Kansas City Sun
Saturday, November 13, 1920
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
THREE NEGROES KILLED
FIFTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT CELEBRATES BISHOP PARKS' 43RD MINISTERIAL ANNIVERSARY
Allied Local Charities Negro Division Must Raise $30,000 out of $700,000 in Five Days Beginning Monday, Nov. 14 Negro Institutions Directly Benefitted: Wheatly Provident Hospital Orphans Home West Bottoms Mission Day Nursery Community Service Urban League
THRIFIFTH EPISCOPALWALTHAL MOORE OF
REEN
OPAL DISTRICT CE
ORE OF SAINT LOUIS
HON. A. E. MALONE.
Chairman Repubilican Negro State Auxiliary and member of State Executive Committee. Prof. Malone waged a wonderful campaign among our group and he and Mrs. Malone gave $1500 to the campaign fund. The race needs more leaders like Aaron E. Malone.
WAGES OF SIN; DEATH.
W. H. "Atch" Stinson, negro gambler, was shot to death by another Negro in front of a saloon at Sixth and McGee streets last Monday afternoon. The police arrested Lee A. Brasier, Negro, with who Stiasen had been quarreling.
Philadelphia, Pa.—J. C. Asbury and Andrew Stevens, Colored men, were elected to the Pennsylvania Legislature from this city representing sixth and seventh districts, respectively, with a majority of 5,500 votes. Dr. Henry Piper was elected to the Delaware Legislature, being the first Colored man to be thus honored.
Allied L
Must Raise $
Wh
J. R. E. LE
L. C. STEW
Negro
d Local C
Raise $30,000 out of
Neg
Wheatly Provident H
Day Nurse
J. R. E. LEE, General Chairman.
L. C. STEWARD, Vice Chairman, Representi
Negro Chamber of Commerce.
J. R. E. LEE, General Chairman.
L. C. STEWARD, Vice Chairman, Representing the Negro Chamber of Commerce.
GENERAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE
R. T. Coles, Chairman,
Dr. T. C. Uthank
Dr. J. E. Perry
Mrs. Eva Fox
Mrs. Wm. Alphin
Dr. M. H. Lamright.
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
(Negro Chamber of Commerce)
Samuel R. Hopkins, Chairman,
L. C. Smith,
Fred Gleed,
Dr. A. R. Eagleson,
George Golden
man,
DIVISION 1
J. J. Allen, General,
1. N. S. Adkins, Captain.
2. Mrs. Richardson, Captain.
Mrs. J. J. Allen,
Mrs. William Davis,
Mrs. S. Hopkins,
Mrs. E. Bruce,
Mrs. L. Henley,
Mrs. William Bruce
Mrs. B. O. Ervin,
Miss Grace White.
MITTEE
man,
Mrs. S. Hopkins,
Mrs. E. Bruce,
Mrs. L. Henley,
Mrs. William Bruce
Mrs. B. O. Ervin,
Miss Grace White.
3. Mrs. W. H. Harrison, Captain
Mrs. McLain,
H. H. Coleman,
Mrs. J. L. Johnson,
Mrs. Edna Tutt,
Nannie Burke,
Sadie Fitzpatrick,
Mrs. Nellie
Headquarters—Community Center,
Headquarters—Community Center, 18th and Vine Streets.
The Sun 5c a Copy EVERYWHERE
VOL. XXIV. NO. 7
Negro Troopers To Be Free?
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Leavenworth, Kansas, Nov. 12.—T. W. Bell, the attorney for the imprisoned Negro soldiers in the Federal penitentiary, is working very hard on the case and confidently expects to win. While he has not disclosed his latest plans, he declares that he is confident he will be able to procure the freedom of the accused men. The case will be argued here within a short time.
BROOKLYN, ILL. GIVES HARDING
641, COX 1.
Brooklyn, Ill., returned to normalcy Tuesday, by giving Harding a vote of 642 to 1 for Cox.
Brooklyn is a Negro village just north of East St. Louis, and in former times 600 to 1 was the normal percentage in favor of the Republicans. In the last two elections, however, President Wilson had received a dozen votes.
The return to normalcy was marred, in the opinion of the majority, by the fact that Christensen got three votes, and Debs 2. This is the only place yet reported where the Farmer-Labor ticket received three times, and the Socialist twice as many as the Democratic.
NEGRO SENATOR ELECTED
Two Afro-American members of the Ohio Legislature were elected in this county in 1893 when the editor of The Gazette and Hon. Wm. H. Clifford were the lucky ones. Tuesday, three were elected—one to the State Senate—Wm. R. Green, Harry E. Davis and S. E. Woods. This shows an encouraging advance in local politics for which our people of this community are to be credited. It was their vote at the August 10, 1920 primary that made it possible.
—Cleveland Gazette.
Homer Roberts, Chairman,
Nelson C. Crews,
George Love,
A. L. Richmond,
W. G. Mosley,
Dr. T. A. Eagleson.
SPEAKERS COMMITTEE
W. H. Harrison, Chaldman,
J. S. Moten,
J. H. Coleman,
Joe E. Herriford,
A. M. Wilson,
Wm. E. Griffin,
Miss Lolia Elmore,
Miss Emma Jane Robinson,
Whitefoed Ross,
M. H. Thompkins,
Henley L. Cox,
F. Leslie Clark,
R. T. Coles.
The Kansas City Sun
WITH 29 KIDS MAW HAS RUN OUT OF NAMES.
Ashdown, Ark.—Virginia Neal, a Negro woman living at Ashdown, is the mother r of twenty-nine children. She is now only 50 years old. She was divorced ro her husband three years ago.
The woman has given birth to one set of quadruplets, one of triplets and several of twins—she has forgotten the number of the latter, she says. After exhausting her vocabulary for names for the children, Virginia "dubbed" the last one "Little Neal" to distinguish him from his elder brother, "Big Neal."
The woman recently mortgaged her little plot of ground on which her two-room home stands and bought a second-hand automobile. She says she will spend the declining years of her life, or until the mortgage is due, "motoring about."
One of the most liberal contributors to the Republican campaign fund among our people was Dr. Theodore Smith, the pioneer druggist at 18th and Tracy avenue. Dr. Smith always stands for his race and right.
Entered as second-class matter, August
Mo, under the act of March 3, 1879.
HON. A. E. MALONE
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
MINISTERIAL ALLIANCE
Rev. J. St. Feliv Issacs
Rev. S. W. Bacote
Rev. W. T. Osborne
Rev. A. C. Higgs
Rev. J. C. Patton
FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING
COMMITTEE
Rev. Wm. Alpin. Chairman,
Rev. J. W. Jenkins,
J. W. Holbert,
J. H. Bulford,
A. C. Perry.
INCHARGE OF SUPPLIES
Mrs. D. M. Miller.
Mrs. Pearl M. Dabney.
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
the elaborate reception tendered Bishop H. Blanton Parks at Allen Chapel last Tuesday evening, November 10 was a success in every detail. About five hundred persons were present, more than one hundred of whom were from out of the City. Many prominent ministers of the fifth Episcopal district were in evidence. Mr. W. C. Hueston was Master of Ceremonies and addresses were delivered by Bishop Wm. T. Vernon, Rev. J. F. Sage of Lexington, Mo. Rev. Brooks of Columbia, Mo.; Rev. R. L. Pope of Denver, Colo. A purse of $1500 was given to the bishop by the Fifth Episcopal District and a check for $100 by the Southwest Missouri Conference as well as a substantial gift by Mrs. Aaron E. Malone of Poro College, St. Louis, Mo. Music was furnished by the Western University Orchestra and solos were rendered by Mrs. Cozetta Seals and the Jackson Jubilee Chorus. About two hundred sat at the banquet table, many having had to be turned away on account of purchasing their tickets too late.
Neg
ws Beginning M
y Benefitted:
e West Bo
y Service Urban L
WORKERS ORGANIZATION
MRS. PEARL DABNEY, Second Vice Chairman,
Representing Federation of Women's Clubs.
F. A. HARRIS, Secretary.
DIVISION 2.
G. A. Page, General.
CAPTAINS.
Roberts,
Smith,
Young,
ayne,
oss. (Workers incomplete)
DIVISION 3.
Della Brookins, General.
4. Mrs. H. W. Lackey, Captain.
N. E. Saunderson,
Stella Revis,
Ethel Smith,
George Massey,
Katie Price,
R. H. Collins,
Mrs. D. C. Cosby,
Miss Melina Williamson,
Mrs. Willa Bigsby.
5. Mrs. Grady, Captain (not complete)
6. ADVANCE WORKERS
DIVISION 4.
Q. J. Gilmore, General.
Mrs. Bertha St. Clair, Captain.
Mrs. Ida Brown,
Mrs. Fannie Cavanaugh,
Mrs. Josephine Finney,
Mrs. Ethel Cave,
Mrs. W. B. Garrett,
Mrs. Mamie Quick.
Mrs. A. Moore, Captain.
TY—SUBSCRIBE NOW.
A PEACEMAKER WAS SHOT.
Walter Carter, Negro, Tried to Stop a Women's Quarrel.
Walter Carter, Colored, 31 years old, 2208 Highland avenue, was shot through the left breast near the heart Sunday morning when he attempted to interfere in an argument between two Negro women at Twenty-second and Vine streets. Carter was taken to the old City Hospital. His condition is said to be dangerous. According to the police, Arthur Ward, 1627 Cottage avenue, did the shooting when he saw that Carter was attempting to pacify the arguing women. Ward and Lizzie Hughes, 1627 Cottage avenue, were taken to No. 6 police station, where they are being held for investigation. The other woman, who was a participant in the argument, Ophelia Vivians, 1611 East Twenty-second street, was released.
A REAL LEADER
FORECAST FOR KANSAS CITY AND
VICINITY.
From November 11 to November 18
unsettled temperature, shifting
winds, rains, probably little change to
colder threatening snow.
C. F. COLLINS, Astro.
1316 Euclid Avenue
AN APPEAL FOR MORE WORKERS
Many of our teams are not filled out. We are sending out this appeal to any persons throughout the city who may be willing to help us work in this campaign. Call in to Headquarters and let us list you on one of our teams.
No greater service can be rendered the Race and there is no surer test of Race dependableness than is indicated by the response to the needs of the Orphan Children and other unfortunates of the Race.
WILL YOU HELP US?
J. R. E. LEE, General Chairman
ALLIED CHARITIES CAMPAIGN.
DIVISION 2.
G. A. Page, General.
CAPTAINS.
1. Homer Roberts,
2. L. C. Smith,
3. Austin Young,
4. Mrs. Payne,
5. Mr. Cross. (Workers incomplete)
DIVISION 3.
Mrs. Della Brookins, General.
1. Mrs. Cyrene Trent, Captain.
Della Brookins,
Minnie Crosthwaite,
Eva Fox,
Nannie Bunch,
Bertie Greer,
Clara Wesley,
Estella Woods,
Katie Miller,
Maggie Gaines,
Louise Winn,
Pearl Dabney,
Miss B. Lee,
Mrs. Truehart,
Stella Hardy,
Esther Clark,
Edith Edwards.
Emma Blanton,
Hattie Penn,
Edna Colston,
Versa Rice,
Flossie Marshall,
Caddie Lawson,
Sallie Jackson,
Ruby Lockhart,
Maggie Meredith,
Ethel Bragg.
2. Mrs. Nelson Crews, Captain.
Miss Gordon,
Miss Roper,
Miss Menter,
Miss Turner,
Miss Binkley,
Miss Albuddy. (Others to be added)
3. Mrs. Lucy Vaughn, Captain.
Mrs. Ona B. Wilson,
Mrs. Emma Logan,
Mrs. Luella Davis,
Helen Herndon,
Mrs. Yancy.
RECEPTION TENDERED BISHOP
PARKS.
DARE TO DO YOUR DUTY.
"Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty as we understand it."—Abraham Lincoln.
"Any Prejudice whatever will be insurmountable if those who do not share in it themselves truckle to it and flatter it and accept it as a law of nature."—John Stuart Mill.
F. T. LANE, Assistant Secretary.
ALBERTA S. COLLINS, Chief Clerk.
Mrs. Minnie Moore,
Mrs. Mable Carmack,
Bessie Tarwater,
Millie Green,
Carl Young,
Bertha Bennett,
Estella Laden.
Mr. Chas. Astwood, Captain.
(Not complete.)
e) DIVISION 5.
