Chicago Defender
Saturday, June 9, 1928
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
BROTHERS LYNCHED BY LOUISIANA MOB
CONVICT 3 MORE BANKERS
USE CLASSIFIED ADS FOR QUICK RESULTS
LOUISVILLE OPENS DOORS TO BAPTISTS
LOUISVILLE OPENS DOORS TO BAPTISTS
"Boyd's Faction" in Annual Session
By DAVID W. KELLUM
(Staff Correspondent)
(Picture on Page 2)
Louisville, Ky., June 8.—(Special)—Twelve themes affecting the present and future status of the religious life of the young people of America are being discussed here at the 23d annual session of the Sunday School congress which opened in this city Wednesday morning. June 6, at Mt. Lebanon Baptist church.
Five days will be spent in explaining and handing out the recipe of front line Sunday school building and in giving ocular demonstration of modern methods. The thousands that make His summer Sunday school of methods have journeyed from the four corners of the United States to spend the five days in intensive study.
Every Day a Big Day
The key to the congress, as demonstrated during the nearly quarter of a century that it has been in operation, is the Bible study hour, beginning at 8 a. m. and lasting until 9. Every day has proven a big day, for the congregation, for every individual a contributor, and for the entire denomination is a storehouse from which to draw with the United States and foreign lands as a reservoir to supply further material and to offer greater opportunity for service. This gathering of young people, which is meeting in the city of Houston this month, the organization, is being given a hearty welcome and a royal reception. The official congress special train arrived Wednesday morning at 8 o'clock, bringing the South Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, North Georgia and the Mississippi into the organization, but prior to the arrival of the official congress special messengers and begin to come in from California, Colorado, North Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri and the far West. All night Tuesday special parties were alighting from the train, reaching this city, and by noon West Georgia opened, the congress secretary stated that 32 states were represented in this 1923 gathering.
Convention Called to Order
At 10 o'clock Rev. J. B. Robinson, D.D., of Little Rock, Ark., rapped on the pulpit stand with a lead pencil, and the congress' vast assembly came to order. He declared the congress opened, and after a fervent prayer, the machinery began to function. Full instructions for the entire week, or rather the five days, were handed out. Departmental committees were formed, and the team of workers submitted their plans and secured the approval of the body as a whole.
Thirty minutes were given in the midst of the opening session for a "Let's Get Acquainted" period. People shook hands, they told each other their names, they told each other they came, and from that moment on everyone was on the march against the congress. The secretary's slogan, "I Want to Shake Hands With You at Louisville," brought results. People from the rural districts, from the remote sections of the Union, from Sunday schools with small attendance, those from the city, the village, the hamlet, the metropolitan centers and even the educational institutions hands with the congress secretary.
The following conductors were then assigned for the week: Teacher training—J. A. Sharpe, D.D., Nashville, Tenn.
Metokas—R. M. Reddiek, D.D., S. Atlanta, Ga., and J. W. Welch, Ensley, Ala.
Messrs. Mrs. L. R. Fouse, Lexington, Ky., and Miss Nell E. King, Nashville, Tenn.
Advanced teachers—J. P. Eugene Beaumont, Tex., and W. M. McIntyre, Chicago, Ill.
Primary department—G. P. Baker, Nashville, Tenn., and L. E. Brown, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Intermediate department — E. D. P. Tucker, Atlanta, Ga., and Mrs. Clara James, Kansas, Mo.
Partner of music — H. R. P. Johnson, Denison, Tex.; N. S. Laundix, New Orleans, La., and Mrs. J. W. Hurse, Kansas City, Mo.
Superintendents — H. W. Russell, Atlanta, Ga.; Prof. W. H. Fort, Okungee, Okla.; Mrs. E. W. White, New Orleans, La., and Prof. H. P. Jones, Henderson, Ky.
Layman's league—H. R. P. Johnson, Denison, Tex.; R. McCorkle, Monterey, Miss., and L. Landers, Nashville, Tenn.
Cradle roll — Mrs. Idella Hardin, Atlanta, Ga.
Home department—Rev. L. A. McIntyre, Evansville, Ind.
Bible study - Ernest Hall, D.D.
Cleveland, Ohio.
National A. F. cadet—S. S. Jones
general, Muskogee, Okla.
Ministerial—D. E. Over, D.D. Bald
bathery, Md.
K. Y. Y. —Hoy. T. B. Livingston
D.D. Nashville, Tenn. F. Marshall
Tampa, Fla. G. W. Millis, Little
(Continued on Page 2)
THIS PAPER CONSISTS OF
TWO PARTS - PART ONE
EX-ALDERMAN
FLAYS TALES
FROM HARLEM
New York, June S.—Harlem has long been the hunting ground of would-be reformers and scandal-mongering authors who have painted that locale in altogether underserved color," declared George W. Hirsch, former alder and president of 53 W. 158 St. a house address over WABC. "It has been the lure of the play children of the midnight sun and the slum hunters, the sociologists, the savants, the proverbial long-haired men and short-haired women have sought it as a fertile field for their theories on misregulation, immorality and excessive mortality."
"Harlem," he continued, "is a normal progressive section of New York, Assemblymen, aldermen, assistant county and United States district attorneys and hundreds of other competent men and women holding city, state and federal positions mark the remarkable advance of New York." He described Harlem will receive the scene of Race riots such as have occurred in other cities because there is less race hysteria due to the gradual equalizing of the standing of all races in schools, hospitals and the police department.
MOB ADDS TWO MORE VICTIMS TO LONG LIST
Louisiana Sets Fast Lynching Pace
Boyce, La., June 8.—Mobbists, not satisfied with the brutal killing of one member of a family, Saturday lynched Lee and Dave, brothers of William Blackman, who met a similar fate three weeks ago at Long Leaf. The bodies of the two brothers mobbed Saturday were riddled with bullets from shotguns and pistols, some held in the hands of women and children.
The lynching occurred five miles from here as the men in "custody" of officers were being taken to Shreveport for safekeeping. The Rapides Parish officers had kept the brothers in the Vernon Parish jail at Leesville since they were apprehended while fleeing from mob violence and sure death three weeks following the warning given them that moals were scouring the countryside for them.
Following what seems a well laid plan between the law enforcers and the mob leaders, three deputy sheriffs came at the request of the Vernon Parish authorities and took the prisoners into custody. The two brothers, in company with the three deputies, were nearing Boyce when their machine was suddenly surged and a scope of machines bearing heavily armed officers were ordered to get out and stand by the roadside. The three Rapides Parish deputies drove off without protesting and attempting to defend their prisoners.
On the opposite side of the road from the Blackmans, who had done nothing less than being the brothers of a man who had defended his house from unlawful invasion and mobbists, were scores of whites with guns from the volleyball field and the brothers fell dead, their bodies pierced by many bullets of different sizes.
Mob fury rose to a white heat three weeks ago at Long Leaf when a deputy sheriff backed by a mob went to the home of William Blackman on a pretense of searching for liquor. With the mob surrounding his home, the police in front porch, Blackman opened the front door with a shotgun in his hand. He fired, killing the deputy sheriff instantly. The mob fired a number of volleys into the home defender's body before starting out to destroy his aged father and brothers who lived a half mile away. Their delay in starting on their mission gave wowing things to the one of William a chance to steal out of the back door and warn the other members of the family of their danger.
Burn Seven Homes
The homes of seven families were burned to the ground by the furious mob as its six sons were killed by the brothers of the slain man were seized by members of the sheriff's posse and spirited to Leesville for safekeeping. The sheriff of Rapides Parish states that he will center his investigation into the lynching on the manner in which members of the mob obtained information that the prisoners were transferred for Leesville Shreveport. The mess of the transfer came by telephone from the sheriff of Vernon Parish to the Rapides Parish jail.
Waylaid by Mob
Burn Seven Homes
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
CT 3
Gun Pl
Gun Play Causes Panic in Theater CROWD FLEES PLAYHOUSE BOMB WRECKS CHURCH
CROWD FLEES PLAYHOUSE IN STAMPEDE
Chorus Girl Fires on Orchestra Drummer
Patrons of the fashionable Regal theater, 47th St. and South parkway, became panic-stricken shortly after 7 o'clock Saturday night when Mrs. Gladys Mason, 4624 Michigan Ave., 20-year-old dancer, fired several shots at Jasper Taylor, 3222 Calumet Ave., drummer in Dave Peyton's orchestra, just after it appeared in the pit to play.
When the shooting was over Taylor was uninjured, but Mrs. Mason was shot through the abdomen. Investigations made by Officers Brown and Pennington of the Fifth district police revealed evidence that Mrs. Mason shot herself. Her body and oblong body pooled to burns.
Two of the bullets fired at the drummer were found by the police in the orchestra pit. One of them had struck a music rack near Taylor, who ducked under the pit when the firing started. Mrs. Mason, when taken into custody, told several different stories. She first accused Taylor of firing at her while she was walking down the alley near the stage.
Tells Different Stories
Later the young woman said she shot herself, declaring again, according to the police, that she did not know who shot her and that she never had a gun. From Taylor the police learned that he and the girl had been sweethearts, but he had jilted her. The break came a week ago and Taylor had called on her since Wednesday. Mrs. Mason is said to have told the police. Friday night after the show Mrs. Mason sought to see him, Taylor said, but he left in a taxicab. She followed him in another, he said, but he eluded her. Saturday morning Taylor is said to have sworn out a warrant for the girl's arrest at the 48th St. court. The warrant was not served. That evening came the gun play in the theater.
Shields Lover
Mrs. Mason is recovering from her wound at the Provident hospital. When interviewed there by a Defender reporter she said she did not want to say anything against Taylor and friends for almost a year and until a week ago she occupied an apartment he had rented in his name for her at 415 E. 46th St.
Mrs. Mason is a chorus girl and had been playing at other South side theaters, she said. She refused to say whether she shot or herself or if Taylor shot her. "He did shoot me I loved her," I love him to well." she is alleged to have declared, Mrs. Mason and Taylor are booked on charges of assault to kill and disorderly conduct, respectively. A hearing of the charges is scheduled for June 14 at 48th St. court.
ARMED WOMAN SHOT FATALLY AFTER GUN PLAY
ARMED WOMAN SHOT FATALLY AFTER GUN PLAY
Enraged because she had found the man with whom she was said to have been in love in the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Loney Simpson, 443 E. 37th St., late Saturday night, Mrs. Vernia Smith, 31 years old, 3650 Vernon Ave. armed with a revolver, threatened the man with a knife, 3570 Rhodes Ave., and the lives of others in the Simpson home. Mrs. Smith was shot and fatally wounded by Simpson after she had slapped his wife and cursed his baby held by the mother, according to his story to the Stanton Ave. police.
Mrs. Smith died early Sunday morning after she killed the woman she shot through the abdomen. The inquest Monday at Charles Jackson's morgue was continued to June 15. Simpson was arrested by Lieut. William A. Middleton and Sergeant Ward's squad of the detective bureau. He told the police he shot Mrs. Smith in defense of his wife and home.
The stain woman, the police were told had been injured earlier in the evening from a man who had pawned it to her for $2.50. She went to Simpson's home, where a party was being staged Seeing Sunders, her friend, there, she became enraged and threatened him as he fled out a rear door.
Mrs. Smith, according to her husband, Fred Smith, 4200 Michigan Ave. was shot and killed with a gun. ago, had shot at him three times and had killed her first husband in Weetenmaa, Ma.
ADMITS CRIME
Newport News, Va., June 5—Sylvester Tremper (white), 17, was sent on to the grand jury Saturday, May 26, on a charge of attempting criminal attack on a 9-year-old child. The boy, police said, admitted the attack.
Shields Lover
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AN UNENDING JUGGLING ACT
SCORRATION
MAR-RAIL
LIFE-CHANGE
CONCUBINATION
LYNCHING
CONGRESS
2. ROGERS
T. T. FORTUNE LAID TO REST; IN 72D YEAR
Philadelphia, Pa., June 8.-- The dean of American journalism, Timothy Thomas Fortune, was laid to rest here Wednesday, after simple and impressive rites were held in the home of his son, Dr. F. W. Fortune, 770 S. 18th St. He died Saturday in his 72d year at St. Mark's hospital from a complication of diseases from which he had suffered for nearly a year.
Perhaps there has been no character in class journalism that has had so brilliant a career as T. Thomas Fortune. For a number of years he was chief editorial writer for the New York Daily Sun, which was regarded as being the best news time. The paper was established by the pioneer publisher, Charles A. Dana (white). In recent years Mr. Fortune has been directing the house organ of the Universal Improvement association, which was founded and is governed by Marus Garvey. He wrote the documentation until he came here four six months ago to be under the personal care of his son.
Known in Europe
The Journalist enjoyed such friendships with persons as the late Frank Munsey, Jason Rogers, James Bennett Jr, and Joseph Pulitzer, all outstanding white newspaper men of America. He was also acquainted with Sidney Wleks, editor of the Manchester Guardian of London, England. He also corresponded with some of the greatest statesmen of Europe, whom he had met and interacted here in the United States. By virtue of the fact of his slender and stately appearance, Mr. Fortune was a striking figure. His activity in community affairs was limited during his last few years. His last public appearance in New York was at a forum where he gave
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HAITI RECALLS MINISTER TO UNITED STATES
Washington, June 5.—Hamibul Price, the minister of Haiti to the United States, has informed Secretary of State Kellogg that he has received orders from his government to send him to Washington has come in end. The minister, who has been the representative of his government in this country since Feb. 10, 1925, gave no other explanation in his letter to the secretary, which was given by the secretary information was given stating that Minister Prince left for his country May 26.
ROBT. WHEELER,
SON OF NOTED
ATTORNEY, DIES
Robert Foster Wheeler, 50 years old and son of the late Lloyd G. Wheeler, one of Chicago's oldest settlers and first attorneys, died Saturday, June 2, in Los Angeles, Calif., according to a message received by his brother, Lloyd Wheeler Jr., 122 E. 51th St., from the widow, Mrs. Flora Wheeler.
She and her husband have been residing in California for the past two years. Details as to the cause of Mr. Wheeler's death were not given in the message he received, the brother said Tuesday. Funeral arrangements were not announced.
The deceased was born in Chicago. He was a grandson of John Jones, who established a cleaning and dying business here in 1845. After his grandfather's death, Mr. Wheeler conducted the business until 1905. He then married a checker on a United States war vessel.
The body of Mr. Wheeler probably will be shipped here for interment in the family plot, where three generations of the Wheeler们 are buried. He is survived by another brother, John J., in Baltimore, and sister, Mrs. George Edmons, in St. Louis. Nor will he be remembered by Chicago's oldest citizen as the first president of the board of trustees of Provident hospital.
JURY AWARDS
$10,000 FOR
STOLEN LOVE
(Photo on picture page)
Los Angeles, Calif., June S.
—A petite, attractive woman, with a merry twinkle in her eyes, calmly sat on the witness stand last Monday afternoon in a crowded superior courtroom here and convinced a jury of mostly staid married folk that the affections of her husband were worth a great deal. At least the jury was convinced in a very few minutes that $10,000 would compensate her.
The woman was Mrs. S. Elosie Foster, who asked $50,000.00 from Mrs. Mabel Carter, Knutigee. Okin. old queen, for the alienation of the affections of her husband, Cornelius D. Foster.
The Fosters were married in 1921 in Oklahoma, where both formerly married women were very happy until the dashing titian-hired Oklahoma girl appeared in Los Angeles in November. 1925.
Then, according to Mrs. Foster's testimony, after Mrs. Carter's first visit to California correspondence was kept up in endearing terms between herself and Mr. Foster. In August 1925, Mrs. Carter returned to California. During her sojourn here she continued to accept the attentions of Mr. Foster.
Mr. Foster has been a valet for a number of years to John Slater of Santa Barbara, son of the late multimillionaire of the same name, who bequeathed a million dollars to education. A week-end visit with Foster in Santa Barbara and a big all-night party in Pasadena with Mrs. Carter the center of attraction finally caused a separation of the married pair. Mrs. Carter, whose wealth is estimated at $100,000, is now married to Robert Garrett, a Kansas City school teacher, and is living in Chicago and
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NATIONAL
EDITION
Minister and Wife Unhurt in Explosion
Detroit, Mich., June 8. (Special)—The annual spring and summer neighborhood invasion fights of this city started at 3 a. m. Tuesday when a bomb of gigantic force exploded in the front vestibule of the Mt. Zion Baptist church at Mack Ave. and Chene St., driving the great front door of the church into the street, breaking all the windows and wrecking the interior.
Damage to the church is placed at more than $75,000. Windows in stores and homes in all directions were shattered. People were thrown from their beds by the violence of the explosion which was heard over a great radius around the edifice.
Church Recently Purchased
Church Recently Purchased
The church was purchased for $68,000 in April from the Salem Bungalow church in White congregation, and occupied by the Baptists May 5, for the first time. The bomb, which police authorities said was one of the largest exploded in the city judging by the damage done, was placed in the middle of the vestibule. When it exploded the impact hurled the entire brick and stone entrance and part of the root into the street. Bricks and parts of the roof were thrown into the body of the church, wrecking the walls and cutting into the roof that did not fall. Many of the news at the rear were torn from the floor and thrown half way down the church, piled in confusion with hymn-books and tables.
Pastor Thrown From Bed
The organ, over the vestibule, was half torn from the roof and wall, and was hanging by one side when the police arrived. Every pane of glass in the building was broken. The pastor, Rev. James S. Williams, with his wife, Sarah, and their two children, Thelma, 15, and James, 17, he in parsonsage adjoining the church built in them were taken from their beds by the explosion, but were not injured.
The sale of the church was in the mail. of Joseph M. Vigliotti, banker and real state dealer, whose bank at 3003 C. ne St., directly across from the church, was also damaged in the explosion. Inspector Robert MacPherson, head of the Black Hand squad, said Tuesday.
Officials of the church, he said, told him a committee of their confederation had asked him if he thought there would be any objections to them buying the property and holding services there. He replied that there would be no objections, they said, according to MacPherson, and $68,000 was agreed on as the price of the property.
Sellers Wanted Church Back
Later, the church officials told Maepherson, Vigliotti headed a committee of four Italians which called on the elders of the church and offered to buy it back for $75,000. The baptists had had the property only a month. The church officials said the elders why the offer was made and he replied that the sald, "that there might be trouble." The elders then said they told Vigliotti that he should have told them that in the first place. The matter was referred by the elders to the congregation, which voted against the resale of the property. The congregation bank when the police called Tuesday. He and the other four Italians on the committee, whose names the police have, are to be questioned.
The church is located in a white residential district close to the exclusive Indian Village colony. This territory in spots has been inhabited by Italians and families, but this is the first time that a church or business has sought to establish itself in this district.
Damage Stores
The bombing is one of the most costly in recent years here, according to Detective Sergt. Daniel Schoonover of the Hunt station, who made the preliminary investigation. Detectives from the Black Hand squad, the crime and bomb squad and the Hunt station have been assigned to Most of the damage was done to the interior of the church. The windows of the Vigliotti bank were broken, and the first policemen who reached the corner stationed themselves about this building. On both Mack Ave. and Chene St. for several blocks from the corner on which the church is located, are small confectionary, clothing and dry goods stores, with living quarters there. The stores were these shops were broken. Many of the merchants said they had lost hundreds of dollars worth of goods.
[ ]
PRICE TEN CENTS
ERS
ASK RETRIAL FOR HEAD OF DEFUNCT BANK
Hayes Given Lightest Sentence of All
Memphis, Tenn., June 8.—Disappointment and amazement swept over the criminal courtroom here Friday night when a jury after deliberating three hours found T. H. Hayes, G. W. Atkins and J. L. Yancy, officers of the defunct Solvent Savings Bank and Trust company, guilty of fraudulent breach of trust in connection with the theft of $21,403.35 of the bank's funds.
Hayes, president of the wrecked financial institution, credited with engineering the wholesale steals, instead of getting a 20-year conviction, received only a one-year sentence. Atkins, vice president, and Yancy, assistant cashier, were sentenced to five years each. The latter two were also found guilty of making false entries and wives given additional five years on this count, but the sentences are to run concurrently.
Motion for Retrial
The prosecuting attorneys, court attaches and the spectators who crowded the courtroom were at a loss to explain why Hayes received such sentence when all proof showed that he was a major minor who lead the looting and who most benefited by the vault robberies. It was the accounts of Hayes that were padded through a series of false entries.
Immediately following the convictions attorneys for the three former bank officials made motion for a new trial that would be heard June 15. In that case that the motion is overruled the court married to the supreme court on appeal.
"My business was to walk around the bank and look important," testified Hayes on the witness stand Thursday in denying vehemently that he ever knowingly took a penny of the depositors' money. He admitted that he didn't know anything about the operation of a bank. The former banker had been the wealthiest men in the South under furious cross-examination was forced to give damaging admittances.
Hayes succeeded Atkins, who had earlier testified. The former vice president told a story of "injured innocence." He confessed that he got connected with the defunct bank because people had too much confidence caused laughter and omitted rumblings in the courtroom packed with fleeced depositors.
Bank Short Cash
The testimony brought admittances from Atkins and Yancy, that many times the bank had less cash on hand than the banking law required for operation and that often they were forced to make personal checks to meet the cash requirements. These checks they admitted were later withdrawn. It was admitted by Atkins that he knew the bank wasn't "exactly solvent" despite its name, and that it never made any money in its later years. When asked why he didn't close the bank before the crash, Atkins replied, "I thought the bank expenses were the ones to do that thing." The final chapter in the trial of the former financiers will be closed when the state disposes of the case of P. W. Thornton, teller of the bank, who turned state's evidence on Hayes, Atkins and Yancy. A. F. Ward, former president of the merged institutions, is serving a 10-year sentence in the state penitentiary. Hayes, L. William Wilkins, cashier, and E. J. Raspberry, teller, are serving seven-year terms each in the same penal institution. Thornton confessed and testified to making the false entry of $21,403.35 in Hayes' account upon which the three men were convicted. It is through that the state will deal leniently with Thornton as well as the criminal justice and was little more than an insignificant tool in the hands of his superior officers.
Hayes' Financing
The disposal of Thornton's case will end the prosecution growing out of the $500,000 bank crash of last December that left 20,000 depositors in the Southwest Bank of Business observers in the Southwest Bank of Business the crash of this bank has retarded general business and banking in the South 25 years.
It was the theory of the state, in the present case, that Hayes, endowment secretary for the Tennessee Knights of Pythias, was short in his ability to deal with the bank. That was in July of 1925. In August of the sam year there was to be a state convention of the lodge and it was necessary for Hayes to show a proper balance and made a turnover of funds to R. W. Allen, elected to succeed him by the lodge.
The checks the deficient two checks were executed by Atkins and the other Hayes. In this way the lodge's account was credited with the correct balance. Later the checks were taken out of the account and still later a check for $21,403.35 was drawn on Hayes' account by the lodge. To meet the check he debited Allen's account in the bank. Then there followed a series of bogging to mislead auditors for the lodge and banking department.
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1926
NOTED LEADER CONFINED TO BED IN N. Y
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Plea Made for Sale of Manning's Book
New York, June 8.—An urgent appeal is being made by liberals all over the country to get persons to read a critical survey of the political Alabama in the '98s by Ex-Congressman Joseph Manning of that state, who now resides at 55 W. 119th St. White River Junction, North Carolina. Manning was regarded as being this foremost champion of the cause for impressed people in Washington. At a recent meeting of the N. A. A. C. p. board of directors, a resolution was passed expressing deepest sympathy for the great leader because of illness. The resolution read in part:
"The association learns with regret of the serious illness of Joseph Manning, who for many years fought bravely in the South against great odds for the cause of human rights." Letter written by Judge Warren H. Washington, D. C., and formerly of Alabama, to Mr. Manning gives a valid description of his work in "Tideout of Populism." The letter reads:
"I have your favor of the 14th inst. and also the copy of your book, 'Trade-out of Populism.' In it you have told a wonderful story of the fierce battle between the ancient Democracy and the fusion of Republicans and Populists. "I thank God for having spared your life, his legacy in truth and write, and give the world the truth of his last great effort of the best men of Alabama to establish and maintain a republican form of government in that state. The truths set forth in your book inspire me with real hope for the final triumph of right and justice. The book ought to be in the hands of every American who loves his country, its tag and its Constitution." It is unable to be active, friends of the leader asking that the word he passed around as to the unusual value of his book, which may be secured by writing the author at his home address, the same number he sold in order to receive the congressman's upkeep. The cost of the book is only $1.
Modern Man Must Keep Pace With Present Age
Those who study the present situation of the modern young woman are agreeing that the dependent, long-suffering type of woman is being planted by the girl of the present, who does not look upon marriage as a chance to get free board and locking for the least exertion. This does not mean that femininity is losing its charm. On the contrary it that women are alive to the fact that women are not locked in the quirements of the new age and that the old custom in which every woman looked frantically for a man to keep up her expenses of living is gone. The majority of modern girls are not holding and able to take their share in home if there is perfect understanding and love present, rather than stay at home and grumble at their many needs. As an English writer puts it: "She does not want to be housed but to be in her mother's care, being neither better nor worse than men, having the same essential needs, the same fundamental rights."
Citizen's Lack Services
The taxpayers are mines the representation of 547 firemen to protect their lives and property through violation of the Chicago civil service code, complying with the regulations have heeded the cries of segregation advocates. The 159 fire stations are white-white, while 175,000 citizens are allowed only 14 men on house in one station. Men should be assigned to these stations, while able young men must be added to these stations to bring about the just representation that has long been neglected. It is a disgrace to think that cities the size of Atlantic City, Wichita Falls and Indianapolis have more men and stations than Chicago, the nation's second largest city.
