vers ol tliner from Sreacuse, SY, ate. Wate fun has been in Eneiand 45 yeara and fame over with the frst~ Colored Martet that camo to Enxtand, the Tnubsinna, ‘Troubatoure quacter. 1 rien worked for sears with tho, fac fiantn' Ho. fea. ‘Bret. aver here, Who Scere Wonilestully. popular in. those thas ay exclusive extertainers of roy- ity, ate, Watson veas 2 great frlend ‘of the late Sam Lucas and other old Uimers in America. and regardless of fige ho is pulll very” active. “Te Is Interesting indeed to know nat ‘the ery Anese painters and soulptors im Tondon and Europe havo Deon very binge thie weason. painting ‘pictures and making models of Ne- Frown, Epstein, the noted attist, has ‘Compieted a woner(il model offre Johnny Dunn, wite of the well knoven Zormetint, and haa presented same to her with his compliments This iy to bo muro quite an honor conor rom. aich an internationally aos Sne expensive artist as the famous ‘Epatein. "Massel, the well known West end ‘pointer, completed sine time ago 3 Tine painting of the popstar Johauy aging nd onnner thinking tae seit would. soll. or ive him this: pic- tire In. very Atsappolnted NStuarte, the painter of royalty and other celebrities, haw just Anished 3 Grenderful painting of Mise Florence lis and fe fe nee hanging inthe National Art. gallery in London Reoiea, the wonderful: Scottish” paint- cevin Garam, haa started a. master painting of Siae a1 Alen ad te wil Rang iw the famonn Scottind Art eal- terse Te ix cortainiy unused to. ste {now a person like the very mo- ine litte. Florence, Perhaps other than Josephine Baker few Colored Women have exer enjoyed. the pon- inrity th iate years that Mise ils In enjoying. Her photos have — ape peared. in the very finest and. most Gkclusive’ magazines and papers all Seer the world, Ae a recent eneft ficen‘in the ‘West end Just. bernre Sttee Mills closed at the Lontion. Pa- Mlion she wa & special guest at private “supper ‘given by the lord Tmivor of London amt een thotsh Iden was said about. thi affair. i wis through a very prominent Ene Tish Seter who was Also a guest st tite supper that T waa. told. of how Modest und charming Siem Atle was Turing the, whole time sive was ther Gnd how. beautiful "the lord mayo: Shnke nf her. Of course this ts Jase She of the many affairs {Ms xls Ritonded and wea aecepted Inn RIost Gamaual wag" during her stay ia Lon don. "She fs too modest in a wey" to Seen speak of theve thing. 1 hav? fnown hers number of years and Inve seen quite a hit of her during hier stain’ England. ‘To my. rela perhare she ix Just a bit ton aneslest, Fitere arn those were they atts Mil fron iniieed feel quite "iarze™ wot The heat and would. most “ansieis She to It that at least ono of heir Frientis be jnformed as to a few o¢ the weueual thinas they were soln At all times, ‘Florence alilis well e- Serves the inany compliments and Ronfertul things said and done for fer Ragland nay honored | 37 in mang wars and her success in Ft fove is always assured. She should Eatin even srextnr success on Wer Fe- fun to America, for she tq wilhon 8 Mount no. the Tnetish say "wonder fully clever" and divinely sweet. Terre De Calux, pianist, who Hae teen in. London trumier of ‘years has" lett for Stockholm, Sweden, Rheve lie it now In charge of a Mie Symphony orchestra, “igs De Caius Fecontly finished. at the Lonilon Con: SO ae ae ey Oe Lillle, the noted Bngllsh actross, who tm returninic to Amertea, The Daily Sketeh sult tat Huten's playing wan feightéclly —titorvaling, Whatever that meane After nine weeks of great alm= eltien Lew Toslle’s revue, “White: birds" closed at Hie Miajesty's the- ater ata loss of 20,000 pounds. Which tn Amorlean money ia aquat to $100.- fy, Je was prvalteted all along. that Inf very" uur imitation | of Black birds. naver iad a eluince, but. the supposed to hie clover manager ul Figronce Mills ved in hopes aa) never hefore thue. this revue. would really take tho place uf Hluckbieds since Bs ba producer st same. Rad enough of TMluekbints, whieh mine 3 possible for him to eat aud ywsedte. for im. to woduce ‘Whitehinus. It wae Lesile's tive imbition to take. bis earalnes {om ‘lwekied ad put nm white Fovue that would ontdy Blackbirdn tn very respect, hive fe run tn Loudon indennfeely aid thon bring ft to New York. arriving there as ais world's tentest proiticer and anneunelnis his tring through with Negeo artists’ and revues, Towever, fate hay worked aeainst hhn i many ways, besides hig "Toss in Whitebteds, he Was fureed by the English votirte to Bay Foster Bros. a. lange sim of money due then for conmteston, and being foveed to give up is swell London house which Hinckbirds made fe pos- sibiofor hin to rent aswell aan expensive hgh justored ear, he $¢ now fompelted to stake Wek to. Blaeke binds art remain. with this money- inaker until he's able to recover {rom his Whitebirts fos and: probably, Tater on ry wisnin to get away from Nese fevuiew and. Uy hile ham at another hit revue. Lesllo was sexerely criticized when he tried to put White- Hints on av a rival to. his Colored Fevue and had he spent Just half on buying. new material, wardrobe and Sconery tor Hinckbinds, as what he Mia on Whltenteds, Binckbirds would uve eaally rematied in London an- other your, hut of courte he is typical of all’ Omi, after, moking all they can of nf Negro eves and shows they ‘soon gee tired anit boii eetting hones ont producing white shores for tho white’ people only, however, {€ Mes. Leslie's feeues attempts are no Detter than bly Whitebirdn, perhaps hell have to tolerate and depend on Negro artats right on Just aa he's deen doing. Tie has niado himselt Sere Snmepular in London and T Goube it ho. will ever be allowed_ to feturn ‘again even with a. sood. Col drei Fev to depend cn, while on the other hand Ils vere poorly: costumed find scenery revue Blickbieds ave still ihe sensation and real tnoneymaler In England, Gus As Haston malted for Amertea on Saturday to twjein his fornier part- her. Mille. tn Chicago, the. versatile Three shaving. heen temporasily lis Danded owing to the death of their pianist, Covington. We hope to Rear big thingy from the popnlur Haston Welthin the next fow Weeks. Inthe meantime Mrs Jenny Maxton will re- fininat-their London house, 129 Gannten Ra. X. “The light the other night between Len Junnson, the. English Necro fighter of Manchester, and Jack Bi- Hott o€ Merniondsey certainly caused puch. talle. While many of the Panera rather fele that Tchnson would Win, sult they were in hopen that le Tiott would at leant set a draw wlth him amt. since Johneon whipped him so cloverty there's only been ono or Teo papers tint have even spoken ahout the contest. Stull tie English- nen are supposed to be such woniler- ful sperte Thine tha Johnson's home town papers are Roing to bring ahout fghe benween hie and Tom- tay Milligan which will bo a. woner- fa draw and to my" rind Johnson Bill really Hele the Seotehman, Other articles in rerards to the fzht will be found elsewhere in my column, Tot noe have the pleasure o¢ hear- Ing ‘Clements Kandalie, the African, ke tis: fine aldresm ‘aa Tecan to tw black man's plea fer fale play tut In talking: with several who verre here It is anid that he stinply Kept ‘hin audiences spellbound for ene hour ‘and 25 mimutes and judging too from is articlen and from otter thins ‘Mr, Kundaile suid condttlony must be terrible im South Africa. -F have heard fever since we have been aver that fe conditima continue in’ South At- ea as. they are ie will only ba imatrer of time deform something. ter- Hole ie going. to happen and. believe ‘mo it should, go aCter all slavery sti foes on in other parts of the world eae fa cite pattie, Marzelta Armstrong of Pasn- dena, Cat, ham fast won thre dis- ‘ribution prizes “in French history, Molin and plano at the Ineiltutlon Stine “Anne, Longjumeau, France. “Malles, Marzcite Ie the very. Fonthcal daughter of Mr. and “Stea. Bryon ‘Armstrons.. Her mother, ates. Ellza- eth Armstrong. ig Instructor af piano At North Carolina college, Durham. XN. Gand her father Is a teacher Mn ie Kansas City high school, Lite Marzeili's accomplishments are in- deed marvelous for she Ia Just 1 Years oM and the only puptl of her Age who has exer recelval - three prises at ence from seh a fine and Csclusive ‘French institution. Mrs ‘Armstrone, who is speniling tie sum- ner in Paria studying herself. 1s 0 Celving many cometubations on. her Serr tntsually’ talented stughtoe's uceent. T tno conztatilate Mr. and ‘Mex Armstrong on having such 2 irittiane daughter for 1 was thrilled boyond words when T ave and heard tte Matles Armitrong. rattle of ‘French like she does during onr stay in Paris 2 short time azo. iS sfhae Ads Ward, the. sery talented understudy, of Mist "Florence Sills has ‘returned from. -\meriea and will rephee Misv Mil In Tinekbirds due: Ing the Fest of the provincial tour tn England. besinning’ at. the. Bmpire Newcastle, week ater ‘next. Mths Ward has been in New York for ult sonie time, having left. Dlackoled: daring ts run at the Tondon_ Pa- Vilfon. Mina Mulg tx taking a mitch Aeeiled Feat In the German hills. ‘Miss “Josephine iaker Ras nov diaad bite ten coat tn the dartin doa The slentor vandmaster, Slim Austin, radios from Chappelle and Stinott's “Let Tt Reizn™ shew saying all is Well with the bunch on the show, which Is bovived solid ‘on the Lowe circuit, Rilly Maxie and Mama Dinks are doing the comedy ‘and Wanita Stinnett does the feminine leads, ‘with tandsome Chappy dui the straight work, Of course, Siti Austin looks after the trombone end of the 1-piece orchestra, | Mall will Feach them the lise hale of the week of the 1sth at Lowe's National thea- acer Sake chee SE aly oe eee “oe. eel Se i Wadia: Big B} A wie es ae ee eg Ree PEE iY igri ae Sung by oof Furry | co LEWIS | Ba with f° Sa: \ Guitar J ff a os EE f are ] eee: y of WO WHEN we told you See that our new, exclusive Vocalion Star, Furry Lewis, was going to be a big hit, we knew our prediction would come true. His second record, *‘Jelly- roll”, is even better than his first, and you'll like the way he sings those low down blues. On the other side he sings and plays “Mr. Furry’s Blues,” another mean number. Be sure to hear this record today! : A Few More Vecalion Hits Rock Island Blues Voice end Geter Everybody's Blues Voice, Goiter, Mandolin mu Forry Lewis 75° Goin’ to Hell and Who Cares Hiding Behind the Stuff Sem. 1108 Rev. @. W. Nix and His Congregation 75 'm Goin’ Huntin” If You Want to Be My Sugar Papa For Tits 1999 Jimmy Bertrand’s Washboard Wizards = 75¢ BETTER AND CLEAMER RACE RECORDS «afl ° | Vocalion Reinier N27 Recovts Riestrtently Recorded Menhctred by The Bons Dlb-Cleder Co, Chae, Mima LINGBER PERRY'S LETTER pre Exposition Four. quartet tour Ing the Pantages eiremit, i now plas Ae here an the Will with the "Pwo Binck Grown at th Pantagen theater and. tonight Will be tin guests of Ronor at the Tiron Royal Garden, Mrs. Ive Andsasun. and. tour chorus igitls with such rntertatnone sug fae diddiy Wittivins, Uiek Canspbetl, Cunt itenie, Corinne tare and others will furniah’ the entertainment, sat Me. Monin, the mianayer, wih his Dixie und ing Blowers will furnish chat Weresistthlo music. Mine Mibdeed Washingtin, ‘ite ot tiie Brois, init now at thé Cotton club with her Creole Cutles, has sent away to.male snvadaition to her revue. Billy Tuck fr, although at Jelwaroy © thine wil bo the suecesstul contender tor the Honolulu trip. Things ata 2 tthe slow at present with the professional fue'to the summer siump. Joo Shet= el tay not been ‘ene from this weele by yours wily, wut there is na Aoabe that ho le not Mle, ‘The Burks Hrothers have thele minstrel show az the Plaza theater amt although 1 had the tne T didnt euteh thelr show because. the Pa theater fs located iy Oy. Meare of the vieinity “where Sacco. sytapathizers had attempted a Pog, so T thought 1 yould overivok Ting for awhile, | Sia, hat John Anelisnn aid the Ali Broilers are dus ing dates for Fanehon aol Marea. Tf met them going down Seventh und T think they “were om thelr was to talk aclitue head up taiie with Ales: Pan- Takes, Tied Spike's Musie shop, tin the ‘ream has become a place where ta dancing ix ndded, suberncted, oivided rd multiplied since some’ of. the Scoust's Dewt™ have ureivelbek in town, ‘Buddy Williams, movie artist ind the hoy with the hes aeigul pines, ies the Rng Will find hime Atwell use aierxg it Me. Duddy. Willan, ow, Angeies, and he'll get ie. Avett, Dave, Te guess t bave_sibed enough, so T will ring oft-—Yours [professionally ‘Lincoln errs, 1302 Central Ave.. Los Anseles, Calif, Ty the future all news sent in by our stake correspondents must be typed, doubled spaced and. para~ Eruphed. If unable to have ‘them (rpod,. the articles must be written blatily ‘In Inte to insure. publication. All matter must be in the olllee not later than Monday of each week. This department appreckites the past co-operation given by the varl- bus correspondents, but it must insist fn the abovn mentloned requirements im the future. ‘This department is for the performers aad. the World's Greatest Weekly 1s ever ready to assist in any way possible (or their sucress, “Any” news of theatrical Rature vwiti gladly he considered for publicattun, DAVE PEYTON, ‘Theatrieat Editor. oo J.B, Norton writes that all is well on ‘the Well-known Lincoln minstrel show now playing through the «ate of Oklahouia. Manager HS. ‘Pal- mer fy wild about his show and band. which is under tho. leadership. of Shorty Hareix, AM alome the toute huiny enteruiinmients aro.glven. tor the members of the show, who all fudio regards to the show world. Sait will sexch the show at’ 1205 Uhinters bank bullding, Memphis, Tenn, rs After a successful year’s run of Chas, Colliers show “Mix Twins.” which was written and staged. by S.H. Gray, Ute well-known uvner, wil inunch'a new show the coming season, ‘This new show will be writ= ten by S. H. Dudele and Lonnie Fisher. Rehwireats will stzrt soon. a PHIL DORSEY WRITES Clever Phil Dorsey says he is har- ing the timo of his ite fishing and cyon hunting and xenerally taking Tite easy way Mown south in Tire mingham. "He will tate mall at che na chnahaee Chak. Maced ANOTE OR TWO Herman an} Eva Brown will do anlre nt te Voge tienen: Raine Pero a ae eer EHP ieee wef the Aloe Jetahvitiams ig closing on the 1. Pea i Rateneot Claas Mea WOU “Ua ut end oe Nene ooh ite Brows’s “eat Spots Revue cel ghey ons cout eovaeaene ae tha vee" vbashington thoar Se aoe kare 1S Saat report good Malta Sad ae UE Lala erat hy ees world 105 Tie ad thet teat Slit CostaterStkeg tae ne wal ne with he Ueorgie Slits Te Mucins Spe nonin weheartat Se Ra TM, SPEARS abt ak the Hoorocelt, theater Cincinnatt ‘Ohio, rege ee na saat “Hier Waris wants to-nene from the inSiner of Holter tiaeat heat AS te He eaerdate Soe iin ae ahi illo Sunes conans “wit open the ce elt Goo ater Aes ue alopkenaele Ky, Shoot all mail there. Sine red baneing Stxalace, come penal of Lig Pe aoa Comp Bei"act due’ peeg are weeniag ta Bed Seta” See ene Sia at feten"sthem at ioe Elgecomb. aves Sets sii ions ratios that, ine mait- at Sater He ine gee thereon bata Shier wee of te ‘1th, He ts with the Breezing Along bane ‘SSeetia Walker ig on the Rice and Dorms guna Sate Sibas eels mest’ of thy saves Weadenbay Rane ie Costans Werther coat ante asd et he nen 9 Rta Sse ece cee SSR Monde’ nates “ctw | plays aaron Ala, Wet ie" sok T SMsPnetnce the wonle Geemte comedy juugler. Beta iia ana nia wite are sith Roce Hoste Sune” tae Shite ist Bustos the RAL Theates Shotts, eel of tho ER "Bunter Scott an annie Sas wie to tiie" heared het tneaen Case liege, Oereeek Gene Maus" eis Ub the ison cine nat fora wit eae te Sue ttS General ters amen BUEN Eadlos Bh Wakes be ee Sen ghee aoe Beis Haste wine Gentry Bron moet ah all wt on ie Bars ike wil ute show shot all's Eline with Ae at MEMS ani Ao Breesing Alone coimpaiy aged 2 auceeitul engages trent the Magee theater iat wes | in Dayton. Ohio, Phos Wah wants his malt sen tovehe Tiber theater Peta tnd seknng ee Bona eit com [pane enened ag he Seaman thaston ‘BRIE duhte, atl'week we the tate Ghee Besionn ns ctoe te ge sear Nchfa saya ater mien uesig | rom'tho mung pabity co covae back [shite them em hoecone com 2a Si MOOSE cln te esr | Stinrrabe ‘Shie meus. The Melba und Tess “Breezing Alone” ‘company iz now playing at the Lotenzo theater, Middleton, Ohio. Rows goes over very good In hie wite act cin the teun of Mitchell and Mizohell are a. riot. Melba the Great takes two and three nightly on his blues” songs, Week of the 1th will find the gang at the Washington theater. Spring= feld, Ohio. — Martin Klein, the well-known manager of the ‘Grant theater, Chle cago, left the Winds bere last Sune Gay night for Wavhinton, D.C. to atiend a mecting of the T, O. BAL managers, While away he will vlate New York, Piteshureh and. several other prominent eastern cities, — ae BROWN AND SINGLETON ‘The well-known team of Brown and Singleton are Licting, the trall through Kansas, Weel of the sth they “will” play’ tn Norton, Kana, where the mail man will briag theirs eeenvee: See Meee Snes armen AUGUST 20, 1927 ‘THE CHICAGO DEFENDER PART * 8 Bis 8) heDeender- MOVIE ad STAGE” DEPARTMENT @& ae oa oa a at eee fF amen Gers si con 4 UP ia ee ee | ET PPE h Gy ead = Rt Oma eee A. & eee: «! | Sees va eae} oe PE a | f i in fs 5 re Pad ge TEASING aga * 4 = SP’ BLUES Sally Roberts sings to a . guitar accompaniment by | Sylvester Weaver | NO. 8485 10 in.