Mrs. Ida M. Becks, General.
Mrs. Amanda Bond, Captain.
Mayme Scott,
Carrie Dysart,
George Moore,
Gertrude Lay,
Bertha Brown,
Abbie Jones,
Mary Campbell,
Bessie Austin,
Christine Barnard,
Louisiana Crawford.
Mayd Randall,
PREJUDICE
Nelson C. Crews.....Editor and Owner
Willa Glenn Peebles.....General Manager
KILL
MINISTERIAL AND
ED TO MISSOURI
MILTON L. HINES,
known as one of the Old Guard in politics, active in all campaigns for the last twenty years, was selected as the Chairman of Speakers and Halls, for the election of 1920. He has been a consistent Republican and never could be induced to vote or work for any other than the party with which he is identified. In and out of season you always find him espousing the cause of the Republican party.
He was Street Foreman under one Republican administration in the Street Cleaning Department, and also was foreman in the Street Repair Department from 1916 to 1918; he has been continuously a precinct captain and ward lieutenant for twenty years in Kakas City. There has never been a doubt in the Republican party in any election as to how he stood. He spent a great deal of his time assisting the Eighth Ward, in which he lives. With the management of the campaign in such hands as his, and the splendid working force with which he had the forethought to surround himself, success was inevitable. The Democratic slogan is: "What Are They Going To Give You?" Such
gro Divi
Monday, Nov.
ttoms Mission
league
Publicity Div. Negro Chamber
Publicity Div. Negro Chamber of Commerce.
Rev. Daniels, General.
C. V. Patterson, Captain.
Mrs. Ernest Dawson.
Mrs. E. Jones,
Mrs. Lovinggood,
Mrs. Ella Jenkins,
Mrs. Annie Steward,
W. M. Patterson,
Nancy Ross.
W. P. Kinney, Captain.
Mrs. W. P. Kinney,
Mrs. Lecture Ewing,
Carrell Alexander,
Bettie Maxey,
Mrs. Martin,
Mrs. Rosie Miller,
Cynthia McCulley,
Mrs. R. M. Grant,
Mrs. Emma Sausberry,
Amanda Ellison,
Elsie Dixon.
Mrs. E. D. Moore, Captain.
Mrs. M. B. Humphrey,
Mrs. Mabel Cunningham,
Mrs. Flossie Cottee.
Alberta Seals, Captain.
Myrtle Phillips,
Alice Brown,
Frankkey Pierce,
Leona Watson,
Georgi Franklin.
The Sun 5c a Copy EVERYWHERE
LED
ANNIVERSARY
RI LEGISLATURE
questions will be answered by M. L.
Hines through the columns of The
Kansas City Sun each week.
"Negro Domination" Dead
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Chicago, Nov. 12. "Negro Domination" and "Social equality" received a death blow as political issues in the recent general election.
The Race issue was inected in all of the states in the North where numbers have been increased by the recent migration. The plan of operation was well and cunningly thought out, and thousands of dollars were expended in the efforts to prove its worth, by pushing the propaganda.
THREE NEGROES KILLED.
Three Colored men have met violent death in this City during the week: Benjamin Patton who was held up by foot pads and fatally shot last Monday night, died at the City Hospital Tuesday. W. H. "Ace" Stinson was shot and instantly killed in a quarrel over a gambling game on East Sixth street; and Walter Carter who undertook to stop a quarrel between two Colored women at 22nd and Vine streets last Sunday morning was shot and killed by another Colored man alleged to be Arthur Ward. Truly Kansas City needs cleaning up and the first essential is to disarm every crook, thug and "bad man" in Kansas City or send them to the penitentiary.
DR. CROSSLAND IN CITY
Dr. J. R. A. Crossland of St. Joseph, Mo., former minister to Liberia and one of the foremost orators of the race was in the city on business this week.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Rev. William H. Peck of St. Louis, Mo., will preach Sunday morning and evening at Allen Chapel. Hear him.
vision
v. 14
VISION 6.
amber of Commerce.
PRICE. 5c.
From Our Foreign Correspondents
Lodge Directory
A. F. & A. M., Missouri Jurisdiction
OFFICERS FOR 1920-21.
Grand Lodge.
Grand Master, Crittenden C. Clark
St. Louis.
Senior Grand Warden—Eugene Lacey, Kansas City, Mo.
Junior Grand Warden—H. H. Curtis. Joplin.
Grand Secretary—Leon Hill, Boonville, Mo.
Secretary of Relief—Willis G. Moseley, Kansas City, Mo.
Grand Lecturer, First District—P L. Pratt Cameron.
Grand Lecturer Second District—E J. Cooper Mexico.
Member Board of Relief—K. D. Smith De Soto.
Member Board of Relief—George Renfro Mt. Vernon.
Grand Captain—Rev. M. S. Bryant, Liberty, Mo.
Next place of meeting, 1921, Marshall, Mo.
Grand Chapter
A. L. Thomas, Grand High Priest, Jefferson City, Mo.
J. P. Moffitt, Deputy Grand High Priest, Sedalia, Mo.
S. A. May, Grand King, St. Louis, Mo.
Jas. Cannon, St. Louis, Mo., Grand Secretary.
F. W. Dahney, Grand Scribe, Kanas city, Mo.
Geo. Broomfield, Grand Treasurer
St. Louis, Mo.
T. G. McCampbell, Grand Chaplain,
Kansas City, Mo.
L. D. Carter, Grand Lecturer, Kansas City, Mo.
Grand Commandery.
J. W. Beard—R. E. G. C., St. Louis, Mo.
C. E. Brassfield—D. E. G. C., Kansas City, Mo.
B. F. Graves—E. G. G., St. Joseph, Mo.
J. T. Ferrell—E. G. C. General, Seedalia, Mo.
Wm. Lamb—E. G. Treasurer, Kan
sas City, Mo.
T. G. McCampbell, Grand Prelate Kansas City, Mo.
A. D. Butler—E. G. Recorder, St
Joseph, Mo.
Rone Lodge No. 25. A. F. and
A. M. meets the 1st and 3rd
Monday in each month. Al
Master Masons in good standing
welcome. L. D. Carter, W.
M.; C. H. Countee, Secy.
Rone Lodge No. 25, A. F, and
A. M., meets the 1st and 3rd
Master Maons in good standing
welcome. H. C. Courteau, Sec. W.
G
MASONRY
Liberty Lodge No. 37. A. F. and A M. Liberty, Mo. meets the 2nd and 4th Saturday nights in each month. Nelson Wallar W. M., Robert Dodd, Sec'y.
St. Stephens Chapter No. 37. Royal Arch Masons, Liberty Mo. meets first Tuesday in the month. P. H. Winn, Robinson, Recorder
RMES P
HOC
HOC
St. Matthew Commandery
No. 17, Liberty, Mo, meets
the third Saturday night
at the Masonic Temple,
M. Robinson, Rec. Sec. W.
```markdown
```
King of the West Lodge
No. 218. H. J. Leon, W. M.
533 E. 11th. H. J. Harri
sey. 1717 Woodland Ave.
ere held the 1st and
were weddings of each
month.
[Picture of a woman with a large white collar and decorative embroidery on her dress].
MME. VIOLA ELLIS
Scientific Scalp Specialist
MASSAGE and HAIR GROWER
1907 E. 13th Street
See —
C. H. HARRIS, Mgr.
1731 Lydia Ave.
Hours: 8 to 9 a. m., 12 to 1
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3352-W. Residence, 2624 Euclid
Aid. Res. Phone, Bell
Melrose 5219-W.
RATES REASONABLE
Do you need money?
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PROPERTY OWNERS
can obtain a loan through our agency and pay it back by weekly installments.
IF YOUR HOUSE NEEDS repairing, painting or papering, get a loan and put in its necessary repairs.
Our Business is Strictly Confidential.
Bell Phone Grand 4204.
Home, Delaware 950.
HOLDEN, MO.
Mrs. Warnick of Centerview spent the morning visiting Lincoln School last week...Mr. Irwin Kinnel of Lathrop, Mo., was in Holden last Saturday...The ladies of the A. M. E. church served dinner last Tuesday (Election Day) on 2nd street. They realized a neat sum...Mr. Cob of St. Louis was a guest of Mrs. Ewing this past week...Persons sick throughout the town are reported on the road to good health...Mrs. Madison Fisher and daughter spent Saturday and Sunday in Warrensburg...Mrs. Winnie Pemberton of Kingsville spent the week-end with her daughter, Mrs. James Taylor...The Holden Hunter's Club had good success this week by catching thirty-nine opposums...Rev. J. D. Evans is having a great success at Warrensburg with his meeting...Mrs. Bowren spent Sunday in Harrisonville with many friends...Mrs. Nannie Simmons left last week for Des Moines, Ia., where she will perhaps spend the winter...Mrs. Stella Combs goes to live with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Holman for the winter...Mrs. Luella Edwards of Windsor, Mo., a practical nurse, has been nursing in the home of Mr. J. T. Glass for the past two weeks.
BILLINGS, MONT.
By Mr. D. H. Harris.
The most brilliant affair of the past week was the "Indoor Carnival" staged by the Phyllis Wheatley Club of the City. The Colored Fraternal Hall was a galla scene with the conventional Carnival Booths, side shows, fortune telling, etc., also the decorations and different amusements characteristic to age-old. Hallowe'en festivals lent a wierd, mystic charm to the entertainment. A capacity house of Billings select Colored society voted it a decided success. The chief feature of the evening which deserves special mention and credit was our newly organized Colored band composed of twelve different musical instruments and of which Mr. D. H. Harris is the very competent and enthusiastic leader, made its first formal bow to the public. It is made up chiefly of the young men and boys of the city. They furnished splendid selections during the entire evening and were greeted with rounds of applause. We predict for them in the future, a place second to none among the bands of the Northwest. Quite a neat sum was realized by the ladies of this Club. They deserve much praise for the work they are doing...Mr. C. W. Smith left for Los Angeles, Calif., to continue his course of studies in the University there. We regret to say that Mrs. Lula Overman continues to be reported on the sick list...Mrs. J. W. Whittington of 25th street north was quite indisposed during the just week...The first snow fall of the season on October 31st is diligently inquiring of the disposition of the "Summer Salary" and "Friend Overcoat."
LOUISIANA, MO.
Services at all the churches were well attended Sunday. Last Sunday Rev. L. P. Bryant preached two soul stirring sermons and had three additions to the church. Mrs. Dr. Richardson is ill...Mrs. Hayden Wheeler was hostess to a six o'clock dinner Tuesday complimentary to Rev. and Mrs. Bryant. Covers were laid for six...The Republican Club will meet at the A. M. E. church Tuesday evening...Mrs. M. Covington's sister Mrs. Dillard is here on a visit...Mr. Anderson Huff has been ill. Madame Jessie Shephard lectured at the Bap tist church Monday evening...Sunday was trustee day at the A. M. E. church. The collection was $2.00.
AREO 8 LIMOUSINE
HUBBEL'S CAR
Grand 3244
DENTIST
If it is your TEETH I can help you. Neither pain nor expense will prove as great as you think.
Office Hours Daily till 8 p. m., Sunday till 2 p. m.
DR. B. A. WALLMAN
Dentist
N. W. Corner 8th and Walnut
Above Owl Drug Store.
Home Phone Harrison 7199.
SALLIE T. JACKSON
Notary Public
With
Williams & Jackson Realty Co.
1704 E. 12th.
Both Phones:
Bell Clifton 1415 Home Benton
Residence, 1910 Woodland.
Bell phone Clifton 623.
BARBER SHOP AND POOL HALL
Electrical Equipment
"Good Work" our motto.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
GIVE US A TRIAL
1717 East 18th Street
KANSAS CITY, MO.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920
Services were well attended at the churches Sunday...Miss Della Williams and Mr. Jimmie Johnson of Brookfield, Mo. were married Thursday November 4, at 8 p. m....Mr. Andrel Stevenson of Camden, Mo. is the guest of his brother, Mr. E. L. Stevenson....The Macon Woman's Club met at the residence of Mr. Arthur Williams Saturday afternoon....The Sewing Circle of the Bethel A. M. E. Church met at the residence of Mrs. Joe Brown Friday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock....Mr. Henry Taylor was in the city the guest of Mrs. Nicholes.
By Mrs. J. Z. Boseley.
