Chicago Whip
Saturday, December 6, 1919
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
COURT FINES CONVICTED LYNCHERS
Alabama Throws No Shadow of Gallows Into Murderers Path
Do Your Xmas Shopping Early Patronize Our Advertisers
Vol. 1.—No. 24.
MUH
SOUTH VAL
LIFE AT
COURT FINES CONV
Alabama Throws No Sha
Murderer
On Nov. 23, in an Alabama paper, appeared in some ten lines the report of the release of twelve white men, who had been charged with the death of Feraule Foulral, white, and who, in expiation for their crime paid fines ranging from 100.00 to $300.00. The laconic statement of this astonishing fact is highly significant. In an American paper the plain statement of the fact that a man's life in Alabama is worth from $100.00 to $300.00. What sort of justice is this? What sort of people are they who interpret the laws in such a manner? What sort of a state is it that tolerates such proceedings?
SHOWS SPIRIT OF SOUTH.
No better indication of the spirit of the south and the psychology of the southerner can be gained then from this bare statement, no better refutation of the alleged civilization of the south can be had than this. The irony of such a condition of affairs in a State which is supposed to be representative of its section of the country is alarming. That murder should be punished by death or imprisonment, is the cornerstone upon which modern civilization is built. It is the fundamental principle that distinguishes modern culture from the aye of barbarianism. Alabama in recognizing this outrageous procedure in inscribing upon her statute books this dastardly decision as an example for later generations of law breakers: to follow has not only disgraced a name hundreds of times disgraced before, but has dragged the whole south deeper in the mire of beastiality, into the frightful mors of
Beauregard Mosely Passes Away
B. F. Mosely, owner of the Idlewild Hotel and formerly an attorney in this city died Tuesday evening, Dec. 2. Mr. Mosely was a shrewd business man and acquired early training in Georgia. He studied law in a Louisiana office and came to Chicago in 1896.
Mr. Mosely was a politician and supported Medill McCormick for Senator and also toured the country in interest of the late President Roosevelt. Senator McCormick was at his bedside a few hours before death came.
Mr. Mosely was placed in ill favor during the riot because of an able aged statement he made to the effect that this was a white man's country.
His friends trust that the memory of his good deeds wil outweight the unfortunate evil that man is prone to commit.
May his soul rest in peace.
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lynch laws and all that lynch laws entail. VERIFIED REPORT.
We call "Shame Alabama!" We see the red leer of Judge Lynch and demand reparation. Indeed we felt this case to be of such importance that we were led to verify the report. We read that it was a white man who had been lynched and refused to believe it. Thus to assure ourselves of its authenticity, we wrote to Miss... of Buguinette, Ala., asking first whether the whole thing was true and whether the man lynched was really white. The reply we received is as follows.
Dear Sir:—
Foranlr Foulral was not a white man. He was a Colored farmer. He was lynched by the twelve men you mention because he refused to sell an old horse of his which these men wanted for (God knows what). He lived just outside the town on the Bayou road. His mother, 86 years old, lived with him. He had no other relatives. The men broke into his cottage at night, took Foulral out of bed and strung him up in his own back yard. His poor mother died of fright.
CONTRAST BETWEEN ALABAMA
AND ARKANSAS.
The contrast between this case and that of the 87 Colored men now in prison in Arkansas for investigation in riots in Phillips County is startling. Here twelve white men are merely fined for the deliberate murder of a defenseless Colored farmer, and in Arkansas twelve Colored men are doomed to immediate death for alleged crimes which they had not even the chance of employing legal aid to clear themselves. A Miracle!
HARVEY B. WATKINS TO QUIT RACES
Authentic rumor is that Harry A. Watkins has asked for the political sponge in the coming race for Ward Committeeman.
When interviewed a few days ago as to his outlook in regard to politics in general and Ward Committeemen, the Big Real Estate man smiled broadly and said, "The Harmony crowd bids fair to smother all contestants who are not playing in the Harmony bowl." He is to be heard himself at the Harmony Banquet.
Come on Harry and tell us about it.
Suit to Come Up
According to reliable reports it is said that the suit which he has against the Chicago Defender will be tried during his stay. The Steamship Frederick Douglas which is the first to be owned and commandered by Negroes sailed a few days ago and wireless say that she has anchored safely into several British ports which were scheduled on her interyn.
CHICAGO, ILL., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1919
Church Will Assist in the Light Against Illiteracy
The First Congregational church, colored, is joining the campaign against illiteracy in Georgia. C. J. Haden presented the cause at the morning service yesterday, and in response to the appeal of the partor, Rev. H. H. Proctor, fifteen of the members volunteered as teachers. Classes will be operated in the institutional department of the church Tuesday and Thursday nights of each week, from 7 to 9 o'clock. The admission to the classes is free, and both adult and youthful illiterates are invited to join the classes.
At the evening hour Dr. Proctor spoke on "The A. B. C.'s of the Gospel," stressing the value of spiritual literacy. He dwelt on the universality of sin, the cure of selfishness and the appeal of the gospel.
The Thanksgiving offering was the largest in the history of the Church, and was as follows: C. B. Bullard, $400; F. P. Raiford, $293; J. O. Ross, $300; W. M. Woodall, $1,536; total, $2,529.
Governor Commends Work of Negro Bishop
Little Rock, Ark., November 29. Governor Brough commended the work of the Negroes under the leadership of Bishop J. M. Conner, in an address before the African Methodist Episcopal conference of Arkansas in Bethel A. M. E. Church, Ninth street and Broadway.
Referring to Bishop Conner, Governor Brough said: "He is a sane and careful leader of his people. I have the highest regard for him. He is putting forth and effort to rid his people of ignorance. Education is the salvation of all races."
The conference opened with the scrutiny of the official and religious character of each minister. While all passed without a black mark, Bishop Conner reminded them that there were complaints against some ministers because of their failure to pay debts. He declared that he was not elected to collect debts, but that the man who would not pay a debt was dishonest and not qualified to be a leader of the people.
Cr. C. M. Townsend spoke on the work and leadership of Bishop Conner and said that he had done much to cement the friendly relation between the races in this section of the country and Oklahoma.
Shorter College, headed Dr. S. L. Green, president, visited the conference yesterday afternoon in a body. An effort is being made to pay the college out of debt before the meeting of the general conference in May.
Julius A. Rosenwald Lectures to Howard University Students
Mr. Julius A. Rosenwald, Chicago's millionaire and Philanthropist, delivered his first lecture at Howard University, Washington, D. C., to the student body on the subject of "General Usefullness." He was very much impressed with his initial visit.
Leader Urges His Race to Shun Idleness
Little Rock, Arkansas, Gazette, Dec. 3, 1919.
Dr. E. E. Morris addressing the Negro Baptist State Convention said that idleness was the crime breeder of America, and he said that before this country could ever put down crime, criminality, lynching, mob violence and their kindred evils, it would be necessary to enforce a strict vagrancy law which would force all loafers to go to work or move on, and move clear out of the state.
Mr. Morris said some plain things, urging his people to make friends in the communities in which they live, and then to teach their children that it is no disgrace to work. "The man or woman who wont work will steal or resort to some other unbecoming method of getting their support," he dress up, look wise, and walk the said; "for no man or woman can streets without resorting to some dishonest methods.
"Tell it so the world can hear it engrave it on the azure blue above so that he who runs may read it, that the Negroes of Arkansas are opposed to crime, criminality, lynching, mob violence, assaults on women, and he condemns them with all of his life. We preach against this, an dwe have put forth an effort to reach the unreached of our race, but we have not succeeded thus far, for we cannot get them into our churches, homes, schools and places of healthful and uplifting influences. He is in the dens of shame and disgrace, the gambling hells and our arms are too short to reach them, they can only be reached by the arm of the law."
Improvement in Education
Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 1. — The Georgia State Board of Education has issued a bulletin showing the improvement in the Negro county school situation since 1914. In this period the number of teachers holding first grade licenses in county schools has almost doubled, amounting to 12.5 per cent of the total number employed. Forty-three per cent hold third grade certificates, a decrease from the 71 per cent of five years ago. The report states that 178 have no certificates at all. Local and private funds totaling $33,800 have been appropriated in the last three years for the improvement of the condition of the county schools.
Foundation of Confidence Required in Business
Integrity is a prime essential to real success. One who is dishonest may pile up money, but riches are not important without honor and the respect of your associates. I try always to keep my word, no matter how trifling the circumstances, and never promise what I can't fulfill. I insist that none of our men make a contract that the company can't live up to fully. Any salesman discovered making an agreement in which is inserted a clause giving the company a loop hole to escape from so filling the contrast, will be given ten minutes' notice. This policy is so well understood that we never have to enforce the threat. I never forget that individual friendship, as well as corporation good will, is based on confidence; and the foundation of confidence is integrity.—Eugene G. Grace, in Forbes Magazine.
RELEASED
Woman Held for Murder
Shoots and Instantly Kills Man With Whom She Had Quarreled.
Friday night, at 11:30, Beurl Brooks, age 32, shot and killed Given Greer, age 34, at her home, 1441 State Street. Greer was shot through the left cheek and died almost instantly. Witnesses of the murder stated it came as the result of a quarrel. Witnesses were William Heward, 1451 So. State St., William H. Ford, Fannie Paulree, and George Thompson.
Inguest Saturday.
Officer Samuel Bass, of the 2nd precinct station, made the arrest. The woman has been cited to the grand jury on a charge of murder. The coroners inquest was held Saturday at Chas. Jackson's Undertaking establishment. Green's home, it is said, is in Paducah, Kentucky.
Vincennes Hotel Has Formal Opening
Tuesday evening the Vincennes Hotel, at 36th St. and Vincennes ave. staged the first act of its official existence under colored managership. The snowy flakes driven with incalculable speed by the frigid wintry winds of Lake Michigan made transportation unpleasant, unprofitable and unsafe. But in spite of all this some of the leading citizens of Chicago and neighboring cities braved the inclement weather and filled corridors and the spacious dining rooms to capacity.
MANY PROMINENT CITIZENS
PRESENT
The large dining room was officially opened at 6 o'clock. Only the regular patrons of the hotel, however, were on the scene to greet the beautiful decorations, classic Jazz music that was previously and especially prepared by the management of the Hotel. But at eight o'clock hundreds of automobiles covered the streets surrounding the hotel like the sands cap the underlying strata of the Sahara. They expected something great, something unusual. They found it. Perhaps nowhere in America could they have found more high class joy and mirth. The dance floor was excellent, the music was of the Yim Europe variety which of course satisfies the most particular. Among the many present were Mrs. and Mrs. Dave Manson, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Abott, Dr. and Mrs. Spencer Dickerson, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar D. E. Priest, Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, Mrs. and Mrs. Geo. Garner, Mrs. Dr. Lester of Nashville, Tenn.
Justice Goes Mad in Arkansas
Looking over the crowded courtroom mothers, sisters sitting waiting in suspense for the next move justice will make against them. Old woman with tears in their eyes wring their hands in the fond hope that their loved ones will get a square deal, but their hopes are only cherished for awhile. Justice again takes off her blind and points out the man of color as—Guilty. The day was dark and dreary, the heavens itself looked down with disgust on the automatic disorder of things men were sent to their doom without even being given a fighting chance. Arkansas has forever tarnished the escutcheon of our judicial dignity, a state with ready justice to strike down a race of men. Nine race members were sentenced to terms in the penitentiary, twenty-seven to terms of five years,
NO GAMBLING, DANCING, CARD PLAYING NOT EVEN BASE BALL IS PERMITTED
"POSSUM HUNTING" THE MAIN SPORT
Very Latest Bulletins
Very Latest Bulletins
A colored man was lynched in Macon, Ga., yesterday. It is said that he shot a white man in self-defense.
Mr. Carter, Consul to Madagascar is visiting Consul Yerby of our city.
Mr. _____ is said to be the "Housing Committee" and he placed those posters intimidating colored people. His name will be given soon.
The "Old Eight Regiment" is to be enlarged. Col. Patten has issued the policy and wishes all to consider it.
The coal strike is threatening Citizens of the South Side with a scarcity of fuel.
It is said that colored people are waiting with plenty of coin for the State Bank.
The Harmony Banquet was the affair of the season.
Memphis, Tenn., Dec. 3, 1919.
The "promised land" for the Southern Negro is in a 35,000 acre tract in Lonoke County, Arkansas, where a new idea Negro community is being built and for which a set of laws has been laid down that forbids almost every kind of amusement save "hunting possum" and whose code is "work" on the theory that idleness is the worst enemy of the Negro, the old saw about "all work and no play" to the contrary notwithstanding.
There will be no dancing, no shooting "crans", no card playing, no loafing, no fighting. About the only thing that this new and fast growing community will be permitted to do is hunt. Not every baseball is admitted within the limits of lawful amusements.
And the chief aim is the establishment of a big factory to turn out high quality and artistic coffins.
The "promised land" surrounds the community centre that has been named Allport and to which 568 families have gone, each to take up and improve forty acres of land. Next year all business, most of which now is conducted by whites, will be taken over by Negroes, and one year from now the whole community's law and order, region, administration and
and one to ten years with rapidity to day by judge J. M. Jackson in Phillips county court, this makes the total convictions in the three days the trials have been in progress.
Negroes Not Accepting Red Ideas, Editors Say
Baltimore, December 1. (Associated.) — Editors of the four Negro newspapers published here today poined in an open letter to Attorney General Palmer expressing their belief that the recent report to the Attorney General that Bolshevism and I. W. W. propaganda are making converts among Negroes is unfounded and deny that un-American ideals have taken hold among their race.
DAYBREAK
EDITION
EXTRA
PRICE FIVE CENTS
SED
NTIC RACE CITY
NCING, CARD PLAYING,
BALL IS PERMITTED
G" THE MAIN SPORT
these general headings will be in the
hands of Negroes exclusively who
live in the community.
The "bad negro" is barred. It takes a first rate "character" to gain a place in the community. And — no Northern Negroes, or Negroes who have gone to the North from the South, can hope to find a haven in or near Allport. The lines are closely drawn and there are no exceptions.