—75c. | “TEASING BROWN BLUES” “GONNA RAMBLE BLUES” Teasing Brown Blues is the best | “scare” record Okeh has had in a long, long time. | They'll be playing it in all the 2 Okceh dealers’ stores. Stop in yourself and have them | put it on for you. ' © OKedt Moves cope Corporation, 2% West 43th Street, New Yeu City | AE a ea so C01 Eo OW Lee oe) gel) a: » IN OLD KAYSEE iy Sou ett es, he Charles Amtersen, the _vodeling donut of the Folliew of Dixtg reve Peports tothe ailticn wt the World's Eeatese, Weekly that the shox ix Going wonderiuiiy Well, AN of the principe Einma "simmons the ‘Varsaguson vtstere att Issac Patter Hoop tho shove at ech performance feith heir spociniting. - Weeke 0 the Vath the shone plays the Globe. thea- ter, Cleveland, Ohio, and the Week of the Saqthe Pytninn theater, Coline ‘ts, Ohio. - es CARE" M'CABE'S GANG MeCave's troubadours ave dott a big business playing thrash the Fate of South Dakwrs, In the eh fre Dimes and” Dinnes. Allen and ‘Milen, Western and Western, Gool= nan and Goodnian, and wihsr well= Tnown hetformere, Em the ores Tey are Voines: Fiske, Narvet Shsie, Beha “eazor, Ivory “Flirter. tov Marsnait and Fost Smith.” Mail Sei Weach the ang at box 37, Tieasant. Kane. eo Frown Sugar tx the te of the new “musical sumed ‘ahow hat Dhened ave, T5 at the Putazette theater, New York Reports have te that ‘the show went ver” in fine Fhahion,. Mee Maretig Garvey is the Ruling Wiehe of the show. Margaret Sohnwn ot tecording. Tune te. tie Principat feature, aatisted hy a Mne= Drtecipad sooture, aie! BS a TIMELY TOPICS coc cae EBON By SALEM TUTT WHITNEY Self-Control umicr way there arc many Rirls and yore anxious to make a start in che theatrivat business. Some there are who sve really ambitious, others aro awtittted to make the triad beenuse of the glamour of the stage, the oxag- zenuten. talon of fabulois-salaries and the Koud times. To stteceed inthe Ueattieat “hnsiness aye’ tt hue Aputude, talent, lntellidenee, courage, Mitienien, ersiateney and a eayaeity for sti find hited works, —Dour't ex- hoct te hain at the top.” Don't seek tocavold the chorus, WHE Tew ex Septions, hase whe are at the top today, best at the horton. and Ciibed irough many hard, dieu. ‘using Years. Ne amount of teebuteal Knowledge cat discount the vals of cxperience, One must Tearn, aml te ony way, 1 acqulte the | propor Knowlodg is to Desi at the bottom, “the heights bs. xreat- men reached and kept were Hot ubtained by sud~ deve Might.” ‘Notting makes mo 20 happy ax the nawtedge hve what one has duno ix tndersiuod aid appreciated. Let me agsure my many Defender friends that thele Tetters are a. constant solitee of inspiration. Here. follows wondurtel letter from Miss B. Mae Russelt, a teuelier ih che Simmons school, St, Tanta, Mo. “hin £,"r, "Whitney. Dear Sir: ‘The nupiis o€ the sixtin rade hngunge Chis aad Pdedizhe in writing thy you expresstona ‘of uur appreciation of tae beautiful pocm, uished in the Dotender entitled, "Vd Like to Know. More than one hundred. youngsters studied and memorized tt, and: de- thted that it wax the best chat they had studied hie: summer. thank ou in” adlvanco for ‘another such selvctlon—-Respecttully, E. Mae ieus- sel Tam jglad to recommend “Little Roy Binek” in my book of "Mellow Mus- nies aye alt exceptionally’ tie, jwem for recital. ‘There arw a number uf thor ivelag that will appeal teal Children, Write at orice for 2. eopy, bnly S105, Address. 38,7. Whitney’ tis St. Nicholas Ave, Ant, 32, New York city. FLORIDA NEWS SEGEGNRINGEI: Feae Use pies On coaue ool oa ee i cconn ans patented covet na Coe from au extended moun trp tn Cur Sint’ Sout Carona Sahel irs {inti returned dean fiesaturen Ge gters felacene ese is eter i, BS Note win es hones i Mrs. GT. Emory has gone, to jon he inuatiand in Norther, So. rex White ond ae. amit eee [married reventis. the count wii te AC hue Sethe roaldims OF te sno 2h hn’ corner’ af tenon sate seco Shas Winl:aaet’ nt ha iekinod trom Faliharseg, wees sits Ritoniea atimmer wth hie Ea Aalamns hav tate foun eee: thre’ ake apne seta ete a the Eset of See ane MeDede of Gos Renin avn Th citteana of aston Hench grapes or have, Icha iat afew, BEN mew the ‘eontie calle, gta of St"Biahel "Rom Shorey, Pee, Sores teas: greece inet" Monumental Haye chase in SMaeiene tian Nu, Canter hy Petuined frein Hampton: Va where ae Rttenon the fig texsion oF the kame inet seheot “Eelam ura plesied ta Min, Ue” hira! Stud etek Stone. fe ania eneereiae ain eathee me Tietuat Soue recurs gon” Eaton tiene she" attend ig blnimey” ee Son se tine “unre aneerton steel iia ies ‘Tauen, Mite aaahter LE Nesatney ‘GC atthell ot Weta Yasn eeconeiy itiant Rea Bie aS, EST ee te Saas FE A Be aRiceal Shee” eh Bho so bia! Sta ontertalme lone at Tie Henig of er Tati men rt Wlectat lchedltes basen nd Rees Shes ia supeie ecto, hes Jenent are Same Wiles Ray wa Eva weer, Stinnte ete amt aes “itce Sith Atria aid ke Bere, innit Me aed ore ae Ge Pe gene Edoiteny Han Wiens Fe {Robs 2° GetSeisom ad ea, 9 atte” Ma sare Chabler hae na {irik eam’ gaekoneite where te Nee tht fhe nerah of hor begthers i iro. tewen ot Santor: Thee GE Hisciot pastor of SFE ion St EE ineeh of ths eke” pewnehd ica ber sons 'Sinviags “We "were honored "ts Rivet ax oe miqiaters sel mya Be aartal be Walk amt ne Smt pf Merch leapt “chuneh, hg finerai aeeticn of tirant Guna, were het Showa at Mie Son A a EL Shura Ree? . eUactell otiteitin Sie aati, ‘Alona White Som ts: cei ate ime tn See Won ed Mw Enstamt staten,” Fhe nse dhe outae wages scaling the af Poe how "Amaviea’s aint ote dee Tinatlaed elt ee" Stary. Met Hotime’ tne woman sco Ras sine Ba fanaa the man.” The Usher's board SOME din "Ea a, beni Se Bones arin ‘Thiwrsdne, “Adee” 4, “for thn fenton aint etonde. ahite At tet ine serra ‘tho fence And Poe teereyeomtane, (0 climb he. top af Ihe" iShmnadtes” Ail" recurtad a wore sf times in mrslatlom, forthe Haldia setae enslorad ie ae 382 Sn Wellenn on thitesa ke. abe water's iinard Of SEC om ME FE eed ae” een “hora hae titer tt of money, s MIAi, FLA. Tho Nonetineeil Sty elas mot at ster ltoage Sie antag Weak inthe, Saige tarde ese ead “te azinr i ther wenitent, Sex Chgetes ‘iran. yingar ng “Nes, “Pram Steaisieur, | Mise” white oustanes ited of teachin Wn ule has Semin ‘inant ana ister one perteet Hie, ehuly wens these Pe hated atin ‘Tr alee tlanchin Hogs war atte “ates nseyeeine Ui Ae afte note tee et Tea wy Sree Annie Mae tee hes Soitong, were Mestainen, We TE, anes ere amiss Siequaiver, YT Nitartty sini HS AS Bertota” | stone ‘Een ing Pham 3 ese Ee Mbetime 1p Siarnn, taco Sine: thy Hometime Binnriae fea and tee dines *Watking, Thin mse age Tecan We Use earner eae Where to Buy OKeh Race Records Snes uae ee ress Ghee £7 Brosdead see Forren, Pa: | 606 Walont Shor. tevbevitte. Ry 101d Seventh St. Waa -sicg, | sail Hastings St..s-Detrot, Mich 4581 8. Stato Staanens-Chlenge, mE | 2597 Hastings St Deer Mie. tialto Music Shi Ee ve ee re Richardson's Piano Store Ser sectnat ty Nowe, Service So02 S."Staie St; eofea, Mh SEE SE aasatlioauee, Wis 409 W, Oak St--nens-s Chicano, 1 | yy9, x Delux Musio Shoppe oak nena | aay ts SEE a ret Sacer ee | ant cea tee Meme, ve ata Music Shop" | oso Brankatown ag ee fs ad aerutweds €0 came 2 sk rae | ee he cereal sce erie a a ‘Salem T.Whitney ve em atten Pee eA i. See . oa Reo ee of aa eo awd Are satelite bern butrayed, Tow few wf us are Able to do Uneve things. Ne wonder She great hiner said: "Self-tmnowl- Miige, self-reverenee and selG-coutte these “Three lead life to. sovereign power. Tavs cam a teacher. a preacher, a IusineeR man, a_manager. i leader op a general expect to conttal those Skee Wham he true chee i he has tive cutive ‘seif-canitol? A m= ager ata leader who wears kts ten per upon hig sleeve, wha sore oft at hait-cuck from tho feast Misturhanee, ought mot to he surprised to tind that those who ave under ian will maui fest the sume trails. It wax General Wasington's inguiitcent exhibition of self-control thet turned. the disas~ irous Valloy Forge eunpaign into a Metor, When General Grant was charged with drunkentess, aid was threatened swith demotion for Invout= puteney he never lest lily head fur a Biowent. hig remarkable self-control ever deserted hin, It has beet told that duvitue the Siege at Iichmond, Geter Grure. walked “between the crossuiite uf the upposiiis armies ws Coulis and eaimty aus if he fad been Sttulling down Venaayivania Ave. Rapoleun’s superty self-control, when hie Gyons Were threatened with an- ailiiation, Inspired The troops with Comidencs, amd again cid again timed. defoat. into victory. "Nu polcua's Svif-eontrol was su. Femaris~ ably that his ernud pulse beat was 40 tw the muinute, ‘AVjocdote who allows his temper to go unbridied and. hie tails and Aeunns ‘unrestrained. will eventually come upon another jacdoke who will foree him tw rexubite his behavior, The tongue xecnia to be our most unruly aiember, [iow much trauble could he avoided i€ we would fearn ta Keep our ears open and our mouths Clused, Shakespeare wrote: | "Give every “man thine ear, Wut few thy voice." Most of our hos and. gine Act upon the acsumnption tag ie they are w he recosmized thes must mix in every aisument and conuoversy when most af the time they only dis- close their lamentable tack of know! edie, Lews talking, fewer arcuments, more study aml conselentiony. work Wil prove hereliciad to ull of us, ak rent inns Performers waste enous Pine plays the “wluzens.” ete. wie if praperis applied sould place them tap uf te Lulder of Success. ‘Now thar t= sew vecieen fy poring STEWARD'S STENINGS | Reanake, Va.—In Richmond we met Sanh! cafe ened there fet iam neat Rae STG oat Hot edi the wan “Hay Seahadleane tthe fan a tndatershu ttc sae ie py. My old side-kick, Sleepy Harris, i Uniting olathe Hp Saat teach atopy ato “eget punto iarer a fe ine Re cot ale Incheon” Sn'Stomhere Some a ESNet Wi Sannin sath opin woe holding things woth See, ‘At'Nortlie Mate Mastin ined wa bo the inte ae el Sey aon onttioned, Nawstng sa Heeger it Nl ice ietheat"houthe"WChurek $e Coat ad he, fe Singing en Tee Ee la eat Hecho Site sna the ‘ered tun! aN hoe wh ist bat fue Ba Ae ana ste hye ace ke Sci ie" yt te aa oa ‘the Sh iseruancntt it use a iano tr te hun ‘folton test arcade th spor an a fe befor ete ihe ast a “tac ee fe too rie ne ‘agers Rew Negti of tins nent far dnd hae Hae ened ies Cita ae Wat adh Ac at ue Bains BSE ee Ai due haa Sianeli ol tae i belt ats joie” Benn at tne, ike Sonn [Kaite. answered your hue have wet etn ough an” \e sd natin hue, Wa, ae ie ae Deon a 2S toi Sui Nua 2 lb, ie ena, “Oe Sn am 22", Shin "tn tome tte” i Tah” he tne eum Mott, fou Rioa Git alll ons 20" yon Know due ds eating INEZ IN CHICAGO Tuo Sunmiloes way In Chieazo Mon- day, the KteSt of Mie Jennie Olds, She was en route to Kansas Clty for a vacation at home with her parents, Whe veernte A haael Oheed, ‘Agu. for St. Auguatine their old Rone. Miva” aire, “Paine and “the. ebitdeen Ha renvain aiutit sehuot opens. Mrs. Wii "Fhompmon Tele afew dase an foe Tailatiaszen, dacksonvilio and Wet Pat beac,” She ean aecumpanted home ty her slater, Mise Toasty, eho ase heen stctenlin saunmae selva! for fencers at “tasthaszen, Se. and Mee. Miaek Franktin, erata, tla, returned that ety axe week sitter fipencing Ue Winter Seazon In Atami “LaLtie. dose Pattertetd, “tie. wintwonne tthe nih: tervaf Mira Se A Buttertleld tote fr Gat’ shery ste ie visting he. ttle farce, "Siete “My “Daa. “She ro ports a pleasant stay among fer trlende And iftele wcounins, > De Willian Stur= fell and fami lett daat weenie: for a thotor tein tiraiigh Porha and Georgia. Sen "Edwina Sichole anit wees, Hate Shieh,” Kernandina, ‘returned ty thelr home! after viaituz dirs, Elin, Siechal. Dire ant Mea ak. Harvey smith gave. a furvice ae tei beaweigin hime on SIEM cuve. in ‘honor of size, S.C. Me= fver) St)"Peterabung,” sinter of” Ses. Sink rears aber of gents Rendinig paged vehist at ihe end Sehteh “prizes wore disttiouted to the seinnere ine Peat. -Grgnberre.” Mes. Gara Hunter sand iret, Chan. Thom on receiver tlw pilzrs A Ruest helze Beas “eearieds te "try. STetver, Ste horesn Clark ty convalescent ator A Yrlut stage \of” Hiness. Sirs. Choe Stating Feurned last Weeic fram Tale Tahassee where she haw Beem fy atcenit: Anco at ihe summer normal, ‘Theodore Anion iad wii, returned last. week Fron as, Weigel ehh Genrsia anid Florida. ates, 1eeltey Phare Stat Manis, Tele son. Keleer fee A" Gomgianied Larcdutm it, Sentt See tae fumed two seack azn’ from Washi: tom. ee, wwhure the two ose at fended scnbol Fhee see mich elaeed iver thet tip, Send. navy to Mes Aas! AS" Tucternibtd, reporter: neuron te eae ene: se that Aguas lac Tae ececrpencimaal ok et out i ee saree ot Seas ee Dees Te Fee Mioame Baht ah ie aie ia a cnahete BBR Mt aPReE ROE Sed Th naa Shee | | MONROE. La, edad: Cron A signe. tebe Ge Teac hada Ae SoMPURS ‘Sed Bartha ake BaP AP al a Nak Feet Masi! Sire ate BAPE? al ee se Seale Cha deat ae Binge" ae ad lt SE SRG Ne aio Hat a GEIR peng fe eet Ear ube ince "iene Meera sear Batis" ht a RE ea ae sea Merced aa tie he Beck, SORE hd a kee, A Hse eal ietaual toe Roget hat Pinte Satie Ca eae ae of Ni Sethe dad eta Bogie char Satta ee a ea A SA ea 2a, Becta teat Ut A SR PTR ae —— A surg ey Parte Te rapoted seen Tiel eD a tha He cae cha tae ACER cath ce aerah ere Aten bed pagal rn 506 Walnut St......-Loulwville, Ky New York Russian Musie Store 2341 Hastings St.....Detroi*, Mich. Russian Music Store 3507 Wastings St...--Detrott, Mteb 8. & F. Music Store 1610 Chene St......-Detrolt, Mich. Scott's News Service 451 Seventh Se.“ Milwaukee, Wis, Recola Beat “deyihere G- OD. Delux Musio Shoppe 2234 Market St....-.St Leute, Mo, Pactime Music Shop 2339 Marker St... St, Louts, Mo Geodes Music House 200 Market St.......St- Louls, Mo, Golambia Music Shep 451 Michigan Ave.....Buffala, Ne Brown Music Store 4614 Central Ave...Cleveland, Ohto Cedar. Music Shoppe 9907 Cedar Ave....Cleveland, Ohto Sol Gershuny 584 W. Sixth St...Cinclanatl, Onto Rosenberg Music Co. 1982 Canton St.-......Toleda, Onto Sol Lewis 1901 N, 2ath St... essOmaha, Neb ‘The Colored Music Shoppe 6931 Brankstown Ave... veces ‘eanaecunceveccese SUCMDECSIL aM. THE MUSICAL BUNCH ay OAVE Pevrow {Continued from Page 6) engagement, don't know jut whore [lasing orcheaza inthe Windy Cl bane the weodwind, in in fhirago With the Erskine Tate, leader of tiie Ven-| knows his onions. * iran, tie vacation. WAM Carvoll Gt [ins Teen ony Hh sk: Hist Es a ane i er, will soon bo at it aguin. Joe's |tor at the Grand Theater nowadays, SUMTER. S C. Dr. ct. Davin and familly who has pad tis Hints Atlant, 3 Is Chsite ing his varenis, iteve and Sire 1D. Davis. Mine ‘Mauien Javiuon ts visit” ine Miing races Lawson, sire DF Wininma of New York be vinting. hee Bustand, “site. Dora Meadden hs Her ihe il foe ice AL Woe stopping: seit Me. anud: Mees J. eiehated= Sone Mira iB. Michaedenn and rad= cillaeci ot Mannings 8, Cl, Were in Un Five Sunday. Mien S. E. “Adkinsen and iiitle tiatihiter, Mary. have gone to An- ea i sues na, tine fma Stebionsid and Tine Title tees Are higre, “Send news: to Futher Ratiodye. BENNETTSVILLE, S.C. (Mice Lertha Stubs of Fayoteeritle, NOG te hege visting her miner. Ar Aid Str Shephard, roturmed Mondas After ‘spending A weeks tn Olan. S.C, Where. thee attenied the. fanerai wi Sex Shephard. Sister. “Str, “and Mrs. AWghe “lian” comploted” thelr home: Jamon. Night, veuurned hoine. ater ci vinit'in ited Spring. Soc. Honey Dad= ees, ot usiowema, Sak gen the feck-rnd. here visiting ffivnde. He ts the vcunct of) TM Eranklin. ties Cireto Herein tote, for Golub, where She will Sietnil the roimainier” of ihe Rmmner, “Sine Tatellie alten. tote tor Nive York. whers she Wil visit ier sister. FLORENCE, $, ©. die, and Aires Aw. divowen wf 111 Cheten St, Arm tik: soul parents Of a abe iausiiter, Barbar Hitzahery torn Eerenily. Meg. Brown waa formerly Riise Skate: Ailtenell of Hulsake, Naw Renres ne telegrams ind cards. of rome Sentutation heen beem received faoht Ciete many feieats th Hotkotey an Clee te ee te’ Deatehae TL at te cone: Under the auspices ot Mes. Hell Commit, the Sfe Calvary Uapriae chureh chur Sanaiged a eetent agalnag St Hoitow choir. Mr. Calvars: won, Sian Beapiy Attonites the rontest. Mfr. al Sine"'Nathanial Simpson, formeriy’ ot itin town, noe. of Shnre Creek, We Va Sure reeeut vinltnes. Mes, cieancia’ Poss ter aid ron and. tithe daughter “at Mardinscilie are visiting Mev tnd Mes Sutherland) Foster. Mra Msgeie Drench has returned. tena tating hee dash ters hn Shore Wrecks, Wry Va. Mies Waldo wWoedgor made a Mink tripe to Lube, Tees tottus te ein Shmex frais “Mira, Stare thomiecn innm been very Mi Mfr. and Mea. 8. Ww. Perry are vers Toiiesimies sition, {hole Tiree lite, dauehters left for. wise in West Virginia.» Mes, Pred Foster an ister, Mrs, Newherry, have returned tn South Carmina, where they are FiMttNE Shuts ‘motions The. A Me Zhe Ghireh " Missinunty’ "vocinty. Mra, Nola Whee! president, were slatted be Tet Ustriee "peeakdent, Slew Carcie tell at CHinehs “recently” “the “Bangs tants fecently played the Johnson city” Reds ABINGDON. VA. Prot, We atanmiton, strinethal at Booker TF. Avaahinetsn” nigh rehoel Memphis. tenn vari. Mex Hamiiean Shen ‘Teentay night ae: auest of WoT. Anderson, one af the teachers. lm th samme nehoot at fle hore an thet geewen Yaum "Sew. Fork to. Momphte. Tivsel (onde and “tke Young Were’ married Eerentic. ates.” Catherine “Coffee and Mien Mliteed Gunton were tore Thine: ine: “thay wers dinner guests at tits linia a Ates. dengie Youn on Tastes hill,” Stes, adn Sneder nncerianied at earn tou hee pane. frlenda. thuredat Stoning at hor heme an A St, tm hone ge Mew Parchann Raker. “Ate. Ellen Bove Darien In tme frou eww Ore jeana for n few weeks. Katto Eennktin Ani Hubore Stille. wore” margicd ase ews. Aeaate Wheelon te fn Memubin ‘ian. Charles ‘Thomas has returned. th Philadolphin, Pa. and waa arcomnatted hy fils urether Surgeon, "Mtr. and Ate Bate ameran entertained at ainer Monday evening Mise Besivn Anders Some sind Ste Ded. J, ussell Mardy gave a dance, Mr. aint Mies._ Keene Raccult Sat small aewehter are. here Spending afore weelks at the Hane of Mand Sree anions” Moora am eon ereaie Vater. Eaithy Hosa Tignes enters Eland at tinchoan, Wesinenday event Ae her hoian an "Madison Hetehts. in honor af Stra, fC. Candy of the lee Bina. state ‘colttge ‘ot betceshurm: Via. Sita. Dr. Tamme and Misw deni. W: Lomax st fMunfoii Ww. Vi. am tse Coulee Young er Raltimere,” Mile Stes: She Cooley and dauzhter tise” Pinkie Cooley: if Marion wire the. atest nf Sinn Hrattin Comoe Weinesvay evenings Br lowste (ine Hall mavens rhurwiay nighe at Mer twine ot Te St. in honor of Retest Tanga wha ie lea Sytungare ror Clevelani Ohio. Bev. WHE? siieoie “war vaingline xeth felons) here tig rete str Pikza Eintk! asd) fe heme front Newhart News, Var Lovehy Tabinven mater te Tenelibure (set Saturday to sme ble Yacainn, alee dah), Sicheae. snd SiS Sosenit Si, “Tele it Weshheion, Pease thresh, the te Brida cn fire to Ruggeitie, em. Send sale Se ee an ck emer WEST VIRGINIA EMMETT. W. VA. ohn tateee fe invine hosaitat_ on actotine af a tprained_ nites SH a Ege erik ila ae Tnuiae Sankase wwii Mane ay Sinphie ig" Mia recently Wee. “Ve Pipe oP inne" Beach Weachea fare ‘Sunday, "Wee. deck af Chee Ue avtendea, che eoieieess” en dats iitasrsony athe hae heen out af even EAUEAT Gotta hag “retveede Ste." Siew “Ge Cramne af Hobinetie were {Si Nip ki "aafe, BM Peeves net Seie™ Mina Avors made nines SM Delite Bed work, "Se aha Pe Sistine hate "Aa eoere Was neve iaevinvineae kos erste Ses kana AGEN Meer taser” Gar" carat Hat lace! Worle “Sica” Katio’ Ceensay pela at isn ne” wushanah SOY scotet and Mix, Toe tine mo: ell 0 Euimdate ragannles = IP MO" T. 0. B. A. (Toeatar Onvwe” Beohng Avelain) ALL ACTS, COMPANIES AND ‘THEATER MANAGERS Oenmaniste wih T. 0. W, An, Bute FevEs243, Woluacar Lite Wtdp. hate ineecns Tents tame Renny or. se vaer” 4309 32 "se. te Wee Svumincon, @. Os MoAIn Wal Ore {on Bice, 2621 ula 6, Chae, VIRGINIA playing orchesra in the Windy City. Ginn ley the clo i with tife eeodssind, be in Chieso Wich the Hietclier Heniorson orchestra, Luster nows his onfons. a“ Clarence Hlaek. the violinist who hin Tien ony th sek Hist. is ay inal the secretary's olflee of Local 208 Jonee more. The Nowp Whig is a constant visi- tor at the Grand Theater nowwlays. Stomp says he likes the way the or- shestra. plays ho feature pictures, and if Stomp says-so, he knows what oie talking about. John i. Wickliffe is still In town, Nobody lows whar John Is going to de untit hy doex it.” te fs aslick fhied in the mnusle zane. Robert ‘Waugh, ‘just a fow yenrs Jago a slow horse an the violin Is ined up now with the stars, He has heen tino secison with the Grand or chestre saul with only Unis oxperfence he has mokled himself into a fine ittie player. “AIL a person wants is ja chance, “Many payers tmve lett the husiners due to the face that that chance™ was not ssiven them, Leal eps ith power should remember to give tho young chaps an opportunity. They Wil make hetter players fer you th tha tong ruin. The wld aces Know t00 Sek tei cohunmn: tee 16k meee nitiele pilesscedt with the condition uf the futher sand auger “Samy AIC. OF fats oniggarutee Stee wee” Mh, Mine Ll tian. te Newsan Wie the event RUE We'ME and Aire Be iradfonhs tee Singhs Mitchell nf etveRe. Mase. Ts Eisiding the home of her sladeliter. Stes SN bam: Rees BC. Mebend ati farmlis nf Tidaton,. Mace, Sinitod. Uielr damier, "Ther "returned fast week. ‘nine Eagerehive "resents sisted farenta. “Revs It, Pe. Harsincton vies Red there am acening af tle deatiy of his Hrottice face weeks “Tea, White ut Sut ta visited his hreher, Sant White, whe igri, Yast week. LAURENS, S.C. Aire. Cerilla Hardens, Mes. Cora Dit Upshaw nd Ariett. Havieitale spent Wedhesaay” ac ‘Katie Sultivait cami reunion. Mire. Fila Dake hay rosurand ome gter spending a vweele In Witte Mura, Pas Witt Her daughter and son, Mra ia tc, “Change and Dr. “Fayecte Davis.” Mig. annie te, Owens, ts Ceritia Hudgens aml Mes. Mtare Parks inevored to Chitrlonten, sige. Susie Criss And. chitdrest wisited in Seneca (Mts Mauiow. Suillean and son Willian Arthie are visiting in Cleveland, Ob, CAMDEN, S.C. Richard Rholes, of Hartford, Conn. wpent a week of his, vacation her with ithe keandueahers. Mes. Anna Catter, Sea, iilen Hattersoat fe chung ie Nes Yorke cits Dred, ih, Thomas fete Sate Ghiay. for an’ cktnded tise, to eww York? Sirs, Razzle dune nt Patterson, ROP5., after Aan eataned tripe Senth Returied home muting the week ater Spetidine sometime in Camden vjsiting Mion Nessie Aiesander and Visiting sev erat paints Mimwaehwat the states Mrs, Hb. Cook of Patterson, S.J, arrives Fhuradae erwin for an “istonded Ziulte Abe Halney attended the «rad Ledge ig? of Tat tcharleston, Mowers, ames “Frnesdite ait ttoney “Martin Fauened-hoe Saturusys after a” motor trip to. Dhiiadeiphta, Sew York, a Eapnettewt. sie Mais Moaeit of Com limba spent the wevk-onde in camilen, Welard Heard, one nf Camden's lending. farmers is visiting hig sen, Dr Hnward ae Chleage.. Mies, ef. Wi Unme Seo left for Uhiesko Lxt week, Richmond Carter dey lei at the Gans fon huspita Weidaye wwenine of in Flex reneiven "Thuewdng whe layla: Haxebail, Carte, aud Tuireutighe els lided switn ‘eae other Un center: Held Mise Hottie Willits, Mea. "te i, Wit inmg ‘Secand Rati MeGirt” snotored fa cabana ince ev [PR h Gee, Pie as nae? Rane te Bee mc: GS . nes. raw Fe ae a be aE q\ d pay eo aa. aK ! £ Passo NIG: gd ‘. ° WMS Mia) by EladieRobinsop oS. BAGS a ‘ SONS : { a: PUR: Egy ray yf! os Vy la eee Wee \ SF 2“ Wb BRAY Sa b ge F ms ee eo a ely S 5 Bee 2 q a ee a bo iO eet ——a — 3 ee ee AY 1 NG) 037, a Ce NUN AEN SOE se a \ J 1 \ a la Qs yen, amen. © PE \. ‘ la 1 red, Jat Ta theo Bs Stns tan Ron Coed To Beg Tea By My Saat” = 10 sings Elzddie Robinson in her low-down, intoxicating voice, as Will Ezell oY sympathizesanaccompanimenton the piano. Elzadie and Will, you remember, J are the pair that “made” the famous “Saw Mill Blues”. Now, as you hear a theminthisinteresting, unusual "Whiskey Blues”"— Paramount No. 12509—you'll le say they've scored another big hit. Ask your dealer forit,or send us the coupor. io et 42509—Whiskey Biues and Back Door Biues, by | ie, Elzadie Robinson with Will Ezell at the piano. = 1250@—Dead Drunk Blore and Misery 12493—Hot Dogs and Weary Dog: Biues, io ‘Biues, Ma" Rainey with Hop Hopkins Bind enon Jarry tuner, and : atthe piane, is Feet. eS 12907—MemphisEarthquekeandWater 12501—Sheedio Um Skee and Sheth of 5 iS ‘sewed Btues, Alice Pestson Piso Desptainee Serest, “apa” Chatie ‘Ace: by F. Coates Jpetton and His Bato. la 12505—Everybody Help The BoysCome 12.497—Bad Fecting Bhuee and That Wi} (i Reme 2nd When That Great Ship Never Happen Neo Mere, Blind Went Down, Willam and Versey Blake and His Guitar. , a) Set Soe ca ieiemeteneunen iB ee 12502—~Hard, Oh Lawd and Mercy Biues, and The Reyal Telephone, Blind F is Cor; Plano Acc. by Jesse Cramp. Connie Roseasond; Orga Acs c pe sy Sacred Masterpieces q ject ob—Jesua Coana Shake Righteous Heed ard Receiving Eiecorded? a ba ney tomar ra D gnount Re | a2503—te's The Owe and Yoh" Better Mind, Pace Jcbilee Singers BR eaencorded MY tie “(Soloists Hattie Parker and Mes. Jomes Simpson) 2 BR Sicar 00 Sly vot | sa386—All ¥ Want Is That Pure Religion and 3 Want To Be / arenod OTNy cleat ‘Like Jesus In My Heart, Deacon L. J. Bates. Peete! ta Gor atte Bett | seem wo MONET! “ 7 et “ome ANGE? Natoma en agunen tres Pay sennes ey een SY feet fe HSS TaN CG ise cane delivers secerce. We fay Dotese om Report | : 7 Sekereyee , Sete | {ius Oise tinsel Os UE IER Pry aa ae ak deen E sof RLU eae ay ial a SY cane enone teenen eS —_ chy. 4 boone SMALL, STAGE STAR, JAILED ON ASSAULT CHARGE on Fs he i aaenemenine ‘would ne monotony DINAH SCOTT RADIOS Court fondle Sete raion nat ine Rant sound an theta So a a ae Sige teh tee Gea SESS Saat Shand Goat NST SM wee ae Pane au eg wnsLow. ARIZ senna, oe canta tai om Me iene throes cal ie gee ERR feaetarh aay Be SaaS oan aR CAG SPR te Tete ae ete ll rte ier inal RAS na et Be oft okt dat oar a Bea ate Pau Mae SENS, Si il Sa oad ics “ie “toni AGIs i a te Fee Mie eh atae “hace Shin ata, ke’ Wil be aiext month. “Ae the Community Screens Ruane ie Aor"st Se ESP a ae EER nat atng™ hed he ata ain, SE Shane stones, Weta HE hina hare se ee fet a Eee ert ese Writ nd oe eh a Seis Mir aa ie ana meses ate at ME eh ae te A Se ta tad Mid ale taki seme at St ee Ree Re aa Chicago Theatrical News: Green and Pailey are working in and around Uhicazy,out of the Weate crn vaulevttie uiliée, Low LaMar, well known mut pera former, it 2 riot on tho DIN at the Vendome theater for the firat halt of the weet of the 13th, Ho Just Closed a four days run at the Met= Topolitan theater, Chieagu. Billy Mitchell and his Tigfeld Fot~ Men show are at the Indiana thes ater. Chicage. Some show has Bills, Toby and the ung. Dan Wilee, “tha roller skater, is working ia and around Chicago. Very. ood {s thin aet and he Keeps busy With his wkatine novelty. Boley De Legne's Banianna Girly are doinz the Week of the Tath at the Grand theater, Chicaso. Wim, Benbow blew into town this weele on hie way Up in Michigan to Join the show, the Rubin and Cherry ‘guns. Tlorse Crawford, the bass alnger, iw back on the Stroll. Ho bas beer ‘with the Bright Spots revue over the Toby wheel. Biter Teans and Susie lett Chi jcaxusthia week for New York. They, Aci) star in Jimmy Cooper's revue ‘over the Columbia wheel the coming season. ‘Jazz Lips Richardson, the funny man, was on the bil at the Vendome this ‘week sind went awfully bis. He is billed to play the Metropolitan next week. Jinimy Ferguson ts now working ‘at the Sunset cafe, Chease, suing big ‘Cleo Desmond of Lafayette players fame is In Chicago, “She comey here direct from Detroit, Mich., where she has been for the past three months, ‘Wratt Houston, the leater of the orchestra at the Indiana theater, has been on the sick Ist for two weeks and ig now slowly improving. H. B. Miller, owner of tie Grand theater, Chicago, is still in Europe and iB not return to tho States uh Mlearly In October. Dasty Fletcher's ganz will open in Chicago week of the 20 at the Grand theater. Buddy Austin, well known mans ager and owner of @ theater tn Juck= Sonville, Fla, is spending a few weeks in Chicago.” He is on his way to Capada, Where the oasis ts flowleg, Rill Potter. manager of the KKoppin theater, Detroit, is no longer con nected ‘with thit theater, aeconting to reports from there. He was for merly an editor of a show magazine fa Chicazo. ‘The Actors clu under the atew- ardship wf Chas. Moore Is lovated at 3136 -S. State St. Chicaco. Te is al- ways Goat: Ub these af the QLUnianion, Doe Tinie. the main man on the ALG. Wisds ‘minstret show. ‘rullos that the gens is still treating lm witite and buxinese has heen great since the opening of the show a few weeks agp. The show plays Hratord, Pa. Aug, 22. and Youngstown, Ohio, Aug. 25, 95 and 2%, a Two KINGS ‘King Hunter and Kine Joe Russell, the couk and the walter, are Colne thelys at the Hoaker Washingcon theater, St. Louis, Ma. week of the 1th, ing Joe Baw been under the Aoctor’s care but. ix rapidly getting back to form, Writes Jing Wunter. The act he says ia a "Wow" every= PART 1—PAGE 8 FINISH INSTITUTE SUMMER SESSION Degrees Conferred Upon Large Class at the Closing Exercises institute, W, Va. Auc. 19.—-The 14h arousal uimér réativ a€ ane Wee Virginia Wolingiate insticuts wan endeu ith graduwtinn exerctnea tn ame aul: Torlush at Institute, Sine collegatn ae: Fig Site Gantersea unin Studente wh iad completed muceesatully the ‘cuuEses Ino wie they sere enrolled. Te Standard coral elpiemas were awarded Bu tise, étplomas froin the Engileh Ui Sttlon uf the secondare departaene. a Sertificate. In home econeanies, ndteat Tare he wuceesntul completion of Ne- exfional ‘course, was. granted, “Fhe closing excrelaen exam at 1 getnck Sun ine Proceostonal nnd ent Shines of eradgaraee Tees D.C. ea oF intconiery eered pase. Shavit Shusle Yor the program wae rendered ty Bisses Auatina dackson and. Joyrtet Hlurhes,*Aimander Lowry nd Sea Bury Canel ail students af the sum: igor session, “Hon, Wee We, dander ‘ate ‘wupertisar af Teace ‘achnals nd: Geested the amormbly with thoughts ap Browriae forthe, cease RHE waa thade that the ‘Nationals. Jegclation of stygehers. woul tect i ‘Claarlestnn, W Vin, ext July. ‘Dean Taine of the college department mada “annuuncement concerniae the Berber and kind of teachets’ certiti Eaten for which the students had quail: fed during the {otT session. Revo. mendations will he made ty’ the state Gepariment of education for the eu: five «f the following vertifeates: ih School, dirst rlasn, Gz renewal of firste Ehtss ida acheal. 2 ‘peocinionat high sehen 0: soveiat ecealeatea, in hen iendard normal certiticates, 42 renewal Of mundend normal, hs short court. 21 Fennwal of xhort wourse, 1 est grade Temporary, (Br renew "of hte fade Eembporars! Gi sccond grade Lemparaty, 3 Prenewal “gr sccond grade temo High Te aresanates, oes abate, WP eS lll, principal of Genoa igh ‘se OF ducstids Wee Va., anil presitent af The State Teachers” assecintion. The its Aasoeiatinn Wilk teat at tho We Cirginie collegiate tnstiiute Nove 2% Band 6 of the current fear. The {illoning deerens were conferred and dipieinan awarded: Hachelor af aris. Allee G, Cardwell ARENT ai Gothia Cs chateclioe Saitinnus. Gio. Ginehelor of neta In education., Sese- phine de. Connadye Chariestin, Wt, Cas Dewrgia Pr Miteuel, Siewerauilie, We. Va. ged citclen Se Wade, Bucktafnen, Nipachelor of rclence. James E. Brown, ‘anmapolls, Stars aantbs Ie svelzon, Tin: fen, WW. Vay. aga dlenzy 0. Hobinxan, Lnnciahire, WW Ua. Piacarlor at scivage in home cconom- ton Scum Srugee Stabel Pe deamon, Weddin, We Va, ‘Siqwlard “Kormal diplorsas, Beatrice ore Canuads. Charleston, Wr Va. and Begin dehtnears ghamgetne WN ‘Seconidare Wvgiish dintomsts. Talbert ccurners Hiookisie Ne Ye and Lda 3 Perkins Institutes We Vat Certifite tt" Reine eronomics, Lda M. wertine Terhune. te. Maroons Give Gay i Dansant for Visitors The Maroons, hae nonwlar, sun eid gra ana saifenl Bal” of Che Srther delighesut aaie Saturday eke Sina. Wnen the anensbers eazeriained fa Blouse ek tumaaes ‘wivitors to thin ite the Svaianee or Me. ana Sizes dope Riotehatt, saua se atichiian avg. Alure Shon lay bouna ptleze mien ta wus Uanved” and made “merry ag tar gala BALE! Porm carte evening eat he danced fo the strains of Paul Iivitin's Phe wreint eatmlene, headed by qiatios Zane, shared no patie {make Boia! FES" colored wahun and “Tae GNGH added much to the morvimen® of Tee Caispoane and the winora i Bea Gd Ws president ofthe clan Euusatel Vottons vice president? Tesi Bae Waadeth “ccretaeds and Iteren owns treaniren "Rinnng hens ieho enjoyed the, hos plitliefof the Siaroons were: “ABR: Fi ROUOS Gait Nach oe: polaris New Orieaqay ‘Thelma Wateos Reishscton Dit’ geroue™ Mitchel Suleay “nis: Btancng Errante Fuk! cinaie’ ramnuel, New York: Ya Fie ‘tava Siarnuette. let dieden Rlehman, 'staruuctiey Slee? Haast Shida, Waehinevon, 1, Cr Wales Ce finn “naiimere, Sia Vesoria’ Say Rtoniphis, Tem? lwebud Bega Sei. Mart Ruth stuzon, dtavara, Colas With Silicate Nene Far Dorie stare Wachingedne Dy. Coe itainn Canning: Relansae Gat: des Aunine, Selina, it and ‘Exaestine Yondn Setinas AIS. ee Se ee Mrs. Sara Cross Dies, Stricken by Paralysis Zire. Garad Crow. muker cf Neres greg, CE ined vey after 1 Baqurdae’thornine, ah ie ok eae Sas din wie aie hewee regime Zomciouenesn, "'Puncral ‘serviens. were Eentucied ts New "Miartin,. aston 6d SKeibenia’ fapeise church “on "Sunday aternoen, at She hanes. “Sita Geinn. vealed Colence. 40 Rien" 1f gare ath She. lentes a) tans Flot Willian Crowe R pramutsons Hor: Reo Hone Cena, a" aeaaiters lai, Sfaaxte $i: cues: two sintate Siow lad Been” ae” Ghisaee Men i “Amoeat Botieeclle, Miche aud aha at lems Seon ie tina She wes Hi te Feat 'Sanine beatae her hushanat, Pane ‘Eroad i Miversiae vemeters, Halamaas liek: : Mrs. Mary Saunders Dies After Prolonged Illness Ree Mary Saundra, an old resen ete pated gay at te Nome of fet Bascal Ne tenia ie oowig. a8 NG. Racsiny wmurning ater redone itness. BeSir tudes jas Nogn alto a Sree es “She eat Shere BouRetmy-aee sare aun. wheres a Feetresant with ice’ daughter, sv. Enix’ ever since: " ig Herluer Meee Tein, he Weazen an- ejhet daughter. New. tasahelh Freud Ser MeN thor inathr af the Plugin” sttnases aie Tao inst ‘Hansea) services were held at Quilon haw Bin St) And Wabash Sten ‘Sadeny 1c, une ae, a: Bivignat orier af estees NEE a Opens Musical Session the Netrupoliian vhureh choir. peesitent e Matrapelitan ehured choir. iesitent Sng Eilcager branch of te 'Natiomal Reamtation ae, Seer Mucieinnss med iene ae the Sckoinesin fated of the ee aon for Se aus stare Pidiies au 1 to ntteul, the sum Jrvetinie “Mt teat ational teed hich Eanveter in that city Moudas, Auge 23, Sie Nainnue Sacteapotitan cle at Fiken ‘Pit Sones tn conductor, work, the Petia ize two sears ney fa fhe Tones In whieh choke 22 ef which Sere tenes, Weree partteriants,. “Aslde eeRe ahie'the bis cher af 150. volces tn Fhtakn ennie ‘ands hus heen. heard al Seer the cwanu, irnadeasting front the Wis bration "chiteae. once every That Waring thes mast winter, “Car Bikone prentdend ee ihe SOA Se Jaw sppainted rot, Jonea to open te Big sneecng Sursday. Entertains Guests gee AEE oes gS ctehtzan Pecinde tlene Fee wen she he parte SoBe el Ae Ghigo imathiani, Ala.e, 3h, Tuguer nt Den Bioinage downy ia 2A Carter ot Bee Tiowy Rtas Tie syening was Zereiniasing 808, acter which the Bess Es titan a Sohliad ferst Arvong the ‘Sussts ‘present. wero. Mtchdasnes Pye Rehtieiss de Se Rrown, J. Slenard, iM Begun @: Lindre, Gevcer fue Rota Wine tien Fe We. Wits, ae Sfortaea Samana Stones: S dackser. er ane eA Ware, A, Davie. Ho PRG ies and Mitees “kateabect Rorier and Edna Iells. mt Bone . MISS WINTERS EAST Hen jille Winters, founder and prone se PL NS Rate acct Sy $eUt ting in Sew Yorks wires she f Poing meen eateriained.” Mice Winter Rar tacmensiratea hes abiWty for Trad Teeny Nig aang an, epatopoiy Tanck of soung workers In one of th hunchnding clubs ot chicago. She Sheradaute of thn dung class of Wen ARUP Beivive ‘high school: By BERTHA MOoLEY LEWIS ‘Two of the loveliest women in the country will be among the visitors in Chicazo the coming Week, Both are leaders in educational and cub lige th the Uated Staten, One iy Mrm. Mary McLeod Bethune, president of the National Federation of Women'a clubs, who has recently: returned from Europe, and is president of the Daytona, Fia., school, ad the other ts Miss Xannle’ i, Burroughs, Washington, D.C, president aud founder of the Na- oni Tratning School for Girls and secretary of the women's auxiliary of the National Baptist convention Mrs, Bethune will be the guest of alt Chicago and the Phyllis Wheatley honic, while Misa Rurroughs will have Heansion, IL, and fur wealth pay her homage, Charmin women will dine them ahow them Chicago's beautlful parks nad homes, ‘They wilt visit our Yanks, Insurance oices and newspaper buildings. Young folks will bring them fawers! 