Mrs. Ruth Strawn Nanks left Thursday, November 4 for Boston, Mass., where she will join her husband who is attending the Independent Industrial Shoe Making School, located at Lynn, Mass. There was a pie pie super given at the Sugar Grove school by the teacher, Miss Ella Williams, for the benefit of the school, which netted them $33.90. The highest pie was sold for $10.75...Mrs. Maggie Kelley of Canada is here spending the winter with her other, Mrs. Martha Willias. She has six of her children with her. Mrs. Kelley is very pleasantly remembered as Miss Maggie Drew...The S. C. O. Club gave a dance Thursday night, Nov. 11.
Rev. S. L. Brooks and Presiding Elder N. C. Buren left Tuesday for Kansas
"The most pleasing and entertaining the modest claim of the business man the Auditorium Theater on Sunday night.
"Hello Jazzbo," briefly described theization of forty people including a reJazzonian orchestra. The company is, among whom are Laura Bowman Mills, Sidney Kirkpatrick, Medill Thom Bronze beauties.
The Delhi Amusement Company spent a solid year organizing the com abroad, determined that this organiz city visited, leaving no detail to change field something before unheard of the.
The chorus it is claimed is the stage, there being less than one in than seven pounds difference in their lenge to any musical comedy carrying singing or dancing. This company pl Grand Theater in Chicago last summer breaking week at the Lyceum Theatre the Pacific Coast. There are few all The Bronze Bostonians is without prevail during the Kansas City enga phoning Home phone, Harrison 6933
PENDLETON AVE.
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Equipped with
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Terms Moderate
Writ
NIGHT, NOV. 14.
"The most pleasing and entertaining musical comedy of the season," is the modest claim of the business manager of "Hello Jazzbo" which comes to the Auditorium Theater on Sunday night for eight nights.
THE MUSICAL FESTIVAL
"Hello Jazzbo," briefly described is a high class colored musical organization of forty people including a real creole beauty chorus and their own Jazzonian orchestra. The company includes the cream of colored entertainers, among whom are Laura Bowman, Maud Russell, Trixie White, Jerry Mills, Sidney Kirkpatrick, Medill Thompson, Lovie Taylor and a big chorus of Bronze beauties.
The Delhi Amusement Company who are responsible for "Hello Jazzbo" spent a solid year organizing the company, bringing many of the artists from abroad, determined that this organization should be the sensation of every city visited, leaving no detail to chance, and bringing to the musical comedy field something before unheard of their own orchestra.
The chorus it is claimed is the most perfect on the musical comedy stage, there being less than one inch variance in their height, and less than seven pounds difference in their weight. The management offer a challenge to any musical comedy carrying a chorus that can equal them in their singing or dancing. This company played an engagement of ten weeks at the Grand Theater in Chicago last summer and comes here direct from a record breaking week at the Lyceum Theater at Cincinnati. They are en route to the Pacific Coast. There are few all colored organizations in America and The Bronze Bostonians is without doubt the largest. Popular prices will prevail during the Kansas City engagement and seats can be reserved by phoning Home phone, Harrison 6931.
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MACON, MO.
COLUMBIA, MO.
PORO CORNER
City to be present at the banquet given for Bishop H. B. Parks.,Miss Lucille Smith was hostess to the "Ladies Art Club" last Wednesday. A very pleasant afternoon was spent. Mrs. Lula Drew of Connecticut is visiting her other, Mrs. Marion Drew and her son, Marion.
Mesdames A. Powell and Z. Powell were hostesses of the Pleasure Seekers Club at a Halloween party given at the residence of Mrs. Powell Friday evening. Miss Grace Tucker was awarded the prize for the neatest dressed person and Mr. Joseph Collins was awarded the prize for the tackiest dressed. The house was beautifully decorated with Halloween colors and refreshments were served by the hostesses and an enjoyable evening was spent. All the services at the Pleasant Valley Baptist Church were very good. Rev. M. J. Battles delivered two quite inspirational sermons at the morning and evening services. Little Cozetta Thornton who has been ill is very much better. Mrs. M. Grant went to Denver, Colo., to accompany her daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Gaddy and baby to her home, 131 Stewart avenue, Kansas City, Kas. Mrs. Gaddy has been quite ill but the condition shows improvement. Mrs. Gaddy was formerly Miss Myrtle Grant of this city.
ROSEDALE, KAS.
"HELP CHARITY TO HELP OTH ERS."—Allied Charities.
Ollie Clark
PORO HAIR DRESSER
I guarantee to make harsh, brittle hair soft and fluffy, and if not satisfactory after three months' treatment, your money will be refunded.
627 Parallel Ave.,
Kansas City, Kansas.
WHY NOT PATRONIZE
YOUR OWN RACE
ENTERPRISE?
THE
Handy Colored Store
2409 Vine Street
Ladies and Gent's
Furnishings Goods
and Notions
Also a line of Dry Goods
and Hardware
We Hope You Will Come and
Investigate For Yourself
We Give Surety Coupons
Help Build a creditable store
for the race.
Mrs. Annie Holmes
Proprietor and Manager.
Bell Phone East 4221J
LEARN GREGG
SHORTHAND
System Taught by All Leading
Schools and Business Colleges.
Private lessons given by
MRS. K. M. FORNEY
2746 WOODLAND AVE.
Elmridge 2358-W
Busy Bee
CANDY KITCHEN
Home Made Candies
— and —
Soft Drinks
Home Phone Benton 4018
1513 East 12th St.
ST. FERDINAND AVE.
TS WANTED
for Teaching the
Hair Culture
culture
Diplomas Given
mation
SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI.
N. CLARK SMITH
VOICE TRAINING
(University of Kansas Method)
Bell Grand 4393 2313 TRACY
Home Phone Linwood 2626
GROCERY
The Right Place a
FREE DELIVERY
Phone us or drop in and give
pleased with both qual
ALLEN &
OCCERY & MEATS.
The Right Place and the Right Price.
FREE DELIVERY EVERYWHERE
drop in and give us your order. You will be
with both quality of goods and service.
ALLEN & MANNING
3051 Hardesty
BALTIMORE
SHIRT CO.
18th & Walnut, 12th & Walnut, 12th & Baltimore, 15 E. 11th
4 8th & Walnut, 12th
8th & Walnut, 12th & Walnut, 12th & Baltimore, 15 E. 11th We wish to thank the readers of this paper for their trade. We always give them the best of service.
STORES
Peoples' I
Northeast corner of Eight
For fourteen ye
ed you. We h
tuted nor give
article. We
in the Drug li
and best toile
deliver anything
the city -- prom
PHC
Apples' Drug Store
first corner of Eighteenth Street and the Paseo
for fourteen years we have serv-
you. We have never substi-
tuted nor given you an inferior
article. We carry everything
on the Drug line, all the latest
and best toilet articles. We
deliver anything to any part of
the city -- promptly -- cal. us up.
Peoples' Drug Store
Northeast corner of Eighteenth Street and the Paseo For fourteen years we have served you. We have never substituted nor given you an inferior article. We carry everything in the Drug line, all the latest and best toilet articles. We deliver anything to any part of the city -- promptly -- cal. us up.
PHONES
Bell East 1814
A
MADAM S.
Manufa
VELVET BLEE
WONDER WORK
Face and Hand Lotion
I teach Beauty Culture, Sca
Manicuring and give diplomas.
ly read and answered promptly.
United States. You can make f
ing my Oils and Dressing. All
At Once. Write Today.
ADAM S. PLUMMER
Manufacturer of
VELVET BLEACHING CREAM
WONDER WORKER HAIR GROWER
and Hand Lotion and other Toilet Articles
Beauty Culture, Scalp Treatment, Facial Massage and
and give diplomas. I teach by mail, all letters careful-
answered promptly. I send goods to all parts of the
s. You can make from $15.00 to $25.00 per week sell-
and Dressing. All work guaranteed. Agents Wanted
write Today.
MADAM S. PLUMMER
Manufacturer of
VELVET BLEACHING CREAM
WONDER WORKER HAIR GROWER
Face and Hand Lotion and other Toilet Articles
I teach Beauty Culture, Scalp Treatment, Facial Massage and Manicuring and give diplomas. I teach by mail, all letters carefully read and answered promptly. I send goods to all parts of the United States. You can make from $15.00 to $25.00 per week selling my Oils and Dressing. All work guaranteed. Agents Wanted At Once. Write Today.
MME. S. PLUMMER, Proprietor.
50
Everything is
The Live
Auto Bag
Have T
Can be at your serv
50 everything is Pointing Plus The Live and Let Live Auto Baggage and Express Have TWO CARS. be at your service in a moment's notice
50 50
Everything is Pointing Plus
The Live and Let Live
Auto Baggage and Express
Have TWO CARS.
Can be at your service in a moment's notice
Kindling and Boxes for sale.
T. T. TIVETT
Bell Phone, Grand 1266
Stand: 2109 Campbell Street,
Kansas City, Mo.
"For the Good of Your S-O-LE"
BANKS ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
All kinds of Shoe Repairing
Shoe Strings Polish Inner Soles Buttons Heel Plates
Best Rubber Heels
Hours 7:30 a. m. to 7 p. m. Saturdays 10 p. m.
1620 East 18th St. Kansas City, Mo.
Terms Cash
STORES
Bell Phone Clifton 2464.
3051 Hardesty
Home East 4082
THE STAR HAIR GROWER
A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower
1,000 AGENTS WANTED
1,000 AGENTS WANTED
Good money made. Want agents in every city and village to sell the STAR HAIR GROWER. This is a wonderful preparation. Can be used with or without Straightening Irons. Sells for 15c per box, one 25c box will prove its value. Any person who will use a 25c box will be convinced. No matter what has failed to grow your hair, just give the
STAR HAIR GROWER
a trial and you will be convinced.
Send 25c for full sized box.
If you wish to be an Agent send $1.00 and we will send you a full Supply that you can begin work at once; also agents' terms.
Send all money by Money Order to THE STAR HAIR GROWER MFR,
Box 812. Greensboro, N. C.
2114 Vine Street.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
> the, Churche s—
AUDITORIUM THEATRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 26
Presented by Degree Team, 0. E. 8.
PROF, R. G, JACKSON, Musical Direetor,
in charge of the Persian Chorus,
MAJOR N. CLARK SMITH, Director,
in charge of the Jewish Chorus.
MRS. W. T. OSBORNE,
Managing Dramatie Director,
Home Phone 31 Main Bell Phone 1518 ‘aeea’:
FRIEDSON & SON COAL CO.
Dealers in
ALL GRADES OF COAL
We make a_specialty of steam contracts,
8. W. COR, 19TH AND HARRISON STS.
Kansas City, Mo,
VINE STAEET BAPTIST CHURCH
Open at New Location, 1700 East 12th. St.
Meals prepared by an expert caterer. Special French Pastry.
Pure Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Sanitary Soda
Fountain with unsurpassed service.
Martin Young, Prop.
On account of the rain the meeting
was not so well attended. ‘There
were not so many visitors as usual
‘but we invite all who come to return,
All of the sick are doing nicely.
ST. JAMES A.M, E. ZION CHURCH.
Services were very good Sunday.
Many of the members stayed at
home; the faithful ones were on hand,
‘The pastor preached both morning
and evening....The Trustees having
completed the fixing of the roofing,
guttering and installing of two new
furnaces in the basement, informed
the pastor and members’ that they
may now have a short breathing spell]
+. .Class Was very well attended last
Wednesday night....Thursday night
Rev. J. W. Lowe of the C. M, B.
church preached for us, He is a
splendid preacher....We want to
thank the Rev. Bro, Hilliard for the
nico things donated the pastor and
wite and especially for the shoes;
also Sisters Johnson, Batts, Scott,
Howar adnd Bro, ‘Vaughn....The
Swamp Angel recently from Galves-
ton, Tex., will conduct a revival meet-
ing at St. James beginning Monday
night,
Hair Health in a Glass Tube
‘We guarantee to rid the scalp of dandruff, eczema and baldness
and promote the growth of the hair with the aid of the wonderful
Violet Ray. Our pomade and tonic have been on the market for the
past seventeen years. Tried and not found wanting. Write for our
prices,
THANKS TO OUR MANY PATRONS FOR THE USE OF OUR
EXCELSIOR GOODS.
CALDWELL AND CHAPMAN
Phones: Home Benton 4040. Bell, Clifton 798.