The moving spirit for this Utopia for Negroes and the one who is responsible for most of the ideas that are being worked out, for the enforcement of its laws and for most of the other things that pertain to living and learning and prospering, is the New He Aaron Negro "elder" as he calls himself, who has been a leader of his race in Arkansas for a good many years. At this particular time, however, he is going thru the State conducting meetings for the particular purpose of striking down what he terms "vicious propaganda" aimed to create discord between Negroes and whites. He has held sixty-four meetings to teach contentment to his race. His work ahs been indorsed by Governor C. H. Brough, of Arkansas, and by a good many other white people.
Editor Linton Apologizes For Article Criticizing S. S. Frederick K. Douglas
At the Old Fellows Hall, 3339 So. State Street, Sunday afternoon, Editor Linton of the Chicago Whip said that a few days ago an article appeared in the Whip saying that the S. S. Frederick Douglas was not owned by the Black Star Line. "I am not responsible for it and did not even see the article until my attention was called to it by some of the members. I think the Black Star Line is worthy of the qualified support of the Race.
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atched in Macon, Ga., yesterday. It man in self-defense.
Madagascar is visiting Consul Yerby
id to be the "Housing Committee"
THE CHICAGO WHIP
SOCIETY
Mrs. Sinclair the wife of Mr. Sinclair, popular So. Side restaurant and Hotel proprietor is setting a pace for Chicago Club women at Wendall Phillips Rally for the Chicago Business League. She turned over her organization which consisted of several hundred women to the League and is sacrificing her time to put over the drive. Dr. Greer, president of the A. P. A. Fraternity and Dr. Homer Cooper, 51st and State Street, took thanksgiving on Saturday evening.
Mr. A. T. MacNeal is working day and night to put over the N.A.C. membership Drive.
Dr. A. C. Johnson popular dentist at 3518 State Street, has another addition to his family. They say the Dr. is all smiles.
Dr. Gordon Jackson gave a Stag Thanksgiving dinner in his bachelor apartments at 37th Street, and Vineennes Ave. It is said that he and Dr. Julius Green were the culinary Artists. No complaints have been made by the participants in the festivities.
Lieut. A. S. Shaw delivers Forceful Talk at Peoples Movement.
Lieut. Shaw, late of the 370th Infantry, formerly the Old 8th Intelligence officer in the A. E. F., gave a most interesting talk to a large audience at the People's Movement last Sunday evening.
He pictured France in all its beauty, the wonderful scenes of battle fields, her spirit of chivalry, her great debt of honor to men of Color, and in particular the 370th. He spoke graphically regarding the supposed failure of the 92nd Division. How it was fixed by the powers that be to put men in charge who were knowingly incompetent in order that the propaganda they were fostering would win out successfully. Frenchmen were not misled. The great French nation and her civilization today stands impartial due to the manner in which men of the 5th, 92nd Division and the 1st New York and other recruits of color conducted themselves which bring here for you everlasting respect and gratitude from the noble sons and daughters of France.
Mrs. Katie Brown, 3606 Wabash Ave., entertained at Thanksgiving dinner ten couples. The table was beautifully decorated with ferns and flowers. Visiting guests from out of town were Dr. Johnson and Hodges and friends from Wisconsin.
Dr. Davenport Grimes of Atlanta, Ga., was in the city for a few days this week to spend Thanksgiving with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey of Minneapolis spent a week in Chicago visiting their father in Chicago, Mr. Gaskill on the West Side and sister Mrs. J. A. Harper of 6339 Eberhardt Ave., Several card parties and theatre parties were given in honor of the Jefferys while in the city.
Mrs. M. E. Tillery of 4319 Langley Avenue spent the Thanksgiving holidays in Kansas City visiting relatives.
The many friends of our genial Dr. Lowe will be glad to know that he is steadily improving in health.
Lieut. R. A. J. Shaw in his customary smooth and fluent English charmed a large audience at the Peoples' Monument Club House, Sunday, November 30.
The Dixie Jubilee Concert Company owned and managed by Mr. Will C. Buckner, write from Canada where they have entertained large and appreciative audiences each season for the past fifteen years that Canada has taken on new life and that the Canadian folk are still enthusiastic for high class entertainment.
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A family reunion and Thanksgiving dinner was held at the home of Mrs. Jennie Jones, 3305 Vernon Ave., and for two hours those present dined most royally. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ade Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Phillips, Miss Julius Stout, Master Edward Stanton, Master Elwood Phillips, Mrs. Jones and Dr. Thos. Watson.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Walden, 4433 State street entertained a few friends wit han elaborate Thanksgiving dinner. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Beard, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Allen, Miss Caldwell of Lexington, Ky., Drs. Fraizier, Richie and Watson. The evening ended with dancing.
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hardin of 520 E. 37th Street who celebrated their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary received two hundred and fifty dollars in silver coin besides many wonderful presents in silver.
Messrs. Palmer, Roach and Webb entertained a few friends in their bachelor quarters with a midnight luncheon and a dance. The boys did themselves proud and the one who made the punch was gifted.
Miss Olvee Sims has just returned from St. Louis where she spent her Thanksgiving holidays with relatives and friends, among whom was Miss Empress Davidson of Chicago who is numbered among the best primary teachers of St. Louis.
A committee has been organized and are holding' meetings at the Peoples Moevement Club for the purpose of looking after rthe needs of any making merry and glad hearts of the poor and destitute children. This committee is working under the leadership of the Hon. Oscear De Priest, Dr. Spencer Dickerson, Dr. Goldbeg and Col. Johnson. The intention is to make a door to door canvas for dnatins.
COLORED WOMEN TO CONVENE
IN ITHACA. NEW YORK.
Ithaca, New York, Dec. 3, 1919. It was announced that the annual convention of the Empire State Federation of Women's Clubs, an association of the colored women of New oYrk State will be held in Ithaca during the first week of netx July. The City was selected as the place for the 1920 gathering at the 1919 convention in New York City last July, and the decision has just been confirmed by the executive body. It is expected 150 or more delegates will be here. The convention will be entertained unedr the auspices of Frances Harper Club of this city. The program of events and selection of speakers will be announced later.
GIRL MADE HIT WITH COLORED
Y. M. C. A. MEN
Detroit, Dec. 4.—When the international Y. M. C. A. convention, held here last week, is only a memory, Miss Gladys Barnes will have the satisfaction in knowing that her part in the arrangements was performed perfectly.
Miss Barnes' duty was the placing of 120 negro delegates in suitable homes. Her wide acquaintance in the city, her tact, courtesy and energy fitted her admirably off the task. "Who is that girl down at the Y. M. C. A.?" newspaper men and business people would inquire after a telephone conversation in which she had conveyed concisely, rapidly and cheerfully exactly what the inquirer wanted to know.
Where is Mr. B. staying? Miss Barnes knew and moreover told how to get there. When is Mr. S. likely to be at the headquarters? She could offer an opinion. Will Miss Barnes
deliver a message to Mr. A.? Willingly!
During the convention week Miss Barnes was secretary to Robert B. DeFrantz, recruiting secretary of the war work council, who had come here to arrange for the welfare of negro delegates. It was in the capacity of chief advisch that Miss Barnes found homes for their entertainment.
Miss Barnes lives at 207 Josephine street and is stenographer for her father, R. C. Barnes, of the law firm of Barnes & Stowers.
"COLONIAL DREAM" GIVEN BY DRAMATICS CLUB.
A striking little play filled with humorous situations and prettily performed was staged by the Dramatics Division of the Community Service, incorporated, at the South Side Soldiers and Sailors Club, Wednesday evening, November 26th under the direction of Miss Marie Burgette. The grils were well costumed and the stage settings showed unusual good taste. The cast of characters was as follows: Sir Lionel, dreamer—Ruth Arnett. Penelope, the painting—Irene Wilson. Mistress Suzana Love—R. Hansboro.
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PERSONAL
The friends and immediate family of Mr. A. L. Jones, 6125 Michigan Ave. had a delightful thanksgiving dinner Those present were: Miss' Ethel Jones Miss Grace Stewart, Mr. and Mrs Harry Macey, Mr. Houston Gilson and Mr. Will Taylor. The affair was one crowded with informal pleasure for those present.
Mrs. E. P. Randolph, 4335 Wabash Avenue, gave an informal thanksgiving dinner in honor of Mr. Perry Williams and Miss Omar Wilson, who are to be married Tuesday December 2nd. Those present were: Mr. A. Finney of New York City, Mr. Joseph Pope, Mr. Hendrickson of the City Health Department, Miss Evelyn Parker. Doctor Luther Dottin joined the parity after dinner, and they were delightfully entertained with various musical selections which made the affair all the more pleasant and agreeable.
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219 East 35th St., Near Indiana Ave. CHICAGO Carry your bundle to our office. We allow you 15% for your trouble and give you the best work in town. Socks darned and buttons sewed on.
BUY WHILE IT LASTS 25% Investment Griffin Music Co., Stock
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Stephen A. Griffin President and Treasurer
William A. Thomas Vice-President and General Manager
Porter P. Grainger Secretary and Prof. Manager
GRIFFIN MUSIC CO. (Inc.)
Offers the unsold balance of the $25,000 Capital Stock $10.00 PER SHARE $5.00 PER SHARE CASH PAYMENTS, $5.00 PER MONTH
WALK TO THE APE THESE NUMBERS BEFORE YOU
Sales Room, Arlington Music House, 3034 Indiana
The Griffin Music Company was incorporated under the laws of the State of Illinois, for twenty-five ($25,000.00) dollars, divided into two thousand five hundred (2,500) shares, with a par value of ten ($10.00) dollars each.
The firm has been doing a general retail Music business, at two stores, one at 3637 South State St., and one at 3034 Indiana Avenue, for the past three years. Their success is evidenced by the fact that during this time they have done more than forty-five thousand ($45,000) dollars of business.
They have been especially successful since they began the publishing business, so much so that they find it necessary to increase their working capital to take care of the great increase in the volume of business. To that end they find it advisable to offer a limited amount of their treasury stock at par.
R. W. HUNTER & CO., BANKERS, recommend to the public that part of the Companies' stock which is for sale in blocks of from 5 to 100 shares, with a cash payment of $5.00 per share and $5.00 per month.
Avenue — owned by the Griffin Music Company.
The financial possibilities of a song "hit" is limited only by the number of music-loving people in the world. The Griffin Music Company owns several popular song hits, upon which they receive royalties, some "THOSE DRAFTING BLUES."
"YOU LIED."
"THERE'S NO USE SAYING, SWEETE DONT."
She'll DDo It Just the Same."
"CALL OF THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE."
"IT'S A LONG WAY TO MY OLD HOME TOWN."
This last song was dedicated to Vivian Martin. Star in "The Home Town Girl," a Paramount picture "hit." It is thought that this popular number alone should bring the firm $100,000 to $200,000.
"Mammy O' Mine," written by Maceo Pinkard, who also wrote "Drafting Blues," brought t its owner $400,000.00 in royalties and sheet music sales. YOU TAKE NO CHANCES WHEN YOU BUY GRIFFIN MUSIC COMPANY STOCK.
BUY TODAY
$5.00 starts you on the road to fortune. Yes.
THE GRIFFIN MUSIC HOUSE is already paying large dividends on the capital invested. Additional capital will be limited to $100,000 there. There is no limit to the financial possibilities of a song "hit", in sheet music, record and roll sales.
VENICE, CAL., NEWS.
Miss Margaret Burton and Miss Sager gave a delightful Thanksgiving dined at the beautiful residence of Miss Burton. The place is known as "Venice by the Sea" and is located at 669 Ind. Ave.
Every one enjoyed themselves to the highest and retired to the reception room where dancing was enjoyed, until the sun went down behind the ocean.
EAT SHOP
Quality, Service and Quantity
the best. We serve the best at
MRS. E. T. ALLEY
217 East 35th St
Do You Read. Need
We Can
Save
You
Subscription
Money
We can furnish an
NEWSPAPER (no re
combination with a s
Whip, at money saving
nation list, or better stil
tions desired and allow
same, before placing you
can save you money, s
SWANCY &
2060 North Third Street
THE ELITE L
219 East 35th St., Near
CHICAGO
Carry your bundle to
We allow you 15% for
and give you the best w
Socks darned and button
BUY W
25% Investment
“You take no chances when
Griffin Music Company
3637 SOUTH STATE STREET
Stephen A. Griffin.....
William A. Thomas.....
Porter P. Grainger.....
GRIFFIN
Offers the unsold ba
$10.00 PER SHARE $5.00 PER
Sales Room, Arlington Music House, 30
The Griffin Music Company was incor
der the laws of the State of Illinois, for
($25,000.00) dollars, divided into two th
hundred (2,500) shares, with a par va
($10.00) dollars each.
The firm has been doing a general re
business, at two stores, one at 3637 South
and one at 3034 Indiana Avenue, for the
years. Their success is evidenced by the fa
ing this time they have done more than
thousand ($45,000) dollars of business.
They have been especially successful
began the publishing business, so much so
find it necessary to increase their working
take care of the great increase in the volu
ness. To that end they find it advisable
limited amount of their treasury stock at p
R. W. HUNTER & CO., BANKERS,
to the public that part of the Companies’ s
is for sale in blocks of from 5 to 100 share
cash payment of $5.00 per share and $5.00.
THE GRIFFIN MUSIC HOUSE is alre
large dividends on the capital invested.
capital will increase dividends in proportion
virtually no limit to the financial possibilities
“hit” in sheet music, record and roll sales.
GRIFFIN
3034 Indiana Ave.,
The financial possibilities of a song "hit" is limited only by the number of music-loving people in the world. The Griffin Music Company owns several popular song hits, upon which they receive royalties, some "THOSE DRAFTING BLUES."
"YOU LIED."
"THERE'S NO USE SAYING, SWEETIE DONT."
She'll DDo It Just the Same.
"CALL OF THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE."
"IT'S A LONG WAY TO MY MOLD HOME TOWN."
This last song was dedicated to Vivian Martin, Star in "The Home Town Girl," a Paramount picture "hit." It is thought that this popular number alone should bring the firm $1000,000 to $200,000
"Mammy O' Mine," written by Maceo Pinkard, who also wrote "Drafting Blues," brought t oits owner $400,000.00 in royalties and sheet music sales. YOU TAKE NO CHANCES WHEN YOU BUY GRIFFIN MUSIC COMPANY STOCK.
—BUY TODAY—
$5.00 starts you on the road to fortune. You may buy through R. W. Hunter & Co.'s three banks, 4757 South State Street, 3003 South State Street or 1801 West Lake Street.