49 fet, every day will be one of pleasure and delight. ‘These Ero noted educators will lenve with Us food for thought. Ont of thelr rine Experience thes Will apeak from thelr hearty and no two women in. America Gan Cll the “story” of thelr rise mora churmingly than Myx. Bethune and Stirs Burroughs. Ail Chicago roclety folk welcome them for the nuccess Aone aoe ae ee ite meee sear Saba ghecmtanid toe tee neces Emily Johnson, Haltimare, | aid.. and Haw” ashdle Sernina. teeninaton. Wo: Bee’ atoms ‘at the, Nimeennen” Motel he faaica are etme: ely entertatee And steels, ram ea een Wir howe te. Ramin stewart ath Pea Suonaase niet. : We amt Sine Charien ‘Thompron, 42 geet Mt Mate returned fonts weak Foaltely Wi Henton Harboe, Sieh wher [ie efery Teents of Aig mnt Sr ear ora, Fheye dunret jake tated etore the month Miuise ene. [MISES US aten, mobert S. AUnot Ina ciyrnea “Yeon Ruvimt to Yheatom Lisrhot’ ‘Mien. iehere thew were kurt AEG “and *atene‘wranklln Denison oes maven yw other parte of Sieh Zan ahh had. S fant emjosable tee Sif Ati thas: mada Mie wife a pres ame pedigreed Chinese Hose Here for Convention Meant Mmm SW, Green, Nex Ofte an resin ihe ate, Sie rect de "aunreme chatcelne ef tt Winighee Sea's weil wet Be diet atte Wine Weck “A number SSG" shinee haves Teen “planed 1 item Ug the AT. Semana sre. SF Scher gniv Ttbates Ave hal a her sauetta lake welt Stee Joh Pah huiiieort Nae and her Réether Tees Tai emetic" of tie, Vletory Hee nestor ite ats, “hat who: wa Temaateteca to Neve Yorke clty. “Hie wan Acero to, the’ Eeeent Vitor Sak Somerton. Heres’ Sire, Lev was it fein ey iain vocal sifolia™ aa ae ee ecm, 4806 seth Park wit oe Se, MM, Seneeat manaect Wine Shease Dates! has fetuene Ub the oats" treet a eneaiton at the Chie. Paterenn's aria dn” Stiehicin, Sian aediif'aan “carats. tere. morare Mite tye tent iquabande etenine they faten Sie iata ‘Mires Sb Atel and iiuhner™ Vigerinte aed Mes. Arnis eee sSeaaagtili Fine ay thee guests Seah cE Pesce an niatber, Sire Cte Mopar” Kehaonptes "Fase "were, ateo eke of Sea Nee sent, "The mite arg sau a tor icp here Gon Cal UE ont sex, foto Roane £0 fe aisnn ‘Aves. wives A recepioa ‘sinday oR ia Toners of arn. Htser MSE Virginia, Nana “oes Guests Were estore. read Mee, Marla Meters, 63, 1 salTéc "whcoreainel with ie? Siee ig, Hor fet er Grote te uuge and stra albert P. Gearae and aibere un ave seit ge Wine tenor ABA sts gagecsor Meat Hertha Mose= aie tin ees sett recur for the thabargn visit to Chicago, the iudes (SHWE vacation fromthe niunletral oust Denche | A Broakiynite Migs Litian, Mractor, Drooxln, N. 3 aguchter of tue eee Sry Procter and SINEMSE Reenrnew Veecter, fo vatting, Ainl'inaag atisa ave belba’ given I Re monet, Smo Noite C nageom, Desrois. sich. ig tthe “umes af Site Maddalize exit? BSG éatuniee Aver anil iy one Sti nee ati Sil ASS SH Hetuta ta nettoiy feat weet to, attend {hel hetiee semvcarion Bnd be a Rivest Offre “Honsrim, . eS Leeman ana wits, Kansas cise “Sunt “Momped aver “aa ace, hs Gikin. Airs, Marke Utolmes, Sist Michi- Satie nay a en cout @ beveott Signe to attend the doctors” conven: ihe an Boule. Mea ulin Sasvon, Philadephia, a, ana her daugites Mire Tilman’ 3s. TieatTeaneae ches, in. Sra irene Halites and aise, Sisuda Moberae Georxe ‘fore dinner sacatn ot Stee, Any Natal Tepe Gs “Shicitgan Wve Citeaas favorite concert atdat, Who Wilt give EEe"iocat veeuat at “Bloat Bah arg Th. Lewis, G09 1, Stet St gore swifehat bag tne ag talesilde Sieh And who is'cen tastes thls colaina dor= i ee‘aticners seas a dinner guest 3 Mindi ot “dese aerslweather, 14i2 they heey eke mas werconal Fegan i Ae ine Aecremetlian theater FS3fie Anite Wine Be doula, Mo. te Tn uie city. studgin'g with suena Beotalns dastcing teacher. tina, Wits ism trachea hn'Whe Dobie Sehvors at Sue icdin Fowler wae marcied, to award Weld on aeredag niente ay the iran Wie gn tkseeaas Mh Sethe ee Ser BE Jasurist, “will Tetum” home’ soon after aylegtenden ioe Past nS etRmas asiues dabe Greeny, Mise evta Metiaray Stine Matetgen tea and eBanking ate gn a rotarin trip 69 Nic! Sonttand Chanerigning ade Feta fuze gh ated hi“ lona Eituical amearaton ae Se Tuten Soy ag Mek Buateheie Wil 807 rensagliie. Ave. Shee ag, Ses, White, Ros arse AVE ie Wiegand Mex. Mircom are invidiewiia, Mish. to Nefnd the" ape gation sh eo and Sirs Thoman Allen of wins ves haere eae “in talgetid Posoet hush oiete aueats Size, Suste Tan Fer of ealtfornia, ‘Attending Conservatory Mrs, Huby ‘Thomie Robinson, Aueuse ta. ae ia the elu anemic Wr tere Soekittth Met and Nees Wem Ward Aegina sve alsa toninon fe the MEE! 2 peddut eof the Tue “rhminene ag ionnrens hye Chany be Heargia, “Sa vees talented Cache to Parte emcee, aiot oe here Sqteiing” che’ amicrtcan™ cvuservators otamasig, Af at. Stizal, assisans print pal of Hamtoie jbile sets, Him. Molt renin wag ‘inthe eit with. Nor guano gas Shorea’ vista at SEN Gua Some eftieadtonal work at ihe nates or Chtcneo. (MS ctornes And fairs. “Hieeman Moace wi Pensa. dhe! aged “agt the week for Wiest eacre ana “Wotan Mra Airote te focitty ‘eultar at the five at Mee"Siedrera successful tracisionee 3 oe ee . ae Tinany triena at ats, WT. pawtsen regeet to Peart time ie Fgh Fe wae tsk tmeitien sar ear Tie werk while cranking te ear, ‘Be ilomer aspen siet anit sat suey Mem rece a theif ate Miss? Mletbena fionhes. a” tenner ai nel onlle ehonle ae sLoaiseiien ie ue nueed ae Siear"Senaie Eolrarcs ‘ee Howien Ave. Stine ionae Jones and, ler tlace_ are ac tusiuren tha. Owners they Ore Tiekima getnitven, Meek So MChark sites, e420 Sout ageiigt te iting "at anspa “Ci Sir. and Mes. Franke Thrown, Shr. ama aie Ande rata ani kanes “Te jieera “inthe. cl hast" weck vii PSS. ciarkem [ Atmiual’ Mefentnre wit! eave «ht wont ire “Wleatresert, (0 be th Guat fe ne ieiwin Cheetiae Sethe SGhreange barns he ewe gimme cot tage of Slevang aire Charles hesshue Steet Be re MBekere. “Memhts, ‘Ton. Igestigng Sen eile. fhe Seam ce ean land Walter’ Searcy of Ci Doutavice National bums “Mone he. visitors whe, te taking Gee Sega, ee Washington, Dy. See Gtee Chien, wite ot Prot Chit, Seno’ na eharee"of the Seat SU Rega elite hte from Salle Bore, ee ha te Meena at B80 Ronth duewicass bars Church whe for Jacriy ia tie amion een. Teene Wier Sial® Citiewe tat Satire, Be. ‘iro Th Viaanivons st. Laais. So, ay tenner as wammer” iets itctert Bareun rpecial Sounsel i, the “gr eieet Barcun, Fuecial Couneed ta toe THAT BABY YOU’VE LONGED FOR Mra, Burton Advises Women on Motherhood and Companionship of Ea tg ee Sea ee he a STiStuilat ite dtece" at "®. ow os Pee ee tated te Heaytieen' @ si mari tea? Sh Hit eatte tec" Mew Boston ofeee het advice Bist atin ie, team rieas Siaceart Uston Mo Btantsentin, anat Baie eStespesucnte eal be suell ere ee ae wSitisy Data: Coleman, daughter of Str, Cotemam, attimore, St. be the “hours fucet of her aunt nnd, tinele, Ste.” and Sirs: vol ii Coleman, 2202 South park. was. She. iil Teaver thin week with SEN games Laweon for Idlewild to Wie ent the. fashion how. “Mion ‘Patricia Sloward, 4991 Forest. ville “Awe wan Rostern sta etaering Qiiner “Alonday. honoring “De. FD. Mason of Siamil, Pla Those” present stoeo Nabaea et ren ant ere Wl Rony De My As Deng, EW eases B"b. Noselex and Jouinny Wilson, ‘pe, Rnd. Ara Leon taneil, 45, aad St. eutertalned a number of frleuds fixe Wick, ‘gnome thein being: Dr. and Bg, oh Hector, “Wasningtin, B.C. Sis, Cynthia Clayborne, fax Angeles cal, Is touring Hie Bast and wil he the fucce of Miates Wairicin Moward: and Hfeue Whson white tn the city. Mew Cordell Ward, Mliwaukee, Wi, sister of Siies Marguerita Ward, 47th St nd Calumet Ave., was Inthe city ii Wook an ea seta te a the Apes club Mombty evening: Sind. Mra. Ruel Furuiy, | 839 stichigan Age. sand farally. will tena fest week for Mlowild aid Woodlawn for hele vacation. , Thay will he a Companted ty Mrs: Leroy Junasun, Dr Shusieae Fred rap slit Jofn them hate: ‘Attorney and. Siem, Joseph 1. 2Ibhy 350 Seance AbSae a thel retain Jowett ts tite, Sr am ramienitdran, “Hide tiarre ace St jorepline Pave, New ork chy Mies Claudia’ Me Pats, New Tork gigs ie the: ucst of Aucs. atta Mes, Tetey 31, Porter, 2642 Souths parkwas, Devand Nee. He, A. Willian of South parkway returned to the rity Monday Faint weaieend wie At their suminey Hoge “at anton Harbor, Mich, who inalntaina, a beautteat ‘home mes eal unites ut fon Chicage, will tive Sfisy Nannie ti. urroughe, Waantagton, Deg, with Yer for. beiet visit, ‘sted. “Te A" Norris, “SMiam, ia.. ts aonping sl SS. Thorggen “stag Bugdhparkwas, Mrs. Norris $9 ate Aegiing “he wuininer Hostal scluol, otras Le We tilsone aags Caampiain Ave lias’ bee to Columbus, Ohly, vis- Rigg relates “Sirs, Grace Hoxter, 5632 Mratrle Ave. anid rok Higron, have returned var0 Rioterng "aeip yhrosch, Whe sai of chicas, eeappine at Jackson to ate fen! she “enameination cotebratton. Iie Fon has “iinished Teward whiversite: Sharmaceutiealegurtment. “and. will take the stave. bentil of Iifinols exam Tiation “at a. easly date “Al Mloaton stage, secinty and sport- Ing editor of The Chicaga Whin, had 8 HMighctal trip ta Idlewild. Inst. wee He was the Ruest of Me, and atis. Bush, eho have recently” Bulle a dea that “coutace “there. The Fhivteen cli have issued tavte tations to Gielr inane friends to "At Banu ines Rhea sat ance alae. AUR. Me at Cermaten Park Autstenton Uy ear “ots. “These. young fuen have established a reputation fer Mavlue come af the mext enjoyable ats fetew of any up in the ith Syme vd Chicago's tost keautlful girls and thels STOP a a ‘ss. Clifford Starks, 3622 Praitie Ave, wil Toave next week Ge Tlewiid Apend her varation.. Ate, Starks recent= ifereturned seem the Fast. ‘iw Millard. Mobbine, G2 1 30th Pi, accompanied. by hee children, has folie fo arsenite. Ohio, to vise her father and. fam, ‘Mr..and Mrs. Alfred Hampton, 434 $t. and ‘South parkas, wad tes: Celle Eivlon, Fister of Stra, Tainpton, Vieks- burg. Misa. have returned Cronk aime. {or ip fo putiaio, Cleveland and Can. Ada, also vishting Niagara. Falls, They eave Aug. 22 tobe the Ruente of Mrs egths Moseley aoe. etl ste Sirs nella Harris of B. feety St. wl weave Monday for Derrolt, Mich,, vo t= tent the Hoctore konvenitan. Biles Alby simins: father of St, Louls, Mow Wit be in the chiy sext_ Weeks Stosning av s2tz Indiana -vve,, she huss of hia daughter ‘alist Stitue Hammond, Terre Haute, Ind. is Ia the city, sue te an accom Pilsicd’ planiat and Stott Yao Havel with Stadam Ania Pued"Brown this fal, ‘Mra. Viola Hanks, 3124 Michigan Ave. weit eave nest werkt for Ialewiid, Stich. Si."Stasme Lynive and Sten, Travents Sil sing) moto? Wo ha. sama’ piace for Aw Male Starr, Tom Angeles, Cal. wis given A presiddant on tase, Sgnday morning by afr. ciara, Odetl, £216 South Parkway, Mes and Sirs Alapein Pavers nd Sr, euhee Mere Buesix: duh Brent Si “Mute parkway, fy catertainine we breaktust. 12 honor’ of Str, Starr on Nese Sunday, 5 ‘Mire Leow Motte, 44th St, and Pratrie Att iit leave seat. Wweek foe Clave: tend’ and. Detrate, where she wit) Jota Nits, Charles Jackson and then got fdlewtld. Mich.) Qt cleveland ‘they wil Devthe guests of Sirs. Lawrence Tasne sine Twin ‘Washington. and tainly arent thelr summer home at Siuskeyan, Sten. Silke Zoltie Martin, Atlanta, unlver- siz. Auerta, Ga, te tite guest of Me Snd' sivas 1s Muriihys ene Ten Ave. a a Seen Lem te, Picnor and. fi ‘Me, and Mes, Leo 1. Tirpse wed fam: fie, 63 Ada Mt. spent fast weeks a fhe Sila uf Ste. and Mrs, detines Steven Wareeton obba, aiteniding. the fast athe CURE 10s rolitiece minenaesie Pea | We i vel E SS EX A \ z ie. < ES Peep | freckles SS: Sy, PZ) pimples WGA 4 N Diackheads ee ugly skin é awe eruptions Can: x) SS TEAS ame Are you ting tide batind a mask of powder and WHITENER rouge? Itcan'ebe done! If your skin is rough and LL VES pinplj-—ce spouy with Uachibeads, chrouisseves or etna key FS ‘eczema, there is only one way to win back a beautiful SS ff Ss complexion—get rid of those defects with GES EES WANE TENER, = SKIN, OINTMENT Tor soke ms Silky Hair A soothing ointment that heals medicinally the . sores, pimples and splotches that spoil your com- Wavine plexion. Gives you white skin beauty—for itis itself HAJR DRESSING White. And has marvelous bleaching qualities! Oe EMA Yousilllovetowe Wavine Skin Whitener and LAST YEAR Ointmcht, With aly sin inex ht as od Sisdal Aye @ E> BOYD Perfumers ~~BirminghamAle. QS =~ THE CHICAGO DEFENDER = THE Cee AFRICAN LEADER | @== ; TO TOUR THE V. S.| EXtVULS Will Be Under Patronage], eure ges of the Brotherhood of | |3",20 8.5 inset Pullman Porters. (sci seatuente es Stowe Tore. Ane. 2h — The, tran hood et Sieehing ir Vorsers: a'matlona Unlon uf over SuWy pullnant gertters sn isk hone ig? As tip enti Bbringing to the United Staten fis Hnuest, “clement ‘Kacaltes attonal Secrets” of thn Tnwlistciat anion Ingrlat Workers” mun of Afton a tditor of the Workene Ierild, gota: Resturg,, Mouth “Avrica. air." Kadalle Witt serived tho latter fart ef AusuNt Dating’ the. guontha nf, September, Oe tober and Nuvember he" wilt tour the Unitea Staten under the nuspices ino Dretheciind! of Steopiaw eur Der tery dle wilt Toetuze onthe. Deesen Statin at thet natives: Ii'South Attic Lin najaceht caters ‘Clements Kauaties & mattve, of Dritsl Neawtland Neadw ian organisation. ‘Mose 200,000 workern fn South fete ghia became infaraatiially, kage iecxune of in courageniy ight for bet ter sennomle and social ‘comuitiona. fe fio ‘Kériean nativer: “Tho ‘union wht he fieads. waa founied tye him ta 131% Bnd hag since grown vere fapidly unt ie haw bteoinet am tmpwrtant factor South’ Africa. ‘iecenthy 1e became aif iP ated ith the Anvsteritamn ‘Frade Union Tntersational” amd thruugh an under Sanding. with ‘white iabor “in "South Africa, Wea nite to have the peraietons Regreation Wilts atined: t= the “Noth ‘AéGieain, inntennitely nhetsen. bye pan iment. "Bor the Jane thitee or fou nontiss hes lute beet in ‘England and Hurome, “isvturing in the Sinerest 0 BRS Bogen Aten, 2° With George Schuyler Acromnanting Sit: eadaite on the na- ional tours an tectuing from © the Sin adatfcrt will be tleutge S. Schit ree fated Jourenase tw crite: whe inating, ar of te Shewsenbes, 9 inontlig magazine yatilished ine Sew Mork clus tid a member af the el osha ‘nade ofthe Fitabrgh, ution nmlinent ‘national weekly nestanper Whrenn tio Foun men Fepresentine tht shore’ adeasieen themshe and opin. indo wi ogee ngetantth fing of ew of the. Sew "Negeuen In Tet ishitent States find Africa “Fue elses Cisted Wh or Now York. Reookign Newark, “Heston, Vhiladet: play Hwimrey Waxhietons ia etaainmath indianapelts, Lukes er einctnnart, iakwnapells, Loulgriite Siisneitie, "Attinta, iseminghtiny Sem: fines Sis Tanase teat cs, Ble iiaiia, Chismee Milwaukee, St. Paul Senttie, Portland, voren akin, tas Angeles, Dynaver.” Dalits, San Anton, Husted, “New “orleans, Jacksanville Sivannai, Durham, N.C, Norfolk. ahd Elcimond ‘Phi wilt he the, Gest apnertunity the American peonte have Iuil take. the ilest ‘haut fartn about the resent a flue Matta of the: Mae ante tn Siciea, “Avereat tinier will be hel fe Sire “Raat in ewe York “eign ANE antival at which the met pent Rent Hucens and laborltes of boxt tees ‘fept liberals and Complete Plans for Pan-African Congress New York, Aue, Tha plans for tne “Youth pansAteiean scongres. Aen Wing Wennttels announced, fieadquar: (eerfare at trses Congrosational ehureh: ‘ciiere all" the moraine sessions will be fends “ening kessiog, will be at St. Matis at, BSnuroh siraday afternoons ue, Se cnumont awakens (ron the Cait Efates ami abronde, crhe weenie mss Plans wilt he held ae Ste states Urea Gectane Salem aud Abyesinia. churches Poetic Sten Flournoy sitter will aet ag cha. tna et “the, fre eption committee Sor Usiegates ing, teiendy at the Ye We S ietaay efeernoon xine! Eva Varks, cliatrman of the en- teftniament wonmmiliter. Wil pronto. Re Sevat the publle brary ‘Tuealay ats ‘rnoon when the African art exhibit Wh beteatoress ‘pantes Hetleganite, ts en route. to. the congress “frome Hiadth © De Wilhelm Galscuing of Petzen, Germany, and Dr YSHnaa"of Japan will agend the con: Eigse. $E5. Lottie, Cooper. hostess for the Grangeny hex font torwarted $30 for the Sgreteet {ont the woinen of thae ate wa apes terest 4 the fact that he iow from the pena Abranaim farele. ee Be and Mrs. Jordan Entertain for Visitors ‘The beautiful homo of Rev. and Mra. aSontan if gaan fs Wabash As Ma je surne oC a pretty party The hott- dred guest of his elaborate affaiy. wax Stine Hvies Daniels, ‘uteaener of Nase Mite, ‘Tena, Siew Daniels ig gis a Russt 4 Sign Clcranto Hatch, 2301 & Wabarh Ave. ‘ther Vsiiing ranchers sho. sharad howors were Mian Hattie tlle of Inox Yiiles ‘Tens who ts visiting Der Sister Mire 17H” MeGowan, 3030 3. Wabash Ate Mines, ie Beanie’“and. dauaneer, MIS Ruth Brame, of Honklnsilte. BY. Specialties hy trafensional sntertainets leepe the fun poly steadily all the eves Ring. Fey ero Prince 2. 12. lave: Ghetiat of Attics. Dru tte Ee Clark, ine our Seca doctors of 81° 4h Se. "aceunpanied "tee his. sister,” Mrs. Baia “Tinerie. Every nines wan highs apprecinced by the Ruests. | Mes nedan land her sktery, ‘Sea. Besse Haack, were prefect hustexses. : pe tas Waray MOTORING FROM _ORLANGO eam aires Wee. Nixon ana thely mother nnd children, De, amd Stee. Wy Ais Wet and sire. i 3h. Wandeas ats ise iuests of Sire. DY galas 34 Hilo Aton Phe artis Wil Toave far Hetresi anit New York to Susne tins ted Hieal asectathin. andthe etka ontvea Hit dine The We Wwoenien of crland SSH join then ae Detratts em route. to ae does tt Sy MAUDE ROBERTS GEORGE ate meeting afte Salona Aseocia- ici Seti of che atta ea: tno Areas Mane Mh Sant ae? Shai alee Bs Gare’ “Gate tans Gree ee Gres Corea aed bee tp ltt, crv Girma het, ed unceasingly and Wave made inost watts Bees ieee ee, ea iat et ft te Cet Oe ras reese Se fee at een te ae eeadene Teng of rete wi petites Pitta att a Borer detain Blea teats estes Sati hie Ret tae EPA neat) Siege ss enor, te en eas dt fe Sees ava See drs te ea See ge oes ieee cee ie Bal? Stotloe Seale Ag be att panei Sige ili, Rranth of Wablngton oe Ha Rt eee FEE ar ae coe al ad cs SSIS OE SSsORE sen as wh ageless, tng of se ee een cattle Poamenat BAe, eerie cea eee Siececads ae grag Pe ExCleaeueiess Hci Sone teeter sien “ee erties aka hse EN Te hsricd actos ha Caleta oe ae a hetero athe BP salons NA uh esa cL ae eg ee segura auntie aalans, ae Sing et ate eae fo site ene ered cae ae tees ae Seren ae a Sey RPA a retdent Dette Aadress Deca of the grat sininence of UL GP eis batter nee weet are Si bes erent fs oe om, a ae, et Seer Sess. A Mya Lanna Seca Betta ne Sar eecn tie Grarsae ever cere ae a ee ae ic ase Mee ee eee Seniesa att date! ee aarnernae ieee dee far ae aes, Coney o WMGadare CPrham Set Ae al rt eek Sat tones be eats Hoda tat eat He te area haercne ies Shanty tee Ban Aaa TEe ate, chert aa Bee nears, Uaacttnee atc Eh fete et aaeaen Ae eae a geri ag sent 35 sree a ENE aR a a Cs aa ees taney cota fe Shemale ino emerysns mac HOP ASE ase ot Be aa onophs tae sane toi: Race yenarecrare | Perse ced ag these oder sts [Test cronies te cee otter See Se ee, Dat eats “seal Ee fee eee asking aces Na wa say ee! ate rR wn hase Open reqang trac the question is helne raised, “Eas [ets wrnn es Bee etc oa HE STE ARs llth tan Bee whens ee Ame et at Seas Seiseie ee ts ey aise Belt Aone Bie ia ear Slee iy Soe ae at neeee SHIGE the REEaI cheat SA feat thie might eco afte ne: Be alga TA ecole a: ig arercaenre td ate [New wwe begin to Fee that here ts edt e eee itetts we eas eS cee cnet ae Seren ey Greer cea tt Sen ye eee Pe Bee tated ett ate el ee |asaliee fof retectane, artists ueaeed [sh ae green her [see Maat Mit Nee [ine atta MA BD a Tknmw whom P could mention. put Jt $s Receonats, tents Ce RS ee oe oe aes é P iE tho be sory ti ule mice Bee sai Sure Eiko he ae Tet Pe emtal o mone Sorel ate chad or tea Si Bea Racine Pah ena Chek age Reet mare ite a tad ea tar a ial i SE an nea srs cine tet See pean eee ean th a ht ee age tee pee satan Gaaee fee aca ta ort ee ie herca areata Be a 3 gas: AMR ase ee Binet Bie Gr pia aa enciaetiate to Pa ah emacs: Mckee “UP ieretcaae Gia Shs eS Nab Depot age Pence, ou Bave ged kirsten eu art Aneta SU cat Bi PRM ot Fee cet Mare eu Beer tte Ba eentie ate: Aae eo eras seen EPL So ci oats aaitiorct a Rial oh artha EG Matar cer ae Wes Bilin fe eae ate Bete BORER ara MA at Pe tiinte atadatnatte Hoa Wenner ini Eeistiang hag sean Pinal HT GAS wee Seed Mae oe fete ithe nae ts ut the heip will delve ite or L ean drive Ce eee cine a ERG Re hi a ate NW teh er a ea? Sea hats Telit ie dating ha Ber te ai anes en ae Gay Aaa? San We coetnag Sina atte Sm ah NSR Ra ha ah RECS! SA'se Mula i oy at, term sae hucand cu ign erm aes Nata ia seas teak eet aac co rt. Hh ENG Rats OG inet SE bathe eve at ciety ean ee aE Sr occa SS ae ie ha iene sane ot ee eco hun tating hae acs [bur there are worse things, Ir, is bet- aE ARS saad than SehtR ae ZAP te HBE 8 RR iasded eaate acts, athe {asco aah al 1S Ut ad ate de 1a oA Retain Mae [int Pita te ea tue a {are Sab” tant AIM A Se Ta Fas Tine Tom 029 ai Desires kame deta ioe eset at ke sas a {ie sitloh eae ae grata a Ieee aad etait to"eal oe ieee ata, ieee eam the nat Bei nemektiaty Man (neta acy ay fle {mowed “Nowe she_ hax font atm aa Se ; e re ae | a P * | ee . 