1505 East 18th Street (Upstairs) Kansas City, Misourt,
Call and see our special line of hair goods, straightening combs,
pressing irons and so forth. Braids made from combings or cut hair.
eee er eae Oe SOMOS OF ONE BRIE.
. “HELPLESS MOTHERS AND
BABES ASK YOU TO GIVE."—Allied
Charities,
INDEPENDENCE, MO.
| THE DRUG STORE BEAUTIFUL |
Service and Quality are Paramount at the
-W. S. WOOD DRUG STORE
"Bring Your Prescriptions to us and be assured
of Absolute Accuracy and Fair Treatment.
OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE IN ALL LINES
N. W. Corner 19th and Vine Streets. (Transfer Point)
PHONES—HOME EAST 2203, BELL E. 641.
is ets. FANS ie ie Ee CURD.
Our services were not so well at:
tended Sunday on account of the rain.
Sunday November 14 is Quarterly
‘meeting day here....Rey. Dr. P, W.
Delyles, Presiding Elder, will be with
ug and preach morning and evening
and Dr, H, R. Jackson, pastor of St.
James A. M. E. Zfon Church will
reach at 9:00 j, m. AN of the pastors
and their congregations and friends
are invited... Thanksgiving day will
be a big day here. We will serve
dinner from 2:00 o'clock to 4:00
o'tock p. m.....The Sunday school
will render a program at 8:30 p. m.
‘The Choir will give a first class pro-
gram, All are welcome.
| JA, Chandley, Pastor.
| St. Johns A. Mt. 1B. church was the
‘scene of a brilliant affair on last Fri
day evening, the occasion being a re
ception given in honor of the newly
‘assigned pastor and his wife Rev.
and Mrs. B. R. Monroe, Mrs. G. B.
Gly presided as mistress of cere:
monies, An interesting program was
rendered with addresses of welcome
from Rev. Woods pastor of St. Paul
M. B. church; Mrs. Madge Woods and
Edward Smith followed by the pre
sentation of a beautiful quilt, a groc.
ery shower valued at $85 or more and
a substantial purse,
The pastor and his wife expressed
heartfelt appreciation of this splendid
affair in appropriate responses. —St.
‘Charles, Mo., Monitor.
NO can SHORT, HARSH
ft you will insure your Hair and Scalp with theVim and Vigor
Hair and Scalp Treatment. What the Vim and Vigor Treatment
will do for your hair and scalp:
{ (Ecm5?\ ()—Remoye dandrutt. (2)—
Poem vee ‘Will increase the growth of the
7 eT "5 air. (3)—Will heal the scalp
ie RSBUAN S and keep the scalp and hair in
z dation, &. a health condition, (4)—Will
a Cea v8 render the hair soft, thick,
me ase Meng \ straight, flutty end beautiful
ree og j Get it today.
(oH Ri die Ag ‘The Hair Promoter and Sham-
< LS Gamma, — p00, 50 cents each, or $1.00 the
é BY b ) twit treatment. At all drug
: SAM Rey —storos. it your druggist hasn't
yeti: Ree {t he will get it for you, or you
HO sae may send money order or $1.20
ER in stamps to
TOM RR SESS. Theo. Smith, Druggist and Die
BROS tributor, 1301 E. 18th Street,
GORI NON Y
UG NS SS Kansas City, Mo,
You Need Vim and Vigor System!Toner
‘America’s greatest general tonic, It makes rich, red blood
and builds up « rundown system, Vim and Vigor System Toner
is a powerful Alternative, Blood Purifier Tonic and Appetizer. A.
wonderful Blood and Rheumatic remedy. If you are troubled
with Scrofula, Abcesses, Rickets, Eczema, Cartarrh, Falling of
the Hair, Tetier, Ringworm, Scald Herd, Bolls, and Various Skin
Diseases and Humors of the Blood, give this remedy a trial and
be convinced of its great value, Price $1.20 by mail,
Newspapers—We carry the Freeman, Sun, Plaindealer, Call,
Dallas Express, Defender, Crisis,
BRICK ICE CREAM AND ICES THE YEAR ‘ROUND, CALL
j THEO. SMITH
1301 EAST 18TH STREET
Home, 6467 Main, FREE DELLVERY. Bell, Grand 4591.
(Mi aecremneltestcbllbse nyse Tt! saxo a, ope? Secale gnats
_ “HAVE A BIG HEART BY HELP.
ING THE HELPLESS."—Allied Char.
ities.
ARMISTICE DAY.
Armistice Day last Thursday, No-
vember 11 was celebrated in an im-
posing manner by members of the
American Legion and overseas veter
ans and a most impressive parade
traversing the principal thorough:
fares was held at 11:00 A. M. While
the Colored veterans were represent:
ed by Wayne Minor Post there were
not nearly as many in evidence as
we should liked to have seen.
A CALL FOR CITY MINISTERS.
All pastors, district superintendents
duly appointed evangelists and mis:
sionaries are kindly requested to
meet at the ¥. M. C. A. Tuesday, 1:00
P, M., November 16, 1920.
Important matters demanding the
interest and consideration of the Min-
istry to be considered.
W. T. Osborne, Pres. Methodist Al-
Hance.
W. B, Johnson, Sec, Methodist Al-
Yiance.
G. H. Daniels, Pres. Baptist Al-
Manco.
J.C. Patton, Sec. Baptist Alliance.
3. W. Hurst, Pres, Inter-Denomina-
tional Alliance.
B. ©, Dawson, Sec, Inter-Denomina-
‘tional Alliance,
J. B, Isaac, A. M, B.
A. Hi Higgs, M. B.
J.R, Jackson, J. A.M. B.
J. W. 8. Lowe, C. M. EL
A.C. Chatman, Adventist,
8. W. Bacote, Baptist,
William Alphin, Christian, F
LOOK! LOOK! LOOK!
=== COME AND SEE. HERE |S, ===
FOR THE HEALING OF THE NATION |
Native Barks or7@99 Urata
Roots & Herbs 1 eee
‘One ‘Tablespoontal
Great Blood Purifying Medecine
eee i Ti) Try it and be convinced. It
Abts M8! will prove its worth, curing
| 2 IRR | Inflammatory Rheumatism
gece ee * | Scrofala, Lumbago, Indiges-
| eee a’. Vitex=!| tion, Syphilitic Troubles, for
A Afr roxdown men and women,
AM) and for different complaints,
1s COMPOSED BY
4 a REV.R.C. SHERWOOD
i : 1910 Paseo Bell Pho. Main 1358
| » AG) This Medecine can also be
a a AMR) found ri Tracy Ave
ee fea
By LAR $1.00
eer PER| BOTTLE.
EBENEZER CHURCH.
Splendid services all day Sunday.
Several additions, The most excellent
President, Sister Letha Nucomb of
the Deaconess Board, royally enter-
tained her Board with a four course
dinner, Mrs. Cora Stephenson receiv.
ed the beautiful brass bed. In this
entertainment the Missionaries and
the United-We-Stand Club reported
Mrs, Cora Stephensomy $46.00; Mrs.
Daisy Hayes $40.80; who received the
second prize; Miss Loyie Thatcher
$26.00; Mrs, Laura kins and daughter
$16.00; Mrs. Stokes $9.00. The Im-
provement Board will present “How
a Woman Keeps a Secret” early in
Deceuber
A Negro Prophet
A: Nese ‘phephet a" ay warding
people that the world will come to an
Gnd tn 106i, This te important it tre.
But why should we worry about it?
tha ‘word will sete to aa ‘end tn
1920, for that matter, for a great num-
Sor ot thas “tad own onus “16
will do just as well as any other time
if that is the fate in store for me. The
world had a beginning and, in all
probability, it will have an end. We
had nothing to do with the beginning,
and we will just as little to do with
Chaise tat watllre wills we ob
and do good.
In the meanwhile Woodrow Wilson
will ours to peledie lle ox th
Hous ce Manes Tete
REPORT OF TICKET COMMITTEE.
(EVERYWOMAN.)
Sale of tickets according to
stubs counted at theatre. ...$695.35
Sale of tickets not used....... 20.20
Total eigen yp OLN
BILLS PAID.
Auditorium Theatre ..........$160.00
Stage Hands ......0ccccccse. SAAS
WARE TAR ee cre capteee sears cess OAS)
Ddayage. ... seeeeceesseeeees 14,00
“Musicians. isos S200)
Kansas City Call ...6......, $8.00
Kansas City Sum ............. 17.00
Publicity Com. (Auto hire).... 9.25
SIM BE Or a hes creemiaseenss. | 400
‘Tickets, . sqeeiens ose. 1618)
DuBois Dramatic Co. ......... 269.50
Jeash Balance... sce. $8.98
Committee:
J. W, HOLBERT, Chm.
| 7, B, WATKINS,
M. H. 'THOMPKINS,
L.A. KNOX,
| MRS. EVA M. FOX,
. F, A. HARRIS, Sec.
FREE TO
a ‘Trial of a Metholf That Anyone
Can Use Without Discomfort
/ or Loss of Time.
We have a method for the controt of
Asthma, and we Want you to try it at
‘our expense, “No "matter whether your
case in of long standing or recent devel
‘opment, whether It. in present as occa
slonal. or chronic Asthma, you" should
Send fora free trial of our method. No
matter in'what climate you tive, nq mat
ter what your age or ‘occupation, If you
are “troubled with asthma, our method
Should relieve you promptly.
We expecially want to send it to those
apparently. ‘hopeless ‘cases, where all
forms of inhalers, douches, ophim prepa
rations, fumes, “patent smokes," ete,
have failed. We want to show everyone
At our expense, that our method tw de
Signed to end all ditricuit breathing, all
wheezing, ‘and’ all thoae terrible’ pa
Foxysms.
‘This free offer is too important to
neglect a single day. Write now and. be>
kin the method at once. Send no money,
Simply mail ‘coupon below. Do It Today
vou do not even pay postage,
FREE TRIAL COUPON.
FRONTIER ASTHMA CO.,
Room 635N, “Niagara and "Hudson
Streets, Buttalo, N.Y.
Send free trial of your method to:
The AUTO DOCTOR
In His New Location
24TH AND VINE STREETS.
(Rear of Hopkins Coal Co.)
Page 3
“LET'S PUT 4HE RACE ON REC:
ORD—$30,000.000 IN FIVE DAYS."—
Allied Charities,
“PRINTING THAT SATISFIES’
That's done by
THE GRAY-DAWLEY PRINTING CO,
1603 EAST 12TH STREET
Everybody says so. all Clifton 1675 and make us
Prove It To You.
Te en tl ees Sel Beets
| Atlas Motor Car
Company
High Grade Automobiles.
Late Models Only
Cars fully guaranteed. ‘Terms if
desired to responsible people.
BARGAINS THIS WEEK
$030, Hudson “Coupe, evo us
ioe ee eee GG
1820" McFaland;””tpassongers
cont $4108 wew;,arien 106
miles; my price.............$4,900
1818 Gadlad "WP ipasoeer
Sport model ................ $2,850
3818, Gadling G1, Syacoccuse an400
1890 Walon, Toansongert. oom
Sud ey plone tates
1920 Templar Roadster.........$1,700
1918 Chandler Chummy........$ 900
Phones—Bell, Grand 1604,
Home, Delaware 3333,
Call for
Charles Harvey
2324 McGee Trafficway
EEEEEEEEE EEE TELE EE EERE EEE
Martin Young’s Barber Shop
MOVED TO NEW LOCATION
1703 E. 12th
LOOK US OVER
The last word in Tonsorial elegance. Every-
thing that ought to be in a First Class Barber Shop.
Optical Goods of All Kinds Sold on Easy Payments
Have 3,000 Pairs $10.00 Gold-Filled Glasses at $3.00 While They Last
M. E. CAIN SS Optician
25 Years Experience
ALL KINDS OF GLASSES FITTED TO Your Eves
GUARANTEED AS REPRESENTED
Will call and fit Glasses in your home If desired,
Home Phone Delaware 1783 Bell Phone Main 3415,
1012 PASEO, KANSAS CITY, Mo.
RR ee TO UN Te eR ONT a Te eee eae
Soececcogcooccoeooooocoooe
ALEX'S LUNCH
Home Cooking
It is different, especially that 35c
Dinner is the talk of the town.
Our Motto Is:
Quality, Qauntity and Good Service.
If we please you tell other, If we don't
tell us.