ALSO AT THE COMPAN'S OFFICE: 3637 S. STATE
STREET or SEE.
The 2 "Old Whip" was among those present.
Mrs. Margaret Burton, Mrs. Sager, Mrs. DeVaugan, Mrs. Mamie Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Paul McCardy, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Pollock, Mrs. uanita Scott, Mrs. M. Pickens, Mrs. Chas. Spear, Mrs. Eva Ware, Mrs. Marguerite Boubon were among those present.
VOL. 1, December 6, 1919. No. 24
Published by
The CHICAGO PUBLISHING CO.
Not Inc.
CHICAGO OFFICE: 3457 STATE STREET
PHONE: DOUGLAS 9550
JOS. D. BIBB L. L. B. Editors
WILLIAM C. LINTON
All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and lectures sent to the CHICAGO WHIP are sent at the owner's risk, and the CHIBILITY or responsibility for their safety or return. All communications must be sent in the name of the CHICAGO WHIP. No attention may ever be paid to unsigned matter. Stamps must accompany all queries and manuscript.
Term of Subscription (Payable in advance):
One Year. $2.00; Six Months. $1.25;
Three Months. $75c.
You Can't Get Away From It
SINCLAIRS GRILL
Serves The Best Food On Earth. At Prices That Are Suprisingly Low.
The Pride Of Elite.
We Scarve Banquets, Parties On Short Notice.
SINCLAIRS GRILL
4660 S. State Street
We Get the News
ASTS
sic Co., Stock
Company's stock."
stock of $25,000
3034 INDIANA AVENUE
President and Treasurer
Event and General Manager
Secretary and Prof. Manager
(Inc.)
2000 Capital Stock
PAYMENTS, $5.00 PER MONTH
led by the Griffin Music Company.
possibilities of a song "hit" is lim-
number of music-loving people in the
Music Company owns several pop-
on which they receive royalties, some
STING BLUES."
USE SAYING, SWEETIE DON'T."
DO It Just the Same.)
RE RED, WHITE AND BLUE."
WAY TO MY OLD HOME TOWN."
buy was dedicated to Vivian Martin,
the Town Girl," a Paramount picture
right that this popular number alone
from $1000,000 to $200,000.
Mine," written by Maceo Pinkard,
crafting Blues," brought t oits owner
royalties and sheet music sales. YOU
CES WHEN YOU BUY GRIFFIN
BY STOCK.
-BUY TODAY—
on the road to fortune. You may buy
enter & Co.'s three banks, 4757 South
3 South State Street or 1801 West
COMPAN'S OFFICE: 3637 S. STATE
STREET or SEE
O. (Inc.)
CHICAGO, ILL
The STAGE CRITICISM IS ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL TO PUBLIC MORAL AND PUBLIC TASTE
Smarter Set make Hit at the Grand
Messers. Tutt and Whitney have brought to Chicago the greatest musical comedy of the age. This statement is broad but all one has to do is to look, not with the eyes of prejudice nor with the ordinary dramatic interpretation, but with the eyes of a historical dramatic interpreter. There are not three dramatic critics in America that could do justice to this show without delving in to the Archieves of ancient history, and at the same time being in possession of sufficient archeaeological data to cover a long chumeristic period. The Colored people of Chicago could not have a better message brought to them at this time than the answer radiated by the Smarter Set Company of uniting the Children of The Sun. The historical points were
Sam Harris Come and Get your Nephew
On November 24 a young boy by the name of Obed Brown, 12 years of age was brought to the office of the Chicago Urban League. He had been placed on a train at Cherry, Tennessee, by his grandmother, Mrs. Mattie Mackey, and sent to Chicago. Because his grandmother forgot to furnish him with the address of his uncle Mr. Sam Harris and his Aunt Mrs. Consalides Harris, living somewhere in Chicago, the boy found himself without friends or funds. As yet no response has come to the efforts of the League to reach his grandparents in Tennessee, Obed Brown may be renched through the Chicago Urban League, 3032 So. Wabash Avenue.
Women's Club Meet
The Chicago-Colored Women's Club, the small in numbers as yet is doing a real, effective work. They are establishing acquaintances with each other
PRE-HO
SA
FOR ONE W
Dec. 3rd
We give double tradi
from December 3 to 10th.
morning and take adva
STAMPS. — Stamps rea
MERCHANDISE.
Exceptional values m
Goods, Men's Furnishing
derwear and Hosiery Dep
... Below we quote a few
our cloak and suit depart
All wool serge dresses, a
$27.50 values, Sale price
All wool serge dresses,
$25.00 values, Sale price
Beaver Plush Coats, all s
$27.50 values, Sale price
A few Velour, Velvet and
while they last, very spec
Skirts greatly reduced. A
from. Specially priced for
this sale only
RE-HOLIDAY
SALE
FOR ONE WEEK ON
Dec. 3rd to 11th
give double trading stamps every
december 3 to 10th.—Do your shopping
and take advantage of THE D
IPS. — Stamps redeemable for CA
HANDISE.
exceptional values may be found in o
Men's Furnishings, Notion and Lac
er and Hosiery Departments.
Now we quote a few of the many ba
sk and suit department.
col serge dresses, all sizes,
values, Sale price $1
col serge dresseses, all sizes—
values, Sale price $1
Plush Coats, all sizes —
values, Sale price $1
Velour, Velvet and Plush Coats,
they last, very special $1
greatly reduced. A large assortment
Specially priced for
sale only $3.98 to $1
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
We give double trading stamps every morning from December 3 to 10th.—Do your shopping in the morning and take advantage of THE DOUBLE STAMPS. — Stamps redeemable for CASH OR MERCHANDISE.
Exceptional values may be found in our Dress Goods, Men's Furnishings, Notion and Ladies' Underwear and Hosiery Departments.
Below we quote a few of the many bargains in our cloak and suit department.
All wool serge dresses, all sizes,
$27.50 values, Sale price $16.75
All wool serge dresses, all sizes—
$25.00 values, Sale price $14.75
Beaver Plush Coats, all sizes — $27.50 values, Sale price $19.75
A few Velour, Velvet and Plush Coats, while they last, very special $14.75
Skirts greatly reduced. A large assortment to choose from. Specially priced for this sale only $3.98 to $12.98
Store opens at 9:00 A. M.
Thursday Evening 'till 9:00 P. M.
Saturday Evening 'till 10:00 P. M.
P. D. Madigan & Co.
D. Madigan &
P.D.Madigan & Co.
Dry Goods Importers
299 to 307 E. 31st St.
307 E. 31st St. Corner For
299 to 307 E. 31st St. Corner Forest Ave.
burlesqued at several points but in main the audience received the import of the camoflaged message. The costumes are beautiful. The chorus is well trained in cadence and well balanced in voice, which gives a pleasing effect to the critical eye and at the same time reflects harmony to the ear. Mr. Whitney played the comedy part thru out. He has a style that is original and fascinating. At times especially in the last act where he is starving in the Sahara's proves himself not only a comedian but dramatist of covetous qualities. On the whole, however, his comedy does not balance the deep historica lplot of the play which was portrayed by the rest of the Company in divers ways.
in their various lines, pledging support to each member in a business way, and encouraging the small business.
Their membership is increasing, the treasury groving, and the outlook is very bright. A membership drive is instituted, which they hope to net them all the business in the city, and if the interest shown is kept up business along the stroll among the colored people will increase by leaps and bounds.
Investigation is earnestly solicited, and any information gladly given by calling the secretary, Drexel 1485.
Avoid the
Whip's Lash.
HOLIDAY
SALE
WEEK ONLY
all to 11th
ing stamps every morning
—Do your shopping in the
vantage of THE DOUBLE
deemable for CASH OR
may be found in our Dress
s, Notion and Ladies' Un-
departments.
v of the many bargains in
ment.
all sizes,
$16.75
all sizes—
$14.75
izes —
$19.75
Plush Coats,
special
$14.75
large assortment to choose
or $3.98 to $12.98
igan & Co.
Corner Forest Ave.
MAGE TO PUBLIC MORAL AND PUBLIC TAS
IRISH CONDITIONS MOST ALARMING.
Sir Horace Plunkett Warns Britain That Repressive Measures Only Make Matters Worse.
London, November 30. — Sir Horace Plunkett, who was chairman of the Dublin convention and who has generally kept aloof from Irish politics during his long career of public service, has issued a' warning that the announcement that hunger strikers will not be released from the jails in Ireland hereafter, if it is intended to break the spirit of the Sinn Fein, will have the opposite effect.
WELLI NOVELT
The WELLINGTON NOVELTY SHOP
WELLINGTON NOVELTY SHOP
High grade waists and silk underwear at lowest prices. First class line of silk underwear made in attractive patterns. We also carry a full line of silk hosiery. Courtesy and attention to all.
206 E. 31st St.
Phone 211
KING & HILL
Edward
Funeral
206 E. 31st St., near Indiana Ave
Phone 2117 Calumet
KING & HILL NOTARY PUBLISH
Edward T. Hill
Funeral Director
206 E. 31st St., near Indiana Ave. Phone 2117 Calumet
Phone Boulevard 1697
My shop is qualified for service and courtesy for up-to-date
EXPERT TONSORIAL ARTISTS---EXPERT
MANICURING--ELECTRIC TREATMENTS
Cosmopolitan
The finest equippe
Modern methods
J. D. L.
SUCCESSOR
313 East 35th Street
Why Go To
THE BARC
appreciates y
We give you BETTER
BETTER
Cosmopolitan Barber Shop
The finest equipped shop on the South.
Modern methods for modern men.
J. D. LEONARD
SUCCESSOR TO MALLORY
813 East 35th Street Phone Douglas 9
Why Go To The Loop?
THE BARGAIN STORE
appreciates your patronage
We give you BETTER GOODS and BETTER SERVICE for less more
Cosmopolitan Barber Shop
We give you BETTER GOODS and BETTER SERVICE for less money
Cut out the coupon below--it is
Good for 10% DISCOUNT on Merchandise
Bring it with you
We carry a full line of Hardware, Dry Goods, Notions and Confections. Call to-day.
Bring it with you
We carry a full line of Hardware, Dry Goods, Notions and
Confections. Call to-day.
THE BARGAIN STORE
IS YOUR STORE
117-119 EAST 31st STREET
FOR BA
in Diamonds, Watch
Traveling
Richter's
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED
AS REPRESENTED
FOR BARGAINS
in Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Trunk
Traveling Bags, Etc.
— GO TO —
Richter's Loan Bank
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED
AS REPRESENTED
114 East 31st St
in Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Trunks, Traveling Bags, Etc.
Richter's Loan Bank
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED
AS REPRESENTED
114 East 31st Street
THE CHICAGO WHIP
GEO LAND PUBLIC TASTE
Advices from Dublin say conditions in Ireland are most disquieting. Lawlessness has not been discouraged by the recent proclamation and crimes of violence are increasing in number.
"Proclamation without action," is the description some critics give of Lord French's rule. His latest manifesto proclaimed the Sinn Fein and kindred societies throughout Ireland as illegal bodies. The Sinn Fein had already been proclaimed such in Dublin and other parts before the recent meeting of the Sinn Fein congress there. Yet the Sinn Feiners held their congress, even advertised it and boasted of it, and nothing happened in the way of measures against them.
he
NGTON
Y SHOP
near Indiana Ave.
7 Calumet
NOTARY PUBLIC
201012
I T. Hill
Director
3604 SO. STATE ST.
Barber Shop
and shop on the South.
for modern men.
LEONARD
TO MALLORY
Phone Douglas 9490
Do The Loop?
AIN STORE
our patronage
GOODS and
SERVICE
for less money
with you
dware, Dry Goods, Notions and
Call to-day.
ARGAINS
Times, Jewelry, Trunks,
Bags, Etc.
TO -
Loan Bank
114 East 31st Street
St. Good renetr and investment. Price $10,000. Small cash payment. Matthew Ivens & Co., 4217 Indiana Ave. Phone Oakland 5629.
View and Flashlight Work a Specialty SCHOOL OF PRACTICAL PHOTOGRAPHY PORTRAITS, COPYING, ENLARGING FRAMING AND POST CARDS A complete course makes you independent for life
WEBB STUDIO
MILES M. WEBB, Photographer
3519 South State Street
Phone Douglas 6688 CHICAGO
Phones Calumet 177-297
Lekholm Exp. & Van
FURNITURE AND PIANOS PACKED,
MOVED AND STORED
OFFICE: 116 EAST 31st STREET
Van
CKED,
O
TREET
OMY
e and
d cus-
cinity
nt for
ENCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY METHODS for New Condition Fight Fire With Fire
Most commercial achievement has been in Insurance. Reconstructed opportunity demand insurance policies which will meet these new conditions. LIFE AND CASUALTY COMPANY is now being organized to make Companies do not adequately handle. When completely organized, Mutual of Georgia and the Fireside Mutual of Ohio, giving at once, the laws of the State of Ohio and AUTHORIZED TO SELL THE Company is now offering to the public a limited number of insurance and License for the sale of the securities of the SUPREME DIVISION. Been formed for the greater development and expansion of Insurance for the acquisition by purchase and reinsurance, subject to legal and accident organizations in various parts of the country. Greatest commercial advancement has been achieved in Insurance. Issues and our many health and accident organizations have shared, tension, yet, our greatly increased wages and highly enchanced starvance now in vogue and have created an urgent demand for policies. The SUPREME LIFE AND CASUALTY COMPANY comes to the aid campaign has been launched for the nation-wide sale of these of the organization and the presentation of the Supreme Life and years of scientific study and actual experience; has been prepared to face the most advanced ideas of Casualty, Life and Group Insurance.
ANNOUNCEMENT
New Methods for
Fight Fire
The Negro's greatest Commercial achievement has
war expansion and opportunity demand insurance policy.
THE SUPREME LIFE AND CASUALTY COMPANY
which the older Insurance Companies do not adequately
business of the Fireside Mutual of Georgia and the Fires
and agency organization.
Incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio
STATE OF ILLINOIS, the Company is now offering
Articles of Incorporation and License for the sale of
COMPANY have been granted by the State of Ohio and
The Company has been formed for the greater dev-
among our people, and for the acquisition by purchase a
sion, of life, health and accident organizations in various
Admittently, our greatest commercial advancement
line legal reserve companies and our many health and
mendous industrial expansion, yet, our greatly increased
grown much of the Insurance now in vogue and have cre
period of reconstruction. The SUPREME LIFE AND O
A carefully conceived campaign has been launched
allowed by the completion of the organization and the pro
Policy is the result of years of scientific study and actu-
ment actuaries; embraces the most advanced ideas of
ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY New Methods for New Conditions Fight Fire With Fire
The Negro's greatest Commercial achievement has been in Insurance. Reconstruction and industrial post war expansion and opportunity demand insurance policies which will meet these new conditions.
Legal details pertaining to the formation of the Company and the issuance of the securities have been passed upon by the Departments of Insurance and by A. Lee Beaty, Attorney, Cincinnati. Dorsey, Shelton and Dorsey, Attorneys for Georgia.
Legal details pertaining to the formation of the Corp. upon by the Departments of Insurance and by A. Lee B. Attorneys for Georgia.
Correspondence cordially solicited. Address comm.
SUPREME LIFE AND
HOME OFFICE,
State Office, 3303 South St.
INITIAL STOCKHOLDERS, P.
T. K. Gibson, Founder,
Fireside Mutual.
G. W. Hayes, U. S. Court,
Cincinnati.
C. R. Davis, Insurance,
Cincinnati.
C. S. Smith, Insurance,
Chicago.
D. C. Chandler, Insurance,
Columbus.
B. M. Roddy, Cashier Solvent
Savings Bank, Pres.
Roddy Stores, Memphis.
R. Black, President Standard
Loan & Realty Co.,
Atlanta.
J. L. Jones, President Central
Reg. Co., Cincinnati.
17 Atlanta Physicians.
H. A. Bowl, A.
Nat'l Bank,
Nashville.
W. S. Cannon,
Reginald,
Georgia.
David T. Hoy,
Atlanta.
B. J. Davis, I.
Atlanta.
A. P. Bentley,
Solvent t.
Memphis.
A. D. Hamilton,
Atlanta.
C. S. Cox, U.
Atlanta.
7 Macon P.
10 Memphis.
BLY NOW! OWN SHARES IN THE COMING
FROMOTE A NATIONAL ORGANIZATION TO SAVE
EVERY SECTION OF THE COUNTRY. PROTECT
ECONOMIC WELFARE.
For further in
Supreme Life and
3303 South State S
Telephone
INITIAL STOCKHOLDERS, PROMOTERS AND ENDORSERS
T. K. Gibson, Founder, Fireside Mutual.
G. W. Hayes, U. S. Court, Cincinnati.
C. R. Davis, Insurance, Cincinnati.
C. S. Smith, Insurance, Chicago.
D. C. Chandler, Insurance, Columbus.
B. M. Roddy, Cashier Solvent Savings Bank, Pres. Roddy Stores, Memphis.
R. Black, President Standard Loan & Realty Co., Atlanta.
J. L. Jones, President Central Reg. Co., Cincinnati.
17 Atlanta Physicians.
J. S. Flipper, Bishop, A. M. E. Church, Atlanta.
H. R. Butler, Grand Master, Masons, Georgia.
J. C. Logan, Grand Master Masons, Ohio.
H. E. Hall, President Mammoth Life & Accident, Louisville.
C. C. Cater, Cashier, Atlanta State Savings Bank, Georgia.
C. S. Smith, Bishop, A. M. E. Church, Detroit.
E. J. Turner, Gr. Med. Reg. K. of P., Columbus.
BLY NOW! OWN SHARES IN THE COMING COLORED INSURANCE COMPANY AND THUS PROMOTE A NATIONAL ORGANIZATION TO SERVE THE INTERESTS OF OUR OWN PEOPLE IN EVERY SECTION OF THE COUNTRY. PROTECT YOUR RACE AND PROMOTE YOUR OWN—ECONOMIC WELFARE.
For further information write
3303 South State Street — Chicago, Ill.
Telephone Douglas 850.
LEWIS W.
---
PHONE: Coliseum 7828
J. L. G. CHASE
THE LITTLE PALACE BARBER SHOP
ELECTRIC MASSAGE
Bair Straightened Without Hot Irons
Hair cut in any style, 5 charm. No waiting.
Razor and everything in Barber line for
9 W. 29th STREET. CHICAGO
BARGAINS: 3 Flats for Sale. 8-
room each. Modern, good transportation.
Rents for $188 a yer. Cash down
$500. — 4 Flats; modern, northeast 47th
St. Good renetr and investment.—
Price $10,000. Small cash payment.
Matthew Ivens & Co. 4217 Indiana
Ave. Phone Oakland 5629.
View and Flashlight Work a Specialty
SCHOOL OF PRACTICAL PHOTOGRAPHY
PORTRAITS, COPYING, ENLARGING
FRAMING AND POST CARDS
A complete course makes you independent
for life
WEBB STUDIO
MILES M. WEBB, Photographer
3519 South Stats Street
Phone Douglas 6688 CHICAGO
When in Need of Groceries
Visit G. Johnson's Delicatessen
FISH AND OYSTERS IN SEASON
Phone Douglas 4996
Phone Orders Promptly Attended to
509 E. 31st Street
Chicago
STYLE AND ECONOMY
GO TO
J. D. LEWIS
THE TAILOR
10 Years experience and
thousands of satisfied customers in this vicinity
sufficient inducement for
your patronage.
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing
3209 So. State St.
Phone Douglas 3495
C. S. SMITH, Jr.
State Representative
NOTARY PUBLIC
PHONE DOUGLAS 6105
F.W.HARSH,Jr.
Real Estate Renting & Insurance
Loans and Mortgages Property Managed
309 EAST 39th STREET
CHICAGO
PENT EXTRAORDINARY
Tools for New Conditions
Fire With Fire
Movement has been in Insurance. Reconstruction and industrial policy
insurance policies which will meet these new conditions.
SUPREME COMPANY is now being organized to meet these new conditions
not adequately handle. When completely organized it will re-insure the
and the Fireside Mutual of Ohio, giving at once an established busi-
estate of Ohio and AUTHORIZED TO SELL SECURITIES IN THE
now offering to the public a limited number of shares.
For the sale of the securities of the SUPREME LIFE AND CASUALTY
of Ohio and officially approved by the departments of other states.
Greater development and expansion of Insurance along Casualty line
purchase and reinsurance, subject to legal and departmental supervis-
ions in various parts of the country.
Advancement has been achieved in Insurance. And, while our few o
health and accident organizations have shared bountifully in the tran-
tly increased wages and highly enhanced standard of living have our
and have created an urgent demand for policies better adapted to the
LIFE AND CASUALTY COMPANY comes to answer that demand.
We launched for the nation-wide sale of these securities and will be fo-
nished and the presentation of the Supreme Life and Casualty Policy.
Supreme and actual experience; has been prepared by one of America's most
ideas of Casualty, Life and Group Insurance.
as follows:
on the Company and the issuance of the securities have been passed by A. Lee Beaty, Attorney, Cincinnati. Dorsey, Shelton and Dorsey.
Address communications to
E AND CASUALTY COMPANY
OFFICE, COLUMBUS, OHIO
South State Street, Chicago, Illinois
OLDERS, PROMOTERS AND ENDORSERS
I. A. Boyd, Ass't. Secty.
Nat'l Bapt. Pub. Bd., Nashville.
V. S. Cannon, Pres., I. O. B., Reginall, Fireside Mutual, Georgia.
David T. Howard, Undertaker, Atlanta.
B. J. Davis, D. G. S., Editor, Atlanta.
A. P. Bentley, Ass't. Cashier Solvent Savings Bank, Memphis.
A. D. Hamilton, Contractor, Atlanta.
C. S. Cox, Undertaker, Atlanta.
7 Macon Physicians.
10 Memphis Physicians.
J. S. Flipper, Bishop,
A. M. E. Church, Atlanta.
H. R. Butler, Grand Master,
Masons, Georgia.
J. C. Logan, Grand Master
Masons, Ohio.
H. E. Hall, President Mammoth Life & Accident, Louisville.
C. C. Cater, Cashier. Atlanta State Savings Bank, Georgia.
C. S. Smith, Bishop,
A. M. E. Church, Detroit.
E. J. Turner, Gr. Med. Reg. K. of P., Columbus.
5 Cincinnati Physicians.
4 Columbus Physicians.
THE COMING COLORED INSURANCE COMPANY AND THE ACTION TO SERVE THE INTERESTS OF OUR OWN PEOPLE. PROTECT YOUR RACE AND PROMOTE YOUR OWN
and Casualty Company
North State Street — Chicago, Ill.
Telephone Douglas 850.
LEWIS W. WALLACE, Jr. As
In the Field of Labor.
Chorus girls and musicians in Madrid, Spain, have formed a labor union. Of the 130,000 people employed in the spinning mills in Japan, 96,000 are women. London teamsters who are employed by the city engineer are asking for $1 per hour. Iron molders in Toronto, Canada, are receiving 75 cents an hour for eight hours a day. In 1919 it took 127 men employed by the Pennsylvania railroad to do work of 100 men in 1917. Metal trades workers in Salt Lake City, Utah, are demanding a blanket increase in wages of $1 a day. Among Pennsylvania railroad workers 14 per cent more men did 11 per cent less work last year than in 1917.
Soda clerks of the first grade in New York drug stores have presented demands for a minimum salary of $40 a week, while third-grade dispensers want $20. Policemen of Ashtabula, Ohio, have petitioned council for the establishment of an eight-hour day, also for the creation of a pension fund. The matter is now in committee. The Western Brick company of Danville, Ill., has entered into a contract with 450 employees that wages will be increased or decreased every three months in accordance with the cost of living. The price of 13 articles of food is taken as the standard. Fourteen of the leading retail stores of Providence, R. L., have issued statements to their employees that they will not allow them to join any union. They declare that while unions are of use in many industries, the retail trade is not suited to them.
One thousand employees of the Federal Lead company were called out on strike at Bonne Terre, Mo. They are asking for a closed shop and 25 per cent increase in pay. The company has announced it is preparing for an indefinite closed down.
As the result of conference between various German organizations, the Clerical Office Workers' union has been organized. It comprises more than 350,000 members, making it, it is contended, the biggest organization of office workers in the world.
The strike of metal workers in Berlin, Germany, has been settled, according to announcement. Gustav Noske, minister of defense, speaking in the national assembly, declared those responsible for the strike would be punished for "disturbing the vital functions of public life."
The marked increase in the number of highway robberies and burglaries the last few days has resulted in the issuance of an order by Chief of Police O'Brien of St. Louis which will mean that all unemployed are subject to arrest and prosecution as idlers. The order also empowers the police to investigate and search all motor cars out after midnight.
A demand for a 35 to 65 per cent increase in wages and that all coal-burning locomotives weighing 200,000 pounds and more in road service be equipped with mechanical stokers and two firemen be placed in all such engines until they are so equipped was adopted by a conference of 300 general chairmen of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen.
The leather industry ranks as the third greatest manufacturing industry in the United States. According to the census of manufacturers for 1914, about 250,000 persons are engaged in the leather industry of the United States, some 55,936 of whom are in the tanning and leather trades, the remainder being principally shoemakers and harness makers. Houston, Texas, has produced something new in the line of unions. It is claimed that the Undertakers and Embalmers' union, chartered by the American Federation of Labor, is the first of its kind in existence. Undertakers and embalmers in, Galveston, Beaumont and other cities of southwestern Texas are also contemplating pursuing a similar course.
The report of the Indiana industrial board includes the report of the department of mines and mining, which shows a coal production for the year ending September 30, 1918, of 28,795,682 short tons. This coal was secured from 239 mines employing 27,932 workmen, whose average annual earnings were $1,424.06. During the year there were 114 fatal accidents, 106 to persons employed in the mines and eight to persons employed on the surface; this gives a rate of 4.08 persons killed per 1,000 employed.
Notices were posted in the offices of the Western Union Telegraph company of a 15 per cent increase in pay beginning Jan. 1, 1920, for all employees of the company who have been in service one year or more and a 10 per cent raise for those in its employ for six months. It was announced also that on Nov. 1 all employees will receive a bonus of 30 per cent of their salaries for the months of August, September and October. On Jan. 1 next another bonus will be paid of 20 per cent of the salaries for November and December.
Fifteen thousand weavers employed by 50 mills at Alcoy, Spain, engaged in the manufacture of cloth for uniforms, struck, demanding a 50 per cent increase in wages. The employers have offered a 20 per cent advance, but this has been rejected.
Unions in Butte, Anaconda and Great Falls, affiliated with the Metal Trades council, by a referendum vote cast in the three cities, have formally ended the strike that has been in progress among the Butte copper mines and the smelter plants in Anaconda and Great Falls for the last two months, it was announced today.
KILLS MORE THAN WAR RED ORGY OF MURDER
CHRISTMAS BARGAINS
CHRISTMAS BARGAINS
$500 down buys a three flat building, stone front, 6—6—7 rooms. Price
$6,750. Terms to suit.
$250 down buys a seven room house, newly decorated. Price $2,450.
Balance like rent.
$500 down buys a ten room, steam heated, electric lighted, stone front
house. One half block from street car line. Price $5,750. Terms to suit.
$1,500 down buys a six flat building, six years old, strictly modern and
un-date, south of 39th street, and north of 47th street, price $16,500.
Terms
The Co-operative Society of America
Now operating a chain of Grocery Stores has a Branch Office at the R. W. Woodfolk Savings Bank 3201 So. State Street We are helping the people to cut the expense on their grocery bill by cooperating together. We are now planning to put 32 stores on the South Side. One in each district comprising 300 members. If you are interested in cutting the high cost of living, don't fail to get in touch with us. Male and Female Salesmen wanted as organizers Apply at
R. W. Woodfolk & Co. Bank 3201 So. State Street
J. R. JOHNSON. E. M. MILLER, Dist. Mgr. Sales Mgr. 6317 S. Halsted St.
Tuberculosis Claims 150.000 Victims a Year.
Survey Indicates 2,000,000 Unuspected Sufferers From Disease in Nation.
New York.—A survey of the country shows the United States is face to face with a condition more menacing to its people than actual warfare, according to the report of the executive committee of the National Tuberculosis association.
The survey shows an annual death rate from tuberculosis in the United States of 150,000, and more than 1,000,000 active cases of the disease in the nation.