7 ee ew ae ne 2 Bleach Your Skin Thi ick, Sure Way © is Quick, Sure Way ‘OWscience has foundan amaz- enlarged pores, clears up eruptions, “ ‘ing new way to whiten your refines the texture, removes olliness, skinmorequickly,safely.sure- © —vithout fail or your money back. Iy! In Nadinolaare secretly combined Remember, Nadinola always gets the fastest, most powerful skin-white- results. Positive, written, money- ning ingredients known, It never back guarantee (together with simple fails. The minute you apply this mar- directions) in every package. - velous super: bleach, it begins to a. : lighten your skin—give you new _Begin this very night—leam the beauty. real power of beauty—the power to attract and hold men who admire a You will be amazed how fast fair light skin. Atall drug stores and Nadinola works. Almest overnight toilet counters, 50c. Extra large, save- _ you will note the change. Instant money size, SI. If you cannot buy it improvement, then day by day fresh — where vou live, send us 50c or Sl and beauty, new loveliness, untilina very we will promptly send it, postpaid, short time you have. the together with dainty gift light fair skin everybody sample box of Nadine Face admires. éutassmmm| Powder and free beauty “ i) booklet. Address Dept. D, + And Nadinola does more : Rational Toilet Company, —itbanishespimples,closes SSeSey) Paris, Tenn, U.S.A. Use these Nadine Beauty Aids, too: Nadine Face Powder, 50c3 Rouge, 25¢ and 50c; Vanishing Cream, 50c; Soap, 25¢. eNadinola Bleaching Cream $100,000 FUND FOR TEXAS COLLEGE Big Enrollment Increase Speeds Up Institution’s Building Plans Prattin View, ‘Tex, Aug. 20— Prairie view Stags oie nat fiatwerit os Moet of ext cinne' te: there Ut its Sttive’ maths ‘seaston Aue T2. the Enelve Inunthe session emoratet ane Thontis Zoe" thy “rtpuiars sessfon. “at the gna for thesis Aimintateation of Prot, We; fe Banks Sa" princitat o€{ tha Institbiton, Splicing the twelve month aire than 4.200 ntdauntat fan Ail wertlons OC the Sune enrolted in the (ue cates He Sina’ the trades ana. Industries. AG he close s¢ the rexular session,” May 21” 60 student were award lie Woe iow of bachelor of welenee and. at the Stmsmer consmenceniont. there, were, Se PME mena samen om whom “i pecie acealnurente Sermon , for th Seize. Wee" andrete, 1... veesid- Wie eters "reich alstriet 0 thin Sh Ghirch South, he commenceynent ad Sheed eae Meuvenr a aa eg Houta ih,‘ privelpal of Booker Waaitigion High schuol, Batti, er ‘The Enceatmreato vnermion, for the quinmer scival Was preached Ly Wet. fe Cote, Ds gee MM, ee Toreit “In hantor “of Teimit? St. Ty GE StaUstes Wan iste Aug a Ly ten Seen rip Melt Ata ete ies. 'S! EL “clutch, ieminghar, Sie unit eae fr the rest sate cel icge for Gur peotie in the Cited States aii ctor oneal Wo Banks Is destined to, place the caliexg Rhone tho ee tn uueation sad tes ‘Forme heen for an enlarsed enrotinent $oqao: was nppeote tat {NSrecent special seemun of the Te Hecisinture Qu erect a three~atees tots Biter bins have, Neen dae, ‘a Tier Wormicors, il “be canmieced as Fapidly' as poeailes Aiready the apni fauons Hrevived indicate that the, en fella ffi aon rs) onin oraes e sare Entertains at Tea for Pittsburgh Visitor alee, Basgares Berens ease 8 Yshetar “fwcinak tea Sunday at the Home of ie ami atese Walter S. Gran, Bead Sonn pareiwae, honoring. St Slanei ‘Tage ne Titsmurcn da, thin fs ‘alta friends tn the wits’ as thn hence Fuost ot Siies Surah Tanner of 4315 Cine Eennea Aves ~ Tssplte shin. inehement ‘eather “hatuy Swembers of ‘Chicasa's June enelat See were ont so, moet tte Rharruine“vistag, “Amon ‘ane pees ante ts shee Pige’were br. and Me. Nethony: Wess, Minses Doretiny Carey: Miran Srannees gh ik” Ghrarelts, tac Chile Ge Neititon, Si ean Leona Tennigeh Wiis Teenie Eenestiig ier ing, Mareneity iovels, “Lath. Meuse, ibaa Nest, Tiaae! Remtroe. Warient Ba ram Shae, Stare Sheiton, iin Eateen nt Wangkinsor. ie te SMES Aue Wells of chariottravte, Vals tate Atle‘ aleines Slargneee Warr, dams Eish= te Fences ivaver of Ienavak Clee, Kean Mis Hiuch Taerutsn, Ass and Mie, Tiel” IGA Miatmans es aaa Me tess Chay atgeniny Toward Shaw, coelt Te oF Washington. 1 c. Whiian Knox of Regan, Maser” tve, 12 Ii ashe, ears Be Binhans istaard 1 demas, tomer ThoPtems Letele aru aces Seozt, Faaelte fon Caer Cinad ante pile Remit Mecur Siahons, ain Cunminshatn et Rilents, “Ga be." Spuregon = Mati, Mite’ staviee ahd slim Cuaed, Miss eynelas war Caseietede im. serine he AWiSD tue tee Diss Wakeey Grant na’ shisy ‘Mactaia Hixesmain. Atlanta Miss Visiting _ , Relatives and Friends SSS AEST Townes, age 12 or Atunias, Gi Sho bus Juat Srduated. from peters ie apenas Siew ielen fis Gottars Bae. fall w hse e she | ee | ees Bee 1B. of Atlanta, Ga. EEE) ro hus Suse Frduneed from tho Edmond 47! p Ware grammar A BG | scteot. 35. arena PM A ire tier vacction, 2 ME) win ber aunt, BREW SGM | Sie ticien coir, ° zis Cottage Sy SEP Geos aN Sage) of marie wail be atven Bert dau hoe tor. She I 1 | SE Re Pte LA Gc ittee ke eh tee Sui ‘Miss Daisy Townes hish, : ty Townes ENTERING WT, HOLYOKE Meta ee Srammhadn snd asusicer seam, we nea tenet grate ato uf Atants unieecsity hich when! ites in dee eas: OSice elaine ts face bm ties sity. pling Cue Advice tthe Wise end Otherwise Hotel Brookmont Michigan Ave. at 40th St. CHICAGG iis anc in Sethe mere Gerrans wlmacae: ae ee om Mere ye oes 8 made Fre indie { SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1927 afer ime, aga and ye cap love Roe hurgive hate” What inuse do? CH “A ‘chat ‘has: hig donations foo, | Wael fa Woman {voniy using with ‘2 ina and Sueeare ho Marta tes to never. sie AMisei iodo alenose anbeiinws She ts ffeacto de te" Slacriage oes a Pelz ho ishnd of eaters. Your alleged weit thal tet gegen fo you (oben ee oat aca, ean fou hey 0 the ‘alalster sau geyeated che worde “P do. Rotates he disvairus a marriage duaetirn ot tober there fs ne Bate blog’ thie Is acroné and in oraer™ She TORE “nhich to the" woaler. a5 The di to 'Your so ulsplavent her feelinws Bee ee aidacy “She wit never be ant thing “but truabier Hat love ta Ue Puce on ‘and git, There ia nal, to Autor among thigres, ue what ail Cee Bente ga cwhat kind’ ofa thet fe ia. Ronin Peay be yourselt. Dear felons: Again I am ovetloated Pencerarac cesar Joune and waned. “lock Bae hese: tron Fou” Remember your atamps.—PHin- gi irs. Matilda Mack, Birmingham, Ala. pong ae eS AE “Saoied E. YeUliame, Avlanta, Ga. wine sang Stee, Mary wlan lie Wis 7e"s. Mitson and Edward_Cardan, Aiots, Gaetan SAEs, Are. Agie Deit oulséitta? Ky, wtstte sna Mids Via Bell, Seis Indl Aves Voit i Stevie, ‘Puscummbla, Aimy Hiae tga bie Usoiners ie Be "Steet “WIE “Mr. and Mrs. W. Jenkins, Omaha, xen: visiting rtitives at 88 Brewaing “Size. tester | Mardeman, | Topeka, ‘Kans. visiting Mr, Lenora Bei 8526 SAhopete is Viens, Montsomers, Als HEME, eg doses Eh, Sis unite Sf, Chadwick, Brooklyn, 3 Sinking Siege hiova wally 6538 Bkeriaede ave Sie and Sits: 1. ¢ startin, Bieming- yom Als. Vining Ste end ‘airs Seth Tak Sik. auth'se Silty Atated Waeriion and atee. Stary Liowts Toeds, Ohias siting Mes. Mets ERAS, Tit Sichtesa ace ie and. Ales 2 De Alexander, Rice minghainy Alby vloltigg Sie and Sew Fee Aiceandee, Soon Prateie Ave. rede White, High Eaist S.C sine, Stead steateasy sfeaeees Albert Harrell, Phijadetphia. Pa., vie ung tea ard Ma, Mente MeAfery 22 Sage “sire'S Sf. Vaurhn. Riemingham, Ata. yeas ie aH, Seah igs vies George, ©. Graves New Toni [fan inking Ses. Mavlon’‘Beastes, 4353 Caimet ve. ‘em 'aitidire, Nene, York, visiting ates Saion Brastogs 4629 Calimet Anes LEAVE FOR VACATION Mc, anid Mes, Adetphus Tazri of 6st4 Lange avec bf chtaea areas for Aveat'Taden “Springs. Inte Theis sans friends hope Tent Mir. Harris. will fore Sei Moke tcl iae tage peed incurtnn peers: _ A G45 . 2 St Re INSEL, SNe; 7 sr Y Por Me } —_——— |_ Thick Lips Made Thint sn puree eri, oe atime, Jost name | SREY tts sha Rv tate Sea sin pec aah eet thei Tiboaiet Beaeaneer ue ies Thee eal pes ot Ah tree ne ac Mee el incl else Socal oie (bla St! SEND. NO. MONEY-—Jit send, sour Sen ay ualteoee pore card wal te iat ony HE38 Sal ioe Blase PEE vere toda amt we Mt include RS Eat AE REEL OP I HORUS A ene iee berets Lawratorics, a1 E: ineison St Doreen ate --- TENNESSEE AGENTS WANTED THE Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY Wants Energetic, Reliable and Trustworthy Sales Agents IN ALL COMMUNITIES WHERE THE WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY IS NOT ON SALE Bigger Profits Than on Any Other Weekly Newspaper FOR AGENTS' TERMS APPLY TO CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE CHICAGO DEFENDER 3435 Indiana Avenue Chicago, Illinois SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1927 GALLATIN, TENN. NEWBERN. TENN. Walter Sorrell of Bishkek died in the day. His funeral was held at the G.P. church in Newbern Saturday, Rev. D. K. Browne hosts the Bon Ton club Thursday, hosts the Bon Ton club Thursday, having a lay amputated, Mrs. Bertha Cherry of Toledo is in town, Mrs. Eliza O'Brien of Mrs. Ben Pinnon Linda Meyers Wyatt of Mrs. Ben Pinnon Linda Meyers Wyatt of Providence, Ky, and Miss Myrra Atkins of St. Louis motored to South Chicago attended the funeral of her Chicago attended the funeral of her children of Moryama, Ark. are in town. Rev. and Mrs. Bishop of Mar. Miss Louie E. Mrs. Bawns and others Miss Louie E. Mrs. Bawns and others attended the funeral of Mr. Sorrell. BOLIVAR TENN SPARTA TENN. SHELBYVILLE, TENN MANCHESTER TENN. ROCKWOOD TENN The 5th annual session of the grand lodge and grand court K, of P. of Tennantana, Tenn, with Grand chancellor N. N. Reynolds presiding. Quite a huge crowd attended the grand sitting, Mrs. Cora Bell Meeks, Mrs Sallia Welsher, Mrs. Jock Smith, Mrs Emmia Brown, Mrs. Bettie Mills, Mrs. Emma Brown, Mrs. Rey, Semper Carpenter of Nashville, Mrs. L. E. Height of South Pittsburg, Sarah Rells. She was the honored guest at an elaborate dinner party at Ralph Smith of Louisville, K. is visiting Miss Coel Howard of Harriman, Wood to be participants in the dinner HARTSVILLE TENN TRENTON, TENN. DYERSBURG TENN DECHERD. TENN. Miss Anna Clark of Nashville is the daughter of Mrs. Caleb Darwin were in Cowan recently. Mrs. John Buckner was called the mother of the husband, who is very slick. The newly married husband is continuing to grow stronger under the auspices of L. Smith. Elder Taylor and Mrs. Caleb Darwin deacon. Mr. and Mrs. L. Smith spent the last few years with wife and wife, Mrs. I. W. Acklin and Mrs. Ethel Sours spent the week at Columbo Young. Mrs. Mary Jones is visiting Miss Anna Clark is very ill in Chicago. Mrs. Rosella Potter has returned to Evansville, Ind. Mrs. William Jones is visiting in Chattanooga. William Jones has returned from Chattanooga where they visited their children. Elder Lamar Zimmerman and the A. M. E. church Friday night. SPRINGFIELD, TENN. Miss Alberta Hunter is the house murderer. Mich. Mick, Mgr. Gisel Chatham has returned from a two weeks' vacation in Detroit, Mich. Mgr. Gisel Chatham has returned from a two weeks' vacation in Dawson Springs, Ky. Miss Katrina Hammond has returned from a fitness, MJ. Mia R. Race and C. T. Woodward notored through Dawson Springs, Ky. Miss Katrina Hammond notored through Dawson Springs, Ky. Miss Katrina Hammond notored through Dawson Springs, Ky. BELLS, TENN. TULLAHONA. TENN. LINDEN, TENN. JOHNSON CITY, TENN. On Monday, Aug. 3, the churches of freedom, Rev. G. A. Edilson, A.M. once Merrik and wife who have been McKinna Thomas Carvellweather, re- of for Kingston, Tenn. to visit relatives, city. She has been reaching in Chattanooga. She has been reaching in Chattanooga from Hindsville, W. Va. Mrs. She has returned from Cincinnati, Ohio. JELLICO TENN THE CHICAGO DEFENDER CALIFORNIA NEWS LOS ANGELES By MARIE LANGUMS ROUT One of the smartest affairs of the city was the Clayton was hostess Monday evening, Aug 8, to her husband, J. H. Clayton, and evening was spent in dancing and bridge, beautiful prices were given, and Mrs. Clayton received the Mrs. Rebecca Bolin and daughters, arrived in the city this week for an extended visit. They will be joined later in the city. While here they will be the wise guests generally Miss Dorothy Howard of Topeka, Kansas. Miss Elia Mathews accompanied with a friend recently in honor of Miss Robinez Hobbes, who will be the others present were Miss Corinne Bradford, Miss Dolly Townsend, Miss Books of Berkeley, Miss Rena Muskleton, and Miss Thompson, Miss Margaret Vernon and Miss Camille Wilson. In the city after spending her vacation in Dr. Anne Lleget gave a very interesting paper on social tales Tuesday morning and associate members of the Rt. Ft. Louis Browne, 25th Ft. Elkton. Mis Mamie Francis and Miss Alta Musa of friends on a Catalina trip Mergey. The Students Girl Reserve had their firearm firemite museum and the Pleasures it can firearm museum and the girls had a very delightful evening. The Play's Art-Life-Mo club is giving a special garden Wednesday evening, Aug. 17. Sport clothes will be in order. Arthur Cole is going on his vacation There is just one keep the skin THE FILM OF "THE MIRROR" BY JOHN B. HARRIS, AUGUST 1915. There is just one right way to keep the skin clear and smooth Skilled physicians recognize the appearance of pimples, boils and other skin eruptions as being an indication of an abnormal condition of the skin. Thousands have been enabled to free themselves of these unsightly blemishes by taking a course of S.S.S. an annoyances. You owe it to yourself to try S.S.S. eruptions. It improves the processes by which the blood is nourished. You suffered from impure blood—was right. I didn't look natural. I had pimples and was also bothered with an itch. I didn't look right. I didn't look natural. I had pimples and was also bothered with an itch. I didn't look right. I also had boils one after another. MISSOURI SALISBURY NO. EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, NO. The Main St. Baptist church is manning onward. The rally and basement. The affair raised $1,200 for the club led with $500 under the supervision of the superintendent, followed second and the Katy Fiber club under the supervision of Mrs. Lon Tippler. Thurston returned home after visiting the church. Mrs. Ruth Thurston is visiting relatives in St. Louis. Johnnie Holmes and wife and daughter. Mrs. Payne. Mrs. Minnie Fink left Saturday to chuse Bife. Ike Rife and wife and boy Maurice attended the funeral of Mrs. Brown and boy Monroe left Saturday to demean Mrs. Eliza Craig went to Kansas City Thursday. Mrs. Mary Vaughn Clark was in Kansas City Monday. Mrs. Eliza Craig was gone to California. There were at the picnic Thurs- MACON. MO. MEXICO, MO. Mrs. Ella Medlock is the house guest of Mrs. Henry Johnson on Saturday and Mrs. Fannie Hinech. Mrs. Medlock will be in the city three weeks from now, but it won't be out again. J. C. Curry is also improving. Henry Brown is about to leave William Coleman and Roy Fry left Wednesday for a motor trip through the country. Warfield was a villa for a short time Wednesday. He was an route to the cut Sunday night. He is a patient at right way to a clear and smooth tried different kinds of remedies, but pulled in one and gone. I had to S.S.S. which I did. This was some time ago. Now I feel well and I am gagging. I fetch and it cured me of febrile fetching and it cured me of bolls. I advise all weak and run-down people skin and makes you strong and fills you with energy". Mrs. J. W. Barker, S.S.S. is made from the fresh roots of medicinal herbs and plants and is prepared in a scientific way in a laboratory. It is time-tried and reliable. S.S.S. is sold at all good drug stores economically. The larger size is more economical. and Mrs. E. Trowell and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. E. Trowell and Mrs. O. Morton and Mrs. R. Payne. Among the visitors of the week were Mrs. C. H. H. Williams and Mrs. A. C. Hendry. Mrs. Katie Decatur of Oakland is vis- tating the 21st St. and 22nd St. Mrs. Katie Decatur is a former resi- dent. Mrs. E. H. Jackson of 1535 W. 23rd St. are entertaining, their nine misses in Irish dancing. Mrs. Miss Burge was the guest of Miss Virginia Wintney at a tribute to her husband, F. J. Jackson and Mrs. Z. Jackson and Miss Evely Spiller. Mrs. Eleanor Tetraum of Santa Barbara, called to Los Angeles to attend the state federation. Mrs. M. L. H. Houston, Mrs. John Craig and daughter of Bartokey, who have been the left Monday morning for their home. They attended the federation while Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Holden and Mrs. T. T. Holden Sunday on a vacation visiting friends in Chicago, Nashville, Tennessee, Detroit, and New York to return in September. Mrs. A. R. Wright superintendent of Sunday School was a visitor in the city Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. M. Littles have left on their vacation in the city Sunday, Mr. C. E. League president of Los Angeles was a visitor of St. Paul, Mr. M. E. Lea, Mr. M. E. Lea, Mr. P. S. Kratzer and Mrs. P. Patton, Mr. P. S. Kratzer and Mrs. P. Patton. Bert entertained a few of his friends Sunday evening at his home in the city last week in the city last week en route from Los Angeles to her home at Victoriaville. The checks and balances which the treasury department has vided for have proven out, the taxation department has vided for the treasury department holding the balances. — The Thomas E. Pickler Girls! My Skin is Softer, Lighter and more Velvety since I Started Using Almer's Skin Whitener e Robinson, of West Crawter, Penn, visited the trial box of Dr. Fred Pet- Whitener and Powder some time ago, pleased with them I went to my drug right some more. My skin is a per- I will never be without Dr. Fred Whitener Preparations." and Since I S Dr.Fred Palmer's Miss Willie Robinson, says, "I received the mier's Skin Whitener and and was so pleased with store and bought some c fect success. I will ne Palmer's Skin Whitener Girls! My Skin is Softer, Lighter and more Velvety Since I Started Using Dr.Fred Palmer's SkinWhitener Be a My famous favorite this repi- ring. And address of always to business. Rare cha- gueur of blue-white guarantee. Lost the 55 size at once and 20 co only $2.74 when deli- guarantee. MAGNUS WOR Box 12, Varkick Station, Dept. C.D. My famous "Luck Power Vs. Mind Power" is the oldest Talmatic ring. Ancient worshippers of Fortuna, Goddess of Fortune, wore her emblem always. Great success in love, games, business and various undertakings. Rare charm and dazzling beauty, Genuine 12-K. Gold Filled with diamine, likelihood of being reproduced, guaranteed 25 years. Wear it and follow the "Seven Magic Secrets." Send ce and 20 cents for postage. Pay when delivered. Money Back ed. NUS WORKS Bick Station, New York Dept. C.D. SAN BERNARDINO, CAL. GEORGIA CORDELE, GA. THOMASVILLE GA BAINBRIDGE, GA. DAWSON, GA The Merry Makers Whist club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Jackson Monday evening. August 11. After the meeting, three courses were served by the after getting your skin in the proper condition with Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment, your rouge and powder will be more effective. Companion preparations to Skin Whitener Ointment are: Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment, Soap Powder, and Hair Dresser, to specify Dr. Fred Palmer's preparations to get the genuine, and if your dealer can't supply you, they will be direct upon receipt of price, or the four instructions addressing Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories, Dept. A-378, Atlanta, Ga. FREE SAMPLE If you want to try before you buy, send 4 in stamps for free to Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment, and Skin Whitener Soap Powder. FREE SAMPLE FREE SAMPLE If you want to try beauty products in stamps for free samples of skin Whitener Goutment, and Skin Whitener Scalp. ```markdown ``` PART 1—PAGE 9 hostess. The club will meet next Monday and Mrs. J. W. Hawklett left Tampa for Mrs. J. W. Hawklett day morning for Orange, N. J., where she will visit the guestus Dozer, Jr., has been visiting his parents several weeks in planning her visit. Mrs. William M. Jorlain and her two children have turned home after a very pleasant visit to her parents in Fort Valley. They cities. Miss Maria Peterson of Orlando, Miss Marisa Peterson of L. I. Peterson of Stone Mountain, Va., is visiting Mother and her mother at Fort Gaitha. Peterson and her mother at Fort Gaitha. CORDELE, GA MARIETTA, GA. ALLEN ROGERS COMPANY. 1523 So. Aven. Ave., Depl. 117, Chicago, IL. GLANOL Recommended by a Société physician. HAS A SURPRISE FOR YOU Have Healthy Glands As When Young Write for Special 10-Day Trial Offer. Send money—just your name and address. IT'S A WIZARD OH, BOY! O'rgey, O'rgey, Japo beautifying the skirt, beautifying the skirt, beautifying the skirt, Fr. Driggs, Framed, Framed, Framed, Framed, Will not be bearer, Will not be bearer, Will not be bearer, $2,00. GODFREY KAYOS JIM MALONEY; BEN TAYLOR HURT ```markdown ``` SPORTS KANS Visitors Mad American Giant Last; Also a KANSAS CITY CLUB Visitors Made it Hot for American Giants When Here Last; Also at Kansas City The Kansas City Monarchs have arrived and they don't feel any too good. They dropped four out of five games to the league leading Birmingham club and have their minds set on a revenge out on the American Giants club. Chicago fans are besieging the office at the American Giants box for seats. The Monarchs will play to the largest crowd of the season, it has been predicted. Chicago fans will get their first glimpse of Duncan this season. Duncan hiked off to Japan with the coast barometers and was not with the team in the Birmingham club. Kansas City dropped to fourth place. By winning from the Memphis team, the Giants have come back into the Birmingham follows Kansas City here and the light for first place will really be on. The team will spend the current week in St. Louis where five games will be played. If the Giants can stop the Mount city bunch they'll win. But back in the home lot here in Chicago Dave Malarecher predicts that the Giants will sweep into first place before the second ends, and playoff. If his predictions come true—that means the Chicago club will once again hook up with the Miami championship. Atlantic City won the first half and it looks mighty near like they are going to cop the second in the Eastern league race. Chicago City is here—bid them welcome but as Hawkins says this series will be crucial. The fans are of the opinion that it will be for one or the other of the teams. Let's do some figuring. If the Giants can take all five they will spin even on the season's play as the team show Monarchs, 7. Chicago. It is true that the Chicago club lost horribly in Kansas City, They then they did what Kansas City couldn't do-stop Birmingham in Dirmingham, all in all it should be one hook of some tight ball games and the fans are all waiting for the ump's word to play hall Saturday. We've heard all along the summer "warn till the Kansas City team gets here" You didn't see Giles play first the last time in Chicago. He is a duplicate of Leroy Grant—takes 'on any one of the boys' and hits the pill bird and is a youngster. Hawkins is on center, Mathel on second, Allen at short and Joseph from Oklahoma on third, Johnston and McNair make up the outdoor outfit. Young and Duncan, both flush backpackers on deck, while shufflebackers, the latter out is at short and Mitchell make the pitching staff. The Giants remain the same. Hines is still out of the game with a broken arm, the latter or Miller will play in With Veterans Eyes Southw Big Game at With Veterans Back, Wiley Eyes Southwestern Title; Big Game at Dallas Oct.17 Marshell, T. Tex., Aug. 15, 1964, same year. He may approach its close interest because of a glus to gather around the 1927 football season in various sections of the city for the pro football season. Texas, where in days gone athletics are by the battles have assumed the comfort aspects, especially as regards certain schools in the southern athletic conference. They college, which perhaps is the premier representative in that field and that section, announces a slight change in its schedule for the 1952 season to position it for the Southern conference game, played for the past three years. Wiley has at the Louisiana state fair, Shreveport, has been canceled and the date reserved for an intercollegiate game contested by Wiley. A conference. Negotiations for such game, says H. J. Mason, manager of collegiate athletics at Wiley, have been going on for some time and prospects are body of evidence in a home or forbidden soil. Hurring this realignment, the schedule remains the same and is as follows: Quinn will win Nov. 10; Petrie View at Pruitt View, Nov. 18; Texas college at Marshall, Nov. 4; Sam Monston at Austin, Oct. 21; Bishop Wiley at the Bay, Oct. 24; Thanksgiving day, Nov. 26; Dallas, Oct. 17. Arrangements for this game have been completed, including details for operation of special teams, Oklahoma, and Oklahoma. The occasion will be chosen for a reunion of Wiley alumni. Many of the fans have never been on the figure out just how the pennant slipped from the grasp of the Wild Cats last season when their goal was not crossed a single time and an aggregate of only six points was registered. Other team in the conference had at least one touchdown chalked against them. The old machine is to be overhauled this season if plans of Chief Mentor Long materialize. Most of the veterans will be back, and with the new material in prospect is calculated to produce a formidable aggre 11. J. Mason, president of the southern athletic conference, essays the guess that the conference race will be the most keenly contested in PART 1-PAGE 10 --- ```markdown ``` They have arrived THE Standing # NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Birmingham 16 5 762 Chicago 18 13 147 Houston 18 13 147 Kansas City 11 9 550 St. Louis 11 11 950 Urbana 5 8 385 Memphis 3 13 188 # EASTERN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Bacharach Giants 14 7 667 Cuban Stars 5 4 556 Miami 5 4 556 Baltimore Black Sox 10 444 Harrisburg Giants 6 8 429 Brooklyn Royal Giants 7 1 725 Including games played Aug. 14. the outfield along with Jackson and Davis. Sweat is on first with Jim Brown catching. If they catch a ball, the ball is right field. Maharacher is to return to third with Williams on second. Powell, who held Memphis to a no-hit run, is now equitable. Mebbona is who the Memphis team shut out with a no hit, no run game until Williams error in the ninth. Curry. Harmony will be some series. Len Johnson Victor Over Elliott in 15 London, July 26—(by mail).—At The King, London, last night, in a 12-round contest Len Johnson (Minnesota) opened out and got home a right hook to the jaw, causing Elliott to saturate the knees. Elliott did not go out and had not fully recovered by the third round when Johnson scored with frequent lefts. To the best of his ability, it was obvious that Elliott would make no match for Milligan, as Johnson hit practically as he chose. The rounds were much variation, and by the last round Elliott was in a distressed condition. UNION GIANTS LOSE Proviso pounded out 17 safeties, and beat the Union Giants, 8 to 3, at Maywood Sunday in the Midwest league. years. He contemplates calling a meeting of this body during the early fall prior to opening of the season and some important matter pertaining to athletic activities as carried on in the conference. Referring to the contest with Langston, he says Langston was the first African-American to win the country. Six thousand people witnessed the game last year and he thinks a much larger crowd will be on hand this time. He also calls attention to the years of organized athletics in Texas, Wiley has stood in first place 12 of the 26 and second place during the rest of the time, for the most part uninterrupted. The position being contested. Wiley is a member of the American College Athletic association which is endeavoring to establish a national clearing house for all questions arising in local jurisdictions and which cannot be equitably settled within the organization. This organization will seek to develop athletics along progressive lines with hope of lifting it to a much higher plane than at present obtains. Virginia is the only state where there is great danger of athletics becoming a positive deterrent to the primary aims of the institutions. Dr. M. K. W. Dogan, president of the Wiley College, will embark on the fourth district, embracing schools in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Florida, calling a regional meeting during the coming scholastic year for purposes of working out and adopting a program correlating with that of the national athletic organization. Wiley already expressed a willingness to affiliate with the national organization are Leland, Langston, Lincoln, New York, and Smith. Haven Teachers college. The Wiley representatives voted the proxy of these schools at the last national meeting in Durham last December. The meeting was very satisfactory and feels that as soon as the organization is functioning at maximum efficiency it ought to work marvelous changes in athletics throughout the country. UNION GIANTS LOSE Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY 20 STITCHES TAKEN IN BEN TAYLOR'S CHIN Hilldale Easily Wins From Baltimore Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 11—Due to a collision of the Black Hillel team that occurred Monday, the Baltimore team presented a line-up of pitched up players to battle Hillel in this afternoon fuss. Taylor suffered the most severe injuries and will be out of the game for several weeks with his back in the mud. Dick Jenkins played with his chin swathed in bandages and Bill Monroe, a recruit from Washington, played in. Nip Winers opposed Tarleton Strong on the mound and Hillel barged the contest in rather easy fashion. The Daisies took advantage of the Daisies' best skill in the Sox lose'd in the fourth inning, with the result that two errors, Briggs single, single innings, Mike Stevens triple over Holloway, head showed over four runs and swept up the contest. The fourth inning settled Storm and Judge Vally, who unsteady in the next two frames. DRAKE PLAYGROUND IS WINNER OVER LAWSON THE SCHEDULE Birmingham at St. Louis—Aug. 20. 21. 22 23. 24. Kansas at Chicago—Aug. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24 Memphis at Detroit—Aug. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24 Cuban open. Memphis at St. Louis—Aug. 27. 28. 29. 30 31. Birmingham at Chicago—Aug. 27. 28. 29. 30 32. Kansas at Detroit—Aug. 27. 28. 29. 30 33. Cuban open. Cuban at Detroit—Sept. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 34. St. Louis at Kansas City—Sept. 3. 4. 5. 35. Birmingham at Memphis—Sept. 2. 3. 4. 36. Memphis at Birmingham—Sept. 5. 6. 7. 8. 37. Cuban at Memphis—Sept. 5. 10. 11. Cuban at Birmingham—Sept. 12. 13. 14 15. Memphis at Detroit—Sept. 10. 11. 12. 13. Kansas City open. St. Louis open. The Cheekland club will be given all open their games will not count in the league standings. EASTERN LEAGUE THE CHICAGO DEFENDER CLUB IS Louisville Sox Down Goldbergs in 6 to 3 Game Louisville, Ky., Aug. 14. The White Sox defeated the Goldbergers 6 to 2 in the sixth inning when rain halted the game. The White Sox are having the greatest season that they have ever had. They have won 17 games and best 6. Rowlett has started 16 times and has not been defeated. Next Sunday the White Sox will play Jefferson S. A. C. in a double-header. R. H. E. Goldberg's ..... 020 000 977-2 6 9 White Sox ..... 023 010 97-2 6 9 Batteries - Aubbach, Zonner and Myers; Rowlett and Wattkins. LEAGUE CLUB TOO FAST FOR COLUMBUS Detroit Stars Take Twin Bill EIGHT THE FOOTBALL TEAM Crack box team of the Eighth regiment, Illinois national guard, which won two second, one third and two fourth place honors in the annual championship of the team. They are, standing, left to right: Private A. Brown, Company D: Private J. Mason, Company K: Captain Pitts, Corporal G. L. (Rough House) Wilson, trainer, and Captain Foughton, Company A. Kneeling, left to right: Serget S. Taylor, Company A. Allie Foughton. — *Photo by Woolard.* --- ISH MALONEY IS KNOCKED OUT BY GODFREY End of Bout Comes in First Round Philadelphia, Pa. Aug. 16—George Godfrey's one-round knock of Jim Malone face last night was one of the highlights of the day, as the Malone has seen in a long time. Maloney was pushed out of an immediate contention for the heavyweight crown, which he figured to trim the 233-pound Lowe-ville man and force himself into more big-money bouts. There was really nothing to this, but Godfrey gave him, looking against the rope. As Jim bounced off Godfrey go a right upward with every ounce of his weight behind it. The long boy weat down that on this face. It was a waste of time for Referee Tommy Kelly to count. Everyone in Shipe park could see that Maloney. This puts Godfrey into humble running as a contender for the championship. He is not only the biggest, but the best, and hit. Whether he has overcome the fatness of heart that characterized him when Jack Renault made him quit no one knows of, course. Godfrey has an ideal heavyweight prospect. Michigan City Downs Pullman Car Co., 9-3 Michigan City, Ind. Aug. 11.