GETS DRUNK ON ASPIRIN
Kalamazoo, Mich. June 8. - Protesting that it was the effect of aspirin and not liquor which made him starvate, Mr. Baldwin, A. Thornton, a barber, demanded an examination when arraigned before a municipal court judge last week. The barber, while intolerated, ballt was fixed at $200, which was not furnished.
Corns
Stop Hurting
Instantly
Drop "Freezee" on that aching corn. Instantly it stops hurting; then shortly you lift the corn right off with your fingers. You'll laugh, really! It is so easy and doesn't hurt one bit! Works like a charm, every time.
A tiny bottle of "Freezee" costs only a few cents at any drug store, and is sufficient to recover corn, soft corn, and calluses. Try it!
ATTORNEY WILLIAM H. HAYNES AIDS PROSECUTION
Illinois Attorney General Oscar Carlstrom appoints Attorney Haynes to staff as special assistant to investigate crime and election frauds in Chicago. The outrages, including the tragic death of Attorney Octavious Granady which occurred during the primary elections of April 10, are to be delved into by the staff of six attorneys selected by the attorney general. In the photo, left to right, standing: William H. Haynes, Fred L. Fale and David D. Stansbury. Seated: Ferre Watkins, Frank J. Loesch, president of the Chicago crime commission, and Charles O. Rundall.
WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO
By MEHRAN K. THOMSON, Ph. D. (Author of "The Springs of Human Action")
"Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them." Those who are geniuses possess great geniuses. We now apply the term genius to a person of unusual ability. Michael Angelo, Shakespeare, Napoleon, Edison, Bismarck, Gladstone, Benjamin Franklin and others are outstanding in their respective fields belonging to a distinction should make between talent and power. "Talent is that which is in a man's power; genius is that in whose power a man is."
Psychological studies have been made of geniuses to determine the possibility of measure it as we measure it by licence. The results have been only partly successful.
who has found opportunity his extraordinary power, we result of the law of variability produces some differently different why do you do what you Dr. Thomson, Write him this paper, and send star velope for reply!
Next week—Why the More Nervous Than the Sense Newspaper Sys.
HARRISON FERRELL LARGE EASTERN A
Philadelphia, Pa., June
It is generally agreed that a genius is born, not made. You cannot make a genius out of a man of culinary inheritance. Heredity is the biggest factor in the development of a genius. The law of heredity is conservative. It transmits from generation to generation the characteristics that are peculiar to the race and family. If this were the only law operating a genius could come only from a genius. It does not work that way. A genius may spring up anywhere. The explanation is that the law of variation introduces changes and modifies the hereditary pattern. Occasionally this law produces a freak. Every genius is a freak. He is radically different from average folk. Biologists are inclined to accept this theory because a genius is generally born and changed cannot be inherited and the law of heredity would merely reproduce like from like without any changes such as we see in the genius.
The genius is a freak of nature
The Secret Beauty that he little Blackbird are now the "m to beauty" of charming AIDA W Star of Lew I "BLACKBIRDS At the LIBERTY THE says-
Beauty that helped one little Blackbird to fame are now the "magic aids to beauty" of another charming star
"I find these preparations far superior to any I have used."
Florence M
The Little H
Beauty Prepara
The "Blackbirds" of
Florence Mills The Little Blackbird
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who has found opportunity to develop his extraordinary power, which is the result of the law of variation that overcomes produces something entirely different. Why do you do what you do? Ask Dr. Thomson. Write him care of this paper, and send stamped envelope for reply.
Next week—Why the Groom
Next week—Why the Groom
(2) Maternity Newspaper Schedule)
HARRISON FERRELL PLEASES
LARGE EASTERN AUDIENCE
Philadelphia, Pa., June 8—Harrison H. Ferrell, Chicago violinist, gave a recital here Thursday which won the appraisal of a large audience of music lovers and critics. Mr. Ferrell, in spite of his youth, has achieved distinction in the world of arts and letters. His brilliant work includes a concert for him a bachelor's and master's degree, and he is soon to receive his doctor's award. His work in the world of music has been marked with a similar measure of success. Ferrell was a member of the organization of the Ferrell symphony orchestra, with 32 accomplished young musicians. This intitled group has given successful concerts which have been disseminated critics of the other race. Saturday evening the artist was the guest of honor at a reception given by Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Lemon which was attended by notables of the music world. was the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd L. Proctor during his stay here.
The ( )
AYNES to staff as special assistant to inves-
sing the tragic death of Attorney Octavio-
s to be delivered into by the staff of six atter-
standing: William H. Haynes, Fred L.
Besch, president of the Chicago crime com-
P. & A. Photo.
"Bad" White Operator
ALTON YOUTH HIGHLY HONORED AT U. OF C.
ALTON YOUTH HIGHLY HONORED AT U. OF C.
(Photo on Picture Page)
Lawrence Alexander Whitfield, 20-year-old graduate of the University of Chicago, was this week elected a member of the Chicago chapter of the National Society of Fraternity. Whitfield's selection came at the close of one of the most brilliant courses at the university, and he was honored not only by the scholastic fraternity, but was awarded the next three quarters to further his study in zoology.
Whitfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Whitfield, son of Topeka, Kau. attended the public schools of Alton, IL. where he graduated from the Alton high school in 1901 and of his graduation in Alton young Whitfield was forbidden the trip down the Mississippi 16 St. Louis because there were white members of the Klum in Alton who objected to his progress and selection as valedictorian. And because of their leader, the rest of the class refused to take the trip, which until that time had been an annual event. Although it was necessary for Whitfield to use a classmate's car to get to the auditorium and although he had to go to the auditorium at 4 o'clock in order to get in before dark, he made his talk and was highly acclaimed by the fair citizens of Alton.
He plans to return to the university next year for his master's degree in the medical school. He is a member of the Alpha Ii Alpha fraternity.
ROB BISHOP
Blue Ash, Ohio, June S. — Bishop Joseph C. Hartwell, 86, retired M. E. church bishop of Africa, was severely beaten at his home Friday by three men who robbed him of his wallet and gold watch.
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IN DISPUTE OVER CARDS
"Bad" White Gasoline Operator Held
Dayton Beach, Fla., June 8
Charged with shooting and killing Paul Sweet over a card game and paying three other men $5 each to bury the body in a lonely grave in a dense thicket. Leroy Crawford, 38, a white operator of two filling stations at Opmond, is being held in jail to await his trial. The killing took place about three weeks ago and only was disclosed this week when H. "Slim" Warren, white, an employee of Crawford, told the story. Sweet, it is said, had no relative have a head in jail been missed. Fear of bodily harm, Warren noted, led him to Chief of Police Whitehurst of Opmond. The chief in turn summoned the chiefs of Dayton and Deland. Crawford has been formed by some of the residents in the locality as "bad actor." He is said to be at present under an injunction for an assault.
Many points we want to take into account provided. There many travelers make trips of a they have experiences in trying places at which they travel. The Chicago Dade as a clearing-bear to travelers in se and the homes to them. All per highway here are their names and, with office, info quarters available scripts, with routes, should dress "Dade cage Defender."
Jails Ignore
Given b
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Warren told the authorities a clear story of what he says is the entire affair. He declared that Crawford was at Crawford's filling station one night about three weeks ago and that he was watching from near the door, when Crawford reached over and took $ from the table. Sweet, says Warren, took $ from his money and that he was being robbed. The white man, the witness said, fired at Sweet, who slumped into a corner, said. Sold that Crawford paid three men to carry the body to a house near the highway and later buried him in the woods. The shooting occurred at 9 p.m. and Sweet was buried at midnight, Warren said. He went to the highway, Warren said, to get "out" after shooting. He went to the home of a friend, Reuben Davis (white). The latter, who said he feared violence on the part of Crawford, induced Warren to tell his
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TOURISTS SEEK COMFORTABLE FARE ON ROAD
TOURISTS SEEK COMFORTABLE FARE ON ROAD
The season for motoring is here and thousands of tourists are preparing to take their yearly jaunts in search of recreation. There are many homes where accommodations are provided. There are equally as many travelers who hesitate to make trips of any length because they have experienced such hardships in trying to find comfortableness in trying to remedy this condition The Chicago Defender will serve as a clearing bureau both for the travelers in search of lodgings and the homes which we care for. The highways are requested to send their names and addresses to this office, with information as to the quarters available, rates, etc. Descriptions of numbers of the routes, should be provided Address "The Pathfinder" The Chicago Defender.
Jails Ignore Rights Given by Constitution
Discrimination and segregation are making inroads into public and municipal offices of the city and county through the penal institutions, the separation of prisoners in quarantine, the confinement of inmates in these institutions is unlawful. Such practices may develop in all avenues of the city's life. The condemnment of these acts on the part of the jailers is only paying the way for their apprehension. Laws must be enforced now for the constitutional rights and privileges of all people. Daily cases are brought to the public's attention which show that these evil practices are being employed in other places. The Defender stands for drastic reformation in the jails or the withdrawal of the present officials. Every citizen in Chicago who believes in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness should show this贴子 to the authorities of the present authorities of the South are not forced on this great commonwealth.
BURY JANES WALTON
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C. Walton, an inmate of the Soldiers' home, a former member of the Old Eighth Illinois regiment and a memorial to his brother, Norah Walton, a sister, Mrs. M. J. Salisbury, and a niece, Miss Humphrys, all of Chicago, attended the funeral.
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Washington, D.C., June 13—Warming the graduating class of Howard university against sophistication, President Mordecai W. Johnson deferred service from the baccalaureate service to a building last Sunday afternoon. He advised them to do whole heartily whatever they are trained to do. Dr. Johnson recommended to the graduates "that sense of the weighty nature of the state in war times" is suggested that they get it from religion, "Religion," he said, "is the only thing that can give morale."
Rabbi Wise to Speak
This was the second day's celebration of the commencement, which begin June 1. Exercises came to a close in early June, in which candidates for degree received training by Dr. Stephen S. Wise, rabbi of the free synagogue of New York City was the main speaker. The most last Friday chapel exercise was the following the devotional services the cadets of the Reserve Officers' Training corps went on parade. The members of the letter and art college and the nursing school attended the excursions to the graduating expo. the nurses of Freedmen's hospital. The senior prom was held after the nurses' exercises. The seniors in the college group held their class exercises in Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel. Members of the trustee board were seen in a body Tuesday. On Wednesday the senior law students held their exercises in the William Earl hall.
Perhaps the biggest social event on the campus so far this commencement, Mrs. Johnson, seniors, parents and Mrs. Johnson, seniors, parents and friends passed through the home of the college head in an almost continuous stream Thursday afternoon. Thursday morning the annual get together of the school of religion was held in Main hall. In the evening the alumni of the law school had their annual meeting. The General Assembly in Andrew Rankin Memorial chapel.
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PART 1-PAGE 4
ODD FELLOWS PLAN HONOR FOR BUCKNER
Unveil Monument in September
As a part of the program of the 11th B. M. C., of the Grand United Order of Old Fellows here, Sept. 10 to 14, a magnificent; monument erected to the memory of the late Major Dickerson, will be unveiled, it was announced this week from the office of the Buckner memorial committee. At the time Major Buckner was district grand master of the Old Fellows' library, the uniform ranks of the organization. A site for the monument was selected some time ago by the committee in charge at the Lincoln cemetery. At the dedicatory exercises will be ceremonies from the various branches over the world, including Germany, England, Australia, Panama, Santo Domingo and the Philippine islands. Edward Morris, national head of the fraternal organization, will deliver a speech, been reported. The governor of the state, mayor of the city, as well as other prominent persons who knew Major Buckner in his active life, will occupy seats on the platform.
Member of Assembly
Besides being active in the fraternal order, Major Buckner was at one time a member of the Illinois general assembly. He was the founder and organizer of the famous Ninth titulatum, which later became the Eighth. Buckner was a socialist party secretary. For his unusual civic and social work he is well known by the older citizens.
It is of particular interest that the deceased mentor represented a dissident in the state assembly that was made up large by the election was regarded as an appreciation of his liberal spirit. He was a warm and personal friend of the late Congressman Martin R. Madden. Undoubtedly very few have had the opportunity to live upon the local political life of Mr. Buckner, largely responsible for the political destiny of Chicago's outstanding politicians today. He had much to do with shaping the careers of Senator N. A. Ettleson, Oscar Delfries, Assistant Charles Kutkoff and Morris Lewis.
Author of Bill
Major Buckner was a leader in the state legislature and was the author and sponsor of extensive bills. He helped to lead to do with the extension of the plot near the Illinois Central railroad station, which has become the pretest front yard in Chicago. His service in this regard was recognized and praised from the late Ferdinand Peek. At the Buckner memorial committee headquarters, it was explained that funds for the entire project are already in the treasury because of the covered cost of the monument's sculpture. Joe to the Odd Fellows' lodge, the fraternal order has taken the leading part in fostering the movement to pay this tribute to him. The memorial cost of the lodge. The cost of the monument is nearly $3,000.
K. C. UNFRIENDLY TO G. O. P. DELEGATES
Kansas City, Mo., June 8—While the Republican national convention was getting under way Tuesday, a large number of the delegates were expressing their bitter disapproval of the housing facilities that have been arranged for them. Housing officials and the delegates are inadequate and vile. "Contraint to a promise from the party leaders and chamber of commerce of the city made to Chairman William Butler, chairman of the national body, that no color line would be drawn, the policy being followed here by hotel keepers is much the same in Atlanta, Ga., and Birmingham, Ala., and white hotel, agreed upon as one of the places for delegates to stop, refuses to allow anybody but white persons to even enter the lobby.
Simply no accommodations for delegates other than white are available. That it is best for persons not already in the race by most of the politicians. In spite of Ben Davis, Perry Howard and Walter Cohen, prominent leaders, the "tily white" Republicans have crushed their efforts to block the discriminatory voting system. The national committee spent most of the early part of the week hearing the contest between the rival delegates from Louisiana. The center of the controversy was Walter Cohen, a former governor of Louisiana. The committee by a vote of 55 to 41 sented the four Ivory delegates at large who were selected by the faction led by Emil Kunitz, national committeeman from Louisiana. The other opposition to the scating as a district delegate of Cohen.
Mrs. Mary Lee Johnson
Passes Away in Boston
Boston, Mass., June 8.—One of the largest and most notable fraternal funerals held here in recent years was that of Mrs. Mary Lee Betts Johnson, grand worthy councilor of the courts of Calhathte, which took place day from the Eleanor Baptist School in audienced student last week in her home 41 11 Worcester St. Cambridge. The services were conducted by Rev. E. E. Thompson, assisted by a number of speakers and solitists. Letters read from children and adults read from all parts of the country, including one from Supreme Chancellor S. W. Green of the Knights of Pythians of New Orleans, La.
New Jersey Elks Seek
Newark, N. J., June 8—Tans to secure the 1929 Ellis' convention for this city were made known Friday when the Pride of Newark: Lodge of Home at 28 Eason St. Following the report of Excalibur Wright for the year in which he stated that the local lodge's membership had been exceeded in a cost of $100,000 candidates running for his office retired in his favor. His re-election was unanimous. The Newark lodge delegates to be held in Chicago in August.
GUEST OF EDITOR
Arthur A. Schomburg, New York city, prominent art collector and president of the American Academy of Art and Letters, Mrs. Robert A. Abbot on Monday, Mr. Abbot took Mr. Schomburg on an automobile tour of the parks and other showplaces of Chicago. He left Wednesday for Jacqueline McCormick, O. B. Dabney, editor of the Knopf, K. F. Dabney, editor of the Knopf.
图
T. THOMAS FORTUNE, MRS. CORA GOOPER NEWSPAPER MAN. DIES IN FINE RECITAL
(Continued from Page 1)
recollections from old happenings around newspaper offices.
Born in Marianna, Fl., Dec. 3, 1856, he was literally reared in a newspaper office. He an artist, and he was by his side Miss Jane Bush Fortune, to the publisher of a daily paper as a printer's devil. Interested in books, he read a great deal from old works that he found around the newspaper office. He said at one time he met a teacher that met his hands on from the Bible to the snappiest short story.
Reared in Newspaper Office
When Mr. Fortuna was in his early twenties, he decided to teach school. His urge for doing newspaper work however, caused him to give up this position. The first big event in his life, he said, was in 1877 when he met Miss Caroline Sunley of Jacksonville.
By 1879 the printer's devil had become the publisher of the New York Globe, which now is known as the New York Age. It was here that he was discovered by the executives of New York as a traveler as a special writer for the daily publication. To the East T. Thomas Fortune was what James O'Donnell Bennett (white) is to the West today. Leaving the New York Sun, Mr. Fortune went to Washington, D.C. where he established the Washington Sun in 1814. The paper has since gone out of business. While directing the destiny of Marcus Garvey's house organ, Mr. Fortune lived in Newark, N. J., and commuted daily to his place by subway. He decided to leave the World about six months ago and come here. It was here that America's picturequeous newspaper figure passed away.
BISHOP HANKINS 'UNFROCKS'
EIGHT-U. A. M. E. MINISTERS
At a meeting of the general board of trustees and executive committee of the general conference of the United A. M. E. church, of which the Rt. Rev. A. D. Hankins is senior minister, are classes adopted unanimously overseeing the name of eight ministers stricken from the roll of the church. The resolutions stated that these high officers of the church had violated their oath of the ministry by collecting funds in the name of the church and making proper financial reports to the executive committee. Those named in the resolutions were the Revs. S. A. Mathias and J. H. Bowles of South End, Bould. J. Herks, Grand Rapids, Mich.; C. M. Cant, Council Bluffs, Mich.; D. M. Cant, Council Bluffs, W. C. Walker of Ohio, and J. H. Cook and John Brazel of Chicago.
Bishop Hankins, founder of the church, which was established in 1996, stated that the general conference had been embarrassed by receiving complaints from business men in various cities who said they had made donations to certain ministers of the church, and that the parties soliciting funds were not in good standing with the church. This evil, he says, he intends to correct by officially unfrocking those responsible for it.
Jury Awards Woman Big Sum in 'Heart Balm' Suit (Continued from Page 1)
was not represented in court. At one time she secured the firms of Charlene A. Jones and Paul J. Johnson, and Harrison, assistant attorney general of the state of Illinois, Chicago, to represent her. But for some reason these lawyers did not go through with her. Mrs. Foster was represented by Atty. Lorrin Andrews (white), one of the best divorce lawyers on the Pacific coast. Although 0.000 is the largest sum ever paid a woman in the Los Angeles courts on alienation charges, Mrs. Foster's lawyer is sure it would have been more with the letters, telegrams and witnesses Mrs. Foster and Mrs. Carter been legally represented. Mr. Foster could not be located for a statement and has not been seen in Los Angeles for several months. Lawyers handling the case for Mrs. Foster heard from since the decision of the court, but she stands a fair chance of collecting the entire amount.
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Ossining, N. Y., June 6—Yan Harles, 55 to 50 year sentence for serving 55 to 50 year sentence for serving in New York City, who was missing at the morning check up at Sing Sing prison on here Monday, was found late Monday evening hiding in the narrow space between the ground and the prison "regions gallery" is kept. The convict, who was sent to the prison last May, was present at the sunrise check, up, but when it was learned that he was missing at the later check, the convicts were sent to their cells. He was found inside the search inside the prison. The space in which he was found hiding was less than a foot high. He told the guards he had hopped to slip over the prison wall under cover of darkened furniture awaiting transfer. Damone-mora prison, the place where hardened and unruly convicts are kept.
MRS. BRYANT DIES
Mobile, Aba. June 8.-Mrs. Fannie Bryant, one of the most prominent women here in social, civic and community affairs, passed away at her home, 393 Callahon St., Wednesday June 25, her daughter, Mrs. Georgia Bates, wife of Attorney Nika Bates, Chicago, was at her bedside when she died.
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Battle Creek, Mich. June 8—Perhaps there has been no musical event here in recent years which has won so much praise from discerning critics as the recital of Mrs. Cora Cooper, daughter of Mrs. Cora Brown of Erastan, Ill. The affair was given in the auditorium of the Mt. Zion A. M. E. church, Rev. A. J. Irvine, who recently assumed the pastorate, was master of ceremonies. His opinion was that the sensus of the large audience that Mrs. Cooper's recital was the best given in the city in some time. Miss Eleanor Dozier, talented young plainist and organist of Mt. Zion, played the accompaniment. These years she was the teacher of the daughter respectively of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Dozier, pioneer citizens of this city. As a part of the program Woodson Henderson, violinist; Mrs Elizabeth Stewart, pianist, and Mrs. Isaac Stewart, violinist, reader, gave pleasing selections.
Mrs. Cooper seemed to have felt greater ease in singing the sentimental numbers so suited to the sweet soprano voice which brought out the expression and warmth in her voice. As a composer, she sang her arrangement of "Just a Little Blue" by Egbert Van Altyne. Other选集 were grouped in folk numbers and classic selections. Mrs. Cooper, who gives promise of becoming a prima donna, has traveled extensively appearing in theaters, after her training in the South she came to live in Evanston, Ill., where she has continually studied under the best private teachers.
Nolo Contendere Is Plea in Manslaughter Case
Lexington, N. C., June 7. — Amos Jackson, Charlotte man of good standing, entered a plea of parole contender to a charge of manslaughter and judgment was continued by Judge McRae upon payment of costs and $600 to Mrs. Louella Byerly, widow of Robert Byerly (white), the victim of the automobile crash out of which he was killed. Byerly was killed when his car was struck on the side by a car operated by Jackson at a road intersection north of this city several months ago. The impact of the cars is thought to be the shapping of a vertebra in Byerly's neck, producing instant death.
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The transpacific monoplane The Southern Cross, as seen in picture above, winged its way through the clouds form Kauai island, Hawaii, to Suva, Fiji islands, a distance of 132 miles, and 38 ups. Upon the landing of the plane there Tuesday, Capt. Charles Kingsford-Smith and three com-
KILLER LYNCHED BY VICTIM'S FRIENDS
Marshall, Mo., June 8—Twelve hours after he had shaken Romeo Logan, a railroad shop worker, in a gambling game, Ocie Wilson was taken from the motor car of Salline county officers south of Slater and officers in the county jail. The officers believe were friends of Logan. On their way to place Wilson in the county jail, Edgar Ballowe, city marshal, and Price Thompson, constable, were halted when a large car without license plates darted in front of their
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panions completed 5,538 miles of their overseas flight of 7,800 miles from Oakland, California to Sidney, Australia. The British government of Fiji aided in giving the flyers the greatest ovation that has ever been accorded heroes coming to the islands. On the map, which appears below picture of a machine, Mashed men covered the officers with pistols. A report brought here by tourists to the airport a tree by the highway near Sharpe proved groundless. Sheriff G. R. Hutcherson said, but added that the body might have been cut down and thrown into the Missouri river before the searchers reached the place indicated. Logan, who was an ex-service man, was well known and had a large number of friends. Wilson had arrived in only a few days before the trouble.
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ship, is seen the route of the fliers from Oakland, Calif., to Honolulu, 2,460 miles, completed in 27 hours. The flier is carrying a hop from Honolulu to Suva in the Fiji islands, and from there to Sidney, Australia. Photo Courtesy Chicago Herald-Examiner.
William Maddocks Made
G. O. P. Sergent-at-Arms
William Maddocks of 5350 Wabash Ave., assistant United States marshal, has been appointed sergeant-at-arms of the Republican national committee now in session at Kansas City, Mo., preparing for the Republican convention and settling the contests of delegations. The assignment of such an honor was made by Roy O. West, Mr. Maddocks is prominently connected in Chicago, being trustee of Berenan Baptist church, a member of the Ellis Pythians and other fraternal organizations and the Appomattox club.
OAKLAND, CAL.
SPANISH FIESTA ATTRACTS CROWDS
The big Spanish festa to be given June 11 at the beautiful Savoy ballroom, 47th St. and South parkway, for the benefit of the Illinois Children's Home and Aid society, has created a more widespread interest than any similar event in many seasons, from the advance information received by the participants and their friends, by Saturday the South side will be teeming with the crowds of visitors who are coming by motor and train from many of the adjoining cities to be a tale of romantic splendor and those who witness the affair will be treated to a scene of colorful beauty expressed in gorgeous costumes, rare decorations and unsurpassed
Chicago hostesses are bustling about in preparation for the rounds of social events scheduled to usher in the romance of occasion. Already a sort of romance capital, sunny Spain has been cast over the city's smart set. The altruistic motive which prompts this demonstration sponsors of the affair has aroused a fine spirit of individual cooperation which hetokena unusual success. The individuals who are the beneficiaries of this affair will be counted among the fortune.
VISITORS AND TOURISTS
STOP AT THE
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601 E. 36th St.
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At present only a few of the large numbers expected can be noted, but it is known that many others will be expected on the night of nights. Among the nurses of the university are Mrs. C. W. Bryant and Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Johnston, Columbus, Ohio; Captain and Mrs. Beaker, Danville, Illinois; the Louis Huggetts, Kenton Harford, Ohio; the Garnets of Michigan City, Indiana; Wk. the wankee, Wk.; the Conways of Pooria, Illinois; Councilman and Mrs. Fleming, Cleveland; Dr. and Mrs. Norrell, indianapolis, Ind.; Attorney William R. McKinney, Detroit, Mich.; J. L. McKinney, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Buny, Cleveland; the Hundles of Xenin, Ohio; Dr. and Mrs. Kinnibrew, Danville, Ill.; Mrs. E. D. Hayden, Jacksonville, Ill.; Mrs. Marta Ridley, Wilberforce, Ohio, and scores of large motorizing parties are expected on the night of nights. South Point, Ind.; St. Louis, Ms., and many other points.
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The American people pay $20,000,000 a year for their music, including about $15,000,000 worth that isn't. - Boston Transcript.