To combat and prevent the spread of the disease, an intensive national campaign is necessary, it was asserted. Funds for the campaign will be sought by a ten-day sale of Red Cross seats, beginning December 1. The total of the several state budgets will be more than $6,500,000.
During the discussions, attention was called to the revelations of the war-time medical examination boards made up largely of members of the as sociation. Official figures were cited showing that of the men called to the colors, nearly 100,000 were tuberculous.
It was pointed out that the death rate of 150,000 a year from one preventable disease means the sacrifice of more lives than the United State army lost in the year it was actively engaged in the war.
BRITISH SELL WAR STORES
Government Offers to the Public Impense Quantity of Goods and Factory Plants.
Washington.—The British government is offering at public sale, either by auctions or bid from private parties, an enormous amount of goods stores and all kinds of property accumulated in the course of the war and now held in quantities far beyond the needs in time of peace.
A special publication known as "Surplus," copies of which have been received here, show that this property includes whole factories fully equipped for manufacturing all kinds of commodities.
An effort is being made to dispose of much of this property abroad and a special bureau has been established in London to interest export houses.
JUST A MATTER OF MONEY
Ontario Town Would Pay for American Coal in Own Currency.
Windsor, Ont.—Orders placed by Mayor Winter with a United States firm for 600 tons of anthracite coal, quoted at $12 a ton, including freight, and expected to be paid for in Canadian money, must now be paid for in United States currency, according to word received here.
The demand for United States money will make about 42 cents difference a ton, the mayor says. The order is held in 'abeyance until it can be learned whether another American company will accept Canadian money.
City, Freed of Bolshevist Rule. Reveals Terrible Story.
Men, Women and Children Killed Without Trial, Many After Horrible Torture.
London.—Parm, the first city of any size retaken by Admiral Kolchak's All-Russian army from the bolshewiki, offers a great study in "red" atrocities. Perm is virtually a slaughter house. Hundreds of bodies of bolshewiki victims already have been recovered, and more are found every day. In the garden of a seminary, where bolshevist chieftains were wont to hold their revels, the bodies of two dozen schoolgirls already have been recovered. These girls, ranging in age from twelve to sixteen, were first attacked by "red" officers, then when the fiends had tired of their orgy the victims were killed by being tapped on the head with a wooden mallet.
This seminary garden is one continuous grave of naked bodies and skeletons. Identification of the victims is impossible. A Russian countess and her daughter were tied to posts in this garden, stripped of their clothes, then killed by a succession of dagger pricks all over their bodies. A dozen priests were crucified head downward; two others were boiled in oil.
Hundreds of the upper classes of the city, men, women and children, sentenced to death without trial, were taken to the edge of a swamp outside the city and given their choice of fleeing into the swamp or being shot down where they stood. Many dashed into the swamp, only to be engulfed in the quicksands. The others were shot down at the edge of a ditch, into which their bodies fell, and left uncovered during the entire winter.
PLAN NEW HONCR FOR HOOVER
Belgians Collect Money to Give Him Work of Art Symbolizing Achievements.
London. Some time ago the king of the Belgians conferred on Herbert C. Hoover, the founder and first president of the commission for relief in Belgium, the title of "friend of Belgium," To commemorate the conferring of this unique title, the Belgian order of St. John of Jerusalem has opened a subscription for the purpose of offering Mr. Hoover an address, and also a work of art symbolizing the life which this American managed to maintain in the oppressed country during the German occupation. The Belgian army joined in the movements and each unit has sent a subscription. The contribution from the army alone is more than $3,500.
Strange Indian Names.
Rapid City, S. D.—A recent issue of the Ogala Light, the monthly magazine of the Pine Ridge Indian reservation school near here, gives some peculiar names among those listed as students. Lizzie Shot to Pieces is at the end of the list. Other names in include Victoria Holy Rock, Julia Atraf of Hawk, Mary Brown Ears, Julia Crazy Ghost, Mercy Yellow Shin Emma No Fat, Ella Red Eyes, Marti Chase alone, Noah Horse, John Lee Hand and Julia Stands Up. Out of 2 students attending the school on four have French names and six names of English names.
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WEERLEE
BEURY
PEERLESS BEAUTY FACE POWDERS,
Theatrical, pink, brown, flesh, brunett.
PEERLESS BEAUTY GREASELESS CREAM,
Used before powder.
PEERLESS BEAUTY BLEACHING CREAM,
Massage Cream.
PEERLESS BEAUTY HAIR REFINER
AND GROWER
PEERLESS BEAUTY ROUGE, Shampoo, etc.
ARE SUPREME
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND BEAUTY PARLORS
The Peerless Beauty and Chemical Co.
4710 So. State St., CHICAGO, ILL.
Cor. 35th and Forest
This Week and Next Week will be Yvonne Week
We handle the best of everything hence YVONNE, the incomparable and exquisitely delightful Toilet Preparations. FREE SAMPLES TO LADIES.
ON RECORD FOR SHORTER HOURS
Textile Workers Make Declaration, Without Favoring Direct Action.
SOUTH NOT READY FOR MOVE
Convention Felt That More Thorough Organization in That Section Is Necessary Before Success Is Possible—Other Labor News.
Much business of importance to the organization was transacted at the session at Baltimore of the annual convention of the International Textile Workers. The convention adopted a resolution favoring the 44-hour week, but, without taking any action looking to its enforcement, referred the resolution to the executive council.
It was decided to concentrate efforts in the South to more thoroughly organizing the textile workers. It developed that opposition to the 44-hour week resolution came from southern delegates who pointed out that in many places in the South there was in operation a 54-hour and in some cases a 64-hour week.
An increase of 25 per cent in the pay and expense allowance of the general officers and organizers was voted by the convention. The per capita tax was increased from 30 to 35 cents and initiation fees also were raised.
Prize Fish Yarn of 1919.
Topeka, Kan.—The champion "fish tute" for 1919 was brought to this city by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lovewell, who returned with their family from Lake Koronis, Minn., where they spent two months.
The family consisting of the parents, two sons and a daughter, caught a total of 198 pike and bass, in addition to pickerel" which they did not count. They showed a snap-shot with a catch of 40 fish averaging two pounds each.
Phone Douglas 4131
DR. J. AUTHOR KENNEDY, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
3102 Indiana Ave., over Ave. Theatre
HOURS—9 A. M. to 12 M.
1 P. M. to 5 P. M.
ATTENTION!
We, the Coach Cleaners Local No. 16342 of Los Angeles, Cal., are indeed glad to know that the C. C. Locals are increasing. We are now proud of 17 locals. We would like to get in touch with the locals of San Francisco, and Oakland. We will be glad to hear from the various locals. J. Dupree, 1144 E. 10th St.
HEROIC WAR PIGEONS
Flock That Did Wonderful Deeds Returns Home.
"General Muir" Comes With Breast Shattered as Result of Many Exploits.
New York.—With breast shattered, but still alive, General Muir, one of the greatest war heroes, returned recently. As the steamer pulled into New York harbor, General Muir sat on the deck wrapped in a blanket that bore several wound and service stripes. There was no perceptible sign that he realized where he was. He made no comment.
Reporters tried in vain to interview him. Sergt. Fred J. Hermann, his commander, did all the talking. You see—General Muir is a carrier pigeon.
He was one of the seven birds of the intelligence service of the A. E. F. that the transport brought home. General Muir's exploits are many. On one occasion, having been assigned to deliver a message of great importance to a post 18 miles away, he flew through shrapnel and gas, and past a squadron of Germans that had been sent out to intercept carrier pigeons and delivered the message in just 33 minutes. With his breast torn open, with his wings singed by fire, and eyes blinded with blood, he kept on till he had reached his objective. King Cole, another pigeon, is the nearest rival of General Muir for fame. He was a messenger in the last Argonne drive and flying through a cloud of gas fell into an abandoned trench. There he lay in the mud for two days, and gathering strength, arose, and came home with the message.
Advertise in the Whip It's Worth While.
CLASSIFIED WANT ADS
A RELIABLE BUYERS' DIRECTORY OF BUSINESS CONCERNS WHO ARE ADJUSTING THEIR PRICES TO A PRE-WAR BASIS. — SAVE BY GIVING THEM YOUR
Go In Business For Yourself. I will
Send Formula for
FINE LINIMENT
Costs $1.00 per gallon, making 24
50c bottles. Send $2.00 for Formula
J. T. JORDAN,
7448 Princeton Ave., CHICAGO, ILL.
C. L. REYNOLDS, The Tailor
3214 Cottage Grove Ave.
Ladies' Tailoring, Men's Suits Made
to Measure. Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing. We do Strictly Faultless Work.
Ladies' Old Dresses Remodeled.
Work Called for and Delivered.
When in Need of Carpenter Work Call
Douglas 8619
BEN ENTY
Carpenter and Cabinet Maker
103 W. 31st St.
Second Floor
MRS. GERTRUDE MITCHELI
Hair Culturist
Mme. C. J. Walker's Treatment
3336 State Street
LITTLES & TRUMBLES
Lake View Barber Shop
3214 Cottage Grove
Trade At
THE S. & M. GROCERY
2448 S. State Street
Lowest Prices on Meats and
Groceries
Phone Orders Given Prompt Attention.
Douglas 1541.
Blvd. 3681. Billiard Hall in Connection
TIP TOP INN
BARBER SHOP
Newly electric equipped. First class service
High grade domestic and imported Cigars
Tonsorial Artist
J. O. Bethelle, L. Brewster, Proprietors
4312 SO. STATE ST.
Cranshaw & Anderson
FASHIONABLE
MILLINERY
3408 SOUTH STATE STREET
Mme E. Marchand
HAIRDRESSING
Shampooing and Scalp Treatment
Hair Goods Manufactured
THE MME. C. J. WALKER SYSTEM
3902 Indiana Avenue
Yergan Music House
All the Latest Numbers in Player Rolls, Graphophone Records and Sheet Music 55 E. 31st St. Chicago, Ill.
Dr.A.C.Brown,D.D.S.
has resumed his dental practice again and will be glad to meet his patients at
128 E. 33rd St., Chicago
OFFICE HOURS:
9 a. m. to 12 m.; 1 to 5 and 6 to 7 p. m.
Sunday by appointment.
CANDY SHOP
Home Made Candy
Wholesale and Retail
Prices cheaper than any other
candy shop.
16 East 35th Street
Phone Douglas 3449
DR. JULIUS C. GREEN
DENTAL SURGEON
3518 SOUTH STATE ST.
CHICAGO
DPRESS MAKING, PLAIN
And FANCY SEWING
TELEPHONE DOUGLAS 7990
LAMBROS & KUMIS
Yes we have that Peanut Roll.
FRESH HOME MADE CANDIES
Special Prices On Xmas Boxes
3036 SOUTH STATE STREET
N. W. Cor.
PETER H. HARRIS
Phone: Drexel 2324
J. C. O'BRYANT
MUSICIAN
VIOLIN & CORNET
Local No. 298 A. F.
of M.
Also a proprietor
of the
VELVET POCKET
BILLIARD ROOM
49 E. 43rd STREET,
CHICAGO, ILL.
HOME KITCHEN
RESTAURANT
For Home Cooking
Call at Mrs. C. Harris, Prop.
Short Orders at All Hours.
"ALWAYS OPEN"
3632 S. State St.
Phone Douglas 9220
MME. EMILY M. SCOTT
Provident School of Beauty Culture.
3611 S. State St.
School—4956 S. State St.
Chicago
PORTER DRUG CO.
(Not Inc.)
H. PORTER, R. Ph.
N. W. Cor. 35th & Dearborn, Chicago
Phone Douglas 2858-2878.
Will deal with you on a wholesale basis
if bought in quantities.
Phone West 6096
Ladies' Work Is Our Specialty.
Work Called Por and Delivered.
W. A. BLACKMAN
Old Reliable Pressing Shop and Shoe
Shining Parlor.
Cleaning, pressing and repairing.
2229 West Lake Street, Chicago
Douglas 3288
DR. A. C. JOHNSON
Surgeon—Dentist
3518 S. State Street
Phone Douglas 7585
Lace Curtains Cleaned, 30c pair
MRS. M. JACKSON
2932 S. Dearborn Street
MARTHA ELU SCHOOL
of Dress making and Millinery is now
open.
Women's Glory system of scalp and hair
culture. Send 10c for catalogue.
3634 Vernon Avenue
Chicago, Ill.
EXPERT DRESSMAKING — MISS
Susie A. Davis, 83 E. 43rd St.
Phone Drexel 969. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
MUSIC
CALL J. A. RICHARDSON
PIANO PLAYERS GRANDS
VICTROLAS
Douglas 752. Harrison 1656.
The Place You Ought to Know J. W. HERMAN
Billiard Parlor and Barber Shop
460 E. 35th Street
Residence Phone: Seeley 2432
Business Phone: SEELEY 680
Mme. M. E. Mack
Madame C. J. Walker System
HAIR DRESSING
Treatment, Shampooing,
Dyeing and Bleaching,
Hair Made Up to Order.
Massaging and Bleaching.
Manicuring and Chiropody.
1924 WEST LAKE STREET
PHONE SELEY 1411
J. M. Brown
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
1753 WEST LAKE STREET
TELEPHONES:
Office, Drexel 1416 Res. Douglas 470
OFFICE HOURS:
11 a. m. to 1 p. m.; 4 to 6 and 8 to 9 p. m
Dr. BENJ. R. BLUITT
4700 S. STATE STREET
Residence 3162 Lake Park Avenue
Dr. Wm. B. Buchanan
3611 State Street
Office
Douglas 2117 Residence
Douglas 1284
PROF. J. R. DUNGEY'S
Wonderful KUCON Hair Straightener
PRICE $1.00 per jar
2836 S. STATE ST, CHICAGO, ILL.
DR. S. C. HAMILTON, Dentist Gas Administered 3102 Indiana Ave., CHICAGO
MUTUAL DRUG CO.
F. S. FRIES, R. Ph.
State Street, near 32nd Street,
CHICAGO, ILL.
Telephone Douglas 1100
Phone Calumet, 2723
CANTON CO.
FIRST CLASS
American and Chinese Rest.
3016 S. STATE ST., CHICAGO
11 a. m. to 2.30 a. m., Sat. to 3.30 a. m.
Under the Lash of the Whip.
Under the Lash of the Whip.