A Trial Is All We Ask. ,
1614 East 18th Street.
Seeeeecescccccesecceeceoos
>
roaa ie HOPKINS
vg va Dry Goods & Notions
em ¥ Men's high grade Shirts, fine rib
+o "s and athletic Underwear, silk and
‘a ic | Usle Hosiery, Silk Ties, Wash Ties,
2m a? Suspenders, Belts, etc. Triangle
PES ix, Collars, soft and starch, Ladies’
; BME. <| Gowns, Oingtan ana Pane
ms ¢ Rocssdreanoa, ele, ‘Latlea’ nigh
eke HD) rade silk lace and listo Hecioe
Cae fs We carry an assortment that is
aE BUMIE ard to best euch ce tasior nips
; MES) crate broocnes, calee ee
Seas | beads, men's rings, watch fobs, tie
’ Bi sins, oie tts ana Soticy “ies
‘§ In our Cleaning Department if
yo want prompt and efficient vere
ice, Call Bell Phone: Melrose 42400,
R. L. HOPKINS, Pros.
DUEIE)A Vite Bese
is Se a a a
AT ¥/2 PRICE §F oWasn
Sew, Flew, Soap, Cnet Gonta Lar
Fe SRE gd Sear eet
the seidmantscf Be eads Swen
Remar al isn situ We psateas
Seteenete lentitocel camader serve)
ALLIED GROCERS, Chicago, lil., Dept. 2
- — ey
| MOORES
= F
A:
for
Kidney, Bladder and Stomach
Trouble, Lumbago, Indigestion,
Chronic Constipation.
Gives New Life and Vigor.
Best Proof of this Wonderful
Remedy |
“MOORE'S VIGORINE.”
To Whom It May Concern:
For 18 years I have suffered with
constipation, kidney and bladder trov-
ples. I have taken treatments from
many noted physicians, tried numbers
of patent medicines; received little or
no relief. I had almost given up fn
despair for a cure, But by chance
one day two years ago a sample bot
tle of Moore's Vigorine was handed
me. I tried it and found great im-
provement from the first few doses.
I then bought a bottle and took it with
still more marked improvement, until
now I feel that I am entirely well. |
suffer from neither of the three ail-
ments. Instead of that sluggish,
spring-time feeling, I feel well and re-
freshed, For what it has done I feel
that I will be doing myself an injus:
tice without a bottle of it in my house
in case I should ever need it, An3
information I can give a sufferer, |
will gladly do so, at any time, Call
Bell phone Clifton 5221, or fa person
at 2804 Woodland Ave., K. C., Mo,
R. B. SALES.
BEAUTIFUL LOTS FOR SALE
S. A. Y. ADDITION
‘ 36 & HARDESTY
Buy A Lot in the Most Beautiful Section of the
City at a VERY LOW PRICE.
WILL BUILD TO SUIT TENANT.
Call Williams & Jackson. 1704 E. 12 Street.
BOTH PHONES EAST 1415.
’ es Les.
Madame L. Malone’s Merit Hair Grower
For dandruff and all scalp diseases. No difference
how bad the condition, the hair ean be improved by using
MERIT HAIR PREPARATIONS.
Three months’ treatment will convince you. Write for
book of testimonials. A few more agents wanted.
Odessa, Ma,
To those who conteniplate using ‘The Mme, 1 Shttn Scans
Hair and Sealp ‘Treatment T wish triste a He alone, Mont
owe "I -Bave used I for about Perey se i exoellod by
Almost to my waist. Twill answer aay een ay hale
Bee ee PER in wally
To Whol It Stay Conoern: 1 have used many treatments ter
tho hair and scalp, but have fount wows) many, aatmente fo
Meloue Merk Hecotee Shee ca
TUis Maat Fourtseeth be
MME. L. MALONE
1609 East 24th Street Kansas City, Mo.
Bell Phone E. 4681R Office 2460 Waldrond Ave.
La ern Builders Co
me le
A. E. ESTES, President
General Contracting
Repairing a Specialty
ee a eee
Prepared and Distributed by
D. MOORE & CO.
2522 Michigan Avenue
Kansas City, Mo, |
Rupture Kills
7,000 Annually
pee eet rar
BANA horas as? shaun ce
Bee nsec AME cee te
Seta tee, Mea ets eee
rae iis art saiasread
Bro 'you® doing? Are. you. neglecting
‘Jourselt by wearing @ truam appliance oF
Ser etere see cack
fod cannot der expectnd to ket he tore
Rohe poe nea Feet anos:
Se tuat lich they nesd! moet tourieh
‘But wclonce has found @ way, and all
truss suflerers Inthe and are invited to
Sr a a bes
Su lence Ber ee hee ae
ESRE prarag Pap. won sahering
ote Sean. eo chee eee
Sas cis! aes emeeee anes
ecm cca ree
elegpre No. ‘atrapa, buckles or springs a=
‘Learn how to close the hernial open-
pea aie ete Peni cte:
Pa se Mae ee
Be eae Coal nats
Bt Aeula. Mo.” for PRER erin] Tia
MRS. E. L. P. DIXON and P, M. MARSHALL
(Successors to McFadden Tailoring Co.)
2306 Vine Street Bell Phone Clifton 1069
Tailoring, Steam Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing
and Repairing Work Guaranteed.
Give us a trial. Work called for and delivered. Good used
clothing for sale.
‘D. T. THURMAN, Mgr
RESILVERING A SPECIALTY
Don’t throw your old mirror away. We can make
them like new at a low cost. We buy Mirrors and Plate
Glass, Call and get our prices!
K. 0, MIRROR MFG. co.,
Home Phone Victor 9049, 907 East 18th Street
Woman's beauty has justly been called her ‘‘priceless as-
set’ and down through the ages she has cherished it as!
such. In her eagerness to acquire her fortune of beauty’
she has traveled an endless path in search of preparations
to enhance and preserve her natural charm only to find at
the end some worthless often harmful substitute.
The Making of your fortune of beauty bears the Madam
C. J. Walker Seal. Insist upon preparations that bear it.
MADAM C. J. WALKER'S—
Wonderful Hair Grower
Vegetable Shampoo
‘Tetter Salve
Temple Grower
Glossine
Vanishing Cream
Cleansing Cream
Cold Cream
Witch Hazel Jelly
Complexion and Toilet Soap
Vegetable Oil Hand Soap
Aptiseptic Dental Cream
loral Cluster Taloum Powder
Superfine Face Powder
(White, rose-flesh, brown)
Compact Rouge,
The Nearest Walker Agent will be pleased to supply you
or inquire of your druggist why he does not carry our line:
THE MADAM 0. J. WALKER MFG. COMPANY
640 North West Street Indianapolis, Indiana
At Prices Lower than the Actual
Cost Make Them.
*yastF on wabilessines ocd Ra RAR
It is to your interest to come down and look
these bargains over. You will save one half price
on the fur you buy.
oe $157.50 £4
Finest quality Black Poney Coat, i
sure eso $254.50 (ae
Cams
ingtog gmat en mines ae STA, 7 UD
Dake
Fores, “hy any he 27.900) 7) /
————— | if
Many other big bargains here also. A de- q
posit will hold any fur until wanted. Come iK |(\.
down TODAY—NOW!
1203 GRAND AVE. and 123 W. 12TH 8ST.
The Funeral Home
i ae gee
Especially suited for the convenience of people resid-
ing in apartments, Clubs and small homes where you haven’t
ample room to care for your deceased ones. This splendid
service is at your command—FREE.
JULIUS A. K. FICKLIN UNDERTAKING CO.
Phone Clifton 2612. 1209 Vine Street
How Did You Like Th
fall
Election?
Pace 4
a. ES
&
STE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
The Royal Circle’s Success|
Mrs. Ida M. Vaughn Doing Great | Ch 4 |
Long e Hreawnis
The Supreme Royal Circle of
Friends of the World, a Fraternal (In-
surance) Organization, operating in
all states of the United States, is
making rapid progress in Kansas City,
having added over 1100 members in
the last two. months,
‘Mrs. Ida M, Vaughn of 1741 Lydia
is doing a great work since becoming
a member; and is organiizng a Local
Circle whose membership is expected
‘to reach 100 by the 30th of this month
when the Campaign closes. Mrs.
Vaughn would like for all of her
friends to see her or call her over,
‘the phone as she is anxious for them
to get the benefits derived trom be-
‘ng member of this order.
The Royal Circle benefits a mem-
ber while living, as well as taking
care of them in death. The joining.
fee for this campaign which closes on
the night of the 30th of November at
the New Dreamland Hall on Cottage
and Vine streets is $3.50. The total
cost to stay in the Order is only $1.25
per month and NO TAXES, A mem-
ber receives when sick $7.00 per
week, when accidently injured $7.00
per week, pays at death $160.00 and
places at the grave of each deceased
ae ‘A mounment worth $400.00.
On the night of the ace joint
meeting of all Local Circles’ to be
held at the Hall mentioned abofe, and
‘a large class will be made whiph will
be composed of the Can@idates
brought in by the several members,
There will be plenty of good things
to eat as all Candidates and members
are going to bring @ basket.
‘Those desiring information about
the Order can obtain same by seeing
any member or calling at the Royal
Circle Office located at 1834 Paseo
where they will find Mr. A. L. Rich-
mond, Supreme Supervisor of the
‘Missouri and Kansas jurisdictions.
Phones, Bell Grand 2048 and 2471.
PLAYER PIANO OWNERS!
Get these dandy “BLUES” Songs for your Piano. The only
‘ONE DOLLAR Music Roll made
“Dardanella Blues”
“You Can't Keep a Good Man Down.”
“Early Mornin’ Blues”
“Somebody's Got My Man”
“Million Dollar Blues” i
‘The whole list sent prepaid upon receipt of $8.50, Only a few
more left. Better hurry!
‘Address OWENS INC., Kansas City, Mo. (Dept. 8.)
ee eee
ee
WHEATLEY PROVIDENT HOS |
PITAL. ——————_
Eight Months Free Service Report.
‘The Wheatley Provident Hospital
which is located on Forest Avenue
near 19th street is also a beneficiary
of this united effort. While the Char-
ity Ward of the Hospital is limited to
nx eds, these pave been used to
capacity. Free sérvices rendered to
fifty-one different patients in this de
partment amounted to $1,431.60 or an
average of $178.70 per month.
Clinic.
‘The Clinic has done a remarkable
service. The report from March to
September show a total of five hun-
dred and fifty-three free treatments
which would have cost three thousand
two hundred and five dollars ($3,205.)
COMMUNITY SERVICE URBAN
LEAGUE.
‘The statistics of the Community
Service Urban League shows that a
efinite plece of service has been ren-
‘dered to the Community, Report for
‘twelve months:
56 different groups met weekly or
monthly.
514 different meetings.
918 average attendance,
8.898 total attendance,
48 special meetings.
10.571 Total attendance,
‘The parlors of the Center are al-
ways open to groups of men, women
‘and children and the best supervision
is always maintained,
‘The program of the League also tn-
‘cludes social investigations as a basis
of activities, free employment service,
educational and personal efficiency
campaigns and popular recreation.
BUY NOW---He Who Hesitates Will Never Win
| IT ALWAYS PAYS TO BUY KANSAS CITY PROPERTY
Our facilities are the largest and the bett either to buy, exchange or sell for you.
| SEE US FIRST ALWAYS—THEN YOU WILL SEE NO OTHER
| WILLIAMS & JACKSON
Real Estate and Investments
Office---1704 E, 12th St. Kansas City, Mo. Pe Steere. iit
H Comin;
Season--Nov. /th-28th
: | Rev. Frank Jesse Peck
Ex-Pastors: Rev. W. H. Peck
, Rev. Wm. H. Thomas
— Rt. Rev. H. B. Parks
Will Occupy the Pulpit During this Season.
Old Fashion Revival now on, Conducted by
REV. P. W. DeLYLE
A A Real Gospel Preacher. HEAR HIM.
Miss Mary E. Evans
The well known Evangelist will begin at Allen Chapel Nov. 21st. |
COTTAGE AND VINE STREETS
Can be rented any afternoon or evening for dances,
parties, banquets, ete. Rates reasonable, Call Wayman
Boxx, Melrose 2548.W. ‘
POSSESSION AT ONCE
Beautiful home, solid brick, in best all Colored neighbor-
hood in Kansas City. Large lot and double garage. Priced
to sell quick. Terms to suit.