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Your Wives For Your Sweethearts
The Guitar Evangelist 163
Edward W. Clayborn 55c
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A FEW MORE VOICE
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Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blue
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Sobbin' Blues Fox Trot
A Letter From Father
Men Don't Forget Your Wives
"MY BABY"
FOX TROT
by JIMMY BLYTHE'S
WASHBOARD WIZARDS
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Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues—Part II Jim Jackson 1152
Farewell Blues Fox Trot King Oliver and Sobbin' Blues Fox Trot His Oikie Syncopators 163
A Letter From Father
Men Don't Forget Your Wives For Your Sweethearts
The Guitar Evangelist 163
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SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1926
Doomed Man Executed With Prayer on Lips
Washington, D. C. June 6—Philip Jackson, proven mentally unbalanced, died in the electric chair at the District of Columbia jail Tuesday with a stroke. Jackson was the first person to be electrocuted in the District. Shortly before he was led to the chair Jackson declared he was innocent of the assault crime for which he was convicted. He was sentenced upon a woman in the capital grounds in February, 1927.
The doomed man arose early on the morning of his last day alive and partook of a hearty breakfast. He was joined shortly after his breakthrough, aged evangelist, who has ministered spiritually to 58 victims of the gallows. With Rev. Mr. Roberts were Rev. W. D. Eattle and Mrs. Alice Washington, church worker.
We might solve two problems at one stroke, if we could find some way to inject the causes of unemployment the crime business. — San Diego Union
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PART 1-PAGE 6
COY COGITATES
SILAS GREEN SHOW
Raleigh, N. C.
Through the friendship of the
Coyote of Raleigh and the
Silas Green show, we were able to
get a location in
Raleigh, N.C., where the
regular lot is a
mile out of town.
L. E. understaker, was
responsible for
the sale of the
Business was capa-
acity, not with-
standing unfavor-
able conditions.
We are always glad to
be able to show
not only because its
Coy Herndon
a favorite city from a financial standpoint, but there are many other cities where recent nearly every profession pursued by the opposite race, especially their "bank," which has stood the test of time. The banks have failed. The Silas Green show is especially interested in the Eagle Life Insurance Co. Only two of the banks have been owned by the owner of the Silas Green show and members of the company were interested in the Eagle Life by Silas Graves and the Lighter, Mr. Collier and several members bought stock. Only a few of the banks have sold insurance and the pulleys offered the public were very wide and liberal in some. At present the Eagle Life figure business a week and is expanding rapidly. Charles Collier is the board's directors and if there ever be a go-getter its Mr. Graves, the manager.
New Trucks
'While at Raleigh Mr. Collier purchased a new Ford truck for the advance, replacing the Grahn truck he had hired agent, J. By Moore, who hails from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., replacing T. C. Williams, the veteran truck driver, in the nations, and we think in the course of time his reputation will be broadcasted as the greatest of the present day. Doesn't smoke or drink, has a clean car, and then goes ahead. Charles Collier has just placed an order for a new electric lighting plant of 5,000 square feet. The present system there is but 2,000.
Every large circus employs their own physician, not only to look after them, but to administer first aid to their patrons. Charles Collier's Silas Green show, "The Little Barbary," wishes it 45 years to recall to the cities that it visits, that the show carries their own physical examination of examiners and is licensed, and any one in the audience becoming ill while witnessing a performance, the show will be notified. While showing at Warren Plains, N. C. a young lady of 22 years of age visited the show, seeming to be in concert after the main performance, and while selling tickets, etc., for the concert, she became ill outside doctors once she died. Maybe a life could have been said had they known the Silas Green show carries and his service is for the asking.
Many. Doubles.
OSBY MITCHELL'S LETTER
Lexington, N.
This leaves us still in office in good business, with every member of the Florida Blossom show all O. K, except Willie Ehlridge. He is not feeling so good for the past week no more, although he will be much better, he will be much better with the assistance of the rest of the Blossoms. Willie has been feeling bad ever since the death of his old partner, Slim Anderson. I hope you, Mrs. Rosa Henderson, will respond that she has got our sympathy.
In this lineup there are a great number of well known members of the theatrical profession, including Warren McCormick, well known attraction Mattie "Sweet" Spencer and Orlenia Mitchell, soubriette and prima dom; Warren McCormick, characters; Empson the mystery man of India, and desseed Runney, blues, blues, blues. In the chorus are Nettie Hodgson, Laundry, Teresa Garnett, dennie Abraham, Gilliams, and in the band are George Gilliams, cornet and band leader; Greg A. Williams, cornet; Eddie Wheeler; Eminer Wheeler; charriot; Black; Thompson, drums; Rastus Thompson, trombone; William Mills, trombone; Horsey Dorsely, baritone player, and last but not least Walter "Sip" Milligan myself; we take on the comedy of the
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NABROWLY ESCAPES DEATH
The Four Chocolate Dandies, Willie's Barber and Ernest Smith, and Mrs. Isis M. Fountaine narrowly escaped death Saturday night, May 25, when a couple of them recently purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Fountaine, skidded and turned over. They were just unlucky and just unlucky and an engagement in Zanvillee. A terrific electric and rainstorm began just as the Four Chocolate Dandies on the slippery pile.
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Mr. Fisher was cut off the keys and the door was打开, containing a knife. Luckily for all as the car skidded and turned the four men were forced through the top of the car. The driver was able to escape. The car was canceled and all remained in Zanesville Saturday night. Mrs. Jill Fountaine, former president of the Zanesville traveling, with Mr. Fountaine since early in April.
4
THE MUSICAL BUNCH BY DAVE PEYTON
Things in General
when one is dancing to the divine music he has brought into existence, he' actually thinks that Mr. Gibbs has been engaged in the music, "it is really unfortunate that this splendid band cannot be engaged for all of the festivals which this time will be held." He definitely engaged at the Arcadia the services of Mr. Gibbs and his men are available only after 12:30 every day, for the programming and conducting than any other. "No matter what has been said of Mr. Gibbs, it is true that when he welcomes happy and gay, he possesses the ability to make them agree with his dictation. Similarly, when he desires his waltzes to be dreamy, or serious, or funny, he can make the people on the ballroom floor feel the same as he does; and any person who can control the thoughts of others is a distinct success."
**NOTES**
Bennie Moten, the saxophonist writes from Los Angeles, Calif., that he is a concert pianist, theater, where he is giving service in Curtis Mosby's orchestra.
Fess Williams is the big nose in Chicago. The popular little master of ceremonies has the Windy City all his own way.
Veronica Biggs and Rosco Copeland have national musicians' convention and are all smiles over the good that was accomplished for our musicians.
Miss Lillian Armstrong has just received her teacher's certificate from the Chicago College of Music, under the Music Department, young lady musician is so who we are known Louis Armstrong, the celebrated cornetist.
Jose Johnson, the little lord mayor of Market St. in St. Louis, writes that things are all O.K. in the Midwest. He plays with orchestra with open dates this summer and those playing in his territory to get in touch with him at 2334 Market St.
Hack Back, the like king, is doing his act on the Reshee Smith show this week at the St. theater, Atlanta, Ga.
Jimmy Bertrand, the clever trump drum artist, is contracted for the Regal theater orchestra, Chicago, repertory band, Taylor, who has retired from the music game indiscretely.
Verinis Gudgel is managing the tour of the Royal Ambassadors, a well-known 10-piece band from great up in Canada.
Wen Talbert and his orchestra come to the Woods theater, Chicago, with Ed Daley's big show, "Tang Tang," June 17.
Donald Redmond, the arranger and musician, is in Chicago this week, rehearsing a Goldkette band play, having been hailed as it is located in Detroit with Mckinney's Cotton Picks orchestra.
Fletcher Henderson and his orchestra are still at the Roseland hallroom, New York, as usual the favorites of Broadway.
Vernon Hughes, the drummer, was called home to Columbia, Mo., from the Richards and Pringle show last month on account of illness in his family.
Abe White, musician, has gone to Winnepeg, Canada, to join J. W. Moore and his orchestra. He radiuses the kindest to John Wickle. Lawrence Harrison is directing the Alabamaans orchestra at the Schoenfeld Château. They have a fine musical aggregation. Wibur Sweetman, the famous christianist, is in the booking game in New York City. Sweat, as the bunch call him, knows his stuff and is always doing it.
vue will concern themselves considerably with substantial European productions, because the production concluded with Charles B. Cochran, the London producer, for a 1923 presentation there of the current edition of the musical. The revue will probably go to Paris, but Vienna, present negotiations indicate. This will mean that an entirely new company will be whipped up next season's Broadway presentation.
MANAGER OF LINCOLN THEATER
Nashville, Tenn.—Through Milton Starr announcement is made to the students of Baton Rouge, La., former Fisk University student, will succeed Frenchy Davis as manager of the Lincoln theater. Nashville, Mr. Davis will eventually be hired by the S.C. where he will on June 4 assume the management of the new Liberty theater. His is the largest and largest of the Starr-Scars circuit, containing a dozen or more theaters, with indications of more during the season of Mr. Hayes has had but six years experience in the theatrical world, but the business-like manner in which he has performed the Lincoln has won him the confidence of his employers. He will prove a valuable man and before long, Frenchy Davis, will be sent to larger theaters, there is always room for a good man. It was as an operator at the Grand Starr Rouge, La., Haysville, since deriving the service of the Starr-Scars circuit he has left no stone unturned to further his advancement in this line. The circuit has found the right man.
The team of Melba and Ross are scoring the high mark on the Ethel Dudley show. The game played the makeover, Omaha, Neb., took week to turn away business. This week they are doing theirs at the Lincoln theater, Kansas City, Mo. James McCormack, the wife of his partner Melba is one of the clever female impersonators in the biz.
**ACTOR SAILS**
U. S. Thompson, husband of the late Florence Mills, sailed on the S. New York, June 2. For a six-week dancing engagement in Germany.
Deportment
Once again I am going to speak of the department with which musicians should themselves if they want to favor them. We cannot get and maintain the resources they ask if we do not conduct ourselves properly when not engaged in our art in the department, not all, but enough to discredit the profession which has highlighted getting off from their work in seeking our some place of ill-repute and there is nothing to do. Dave Peyton
favor them. We cannot get and maintain the public spect of the public if we do not conduct ourselves properly when not in public. In the past musicians, not all, but enough to dissemble, have delighted, on getting off from their work, in seeking out charities, repute and there spending the rest of the morning, not realizing that, along those things they render themselves unit for service the next day.
Dave Peyton
Let us conduct ourselves as we should when we are doing professional connections with good people who stand for something in your community. Many actors and musicians from their art. The public appreciates decency and when they find out that an artist is of the low-brow type no matter how clever he is, they need to watch your step, bunch. He indies and gentlemen and you will anchor the good will and respect of everyone.
Bunch Displeased
The Spiller Music School
New York city boasts of a modern music school, the Spiller School of Music. She is an accomplished scholar, is directress of the well-known school, and instructs instrumental classes, orchestra classes, and last year this progressive musician taught in public school 152. Brooklyn, NY, is her home school. This year she is in quite busy with her large private classes in addition to her school work. She is a member of the music family, and has traveled with her husband for many seasons, working in the net. She also has contributed to a monthly orchestra publication.
The Gotten Pickers Gang
Fate Marabel and his Cotton Pickers have just finished their winter work down South and you open their weekends. Following is the line-up of the Cotton Pickers bunch: Horace Rollins, It tenor saxophone; Norman Mason, third alto saxophone; Albert Snaer, first trumpet; Louis Averbart, second trumpet; Robert Slayes, banjo and steel guitar; Albert Morgan. Sousaphone and string bass; Engene Hill, keyboard; and Fate C. Marable, director.
Arthur Gibbs' Orchestra
The New York Commercial World has many good things to say about his music and his orchestra and I am proud to report that an article in this column for its readers:
"America's greatest. Colored orchestra has been hard to find for the past few years, but among the many excellent orchestras among the Colored people, which have reserved the weight of choice which their friends have decided upon in their behalf.
Arthur 'Gibbs', the versatile ArCADian orchestra leader, whose com-
BIG REVUE PLANNED
By HOWARD BARNES
It was no empty promise when Lew Leslie announced recently that his new institution would become an annually recruiting institution on Broadway, patterned very much on the manner of George Seandall's and Ziegfeld's "Tollies." The producer is thoroughly imbued with the conception of an annual edition for his troupe. Already his plans are already interesting and in some instances radical effects on both the Broadway season and the artistic colony of Harlem. A sold has bled his time, content to see scores of players perfecting their talents in the past few years. "They are now ready, he will have a way to drive artists." Not only will Negro players be involved in the producer's undertakings, however, for his dream is to reeve a Broadway revue.
As the first step in this direction, he has engaged Bill Vodery, Harlan McCormick and Michael Compose the music for "blackhats of 1922". Vodery's original compositions have been little heard outside of the music world, but a market for his talents in this restricted field, the composer has turned to orchestration, a large portion of his work having been done for Bert Lytch. With strict Negro music in prosopia, Mr. Lytch has sent out scores of letters to Harlem lyricists, asking them for ideas on both lyrics finders and composers. There is a wealth of silent, for such a job, though it has inain fain these many years. Without the assurance of a commission, Harlem's artists have been forced to turn to other fields of activity, he explains. New, he hopes, will be providing material for his shows.
Fresh from trumpets in Europe, Jake Jackson is the most experienced in the coming season's edition, Mr. Leslie further concludes. His evaluation of this artist's talents is interest-building, and he mentions, in the unrestrained ovation which Miss Baker was accorded in her debut, that she could have secured her services for this year's "Blackhirts," he desired to wait till she became more experienced. The artist's worth cannot be judged on the basis of her costume or lack of It, he tersely puts it, for his annual re-
NOTES
MELBA AND ROSS
ACTOR SAILS
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
STEWARD'S STEWINGS
STEWARD'S STEWINGS
By SMILING BILLY
This is our last stand before we cross the river into Maine and down the New England states. The boys are sure sorry this is the last one they have to cross this side and I am glad to say that everybody acted just right. Not a man come around the job with even a smile, but oh, boy, we had some time. At Montreal and when the gang left there they were crazy or sleep it happened and we were dee dee of hard luck come in just right for those babies would not even get up to make the flag. John, the boy, returned Miss Brotherham, but Slick Jones and Shelton Reamey were the sweet boys. We did not miss a day having rain and today has been the next day yet.
Is this is the town? Where is the lot? How far is it? On you go, Say am I 1 too late for breakfast? Walter, bring me plenty. Gee, that you see me on my land. See me on my land. Somebody has my pants. Outside band. Wait just a minute, can't find my mouthpiece. (Bandit smash!) Time to eat. Off for the cook house. Back again. All right, band. (Smash) speck! speck! Outside band. (Smash) speck! (Smash) the blow-off. Little rest. Evening show. Outside band. (Smash) speck! speck! Back. Stick-up to tonight, gang. On. Gee, that you see me on my land. Let me have the band outside. (Smash!) Little run around all over, Say, did they move the ears? How going by the privilege car. To bed and the end of a circus day, unless you step out for a hot minute, but he may see you get yourself a card to "get" with you will be just too late. Hello, Talley and Talley. Stainley and Talley. Go see it? June 11 will find us at Montpellier. Vt. All right, Loverne, tell Kile to wake up.
A GOOD MAN PASSES
TO THE GREAT BEYOND
Nashville, Teen—in looking over the theatrical pages of the World's Greatest Weekly, The Chicago Defender, on June 2, I think the follow-up to the book is a follow-up, following heading: "Billy Bradford Dies." Hence, I wish to say a few fine things about Billy Bradford: he was very well, still, the short-length of time I knew him, to my estimation, in Billy Bradford, I found as a fine a chain, a speedometer, a clock, and out. And too, talent too, being his greatest point of excellence. It was while the writer was in Chicago, on October 31, 1927. At this time, was handling advance work for Johnlee Lee Long's "Dikam" company. And he was playing the role of Mitchell's "Jigged Pollies" was playing the Lincoln theater, Kansas City. I had the pleasure of meeting Billy Bradford, Mitchell, also playing the Liberty theater, a white theater. The writer assisting them with their show. And needless to say, in both the Lincoln and Jigged Pollies" scored very heavily.
His just as I said. Bradford was as fine a clean-cut chap as ever put up for me, and he always dressey too, those who know *klo* better than I did, will say the same thing. Hence, in the passing of Billy from this earth just another good man. And I know those among his friends, even to his friend, Billy. I know that he was just those we leave behind are the sorrowing ones, the ones to miss us.
M'CABE'S TROUBADOURS
A letter from "Spark Plug" Goodman says the show is hitting on all eight, and why not? Just take a look at the cast. Brennan is a field, producer and stage manager; Jake Bymes, comedian; "Spark Plug" straight and characters; Erna Beard, music; and Michael Robinson, Rosa Tucker and Maxine Lopez, the "boneless lady." Band consists of Guy Beard, piano and William Gotdard, saxophonist; William Tucker, trombonist, and Torews Beans, drummer. Mrs. Edward McCormick and treasurer; William Metcalf, musician. Next week, Pleasanton, Kans.
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STAGE
NOBLE
Appearing alone in London, England has caused both the press and the press single attractions on the international
THE NEW YORK TIMES
Appearing alone in London, England, has displayed a versatility that has has been a major attraction of the greatest single attraction on the international stage today.
RENBOW'S GANG IN CUBA
William Renbow and his gang are back in Havana, Cuba, after a successful tour of the tropical islands. Leon Diggs writes that the show went great on every stand, especially in San Juan. He says the black bottom has taken the islands by storm and his singing was a feather in his wings. Renbow has his way in Cuba and may stay here for some time to come.
Mississippi
Stop cultivating
Barbecue Bob
sippi Low-Leve
Daddy, it sure
Record No. 14316-D
10 inch 75c
Record No. 14315-D 10
Shake It Down
Where Have All the B
Gone
Vocals—LILLIAN G
Queen
Stop
Vocals
Columbia Ph
Columbia
"Magic Notes"
Mississippi Low-Levee Blues
---
APPEARING IN LONDON
THE MUSICIAN
NOBLE SISSLE
Mississippi
app cultivating the corn and
barbecue Bob's singing the
api Low-Levee Blues". M
addy, it sure will make you
record No. 14316-D
10 inch 75c
Mississ
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It Down
Have All the Black Men
als—LILLIAN GLINN
Stop cultivating the corn and cotton. Barbecue Bob's singing the "Mississippi Low-Levee Blues". Mama and Daddy, it sure will make you step out
Columbia Phonograph Company, 634 S. Lombard Ave., Chicago, Ill. Wholesale Branch
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Columbia Records
NEW PROCESS
Made the New Way - Electrically
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Magic Notes
THE NEW YORK TIMES
MINSTRELS TO OPEN
Richard and Pringle's famous Georgia minstrels opened their season June 1 at Kansas City, Kansas Chick Reaman is principal conductor, assisted by Lasses White, Billy McCarver, Harry, Nay and Jack Johnson, the latter being master of ceremonies. Roy Pope is leading the band and the rest of the lineup represent the best talent in the show business.
Mississippi Love
vating the corn and cotton.
Bob's singing the "Missis-
Levee Blues". Mama and
future will make you step out
Mississippi Love
Goin' Up the C
OTHER POPU
OTHER POPULAR RECORDS
Record No. 14311-D 10-inch 75c
Queen Street Rag
Stop That Band!
Vocals—BIRMINGHAM QUARTET
Ask Your Dealer for La
a Phonograph Company, 434 Sq.
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Made the New W
Viva-tunal Recording - T
Columbia Records
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Made the New Way - Electrically
Viva-tonal Recording - The Records without Serach
pi Low-Lo
and cotton.
the "Missis-
Mama and
you step out
with the, be
the guitar h
ming. "Goi
coupling, a
Mississippi Low-Levee Blu
Up the Country
POPULAR RE
Record No. 14314-D 10-inch 75c
Any Time (Incidental Singing)
Sweet Emmalina (Incidental Singing)
Fox Trots—CLARENCE WILLIAMS'
JAZZ KINGS
Dealer for Latest Race Records
Company, 634 So. 12th Ave., Chicago
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umbia "NEW PROCESS" Rec
the New Way - Electric
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COAST DOPE
BY BUDDY BROWN
This week finds us busily engaged in making preparations to celebrate Memorial day. I feel that there is no more appropriate time than this to give to the readers of the World's Greatest Weekly an original poem in memory of the brave Race boys who died "over there." It is written by Johnny A. Jackson of 108 E. Main St., Turcklow Cafe. It is: Sleep on, thon brave, thy toll is over. Though strange, hands shall deck
Thy lips are scaled, thy voice is
bushed forever more:
Sleep on, for thou art bravest of the brave.
Sleep on, thou brave, for once thou
soul, wad brave.
Wear: though thou yielded not to
despair.
With shells whizzing through the night so dreary.
They stood. In cadence to a marital air.
Sleep on, thou brave, thou diest not seek ambition.
Far from a marital entertion wert thou thoughest;
Thou only sought the rightful recognition.
A gracious God bestowed on all
mankind.
Sleep on, thou brave, and all shall
sing thy glory.
"Till every voice shall reach the vaulted skies;
Sing more until the world shall know
the story
of the
sacred
scribes
Of Ethiopia's noble sacrifice.
Friends, I think the young man has the matings of a poet of national reputation if given encouragement. So write him a card or a letter and then know him by name. Of his kind, I A. Jackson, 105 E Main St. Turbock, Calif. More of his work will appear in these columns from time to time. Nothing new in his writings, but I wrote last week. I promise a more interesting article next week. Until then, so long; good luck to all and you, as always, Yours, as ever—Buddy Brown, 344 Phelan Bld. San Francisco, Calif.
ACTORS WRITE SONG
Will Robinson and Adelaide Hall, two of Lev Leslie's stars in "Blackbird," have collaborated on the writing of a song, "Lazy Moon," which will be added to the show next week. It is Lev Leslie's third "blackbird" songs has ever written.
w-Levee
with the, best of them.
the guitar has a mean, wi-
ming. "Goin' Up the Cou-
coupling, and you'll need
w-Levee Blues
Country
BARB
LAR RECORDS
with the, best of them. Joining in, the guitar has a mean, wicked strumming. "Goin' Up the Country" is the coupling, and you'll need the rest.
Record No. 14308-D 10-inch 75c
I'm Just a Rollin' Stone
Pussy Piano Solos
BARREL-HOUSE PETE
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MENT
Chicago Theatrical News.
Columbia
"Magic Notes"
vee Blues
of them. Joining in,
a mean, wicked strum-
Up the Country" is the
you'll need the rest.
BARBECUE BOB
Vocals
Record No. 14312-D 10-inch 75e
Empty Bed Blues—Parts 1 and 2
Vocals—BESSIE SMITH
---
SAT JUNE 9, 1926
Eddie Matthews and Edyth Lewis-saur, the Tuxedo Duo, are still the big noise around Cleveland, playing the exclusive night clubs.
Law Vernon wants the gang to know that from now on he can be paged with Pefingytania Ave., Baltimore, Md.
Biernie Pierson and his "Chocolate Town" company are at the Elmman theater, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Bernice Cannon, please write Walter Cox, 217, 31st St., Dart, D. Very important.
William McCabe, owner and manager of McCabe's Georgia Troubadour, now playing in the far West, is very sick and had to be at Bat-Lake, Minn., under a doctor's care.
Chick De Lotch says that now that he has left Lewis-saur, he is the happiest boy in town. Never again will she leave is Chick's face. They can be reached care the Folded Theater, 31st St. and Calumet Ave.
Using a book by Blue Scott, Paul Johnson and Hylas Haskins are rehearsing a big act for the Fun Time. Will Paul, care Columbia hotel, 31st and State Sts.
Finel Jackson is confined to her home with a severe cold, but hopes to out among the gang soon. 3200 Prairie Ave., Apt. 2, gets her.
The Longshoreman just blew in from Cleveland looking all chic. Says she can be reached for a while at 3427 State St, care Mrs. Allen.
Irene Cook wants the world to know that she is regular now at 3502 Wabash Ave, Apt. 4, Cranford Bldg.
India Allen is taking his at the Columbia hotel, 31st and State Sts, Roanoke.
Johnella Gay is soon to become a full featured "Kill" with her own Mary Walker is also going to try and fit on a pair at the same time.
A. B. WILLIAMS
A. B. (Race Horse) Williams writes from Detroit, Mich., where he is stopping for a short while. He is doing his single in and about the hotel and wants the gang to write him the Hotel Williams, 550 E. Adams St.