—The Michigan City Wonders defeated the strong Pullman Car Co. team, 9 to 3, in a well-played game of baseball at the Wonder's park. Chamberlin for the Wonders pitched steady ball throughout the entire game. The fielding of Lions Chambers of the Wonders featured. R.H.E. Sunday, Aug. 21, the Wonders will play the deciding game of a five-game series with the Chesterton Boosters. R.H.E. Pullman Car Co.001 002 000-3 8 2 M City Wonders 000 340 20-9 12 0 Baskerville and Welles; Chamberlin and Huff. Mickey Walker Wilson Yark Mickey Walker Will Meet Wilson Yarbo in Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio, Aug. 16—Wilson Gilbert, 19, Yardon, but betting ram from out General Ave. way, will have a swing on Mickey Walker's cinnamon and chocolate Tuesday evening at Walter Taylor's bowl, out Newburgh Heights way. Wright, a weight champion of those United States and England since gaining the middleweight title by a rank decision, for Portsmouth, M. Yardon, who by the way by the way, has a knotless valentine with his wife, didbless his month. TH REGIMENT BOXING By WILBER M. COOPER 一 Knocks Out His Man, Who Later Dies; Arrested Denver, Cob, Aug. 13—Cherrie "Snee" Nunn, boxer, tonight faced a charge of involuntary manslaughter for the death of William Madden, 23 (white). Denver boxer, who found under the name of "Jack Madden." Nunn was arrested on orders of the State boxing commission and Foster Cline, district attorney, unanimously charged with manslaughter charge which he filed. Nunn floored Madden with a smashing right to the jaw in the fight. Madden lay prone while the referee counted four, then attempted to rise but fell back to the floor and took off. He died in a hospital here today. DETROIT COPS PLAY CHICAGO POLICE NINE Teams Meet Sunday at Wrigley Field The final day of the annual field meet of the Chicago police department will be held next Sunday, Aug. 21, at Wrigley field. The big feature of the closing day will be a championship baseball game between the Detroit police department and Chicago. There will also be a series of inter-city athletic events. Headed by Mayor Charles W. Smith of Detroit and Chief of Police W. P. Kutledge, a delegation of five hundred Detroit city officials and policemen will attend the closing day to cheer the Detroit police athletes on to victory. The police band, together with Chicago's police band and the Chicago police octet, will furnish the music for the afternoon. There will also be color drills other features. Every dollar derived from the meet goes to take care of the widows and orphans of Chicago policemen. The games start at 1:50 p.m., rain or er Will Meet bo in Cleveland M. COOPER Old feet by connecting on the Mack's insa receiver and thereby acquire the title which once was in the possession of the Georgia deacon. It is this same type who groomed the North Carolina match Meycely-Lanford, Meycely-Sage and flowers versus Chuck Wiggins bouts. Other good bouts will lead up to this banner collision with Tony Aaron both whiteweights in the semifinals. These boys put on the best burr wit- nished in these perils for years and the match was so even and pleasing the reserve and referee called the bread a draw. TEAM --- SPORTS BROWN STARS LOSE TWO TO THE HORNETS Miller and Moore Do the Hurling BABY JOE GANS KAYOS RAMIES IN 8TH ROUND San Diego, Calif., Aug. 6—Baby Joe Gins, lightweight, knocked out in the eighth round of a scheduled 10-round bout before last night. A succession of hits and rights to the head they not in the center of the ring to open the sixth round. To his knack the final count could not get up. Chicago Giants Lose 11 to 1 Game to Mills Southern U Fo Will Start P Southern U Football Squad Will Start Practice Sept.14 Bv G. L. NETTERVILLE, JR. Southampton, La. Aug. 15, 18—C. L. Holmes, sometimes called "Big Chirley" of Colorado college football and for five years of athletic training at Southern university, has been retained as tutor of athletic activities. During the five years that Coach Holmes has guilded the destiny of the southern squirt the football eleven has not suffered a defeat at the hands of a college in the Gulf C. W. Thompson, four letter man from Willerforce college and at one time head coach at Western junior college, has guided coach and tutor of the basketball quintet. The combination of Holmes and Thompson will no doubt give coaching staff in the Gulf Coast conference. At the annual midsummer powwow attended by Coach Holmes, Coach Thompson and Manager Netterville. Coach Holmes announced the issuance of the call for all football men to report for practice on --- SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 19: FAY SAYS- Joe Shellman Team Ducks Langston U The League Race Wilson Yarbo CHICAGO has a little fast boxer in the person of Joe Shelham, who the fans have dubbed "the greased streak of light P Joe is a comer, a st chef, a st wee through with four vibes and a d hits with vibes. We Williams, prefers a big future for him. Bella weeks we blow into Couton's gym on end St, where Joe was during his stuff before weeks. We liked the way he stepped around and went about his work. He put the ring for three rounds and we saw plenty of lista. Write his name down in your memory book. Joe Shelman, 122 pounds. Watch him. LANGSTON UNIVERSITY wants to know why Howard, Wiberger, Skeggee or Atlanta won't play them. Unfortunately Langston is way out in Oklahoma, but they have a football team that is worth going noles to see. Langston is willing to pay the expenses of a team to come there, but a football team that is worth going noles to see. The whole truth of the matter is all coaches are afraid of Langston's formidable team. They are being around the bush about it. Langston has a team well up in the running, equally as good as the team at Howard or West Virginia. That is saying a whole lot, but it's true. This year we hope some athlete director will appraise the public on in intercolonial game. Wiley is another school who has sent out invitations for a game at a season game, but receives no answer. DON'T look like the American Giants will win the second half of the Nets National league race. Memphis is giving them a time of their lives. Don't look like Kansas City will win it either—not if Birmingham keeps the dizzy pace they started on. The play-off seems, at the present time, between Birmingham and the Chicago team and it will be a battle with Memphis. But before we figure too far in advance, Kansas City comes to Chicago Saturday for five games and Birmingham takes the American Giants must win all five to split even on the year's play with the Monarchs. To date the Monarchs have won five clubs stands, Monarchs, 7, Giants, 3. There you have it. WILSON VARROI meets Mickey Walker in Tampa and we are of the opinion that Wilson's manager is carrying him along a bit too fast. Walker should win on the strength of his experience. He has a bitter and a bitter and may get in one of those awful wallpops that will end Mickey, you must remember Mickey is a lower layer and should be able to handle it. Cleveland fight fans must not let their good sense run away with them. Don't expect too much of Earls. Don't expect too much. St. Louis Wins One; Rain Victor in Other St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 14—The St. Louis Stars defeated the Grandered Tampa Bay Lightning in the only game of a scheduled double-header at Stars park on Simmons Avenue. The game was off of the schedule when a heavy downpour in the last half of the first inning made the field unit for further injury. A home run by J. Russell in the fourth inning put over the winning score. M. Williams had the score with a home run just previous to Russell's waltion. featuring played the game with five double plays being made, three of them by the St. Louis Stars. With the loss was the leading batter, with three hits in four times at bat. Flowers, Anderson New York, Aug. 16—Tiger Flowers, former middle-weight champion, was matched power to box Kentucky. Sept. 14 at Madison Square Garden. Sept. 11. Yes, they will come—come trickling from the four corners of Louisiana. "Captain George (Hog) came to the city," accompanied by D. Count) Davis, the incomparable end, and L. (Honey) Washington, the center of centers. From the Tucobee City, Tucobee Vous, Wiley is the password will come. Wiley "Ho" McMillion, the flashing end. Then from the highlands of Opelousas will come Tucobee Vous, the gas lands of Monroe. Anderson and Ford will journey from the home of the great sawmill at Boguesa. "Kich" McAlamond will come Vickersburg and from far away Chicago. The Windy City, will come "Marty" Breaux, the speed merchant. They will rob Johnson will report from the hills of Patterson. Patterson. And finally the Mule brothers, John and Boocher, will come from the hills of Cofax. The Mule and only one suit will be heard from. BIRMINGHAM BARONS TRIM MONARCHS FOUR TIMES RHE Sicoorcenter BS GOFF WINS SOUTHEASTERN CROWN Isadora Channels Cops the Women’s Singles at Norfolk After Losing the First Set often cts Taat"a'ts [Cusick Kayoed | ee cae by Neil Clisby arene! Bans _—_ ee ee Sikoaty late Egy SoMa or me eo Cee Se, RS OST Nor ah Be TE ites Ae Ode i coil tet a Taeits “Sle ow = Birmingham 6 Ja aaitionl wenen Se ——— Singles “chao. formerly of Chi, Goff Eugo but ‘now of “tounoke, Va. where she is taking Simonse incinvesine. eamne the Slit dpings colors ta win the Hele ar ghe women's singles over Mlx« Hlanite Hrown after aliss Brown had Drought she sallery to thelr feet by tuming back’ Misa Channels inthe first set 6—4, The finale count was $265, Fin os tor Miss Choments. The finale of the men's, doubles wan halted by darkness amd WH he Geeided at Hampton this week, where the nationals are. in progress. “The tournament waa the best ever helt he the Southeastern Assockl Hor. he summaries follow: MEN'S SINGLES rast seumtod Be, Wileioa Washing seks yet: Sinner, hres ee de te Sih steel Madge Wied Som tea eet Fee ing Titanate ges eT ma Fee Oi Mined Wea eee Wrirkauee timneaan Se Se vitamins tess, op ifean” stoutitich Geet Aeneas, ne Mi, Lom Wee ae ane hae a: Le Sire dette Wise taNieal, 2" Gos the A Roan eareaiyehines Feed ies tanec EES lied Ugo! lama eatbony ieaaaet abated Wes Ee vanity be dent AERC Sch nee ae Biniuct o2, Gog NEY piitonte ‘ut Wants Coy: Grea BAL eabars bens, 3 Wend, Get Be Toatatee ities i rete raya Ne aeitbeneem peated we UMA Tale Stuer dette ete Se Se seagate Saas eine deteated Wee Mints, Wine baie ty Wy Patan detested ye he Oat a: WE ae ae apt Neca wet Reba Wea ator 3, ta steuet defeated Low aa ei Geis MU A Kean dof, Eo ath oh Eh aihianr eta Hate sass cas Milne Clase enn Hemeratine ae 9, teat antguent ted ta WonlseStie atvaneed Re uetnult: Seater at HRT US dutaniee watne nitaneed dp de HEC Te eine ndesmced hs deta “Fede ee vlacen ent Sat sail 2 aco: Punmoge detested °C Fc ae eS a a Ae ag at! a sunt elt PRI Satier ora, ead, eae Se fe bets Wie pale, Sie oe Seats ee Sate eee eld EP Siete ea SEF aati ea ot iat a tance tented Wilkie eee rie ist ee ae fk. GOR, Sede MUS cca Oat Ga Sots Soe, Bech aifselte detest BOGE dewcines 8 aE hte, race deconted, toate eee Peat sichateedrivated We Some, G8. ER ee Pes oS Thal teak Porkseze, 62 Pata aaron LADIES: SINGLES Fiest_mnd lee Inlora, Cina Ruan Meese Sea leg Sees stage ae Sees Ey AM seue eay e nae ae EER Mea taenniin, Soh stetatn Mindy se. “Selor aiden Sg BREE aS AINE aber ie Riots Wearable Feaedey er Hines ies tettcade eect, diane de eRe ate ihead elgteg tea Sia Satan Lawman oot en Me Teenage Giger. red Sti Haale te CE Riots! RS cman defies. 3 encibe: God, Ost Mom, vioerty aefentn! Mi Fei Cate te asthe Hite detest Bi Sitter dogs goat he Meee eres SMM eSise Channel. defontnt Me EES Guan ete Mh Seer, feo Goa "asic stn oatven, Changes detest 3 Raubte inomes $a, bate JUNIOR SINGLES Tyret nwnd-Tionags Catiomag. (Reameke) aot an ahaa Her Neate teak Whaat giie eae geen, ads teen Heat aS? Tunas Sea eased, Wrtate Mecsas PaaS IE itn etic Ney Nise Saaur, tet tree an ‘Kaen rount—Callonay defeated Merit Sree Minka ned hac n, Bee Satie’ anoint nears, wen G2 Als Stal tetlean es a: ‘Soaldnatetattoear geteaied Guatt, 62 oes atest stom ha 3 Pika Teds Cahokey teeated Ehoms seat oor es. ‘MEN'S DOUBLES Piast qwundmsteGe and FW Yat cet TNE A atte ipa? {Risin cg eke ton 1Waeuinatom ‘aud Ue. Meas. Lanier) LEONE cc anh Mirigh Lanter hint Seciat date ots aug ot Sits anna! ct ela Maes hae Song a SETI Hina ad feainca tye War et Fite 2c 0 att babe etd anke sheen sid ieasing a accel be eanies Waa ak erat elton Ast ectanh "ae Under teteated actos Baie Staats Cy fede os hapten Ret Siedeated" Astin am Bessey on, Rohn ee ait Yara TER Ndi teas, a Mervepd tlt ehaus cnet ae i TTEDE ponte peiit apt Dogon. detente Sn! 2 eg aia haa ae a oes for Pac teens rm aot Sa Feteng aa in, ees “inbebie Bic vind Damian, defer when a eee, aa a ees Sanaa cae weeks Seen ™ SPait at te hantied, a1 matirents, 3 seg tnt ental ten eet fuer ert Oo GEE hull tie aus ecto aces eee Bead tM stie uakted aie ‘MIXED DOUBLES top oiydBt s+ Chandy ol Bo Ce Dea FS Mes ite desig tee Sa dea "Eccl diay nad thane 4 atianga) deat EA Gi ie Bat RY atos see nied Ste Trent iat net asnes G2 gay ae eh Fea pe ra, cae ie ° “Sad tooal ae Chane ant. fh ggieied Me virte at iver to So Rite Sot Fier nana yea SHE Wace dea Wettstt deteane St Butane, 6 OSE See tes Se SALE LeIiST Sis Fear td? Leon Tnttonis Misa Clinnnete and Deowning 4 seve NS Duin nad Hate, ea et Supaty AN dR ie ts Pinalorstise Bat" and Cooke defeat witha ant Tenants Ge es Ses ices: OAs | The national income for 1924 was a hillion ower that for 1923. 1824, aw SOK, Aounitexs eenil, Was -an_clectinn year ig Tilnois and Penasyivania—St. Louls — ee Boot MS ee ye, Cusick Kayoed by Neil Clisby et Birmingham Wins 4From Kansas City Kansas City, Mow Aug, game mingham by winning the final game Gf the series here with the Kansas Gity "Monarchs ran their string of Wits te four, the only win of the Hionarche being ‘the opener of the double-header Sunday. ‘Tie opening game Saturday was won by the visitors. 2 to 1, Salmon Holding the Monarchs to six bingles, While his mate was getting to Wil- iam’ Bell for ten. "A last frame rally which placed three men on the paths with no outs Miss nipped when the next three bat- Yers were retired in order. ‘The Monarchs with Rogan, on the slab and) Duncan. wearing. the shin guards teok the opening game of the Gouble bill Sunday, € to 1, beating Streeter, portside aco for the visitors. The aftermath went to the Bir- mingham club, 7 to 5. ‘The Monarchs were never, able to overcome, a. three-run advantage Gained off Brewer in the first stanza. With Poindexter on the | mound Monday, the Barons won, 4 to 3, in {O° innings after the Barons tied the count in the ninth. Rogan and Duncan took up the bur- den of Mitchell and Young with two men_on the bases. Giles took Mere- Sih’s pop flyin. right. field, threw Parnell’ out “at the” plats, Duncan Whipped the ball back to first before Williams could tag up and complet- ing a triple play. Gurley. first man up in the tenth, tripled to left, sprinted kome with the winning “ran on Alexander’ single, The Barons won the final game Tuesday, 11 to 3. They bumped threc Monarch pitchers for a total of 1 [Nits:, Williams, the Baron's catcher had a perfect day at bat, getting four hits out of four times up. ‘Thompaon's running catch _ on Mothel's drive to center wae a fea- ture. “Kansas City, Mou Aug, 13— RH. E. Birmingham -...001 606 001—2 10" ( pRapege Si 900 O10 OOH. 7 Batterics—Saimon and Williams; W. Bell and Willisma. Kansas City, Me. Aug, 16—R.H. E Biemingham ..500 O20 131—11 18. ¢ Kansas City... 000 300 000— 3 10 Gatteries—Dean, Salmon, Poindex- ter and Williams: Brewer, Tyler, W in cos Danser: Sodan: Hilldale Wins, 6 to 3, From Crippled Sox Philudetphka, Aug. TR—DEH Cock volts inst bull waa aig puzzle. to The ‘baltimore. Black “Sos ml he Margtand team svene winter ht a sharp Aan the bash Datsiow at HM dale'park by the score of to 3. ‘Ralle “from “having kis. apitball working ‘with telling effect ‘in the Jinches, Cnekeell supptled the punch Hine put the hone team oul infront Trine. sixth inging. itis single. to Senter Geld sent George Jobson over the jeuy ‘with the run that broke the ue av 3 al Pete Washington, center elder of! the visiiors: shared the apodight with Conurell —hitrhion: TELDALE iia 3 Hina, spinseag 10 A aia FST piers eye rca a ee tera bk cata ts de irda 112 wimam Woo g 2 G weve 2h 1G taza e. 8 a ¢ Heione ay 2 Seana Y VE S freee Ab Simian 2 2G Hates BAG saris 8208 Pore fon @ ov “twain, PAHS Teale. BAB Tieted tne Sekiya nin patina Oe Te BSB 9 9 o ane BANDE coscing 62 808 28 83 Be Bie. are “alee ak eth aa roa Si EERE ie aha he A oe sili: Ba pee aaa eee Farmers Obtain Only Three Hits Of Oscal New York, Aug. 18—The Cuban sigey ann wit the Farmers 4 to @ 10 he fivet_sqime ot ‘the. doubleheader Re Farmers oval yesterdays. The sees fond wane waa postponed: on account Hee Maer TS Coban Atars sees GO OO 24 Fare LIAO) O88 a name ‘eer ttecba,“Feawe Me Cresgen Home rentihiny, otra pane Aon, iat 0 [alle thecal 2: Of See $e Stewed out eT ee gts HOMESTEAD GRAYS SWEEP LG. SERIES Mitr 2 30 8 8 Wee aes GGA aE it ret Maloney Is Too Much for Jamaica Kid New York, Aus, 13.—Refore une of tie fanart seowes dhe ever stented tho argloge tetues staged thee Ds tee panic aretia bast nit, timume:Sla~ fonds oman stron: boss welshing wea oumuss iavoekced. vat” the. well: inowin veteran, dninaica Kid, weight= tine iste inthe fourth roan Sain was Sialones"s frst Neh sine hin defeat ne the “hands ot Jack filarkess Miatoney. started “to. tulee ininwa cass; just standing off ‘and Hariag Carith Yamaieg Weta” doing Mente of ducking uneil the clown of Tie'round. wenn Stalones’ natled ‘him itn hed rheit jut an the bell Tu sending tie hd to" his corner in’ erogey condition. ‘th minute, fest did the 1k) a tot of grord for he salted. right nto. M0= Tonge roe cateking hint ssithen, fone Malid'sveinigs the rotind ended with the Heit fall of smiles: geting as if he did Det atuwe what Ie was al shout, "rhe hind gpand. waa ike 2” bur- rosie, as tive Kid was ranting around The'ning with Atatonesatger him thea ‘he’ nalied hime with a ight ind Jamnlee took, m count of five. and darely finishea the round Staloney’ meni business ta the fourth and went right attr the vets Stun and ehased hist around the Ting inti he eaushe him with a lett to the five and aright to the hearts and the Faia as counted ute The {ime was fe mate sind. four aeconda of ‘the fourth round. A ges Cuban Stars Lose - to Pittsburg Pirates Pittsburg, Kana. Aug. 14.—the| Pitsburg “Pirates” hammered «helt Way Wa IL 10 1 deelston over the Gahan’ Stare of the Negro, National fengue todas Gien Tarlo, Pirate twieler, hotd the teaguees to ale hits sind sxivucls out sig oats vtltoped Bite for 14 hits. Thor fielding in the first inning prevented the Pirates from shutout. Roy Pruett ied ins tho. hitting swith tree singles.” Score: | RHE Cubans .....-+.100 009 900— 7" 63 Bivatee 20205121020 008 2311 18. 