Who is Property Owners Association anyway? And this colored housing committee? Quit fighting us in the dark, come out in the open.
Who are those merchants who are members of the High Park Committee, who have business places in the 34th block on State St.? We are going to turn the spot light on you.
Who is that gentleman pawnbroker who become to much in love with the little colored girl. To our idea the case hassn't yet been settled.
Who is the colored editor that sold out?
Who is the Race girl who is emplo on 35th and Wabash that tries to be
Who is that gentleman who went peace conference for a local paper? had been in some flashy café, he was t
And returning from Europe brow pictures of He and Lloyd George, so t of addresses of French maidens—
Then have the nerve enough to about some more loyalty bunk—
Who is the Race girl who is employed in a certain lanudry on 35th and Wabash that tries to be so "uppish"?
Who is that gentleman who went to Europe to cover the peace conference for a local paper? If the peace conference had been in some flashy café, he was there every session.
And returning from Europe brough back a lot of bunk pictures of He and Lloyd George, so t' speak. And a long list of addresses of French maidens—
Then have the nerve enough to come back and tell us about some more loyalty bunk—
Your stuff chief has played out.
WE SPARE
EXPENSE TO GIVE
ERS THE BEST IN
OUR EDITORIAL
INSTRUCTIVE, FOR
AND UNCOMPR
Wage Demands and Communications
with Submitted to the Wage Adju-
United States Railroad Administ-
Sleeping Car Porters and Dining
Local 268, Affiliated with
Wage Demands and Communications in Connection There with Submitted to the Wage Adjustment Board of the United States Railroad Administration in Favor of Sleeping Car Porters and Dining Car Employees Local 268, Affiliated with the A. F. of L.
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Another Chicago Surrender.
ATTENTION: W. S. Carter, Dir. Div.
of Labor
Dear Sir:
I am enclosing herewith wage de-
mands and working conditions as per
direction of the members of Sleeping
Car Porters & Dining Car Employees
Local 268 for the men employed on
various railroads under the Railroad
Administration who are desirous of
having the Division of Labor and the
Wage Adjustment Board pass favorably
on same.
We will appreciate anything that
you might do toward having these
mands fulfilled in favor of the mem-
bers of our Organization.
Yous very truly,
(signed) P. D. Campbell,
Secretary, Treasure:
To the Board of Adjustments of Wages & Working Conditions, U. S. Railroad Administration, Washington, D. C.
We are desirous of having the members of your board consider a demand for an increase in pay for the members of the Sleeping Car Porters & Dining Car Employees Local 268, employed on the various systems under the operation and control of the United States Railroad Administration.
We herewith respectfully submit the following wage scale and working conditions for your approval:
1st—That lay-over periods at terminals be continued as prescribed by Government regulations in such a way that sufficient rest can be guaranteed workers in our craft.
2nd—Time and one-half above the regular rate of pay for all overtime.
3rd—Pay for excess mileage to remain in force with such additional compensation for same as may become necessary from time to time in order to comply with the natural requirements.
4th—Wages: Consider the basic minimum wages for Sleeping Car Porters of 125.00 per calendar month; for Sleeping Car Porters running in charge the same rate of compensation, that is now or hereafter in effect for Sleeping Car Conductors for such service.
5th—For Dining Car Waiters, consider a basic minimum wage of $100.00 per calendar month; for waiters having charge of Dining or Cafe Car, the same rate of compensation that is now or hereafter in effect for Stewarts for such service.
6th—It must be noted that in many instances waiters have been held responsible for loss of silver and breakage of dishes, which in itself is unfair and we request that the company refrain from charging suid losses to waiters who are not in a position at all times to prevent such losses.
7th-Seniority rights of all employees in the Sleeping Car & Dining Car Service must be rigidly enforced and observed as applied to promotions, preference to runs, as well as when it becomes necessary to reduce the forces. This of course should not necessarily be used to encourage inefficiency, but rather as a means of protection for workers who might stand in disfavor with some official for some personal reason not calculated to have any bearing on his usefulness as an employee.
EXECUTIVE BOARD:
R. W. Gully, President.
W. M. Cage, Vice-Pres.
P. D. Campbell, See.Treas.
C. H. Brown, Asst. See.
The above wage Demands and Working Conditions, which have been submitted to the Wage Adjustment Board by the officers and members of Loca 268 together with their Internationals Union, is in the estimation of every REAL Trade Unionist, as fair and impartial as a set of demands can possibly be.
Recognizing as they do the many unnecessary burdens that workers are compelled to encounter when taking up for consideration the classification scheme through which the companies can thwart the efforts of the employees to materially advance and protect their interest, graded classifications according to the length of service has always been considered by old Line Trade Unionists, as a hold signal to the companies or employers to immediately set to work various forms of stool pigeon reports through which they can work an excessive labor turn-over.
Such is based on dollars and cents. Very little consideration, if any is ever shown to employee who might grow old in the service when his age entitles him to what one might consider a wage in connection with what a younger employee might be granted by virtue of the fact that he has not had the training and experience that the older employee has been able to secure in his years of faithful service.
Yet, we find many hypocrites and pretenders who will come in and agree as representatives of their organization to the very things that will mean the total disruption of the organization in the end, as it automatically creates unfair competition among the men desiring to reach the coveted goal.
Consequently, we find every pro- progressive Trade Unionist insisting on an equitable wage based on the EFFICIENCY of the employee, and not calculated in such a way that the Companies can take advantage of the older employees and use the ones requiring less compensation.
THE CHICAGO WHIP
THE WANDERING JEW.
By Henry Brown, Artist and Writer.
The status of the Jew in the world at present is not an enviable one. While not a typical 'Subject race', the Jews are unquestionably a despised people. The curse of religious ered has stigmatized this race of people from the tragedy of Golgotha unto the Twentieth Century pogroms, and he has wandered from pillar to post like 'The Son of Man' without place to lay his head.
For two thousand years the Jews have been merchants, bartering and trading the necessities of life because the more refined and nobler vociations have been closed to him. For two thousand years the Jewish Acumen for business has been sharpened because experience always carries its collateral benefits. We find the Jews wealthy and controlling the money market of the world. At the same time we find them still dodging the 'finger of scorn' and 'the eye of hate'. We find them still badgered as 'Christ Killers', and 'Blood Suckers'. We see him excluded from elite social circles. We see him barred from every uplifting avenue, where feasible methods can be adopted. He is shunned, avoided and religiously hated by all gentiles. He has been cursed, beaten with many stripes and murdered with exorciating torture. The Jew, true to the Sacred Oracle, has wandered all over the face of the earth, searching for a haven of peace and justice. We find him in America opulent and crafty but also wounded and crushed by the 'darts and arrows' of outrageous fortune. The Jews in America occupy an anomalous position. He is placed in the graduated scale of racial position, just a little above the negro. He is placed beneath the Italian, the Russian, the German, the Greek, and all other naturalized races of large proportions in America. He plays little part in legislative interests, as a race. His money interests are protected because America is money mad but his interests as to race representation and aggrandisement are negligible.
The Jew does not get representation in Congress and Legislative departments of the several states to any great extent. He is 'with it, but not of it'. The colored people of America whose subjugation has even caused them to look to the Jew for aid are awakening to the fact that the Jews are forgetful of their own indignities and insults when it comes to dealing the under man. The Colored people being full of the 'humane element' have extended sympathy and aid to Jewish sufferers. They have felt a peculiar kinship for the oppressed, because they themselves were oppressed. The Colored man however has always known that his case was not in analogy to the Jews. The Jew is a profiteer. The Colored man the victim. The Colored man is forced to realize that the Jew is for the Jew and the broad principle of universal brotherhood means nothing to him. The Jew's pockets have been filled to the overflow by profits from Colored people. The Jew always puts his place of business where he can get the greatest advantage over his patronage. The Jew centralized his business efforts on fleecing Colored people.
In Chicago the Mecca of the Colored man, the Jews are 'raising a merry time' by getting rich quick in the Black Belt. The monarch of the three balls, gets from 10 to 100 per cent for his loan. The ordinary vender of food stuffs also gets his rake off and so the story runs until the human leech is filled and then he starts his propaganda of Color-phobia.
The Jews in Hyde Park are the moving spirit in the Segregation scheme. The Jews were caught red-handed in the riot. The Jews were the main contingency, propagating the hatred of their black victim.
All right, Mr. Jew, the Colored man outnumbers you in America, according to statistics. The Colored man has fought your battles and made you rich. Remember the New Negro has arrived, and your days of extortion among us is nearing its end.
GEORGE L. GILES POST WILI
HOLD ANNUAL BALL.
At the 8th Regiment Armory, Monday night, December 8th, the George L. Giles Post of the American Legion will hold its first Annual Ball. Elgars Orchestra will furnish the music for the occasion. Ex-service men are especially invited to bring their friends and enjoy a real evening. The patronage of all who love wholesome amusement in the interest of a worthy cause is requested. An admission fee of fifty-cents will be charged.
$30,000 BUDGET FOR URBAN
LEAGUE WORK.
The Board of Directors of the Chicago Urban League has approved of a budget of $30,000 for work of the League for the coming year. Last year this organization operated on a budget of $18,000. Owing to the enormous increase in work and to the necessity for extending the activities of each of the departments, this increased budget was deemed advisable.
THE VINCULUM CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY Will reduce the high cost of profiteers
Prosperity and plenty for all of the working people can only come by co-operation.
The Vinculum Co-operative Society is an intelligent organization.
Workers are putting their money to gather to enlarge their buying capacity and eliminate the middle man.
Thereby reduce the high cost of living.
We are capitalized at $50,000. We have a few shares left at $10.00 per share. Buy Today.
A mamoth project - A Loyal movement It is yours.
CHURCH NOTES
Olivet Baptist Church—Nov. 11, '19
Dr. L. K. Williams, the pastor, was host to Rev. S. E. Watson revivalist of Topeka, Kansas and Rev. A. A. Mathis, Atlanta, Ga., both of whom delivered sermons during the day, Nov. 30, 1919.
Rev. J. H. Branham, assistant pastor, introduced Rev. Mathis. The special addresses of Drs. Williams and Watson to the Women and Men's Mass meetings, were very effective.
At 11 o'clock, Sunday morning, assistant Dr. James Hunter McClure preached at Antioch Baptist Church,—Rev. E. S. Robinson, pastor.
Thanksgiving day sgw Rev. Miles M. Fisher, son of the late lamented former pastor of Olivet, Dr. E. J. Fisher, ordained, and ecclesiastical historical coincident—a high day.
Dr. James Hunter McClure's maiden Thanksgiving address, "Much Obliged" at Zion Hill Baptist Church, 30th and Dearborn was well received. Rev. A. M. Martin is founder, Olivet is its organizer.
Assistant pastor, Rev. J. H. Branham's financial effort for the Dry Nursery will soon be crowned with success.
Hear Rev. Dr. Watson, at New Church. Home during this week. Baptismement. Home Thursday Night.
STEPS FOR ADVANCEMENT OF
NEGRO EDUCATION.
Jackson, Miss., Dec. 1. (Special.)
Evidence of the progress of Negroes in Mississippi, especially along educational lines, is found in the fact that Mound Bayou, a Negro settlement, owned and controlled entirely by Cngroes, has just voted the issuance of $100,000 in bonds for the erection of a school. It will be for teacher training and vocational training purposes. It will be the largest institution of its kind in the South.
According to Bura Hilbun, State supervisor of Negro schools, upward of $300,000 will be spent for Negro schools before the close of the present year. The State Board of Education is lending every possible aid to this development, and employs a Negro supervisor of schools, as well as Mr. Hilbun.
DR. MADDEN, LECTURER ON COLONIZATION SCHEME ARRESTED IN ST. LOUIS
Detectives Believe His Speeches Will Cause Race Riots.
St. Louis, Mo.—"Dr." Moses, Madden, who has been in St. Louis three months in the interest of a plan to colonize the race along the Rio Grande river at the Mexican border, was arrested last week after he had delivered an address in Almack's hall, 2600 Pine Street.
Two colored city detectives who heard his speech believed it was intended to cause unrest among the race. They followed Madden to the home of J. C. Campbell, a bishop of the Free Will Methodist Church, at 2242 Adams street, to make the arrest. They also arrested Bishop Campbell and Thos H. Gladney there. Mary Kemp, said to have come here from the South a short time ago, was arrested at 400 South Jefferson avenue.
The detectives were sent to the hall after the Rey. W. D. Vencragle, pastor of a Baptist church had complained to the circuit attorney about Madden's campaign.
The detectives in their written report said that Madden in his speech described a lynching with much descriptive detail and said that occur ences of this sort show that the race was not receiving proper protection under the flag, and that 'any flag that wouldn't protect its citizens is a dirty rag.'
Madden, according to the detectives, did not advise them to carry arms, but told of an old man who was walking down the street when some white men insulted him. They quoted Madden as saying the old man's gray hairs would not have protected him, but that when he drew a revolver the white men fleed. Madden, according to detectives, denied he made an incendiary speech. He said his address was the same he made September 10, at a meeting in the Coliseum, in the presence of several police men who did not interfere at that time. His speech, he said, was solely in the interest of his plan to colonize the race in Texas and Mexico, and his only reference to the government was his assertion that there is nothing in the Constitution which specifically gives citizenship to the Negro, and that therefore they can only work out their destiny by segregating themselves in a
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FEDERAL GOVERNMENT WILL AID THE STATES IN FIGHT ON AUTOMOBILE STEALING.
Proposed Legislation by Congress Will Be Framed to Suppress Crime in Interstate Commerce—Figures That Are Startling.
By JAMES P. HORNADAY.
Washington.—The federal government proposes to re-enforce the states in their efforts to put a stop to the theft of automobiles. Congress, the committee on judiciary of the house of representatives says, Is the only power competent to legislate on this rapidly growing evil, and has reported a bill which, it is believed, will get through each house uncontested. The proposed legislation is based on the principle that congress has the right to exercise any kind of power over automobiles in interstate commerce, that is to say automobiles that move from one state to another.
Thieves steal automobiles and take them from one state to another and oftimes have associates in this crime who receive and sell the stolen cars. Every state has a law on the subject, according to the house committee on judiciary, these laws have proved inadequate to meet the evil. A large percentage of the thieves escape, and thousands of stolen machines are never recovered because, so it is asserted, the stolen machines are rushed from the state in which they are stolen into another state. The advocates of federal legislation on the subject point out that the loss to the people of the United States by reason of this stealing amounts to hundreds of thousands of dollars every year and is getting worse.