Columbia
"Magic Notes"
ATED DAY, JENE 9.1006 : THE CHICAGO DEFENDER _ ‘ : . PART 1-PAGE 7
rane ; NF
| Se pera MOVIE, and STAGE” DEPARTMENT @&
‘STARS THAT SHNE |[———“rarzcy Torres MANSIFEE SUIT [News of the Music Worla]IN. C. KIDDIES [5 onroue
Mike Jackson, who Is scoring a biz
ruccene 1 and around: Sew Tork I
ints flamclogue, tw to broadcast ever
ok introducing: is ova. sone: Mis
Titan ay eee wo eeree a
Seudertner bel saat apnea Ee ac
Pinkeye" See peanuts
wig. Phe toute Of he too i "Cole
Hike and eth eae eae
pris aut me tule ead Canty
Be Bing il
‘ane Dae ie, “Desks steve:
actee Sune tied i toe" weaken
Tete Aeamngio atuste® Laletere
Wes" Bromdweage? Sew works Bly
dimen te to hiiroduce (ite aamber
AUHoatauay Sutseaise, "the number
iS see Tanase aa Amb ional
twee need I0hee doar tere The
Ruce'dopcen set) set anuld Send fn
fornis sone immediately ws We te
elie tae
sha areas gins tee aol
see aey Mt hotees
Ser ee tee Madan to
Beg ein oan
Deana ate asa’ th tna
patter thetten Sew Yorke the bie
Hae Te aS ht ne et Slecmnattens
heeds rents.” Liebe aid Teens
Sea hee ie ele ae a:
sae bcd ee haute Nae Toate
steists tea Ti meee cae eames
it See va otc Sean
Ie'niviag’sa ihe wane tienes Cee
sofia Gate,
mint le oc See nN Reams
Reeisedt oC" jee idee? i
Seer The Sus Uieets atet
ae oad caer wl aes
ee ere eRe
tan Nhe ee octet eniees
Weleda weleavoes siacet Sa
fram Florian be bat een euceruained
ie Teends in" bnokigne teerey chee
Neste Ainge ew otk Grane;
Ney Sad iviiiameoriace
pce “Mack Bhrde: of W828 which
fe papier ne tie ehushe Teer
Se ae te gerdnas as
Pegg ge ia elmer
wuch higher in receipts, “Vergy”
cea arraicen inet
erage the sivestfromh the "hyes
Tee sles intbbek tho Same
Cae ee ee an
ccameeg nal Greene einen
aicnar ne wor Rasentn a
Bee nes a thy ae he OL A
Seming Stewart's Plantauon or-
cnegton le to aber ne tne Cismtnouse
SES Ses vente
Penis ins ata ees
ee? tes and eine
nant auch Snes ha ee
Wieatian tor the he Flee aes Bebe
Ot ie elas ween
“KEEP SHUFFLIN'" CLOSES
New York—"Keep Shutlin the
Trondway musical comeds. headed
ie Miter and sles, closed, Satur=
tay ntzhe after playing to eapreley
ossen for several months. sfiter and
estes have signed up at an atieactive
salary. with a broadcasting. company
in connection with thalr other Work.
Ss
VIOLA MAYO
Viola Mayo, formerly with Tavte
Austins “act, Nenth. the Southern
Sion wants the ganz to know that
hewitt tate ait nt oo8 Main Ste
Wwhenita, Rama.
SS ee
- ACTOR RESTING
Flogd Ray, toruieris of the Ells
rothers team, in tt his hoine rests
Ine and wuld be pleased. te hear
fromthe gangs Weite to eit Jeffers
fon’ Stu teand: Rapids, Mich
| MAIL RADIO
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ALL ACTS, COMPANIES AND
THEATER MANAGERS
Semmes wih 7. ©. & My tite
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TIMELY TOPICS
TT ST CRN
By SALEM TUTT WHITNEY
I Didn't Think!
1 did’ think 8
‘and’ the werd, ike peivoned dae,
Giana ieth Le stanet he tease oar
Beane Tieves AR! lesa 'endl
Rh Shim eblacdd (Rd.
1 did't think
belema aed ivan an act
Wonk hee tare tetStiact:
Norte Rothe te eet sero
Would hreated to sbatire' sy soul
Ab, me! If timie could but erase
te Thoughtcns words mot Wave @ trace
Serta eee etic yea
Would drown sur caress Getde in tears
Winemory woul ogre at iat
Bae cnet shat Ginette past,
fn severing oe every fe”
rat star fe i et Tink,
. * oS Mellow Musings.”
What Are We Looking For?
tnevative, the “primam mobile. the “arriere’ pounce,”
i eeuscless weae, from morn tl nleht, day after, day.
tht death, casts ita lethal spell upon us and we return
fo the elements from sshich we came?
What is It that often enuses us to forsake honesty,
divorce truth, surrender virtze and stake our imperish-
nie souls upon the reenlt of some mad gamble? “What
is ic that impel us to Joln welrd cults, to sponsor wild
echeme® or ts countenance some buslners that we
kaow Ix withont the law? What Ig it that causes Ws
te torture aur bedids and risk cur ives In some
hniztrdous adventure?
Desire is the anawer, ‘This le an Impationt age ana
we ave seeking the mulckest way (0 xutinty ouy desires
"Ve ure Fieh OF poor. nerording to our desires. We ate
coud or bud ag the result of the squnikty and force of
our desires art our abtlity, fo control them.
The attainment of happiness is the ultimate désice
of cach. Some hope to reach happiness by the Accumu-
lation of riches: some think that fame In the key hat
penx the dour. Others attempt to satisfy thelr desires
by fatlating thelr physical senses. All of us travellng
Sitaneuk tonstn ceokiai tke aor ae
| Greed. selfishness, ingratitude, dishonesty. immorality and implety are the
| archsonemtet or hippinens.. "They ae tayplser wile. forget et selfs best
{6 the hed of he man fal whn ih Sou eet a ki a
rite their mamer lndeiliy upon Mimnn Weare The Chey. at Sayin.
| ruta in che ae uf Mina. “
Toby Josephs .
Toty Josephs is a hero, He aecomplished a feat that haw never been
aupitcicad be a iny of Mig age, Tie Tee hay. Lieseare af ace. Hie ta
Ste ‘place atthe end uf the, longest. marathon tace ever ran Ys" hut
igined, ¢rom San Frunclsen'to New York cise Across the continent, Seneiy
2On-acatted, mw huaster o€ that number Anished, Toby ‘was one of CHAU
‘Toby's father 1s a cripple, Doctors told the father that, they_might be
able to effect a eyre If he hid snones w pas" for the gperatien. "Tut whe!
forget the money? “air, le, promoter ef the serons the countes maratlon,
‘as ndfering linge sins the winners of the rate, Tons end of thin snd
Towend ne father tw nilow Winn to enter the contest, “I beiteve can win,
Anat Tita, fou want be well gaealn’” tw what Pune sald to BIS father
They aarted, ‘elthout mines. Tobe father nnd hg {S-seqrzoht Wrother
follewed him in Gilapieated cecontchaaa Star automebite. Tig itte brother
| Grove te ear,” Anmier feat that suid go down in the recom. A Tz-yeare
SIa'Rtace hoy’ afove 4 revond-isuad cur over mounullns, ncrore tke deserts
rough. sow tnd: binding. rainstorms, foom San. Pruelse, to. New. Verh
cigs “there were times when Toby thought he could 0 no tardher.” Many
ot the men thought he would deep frum’ the race, “Oiheer: encouraged iin
to drop from the race, "ils father thoughe thai the hardships were too
reat and aia not urge bin to continue, But litle ‘Toby ts minde.of the
Etre stuft as wae the ancient Spartans, Te would look at hiy father’s poor
Seisted ‘ody, Struggle 10 hie feeu set his tired, aching lees’ to. going and
Surrging on.’ When they Malted, he would elle ay beside his faher. whe
can omy use his urms, Yo be mudseaged. “When the game litte trio reached
tho Ye Sts G. Ar at sth St. the 48+year-old brother had to be lifted om
the car. He went to sleep while standing in the Feeeplton room -Bojansies
Hobiison caught him in hla arme and carried him, lie a mother would carry
for babe, fo-& nige airy roam Rnd pus bimy in a clean. comforiabie bese
“Bojangles” Robinson ts Tooking. out after the welfare of the trio. He
hugs been reaponsible for talsing quite a auin of money for thelr heneft, and
nithouah Hed ‘roby’ ald noc Anta In te money. he ran himsel€ into a piace
Invail'et our heurts ana the Tublle sell nce to it that he collects sufficient
Kinds to uy for his father's operation, "Bojangles tthe most uutstanding
Showman’of our Race. Colortul, aggersalve, dynamic, generous. and brutaiiy
one “A resilur feito a ood friend and’a fearless enems, He possessen
Auniaue sealue tor keeping bimwelt tu the spotlight uf public faver-” ite
fas'iived @clean Hite and nt an age then manw men are LookINe for an ens
Chute and a quiet corner to place ft, ne ie AUll Ur greatest daueer and one
of our suuraieat athletes 2
‘There has heen much Mid and written about our lack of stamina. our
andenee of fue our inability to endure any grueling contest.” But i the
High" 'ot tacts these arguments: against our endurance ul to, hold ood.
Hice ace consestanes started out o€ 229 ewtrieg, One fntshes tied, another
Cisheh, two others finished. the. face and the fifth wae knocked out of the
face br'an:Sutomoblle: “Onir ot of chuse who started continued until the
finish.” rend that wife you fun,
And while we are reading display” Mendlines in our dally papers sbiut
ie Baring melatory ying over the North Poles it fe nee amie for we to er
SShnuene atout’ Sant Haneon, the Race man WHO WALKED OVBIC THE
RONTH VOLIE Henson, Peary ang four kskimes were the Mest huinan
iciney ae the North Poles'so far ag history knows, Thee aldne rife there tn
xteife ising machines hor the canin of w cainfertnhis heated siretbte:
Tuey Metea seer 400 mites of sneve and fee, endured the Intense cold amd the
Wehrhede Sotttade of the Arctic wastes UHl they reached thelr onl.” tlenwoh
Mearge and the Baking are the ony" human eines known to have slept of
Ue" Sonth Poles they arrived grit 6-ano lett pelt f, 1908, Henson we
Mio on'ae Pens to accompany hlin-on fe Aval dark to tia Vote. heenuse of
Mieveapetiontes his Minens and hie estracrdnars powers of endurance, Matt
Teqvot stil ves and ig'an_ American, born luizen.
Perry Hradford, the ploneer weiter of Vives somes ail the discoverer of
aramic’ Siti fe'stit] & big factor: inthe amuse pabighing: business. Ile
presented us ‘sith several uf his: retest puflieations for the" plan.
WC. ttundy fe wot vnty the tending producer of the Uiues, but he fe alka
tue produeer of the Handy. taanily, 4 fwomity to giaden the heart ot un
Iroaticer and minke him pone ant hig ehest with prigs, ‘Pwo af the sive ad
"som 'ave important factors. in tha Conduct of his mise pubitaning Wusteas
Veof, Thomas R, Hall, one of our finest Darllone sollte, and hie accom-
vanish, tanher Teionea: have: haem engnsed to prandeutt w serfea Of spitit-
tials Ly one of the heading malo. Mrmmy of Sew York cits:
J, Jobnion and Andre Razaff ace two of the: most popular downtown
soiig wilteres “Johutsonts: melodies gud Raza’. ievics are Ut the hisheat
merit nnd ave continually tn demand. :
Mable C. Ridley ie appearing at che Alhunibea In a new plano specialty
taint eck, Just fo prove her Serruullity, she enacted’ the lading, dramatic
Filo grthe “South Sea istanders™ playing at the Orpheutn theater, New:
an. ua
‘The famous Zitented) wing MiML aperspe to asim the English channel
some’ thine during the summer. "Wintor hse. tiv have eee eneaxed 19
Apnea over the Loew eireuie 4iter thelr fea The only xiputacion i thei
contract Ie shat rey mitet sist and dance We deaft Kw how meh these
Satyeartota git con singe ine Se de knale thie thee ‘will dance.” Whee are
Teiing inatragted "de fine art of dameing at the, lilly Werve Daneli
AGidous" We kaye tein doing thelr stufe amd the buble Witt Mike tas wel
awe aid, “We these ang wevnrdiage to thos steady til these Wil rae
faive’tike toro Nisan calloper seg el. The tamnoti. Aan Pennington
{he lsu Tearing @ new taming sen we Ist ele ete sul.
‘Tn event scheduled to tnke pace Ula summer that nee sure to he of
more Unt passing Interest to a Kase loves will be the sttempts 0 SUae
Tanline asckeom to twin the Engle ehghel and Ceutenuat duilan's ales
lune trp werom theeAtiantle and tecuen. if confidence counts for nnythies,
Bhthane certain to he sucessful. "A monezce benoit will he hell dune
At'the Lafayette theater. the pocerds nf whled will bg ved to defray the
Ukpenises Uf SHlew Duckecirs tetp to gelund na preparatory trainings
Bud Harrie, assisted ye Yon and Joey Tarris, kngeled Yom fora. row of
cont mile Hitler ot uke Lavosete this. week, The act in one ofthe best
That hae been een ‘at this papslas pleshouse for many moons. "te elieked
Mt eeere peetormance: ai duck gomes ® :
J, Homer Tutt made bis irc. airplane Aight last week at the Curtis fying
fli, We came ns'n thrilling class ty one af the exenlne eplrories of Oncur
Micticaus’s Intext movie, We dliare thiak Brad would heve the nerve, but
te ‘hu ie. Ie always sail he Woue never <o up Mun alritene und they
[al contitvmd come: was te anehor it In noida He save that the pote
[ve so skilled tn the maniputation er thelr machhies that if one did mot Tonk
[it would: be atmoet Imporstbie total achen"the ane fae the ground wr
I tuen ir returned to earth. Ve" will make our MHip- when we.arow Our
Celestial tings REY
| vane Price F112 the tom
a Se Sa ae a a re
Cambs, Chic, June: S-——Sos
chapter of Kappa Alpha Pst fratern-
ity made a pilgrimage to Cincinnati
vin Wilberforce, aa the guests of the
Cincinnat! alumat ehapter and. the
Fawwndale Countys club, Many of the
Frlends of the Wosts were at the club
to enjoy the day” with Ze chapter
among them being Dr. Breedlove,
Ming A. Dukye Woods. Dr. und: Mrs
it, Buzene Clarke, Mr. and Mrs, Wie
liam F. Savoy and son. De. Ross
Miss Charlotte, Chirke, Dr, and Mrs.
Stone, Atty. D. T. Murray, 3iiss Scot,
What is tha rent
vit drives ‘os wit
and sear after seat
ans
LS phe
‘ae
en
a a
Salem T. Whitney
‘Miss Cecelia Chanceller, H. Bruce
Patience, Mine Mary uses, Min
Clara dae Nesby, Clyde Hull, Davis
Mack, Miss Ba Smith, Mise Bernice
Sanders, Art Edwards, Foster Newlln
Dr. ond Mrx, Moore, Migs Loutse
Briscoe: Sf. Spurlock, Miss Patter-
won, Mise Laura Lucas, Mlex Mars
Hatter. Dr. Hicks, Ming’ Lucas, a0
Aims. Howell, Nise. Young, “Owen
Thomas, Chuties Rodse. Mets Leots
elle, isy Edna tancas, Dr basme
Ming Heres, Mine Thomas, Aliss Eth
aU Kern, Mise Alin ‘chapman and
/Miss Marguerite Isby,
A NOTE OR TWO
SPICER'S NUX-HERBS%IRON
a LAXATIVE-DIURETIC AND TONIC
gi PURIFIES the BLOOD
i |
Mey CLEARS the COMPLEXION
Faecal Never Causes The Skin to Break Out
ron MAKES YOU EAT BETTER—SLEEP BETTER
esas —WORK BETTER AND FEEL ‘BETTER
Saas Enpclly Reconmended tr
Slee tsoresnies - ) aivsey ano savore reouu.es
Seay betereacs | Fah Tae nace AAS ire
ooo RS ake
Secs] fonriociver | anv iwecae soon
RMN For Sate ty An Piet chm Dror Seres=Price 4100
Jews oot 0 Msc Shaving Pande ad ton te tae wit
F Deg ony chee Sars Pogtt 2 en te tee ot
: Benet Sechelt tors (ike hin ue “Mute
we Eeptpuan’ Wee Ras Wi seat
4 EL, Cy tanoan dig. site, “A fetunate day ten
Nvoek, this Godsend. Revs G. We Ake weiter, “bane
Bee re ie Sead ke shin ef bu ad psi,
SO iat ances Se -
Smid "Fate reso ontagogi OSE
™ THE MAGIC SHAVING POWDER CO.
L geet. 1A SKVANNAK GEORGIA 3
yo (Eit, 1901-25 years of satisfaction)
MANSIFEE SUIT’
DISMISSED BY
ST. LOU JUDGE
St. Louis, Mo.. June $.—The divoree
suit of Dre William We Sanat
Aguingt bis Gite, Mess Rov Stansites
twas dlnttesed hy de Tall tn the
toure of demestic relations Tuesday
following the completion ot the tev
tinny ot te haiti
Toe "re itams mali’ lady
clean bane ages maton
Sex budge Wate aetna a
ade Geng Unies Seaalan, Se
ogra p reecogeens
a See ani, seem Sa
Bete Sac tle wihstooes aa
a :
Aided Other Women
dirs, Mansitee tad ‘charged he
nebling aile sie cot URS ate
went ad tae ect ete Se
Son” ae oaes ae ee
Beets tees me ened et pase Oe
Lert oe cae et ae
He tad attytne tne ow
csi ieatag at tau fa
Jere at ir Wins bein ate
ee ee ar ay ae bee a
Bhatt’ saa’ sony cor Suse Solan
Collins, a teacher at Sumner high
SOM Seca cated ate
Rad Sureiaed two arouse ute
Ld cetera lirreg egos Nr
inser at anf tt ge ao teas
‘Bia aes ta Seen setaened
oe
Laces
WOODMEN'S SUPERVISOR HERE
ISrotoare fo. winten, peateanes
Ce a er ot Cen tase
Be oe canes tae na ae
eee Saeco a ba
Seer ng tlin te teccess dating
seek i bamphipe ton (eened
ee Seen ae
Sere ee eeater ttce te ia
visited the, Defender office. | Ie. ts
due Lewls: writes: frum the Blick
suid “ram Recue tical Wl reel
iin arith ‘the npwiae ages
the tte theaters Charlotte, Se Ce
Ea Walker, the lyric. tenor, now
studying at, the Shaw university
fill return. soon to Chicago. In the
Teantiine tall wit reach fim the
Hotel Lewis Rulelgh, S.C.
Harrison Blackburn, the one-man
etreus, 19, doing his stuf in Stel
Stinstfet show, playing the state o
Pennsylvania.
Jor Clemons and ‘T. J. Lee want
thelrs radioed in care of the Downe
Bron circus at Angonia, Conn.
Flod Hille wants his sipped to
gai Grand “Rapian, stten, He rade
Shetlo" ty the pang.
Hurry’ Brock ia veith the Shuttiiy
Sam gang and. wil take Tis thi
Beek &t the Lytle theater, Hoboken
x.
‘donzen White, the clever actress
says the malin ean Page ter
ie taist side hotel, 140s Es isth St,
Kansas Cis. ao.
Tuck Selson fe sti with the Flor-
fan ‘Blocsom. Minstrels and ll take
ig ac ChraGanhurg, Va, this week
Emanuel Clark, the ponulae sing
ercand pianist, wants Mis: aMipped.
the" Uyrie: theater, Hoboken, S.J.
Week af tha ath
Floridw Lyons says the mail man
can page ner this week. with the
iiiue ‘aby ‘company: at the Lyceum
theater, canton. Ohio.
‘Viotn McCoy wants herasrent to 60%
Na Winer Ste Whehitn, Kans,
‘Nettie, Henderson is with | th
Florin. Blossom gank and wants hers
Siippea to Christians, Va. this
weak
Siail_ wilt roach member of th
Anna. Nae Cow Revue thin week.
ive" its theater, Montwomers:. Aly
Stim Howard. ‘s0yn hello, folks.
and will take bia. thia week at the
STMnenter, Adana, Ga. :
Robert Freeman sul fa confined i
tne Woodman hospital, Hot Springs
Stk, Prien write. :
“Te Great Adama can be pact
week of the 4th ag general dellyers
Detroit, Sieh
TErnest Randell and Inkspot_ ar
with the tomm. Bailey Our Gang
Revues working in and aroun
Washington. Dec.
Weis Ford ways he is hitting 6
ail four apa will take mail at th
Hincoin Stet, Gury, Inds, for UM
time beinz.
Brondway Ruster Scott says, th
malt man will Bring hits to. Sells
Floto ‘sideshow and, paring wee
Of tho ath ae Newbury Torts tnsa
A. pe Racehorse Williams, th
choo choo danesr, wants hia Rent t
the Hotel Witinins, Detroit, Meh.
Teva Gvergtreet ‘canbe ped a
1752 Loa St. Wanvas Clty, fn eae
Of faded Tender.
George and Taith Coleman are wit
the Captain Ladin sews and can be
uced" "week of the atiy nt gener
Univers, Mason, We Va
Mall far the popular” Ellis. broth.
News of the Music World
Clarence Cameron White. violinist
and winner of the Harmon award to:
distinguished aehieventent an a. vio"
Unigt ‘and. comporer, appeared tn re-
eltat at" Kimiatt hall Sunday afver-
hoon, Sir, White was at his best uid
Played "a" program. of exceptional
inerit which’ gave Ample opportunity
Wo uppreciate hin gifts wna aFtiatrs
diue'to study and’ mastery of the beat
in “viotin muste." “A group of ‘even
of “hls "wen" cumipositions “hough
forth enthusiastic applause and iver
Of these numbern had 0 he renexted
Mr. White was one of the artists t
Appear upon the program at Orches:
fim ‘hall during are week, when ea
internationally” famous artists” Ap-
veared.
“The woman's world fair commlitee,
through allss Bennett, general man
ager, waa frentiy. pleased and. ex-
Dresied thelc. anpreciation of the
Artistry displayed hy the ningers who
appenved. during et weeks at "he
Cakiscum cecltal hall and in the Murs
ayget Aide Waghington eth
‘Tho woman's entemble, an orches-
tra compuned of 25 women, directeu
iis Irene Howard Harrison,” was fen
tured on the Wernesday evening pro:
kram and reflected grent credle upon
themselves and thele divector.
‘Miss Hortense. Hall, Mabel Ar-
bold. Winona “Mason” Brown ani
Helen ‘Hobbing White were, among
the ‘musician who ‘contributed thelr
talent to the artistic success of the
Weeks "Abbott Sayre rendered. des
iighttut selections upon the necuraln
with his usual skh
‘The imunieal ‘Testival program of
the Metrepatian “communis. Center
ciole wag rendered with te. usta
reat crowd ahd excellent antisi, Int
ie srs an unusual occasion, We were
favored. with the presence ot the
seat orgnnint, “Witlkm Hy Tarnes:
whose ski and artistry ure" well
Known and. remembered: by” Metro-
polltan audiences: but upon this oc-
casion Mtr, Barnes brought his bride,
wito was also n well known pianist of
Ee Paul, and w plano and organ duet
by them was a rive treat indeod.
‘The “hinior Music assoclition of
ihe Chleaao -Musle “asociation. Js
slowing great deal of activity. in
hwepanion for the national meetin
Nt Detroit, President. Carl. Diton i
the National “Aasucktion of Aluste
clans, ix thrilting. the West With his
excellent programs ae well as telling
them of the work being accomplished
by the national organization. He Will
appear in Mtinnespolis June 4.
The We. Nathaniel Dett cin. of
which Sikes Seaste spaGara eenece
ohh Sen es choo she are
af blaanen: ue Jo She
ee ae cee ee Te
Bh Sas, aes
SA eds acing afte
ee oe
Lame, Gee tet Gees
eee ei
fens
Srey Pilla! 1 abeod a
nish SANIT Seat as
ous ie pate acide Ga es
Se listed ca a tee
a" 3
aia nudes says sane
cima Raul, Bias 6 ees
a see Reg Silas oe
Bezee se eee ah!
Te ee Cs at.
Re eer
fae Semone ue oe
See enines
Sr na NH sameness
a a
Se ge te ees ot her a
Ec ee coe one i saa
Lee
sean aartis Beretta ce
a eer
HIRE 958 Bee
a See net a
os Tete tee oF pst
fet nae rere tee a
Searlay etna (eaten rae
esmeral apes ag pant Ere
ere cg ee
Stel cog Gi: Boats, oe
dent, had 2 delightful program Mon-
day ‘night when John’ MeCiellan was
the speaker and told of hin travel
through Spain. A large attendnne
wag present nud the soloists were
Helen ttonbins White, soveanos Sf
Set Noulason Walker” contrutto-
Mrs. Lida’ Catawell, former. teas:
ure o€ the club, passed away las
Week ‘and resolutlonn were ready
Miss Eatelle Kennedy. Stes. Cam.
well was a falth(ul member and. Ne
lows tx a source Of Klee to the metn-
ern of the club, 2
"The Girt Reserves of the ¥. W. C
A. ate very busy getting reads fu
tielr operetta, Which Ix to be River
at Goodman theater June 13," There
are a number of unu¥uaily” talenter
Nigh school girls who will appent i
this. group at they Weseeve the en.
courdgement ut mule lovers.
Honoring DeSaible
~ Depends on Citizens
Tt fs Almont abrurd to think that
the citizens of Chictgo mmuse continue
tery. “A _memortal muse be erected
to “Ten Point. Desalbles” "All de-
Mandy. and! methods. of projasands
1 date have been ignored "bythe
South Farle commision, city officials
and ‘realty associations. ‘Tho. mun
fipat authorities showhd he more than
Interested and” appreciative. to De-
Salblo for working and plactiis the
foundation ‘upon whieh ‘Chicago
Smit. "The realty usRoelations. whose
membership it composed of iwealtny
men, wverg piven their start in. dats
ness by this. pioneer. He. purchased
the drst pecs of real ‘estate on. the
shores of Lake Michigan’ whlch 13
how Chicago.
The punning committee of the
Chicago” World's Pulp ties become
interested ina memorial building to
DeSaible, but states frst that ie mu
be convinced that there is sufficient
interest locally and nationally: in the
project. before ie will take definite
Steps, ‘This Interest can be shown by
Fesilers of the Defender addressing
Tetters 10 Maj. J. C- Colller, director
Of the fale, expressing thelr deep ti
terest inthe construction of such
duttaing. "ie anuttatnas sth i
creeted be a tig feauure in the Chie
Suge historical “section uf) the. fare
Te wilt be more chun a Wlegrace if the
lulzens “of Chleago ‘and the. nation
fail to do. their part in seeing that
this ofa neglected hero is not remem-
Uered and. honored when - Chicago
celebrates ite centeninial anniversary.
—
Graduate Chapter of
Omegas in Clarksville
washvitie, Tenn... June S-The
ceaduate chapter ot Gmesa Pat Uhl
fraternity deoer 78 miley to be the
guests nf Dr. Katert T. Hurt, wwner
we the Gut intiroiwey sd a Tecuttne
Sluinen of Ctarksvlite, ‘Tenn. Prot, A.