CRAMER INVESTMENT CO.
15TH AND BROOKLYN
Benton 4038 Clifton 678
Lp ect cnet emanlt eatin
Wet | ———————_
lig Geel,
woneteess || BUY NOW--
dey tor cur femme Book |i) OU KIN VV =
assess TOWED TERED BS, tt
Te Lane oe a eR,
eV 1% KX |
A Rev Y \ |
(Cx ba |
Po Ae ime 5 al)
ee
es Seen el nary © ee
gw is OKee &
ee Sahat Aneel pene Td
= Sh ee
Sa Meee
Sasa eae Bg
Nile Queen Building—Home of Nile Queen Preparations
An U: al i
nusual Opportunity
fi id ible of | i I f $50.00
Se ee ee tccits Nala pies ss
cover city, county 0: travel entire state tervtory doing special
organization work. The Nile Queen Corporation now being,
organized on a profit-sharing, basis is putting into operation
a new plan which offers » Bilt edge opportunity to small
free
Wide awake men and women who want to make real money
or have their savings earn substantial dividends, cannot
afford to overlook this opportunity,
naan ‘Nile Queen rte i >
Kashmir Chemical Co.
3423 Indiana Avenue Chicago
24TH AND VINE STS. 12TH ST. AND WOODLAND AVE.
LOVE'S THEATRES
The Only Theatres in the City Owned, Operated and Directed by Negroes. Always the Best Shows in town
Love's Theatre No.1 and Love's Theatre No. 2 Sunday and Monday November 14th and 15th THE MOST SENSATIONAL FILM OF THE SEASON "THE REVENGE of TARZAN"
By EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS Tarzan back from his soft life in Europe and America finds in the jungle a series of adventures that will send thrills tingling down your spine.
S E E THE APE-MAN CALL THE BEAST OF THE JUNGLE THE WRECK AND EXPLOSION OF THE YACHT TARZAN SWIM MILES TO SAFETY HUNDREDS OF WILD BEASTS IN THEIR NA TIVE HAUNTS TARZAN HUNT HIS FOOD IN THE JUNGLE TARZAN KILL A FULL-GROWN LION BARE-HANDED.
CITY NEWS
No.1 TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH AND 17TH SPECIAL ATTRACTION
LOUISE GLAUM in "Love Madness"
LOUISE GLAUM HAS A ROLE WHICH IS CONCEDED TO BE THE STRONGEST OF HER NOTEWORTHY CAREER. IN IT SHE LAYS BARE THE SOUL OF A WOMAN, AND HER STRUGGLE FOR HAPPINESS IS ONE OF THE FINEST BITS OF SCREEN ENTERTAINMENT THAT THIS OR ANY OTHER SEASON HAS GIVEN US.
Fox News Comedy
Admission for this production: Adults 25c, Children 11c.
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH AND 19TH
An ALLAN DAWN Production
"In the Heart of a Fool"
From William Allen White's Epic Novel of American Life.
THIS IS THE MUCH TALKED OF PRODUCTION THAT MADE SUCH A HIT AT NEWMAN'S THEATRE. MR. WHITE, THE AUTHOR OF THIS PRODUCTION, DID NOT LIKE THE SCREEN VERSION OF HIS BOOK OWING TO THE PROMINENCE GIVEN CERTAIN CHARACTERS IN THE PLAY.
"IN THE HEART OF A FOOL" WILL STAND OUT AS ONE OF THE GREAT PICTURES OF THE SEASON. No Advance in Prices. Comedy.
"GIVE TO CHARITY UNTIL IT HURTS."—Allied Charities.
Mrs. Virginia Price, 2626 Highland avenue, who has been ill is slowly improving.
The friends of Mrs. F. F. Tubbs, 1704 Cleveland will regret to learn of her continued illness. We wish for her a speedy recovery.
Madame Lyda Slaughter-Wilson, the popular hair culturist and manufacturer of toilet preparations was in the City last week, after touring certain sections of the South. She reports her work growing rapidly and all of her agencies doing a flourishing business.
Mrs. Julia Houston who underwent an operation at the Bell Memorial Hospital has sufficiently recovered to be at her residence, 1615 Linwood Blvd. She wishes to thank all those friends who rendered kindness to her during her illness.
Editor of the Kansas City Sun—
Please look up a woman by the name of Sarah Polk; when last heard of she was living at 205 Cherry street, Kansas City, Mo. I am stranded here in a hospital and would like to find my mother. Carlos B. Cores, Military Hosital, Veracruz, Ver. Mexico.
DIXON RECITAL A SUCCESS.
The recital by Miss Willie Dixon last Friday evening at the Second Baptist church was successful in points of attendance and rendition of the program. Miss Dixon is a Lincoln High School product and the talent exhibited by her reflects much credit on that school and her music instructor, Mrs. L. J. Bacote. She was ably assisted by Mrs. Lella Allen and Miss Lessie King.
The Masonic Choir was entertained on its regular meeting night. November 8th in honor of the President, Mrs. Mary E. Boyd's fifteenth wedding anniversary by one of the members, Mrs. Evelyn Baker at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Duncan, 1208 Euclid avenue, Pineapple Punch, Fruit Salad, Braed and butter sandwiches, coffee, brick ice cream and cake were served. Visiting guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Whitney, Dr. and Mrs. Radford, Mr. Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baker, Mr. W. B. McClerkin, Dr. and Mrs. Bunch and Mr. Will Baker. A delightful evening was spent playing games.
24TH AND
LO
The Only Theatr
Love's
Su
“TH
By EDGAR
S E E THE APE-MAN CAL
Topics of the Day
No. 1 TUESDAY
LOUISE G
LOUISE GLAUM HAS A
NOTEWORTHY CAREER. IN
STRUGGLE FOR HAPPINESS
THAT THIS OR ANY OTHER
Fox News
Admission
THURSDAY
"In the
From Wit
THIS IS THE MUCH TA
MAN'S THEATRE. MR. WH
SCREEN VERSION OF HIS
ACTERS IN THE PLAY.
"IN THE HEART OF A F
OF THE SEASON.
Episode No. 3, Phanton Foe.
CARD OF THANKS.
I wish to thank our many friends for their deeds of kindness and wards of sympathy, during the long illness and death of my beloved wife, Emma C. Hopkins, who departed this life November 2, 1920, also for the beautiful floral emblems. I pray God's blessings on all.
Isaiah Hopkins, Husband.
The Roberts Automobile Co., for the second time sold to Dr. E. A. Eagleson whose dental offices are located at 12th and Woodland, a beautiful new Chalmers touring car. The first time Dr. Eagleson was so well satisfied with his car that he declared if he ever had to purchase another car, it would be from the Roberts Automobile Co. He says he is better satisfied with this car than the first.
The Roberts Automobile Brokers are located at 1509 E. 18th street. Every purchaser is satisfied.
A DESERVING LEADER.
Among the large number of Colored men who rendered yoeman service to the party in the recent campaign none stands out with more prominence or were more active in their efforts for Republican success than Prof. G. A. Page, proprietor of the well known Shoe Store at 1507 E. 18th street. While living in the Eighth Ward Prof. Page's activites were not confined to that territory but in all sections of the City where our people lived, he was found holding conferences, working up enthusiasm, urging loyalty and doing everything possible to inspire our men and women to assist in rolling up this splendid majority that brought victory to our party. The Sun is proud of Prof. Page and his earnest devotion to the principals of the party and firmly believe that when the appointments to office are made, he should be among those recognized for faithful service. By education, training and ability he is fitted for any place in Jackson county that requires a high class capable educated man. We're for Page.
We Save You Money!
O'CONNELL
FLOWER SHOP
N. W. Cor. Indep. and Oak Sts.
Flowers for All Occasions
Phones: Bell Main 2402
Home Harrison 3781.
Wm. G. O'Connell, Mgr.
AND VINE STS.
Theatres in the City O
He's Theat
Sunday and
HE RE
OGAR RICE BURROUGHS Tarzan
IN CALL THE BEAST OF THE JUN
TIVE HAUNTS
The Day
SDAY AND WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
SPECIAL ATTRAC
HE GLAUM in "Love
AS A ROLE WHICH IS CONCEDED
ER. IN IT SHE LAYS BARE THE S
INESS IS ONE OF THE FINEST B
OTHER SEASON HAS GIVEN US.
Amission for this production: Adults 25
SDAY AND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER
An ALLAN DAWN Product
the Heart of
from William Allen White's Epic Novel
TH TALKED OF PRODUCTION THA
R. WHITE, THE AUTHOR OF THIS
HIS BOOK OWING TO THE PROM
OF A FOOL" WILL STAND OUT AS
No Advance in Prices.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20
Episode No. 9, Bride 13.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920
Henry Toole, one of Rock Hill's best known Colored citizens, was buried in that city Sunday. Toole was a Democrat and stuck to the white men through the reconstruction times and was highly respected by the white people of Rock Hill. The honorary pallbearers were white men. A white undertaker also had charge of the funeral. A large crowd attended the funeral, however, but there were only about fifteen Negroes present.
ST. STEPHENS BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. J. W. Hurse, Pastor.
Last Sunday the pastor preached to a good house a very strong sermon.
1 Peter 2:9 subject "God's Call to Consecration"...The Sunday School was opened on time with the efficient Superintendent...B. Y. P. U. was called to order by President. Class No. 1, taught by Mrs. Amanda Lawson, rendered an excellent program. Class No. 1 was banner. Evening services were very effective. The pastor arose and chanted "A Charge to Keep I Have." He preached from Matt. 19:27. His sermon was full of thought. There were five additions to the church...All our sick are doing fine...The Mission Circle meets every Thursday; Sister Lillie Wiliams, Pres. The public is welcome to all services. Collection $73.48.
COLORED PEOPLE CELEBRATE
The Colored republicans of the 11th ward celebrated the recent victory at Dreamland Hall, 22nd and Vine streets last Thursday night. A large crowd was present and addresses were made by Ex-Mayor Beardsley, Cameron Orr, Fred Richardson and others. Mrs. Abernathy presided.
Call Clifton 1982. Jeff Lunch. We send it.
WILLA M. PEEBLES
Notary Public
1803 E. 18th St.
Bell Phone E. 999
Captain No. 1—Mrs. Minervia Alkens, 1011 Oak. M. 1394.
Mrs. Cora Henderson, Mrs. Eugene Lacy, Mrs. Christene Simms, Mrs. Ella Alexandra, Mrs. Francis Brown, Mrs. Lutie Sewell, Mr. Robert Barnhill, Mr. James Stephenson, Mr. David Moore.
Captain No. 2—Mrs. A. Bond, 815 Independence Ave. M. 2771.
Mrs. Mayme Scott, Mrs. Carrie Dysart, Mrs. George Moore, Mrs. Bertha Brown, Mrs. Abbie Jones, Mrs. Mary Campbell, Mrs. Bessie Austin, Mrs. Christena Barnard, Mrs. Maud Randall.
Captain No. 3—Mrs. Vergena Cavell, 1226 Woodland, Clifton 4258.
Mrs. Agnes Johnson, Mrs. Clara Waldon, Mrs. Eva Baker, Mrs. Emma Johnson, Mrs. Amy Ward, Mrs. Maria Garrett, Mrs. Willa May Staple, Mrs. Clara Butler, Mrs. Alice Cavell.
Captain No. 4—Mrs. Josephine Abernathy, 2429 Tracy avenue, Grand 2982.
Mrs. Daisy Hayes Roberts, Mrs. Lucilia Williams, Mrs. Eva Herald, Mrs. Olivia Moore, Mrs. Elizabeth Stokes, Mrs. Ethel Kemp, Mrs. Wm. Arnold, Mr. Henry Clayton. Captain No. 5—Mrs. W. H. Prince, 1604 E. 10 street, Clifton 3773. Mrs. Addie Tucker, Mrs. G. E. Horsey, Mrs. Gertrude Lay, Mrs. Luisa Crawford, Mrs. Ella Eleandra, Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs. Mary T. Brown, Mrs. L. A. Glimore, Mr. R. T. Hale.
* —ANNOUNCEMENT.—
* THE BIGELOW MISSION. . .
* A. M. E.
* Doors stands ajar Friday, Aug-
ust 13, 1920. Eleven o'clock serv-
ices Sunday morning.
* 2:30 o'clock p. m., Sunday school
* 8:30 o'clock Preaching services.
* Tuesday night—Class meeting.