Theft Insurance Up 100 Per Cent.
Theft Insurance Up 100 Per Cent.
It is also asserted in support of the proposed legislation that it is getting so now it is difficult for the owners of the cheaper cars to obtain theft insurance due to the great loss that insurance companies have sustained. The judiciary committee points out that during the last year automobile theft insurance on the cheaper classes of cars has increased 100 per cent. The committee says that automobile thieves who make a specialty of this crime do not steal many of the higher priced cars, the reason being, of course, that they are not so easily sold. During the calendar year 1918, 22,273 cars were reported stolen in 18 western and middle western cities. The city of Detroit, Mich., listed the list with 2,637 cars stolen; Chicago came second with 2,611, and St. Louis third with 2,241. Kansas City led in cars stolen and not recovered, 46 per cent. St. Louis was second with 40 per cent of stolen cars lost absolutely.
The judiciary committee of the house says its inquiries into the situation reveal that thieves have found the automobile field one in which they can reap huge harvests due to the fact that there are so many automobiles now in the United States. On July 1, 1919, the number of automobiles and trucks registered in the United States totaled 6,353,233. July and August are always heavy selling months. It is therefore reasonable to assume that the number of automobiles now in use has increased to 6,500,000 cars, with an average estimated value of $1,200 each, giving a total value for all cars now in use at $7,800,000,000.
Federal Legislative Plan.
The purpose of the federal automobile law is to suppress crime in interstate commerce. The house committee on judiciary holds that automobiles admittedly are tangible property, capable of being transmitted in interstate commerce. According to the committee, no good reason exists why congress, invested with the power to regulate commerce among the several states, should not provide that such commerce should not be polluted by the carrying of stolen property from one state to another.
The governors of several states and the police authorities of a large number of cities have advised the committee on the judiciary of the house of representatives that federal legislation dealing with stolen automobiles would be welcome. The item of cost connected with the running down of automobile thieves has increased in many of the cities until it is giving the authorities much concern. Nearly every city now has a force of detectives engaged exclusively in running down automobile thieves and trying to recover automobiles.
There is, so the house committee was informed, close co-operation between the various states and the larger cities, but in spite of this the number of automobiles stolen continues to increase, while the number recovered continues to decrease.
It is told that one day shortly before the armistice, a tired, hungry-looking young man turned up at a British camp and asked if he might have something to eat.
"Certainly," said the officer, noting the khaki suit. "But may I ask who you are?"
A weary smile stole over the young fellow's face as he replied, "Oh, I'm the Prince of Wales—but for heaven's sake forget it."
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GENERAL LABOR NEWS
New Orleans has more than 1,000 factories.
New Orleans has the largest mahogany manufacturing plant in the world.
Members of the various labor unions in Houston, Texas, have established a co-operative store.
Danish co-operative trade unions have a membership of 255,000, an increase of 93 per cent in two years.
Most of the factories in Russia have been transferred to the control of the workers.
A salary increase of 15 per cent has been awarded 2,500 wreckers, concrete workers, excavators and building laborers of St. Louis, it was announced.
Seventy-five miscellaneous union men struck at the Champion Engineering company's plant, Kenton, O., tying up production. They demand union recognition. The plant was picked.
Charging that wealthy Chicago women refuse to give their maids enough to eat and make butlers work long hours, housemaids and other domestic employees took steps to organize a union.
Demand that women be represented equally with men in all future international labor conferences called under the treaty of Versailles was made at the international congress of working women at Washington.
A strike by editors of the Barcelona (Spain) newspapers is threatened. The proprietors of some of the newspapers have refused the editors' demands and the writers affected are threatening to walk out.
Prospects of labor difficulties, involving car men of the Washington Railway and Electric company, who some time ago made demands for a pay raise, averaging 50 per cent, were dispelled when the Employees' union announced that, for the time being, it has accepted the 3 cents an hour increase offered by the company. Only 60 per cent of the silver mines of Mexico, once the leading producer of silver in the world, are being worked, it is revealed in the report of a commission of mining men which has assembled in Mexico City to confer with the department of industry, commerce and labor regarding methods which may be employed to increase the production of the metal.
The longshoremen's strike at New York, on October 29 tied up 625 vessels, said by shipping men to be the largest number ever recorded in the port on a single day. Of the 540 steamships, 53 are passenger vessels, some of them the largest liners affront. The daily cost of the tieup was estimated at more than $1,500,000 in demurrage alone.
The Building Laborers' union, composed of 600 hodcarriers, was expelled from the Denver Building Trades council, and other union men of the council were authorized to work with nonunion laborers until a new laborers' union has been formed. Expulsion was voted because the laborers refused to accept a compromise increase of 50 cents a day, the award of an arbitration board composed of the Building Trades council and representatives of the Master Builders' association.
The men asked $1 a day increase.
Fourteen thousand boilermakers joined the general strike of shipyard workers, who have been out since October 1, according to an announcement at the headquarters of the Metal Trades council at New York. The men demand a 44-hour week and $1 an hour.
About 200 clerks of the Maritime Underwriting agency at New York went out on strike. The men demand a 30 per cent increase in salary, an eight-hour day and the privilege of smoking in office hours. Salaries are said by the strikers to range from $10 a week to $40.
JENNY LIND'S PIANO IS SOLD
White and Gold Instrument That Cost P. T. Barnum $5,000 is Treated as Junk.
Middletown, Conn.—On a big platform truck, with its legs in the air, the white and gold Crystal Patience piano specially built by P. T. Barnum for the concerts of Jennie Lind in 1850 was carted off a few days ago by a New Haven collector who had purchased it from Thomas E. Smith, a local dealer in antiques.
When Barnum contracted with the Swedish Nightingale for a concert tour of the United States, for which he paid her the then magnificent sum of $303,000, he had Fox & Co. of New York construct a mammoth square piano for the concerts, the price of which was over $5,000. While this piano was used no duplicate was to be made. Its case and legs were of San Domingo mugogany, enamelled in ivory and embellished in gold.
DESERTER IS FOUND IN CAVE
Navy Man Living in Blue Ridge Mountains Escapes From Police.
Reading, Pa.—Berks county was thrilled recently by the discovery that Charles Strausser, former Hamburg soldier and navy deserter, was living as a cave dweller, deep in the Blue mountains north of Hamburg. He was trapped in his cave high in the virgin timberland by state police, but escaped after an exchange of shots.
Strausser, who has been sought by navy officials for months, fled deeper into the seclusion of the wild mountain land after he eluded the police net. He had been discovered when campers caught sight of a wild man, haggard and scantily clad, fleeing through the hills. The state police, led by Constable Wilson Lewear of Hamburg, have returned to the chase with reinforcements.
80. SHE TAKES AIR FLIGHT
Atlantic City Widow Goes Up 3,000
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THE CHICAGO WHIP
English Workmen Destroy Interesting Relic of Times of Charles II.
London.—A sundial known as "Nell Gwynn's Sundial," which for years has been in position on the terrace at Lauderdale house, Highgate, was broken beyond repair while workmen were trying to change its position. There is still in the house Nell Gwynn's original bath, which is much older than the sundial, and was placed there when she was installed in the palace by Charles II.
Farmer Gets $900 Pearl.
Vincennes, Ind.—While digging mussels in the Wabash river recently Martin Straw, a farmer, found a pearl which he sold to a Mt. Carmel, Ill., jeweler for $900. Mr. Straw had only dug one pound of shells when he started cooking them and made the find.
Kansas City.—A certain saloonkeeper entered the office of Sam Hargus, assistant United States district attorney, here, and explained that he wanted to know if he could sell some liquor with his 2.75 per cent beer. Others were getting away with it, he declared, and he wanted to know if he could.
"How far would I get?" he asked.
"Well," replied Mr. Hargus.
"seeing that you are an old friend I think I can fix you up—so you could get your choice of any fall in the Western district of Missouri. We have some pretty fine ones; some say they have never seen better."
"I'll stick to my near per cent beer," replied the saloonkeeper as he hurriedly left.
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EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE CHICAGO WHIP
The Chicago Whip
An Independent Newspaper
Published Every Week
Vol. 1 DECEMBER 6th, 1919 No. 24
Published by
THE CHICAGO PUBLISHING COMPANY (Not Incorporated)
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OS. D. BIBB, L. L. B. {Edition}
PILLIAM C. LINTON
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WITH DUE REGARD FOR RIGHT, WITH PURITY OF MOTIVE IN OUR EXPRESSION, WITH CONSCIENTIOUS COMPASSION FOR STRICKEN HUMANITY, WITH UNSTINTED CREDIT TO THOSE WHO MERIT, WITH TRUTH AS OUR GUIDE POST AND LOVE AS OUR INSPIRATION, WE HAVE COMMITTED OURSELVES TO THE WORLD OF JOURNALISM. WE HAVE DEDICATED OURSELVES TO PUBLIC SERVICE.
RACE FAITH
The scriptures with the modest majesty of truth and with the awful grandeur of that which belongs to the eternal had spoken of faith in God equivalent to a mustard seed moving mountains.
The transcendent glory of this idea has been made the basis of all scientific invention and of all exploration. Somebody somewhere, has always had faith in some thing.
Columbus had faith in his intangible conception that the world was round and the western hemisphere was embraced by civilization.
Newton had faith in the force behind the falling apple at the Law of gravitation was handed to the world.
Euclid had faith in lines and angles and mathematics was filled to humanity.
Robert Fulton had faith in the motive power of a steak and the caloric energy in it was bequeathed to the Universe.
Benjamin Franklin had faith in his kite experiment and the lightning was harnessed and shackled and commanded by the wish of man.
Behind all human achievements some one has been the keeper and preserver of the faith.
Americans have had faith in their mammoth railway systems and towering sky scrapers; in their stupendous office buildings, in their massive business enterprises.
Colored people have had faith in God and the Preach and in what the white man said; but he was and is doubtful of his own integrity and capacity to develop.
The age has dawned in the history of our lives when seers earnest thought is imperative and determined action must follow. The tempest of oppression is seething and as the New Era dawns, the question at issue is: Can the Negro live in the clouds and fling a sparkling rainbow on the black bosom of the tempest?
With faith we can subdue it and with faith we can unravel the mysteries of nature and overlap the rampages of time. We can successfully compete with the controlling factors in the business, political and secular world.
Blind faith is not a tenet of the apostolic creed. There we always a tangible idea to work on. In religion there was creedon. In science undeveloped matter. In the Negro race there is the "New Desire." Th great desire to pool interests, to amuse business, to intelligently co-operate. Here and there we have seen the institutions built up by the colored man tott and fall. We have also seen the genius of Germany, England and America ripped asunder, the governments stampede, traffic blockaded and progress check mated; but these great people never lost faith.
Now is the time for all colored people to get together and leave back the torn fabric of our hidden civilization and race unease. Now is the time to be bound together with faith in obsession binds ice. Let us support our race institutions at financial loss to ourselves remembering that our posterity will cap the benefit.
Let us have faith in those who venture out into the area of life and stack wits with those who have been building by the combined faith of their brothers.
Let us support all colored enterprises and cement our nature in America.
The scriptures with the modest majesty of truth and with the awful grandeur of that which belongs to the eternal have spoken of faith in God equivalent to a mustard seed moving mountains.
The transcendent glory of this idea has been made the basis of all scientific invention and of all exploration. Somebody, somewhere, has always had faith in some thing.
Columbus had faith in his intangible conception that the world was round and the western hemisphere was embraced by civilization.
Newton had faith in the force behind the falling apple and the Law of gravitation was handed to the world.
Euclid had faith in lines and angles and mathematics was willed to humanity.
Robert Fulton had faith in the motive power of a steam and the caloric energy in it was bequeathed to the Universe.
Benjamin Franklin had faith in his kite experiment and the lightning was harnessed and shackled and commanded to obey the wish of man.
Behind all human achievements some one has been the keeper and preserver of the fath.
Americans have had faith in their mammoth railway systems and towering sky scrapers; in their stupendous, office buildings, in their massive business enterprises.
Colored people have had faith in God and the Preacher and in what the white man said; but he was and is doubtful of his own integrity and capacity to develop.
The age has dawned in the history of our lives when serious earnest thought is imperative and determined action must follow. The tempest of oppression is seething and as the new Era dawns, the question at issue is: Can the Negro lift the clouds and fling a sparkling rainbow on the black bosom of the tempest?
With faith we can subdue it and with faith we can unravel the mysteries of nature and overlap the rampages of time. We can successfully compete with the controlling factors in the business, political and secular world.
Blind faith is not a tenet of the apostolic creed. There was always a tangible idea to work on. In religion there was creation. In science undeveloped matter. In the Negro race there is the "New Desire." Th great desire to pool interests, to amalgate business, to intelligently co-operate. Here and there we have seen the institutions built up by the colored man totter and fall. We have also seen the genius of Germany, England and America ripped asunder, the governments stampeded, traffic blockaded and progress check mated; but these great people never lost faith.
Now is the time for all colored people to get together and weave back the torn fabric of our hidden civilization and racial lineage. Now is the time to be bound together with faith as cohesion binds ice. Let us support our race institutions at a financial loss to ourselves remembering that our posterity will reap the benefit.
Let us have faith in those who venture out into the arena of life and stack wits with those who have been building up by the combined faith of their brothers.
Let us support all colored enterprises and cement our future in America.
With faith the battle is won. God give us faith.
THE COAL STRIKE
The seriousness of the coal strike and the suffering and inconvenience to humanity points again to the ruffled spirit of America. Under war time exingencies it is conceivable how such a contingency could happen and reasonable excuses would alliate the causes and effects. At the present time however when the exigency is not present it is a puzzle to us, why the great government can not intelligently adjust itself. Is it the autocratic spirit beneath a constitution concienced in liberty, or it the unreasonable demand of the proletariat? Or is it the irreel of capital impressed with obstinacy and blood lust on the neck of America?