MM. Gihere was a Joint host with’ Dr
ifdre, Meogressive whist preceded an
elaborate bitnquet, at which welcome
addresses were made by the host and
Fenresentatives of the Pht Beta Six-
ma fraternity, Drs, Parnell, Jefterson,
Kelley and Prof, Allison, There were
greetings also from the Kappa Al-
Pha Psi. Prot. Giibert ts principal of
the Burt high wchool, which takes tts
name from Dr, Burt, Several after
Ulnner speeches were made, atter
which three prizes were given ta the
winners of the whist tournament.
‘Those in Omega wio made. the tir
Were-Dr. ZA. Lo0vs, Dr. ©. ¥. Ro-
man, James, Horace, De. Ja T.
Harries, Dr, J. 1. Singleton Je. Rev.
Howard Pelam, iter. Herman Jones
Join W, Work, Sante Hemphill, Dr.
W.'S. Guinlang, Dr. W. B.A. Forde
Veet Bed. Henry. Ho A.” Cruphy)
Johnsen. be, Martin, Lovelt, William
Forde and Sirs. MeClennnn,
————
STORING IT UP
a ese We
e i. i
gz Nee
6 a \\ a oe
PNG Si u , ge’
eS NS, / — ee
Ow = YN Cg
E Ai 7 et SS”
Te \ Jah Lemon ag
Rees. Blin SOP Pru mor pineseeteniaie
: Je ffe Hyon bie ‘Mama is acting like &
> a thes. Noworderbe ls gpet and tae ~ oot
a ‘i leaving him, a1 \’t do saything about it.
a You'll laugh at Blind Lemon Jeferton whe
4 nares “4 yn when you play this
Sond ke re chi ti Beg ee ce Be
12631~Balky Mule Bives and Mean Jumper
{ ‘Biues, Blind Lemon. ‘Jeferson and His on)
12029-1 7
ian Hoes Greve, Rube Lacy Guar" ""Waseh tue Water hnanebagtocd
sec. Lincoln Four (Pref. C. H. Pace, Director)
SAAT Lire Cosas Bete on Ten alee 12922—1 se ye waicdanne tos Buea
seertyyonnnie Se Gyre Riatgahge” mint Maman Jeferon end
12608—'Leetric Chair Biwes on: Cieea,
Pen eons cee a Suge 7 Creve meee
wae s eet sh Midaight Blows aod Magee Miteani, Bil Moore
‘Seon 12016—Sawmill Remibite’ ‘Btues, i
Seamer, “Nate eta Aaa Mint wire sine’
rset scbae ang Uepetenh Soke Trreceatie Trneny eg Baal
seo "geen a re ee go
Sis ston teat Oe Comforting Spirituals 7 ent
Cees | wwmuseemeuiteee ube
Seren) ema ierrmeret agers nee am ee EE
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dhe vepular Race gered as
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N. C. KIDDIES
SAVE PENNES
FOR CHARITY
* Raleigh, N. C. June §—A bag of
coins, tanging from pennies to halt
dollars and totaling $95.97, was pre-
sentad to Mrs. Kate Burr Johnson,
commissioner of pubite weltare. fron
schout children of Wake county and
Ralelgi ata meeting held Thursday
morning at the Washingron high
The’ money will be advled to the
fund whieh te being ‘ralsed “under
direction of the Stite Board of Char-
Itles and Public Welfare, to be uscd
fn making a study of child welfare
conditions tn North Carolina. "Suitus
‘Rosenwald of Chicago recentis’ of-
fered $5,000 to the State Bonrd of
Charities and Public Welfare for the
study on the condition that an equal
amount be raised Inthe state. Ap
effort fx Yeinge made through the chil.
ren of the state to help complete the
necessary amount.
Vrof. 1. 8. Cozirt, principal of the
Washington high school, presided
the mecting Which the entice student
Body of the hizh school ‘ttended, is
Well ax representatives trom the
Herry O'Kelly Tralning schoot at
Method, who represented the county
schools. Students attended from the
Cropby-Garileld school, che Wash-
ington Graded school, the Lucille
Hunter ‘school and ‘the Oberlin
Graded school.
_ Following the singing of the na-
‘tlonal anthem, the commisstoner of
publle “welfare was. introduced. by
Professor Cozart to tell the students
the purpose of child welfare studs.
Polating out the fact that the stuuy
would he i aneans to give to all chil-
diren {nthe state as good advantage
Ns those she was addressing, Mrs
Johnson asked the co-operation ot
the teachers and students in obtuln-
ing the funds necessary for the
profect.
“through a careful study of the
conditions sarrounding children, espe-
cially the delinquent, defective and
Hiependent groups, we will be able to
See the whole strength and weakness
of out pabile wellure program as I
Felates to the child,” she said, Upon
the definite facts secured, we hope te
base the extension and impove the
present work.
Uient, ‘Lawrence A. Oxley. director
of the division of work of ike Stale
Hound of Charities and Publie Wel-
fare, called for renorty from various
groups in charge uf the contributions
and it was then that the bag contuin-
ing nearly #100, largely in_ nickels
wag presented to the commiasionet
poping
‘Delay in Adding Women
to Police Is Questioned
What causes the delay in the ap-
polntment of more women to the Bo-
Rice force? ‘That is the question that
i ‘being Falsed by the taxpayers. of
Chieage. “Te appears that the officiate
Fe Wliling to chide the citizens along
ha allow the. delinquency among
young giria to increase rapidly.
‘Toulny there are only 23 women in
the service to Battle the problema of
the young girl. Vers often the mis-
Likes thatsare, made which cause
thele apprehension are ot Mttle con:
Sequence, With proper _ guidance
there giris may develop into wonder-
ful women. It is a: problem for. the
Women and. the authorities should
recognize this fact and gee to ie that
sales eae sun tha tae
WINS UNIQUE |
HONOR AMONG
N.Y. TEACHERS
Soe ae Be
aaie aitpon de Ea SE:
flee rine ae inet Oo
Cinitled Seals tea wees
Siriaas rithm one beneneais
Beet eat She apttsied
SSI, og teoebed ah
Pere ae tn eS
sca eee Tees oe a
mil Gare hel an ric &
Pa ceaaeed a es
petumet couees Sine aati
Erode cE San te
SA Ee er cee ted
Public Utilities Fail
to Give Youths Chance
I peokl eb sive bast s6/Sebcw Eno bere
peofie of the last 20 years have begn
Industrfously swallowing the cor-
porations. Step by step the peonie
Rave tuken over ownership of the
corporitions until today we have x
eve rocial “struettire=the "pullic
Mea” states a wellcknoven Indus
wial ccoudinist, "This authority falls
however, to tke. Into consideration
unscent forces: Which prevent 12,000,-
909 “American,” direct or. Indirectly,
from’ taking part in. these “utiles:
‘Spectalziation. which gives the stu”
dent “an opportunity "to direct hie
‘energies to the fields in whlch be is
‘most Interested and which will form
the basis of his. later career. are
Worthiess’ unless gas, electric, stcece
railway, ‘telephone, ice planta and
other similar concerny. serving. and
Supported by the public’ open’ their
Fanke to ail quulifed south,
ict out of the ordinary. today to
know that a youth is employed and
advancing in Some public enterprice.
‘This ‘condition. shonld tot exist. In
this lund where equal opportunity ie
guaranteed by. the Constitution. Ie
fhe ‘Colleses “and: other educatiénal
institutions train Young men and
wwomen {0F skilled eccupations. then
Tela only alr that they” should. be
given a place. to carry out thelr am=
Bitions, “Ie youth In to. forget the
false. theory” of -inferlority “and. a
Ereater portion of them work in the
Skilled Trader. and industries, the
emplosnient offices. of these public
ullties must Ue forced open.
use ve See over
Jesse O. Thomas Delivers
Dedicatorial Address
athe pehcteat wanttes As toe aroic
Ing the prineipai address et the deals
catorlal exercises of the Alice Coles
fan hall a Sfaths, Industelat school
this cli, on May 29, Jesse ©, Thom=
As, field’ Secretary of the National
Levan, Teague, showed ‘the progres
made in‘education am a justification
for the investment of faith, expect”
ancy and money made by publlc spir-
ied individuals and organized phil
anthropy, as well. ag the prewen:
needa,
He called attention to the tow per-
centage of money for publte Instruc-
Hon spent for the education of chil-
dren ‘in the South. according to. the
per cent of the population they repre-
Fens, In ‘comparison to the amount
Spent for the educatlen of the white
childeen. He disclosed the fact that
South Carolina spent $14.043.719-16 of
the money for, public. Inatruction on
the White childeen, who represenced
49 per, cént of the population ‘of tte
state during 1925926, and only spent
41,885.558.98 or 10 Der cent on other
children, ‘who represented st yer cent
iat the bapentine of Uns tint.
CHICAGO CLUB INVADES KANSAS CITY
SPORTS
AM. GIANTS AND MONARCHS BATTLE AGAIN
Record Crowd to See Sunday's Fray
St. Louis W. 11 L 3 Pct.
Detroit 14 3 823
Chicago 13 7 650
Kansas City 13 10 760
Memphis 14 15 443
Birmingham 14 15 438
Urbana 14 15 382
Cleveland 4 14 222
Chicago lost three out of four to Detroit, won four out of five from Birmingham, won three out of five from the Cubs, won three out of five from the Cubs, won three out of five straight from Memphis. St. Louis-Cleveland standing has three games in Cleveland short. Cleveland management refuses to co-operate and will not play Sunday and Sunday games, Rain Sunday in Memphis and Kansas City, Rain Monday in Birmingham, Kansas City and Detroit, Rain Tuesday in Birmingham, Detroit and Kansas City.
Kansas City, Mo.
American Giants and
Monarchs will back
the game series. This is
the Chicago clubs' first appearance here this season, and with
hoping to bring up with delegates
and visitors to the
Republican national
convention, a record
attached to see the series.
Kansas City, Mo. June 7-The American Giants and the Kansas City Monarchs will lock horns on Saturday for a game series. This is the Chicago club's superpower, one this season, and with the town rapidly filling up with delegates the Republicans must hold a convention, a record crowd is expected to see the series. The Giants will arrive some time tomorrow (Friday) and owner Trimble will announce with J. L. Wilkerson,
The Giants will arrive some time to meet owner Grimble will go into conference with a J. L. Wilkerson, then move to archery, in an effort to have the postponed game in Chicago played off here dur ing the number of games from five to six. All 15th St. from the Street hotel
are that leads to the park if excited. The Monarchs dropped a few games to the Chicago team while in the Windy City and the home town fans are very anxious to see right sight by taking the coming sprints.
PETER HARRIS
Rullet Bogan was a lot downbeat before the storm, weather during the taut series. The Islanders forced the Nets in an inns Saturday and then it rained Sunday and Mon
The Monarchs' infield is the same Joseph at third, then left, short. Ragan will be in the infield field will consist of Dwight in centers Taylor in right, Lichtenberg or Kena do do the backstopting. The Monarchs pitching staff is in tip-top shape.
2 Memorial Day Games to Detroiters
The Black Barons failed to stop the Detroit Stars today in their march toward first place, allowing the Bars to win both games of the double play. In the first game the Stars hit Willis for 29 hits and coupled with loose fielding on the part of the Black Barons, the Bars took the lead. In the meantime the Barons could do nothing with the show ball of Mitchell and after gaining a safe lead he simply toyed with the Barons' second game. The second game was a bit better, defties pitched a good game and orchard would be a good game. The game, the Barons could not hit and coupled with slack and slow fielding, they lost, Davis, for the Stars, pitched a good game and was stinging with the bases.
R.H.E
Detroit . . . 305 321 030 -17 40
Birmingham . . . 201 000 111 -6 13
Batteries -Mittles and Martin
Willis and Mcans.
R.H.E
Detroit . . . 300 202 0 7 9
Birmingham . . . 100 001 11 -6 13
Batteries -Davis and Martin; Jeffries and Perkins.
FYA
SAYS-
Athletics
National Meet
Florence Mills
In K. C.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Thursday—Athletics is the greatest melting pot in the world. It brings together men and boys from all parts of the country and from allingley. They learn. They grow wise. The greatest events in the history of the United States in the minds of the youngest students in field games are the Penn relays and the Drake relays in the spring, the eastern intercollegates, the University of Illinois relays, Stagg's national field games, the University of Chicago's intercollegates. Southern boys and men come to all events. They learn that we can prove on the field, but that we can produce ourselves as any others would. It was a strange sight to the southern lads to see our boys galloping over the hurdles or sprinting down the course in Chicago, but they soon got used to it.
They left with a different feeling, but of course it will be hard to contend, of the follies and home that such is posited. They were not resenting the South were entirely "white" while the winning relay was $88 from Chicago was mixed court, but the winning mile relay team of Columbus was three and one, Richards being the only white boy on the team, and the only any friction, nobody expected any. The southerners can go back and tell the world that up here the races are mixed, they play and eat together, and love in the spirit of gentleness.
---
LOOKING over the list of events maybe you will regret that Beauty lost to Stokes, a white youth from Boston Louise, la. in the 220 hurdles, been in stiff competition each week and it was telling on him. However, we must admit that Stokes showed most wonderful form and that form carried him to victory. Moxley go the 440, in which he has established a new world's record, but the coach of Central preferred to win the mile relay and wouldn't send him in. Moxley had done better than 50 races in Central, so he was his team mate. Richards won three of these 440 races and in each were boys from all sections of the country. Atlanta, Ga. boys' high had one to finish in the prize list, you know that is a white high school.
---
NOW there will be some brown boys in the national collegiate in Washington, who rounded to win the 100-yard dash a few years back at the state championship. Ondie returns, this time as a member of the varsity team of Washington State college. He broke Buddock's 175-yard world record last month.
yard world's record last month.
Others who are looked for are Weeban of Pittsburgh university, buter, who hails from Beaver Falls, N.Y., and Gordon of the University of Iowa freshman team, who will compete unattached. Gordon comes from Gary, Ind., where he was a senator. Gordon will be if any event should be patronized it should be this one. It is too big and too great to be allowed to get into. Mr. Stinge and his assistants allowed you in free both last Friday and Saturday. This Saturday we do not believe you will pass it up, be charged at the gate. Be a good sport.
---
WONDER if there is anything to a name, Florence Millis has won her last three starts. The little flyer has won the Aurora track and came back on the opening day at Arlington to win at a nice price.
And the great American Derby will be run at Arlington Saturday.
---
So LONG on next week. We are down here on 15th St. hob-nobbing with the elites of Kansas City, waterways arrive for the G.O.A.T. convention.
图 1 图 2
NO, we are not to cover that. We will see Saturday and Sunday's game between the Monarchs and the American Giants and then hop a ratter for Chicago.
THE SCHEDULE
Baby Joe Gans Wins From Jackie Brady
Baby Joe Gans Wins From Jackie Brady
New York, June 1.—Baby Joe Gans of Los Angeles, Calif., won a six-round bout from Jackie Brady. Gans won every round but the fourth, which was the first, in which Bryn rumped a small blood vessel in Gans' nose.
GILKS GIANTS WIN. 4-3
Minnesota. Minn. May 31. After
winning six straight games the local
league won its first game in
Union Glants, this being the locus
first defeat. R. H. E.
Gikersons . . . 021 000 010—4 7 2
Minnesota . . . 000 001 021—3 9 1
Batteries—Sims and Coleman; Fenney and Ryan
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
KANSAS CITY BEATS CUBAN STARS IN 12
Cooper Bests Diaz in Hurlers' Duel
Kansas City, June 2.—One of the most interesting games seen in the National league here, this season
was waged at
Mucheh bach
field, the Mon-
aurea defeating
Starus in
12 limbs,
3 to
M
The Monarchs had considerable ability facing Dixie, a 25-year-old Cuba right hander, who should have been returned to the nine innings, rights, right Fielder Montalvo muffed a fly ball with two out and two innings and third in the tiled inning, which enabled the Monarchs to score their first two. Diz allowed only five hits over the entire route, while Andy Cooper, the victor in the duel, was touched for seven, four being bunged in the seventh when the Culans tied the score at 4. The winning run was scored in the 12th on a walk to Taylor, Young's center field single, which sent Taylor, and a sacrifice fly by Dwight. Livingston, a former college star of Wiley college, Marshall, Tex., played left field for the Monarchs, and gave a ball to the right field entanglement for two bases in the seventh.
Chicago in 2 Wins From Memphis Sox
NVADES
DETROIT IN 2 WINS OVER SAINT LOUIS
DeMoss' Gang Hops on Missourians
By BUSSELL J COWANS
BY RUSSELL E. J.COWANS
June 6. The Detroit Stars effectively bunched their hits behind the superb hurting of lukky George Mitchell to gain the verdict in the second game of the fight for the leadership in the first half of the pennant race. The final score was 9 to 4 in favor of the Motor City gang.
Mitchell held the hard hitting St. Louisans to seven well scattered bingles and was ably backed up by his supporting cast. Stearnes and McNeil were right hander with sparkling catches. Stearnes robbed J. Russell of a triple with a great running one hand and McNeil robbed Crecy to score hurling. A spectacular snare of this line drive.
The locals tallied twice in the first round. Harding walked and advanced to second on Stearnes' one-hit to right. Riley smacked a single to third on the blow and Kill moving to second on the throw in McNeil was passed. Radelfield grounded to J. Russell and Stearnes came home. Mitchell scored in the third on Stearnes' homer.
The runs were the result, of some ragged fielding on the part of Crecy, the opposing second sucker, and the defending second sucker, Dumse, Stearns strolled, Crecy booted Rile's easy roller and Harding scampered home. McNair drove sharply to Crecy and again the second sucker, filling the base, filling the sacks, Radcliff inserted a timely triple to unload the bases and scored a minute later on Johnson's single. McNair rescued two of his matches in seventh and fourth drive over the right flight fence for the circuit.
The enemy rallied in the fifth and pit over a run. Another uprising in the enemy was choked when Sutton's mate perched on the bags.
Louisville Royals Cop Game in 14th, 2 to 1
Louisville Royals Cop Game in 14th, 2 to 1
Louisville, Ky. June 4—The Louisville Royal Giants won a 14-14 game from the Owensboro Red Sox visitors got but three hits off Hiley.
McCOX:NOLANS WIN TWO
Pierre, S. D, June 3.—The McCoy-
Noan Giants defeated the Pierre
club today, to 10 to 1. R. H. E.
Giants .....002 023 220-10 14 0
Players .....000 100 000-10 1
Batteries—Morrow and Bammer;
Battles and Hingle.
Alpena, S. D, June 1.—The McCoy-
Noan Giants defeated the Alpena
club, to 11 to 8. W. Mack, first baseman
for the Giants, fitted one over in the
Giants to send the Giants into
three-run lead. R. H. E.
Giants .....002 031 230-11 12 0
Alpenas .....010 212 200-8 9 0
Batteries—Williams and Bammer;
Huffman and Thompson.
North Carolina State Net Play June 13 to 15
Tulare, N. C. June 1.—The North Carolina Tennis association will hold its sixth annual closed tournament on June 15 at the Algonquin Tennis club in Urbana, from June 13 to E. inclusive. The new titlum hotel, recently renovated, will host the cello, has arranged special rates for tournament players and visitors. Accommodations may be arranged for in advance by communicating with W. H. 1202 Fayetteville St. Durham, N. C. The officers of the state association are Dr. Nathaniel E. Jackson, president; Dr. Leslie Rouse, Chancellor; P. Chuckie president; M. S. Chuckie secretary; Mrs. M. E. Mugcatley, assistant secretary; Edward K. Merriet, treasurer, and John W. Holmes, referee. The officers of the Durham club are W. D. Hill, president; J. S. Kugshon, vice president; M. I. S. Kugshon, vice president; Miss Cummie Kunette, assistant secretary, and H. L. Wilson, treasurer.
Memphis Sox at Detroit for 5 Games
Detroit, June 9—The Memphis Red
Sex, the rejuvenated postmen from
the southland, will tangle with the
will tangle with the
Detroit Stars at
Mack park Saturday,
Sunday, Monday,
Tuesday and Tuesday.
A player he
he played Tuesday.
P
This is the first trip to Detroit for any of the southern city fans in their initial bow to the Motor City fans, the Red Sox with the away for an apicalious start on their northern invasion.
Glass
Michigan broke even with the Stars in a four-game series in the southern city last month and in a couple of games and the Memphis cake walked to a victory. In one game the Dixie pastimers passed to all of the Detroit pitchers to all parts of the lot. Memphis has a strong infield in McHaskell. Thomas, Harris and Robinson. Harris and Thomas are new pitchers for the Detroit pitchers playing a bump game at second and short respectively. Harris started several rallies with his timely hitting and threatens to throw in the Detroit burpee.
The outfield of Hicks, Clark and Ward, are fly chases of rare ability and capable wellfitters of the stick. The team is one of the best gardeners in the league. Clark is from one of the southern colleges while Hicks gained his experience in the middle-west. White are hurriers on whose supple arms the southerners will place their dependence. Glass gained the verdict over the Stars in Memphis when he limited White and Tyler lost the verdict but C. Bell copied his game. Brown and Hamilton are the mask artists. Larry Brown, who formerly wore the jersey, is hitting the ball at a merry clip since the season got under way. With the team in fine shape and the pitcher raring to even the count, White and Tyler two defeats in Memphis, the games should develop into some red hot affairs. Detroit fans are coming out in hordes to help the Stars in their fight. Rile, Stearnes, McNair, Johnston and Harding are facing the pellet at a terrific pace. Johnston has just struck his stride and will no doubt a memoir to the opposing hurriers.
The Detroit Glippers are in tip-
shape. Shaw, Jarry, Marschall, Mit-
ka, and McKinney have three
displayed midseason form since their
trip down south.
DETROIT
Johnston, lf
Harding, ss
Shenan, cf
Rile, lb
McNair, rf
Johnson, lb
Johnson, 3b
Orange, 2b
Shaw, p
Marshall, p
MEMPHIS
Harris, ss
McKinney, bell, lf
Ward, cf
Thomas, 2b
Clark, rf
Pierce, 3b
Hicks, lf
Brown, e
Glass, p
Tylan, lf
C Bell, p
White, p
DETROIT
Johnson, harding, sStearnes, cf
Rile, 1b
Rade, rRadeffil, rRadeffil,
Johnson, 3b
Orange, 2b
Marshall, 3b
Pyle's 'Corn' Kings Given Their Dough
New York, June 2—C. Pyle paid off his coast to coast foot racers here at the Madison Square Garden, following a special 26-hour run which only 300 fans watched. The affair was a decided flop.
Phillip Granville of Hamilton, Canada, received a certified check for $5,000, while Eddie Gardiner of Seattle received a check for $1,000. The others who finished in the first 10 were paid off.
Granville had finished third in elapsed time, Gardiner eighth.
Atlantic City, N. J., June 2—With the veterans giving Sammy Robinson his heels and firms making presents in淋浴 ranging from $10 to $100, Robinson will fare better than Gardner. The coolers are still singing his praises. He is the best of the cozy resort today. He didn't finish in the first 10, but he is a "home own boy, a three letter man on the high school board that is enough for the home owners.
Lincoln Giants Win Double Header From Cuban Stars
New York, June 2.—The Lincoln
Giants and Cuban Stars came to
together in their second double-header
of the season at the Protective oval
and the N.Y. Giants, who crowd decisively trouncing the visitors in a double sette. The scores were 6 to 4 and 12 to 6.
The first traveling Lincolnians now
setting a new record, N.Y. Nip
Winters pitching a brand of ball in
the first game that would stop any
chony hunk club in the East and
John Henry Lloyd the chieftain him-
self setting a new record, sticking, collecting a double and single in the opener to drive in four runs and completing an almost perfect day in the midnight with two homers and single to chase six runs across the pitch.
With the battery announced as Oscal twirling for the Stars and Nip Winters hurling for the Lincoln the winters conceded a mount duel. In the first four and a half innings both pitchers allowed one hit, the Lincoln scoring in the duel when Fligings wielded. In the second pitch, the Scies was purposely passed. The Stars' strategy was knocked into a cocked hat as both runners successively added a double steel, Riggins scoring. In the fifth the Lincoln did some real scoring. Winters walked with two down and Gray doubled. Lloyd took the lead into right scoring both runners. With Nip Winters breezing along limiting the Stars to two hits for six innings a three-run lead for the Lincoln and a peculiar club liable to burst forth with a cluster of hits and runs at almost any moment, consequently both pitchers conceded a mount duel which eventually proved the deciding runs of the game. Gray led by off by beating an infield hit and the reliable Lloyd doubled to center, two bases scoring Gray and Lloyd.
Wolcott Langford is Beaten By B. Colima
Ta Juaun, Mexico, May 30. After a sensational fight in which both players scored 100, Columbo, Whittler, Wash., middleweight, won a decision from Woclet Langford, Chicago, here this afternoon after 13 rounds of fighting. It was any player's fight until the final round.
GILKS SPLIT EVEN
SPORTS
AS CITY
Typewriter Girl Won by Grid Star of N. C. Aggies
Greensboro, N. C., June 11—Vioia E. Brannic, stenographer, A. & T. college, Greensboro, N. C., was recently wed to Jesse Miller, Jr., all American right guard and important factor in the winning of the C. I. A. championship for A. & T. college. Miss Brannic is a graduate of Butler's Commercial and Secretarial business school of New Haven, Canaan, and institution with the above named institution for the past five years.