* Wednesday night, Prayer meeting.
* 6:00 o'clock, Bible Class.
* Rev. Mrs. L. B. Aleman Myers.
* Pastor
* 534 Lydia Ave., Kansas City, Mo.
* 534 Lydia Ave., Kansas City, Mo. *
*
Dr. Pryor's Japo Wonder Soap for
beautifying men's hair. A new and
scientific discovery. Will not burn or
turn the hair red. Simply wash the
hair with Japo Soap and it becomes
soft and wavy. For sale by all Druggists. Price $1.00. Manufactured by the Pryor Chemical Co., Chicago.
On Sale at:
Smith's Drug Store, 1301 E. 18th Street
People's Drug Store, 18th and Paseo
Distributor of all Japo Goods.
Constance Talmadge in Two Weeks Episode No. 6, Bride 13. Comedy
Watch This Team.
THURSDAY & FRIDAY, NOV. 18 and 19.
SATURDAY, NOV. 20.
Episode No. 12, Hidden Danger.
Episode No. 7, Ruth of the Rockies.
We sell gold fish, puppies, canaries, birds, pets of all kinds. 1421 Main street.
TAXI
Suits as Low as $28.00 Extra Pants.
Suits as Low as $28.00 Extra Pants.
BON TON TAILORS
Kansas City, Mo.
1715 Brooklyn Ave.
I
Johnson Floral Co. is now at your service at 19th and Paseo. Bell Phone Grand 3081. Our service is strictly high class. Special prices on all funeral designs.
Call Clifton 1982. Jeff Lunch. We send it.
National Park
A. FORD
558 Walnut Street, Just
SAVE ON YOUR D
Quality——Se
National Packing House
A. FORD, Manager.
558 Walnut Street, Just North of Si
SAVE ON YOUR MEAT PURCH
Quality Service Val
Open till
Open till 10:30 P. M.
PETER J.
With MR. JOHN X. BROWN
Is putting on a Million Do-
nity (90) days, in
This Company is thorou-
ated under the Insurance Law
has three (3) types of poli-
ment, A Twenty-Pay Life and
service.
Look up our standing
HOME OFFICE, 15
Bell Clifton 2750.
ST. AND WOODLAND
Always the Best S
Theatre N
4th and 15th
ARZA
that will send thrills tingling down your
TO SAFETY HUNDREDS OF WILD
LION BARE-HANDED.
With MR. JOHN X. BROWN, as its Local District Manager,
Is putting on a Million Dollar Campaign, for the next ninety (90) days, in the State of Missouri.
This Company is thoroughly organized and incorporated under the Insurance Laws of Missouri, and at present has three (3) types of policies—A Twenty-Year Endowment, A Twenty-Pay Life and an Ordinary Life at your service.
Look up our standing and compare our rates.
HOME OFFICE, 1518 EAST 18TH ST.
Bell Clifton 2750. Kansas City, Missouri.
Continuous from 2:30 P. M. Sunday.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH
K. Beach's Tremendous Drama of Alaska
e Brand"
VEMBER 16TH
ous Drama of Alaska
Brand"
with
Kay Laurell and Russell Simpson
Comedy.
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 17TH.
Hart in "Betwee
A thrilling Hart Picture.
es of the Day. Fox News
URSDAY & FRIDAY, NOV. 18 and 19.
Calmadge in Two
Code No. 6, Bride 13. Comedy
SATURDAY NOV. 20
NOVEMBER 17TH.
"Between M
art Picture.
Fox News
AY, NOV. 18 and 19.
ge in Two We
3. Comedy
NOV. 20
Call Clifton 1982. Jeff Lunch. We send it.
Cut the high cost of living by buying your meats at the National Packing House Market, 558 Walnut.
Packing House Market
ORD, Manager.
Just North of Sixth Street
FOR MEAT PURCHASES
Service Value
Leaf Lard, Special 10 lbs.$2.50
Fresh Pig Hams.....25½
Small Pig Shoulders.....25½
Pork Chops, Today only.....30
Fresh Side Pork, Lean.....30
Pure Rendered Lard.....25
Compound Lard.....20
Country Spare Ribs.....25
Cine Bones, 3 lbs.....25
Fresh Hog Melts, 2 lbs.....15
Fresh Hog Liver, 2 lbs.....15
Prime Fat Nippy Cheese.....40
Wilson's Nut Oleo.....25
BLUE VALLEY BUTTER.....66
---
Mid-West Life Insurance Company
Mid-West Life Insurance Company
DOWN, as its Local District Manager,
Dollar Campaign, for the next
in the State of Missouri.
Boroughly organized and incorpor-
Laws of Missouri, and at present
policies—A Twenty-Year Endow-
e and an Ordinary Life at your
ing and compare our rates.
1, 1518 EAST 18TH ST.
Kansas City, Missouri.
ND AVE.
ES
Shows in town
No. 2
th
AN"
our spine.
OLD BEASTS IN THEIR NA
nd"
Page 5
The Ford Sedan Meets All Family Requirements
T
Delivered at Your Door Full of Gas and Oil.
With Our Liberal Terms, Why Wait for a Street Car?
$295.00 Down, $57.57 per Month Including All Interest and Insurance.
Call Us and Let Us Go Into Further Details.
Page 6
THE KANSASCITYSUN PUBLISHED WEEKLY
All communications should be addressed to
the Kansas City Sun, 1805 East 13th
Street
Bell Phone East 999
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year ..... $2.00
Six Months ..... 1.00
Three Months ..... 6.00
Canada and Foreign Countries $1.00 ad-
ditional.
CUMBER
OF
MILNO PRESS
FIRST IN
SERVICE
THE FUTRE OF THE NEGRO IN
THE REPUBLICAN PARTY.
That "Man is the architect of his own fortune" is as true in the realm of politics as it is in all other departments of human endeavor. To be able to determine the part which the Negro will play in the future activities of the Republican party; it will be necessary to draw asid the curtain of the past and take a peep at his record in the days gone by. Almost immediately after the Emancipation the Negro was given the Right of Franchise, and just how sacred he kept this God given right, let the political historian tell.
The Period of the Reconstruction. Most of the political writers of today hold to the opinion that this was a period of "Destruction" instead of "Construction" in as much as it was during this period that the Negro's "Star of hope" shone brightest and in turn, grew darkest. His failure to catch the proper vision of his responsibilities of citizenship and of political leadership, contributed, largely, to the bringing into existence, those damnable laws that has ever since blocked his "pathway" to success and destroyed his political influence for more than a generation. Political "Greed" political "Graft" political "Jealousies", political "Assassination" political "Ignorance", lack of political "Leadership", lack of "Race Loyalty" are just a few of the agencies that helped to "Wreck" the political fortunes of our past, and without their elimination, will "Wreck" our fortunes of the future. The sweeping Victory of November second has revived the drooping spirits of the American Negro, and he sees, in the distance, the dawning of a new day. A day, which he can, by methods of "Right Living" by "Honesty" by "Fragulity", by "Loyalty" by "Industry" by "Love for his People", make a day of "Joy, Happiness, and Prosperity", for the millions yet unborn; and this too, under the glorious Banner of the Grand Old Republican Party. Harding carries in his hand a Beacon of Hope and of Unity, directing en to those higher planes of Citizenship and of Duty where "Race-hatred" and "Race Discrimination" will become a thing of the past and all worthy men will be given a chance to back in the Sunlight of Freedom and of Opportunity. Let's Follow Him.
STATE TEACHERS' MEETING.
Hundreds of Colored teachers are in the City this week attending a meeting of the State Teachers' Association which is holding the largest session in its history in this City. Many prominent educators are among the number and the daily programs have been highly interesting. Prof. G. G. Williams of Boonville is President; A. C. Macin of Hannibal is Secretary. At the opening Session Thursday held in the Paso Y. M. C. A., Prof. G. N. Grisham delivered the address of welcome; the response was by Prof. Frank L. Williams of the Summer High School, St. Louis, after which the President gave his annual address. On Friday evening an informal reception was held which was largely attended by both citizens and visitors.
"IN THE DAYS OF PLENTY PREPARE FOR HAR DTIMES."—Allied Charities.
A
THEY SAY
—That the old fashioned family who asked all their friends to Sunday dinner has died out. Yes indade.
—That the buffet flats make their own whiskey. Is that so? We don't know, do you?
—That the worst kind of scamp is the fellow who secretly abuses his friends.
—That reliability is an admirable trait and it is surely needed in this race of ours.
—That when a man loses a good wife, he looks like he has passed through a flint mill.
—That whenever you see a fellow exceedingly happy and thinks the world is his friend, he has either inherited something or found his wife's pocket book.
—That two certain well known and very popular married women have ceased to be friends all because of an argument in which one said: "Oh you ain't so much; you wouldn't be a thing if my husband hadn't helped your husband." Oh my, that's too bad.
—That a well known business man who has had a world of business in another man's home for the past six months was seen hurrying down the street about ten o'clock the other evening with his coat and shirt in his hand. Wonder what was the trouble.
—That a certain man who has been leaving his wife every spring and coming back to her every winter, tried the same thing recently but this time when he attempted to use his key in the door, he found on another lock on the door; and when he rang the door bell another man came to the door and informed him that his thought-to-be-wife had a divorce and had married him. Poh fellow.
Call Fairfax 380 or Faifax 4422
Johnson Floral Company is now at your service at 19th and Paseo. Bell Phone Grand 3081. Our service is strictly high class. Special prices on all funeral designs.
A GROWING ENTERPRISE
No more rapidly growing enterprise can be found in the West than the Dennis B. Owens Music Co., located at 312 East 12th street, Kansas City, Mo. Orders reach them constantly for large orders of music rolls. Only last week the Pace & Handy Music Co. of New York City, placed an order with this firm for $500.00 in music rolls. The President, Mr. Dennis B. Owens is an energetic, intelligent and far sighted young man and deserves the patronage of everyone in need of music rolls.
St. Stephen's Baptist church sent the Kansas City Sun a generous contribution for its accuracy in publishing the church's notes each week.
The Sun deeply appreciates this contribution and thanks Rev. Hurse and the members of his congregation for their kindness and thoughtfulness.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920
Classified Wants and Rooms to Rent
WANTED—Stenographer who takes dictation. Apply at 1518½ E. 18th street. Community Service, Urban League.
FOR SALE—2408 Campbell street, stone and slate house, six rooms and bath, modern except heat. Lot 65x65. Cash or payments. Call at 2405 Campbell street. 13-20
FO RRENT—Front room furnished. Modern with heat. Bell phone Mel rose 5559W.
OPTICIAN BINGAMAN
is the best place to buy glasses. We
guarantee every pair for one year.
FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnished
room near car line to man or
man and wife. House modern. 2426
Montgall avenue.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, mod-
ern. 2002 E. 11th street. Clifton
2337. 6-13
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, Mod-
ern. 2316 Campbell St. Telephone
Delaware 1786. 6-13
FOR RENT—Furnished room in a
modern apartment to a nice first
class young woman desirous of being
a companion for a young widow. Bell
phone 505. 1609 E. 26th street.
FOR RENT—Rooms strictly mod-
ern, well heated, near three car lines,
men preferred. 1119 Garfield Ave.
Bell phone Melrose 615W.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms at the Kinsler Apartments with heat and electric lights. 14th and Michigan. Bell Melrose 5339W.
HOMES TO SELL.
6 room modern frame, 19th and Montgall, $1,800, terms to suit. See us for other bargains, $100 first payent, balance like rent. Service Realty Co., 2122 Vine street, Bell phone Clifton 2082. Home. Benton 4011.
AGENTS WANTED
Live Agents to introduce our won
dertful Hair Pomade among the fami
lies. No money required.
Address THE DILL COMPANY.
Norristown, Pa.
FOR RENT—Two nicely furnished
rooms to men only. Modern. Bell
phone Clifton 4818.
TOBACCO OR SNUFF HABIT
CURED.
Harmless remedy. Guaranteed
Sent on trial. If it cures, costs you
$1. If it fails, costs nothing. SUPER
B COMPANY, G. S. Baltimore, Md
JAMES W. AND JULIA SMITH
1424 Garfield Avenue.
Neatly furnished rooms.
BLUE GOOSE CAFE
For good things to eat go to Blue Goose Cafe, formerly at 12th and Woodland, now at 1323 $ \frac{1}{2} $ E. 18th.