The question cannot be answered in one breath; but but breath it all we can see unrest and the obvious, omnious dis
The seriousness of the coal strike and the suffering and inconvenience to humanity points again to the ruffied spirit of America. Under war time exingencies it is conceivable how such a contingency could happen and reasonable excuses would palliate the causes and effects. At the present time however, when the exigency is not present it is a puzzle to us, why this great government can not intelligently adjust itself. Is it the Autocratic spirit beneath a constitution concienced in liberty? Is it the unreasonable demand of the proletriat? Or is it the iron heel of capital impressed with obstinacy and blood lust on the neck of America?
The question cannot be answered in one breath; but beneath it all we can see unrest and the obvious, omnious dissatisfaction. Every one is "standing pat" on rights. The middle
THE CHICAGO WHIP
class who are the controlling element, in final analysis, feel that they are inevitable sufferers and are paying the price.
The influx of "red propaganda" and "so-called radicalism" has caused the government to safe-guard itself with drastic measures. Whether the coal strike is mixed up with red propaganda we are not able to say. The citizens of America assert that they should have certain rights which abnormal conditions should not entirely destroy. Sacrifices should be encompased within the limitation of reason.
Labor composes the citizenry of America. Labor seems troubled over the liquor issue. They claim the right to drink has been unreasonably infringed. Labor seems to be troubled over the speech issue under espionage laws and claim that the right to speak has been infringed. Labor claims that right to gather together peacefully has been infringed and the right to assembly has been denied.
Labor claims that the right to the press has been curtailed and the freedom of press has been denied. Labor claims that the right to strike has been imperiled and the right to earn far wages is thus impaired. Labor claims that Capital makes them chattel slaves.
Capital claims that labor is unreasonable and wishes to burn the candle of industry at both ends, that is shorter hours, less production and higher pay. Capital claims that the wave of radicalism endangers our republican form of government, and therefore the right of speech, press and assembly must be conservatively functioned. The right to strike says Capital, carried to unreasonable ends results in anarchy.
The Industrial Conference ended in impromptu adjournment. The people of America are suffering. If President Wilson can evolve a "peace system for all nations, why can't he invent one for Amreica?
class who are the controlling element, in final analysis, feel that they are inevitable sufferers and are paying the price.
The influx of "red propaganda" and "so-called radicalism" has caused the government to safe-guard itself with drastic measures. Whether the coal strike is mixed up with red propaganda we are not able to say. The citizens of America assert that they should have certain rights which abnormal conditions should not entirely destroy. Sacrifices should be encompased within the limitation of reason.
Labor composes the citizenry of America. Labor seems troubled over the liquor issue. They claim the right to drink has been unreasonably infringed. Labor seems to be troubled over the speech issue under espionage laws and claim that the right to speak has been infringed. Labor claims that right to gather together peacefully has been infringed and the right to assembly has been denied.
Labor claims that the right to the press has been curtailed and the freedom of press has been denied. Labor claims that the right to strike has been imperiled and the right to earn far wages is thus impaired. Labor claims that Capital makes them chattel slaves.
Capital claims that labor is unreasonable and wishes to burn the candle of industry at both ends, that is shorter hours, less production and higher pay. Capital claims that the wave of radicalism endangers our republican form of government, and therefore the right of speech, press and assembly must be conservatively functioned. The right to strike says Capital, carried to unreasonable ends results in anarchy.
The Industrial Conference ended in impromptu adjournment. The people of America are suffering. If President Wilson can evolve a "peace system for all nations, why can't he invent one for Amreica?
IN MEMORIAM
The passing of George W. action effects a serious loss not the entire nation. Since a man in this country we doubt very so ever admit the loss. The fact one of the greatest thinkers of men he is not so well-known to
The passing of George W. Ellis from the stage of worldly action effects a serious loss not only to the Negro race but to the entire nation. Since a man's color detracts from his merit in this country we doubt very seriously whether the nation will ever admit the loss. The fact remains however, that he was one of the greatest thinkers of the age. Like most scholarly men he is not so well-known to the rank and file.
The passing of George W. Ellis from the stage of worldly action effects a serious loss not only to the Negro race but to the entire nation. Since a man's color detracts from his merit in this country we doubt very seriously whether the nation will ever admit the loss. The fact remains however, that he was one of the greatest thinkers of the age. Like most scholarly men he is not so well-known to the rank and file.
What he has contributed to the World with his pen and general deportment is worth more to the race than all of lambucyant oratorial Windammers together. If there ever was a man that should be immortalized by his race, Geo. W. Illis is the man. The Race can ill afford to lose men of this mind, at any time. During these days of days reconstruction and turmoil when brain and courage, are required to elevate and establish the Negroes Place permanently in the social economic and political world on equal footing with other racial groups, his death is especially regretable. It will be keenly felt by all who are conscious of the weighty problems that confront the Race. He was considered an authority on economics. His research while in Africa as U. S. Minister plenipotentiary gave him the distinction of being the greatest authority on African History and Archiology. He was honored with a fellowship to practically every scientific society in the civilized world. Without fear of successful contradiction America has never produced a more profound thinker. The works of this man alone will ever stand as a monument of steel to ward off the malicious and unfounded attacks of villifying ignorant outherners who accuse the Negro of inferiority and lack of originality.
He was very active in local politics in Chicago in his latter days; but in intellect he stood as high over the best of his political associates in comparison as does the highest peak of the Rockies over the bottom of the sea.
He ran for Judge of the Municipal court in the last election and lost by a very narrow margin. His presence on the bench would have raised the standard of our local courts. According to "Who's Who in America", a book cataloguing and classifying men of worth, no Judge now on the bench is his equal.
Geo. Ellis is not dead. He will be more alive to the next generation than to this one. They will be more able to appreciate true worth. He shall always live. Even when records are lost. Works of this man will live unconsciously in the minds of human beings.
This is a perplexing world and the worthless ignorant are favored with longevity. Another rational mind that increases the
This is a perplexing world when men like Ellis pass away and the worthless ignorant and selfish so-called leaders are favored with longevity. Another query is inaugurated in the rational mind that increases the perplexity.
This is a perplexing world when men like Ellis pass away and the worthless ignorant and selfish so-called leaders are favored with longevity. Another query is inaugurated in the rational mind that increases the perplexity.
course which you have held a course and particularly your editorials for which, though I confess I viewed with some misgivings at first. I see now, however, what you were leading up to. Sound common sense rewards the editorials of the Nov. 22 issue. Common sense and the measured inspiration which will surely start your readers to thinking on the vital problems you discuss. "The Voice of Progress" in my estimation is the most sane, the most optimistic, the most comforting editorial I have ever read on this editorial problem of the Colored man. It should be hailed as the veritable clarion cry of the race. It sounds the knell on submission, on servility and all that that term implies—it gives comfort and courage to the present by pointing a guiding finger to the future. I heartily congratulate you.
EDITOR'S MAIL.
Editor Chicago Whip.
Dear Sir:—
For news pertinent to the best interests of the Colored race and for the general makeup of the paper your issue of November 29, was a humdinger. By George, I don't know when I have enjoyed a paper so much as that issue. New fine,*editorials excellent, cartoon that puts it in class of real metropolitan newspaper. Your editorial page in particular seems to be in a class by itself. Your own editorial and then that feature, "The Weeks Best Editorial", is great stuff. Let's have more of it.
Yours truly,
Editor Chicago Whip.
Dear Sir:—
I have been watching your paper for some time. I have watched the steady
Yours very sincerely,
Justice in Alabama.
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RALPH TYLER, COLORED WAR CORRESPONDENT DEFENDS SOLDIERS
Columbus, O.—Ralph W. Tyler, has sent the editor of Harvey's Weekly, the following letter, condemning his brutal attack an Colored Soldiers: Editor Harcvey's Weekly.
I know every statement you and Col. Greer make is brutally false, a damnable injustice to the hundreds of colored soldiers whose blood dyed and whose bones are now fertilizing the soil of France to help "make the world safe for democracy." The records in the War Department—even copies of Col. Greer's orders of commendation—brand your editorial and his letter of Dec. 6 as false.
Sir: In the November 1st number of your pamphlet, which you dignify with the name of "Harvey's Weekly," you print one of the moss brutal and unsupported editorial attacks ever made on the colored soldier and the colored race, under the caption, "The Negro Soldier."
The general orders of Gen. Sherburn, commanding the 167th Artillery Brigade (the artillery of the 92nd Division), brand your editorial and its supporting Col. Greer's letter as false. The testimony of Gen. Barnum, commanding the 183rd Brigade, 92nd Division, brands it as false. The final general order of Gen. Ballous, commanding the 92nd Division, gives the lie to your editorial; the cabled information to the War Department from Gen. ershing in August, 1918, brands it as false. The fact that of the only three American regiments whose colors were decorated with the Croix de Guerre were colored regiments—369th, 370th and 371st, brands your editorial and Col. Greer's supporting letter as false.
I am in doubt as to whether you wrote the editorial, or whether Col. Allen J. Green, late chief of staff for the 98 (colored) Division, wrote it. If you did write it, then Col. Green must have furnished the alleged information, for on applying "the deadly parallel," I find that throughout your editorial you use, verbatim of ceratim, the contents of that letter Col. Greer wrote Senator McKeller, under date of Dec. 6, 1918. But Col. Greer, lacking consistency, which is even an admirable trait in a soldier as well as an editor or pamphleteer, had previously issued numerous general orders and memorandum extelling in the highest terms the colored soldiers of the 92nd Division for efficiency, deportment and bravery; he had issued orders to confer the D.S. C. on scores of colored officers and men for "exceptional" bravery in the face of the enemy, signing these orders and memorandum with his full name and affixing thereto his full name and affixing his military title thereto to attest to their genuineness.
Unfortunately, for you, only a few days after your pamphlet, styled "Harvey's Weekly' 'was issued, the War Department gave out a report of an investigating board exonerating the 368th Regiment of the 92nd Division, of alleged cowardice, which you, with your Greer vouch-safed information, assumed to be an established fact.
The 93rd Division, colored, the first to sail for France, fought splendidly, endured heroically, and those who fell to rise no more died stoically indifferent to fate since they were dying for their country. The 92nd Division's brilliant, valorous stand in that inferno, Bois Frehaut the woods which neither the French nor fighting Sengalese could hold but which the 92nd did hold, is sufficient to give it a place in history as a fighting unit, and to long remain green in memory after Harvey's Weekly and its assumed silent contributing editor, Col. Greer have been forgotten.
Col. Greer's letter to Senator McKeller, under date of Dec. 6, 1918, and to which your, or his, editorial suggests deadly parrallel, was written to discourage the use of colored men in the army, either as officers or men, and it would appear from your editorial referred to that between you and Col. Greer there exists a gentleman's (?) agreement to assassinate the colored soldier—even those who fell on Flanders field to establish something they had never enjoyed—democracy.
I can understand the prompting for Col. Greer's antagonism to the colored soldier and colored race, if a report that was generally circulated throughout the 92nd Division is correct, alleging that a colored officer thrashed him—his superior—for directing abusive, profane words to him when they both met at the home of a certain French woman, the colonel and chief of staff being camouflaged in a lieutenant's uniform, as the report allowed, the colored officer was allowed to resign. I repat, if this rept is correct, I can understand the prompting for Col. Greer's antagonism for the colored race, even if I cannot understand his inconsistency in first extolling the colored soldiers of his division in numerous general orders and then assailing them after the armistice had been signed, but I am at a loss to understand your antagonism, unless you have been hypnotized by Col. Greer, who evidently wrote your editorial or supplied the lying information.
The public will prefer to accept the testimony of war correspondents who were at the front, and of commanding officers, who, unlige Col. Greer, have no particular reason to defame brave black soldiers—those living and maimed and those dead—than to accept the testimony of Col. Greer and the editor of Harvey's Weekly, who was more than three thousand miles from the scene of conflict.
If I should permit your false charge to go unchallenged, the spirit forms of the black soldiers who bravely, heroically fell in the Argonne, at Champaign, in No Man's Land, in Boise Frehaut and other bloody fields on which they bravely fell, would rise up and, pointing their skeleton fingers of scorn at me, call me traitor—just what they and the living are calling you today. An editor or ought to be advised before he lies on the brave.
Respectfully,
RALPH W. TYLER.
I was with the 92nd Division for six weeks as was correspondent, and
The tertiary stage of Syphilis following in its order, is called the final stage, being general in all its symptoms and final in its action of destruction.
Having selected its final site of location, is marked by the characteristic lesson of the late and hopeless stage, occurring in any organ or tissues, undergoing a marked change to the tissue from a fatty to a caseous degeneration, the center breaking down into a gummy material called the Gumma. It develops into the brain, spinal cord, and meninges, varying in size from a almond to that of an egg, and causing symptoms according to the location. In the brain — for many years — dizziness, neuralgia, headaches, and disturbances of the cranial nerves were regarded as mere nervousness, covering up the sins of an early infection only to find that syphilis has manifested and in the third stage unannounced.
How often we hear the statement "It is only a slight headache, as my stomach is out of order, it will be alright soon" etc, and the victim finds himself taking a Bromo-Seltzer, Olives Tablets or Orangeine powders, only to get a temporary relief, mask the symptoms and prolong the agonies while the development of the infection is still going on to its destructive stage, instead of consulting the family doctor for proper treatment, we are advised by our good friends as to one of his "sure eures" a patent medicine who's history in the past has killed more or equally as many as war. But only too late to realize its danger and result.
The greatest damage of this disease is done to the nervous system, causing a irreparable damage to the nerve cells; and once a nerve cell is destroyed, it cannot be replaced or repaired. It produces all forms of disorders establishing Paresis, general and partial paralysis, dementia of the various types or insinuity with tremor, speech disturbances increas muscula weakness, finally insinuity and death.
Tabes dorsalis (lecomotor ataxia) is an associated syphilic manifestation of the third stage affecting the spinal column, of the spinal cord (with muscular incoordinations and atrophy, neuralgia, with lancinating pains, disorders of the optic nerve, also crises, with severe pains in the abdomen, or around the waist, preceding with a nausea, and vomiting, leaving one with the ataxia gait (i. e.) unable to walk without a cane or assistance, the legs being thrown out, eyes directed toward the ground, body forward and wide apart. This condition is a sure result and treatment only checks symptoms.
In conclusion the results of the disease depend upon what stage treatment is given. The first stage is generally favorable, as to the character and period of its continuance of treatment.
The second stage treatment should be kept under control for debilitating influences of the third or final stage. The untreated whether because of failure to recognize its character or its ignorance, due to poverty, neglect or dissipation is usually grave.