BALL PLAYERS LOSE JOBS ON LEAGUE CLUBS
BALL PLAYERS LOSE JOBS ON LEAGUE CLUBS
Wholesale releases were given members of the Cleveland team this week by the owners, who felt that neither the manager nor the players were giving the Cleveland fans the baseball that the Forest City fandom demanded. The Memphis Mongoose, ex-owner of the Cleveland team and once a first class pitcher, was released as was Frank Funco, battler and manager who played for the American Giants. Others released were DeWitt, Wooldridge, formerly of Wilberforce university; Johnson, the manager of Johnson, the last named being the one-time heavy clout of the Kansas City Monarchs, a bishop of the Bingham club with suspended days because he failed to show up at the park last Wednesday when the Black Barons played a twin bill with Detroit Stars and lost both games.
Ruth Jones has been let out because of indifferent playing in Chicago and has been let in Wesley, although he has two new players, will strengthen his team when Parrell comes back. Parrell has been let in for serious sickness in his family.
Cleveland Wins, 6to2,
From Buffalo Club
Cleveland Wins, 6to2,
From Buffalo Club
Cleveland, Ohio, June 4. — The Cleveland Tigers roped all over one run Johnson's Buffalo Black Sox game, winning Saturday 29-5 and taking a twin bill Sunday 29-3 and 3-4. The local lore entrust put in the favorable appearance both field and at lat, where they have been weak during the first half of the schedule. The ball might hard in this series when the nighthawk game took place, when little Letty Brady had the Tigers guessing for six innings with the score sounding at 2-2. The defies in the eight with the socks loaded spelled defeat for the Sox.
The Dunla
THE outstanding three of the deep-shade D ished by our new hi SWAGGER shouts prosp toe, with a soft cork, neatness itself and will the smart dresser.
Dunlap Swagger
outstanding three-base hit of the season
the deep-shade DUNLAP red calfskin, fin-
by our new high-gloss process, THE
GER shouts prosperity to the world. Plain
with a soft cork, shape-holding box it is
less itself and will always be applauded by
art dresser.
The Dunlap Swagger
THE outstanding three-base hit of the season of the deep-shade DUNLAP red calfskin, finished by our new high-gloss process, THE SWAGGER shouts prosperity to the world. Plain toe, with a soft cork, shape-holding box it is neatness itself and will always be applauded by the smart dresser.
DUNLAP SHOE COMPANY
NORTH ABINGTON, MASS.
"Step Forward in Quality"
EXTERIOR
DUNLAP
SHOES
Look for the features that look great work on the end and the DUNLAP worn hard and being
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North
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District
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DUNLAP SHOP CO.
North Abington, Mass.
Please send me your New 1948 Booklet of
Distinctive Footwear for Men.
Name.....
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---
---
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1926
BIRMINGHAM BLACK BARONS AT CLEVELAND
New Players Add Life to Tiger Team
BY WILLIAM M. COOPER
Cleveland Browns, who have rejuvenated Cleveland Tigers will be under the management of Harry Jeffries, star thirteenacker and catcher of many years, the National league with the Detroit Stars and Tate Stars who were doing their best a few years ago.
W
Jeffries was appointed manager of manager of Duncan and was handed his release after the year showing the Yankees and the recent road trip and the disastrous series against the league leading at Linnan at Linnan. Willett Since the signing of Jeffries three has been many changes in the local team. Receives a bounty from the Minnesota Stockard, Zumphier, DeWitt, Woolridge and Heavy Johnson, the latter the most disappointing player signed this year and formerly known as the Thone Ting. The new players signed are Willett, shortstop, and Orvil Singer, gardener, both ex-Lincoln Giants stars; a Rangers player a sucker for 20 years ago; Saul Dart, Memphis second baseman who made quite a name for himself last year in the South, and Tom Jackson, a right hand pitcher from Erie, Pa.
With this added strength the Tigers are busy rounding into shape for their five game series against the Black Barons from Birmingham starting Saturday, with two games which by the way will be Birmingham here, as there are many folks here from the Barons' home town.
Amador, Brent Lose at Mills Stadium Show
Amador, Brent Lose at Mills Stadium Show
Dick Earle, substituting for Sam Phillips, beat Billy Brent in the first preliminary bout at Mills stadium on the night of May 31 in Jim Muller's show, which 5,000 fans watched.
Jack Berg, an Englishman with a terrible right punch and who is game to the core, got the decision over Pedro Amador of Panama in 10 rounds that nearly stole the show. Troy Broussard hit more than in the main go in which Ray Miller lost to Freddie Mueller of Buffalo after he had floored the New York state卫 twice the count of nine in the fifth round.
Amador landed two stiff rights in round one and it looked like Berg would be a goner before the round ended. He did more catching than Ray Schultz in round two, but along about the fourth he came to life, and oh! what a bout it was.
Buster Brown of New York won a narrow decision from Louis Terry of Omaha.
Love for the Queen
Love for the Queen
Love for the Queen
The Dwarves and
the Dwarves and
the Dwarves
= ; mam a a... — meee ‘ nn
| Chicsgoamerender Tait
| : LEP Iv
blk 0 i as SAUL CUO SPIE ie MONET mw
High Behoal Lads Attack ~ NATIONAL InTERSCHOLASTIC WINNERS |DIXON GETS - {anoTuER winner BACHARAGHS
ecords at Stagg’s SSS ae]
National Interscholastic’ =—s- | DRAW AFTER | 5 eg : | RAID LINCOLN
- 3 ——— A ee ee __||| BEATING MAN cw Dts SsGIANTS CLUB
the 24th national interscholas-
tic track and ficld meet at, the
University of Chicago Saiur-
day afternoon and set a pace
80 hot that the fastest school-
boy athletes entered in the
running broad jump and the
440-yard run were forced into
the background.
Ehatehing first place fn the bead
jump ind the a0-saed run, These
Gwe” striplings ‘grabbed “two “gn
predate that ather Tad had intended
There were withers who won han-
fore ne the eld games, bue the wes
Emanves of thexe two. youngeters
Te especlally nutieeatie we he
gies of more sina T3300,
John Brooks, a senlor student of
the" Hyde Pare bist schol, Chl
Sage, gus the Mest to “capture ame
tt the ewveted edly, He leaped
$8 feet “Iw Inches tor win the run
hing hyowd Jump, beatin one ‘Med
he" Mekiniey, Tes, ain dohesaa of
Viavkwethy ila. ite ton. added a
Mronze anedat take Lot hye pktetng
Atom tncthe Sunesard tow hurdles
Browse scored 34 cof hie tenis Is
pints.
‘At the Jlinaie state meet the talk
sovond place inthe low huedtex nd
Aniehea third in the head. Jump.
Te wa during the serond race of
the siv-yard run dive William Bxun,
Senin at. Procbel bleh, Gare, de,
Moke. into the Wutelizin, tle, eo
cred the distance in W:ai.2, Taking
The Toad at tie start he wie newer
Theadled sind tiated ve gars sibead
te Dykes shiter of, Nartheastern
iat, Derrait. Exim placed trast i
Tix’ sane event. at the Indian
state “meet, "iis “Terie show=
Tn wited. Feoohed to whit the state
tile two weeks gam. Exim was also
Aineinher of thie mile. relay” team,
‘Froehel won second honors ia thls
event,
‘The _reniurkable performances
these younsetern made in Stazz
Annual epring scramble was by far
The hese dn the history of the meet.
‘They broke Into the sinning eol-
nin in practically every vent they
were entered, and ewpectaily played
Ptnrge part in the wianing of three
Tolay races. ee
Ralph Metcalfe, coniury and 220-
yard dash ash, of Tilden Tech
fica schon, chicago, wits moved. out
In hie peviaiting, ite, tenk serond
Mace In wach event nd site amehor
Tan an the ehninpionship. 420-sard
eiay team.
Mewaife. Woke the state and
equaled the national roeard. in the
Century at the Illinois sate "mect
Tecan. "
‘then’ there war another ful from
doun tn Indiana whn came threuzh
Sint fying colors, “Willie Fowlkes,
2 Sunioe student av the Central high
pehent, | Stuncles Son Se neil
Tied in the s¥oeyar dash and eth
Inthe rentry, Fowlkes browsht the
Howe. tas fort when she nvereaine
S'Sosard handiewy In the frst nen
fe tlie, sk0-yard relay: and beat ont
Hort Collins at the finish.
Saturday was Fowlkes secon tein
to Stacks game sand the second thine
No oreo fio he toning ole
Beatie In 1836 he Malshed second In
SEirsadeyard dank,
J} dugene Reatty and Love Snow
fone stars from Nartneasters zh,
Siearoit, 1827 winners of the tational
Tite, falted, tw ive, up, to all the
Enod things “that have "been sid
Shout them, Hentty, who set a Tec
ded in the 220-sard tow hurdles Inst
Qeare had to be content seith see~
Bnd ples th that event Saturday.
We was nosed que ae the Anish hy
Stunley Stokes, a white south of
Raton oue, Wa, Me. failed to
duality inthe high hurdles. pretiut-
inarles Friday.
Snowden, whose spectalty is the
century. and. 20crurd dash, pulled
S tendon an was forced to SU by
Sind watchs he keummten Least
Winter Snowden and Teatte alae
Amaxced enoueh points to wa Ue
Jutionsl interscholustie. door track
Tide at. Northwestern univeralty.
Verhupe the beet perfarmance of
the dug was that minds by the crack
Central high usehoot relay team. of
Catumbus, Ofo, svinners of the one
nile relay race.
Lal by. Herbert Mosley, senlor
student at the schoo) whoa. Weelk
Seo shattered a world’ Interschol=
aetie tinsyard recur, che team Ov
Shed the mize in 2schs, establish~
Ins anes work's Intorscholnstle
revel. the wld. record get DY
Drath, Ind. in *92t was 324202,
‘The team $ composed of Herbert
Mesteys Rabert. Ternwrne WHat
Daniels ar) Willis tticharde white).
This quartet miso. broke the world’s
Tmerecholastic halt school ‘mie. re=
Tay record. at the Ohta. relays, ‘This
Fevord iad stood for 18 Sears.
Enirles to Staze's samen totaled
mare thin 800. OC this number 10
Mere nor white. ‘Thee hud heen sent
ore. by thelr respective sehooks e=
tauko. of their autstanding pene
formances in eariler meets” Turing
the season. =
‘Dur heya paved In every evant.
‘rinse who finished a the frst Ave
aves were:
Lester Rroven finished tifeh inthe
quigard high undies. Vie. enevted
fie valors-ef Central high school.
Columbus, Ohio
"A. he Holder, graduating senior of
miavien high schon, Altelom,. ans.
finished “fourth i “the 320-yard
Tash At ‘the Kansas tate. meet
Heider set a new mark fn the Fini
hing brand jump. His distance was
Be fect Thich.
pF Eslane Tamsey,. senior, TRovsevelt
ARizt selyooly Prasat Oia, thea vei
Theme athens fap faut pace in the
Tinning nize jump.
Clifford Madison, Senior high
sehnts Hutelhinsan, ‘Kaas, tied with
Tamecy af Fatedo: Ohio. for fourth
Inthe rinnins tee Jum.
Pe gh crane gee 2 tp RO
at 6 feet 21% inches, He was # mem
her of tie relay foun.
‘Thad ‘Dennis, u Junior student of
Detroit Northwestern high —xchook
Hintshed ‘sixth in the running high
Suns.
Frank Ituiletock, senior, Danvtite
high school, Danville, IL, Mnished
third In the 440-yard fun, “Tha was
his frst try to the Chicago mect.
Cliifard Madison, gratduating | sc-
nigr of Senior Nigh school, Hutehin~
an, Kans plaged fth Inthe bru
jump.
‘Others who were enterved, hut who
falled to Fewech the Maas, were:
JSmhomas Spann, Frosebel, Gary.
Ind.: Hie» Odell, Froebel high, Gary,
Ind; Witkin ‘MePhervon, Froebel
Bigh, Gary. ind: dusdell Dennis,
Nortinwestern Nigh school, Detroit:
Monroe Walter,” Washington high
school. Rast chicago. Ind: Henry
Milton, Washington high school, East
Chleazo, Indy Kenneth Scott,” Park
IMzh school, Chieaga: Joxeph Sharpe.
Wendell. Phillips, “Chicaze; Arie
Tiras. Wendell Phillips high school,
Chicago: Musex Graham, Hyde Park
high school, Chica: Oseitr Daler,
Kouserelt hikh seliool, Dayton, Ohio:
Louis Stewart, Tilden teehatent, Chis
enzo: Robert Cardwell, | Wentell
Maillins high xchoal, Chicaxos Lywts
Mallard, Froebel high, (ary, Ind.:
Alvin dackson, Froebel high ‘xchuol,
Gary. Ind Bdward Cardwell, Fror=
Wel high school, Gary, Ind.t Jase
Robinson, Frocbel high school, Gary,
Ind: Bair! Smith, roche!’ high
school. Gary. Ind.:’ Audrey’ Kelley,
Feoebel high fehool. Gary, | Inds:
Kenic Rehardaon and. William
Fitch, Englewood high school, Chie
caana
pes
ee
ITHE wong is ended but the melody
ngers ont Such well describes
the present athletic situation in the
[American Intercollesiate world. ‘he
collegiate baseball season is over. the
track and field event are completed.
‘The college aman tx now turning bis
Jever Into other directions, some of
them have finished exams, others are
[raking them now, and fn Con dys alt
seh scatter fromm eat a cons
the four ports have ail heen eon:
irented and four teane hive struezied
‘io win at least one, it ix a sad affate,
Ithix au revoir season, when eur halt
packs, forwards wind centertlelers Sts
|zeodsiy" until September. Lavera af
Spart must now lonk forward to base-
jun. aupplemented by an accasional
jactin or ishing. Jauns as an ani
[iveania wt satintying their whine. June
jiechtere with her roses. her zraduates.
[Her suley-daye. Tn the midst sf wu
ining vircunistances we will attempt
togive sou n Merting accuuntof the
Inet netivities among cullezes in
[Dixie
AGABAMA asain captured the
Danchall hones with Afteen vle=
orler aid four Mefeats. Atlant unk
Seraity” placed. second wih mine: wits
And. tirke reverses, hut two ne these
fame We the hands sf the. \iabamn
Hornets, ‘Phere has heen seine tal
Ae Atlanta eluting the. chimpton=
Ships because she played stronker
team than the Hornets. This ts pos-
Mies if tie above fa trie, an the enn-
Tereice empioss the Dickinson rating
Aste. “(clarke and Tuskezee sre al
fled up fur secont hones oe etter
third Honurs.” On the face of records
the Ticers seer to enjoy sili ole
In°percemae., ‘The. baseball. season
war not vers exciting and axa result
The attendance nnd enthustasin sul-
fered. “Un the suatrary, hig leamue
Tiseball seems tobe onthe ascend:
Auey and fair erowds are turwiig Out
To Gee the top-utehers perforut.
APRACK came into. ioe own this
Apiins snd now eammunds 3) Dust
o¢ Voorters aud lovers. "The Tuske=
kee and Tampton relngs, the Howard
Ineet and the wurideangulae meet
staged by Clark university in Atiimta
Were nll succetsen. Tuskegee shuwed
the way for cinder path competition
inthe South, white Lincett universes
fencrled ava’ honors in the Last. The
inst auhtetie event for the snuthinst=
crn conference was enacted Saturday
fout at clivke university. fit Gis meet
Shirk: won “over AMorchouse and At=
fanta universiy with ts pointe. The
Clark “relay team. won every” relay
fovent, ‘Te ix Interesting to note tht
The Clark team. with ane. exception.
[enuideupsof what writers eatted
Som""Taytor’s “Airplane fekMeld.”
The ont aldition is Wadley. who
dons his. stult-atonz with Chambers
Toberts and Du Pree. In the Chirk
Inet a conference. Freord wan
inashed when Soon of Atlanta hurled
the javeling 148 feet
APESKEGEE and Fort Valley en«
ered the Hampton relays and
evidently, found the. going. mighty
Tough. wolling, the Fort Walley cone
Large viash star, was unable to. pier
Ivehis event, illt Tuskegee record of
28 sound is better than the 10-ftat
Fosistered at Hampuon.. in the 220~
Sera dish ‘he fared. betser and won
Tne'event in good Ue, “The Tuskezee
team thie out-amarted all opposition
on lay. swas able. to win only one
event, ‘The Hampton meet was esne-
Glaily’ impressive tn the Jump events
X'Union man Jumped 28 feet inthe
fumulng broad Jump. and als feet one
fen waa the high Jump mark. The
Mentors have all titeked away. thelr
uiede equipment untit next Septem
iter, Wien the cal the Pail fr" foot
tall candidates. Who ‘Knotes Rave
jickat “September wil bring? Wil
Tuntecer gait rejen supreme? Just
four shore feeting months ial wel
owen
GILKS WIN IN 10TH
Abert Lew, Minn. dune 2.—Gilker-
sun's Caton Chants hid te go 14 ine
hinge hefore they could defeat te
wean. RHE.
Gilkersons .....060 000 100 1-8 11 i
‘Albert Lea ....000 000 0700—7 B& 2
_ NATIONAL INTERSCHOLASTIC WINNERS _
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DeHart Hubbard Is World’s | AUTO DERBY
Best Jumper-Harvard Coach} OF 100 MULES
re Lo!
Vases 3 ck Oba Fue Cae i PHY aT.
ea anna eae Caner ot
hastaeheaehe gue a et
Sakae ar Sad ree unnartigo nes
ans cio Mi ae ae ares
eta eee mPa
| tn the 1927 Iinterealieginte games
att ‘of the broad jump finalists made
2 reheat an
Penn Stute has jumfed 24 feet 5%
Neches Aneesh
Stanford university: TA. Mathias of
StS, chat ue
Wilbur Clark Takes
Tennis Semifinals
Witbur Clark, Chleags Nurmi
eyltege's teams layer, won train
Corsi Putra nf chine infor eutleze
inthe seule of the Newthern He
Hinols” Junior ‘rullege. tennis. taurat~
miene at Oak Park Pennie club, 6
Gas. “ton tte Normal team Ye Lanes
Feat Turner, brmher. af iets
farmer, now freshmen ot the Univers
sity af Hitnais, Lawvent is captain
tithe wetter ‘the ten hes nee
dual mevis tw their victury list and
Divoan Genet
Cambridge, Mass. June 1.—There
aro twn Uiyinple events to Nie Med
at” Amsterdun west xurmmter that
Sinuld not cite
Z the Cased States
Hutdlng. the out
Sy Sime. rian to
PERE Veltare Mubtewn,
; 2 the drat Atfehte
. zon Suinper this
ae Eouncry sdioutd not
( of have any ainieulty
baie AR? Sinnine twah. the
Ne olympic broad
GF junip and the hop,
Bec seprand ump.
mes “te hatter event
ROE as neon sual
NERS: Nestectea of tute
oe mee! by American ath=
yee? = ictes, but we still
CORSO have’ enous ood
a
in” olgmpie ves
tong anything
Hubbard should happen to
ones ie
fh; Fes
Fe,
‘Cee
a
pee
we
disses
gf revard Hubbard as the greatest
flat jumper in the world today. He
now’ holds the world's broad jump
record of 25 fect 10% inches, and his
mark for the hop, step and jump is 50
fectee =
Kaur years ago the great Australian,
AWW. Winter. rexistered 50 feet 11%
inches in this event in France.
Turing the past four years Winter
hax siipped back while Hubbard has
advanced. 1 aim positive he ean brea
the hop, step sand jump record. any
Ume he desires. Ie ix a. difficult
event, a three-in-une perfurmiinee.
‘Only "a rugged jumper can hope 0
fe guccexstul, Rhythm, speed and
then “perfeet "balance to” maintatn
speed Ie needed to he successful.
Correct Method
The Nop. step ani jumpers should
start off with their right fot. make
Gheir hop. land. then step olf, and
after tunding te second time ‘Wake
A broad jump, Most af the Jumpers
outside of unis country ran” do. but
45 feet in this event. ‘They hop for
18 feet, step nine feet and then Jump
YS for’ A total of 45 feet. 1 have
watched Hubbard ming times in this
event and ant positive he ean brea
the World's record hy happivg 1
feet, wing a is-fum step and ther
pumping 19 feet. "That wauld give
Hime a total distance of 52 feet. 3
Jaate wanin on Winter, even if the
‘Austeatian was at his best
As for the ether American starters
in’ iis ifficult event, T can sure we
ea take cond brent jumpers ai
Within a few weeks Tun wus letter
hop, step and jumpers than any other
AUTO DERBY
OF 100 MES
ON JULY 4TH
Indianapolis, Tad, June 3.—Peaple
are showing greater Interest In aur
own gax derby to be held July 4 at
the state fair grounds when the
world’s Inrgest and most renowned
group of drivers will dash oft 100
miles for a total purse of 32.500,
All Indiana Is Avaiting for ths
ovent and the large delegations to
attend from neighboring stutes lends
the management to Nelleve that thin
race will surpass all others In ate
tendanee.
Entry blanks are being sent tn
answer t) numerous requests from
many cities and nlready ft apnedrs
the number starting the race ex-
coeds 15," Tuering mechanical de-
fects and accidents, this number
should be only slightly reduced when
the checkered tag Is given the wine
ner and those left biting ts dust
come trekking home for a place in
the money.
Muwever, If Dame Fortune doesn’t
Fle some driver's mount In ta win
4 prize, the management has hung
uy $50 for each car that starte but
does not Anis in the money. Cer-
tain ether prlaes are promised by
Tocat “business tirmy to the. étiver
showing the best sportsmanship.
making the fastest trial lap, having
the neatest outtit, the smallest
mount, ete. These und nang. other
fentures simp the Indianupolis auty
races the Nest organized and. most
systematically operated In the world
and should draw the largest. crowd
of tovers of the game.
History alos ‘nother tine ts. es
Juz made at these raees. Fame is
gained for the winners and_ money
put In their pockets, Experience is
aequired by the drivers. ‘These help
advance our cause and like in other
ines. with experience. money” and
rains ts buck us, doors vf the witte
man will hot cuntantte te xtvhn
against us. "The oles of the as-
soctation {s at 618 Indiana Ave.
DIXON GETS -
DRAW AFTER
BEATING MAN
Referee Irwin Pulls a
Punk One
ey eon BAAD
ne le ae ate ene
Denny's {anes L0-second rally rege
{tered at the AMditorium last night
For five rounds George. Dixon” of
Portia! sprayed Denny with fowler,
ite amnacked Frenkle in the ston
ach xy hard that Denny spine is
Jsore today and he hie inn ti the
fare sation that poor Prankle was
ail eat amd blecdiug ns early aw the
ited round. Having lost ive ard 3
Half sonmds, Denne started hie ex
pected rally and ie footed Teeterve
ong ivwhy into calling Aiie ishe a
draw. Eyer stuce the four-round
digs Frankie fae been tying to. Kit
‘he referees witha Tost Minute spurt
Hine hie was never sttocessful until
ist nit and the une were Sr
ised that tae pit uve on se Fe
crew ith, livid’ experience.
totes explained after the howt tht
hie jeive Denny an even bret =
erase he aiid sit the leading. Bat
just "why “Dison. should. Tea” when
Deine wae coming ina att Use
time fe a mystery. Had Denny not
saute the azrewlve bison prot
ably would have mturted to leat And
ie atu might have jumehed
Frunkies hewt off, “tnwin enjosed
the ont as much ax mayone. and
laughed righehenety “at Donne's
‘clowning.’ hut there Wau no nett
som tances dhe gokevta fae to
give Prunkte a-draw,
| Shere was not much to choose be~
tween the pie in the Het round, at
thou. Divon Int the ee,” Me
Georate opened np ta Uke second and
fence the tinisiznal hose a fine shellaelee
ths. “tea zeramde heture the gone
Dison toreed Deuny” Inte Frankie’
nen turner an staggered in with
aight cross tothe chin, Franke
inl ta erat tw maintaln hi Ditianen,
“Tive Uhied, foueus tind ACen. rounds
were ae with Denny. doing. the
Toreing amd Dixon clipping him ae
he cute In, Pranie roe a Muah
‘out ‘of the Portland. hoy bs" daring
Nun ‘to ‘stead up and fighe and he
al Dixon wiggling so tnuch in. the
Anat frume that even the Portlander
feit nto the spirie of the thing and
id not’ seeta"to be hitting any tov
hard, :
pixon was sinning handily: tn the
Maun tnd then Frankie started, the
SG rallss winging away with. both
hands and ‘not atining any Mace in
jpeirtteutae, “The spurt had. te tect
ines the deaw dcelsion ald “not. 'set
well with the smal crowd,
Penny ie zoo came iizhter who
anways ives the fans a run for thelr
ones and he deserved. Somethina
inst night fur Iie valinnt eltorts. te
[tess hut that something was not &
Mabel Jones
a Surprise in
Women’s Meet
‘The girls track team from Jackson
ranpetanundl mutes Cory ctamnaetane
Pr ar tert taeda ae
Held wer ied ishighs wanna ne
wee tite Readctarete hte
a te fa a a a
wea inte inbaleipat pinyeeound eons
ses cnn Bad eron hs
ti eating Creal esis Cane
aphhoy tee cry eases
lay team of 1927, and is the Chicago
eaenat Goagis Canin he
See eo ne oS
ord die igo aed ee Ol
Settee, eae en ee
ely nowt Suny Bilal nein
cae eee bier at ee ek
na ee ne
oe Se eco tained oi
permeritg ten Supored,o female
faeries, enh ae
seme Sante oh kee Sse
ee ia saticiets mae ns
‘Arar eset ate, tn
ee a hg thas neon cae
sere ene ee ie ees ta aes
cuore bee cama niet
aia ae Sean da: arden
Hal pace ee ne a a
St ccone es hae
ie ete sics are members of
ane ocala ei are, meme
gia tena gente eae eae
Sass age Hen, Bore tomatoe
donee: Madore Bet oor gaan
Mae ee Bet tae aie Sor
Papert ici get pre
saan
FNar Uchaete NEMA a ace
seer ee are ae
Eee ection) ee
Sree eri tian
Ca et at eee lt, Ne
ee :
saat
Tom Young Wins Net
Honors at Ohio State
‘university was ineliible fur varsity
competition until after x year's res
wn i
Lack cas Tae Two
ANOTHER WINNER
is g :
V4 ne oes
ae
ory
ta a
pee
wee
conten" arte wh'the teed fom
Bier mecca aap a
Kansas City
Lost Series
to Chicago
‘The American Giants won three
out of the four games with the
Kansas Clty Monarchs. Kansas City
tossed away Memorial day's game
when Brewer blew in the ninth and
three runs crossed the plate with
none out.