3 fitaories 2'Diae and Cableron? rntrle ant Oatertett. A Forbes Is Given Nod After 10 Good Rounds / Pasadena, Cal, Aug. 5--Frankle eniestens: Gils adiMover Erankle Burns inthe lo-round main event. of tie Pastdena armory card last atsht, {Pony Thompson won by. a technical Teoekout inthe fourth. round of Scheduled sis-roun seinivindap {vom Timmy: sail, Joe Clark. defeated ob Senuretrer iy a techincal knock- Out inthe fourth round of a seled= Gilea ‘six-round spect. dle Reed Suipointed Johnny Heyward in one fourcrounder and ‘Happy Romero ‘won from Kid Bobo by decision inthe aetaen Langston Will Have Strong Eleven With John Williams and Doster Back in Line-up Langston, Olita. Aug. 34-— There, remains just 20° dase vetiveel now Tea the time, when’ Caytatn John Totor witlatss aseumes. for the Tan unme the role of leading: the Tuer he’ hae been fooking. nt tBe Slonian Intersect the uprights. {rom Tiettacoant lines ‘This hoa not ante flat te gonet beenuee the uprights iohag con gorda inore distant Wich tee Meld ia ened meann. thatthe st ts tule ao hare to do 0 tbs ‘fittama recently sctonc sho et aint He intend to beike hie Inet year ws greatent of stat meet the bie ‘three of the Texas conference this taht and they ball all remembar tt [payed thoes an io, eee a0" sd Wittanna tien he Infe for fot fara trip co Colorad, ‘Ghee end wt no doubt have tne weesicns of formar. Capeutn. J stated Caner wie Uaeek 30 2 Tome"pronuuneed the est. football Tone un ihe Oklahoma team, Wien Basr'ie property tuned one has He Mar fee Oucers for “Tishomingo: eee fr concer, A eal hee tek Heed nee te aE on ecole free peter a sure et stortevence 10. Ot, © ltt ine clans ts hes nepal ates ates an defense move. This brainy chap is ee aa Fe tl cgupe wil cht i saan, (Mle) eat Seer tore teeta ete Pat at eke a Tee a ane ee ween ane See eat Ne tie als Be ‘erated log. on which he could barely Sonia Bis elt tein ale Fe ee Se te nia Heures Lame hue sea Fee ne ea aoe amar aa ae et one he Hee ere eee ne Sean ot Ser anaet ae aight of tho chat 1 ia eet eaten a cpm ti Fo a erates Gacat Boater Page MR a Oe oa EEE, scl batts ties sn on CE ie are eee Shee ee ae eet sirot guts often thot oeange, te ee oka bine He Bea autlty Sell aay fue [eee eee attr ent ot ea [Editon a eta ieees and pane oe tine aise hee MMe game. EAM eg of Doster will apnea adie tna thule have artes Sa Ne La aed ay Be aes aa gt ae be Sete OS coer Saslttnt Sach ann eer caine ty aa [ite ‘nen, #0 we OURHL to get A ‘BOO cenit gan et hog there fs St wresint not ml TS cy -wi eal es TA noo it set ast atta? geken Feet ae mt ae Sere ee ree plica of Grange, but means that th Ee erie ta for Linea Tee INE eu te, nee for Lae Se eer sea hl pe ay Ue aoa THe seine emtans Intact excep peri mcetelecomnalas last creer Tae ond apse Jeueeon_ HOS" Hed haceron Renae | Seeks Pree, atts Pees eee Hain ore Saas aie sve ee |iisetl cells aareigc, see iene tary Car Tak aahe aa eee ead aeure in the eee | at tear a easter es | “He is sometimes overanxtous, bu fa 2k soma everson, eat een ir noe fanwasd Ge bel hate ousness is not founed on vad Inten ie : >, We, oe . : af & YG Fae yh or oS ge Clift Bell, above, one of the hurlers for Memphis. and McHaskell, one of the best first sackers in the league. Two Red Sox Star Players a ee ROT - % ers den of the tine work for three seasone. ile Is better able this year thait ever before. Sugge is a rising stars He reealls to ine Tubby Johnson of Fisk. Treneved him fron a game hast season when he wes Just coming te his cen cL apolosizey, He wept | was sorry. Due Feould not undo the thing then. Wien he comes In next week. f shall assure him that his sweeping days are aver. Anderson, who bees the coach's ame, though pot tis Mood. five all_or bis spirit. Me is 2 dependabie man, He plies the etd Site. hard, driving game, Dut he plays ag few men can, He lies played fuartes, Jie mag be calied to th ibtty berth, If So, he will be equal to the oveasion. Quarter Is open, as T have said. hore is 4 chap headed this way, even While Eserlte, who ean do the Jot to perfection, ‘Then, too, Morris, _tike The poor Is always with us, "Bear je a ‘mighty god man. ‘This ts. kts Chance. As Elook threwsh iy fist | Sew 2 hose of Feserves—Elmo Johnson, Teil Joimzon, Countes Jonnson and Kiteken wobngen, Billet, oper, Tu! man, Moore, Hampton, ‘Taylor, Hel Macklin, Sharpe, Shepherd. Wallzee Pevwell, Littlejohn, Mill and Card And. too, Tame tll, 2 new host ap- feats, "Hip" and another player fre utsa: Revant, MeDuilie and another from Muskoxee: Celsp and Unree oth: tee from. Ardmore, and some more from MueAlester and Chickasha, In closing, I wish to say that Lane ston veurets Uiat It was not able t gre cither Tuskegee or Howard t Come te Oklahoma, Both were tn: Shed, so was West Virginia. “it hope: fomeet Wilberforce azain somewhere ‘he schedule: Sept. 24, the Santi Fe Athletic elub at Langston: Oct. 2 Okluhoma state fair game to, be an nounced at Oklinoma Clty” Oct. 7 Samuel Zouston college at Austin: Oct, 17, Wiley colleze at Dallas: Oct 22, Prairie View college at Langston: Ger, 28, open! Now, 3. Arkansas Bay Ust at Tittle Rock: Nov, 11, Lincol university at Jefferson City: Nov, 19 Kansas Vorational cotlege at Topeka: Nov. 21, Alntama (Montgomery) 2 Senet ae Sirona: Memphis at Detroit f lthe craty manager of Pierce's club wa Shoo ile i Eatrday and Sun TUSKEGEE 10 START WORK __ SEPTEMBER 1 ‘Tuskeegee Institute, Ala. Aug. 15. <In another 10 days Tuskeezec’s football campaign will be launched. Notices have been scat out to mem- ters of last your's varsity squad, Frospects from the scrub teams, and Iihers listed as avallabale to play to Piport to the atumnl bowl on Thurs- Gis, Sept. 1 forthe initial workout: Gnd practice. ‘THiS will give the Eitad’ four week's preparation Te- fre the apening game with Siraight college ef New Orleans, La., ow Oct 1 Only six of the first string ever- _urtoriows tenm of last fall ave among Ghose whe will’ report, when Head Coven Atwhote starts his search for hott te TIL tig other five position, Tie outlouk for the backiteld is very Telit. The great forward, wall that Tokl all comers. for the [st three sere hus been sadin depleted. ‘The “opening of foothall "practice coming one Werk before the be:zinnine bi tte school teem, allows only hs Nhues of instruction for the werk. Me ueexence of ‘sterling Backtietd puterial ie the ane bright spot in the outlook for the eleven. and if the Bhes comes through in good fashion flowers nf the team expect & 509d seas. ‘Commenting on the general prox: pects for the Tigers. Conch Ahbot Atited that the main handlicaps present are the [ack of a forwar fasser and the absence of reserves for the Tine. ST peopore to devote a great dea’ of time to the development of a for. Qrard passer and line replacements. Siated Conch Abbott. “The fest tw weeks Will consist of Meche drills, tm: Rering-wp exercises and the eombin ing of new materia! for Likely pros pects.” he continued. Yacoming. foolbalt matorial iso aininown «quality, but the hope ix ex. pressed that promising line timbe: fill be located among the newcom: ors, Hnest T. Bailey of Columbus Miss. Tuskecree's great ‘plunzin) halfback, wilt lead the 1927 ‘Tigers amt will’ roport for the flest practic ideng. with the echer regulars fron a ee eee. Mic Vey Gets Nod in Bout With Kelly Akron. O. Aug, Jn la ee Vike ta Hebe that boy ecin.” Ne was Ik. O. Kelly speaking in bist dressing von after his Jd-reund me- fee in the Armory ring Friday night whl Jaek MeVex. the Haztem eon- tender for the welierweight crown. Just why the Kk. G, person would Wie to Hehe MeVer agin isa mys tory tn this writer, Ane beating the litte of which the New Yorker dotet ous to the lical boy. should: aufilee. Kelly” couldn't. lek MeVey If they fought a dozen times for McVey Is a seranper who knows his uppereuts and jabs. There wasn’t any room for argu- ment ag to the Winner when the bratel came to a close, Mr. McVey Handled ell just thou’ as | he pleased but did not knock him ktek- ing. ‘That was the vac surprise of the evening. K. 0, was there, | or thereabouts when the final ” bell Sounded but he was going around in Cireles, dazed and Vewlldered by the many punches McVey Was. tossing his way, Some of the customers Went away feeling that McVey did hot ppt forth his best efforts in an Attempt to flatten Kelly and it did Took to the writer ais the New Yorker was not shooting iis punches tn as hard as he fs capable of shooting them in the closing rounds when he had Kelly staggering around the sits, fallin into one elineh ater an- other. As we predicted Fritay, Mevey played a merry tune on Kelly’s stomach and tibs with short, hard lefts and rights at close quarters, Tn the first round MeVey was satisited to let Kelly throw harmiess pisnches at long range, Me tonk thins easy to find out what IX, O. had to offer and when he found out he jot down to the business of cutting Wells Aown to his size. He opened up tr the second round with a Vicious Tod Yombardment. that soon had Kells slowed down to a walk. with the bell at every round Kelty sould rush from his corner. Yet 20 3 lett or rizht that usually Tindod ot MeVer's shoulder or elbow, Allo Kelly's dynamite was just so much talcum, power against MeVer. K. 0 couldn't land 2 solld punch on Me- Vey's chin and the few he did ian’ dlin't ‘seem to bother the Harlen dos, ‘There was only one knockdows during the fight and it was Kelly who hit the floor on that one occa. sion. A. few seconds before the hel sounded ending the sixth round, Mc: |Vey shot a stif right cross to th thin following a body bombardmen and K. ©. visited the mat. He wa: Up, However, before Teeferce Edu Davis started te count, From. tha stage of the huttle to the finish Kell was in there catching punches a [fast as MeVer could’ throw ‘em, the eighth Kelly went to his corne || eroggy. ‘The ninth and tenth stanza [Saw him reeling around the rin || drunkenly, barely able to stay on bt ‘| feet, bur McVey couldn't or at leas vt Aldus care to nut dim GWEN American Giants Take Series From Memphis; Willie Powell Pitches No-hit, No-run Game Willie Powell rose te the heishis of Yann Sunday afternoon whe Re Bek! the Memphis Hed Sox tw 10" hit, no-run game while the Amevient| Giants gathered three runs in the att-| Sreene encour win the Tiuh after Meltaskel ueake Rp afeDonatit’s: no-iit atemptsthe| Chicago micher ou yielding "x sate hi unelt the Teub. when Mite singlet tien came the Gacal tiuhy sehen to ine row downed the Giants. 2 t0 'Satavaay: Memphis force tie Tocats to-ti innings petore the Grants cout sin an 1a the three day's the: Hed Sox plaved the Gand the a oft the Glande ane tele theme anvone bleacher fan'saids the slant’ club. Tn caturday"s game ‘Chicago dtan’t pur iike 4 champion team. Memphis Eid anotied cure fons in the cpener va aMtnskerta ingie: and erro bs Wiiinms and Etter, whe was plying: third, Pen Drews triple was followed by Davie tong. aie toe lett amt Teron ounied after the cts i the Giant ae IM the fourth Davis doubled, Fuss walked? rug nacridced, Sweat Sone ay to S, Davis and W. Davis seOted afer the caret Wiuaase sin- Biet'to right, scoring tus Stesgphns had twer on And one ou? weiter ebingen ine te Beoven ad Neus out to. Beas and. Brag ra all The wat down to third vo get Rogers olug back to second. Tie by Togers and. Milter and 1. prawns wack flied the sacks inthe ros anety meored of A yee fan thea Sweatt gathered "in 3 Hel's fits righttand proceeded. i kop the batt and Miller Senet Thain wag Ne nour halt, Russ santhiced Tray: singled an Sweat Saree e ath S cwectaeger sending iio runs Ine ‘P 'Bel Dunted to Brown and deat Tame hess hee bag tn te Tine’? aMertaskelsacritieed. Weskey Binds sending: Bell across with the ting rune PEF attted lon until the 22th ain peat gue a hie tovthe Fishe Toss, agers ted to Jackson. ti Tee Seingiod so did. Rouinsen, “t Want aeorea, Brown sinzted,” seer Wie States, “ings set to Startarcher tho touched thied, soubiing Jobie son, ith one out Jackson singted ibm sipeiea. Davis poted one ove Rogers head for a. tripe. sendin: Heogers, Bea brown neve. and esn Ine Senretiien, the Glints. worse [away the deciding run. “Russ sent Shore Hy to S. Bavis ad WW, Dav UOr aenoy out tying tO Score, = Bavie to fe Browne ‘osuey went. in for Chicago in th atin ‘the Lith Ward best Out 4 Hite Monn when Foster itn Mie te grate Rogers maurice, SMe Cited! anbinsen foreed. Ward Mane ePoster. to Mariarchen, Brow he hits Clase tanned, : Salome tai Foster fied erg meson singled to "cent HeRete cut gut a hie to. Metiaske Freer eetod ta eft sind aeRO ce ee ae ee ee lige rom MEIGS) ENE Eo RIE! AMRRALC, gertait BE Eaten of ee ed WaT da heehee Pa Eat Soe ten $9 DEM RA TE a 2 EL WMTNEES ELE Mie ees BTS Wee aL i dea mag dad Estee: $2 Eee eis 2a dt FREES "as oa FE Miilame So 8 Ta Boone 22) ERM gp a's HEGRE: FTE dNarenee ss 20 8B HEM to 2b Hidtag ee g 0S ieee ak we ARE RTO OT “tanta BERG Tote, BEBE Feapihe sean gha gas uo Caws ang SeMHMS isaix adem Sas ned wns wins see Aehlins! “Mer. tenn. Bente Naot: owe tigels, Bon SECM lg butecee nto, towns Aeris iw gut chee Bale thy anes se ecient ie on talker Taree 33 Ub BSS, ae ees. Powell hail the “ups” on the Ten~ nessee tude Sunday. Only four aren Save first, theee via walks and one on Russ" error. Brown doubled fn the Lome fitch. Davis sent hint to third with @ single, Miler's error tet. Brown count, In the fourth Sweatt hognced a Nit oft” Hobinvon's love," Marlareher Singlet, Witlzaat sactiflved. Powell was safe when s. Davis dropned his Ty. Jackson doubled, sending wo runs across. Powel fanned seven and walked three SEAS ONE NER AL “Mitac, Metta WE Ee darken ef Se ES Mee A Ga eanowe fi 2 Tet Meee Te ae ie 28 Te Gesccr: 1 oe tases 28 ES Store LO ek bee Sua 8 oT Yuet ceo 280 deme e BEG Wek 28.8 gaarer ab a tt eer RG Eihee oh eo tg Tiara #8 @ Welton 300 G Shan 2 2 00 2223 wees Ba RE gS ae Bemphis owen BOO BOE a E—o Wielitan Ginnie 2 8 OTe Be 68 as Sty itu Ce Rath ati ied eH Rages eS a Tee ied See fewell. t Bases va balls Of Welt 1 eit Fonells 3; MeDonatd lost 2 hard schne Mon- day. He fanned 11, allowed but three hts, one to Me#faskel In the 10th, one each to Ward and Miller in the 1ith, fut the raps of Ward and Atiller were Qoubles, Miller's tanding a scant to feet fair in tight, scoring Ward with the winnin tally. Prvor pliched a wonderful came for Memphis, fe allowed tue four hits in nine innings, when Glass releived hint i the Wh. “The big fellow had plenty of amoke and 2 veautiful curve ball. ‘Chicago's tone run camie in the fourth, when Williams" single sent Bray across. Bray had made first by forcing Ttuss at second. took, sevond ‘ona passed ball and thifd on Sweatt’ out. Th the eiguth they filled the sacks with two out, Dut Sweatt struck out In the ninth Memhis scored. with- out a bit. Ward gota life when his frounder trickled throush Williams Tess. and Went Co second on the over: throw to frst. Miler" promptly sac: Fifieed. “Gubinson pushed the Vall tc MeDonald, who war busy searchin: the runner. and after he fumbled it shot ft too Ite to Bray to get War: Scoring with the tying run. |"SSackson beat out 2 hit in the 10th | grown walked. ‘Glass relieved Pryor ‘At looked foolish to take the big ba MONARCHS TO PLAY IN GARY the THRs SE reget theese ta POE IS RN eee se Dr. Morrison | ; | Takes Reins | ° | at Lincoln Chester, Pa. Aus. 15.-Candiéates for the Linrola universi¢y football Team ara being. cnited tor the 13th He the vombwe month eattzing thae they are facing one of the hardest Sehedities ‘that a Linentn team. Bas feen eaifed on to wade thresh t0F many gears, the coaches rnd. players ip ie every “efore to" meet the Sitdation. = Dr Morrison is busy watching over the onstruction of a new charsing frachine of iis own desea that can Bevused by Both the linemen ané the Backes land ‘sice, the “dummy pies, Ducking straps and all the gener feta Cquijment thacwitl be used during ie coming season fiGeitintion“hae"noe bean ng to the-foothall satad this year and tried material wilt he missing. Dnt eae hopes weill be that the incoming Pesiman clase will Wein Un Rome promising miaverini, Larze zans will fave to be osed up both in Whe Teeand bsektield. } Each game will be an objective att Gea sell he brews alone grutually during the season, and imuch care must be exercised to keep the entire. squad from seine scale. ‘Lincoln's new athletic. potter, will he ene of expansion, a= many of the [generat student body will be Fenuired fe"take active pare in the various [sports and trom. these groups will Revdeawn men of ability to take nart in varsitt sports, Provisions will be [made to handle at least 100 men for the feck equuad on the opening diy Dt gchnal, the tntormerita, will be pioal" Shoe THE iad of Getoner | his wil he ene Arse fail grack ments The came forces will be hebind. the Sariouy other sports, such av basket Taio tennia wettes balks seceer. and lust, but noe Teast, crirkens oe a See Ed Bolden Gets Jim > Keenan’s League Job Auantic Chy, X. 1. Aug. 1—The comunfssione:s ot the ‘Eastern Cole Sred Tease, held 9 tenting Were at ihe office af Dresitent Trutier. Eile Want Halden, the foriner trailer of the leaue, was elected. to, the. Rost ff secrraty-treastrer made vacant fy dim Keenan autenvatlealls restgn= fic the post achen the Lincoln Giants Were dropped trom the Teaztie, “The matter af arransine pesipened guines was the chict business of the necting. MGiny’ samen hace. heen tained out. Tecaiise of difficulties With the park at’ Bradley Beach, SUE mantes wil we played else out, but Manager Wesley showed he Knew what his “onlons weress Davis hear our a hit to Class. Glas eausht Tsekson oft third to Robloson.. use Towed to Brown. Brown stele third And. Davis scored. Bray was puc- posely watkeds filling the sacks’ for The second time In one inning—but Stwente struck out. "Russ irew out S. Davis in the Lith, War doubled, so dit Miller, sending Ward. neross. \ Toblngon fumed. [. own popped to Wil- isms. Pinch hitters couldn't save the day for Chicaze. Senn an Meeanet, Senne, detawy we a Raeuen of Peg E WMA oo atin 2 8S Simeh st. 2 Faure 208 SOMREES TET EMOTE EB oe Wamris $a 1 Bias to $9 hg Taine St. 30 6 Puneet aes $9 472 ead BAG TEM ae fo a's Wises. Fon 8 BMemeauo a 8 8 & GRE Rod 88 Taken! F308 Mace P88 8 Gay dee sees a a ce Eee casas gee O88 beck ESB ing Meurer at [Snes an halle-ow Sebunatd, 22 ott Peper, ihe Anew sonal tatiana pone eg oats Salas Pass /Sox Tuesday and had ‘an easy time 2, Tees cea as Saree Sr Scat a asian in ihe a Than PLS Brae ese | MEN 18 T045 ZED $1700 TO $3000 YEAR CBB common Educa Svraran CR corres ett Tamu Bb fee CR ete Shee VND Sue? oh o} g te bouks at LES SEs AS 57 afte! vo Fiabe “S f Some «sisstasbninetin Po See ees tenesteeess --- THE CHICAGO DEFENDER SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1927 BLACK AND WHITE OINTMENT ~ SKIN SOAP are used a year The fact that so many thousands of our men and women are now using BLACK AND WHITE Ointment and BLACK AND WHITE Skin Soap that it takes more than 22 solid carloads of these preparations a year to supply the demand proves that they quickly, surely and safely Just use BLACK AND WHITE Ointment and BLACK AND WHITE Skin Soap according to the directions on each box of Ointment. You will notice your skin becoming smoother and brighter in a few days. From then on it is just a question as to how smooth and bright you want your skin as to how long you continue to use this treatment. All dealers recommend and sell the liberal sized 25c cakes of BLACK AND WHITE Skin Soap and the 25c packages of BLACK AND WHITE Ointment. Note—There is also a 50c package of BLACK=WHITE Ointment which contains three times as much Ointment as the smaller size. PLough's BLACK AND WHITE OINTMENT FOR DARK, SALLOW SKIN, FRECKLES AND OTHER BLEMISHES COMPANY ODOR EXTENSION CURCIOIDE) USE ONLY BY MIXING AS RECIPE ON BOTTOM OF CAN PLOUGH CHEMICAL CO. FOREXTERMAL USE ONLY. SINHIS SKIN MEMPHIS, TENN AND NEW YORK, NY USA BLACK AND WHITE OINTMENT SKIN SOAP