‘The Kame ended 2 to 2.
Up to the fatal inning, the Men-
arch hurler had held the Glants to
one hit, ty the heme ninth he
walked C. Willams and Bobby WH-
Hams. Muss dumped une down the
thigd base line and heat it out before
Brewer could throw to first and the
bases were full.
Instead of Rogan yanking Brewer
he left him in. An argument ensued
over the ball and it wax found that
Reewer wax using emery of cutting
{t.. Cmpire Eddie Stuck warned him
If another ball was cut, out he would
go. Koxers singled to lett, driving in
two runs, and Tines singled to. the
Same spot, xending in Russ with the
winning marker.
In the visitors’ third they jumped
inte the lead nn doubles by Dwight
and Gitex with one down.
"The Monarchs half at the fourth.
Joseph singled to left, Kenyon singled
tw right, Dit was ‘out at - second
Hines to Miller to Russ. Taslor
singled to center and Joseph scored.
Dunean fied to center and. Brewer
Aled to Gardner.
Foster relieved Harney in the ftth
and from then on the best the Kan-
Sas City club comd get was ane hit
Stick put Davis out of the game in
the sixth when he threw his bat at
Brewer. Davie clatiqed Brewer wits
trying to bean him with he ball, Sti
Jer then went to first and Bobby Wit-
Hams to third.
‘Kenyon’s catch of Russ’ drive in
the home seventh featured.
SAR ANE
AIIatec,! “A EAL
Bosse Sh eee eras
Atlee Soc don 7 teeth 2 4 on
Bete Eres TTS
Rea Bo dt it bee Si pes
Eomtin te. tad Sten lie. 44 1S
fare ee Lk eMier aes 20d
Win eo SOL dee Ee LS
Kitwer oc B06 SME ais 2 8
‘tense Tae S
iWon om 290 3
ota... HE WH Tans... EAE
‘TaSowr gat when wimiee fin-cewak
Kamae Cie een, SS PRTG 0 oe
geen esis" ROA ano 88 oo8
Teor alge aaa Tene. he Dwisae
ssa" ork sateie Baer he Mare
wie neem: Seale ign eae
BM Resteas oag” Ra se eg
yet EaE sale tien tS has
Woe? “Wiking nese Paate
‘Tuesday's game went te the Gtonts,
2 unt, Willle Foster hesting Willan
Beil thn huvlere’ duel,
Tn the honte sixth, afte Foster had
toon ected out tn’ strikes, Gardner
Aouhted to lett, Allon booted Wits
imams roller, Gillen retired Davis un
Assisted. but ime sdnied. to. rhe
And Gardner and c. Williams scooted
home.
Foster fanned eight, and allowed
hut, four tilts, Rell held. the Glants
to four sate mows.
mace oN
Sam Huston Net Play
Leonard Wells Wins
Aurtin, Tex. Muy 20—Samuel Hus-
ton ‘college held its Arse stuente tone
his tournament under the stnervision
of the deptetment of ‘nthiettex,
Lennard Welle ivon the chanipion-
shin in the men's singles by defentinz
‘Thomas Lee three stiuight sets, 80,
eee
Wells fought his way trom the fest
round to the Anais without losing
Set. to ‘any of is. many eppnentae
Tree ‘inet styoneer" opposition in. ix
fight te reach the inate. Alt hts ape
Wonanin extended bien to the Hmie to
‘win ie matches,
Mise: Harelety Grown, a freshman,
aeGeted Ming Atsiie tiaviss 9 renior
Pe Gt-t. FS, for the airis’ final
sud chamblonsiip-
‘Tennix ackets were avwanied the
winners and finalists.
‘The second Samuel Huston evtlose
[sutdent tennis tuwenamien ¢ will be
haut Bente st ang 2
BACHARACHS
RAD LINCOLN
GIANTS CLUB
Avantic City. N.J.. June 1—George
Carr, hard hitting first baseman, and
Fats “Jenkins, speedbus outfielder.
have been signed by the Bacharach
Glunte of “Uh city and are now
sporting the uniforms of the Seaeia~
ers.
This Is the fest step in the gueritia,
warfare which now prevallt amonz
Colored baseball clubs in the East.
‘Thus the Eastern league pots Jim
Keenan on the back as he takes his
club wut inte the cold, cold work.
‘Thus the Lincoln Giants lose the two
men whom they hoped weukl pack
the fans into the Protectors oval,
And this {4 the condition which
will obtain along the seaboard unit
wwners have again regained their
Feason and come together in a cout
pact league for mutual protection.
White clus are refusing to meet the
stronger Mace teams because they
are too weak to offer attractive opie
ition to the former leagters. The
uvilight comes which used to take
care ‘of the averhead are now he-
coming vanished dreams, Each das
owners are tindine it more difficult
to All their schedules and baseball is
Indeed on a shaky: foundation.
Following: « meeting of the league
In this olty fast week the following
fet bulletin was issued:
“President 1. H, Nutter advises the
press and the loyal fans that the
Eastern league will continue.
“Pending the efforts of prospective
new members to meet the financial
Conditions: impesed un them be. the
Teague there Will he partial sus~
pension of -the schedule.
All kates played between member
team will be leave sames and will
count Im the first halt sanding.
“Every player on every cluly which
han withdrawn from the league ie
the property of the league and tt will
continue to sigh such men as are
wanted by te members”
Rain Causes
fata plaged jarve wih the soba
ual a ager le sae aha
re egal ent ease:
semenit Haleo8 aon ihectae at
Mematiy eae a eee oe
Peer otiee mar aces conte
Senate Sees ee eats
mere ee ne omen eee
Heer ice Sats ene
Se Corte, aetna
Cinna ent Comeiner nn test et
the poe auld be paved in Set:
Say as ieceny guttoe ue
RL ot tha fe ore, careteey es
fant cea Seger egraat weak ot
eee
AE as ina (unaie NUNN
ig men, INE, ota Neate
Sy ete ae es
San aaa ne Se tes tea
Bid ee ae cee ae, ae
mise, lee epeetied fees Der
Baan char ae
an Saag
: 9
Marcos Trim Eddie’s
Tailors Nine, 5 to3
Marcon won their seventh gaine of the
senson at Westwood park Sunday-att
trnoon nt the expence nt Eildie's Tats
ines ot ‘Sprinaiiea, Ole, by '& score
ors toa
Daston, Ohlo, June 2.—The Dayton
‘the. mame. was. “fast throuzhwt,
Kian Brown making semmeclonal
Funging eatelies in tie mucitelde
Hatin neweomer wlth the Starcos,
gave an execlient account of himaeit
By hitting s downloand single and
Iknaling ‘ai’ his chanees_ perfectly.
‘MeLaughlin, receiving his fest game
for the Sturcos was ia good shape.
Hes 'n. reat receiver and will push
Kickeey for thin Job, Mr. Culloush,
Pitching for che Nurcom, ailowed uaty
Hive neatteved hits and “struck woven.
“Accor hooking Hist were asked oer
we gee some Feat iacebnll anne i
The future: “Some of the teatime Sac
onal ‘Teague cute. wif! invade the
Marvo howe tot
TS MARC] ATES
ae th PEE Beas FPS
Rewwi'ss 243 Uaaties $3 8%
Rat. $4 2 sumatats 2234
feos ENE Vem STS
He Ro 22a Sete 28 ee
SMioesii's 2a a Wii tes So 8
Sees e SYS Minow oo oo
toate. BEEF twa. HAST
Fike incon PRO ET TTR
TRS creec9 80 age free
Ponce io ffseide “a Cabal?
quel Race ll BNE
se tame 120 tides
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SEAUSSY Gr tern oe toi Meath
AS SERMENA co. 4201 miimasasn Ave,
PART 1 PAGE 10
Mice and Kellene Lewis' graceful exposition of *Tipping the Roof* by Chippewa Chayla Williams, and *Happy Moments* by a polka pursuit cleverly done by Violet Waret Smith. Estraldo Stratilin and Leona Smith. The diminutive Nancy McKenzie and her lovely, as did Helen Louis Sparks, as *True Antelope*, in orchid costume, as did Helen Louis Sparks, in *Pantomime* in *A Letter From* France, and the entire group in an ensemble musical composition, together with a typical French dance, with, by Miss. Ben, the introductory portion of the program. Miss-famous numbers in the second included *Silver Cloud*, *Wiolet Warrior* perfection, followed by the *Dance Childe*, for 5-year-olds, displayed the line and line native to the Chinese brt. Nadine Harris, who entered the stage for a native number, *Her New French Bantole*, Real voice was displayed, to the Corsock and Tactur, in a Russian Trunk characterization, with Harriet Carter, Carter, Lewis and Therese Smith.
"Little Miss Muffet and Splender," by Jean Merson, "While Four Cheek Chicks," by Jane Larson, "Jane Martin and Harriet Chick," by Jane Larson, "Big hit the other," by Helaine Hamilton, "big hit the other," by Helaine Hamilton, "the passion and pride of the true Andalusian," by Marion Clark, "worn and ruinished," by Mael Jones and Julia Smith.
"Little Time," presented as outstanding numbers in solo dance Meta Carter, "Violet Wardell, Thelma Hamilton, Harriet Pelham and Therule Bricheliate," by Marion Clark, "climax, Meta Bricheliate," by Marion Clark, "professional perfection," was performed by Julia Smith, followed by other interactive numbers, running by Marion Hardwick, to the extremely simple, "Dance Institude," by Julia Smith, in "Dance Institude," by Julia Smith, in "Dance Institude," by Evelyn Elkinson in "Valle Petite" and "Carol Hinsonson in "Valle Petite" and "Carol Hinsonson in "Valle Petite" and "Desire, deserve a special mention." This part closed with a musical visualization, by Miss Jones. (Chamisale, by Miss Jones.)
Oriental Numbers Georgeous
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Beauty is no curse. If it was there without all the things in the world, there is use and abuse of everything. A woman who knows how to dress well known means to add to her appearance. The amount of money spent daily by a woman into fortunes, so how can beauty of face or figure be a curse. There can be a curse of beauty unless you prettiness she is also a producer. A hands-one face oftimes covers a disposition of horrific immoral, and an ambition that aspires to nothing more than heckle man-wants more than a pretty face, so don't let your beauty be a curse. You must allow it to be. If you love the boy of love means more than gifts. Presents without love won't get it. The other way is to force you to love you to force you to have him. You tell the world you are in love, so prove it.
SECRET BRIDE
Mary E.
Sunlock Studio, Washington, D.C.
MRS. WALTER W. GOENS
Dr. and Mrs. Emmett J. Scott,
Washington, D.C. have announced
their young daughter, Lenora, to
Winfield Goens three years ago,
Feb. 7, 1925, at Fairfax, Va., during
Dr. Goens' senior year as a
graduate from the Medical school. Mrs. Goens has been teaching in the public schools of Atlantic City, N. J. The young
student was a volunteer at
22 at Northfork, W. Va., where Dr. Goens has established a promising medical and hospital practice.
Style Parade Witnessed
1925 was introduced with Miss Fisher at the piano; Mr. Early at the violin, and Ms. Berry at the piano, those who appeared in the latest models besides those already mentioned as re-creations of the original Charlotte Perry deserves special mention. The affair was given by the St. James Jally club headed by Mrs. Cresswell, who is due special praise for the artistic success of the affair, she being assisted by the late Mrs. Berry, her school teachers and daughter of Mrs. Blue, credit is also due Miss Lillian Berry for designing the hats for the
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority to Convene in Buffalo
Princess Mysteria
Aile is threatening to divorce him. I do not know her, but the insults of her are frightening. Are your letters confidential? Brown knows.
Dear Princess: We are two young ladies, 25, and 25, both high school students, with two men whom you think worthy of our dominance. -Southern Roses. The South produces the mighty fighter, the best receiver. I have their names. -Princess.
WAVIN
SKIN-
WHITENER
OINTMENT
OYO MANUFACTURING LTD.
BARINGHAM, ALABAMA
You may not know this artist personally but many
You may not know this artist personally but many times you have heard her sing. She is Margaret Johnson, the famous Okeh and Victor Record Star.
Recently she starred in her own show, Fantasies of 1928, at the Walker Theater (Indianapolis). Everywhere Margaret Johnson goes audiences are fascinated by her wonderful voice and the charm of her winsome personality. A light, clear, lovely complexion, like hers, can be yours by using Wavine Skin Whitener—a delightfully perfumed ointment that banshes freckles, pimples and all blemishes.
Use the complete Wavine Beauty Treatment every day at home—the Skin Whitener, Cream and Face Powder—the price of each is only 25c, at your druggist's.
SUMMER SESSION AT HOWARD U
Unusual Advantages Are Shown by Growing Attendance
Washington, D. C., June 5—The sixth
summer session of Harvard University
will begin registration on June 15,
and continue for a period of eight
Following the prevalent procedure in be coeducating to meet what is now generally regarded as a distinct need of the college and regular college students by extending to them all the facilities of the college and regular college students at at other times of the year. To this end the entire plant of the college will be opened to those who will find it possible to avail themselves of these advantages and the facilities of the library, laboratories, dormitories and all the students of the university will be at the disposal of the students. The courses, which number 22, cover science, music and the department of liberal arts, education, applied science, music and the department of instructional staff, numbering 22, is selected from the regular faculty of the college and the instructional staff, numbering 22, will be given by Newell W. Eldson, acting director of the division of education, Hygiene association, and Dr. Sarn W. Brown, who is also connected with the department. This course will have the same standing in the summer session curriculum.
The extra curricular activities conducted by the student are former students. A number of trips are planned for the school have added very decidedly to the profit and pleasure of those who have attended former students. An number of trips are planned for the school to places of historical interest in included trips to Mt. Vernon, Great Ferry, W. Va. and the battlefields of Gattsburg. Arrangements may also be made in August provided there will be a sufficient number of worthwhile entrants. A formal reception will be tendered the student and their friends in the spacious
That the unusual advantages of the realised throughout the country is attracted by the growing attendance from the country, period 1953-1977, inclusive, the attendance from the country, period 1957-1977, The unusually heavy correspondence conducted from the office of the country to other unqualified persons throughout the country are being attracted to theHoway attendance of approximately four hundred forecast for the coming summer season.
Educational Department of Y. W. Present Diplomas
New York, June 8.—The fifth annual commencement exercises of the school was held Thursday evening in the auditorium. The exercises began with school programs and the presentation of the lecture. The invocation was given by the Alfred Miller. Special music was rendered by the students, and a dress to the graduates was made by the students' secretary. Owner of national student secretion, Mrs. B. Jackson, a woman of women at Tatakala college, Candler, attended the graduation school were presented by Miss Jennick, and the announcement of honors by Mrs. Mabel B. Jennick.
The director of the education department graduated of Fisk university. The award of diplomas and certificates was made in the course of the work of the students of the various departments was one of the prizes of the commencement exercises.
SOCIETY
SOCIETY
By NETTIE GEORGE SPEEDY
What a multiplicity of interests it. The month is usually devoted to various schools and colleges, yet time to prepare for the "Spanish Fiesta" representation at the Savoy ballroom asked to name the most ideal place to invite looking lobby but what be the auxiliary of the Illinois Child sponsoring the affair, is fortunate in a setting, for a charity ball in the month, on the most attractive of events, ment shows more of the real purpose. They are gathering to better the lot. For surely no man nor woman of age
What a multiplicity of interests the month of June brings to the front! The month is usually devoted to the commencement exercises of the various schools and colleges, yet time has been found during the first week to prepare for the "Spanish Beater" when the school roster will have a full set of students. The school will ask you to name the most ideal place imaginable for an evening of dancing and frivolity you could think of no nocturne place than the Savoy. One never passes here and sees the magnificent display of vari-colored lights and the inviting looking lobby but what he thinks, "What a place for a dance," the auditory of the Illinois Children's Society, which is昌昌 a setting, for a chiffon ball in these surroundings in inevitably destined to be the most attractive of events. The special churn of this entertainment shows more of the real purport and individuality of the social leaders. They are gathering to better the lot of the dependent children of Illinois. For surely no man nor woman of average means will fall to lend patronage
POPULAR GUEST
- Gov. Hoffman Photo,
MRS. NATHAN K. McGILL
One of the most popular matrons who has visited in Athens, Gaia, for more than 20 years, is wife of Attorney N. K. McGill, Chicago. Friends are vying with each other to make the visit of Mrs. McGill, a pleasant one, and she is kept constant in her social life. Socialive social whirl. Mrs. McGill, who has a magnetic personality, enjoys the function of being a favored member of the Windy City's select matrons.
Chicago Matron Being Highly Entertained
Athens, Ga. June 8—Rousing the occasion of fashionable society was the coming of a new college class, the college class of Attorney Nathan K. Mettil, Chicago, whose appearance was the signal for a new generation of fashionable students. A gift set of Athens fashionables, Mrs. Mettil, who was accompanied by her sister Miss Nina Mao Johnson, the vaudeville actress, witnessed the graduation of her niece, Miss Nina Mao Johnson, the vaudeville actress, Mrs. James Johnson, gave a large card party in her home, which she hosted. Laura Beld as hostess, Miss Vivian Beld charmingly entertained with a large card party in her home, where she not only old friends. The popular visitor shared hobbies with a young girl, who is soiling soon for Europe, when Marie Harris, and Miss Vivian Beld, who is soiling soon for Europe, when she is entertained for the trio, honores was presented with a beautiful
Tonkers, N. Y., June 8—Mrs. Henry B. Davenport, school teacher of the Messiah Baptist church for 42 years, was honored for her service by the school board, a committee headed by Mrs. Dora Davenport, arranged a suitable testimonial to Mrs. Howard which attained her esteem in which she is held by her associates, and in which she is honored by her bourquet and motto by Mrs. Emily Brown, Mrs. Howard is prominent in the community and is one of fine attainments. She is one of the oldest Sunday school teachers in the city. Mrs. Christa Gwathmey, cashier of the Y. W. C. A.
ROY TROTHON JR. GRADUATES
Athens, Ga., June 8—The commencement of the Arthens Hih and Industrial Schools was celebrated on June 3, 5 and 6. Rev. A. K. Gregory, Tallahassee Sunday School, and she inaugurated address was delivered Wednesday by Mrs. Robert Tennison Jr. and Mrs. Robert S. Albert of Chicago.
1
Nothing else scheduled for the next week in the way of diversion will be the world and his wife and children will be found wending their various evening, June 12, Mrs. Robert S. Abbott, chairman of the auxiliary, who will wear her royal coles. Her retiring of mobility will appear as Spanish Sayre, Charles Thompson, Albert B. Sayre, Charles Thompson, Norwood Thorne, Harve Horsley, Eldroner Gillespie, Inez Dickerson, Wilson, John Lewis, Florence Jones, Joseph, Laura B. Jackson, Joseph, Laura B. Jackson, Sue J. Davidson, Sue J. Davidson, Harvold Tyler, Gerrie Grump, Harvold A. Grover, G. Rutherford, Metowan, Spell Belt, Gerrie Grump, Barrow Milford, Milford Foster, Raymond E. Dear Berries, Velatte Mabel Washington, all dressed in Spanish costumes, will make a colorful pleaser with her royal highness.
Mrs. Lloyda Preston Cox, Washington, D.C., is the guest of Mrs. Beatrice T. Lloyda, the wife of John Brown, Erlama, Ohio, who has been visiting Mrs. Hattie Simmons Goodle, 650 E. 50th St., has returned home. Mrs. Thelma Dean Manuel, wife of Dr. Harley S. Manuel, an intern at Provident hospital and daughter of Dr. Harley S. Manuel, an intern at Provident, Md., is the guest of Dr. Samuel R. Burrell, $310 Prairie Ave.
Mrs. French Away
Rev. B. Y. Williams Milwaukee, Wis.
Bryan H. H. Athens, Ohio.
T. H. Brown, 224 Walsh Ave.
Miss Marion Britton, a teacher at
Milwaukee Athens, Fla. will
sound the summer concert at
422 S. Lawrence Ave.
Wilson, 224 Walsh Ave. entertained with a olin-
er party honoring their guest, Mrs.
Bryan H. Athens, Fla.
Clarksville, Tenn., Mrs. Wilkes was
assisted by her mother, Mrs. F. C.
Brown.
Bryan Hirele, Henry 6126 Carpenter
St. will be hostess in the Home girls
Bryan Hirele, Henry 6126 Cage tea room,
6400 Milwaukee Ave.
Mrs. Reginald Smith, 2221 South
party Friday evening honoring Mrs.
Esther Ferguson, Toledo, Ohio.
Gasp. a few days as the guest of
Mrs. George Cleveland Hall, 568 South
Walter Speed, 4224 Prairie Ave.
who has been visiting his son, Walter
Walter Speed, Winchester, Ky., has
returned home.
Says
"Why claim the years of youth when you are an encyclopedia of age? Loss of agility, lusterless eyes, cloudy, rough skin, slow in gait, fat and irritable?"
.
THE WEEKLY PRESS
One of the most prominent women in business, social and civic life in the South, Mrs. Geraldine Gray, the mother of turned home Tuesday after visiting Mrs. Carrie Ramsey and her sister, Mrs. Esther Carry, 5644 S. Ave. Mrs. Gray was highly entertained during her abstay here.
S. C. Women to Have Each Club Adopt a Girl
Alabama, the, June 6.—The Atlanta
director, gave the annual concert last
friday night. The shading and enunciation
director, gave the concert a cellophane.
Medals were given to some
others for sparsity and letters were given
to others for sparsity and cellophane.
The Herion prize contest, which was
held on Saturday night, is a form of generosity that is doing
which has been continued by his estate
Saturday night the winners of the
prizes were as follows: First prizes
were held Towns, second prizes to Marjurie
Strikland, Mary Idina Hastings and
second prizes to
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KENTUCKY MAIDS IN ART EXHIBIT
Fleur de Lis Art Club of Lexington Shows Its Handicraft
Mexico Joins Hands With the Philippine Islands
Sixtieth Commencement of Knox Institute Held
Albens, Ga. June 5. — The sixteenth institution were held in Carnegie Hall Thursday evening when high school students were invited to attend. Johnson, Arthur A. Hobbes, Arthur J. Cherry, Lloyd D. Jackson, Miss Sybil Jones and Arthur J. Hobbes, Miss Jane Jones and Valedictorian, maintained an annual tradition of 20 years. The commencement address delivered by Dr. W. H. Hooper, head of the Department of Education, is the literature of the University of Virginia. The diplomas were presented by Aaron Mottle, Mattie Muller, Garson Jackson, Virginia Eberhardt, Ella Sims and Faust. Among the out-of-town guests were Mrs. X. K. McKillip of Chicago, Honer staff member T. D. Jones of Detroit.
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---
MARY E.
One of the graduates from the College of Engineering Chipropoy at Cleveland Saturday, Miss Freda Rogers, one of the most popular and ambitious girls of college, said the excuses were held in the Hotel Winton, one of Cleveland's show places.
Twenty-three Graduate
at Atlanta University
Atlanta, Ga., June 6. S—The commencement exercise of Atlanta university were held Wednesday morning, June 6, at 10 o'clock. The class had chosen as their motto "Climb the Rocks for Fugged." and adopted the pink carnation as the class flower. Twenty-three received diplomas and presented an honors degree as they completed the class roll was composed of the ample library. Beaver G. P. and Harrison Davis, Emma Dowe, Melia jee Jones, Ella Ma Hagaukhol, Lola Jerome Molk, Louise R. Wintrey, Emma Allen Parks, Rosa Lee Pearson, Omaha University, Marie Williams, Curlew Robinson, Marie Williams, Myra R. Bosnij, Flourence Laurier, Roberta Rubin, Wintrey, Roberta twendleton, Angela-Linum, Tatum and Alma Gerridge Wilkins. Flourence Laurier Sengstuck and Gwinn-Robert Robert S. Abbott, Chicago, Ill.
GLADIATORS HONORED
Aurora, Ill., June 5. — The chicagos Gladiators club and guests from savannah trained by Misses Ruth Barbee, Beatrice Bateson, Fiona Ruth Barbee, and several other chicagos trained by Misses Ruth Barbee, Lession hall Friday evening, gladiators Buford K. F. Hampion and C. A. Brown. After the gladiator affair at the Seventh Heaven café, with William O. Russell acting as hostmaster.
MISS CARBOROUGH GRADUATES
Savannah, Ga., June 5. — The St. Patrick's college exercises June 7 in the school auditorium. Among the students, daughter of Joseph Barbough, formerly a resident of chicagos now a prominent citizen of Savannah.
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WHAT'S HAPPENING IN AND AROUND NEW YORK
HEADQUARTERS, 173 WEST 140TH STREET
Tid-Bits of New York Society By BESSYE J. BEARDEN
The early summer season promises to be unusually gay and interesting this year and at the moment many invitations are out for parties, weddings and other events.
Compliments few thick and fast about the formal dance given by the members of the De La Marge club at their second annual closing spring frolic Thursday evening. He is himself a member of friends were invited to frolic with the lovely members of the De La Marge whose party will be remembered as one of the outstanding events of the late spring season. The officers and members are Margaret L. Reeves, presiding officer; Smith, two vice presidents; recording secretary; Clare J. Hart, financial secretary; Pearl Mitchel, corresponding secretary; Edna Stanley, Ruth Sims, Elizabeth Alien, Dolly Nash, Lahun Robinson Jones, Currie Haywood, Matte Hunter, Kate Corbin, Hattie Royall, Fannie Wood, Narcissus Turner and Manie Jackson.
Buseve beaaron
Mrs. Charles W. Joyce of 210 W. 120th St. was hostess last Thursday at the Marge Club, of which she was a delightful refreshments were served to the members and guests present. Dellweese, Mames Jane Best, Phila Elmo.
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1926
WHAT
HEADQUARTERS, 173
Tid-Bits of New
By BESSYE
The early summer season promises this year and at the moment many in and dances. With the warm days of the fashionables are turning their vacation days. A large number of N leaving within a few weeks for future.
Compliments few thick and fast dance given by the members of the their second annual closing spring firing at the Remediance casino. A friend was invited to attend of the De La Marque whose party will one of the outstanding events of the. The officers and members are Margaret Dent, Eve R. Sandis, else president;ording secretary; Chase J. Hart, J. Pearl Mitchel, corresponding secretor Ruth Shin, Elizabeth Allen, Dolly N. James, Charlotte Haywood, Hugh J. Luther Bright, Irene Royal, Fannie Turner and Manie Jackson.
1.
evening to the Minx Bridge club, o
refreshments were served to the men
Mesdames Jane Best, Phara Elmopoe,
Boston Ruth Price, Sarah Hawkins,
Boston Ruth Price, Sarah Hawkins,
L. Adrienne, Cuffed Myees, Melissa
Shutker of Louisville and the Misses
Lankford and Vida Falmetta. Cwds
were the feature of the social hour, the
back, Mrs. Boston and Mrs. Newswear;
Miss Lankford and Miss Elmopoe won
and second guest honors respectively.
Youth had its fling at the initial social
affair of the Arrow Athletic club of St.
the home of Mrs. Gipsey T. Mayhew,
mother of Curtle the evening of the charter
girls opened the music and dancing.
Mrs. Mayhew was assisted by
Gerry Ellott, sponsor of the club,
Roy Ellott, sponsor of the club,
sure feel proud of his boys, all of
you are high school students. Young
A silk shower was given at the home of the late Nancy Brady, Brooklyn, for the ride-to-the on Sunday afternoon. Present were Mrs. Mary Hankin, for the ride-to-the on Sunday Hankin, Muriel Proctor, Virginia Powell, Elizabeth Johnson, Louise Hankin, for the ride-to-the on Sunday Blanche Leroy, Arlette Leroy, Bertha Sawyer, Alva Davis, Olive Curtum, Marcia Sawyer, Sara Pearson, Gladys Foston. Those to assist the hostess were the Misses Florence Curtrum, Sara Pearson, Sara Pearson and Mrs. Daugie Please.
---
Bridge was the texture of the evening's entertainment when Mrs. Amanda Bessons of the La Clique club Thursday evening. Prizes were won by Mrs. Amanda Bessons, Mrs. Jill Bessons, other members present were Meddames, Nanoui Larres, Florence Wilhelm, Wilihelm Wiggins, John Stewart, Batrice Bridge and Daisy Rousse.
Honor Minister
On Friday evening the wardens, vestibules and reception at St. Lake's auditorium in honor of the achievements of the students, welcomed the insured at St. Amherst as a parish. Speakers for the occasion included Shipman, St. Philip's parish, Commissioner James P. Ibill and Mrs. Aristotle C. Bibbion, St. Philip's parish, Commissioner James P. Ibill and Mrs. Aristotle C. Bibbion, short program was presented by Mrs. Priscilla Baird, Mrs. Elizabeth H. Howell, Mrs. Swain, Sterling Grindle and Mrs. Seales, Mrs. Durant, assisted by Mrs. Griffith and Baker, were in charge of refreshments.
Mrs. Ida Travis of St. W. 200th St. married social club Monday evening. The club is preparing for its annual summer formal to be held early this month.
Mine. Latha Robinson of 171 W. 125th St. noted concert artist, has recently appeared in Bordentown, Cleveland, in Bordentown, St. Louis, Chicago and Pittsburgh.
Messrs. Karenne Dungen, Timothy L. Burchard, F. accustomed by Nathaniel Tramuel and Richard Shine of Albany music, New York to spend the summer.
Miss Milla L. B. Ruthene, daughter-in-law, arrived in the city Wednesday for an indianate stay. Miss Ruthene is temporarily located at 217 Seward Ave.
Robert Taylor of W. W. 14th St. chair among whom were Miss Abigail Mitchell, James Walker, Edie, Coleman and others.
Colleen Williams and Miss Abigail Anderson left the city to spend the summer in South Norwalk, Conn.
Miss Milla Smith and Miss Mary Dalbahum 15th St. are spending time with relatives and friends in Aberdeen, Md.
Edward Rohzinger and Oliver Holbert, students of the Bathome-Cookinum college, were during the week to spend the summer.
---
Howard Bliss of 821 W. 524 St. has returned to the city after a short visit to the city after a short visit to Chester and Ardmore, Pa.
Miss贝拉希 Haskins of 195 W. 1026 St. entertained at tea Sunday in Inpoor Mississippi Mille Smith and Mary Bollum.
Mr. and Mrs. James Lues of W. 643 St. spent Sunday in Enfieldwood, N. J., where they tendered the scored contiants, and they were the final organization of the second game.
Robert Taylor and James Warner spent the week-end in Newark, N. J., as the guests of Eugene Gilson.
Mrs. Milford Powers of 115 W. 524 St. is spending her vacation at Burchill Falls, Pa.
Mrs. Anna Curtis was awarded a scholarship by Jefferson of 258 Seventh Ave. price to her leaving for Launcle City to spend the summer.
Dr. Rustin Foster, autobiographer of 115 W. 524 St., to attend the convention of the State epiphenic poetry and to meet of eyesight conditions at Buffalo.
Mrs. Charles A. Toney, 406 Edgecombe Ave. left the city for Port Smith, Ark. to be called due to the death of her mother.
Ic. Carter I. Marshall of New Haven,
Conn., spent the holiday in the city as
Mary Ann
the guest of Dr. Charles Harris of Jersey City.
Miss Vivian Calfe of 80 Edgecombe A&M operation at the Edgecombe sundial operation. Her condition is reported satisfactory.
Miss Caroline Thomas successfully passed the associated examination of the first woman of organizations. She is the first woman she admitted to the guild.
Rev. William Lloyd has returned to the city after having spent two weeks in New York, as commissioner for the presbytery.
Alexander P. Miller of Brooklyn has been appointed boys' work secretary of the Carlton branch. Y. J. C. A.
Miss Jessie Cunningham, who has been a student at the Institute of Musical Arts in Houston, Tex. During her stay in the city she has made many friends, and the luncheon she was given in her honor by Mrs. Willie Mae Tanner and Mrs. Roy at the Marguerite teacup.
Mrs. Anna Bell Kaster of Chicago is the house guest of Mrs. Charles Hunter, a former staff member of the Marge forensic institute in honor of the western visitor, Mrs. Kassie attended the De La Marge forensic institute. The Citizen's Welfare council will tender a textual dinner to his president, Dr. Charles Buler, as a means of showing appreciation in view of his wonderful services to the community. The dinner will be held on Friday, April 22, 2015, 9:00 a.m. A few of the outstanding achievements are admission of documents, Harlen hospital, appropriation of $1,000, hospital, admission of other effects are admission of documents, Lieutenant Simpson's recreation park and Morningside park comfort room, dames Geraldyn Diamond, dchmnr; Bessay Deanleen, Augustin M. B, Corlain, dchmnr; Attorney William Hayes, Attorney Harry Ausley, dchmnr; Granny, Osmie Attorney William Hayes, Attorney Harry Ausley, Dr. 17 M. Murray, Attorney Ralph Palge, J. M. Green and Dr. M. E. Kelley.
Gard Tournament
Much praise is being beamed upon Paul Dutney Jr., who has been admitted courses in the junior high school of New York. These courses are open to completed the courses of their schools. Little Dutney has made a fine record throughout his career as P. S., F. S., M. S., and M. F. Sr. Ford Dutney of 615 W. 123th St.
Belle Becomes Bride
With the beginning of June came
The -best man was the groom's wife. The groom's wife were English walking suits with white spats, white kilt glovees and black and white dresses. The bride was Douglas, Aaron Bontemps, Arthur Rumf, James Holdbrook Dr. Gerald Seen and James Holdbrook Dr. Gerald Seen. The bride's mother was gowned in shell pink, flat crepe with shoes and a white dress. The groom's mother was gowned in blue flat crepe, wearing a large horsehair stocking to match and carried a small bouquet of tea roses. A reception was held at the Community house on Pulton St., which was beautifully decorated with flowers. There were about 40 guests.
Visite Relativer
Mrs. Joseph Brown, widow of the late
Joseph Brown, died on January 11,
law Mrs. Theodore Gundy of the N. X.
C. I. in Petersburg, Va.
Mrs. Misselyn Laney of 2421 Seventh
Street on Sunday afternoon for the Loveof
the N. A. X. C. P. campaign fund.
Mr. and Mrs. Gayla Howell of New
the N. J. spent the week-end
in the city.
Husband Came Home
in Destructive Mood
New York; June 8. - Accused of striking a man with a knife, breaking up articles of furniture in their home, Charles Nelson, 22, 62 E. 121st Avenue, in 1500 ball for a further burial. The man's wife, Mary, dashed out of the house and told him that her husband had come home in a destructive mood, striking a man with a knife, furniture and everything else in sight.
N. Y. Academy of Business
Graduation for academy seniors is the day of the diploma ceremony, the student body, the commencement exercises are to be held at the Renalssance Center. A number of prizes and awards will be made by the promissory note, who has been a yearly prize giver, was the first this year, and will be the first to receive the prize in typewriting. The prize is keenly competed for by the students. Also the prize in stenography is a much sought after prize. The academy is from an interested people, who have followed the tradition. The house of Isaac Pittman & Son has donated three medals, gold, silver and bronze, to register during the week are Edward Pentress in a special Charles, for civil service and postmaster carrier. The following students have received the Armstrong prize Taylor, Alice Franklin, Evelyn Campbell and Carrie
The Harmony orchestra, under the direction of the conductor, will play music for the graduation dance. It is expected that more than one thousand students will perform exercises from the Metropolitan district, Eleanor Marshall, Julia Smith and Daisy Simpson, who have been cast for the musical "Juliette" and "Romeo," from Shakespeare's "romance," which will be performed in their parts by Miss Inez Chough of the Lincoln theater, now playing at the Lincoln theater.
AUTO INJURES PATROLMAN
New York. June 8. White chasing two sneak attacks on lambing hams, Policemen Rubin Carter, 25, ob Traffic T, was knocked down. A car automobile at 14th St. and Seventh Ave. After hitting the officer, he was lightened, unda breeze to the grieve.
FIND SUBWAY VICTIM
New York, June 3—The body of Charles Killingsworth, 18-year-old boy who was viciously vicious at 14th St. and St. Nicholas Ave, last Thursday night when a mud seam hoaked under 400 feet of rock recovered by workmen Tuesday.
HELD FOR CUTTING
New York, June 6. S—John Ferguson
and his wife, Mary, were shoing Arthur Williams, 36 W.
StL., in the fave with a knife. It
required eight sittches to sew up the
dress.
TAKES BED SHEETS
New York, June 8—Charged with a stolen car, the Horns yanked from the New York Central railroad. HWigans Williams, 28, 75 in a 1920s car, held in $500 bail for special sessions. A railroad detective audited a bulge in his pocket and found $1500 when HWigans was asked to open it.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
EDITED BY BESSYE J. BEARDEN
JOURNALIST
[Picture of a woman with long hair and a dark face].
- Chattoff Phon, New York
MISS THELMA E. BERLACK
The society editress of the American Thesis Society, Berlack was a graduate with honors from the New York university with a degree of bachelor in journalism. The major has been journalism. Miss Berlack was elected to the Delta Mu Delta, the honorary scholastic society. Berlack is a member and is a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, the Round Club, Women's Press club, the Debutantes, and is on the board of managers of the Hope Day Nursery.
Music and Drama
BY CLEVELAND G. ALLEN
under the direction of K. Amma Jackson, rendered "Hiwatiana," by S. Monday evening. The chair measured up to artistic excellence in the resultant advantage as a choral body. The ensemble of the singers was high-quality, splendid diction, beautiful tonal qualification. The soloists were Minnie Brown, Sean prairie, Pennan Lovinggood, tenor, and Minnesota was used to expressive and gave a tender and soulful interpretation to much artistry in his work and effective vocal cues of good quality with a clear tenor strain. Mr. Love, who has in his career been a splendid effect. The accompanists were Lydia Mason and Somona Tallis, whose performance at the piano was one of the most enjoyable features of the evening. The fine control and appeared to excellent Mrs. Mayne Brooks Tilley will give a dramatic recital on Sunday afternoon, will be assisted by Olivia Hunter as accompanist. The recital will be under Mrs. Tilley is the daughter of the late Rev. the Rev. Browne and a young friend of Mrs. Tilley.
The famous Monarch band, under the direction of the last of its series of free public concerts on Sunday afternoon in the city, gave the last of its series of free public concerts on Sunday afternoon in the city, for an audience of 2,004 people. The band received tremendous ovation from the city and its great popularity as a musical conductor. The work of the band was highly commendable and measured up to the most exacting standards of musician. The program offered by the band was the "James Reese Europe" a spiritual "Deep Purple" and the "Spirit of the L. S. N.," by Alton A. Adams; La Petite Suite, by S. C. Johnson; "Ball and Ball" and "Shine," by Shelton Brooks and Pond Jahney; a march, "Mister," a chant arranged by Lieutenant Simpson; Frank Robinson gave a syllogic and harmonized solo which was one of the most successful works of the band and the community. The real letters from George Foster Poultry and Miss Jasmin Simpson, the late Lieutenant Simpson is a musician of the oldest conductors in the country.
The writer received a card from Carle M. Fish university singers. The card was sent from Paris, where the singers are given a series of concerts. The card includes a program and showed the extent to which the music column of the Defender is read aloud; I have been reading with much interest your column in the Defender's touring Europe for the several months and are making an excellent Impression of your music. The most soulful intermediates of spiritual and may well be called musical missionaries. The Utiion jubilee singers will give concerts in Europe this summer. The Utiion singers will season with remarkable success. They are widely known for their concerts. Miss Olive It is Hokkins, soprano, widely known as a concert artist, who has performed the kidegoum santerium, reported to be rapidly regaining her health. A recital of the dancing classes of Miss Olive It is Hokkins, soprano, evening in the auditorium of the Teacheur Training school. The public was invited and directed by Miss Viola V. Roberts.
BRILLIANT STUDENT
Alvin C. Gary, who for the past four years is mentoring at Cooper Union, is one of the most brilliant students in that institution. He is a graduate of the branch of engineering. He conducts a radio and battery business in partnership with the University of electrical engineering is one of the strongest in the country. It is enriched by these highly specialized professions.
LLOYD GARRISON TO SPEAK AT FLUSHING
LLOYD GARRISON TO SPEAK AT FLUSHING
The meeting will be held at the MacArthur S. Church, Rev. Charles J. Whalley, S.J., and St. at 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon. It is one of the two meetings held each month to interact with the art interest in education to the art school of children Flushing, to the school of children Grammage, to the upbringed by Miss Elizabeth Sinkford, soprano, winner of the Julland scholarship of the Institute of Musical Art, to the world- young woman with extraordinary voice and splendid technique at a most pleasing charm of personality.
Although these meetings are usually attended by a large audience, it is through the regular secular meeting will no one of the most experienced yet held by this group in Florida. Planned reunions, made up of Gerald F. N. Norman, Brent high school teacher, chirchurian, T. Smith, Rev. R. S. F. Riley, pastor of the Evangelist Baptist church; Mrs. Johnson is making special efforts to provide comfortable seating for the event to tend, Mr. Garrison and Mr. Wood are both practicing lawyers in Manhattan.
ASSAULT OFFICER
New York, June 6—Charged with holding Policeman Jauer when her husband discharged, and who had disorderly conduct, and her husband was W. 5th St. was found guilty of disorderly conduct, and her husband had some offence. Each received a suspended sentence. Burrow, who is a second-degree drinker and when his wife tried to get him to go home, he insisted on going. When the officer tried to get move on he became abusive and attempted to strike him. His wife plumed his head and not defend himself, the other stated.
SUES MRS. GARVEY
New York, June S.—Antoinne De Silvia,
who described himself as the financial
advisor of the American Review, has brought suit
for $10,800 damage and $2,142,25 publishing
and Mrs. Amy Asquith Garvey, officer
of the Mintwood Publishing company,
whom he charged with ousting him and
propriety of the corporation lists and propriety of the corporation lists.
HELD AS EUGITIVE
New York, June 8 - George Minor, 12,
Minor, was arrested for a charge of
for a further hearing and a charge of
being a fugitive from Baltimore. Minor
was arrested in his home at the request
that he was wanted there for grand larceny.
HELD ON GIRLS'S STORY
New York, June 8 - On complaint of a
15-year-old girl, Silinny Horst, 11, Jr.
at 11:17am, St. Were held in 2,000荷
cash for a further hearing, after the
father to her at an apartment at 12:19am.
Her mother to her at an apartment at 12:19am.
They denied the charge.
DRESSED AS WOMAN
New York, June 12. The feminist attire worn by George Green was a white dress, the father two children, at the maturandere hall of the museum, and the cause of him being fired $2 after he was arrested, Green could give an answer. He said he was building in a hallway at 120 Lexus Avenue.
STRIPS APARTMENT
New York, June 8—When leaving a
snowy head in a burial pile, Jackie
McIntosh had to slide his head into
a McIntosh sling. He had to
further hold and, James Lambert, a
sculptor, had to place his head
at 12th St. testified that McIntosh
was placed of lead pipe, sinks
and wash tubes.
Church Notes
GRACE CONGREGATIONAL
A college in New England was shown by
A. C. Lowe and L. Conway, both shown
at the of the national convention conference
fund. 7 and 8 and an informal conference
of New England and vicinity was held
in congregational church. New Haven, Conn.
June 11-16 the British Congregational pilgrims to Amherst, Gorce. George E. W. Browne, the ministerary committee, will be present June 15-19 at Lincoln Academy, Kings Mountain, N. C. Mr. Augustus Sims, the young people to send a delegation.
The national convention of Congre
tional workers will be held in Winston
ton.
BUSH MEMORIAL
the pastor, Rev. G. M. Oliver; Mrs. E. Oliver and Mrs. L. G. Stukman reaffirmed during the week from the conference. At the morning service Mrs. Stukman gave a very comprehensive report of her duties, and a satisfaction of the officers and members.
The church relishes to have New Mr. Ewing in charge of the enrolment form, which he never conducted the evening services, tinkling his text from St. Matthias. Why Say You Stand You Here All the Day! 1234
ST. NARK'5 M. F.
Rev. John W. Robinson, pastor of the church, returned from Kansas City to attend the general conference. He served as members of the Pastor's Social Helper gave a linen shower in honor of the pastor, whose wedding daughter of the pastor, whose wedding ceremony were taken in the church dining hall.
Benjamin F. Thomas was in charge
and an interesting professor
Pillai, W. J.
The annual session to the rulers and
indians' auxiliary was delivered Sunday
evening by the press, presented by the auxiliaries of St. Mark's church last Sunday in honor of the late J. W. H. Brooks
of the church, its masters and Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip Quintin.
WINS KEY
PETER B.
- Clinton Photo, New York
THEODORE G. MILES
Having won three consecutive class A scholarships at New York University, he theorized that city City, where he is presented with the Phi Beta Kappa key at the class graduation. Young Miles, one of the most prominent of the class, is presented to the Eta Sigma Phi fraternity, the first chapter granted in New York state. He attended his studies for his master's degree, which he will receive next year.
BROOKLYN NOTES
B. CAROLYN J. DURLIN
Miss Helen Anderson of Washington St.
Miss Helen Anderson of Washington St.
Hortense Thompson of Marine St.
Miss Mairette Carrionn of Norwich
Miss Mairette Carrionn of Norwich
Miss Harry Uard of Halsey St.
Miss Kya Johnston of Halsey St.
enrolled the Thursday night club has week.
Mrs. Icar entertained the Le Filles Bridge club at her home on Saturday. Engage 10. Jones and family have taken an apartment at 157 Bainbridge St.
Jersey Dodson of the Skewer club
attends at Summit Lake June 25
at Summit Lake
Accuses Man of Hurling Him Down the Stairs
WOMAN ATTACKS MAN
New York, June 5.—The trays was filled with the candy and the broom, 165, 195, 192th St., who was tired $ for attacking Matthew Coleman, who was a victim of the attack, together. It was said, and separated a week ago. Miss Robinson testified that she was the victim of the abusive names and she struck him.
KILLED BY CAR
New York, June 12. S-White crossing 12th Street at 12th Street was struck skull fatally by a taxi driver operated by a driver who died soon after with a fractured skull.
JAD DANGEROUS KNIFE
TELEPHONE EDGECOMBE 6016
POSES AS OFFICER TO GET HUSH MONEY
New York, June 8. — Charged with posting a police man and extorting a $25 bribe from John L. Simpson and his wife, Melissa, on the promise that he would be arrested from arrest. Edward Morris, on the promise that he would hold without bail for the grand jury by the court. According to the story of the couple, they had had no trouble with anyone, and they had been called day Morris, in civilian clothes, called at her apartment, displayed a brass knife, and that he was "Sergt Morris of the W. station." He then called her, she charged, that the police station had received a number of complaints asking that the Simpson house, and he had five policemen downstairs awaiting his sign to break into the station. When Mrs. Simpson protested, the police informed her that for 100 he would be arrested and that the police would not raid and that the police would she charged. She had not money and fearing there might be a raid, she relented and her husband to come home from work. Simpson testified that he had the $25 bribe. He agreed, agreeing that the balance would be paid in two weeks. After the balance was paid, the police station, and when Morris called to collect the balance, Officer Guernin, who was in the house, placed him under arrest.
Church Losing Ground,
Declares Dr. De Berry
A large number of church workers were intendent of the church school, presided. Addresses were also made by the church school, given by the religious education of the New York church; given by the director of the church; given by the pastor of St. James's Presbyterian church; musical numbers were given by the church; and the乐器的 letter was read from tr. George E. Haynes, Miss Haynes represented the Harmon foundation.
Civil Service News
Applications are being issued for the Sector Sector Sector, junior, grade 4; entrance salary, $1,500. Candidates must the application. The Welsh bill signed by President Clinton provided approximately $20,000 in workers' benefits for 12,200 workers in the service, and offered an opportunity to enter the city service. Salary, $45 to $90 annually, Municipal buffling, from 140 and must be not later than June 8. Over 60% are successful in passing the petroleum test. Applicants must attend to appoint male and female attendants to the department of public works at the place on June 16. Applications are hereby placed on June 16. Applications are being those monthly tests are very popular among our men and more should be received. Federal学员, Grade 4; private children's court; general inspector, departmental counsel; grade 4 physician, Grade 2; deputy commissioner, department of our counsel; grade 4 requirements will be given later.
ARREST BASTOR'S SON
New York June 16 $-On charges of burglary, William Robinson, 23, son of Rev. Alfred Robinson, pastor of the St. Paul's Episcopal Church, his wife, Pearl, were arrested upon the complaint of Mrs. James Stanley, 414, of her apartment and took several thousand dollars worth of clothing and personal items. Mrs. Stanley, woman leave her building with a bouncer under her arm and recognized a man with a beard wearing as one that had been stolen from her. Robinson was held without bail, while his wife was held under arrest.
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Clubs
A musical tea for the benefit of the Harton tuberculosis and health committee was sponsored by Mrs. William Carter on Sunday afternoon, June 12, at the Baskin-Rock club and Commerce. Club La Clauie has its spring dance-sancte at the Savoy ballroom on Tuesday on Friday evening, June 22. The Allen University club will hold a summer night at the Savoy ballroom. A toast at the party and dance was held on Friday evening, June 1, at the Anna Jones' Dancing Kiddle appeared in their sixth annual recital and dance at Labor yceum, Brooklyn, Friday evening.
The annual sermon of the most worshipful grand lodge, F. and A. M., M. E. church, Rev. J. W. Robinson, M. E. church, Rev. J. W. Robinson, Grae Giles Dancing school will appear in their annual theatrical revue evening, June 6, at Manhattan Casino. The monthly forum of the Victory Life Insurance company was held Thursday at the Abyssinian Auditorium of Abysinia Baptist church. Among the speakers were representatives representing various viewpoints: Dr. C. A. Edwards; policy holder, Leaster A. Walton; director, Dr. M. H. Sawary; agent, Donald N. Yearwood and W. Lehorn. W. Thorotton.
Members of the Just UU club met with
Members of the Edgecomb Ave, on Saturday evening.
TEACHERS' ROMANCE ENDS IN MARRIAGE
TEACHERS' ROMANCE ENDS IN MARRIAGE
Charge of Bigamy Made Against John Augustus
New York, June 5—Arranged on April 15, 2014, at 226 W. 14th St. was held for a further hearing. Detective Sergent Battle arrested Augustus on complaint that he had been married to Augustus on July 4, 1834, and stated that she was married to Augustus on July 4, 1834, for several months, and according to her allegations, Augustus has since married her to Augustus at the last St. address. This marriage, it is charged, took place March 1, last, the ceremony has been performed, and James G. Tier, 12 W. 12th St.
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PART 1-PAGE 11
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