MRS. T. H. ELLIOTT.
H. L. KINSLER
Real Estate and Loan Agent and
Notary Public. Furniture Loans made
to people with reference. Payments
by weekly installments.
Office: 918 E. 21st street.
Homesekers Read This.
Myrtle 2800—Frame store room
building with four rooms in rear.
Price $1800. $300 down, balance $15
per month and interest.
Flora 2449—Frame duplex with
water and gas. Price $3000. $400
down, balance $20.00 per month and
interest.
Highland 914—Five room cottage
with water and gas. Price $2200.
$200 down, balance $25.00 per month
including interest.
Brooklyn 807—Nine room frame 30
foot lot, modern. Price $3500. $400
down, balance $25.00 per month and
interest.
Highland 2455—Two houses, four rooms each, electric lights, water and gas, newly decorated. Price $2600. $200 down, balance $25.00 per month and interest.
Euclid 2528—Four room house, water in. Price $1400. $100 down. Balance $12.00 per month and interest.
Michigan Southeast corner of Howard—Two ten-room houses, 50-foot lot, water and gas. Price $5000. $500 down, balance easy.
Remember that we make first and second loans. Also short time loans on household goods, piano, etc. If you have not all of the first payment we might help you to get it. We have helped many other to prosper and we may help you. Our business is strictly confidential. See Kaiser, Bell Grand 4900. Home Delaware 950
Negro Business and Professional Directory of Greater Kansas City
AUTOMOBILES
AUTO TRANSFER, BAGGAGE AND
EXPRESS.
LOVE & LOVE, 1106½ E. 19th Street,
Bell Phone Grand 3163.
GUSTIN SERVICE CO. General Auto-
mobile repairing . 2117 Vine street,
Melrose 3473W.
HASTY TRANSFER CO., 710 E. 9th
St. N. C. Brinson, Manager. Home
Phone Delaware 1257; Residence,
Melrose 3492J.
BAKERIES
HOME BAKERY. Mrs. A. Compton,
Prop. 1801 East 18th Street.
EVANS' HOME BAKERY. Collis
Evans, Prop. Pastry that pleases;
also lunches. 2405 Vine St. Bell
Phone Clinton 3637.
BARBECUE AND LUNCH
BARTEE & VERTER, 1706 East 12th street, Open day and night. Bell phone, E. 3679W; Home phone, E 4133.
BARBER SHOPS
14ND
SHINING PARLOR, 1809 E 12TH
J. W. Tatum, Prop.
BEAUTY PARLORS AND HAIR- DRESSERS.
MRS. LIZIEZ GARY, Poro Hair Dresses, Scalp Treatments a specialty 1118 Vine street. Bell phone 377J9.
MME. HENRIETTA V. BIGGERS, Hair Culturist, Scalp Treatments a specialty. 1800 E. 13th St.
MRS. S. M. WINSTON, S. F. S., Wonderful Hair Preparations, Mail order business a specialty, 1720 E. 24th. Bell phone, Melrose 3586J.
MRS. NANNA REED, Poro Hairdressing Parlor, 1507 E. 12th. Bell Phone Melrose 1583-W.
MME. L. GRAY—Mayo Johnson System, Hairdressing; Chiropody; Manicuring; facial and body massage. 3536 Drury.
MADAM ORA GORDON, Hair Culturist. All goods manufactured by Mme. Gordon, 1212 E. 16th. Bell Phone Maple 3847J.
MRS. B. J. HODGE and MRS. H. JOHNSON, Sanitary Poro Beauty Parlor, Manicuring and Massage 1804 E. 12th St. Bell Clifton 5507 PORO HAIR DRESSING. Mrs. Elora Walton, 1907 East 13th. Bell Phone Melrose 2751-W.
MRS. ADA MONTGOMERY—Hair Culturist and Manufacturer Mail Order business a specialty. 1212 Euclid Ave. Bell Phone Melrose 3453-3.
HUMAN HAIR STORE, Mme. S. A. Bell, Coiffure Artiste, 923 Campbell St. Bell Phone Main 1748W.
MRS. CORA D. WILLIAMS. Poro Hair Dresser, body and facial massage. Manicuring. 1317 E. 22d St. Bell Phone Grand 2319.
MRS. JAMES BARLOW, (Mme. C. J. Walker system), hairdresser 262 parallel, Kansas City, Kansas, Bell phone, Fifthed 4484-R.
MRS. B. A. CLARKSTON, Hair Dresser, Shampooing, Weaving, and All Kinds of Scalp Treatment. 1309 Highland Ave. MDME. E. F. ADAMS, Criterion Hair dresser, manicuring, scalp culture. 1304 Euclid. Bell phone Melrose 3519W.
CAFES
JOHNSON'S CAFE, Home Cooking;
Lunch and Short Order. 415 E. 19th
St. Mrs. M. J. Johnson, Prop.
JAS. BARLOW, FIX IT MAN—Plumbing,
Gas Fitting, Electric Repairing.
Rec. 326 Parallel Ave., Bell phone
Fifield 484R. Kansas City, Kas.
CLEANERS
BLEDSOE CLEANING & TAILORING CO. Pressing and repair, 1609% E. 12th street, Bell phone Melrose 753 J.
HASTY CLEANERS AND DYERS. Bell Phone Clifton 376. 1510 E. 14th street. J. Smith. Prop.
SATISFACTORY CLEANERS AND TAILORS, 1317 E. 18th. Bell Phone Grand 2887. T. F. Tubbs. Prop.
Cleaveland Cleaners, Dyers and Tailors Hats cleaned and blocked, 2212 E. 18th street.
Wm. T. STANLEY, Cleaning, Pressing and Repair, 1611 E. 12th street. Bell phone Clifton 3418.
CASH AND CALL CLEANERS AND DYERS. J. Smith. Prop., 1510 E. 14th Street.
COAL COMPANIES
PAYNE COAL CO., 1902½ Vine St.
Bell Phone Clifton 4892; Home Benton
4132.
CARTER'S CONFECTIONERY AND
CIGARS, 14th and Michigan. Bell
Phone Clifton 4945. Mrs. Robert
Carter, Prop.
CONTRACTORS.
H. I. HOCKETT, Contractor for paint-
ing, paperhanging, glazing and
varnishing. Grand 3163. 1913 Park
Avenue.
DENTISTS.
DR. W. S. STEPHENS, N. W. Cor. 12
and Vine streets, Bell phone Clifton 1632.
DERMATOLOGISTS.
DeNEAL MODERN METHOD, 1515 E.
12th. Bell Phone Clifton 4631.
DRESSMAKING.
MRS. L. E. DADE, Dresemaking and Plain Sewing. 1522 Buelid Ave.
Bell Phone Clifton 3350.
DRUG STORES.
McCAMPBELL & HOUSTON, Prescription druggists. 2300 and 2432
iVne.
GROCERIES & MEATS.
C. L. WILLIAMS, Groceries and
Meats, 1508 E. 24th St. Bell phone Melrose 1437W.
HOTELS.
THE DELMAR APARTMENT HOTEL, 1204-6 Highland, H. A. Grayson, Prop. Bell Phone Melrose 4538J.
HOTEL CUMMINGS, 1711 Walnut St. Bell Phone Grand 3727.
INSURANCE AGENCIES
E. L. B. BARBER, Insurance, Sick Accident, Fire, Life. 1715 E. 18th Bell Phone Clifton 412.
JEWELERS
JEWELERS.
I. A. WILSON, 1616 W. Ninth street,
Kansas City, Mo. Bell Phone, Main
3859.
LAUNDRIES
HAND LAUNDRY, 1508 E. 12th. Bell
Phone Clifton 4400. Canyon & Hogan,
Props.
LAWYERS.
E. A. SHACKELFORD, Attorney-at-Law, 511 Minnesota Avenue, Kanas city, City, Kas. Bell phone Fairfax 3866.
FORREST B. ANDERSON, Lawyer 529 State Avenue, Kansas City, Kas Bell Phone West 1050.
LUNCH ROOM
WILLIAMS LUNCH, 2102 Vine street,
Chill, Sandwiches, short orders.
John Williams, Prop.
STREETS HOUSE OF GOOD EATS,
2428 Vine. Bell phone Clifton 4858.
R. S. Street, prop.
MICHIGAN LUNCH ROOM, F. D.
Clanton, Prop. 1409 Michigan, Bell
Phone Clifton 4181.
MILLINERY
TEACHER OF MILLINERY.
MISS EVA P. WASHINGTON, Hain
Culturist and Teacher of Millinery,
637 Garfield Avenue, Kansas City,
Kansas.
MILLINERY.
FINE MILLINERY. "Old Hats Made
New a Specialty." Mrs. Stella Hubbard,
1667-A East 18th street. Bell
Phone Clifton 4730.
PAINTERS.
WM, COLLINS, PAINT AND PAPER,
1818 E. 18th street. Bell phone
Melrose 5565W.
PHOTOGRAPHERS
J. E. MILLER STUDIO, 1622 East 18th street. Bell phone Clifton 91. THE FAD STUDIO, C. Bruce Santee. Prop. 1613 E. 18th St. Bell phone Clifton 1760.
PRINTERS
GRAY-DAWLEY PRINTING CO.
1603 E. 12th St., Kansas City, Mo.
Bell phone Clifton 1675.
C. A. FRANKLIN, 1309 East 18th St.
Bell Phone, Grand 2988.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS.
SERVICE REALTY AND EMPLOYMENT CO., 2208 Vine street. Home
Benton 4011, Bell, Clifton 2182. W.
V. Harvey, Pres.
T. A. ROSS REALTY CO., 1602 East
12th street. Bell phone Clifton 1675.
Home East 5172.
WILLIAMS & JACKSON, 1704 East
12th St. Both phones, East 1415.
H. L. KINSLER, 918 East Twenty-
first street. Bell phone, Grand
4204. Home phone, Delaware 950.
MUSIC INSTRUCTORS.
CHAS. W. TATTIS, piano tuner, player
piano expert. 1307 Euclid Ave.
Bell Phone Clifton 2446.
SHINING PARLOR
PROF. E. J. MATTHEWS, 1110% Wyandotte street. Shining Parlor, Restore original color on all leather shoes dyed gray, black or bown.
THE BROWN SISTERS. Shining Parlors, 2211% Vine Street. Papers, Cigars, Confections.
SHOE STORE
G. A. PAGE'S SHOE STORE, 1507 E. Eighteenth street. Bell phone, East 1328.
TAILORING
McFADDEN TAILORING CO. 2306
Vine St. Bell Phone Clifton 1069.
E. McFadden, Prop.
EAST 19th STREET TAILORS AND
CLEANERS. 1431. E. 19th. street.
Bell phone Grand 3081. E. W.
Smith. Manager.
UNDERTAKERS.
ADKINS BROS., 2122 Vine St. Both phones. East 4349
A. T. Moore, K. C.'s popular Undertaker. Bell Phone Grand 118,
623 East 17th Street.
Peoples Undertaking Co., formerly Obee & Teeters. 10th and Euclid.
Bell phone, East 1125.
H. B. MOORE, 1820 E. 18th street.
Bell phone Main 3398W. Home
Clifton 5588.
WATKINS BROS., 1729 Lydia avenue.
Bell phone Grand 987, Home Main
7989. Res., Bell East 2381.
H. K. L. Love
O. Blanchard
Johnson Floral Co. is now at your
service at 19th and Paseo, Bell Phone
Grand 3081. Our service is strictly
high class. Special prices on all funeral
designs.
The Home
of
QUALITY EATS
DABNEY & CARTER
Groceries and Meats
Fruits and Vegetables
Telephone Clifton 2987.
2231 Woodland Ave.
DeLuxe Cafe 18 & Paseo
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
First class meals. Prices right.
Special Noon Day
Meals 50 Cents
Musical Entertainment Thursday and Sunday
Evenings.
```markdown
```
A splendid offer for the ambitious woman to do
work in homes of the wealthy and earn from five to
eight day by learning
BEAUTY CULTURE
Through our Correspondence Course.
Music, medicine and law are successfully taught thru
the box, why not BEAUTY?
We teach scalp cure, facial massage, face bleachi-
ing, water waving, manicuring and all secret reco-
session that has a big future before it.
Write for our booklet.
CALIFORNIA SUN PARLOR AND SCHOOL
BEAUTY CULTURE.
North 33rd Street Omaha,
ONEER AUTO LIVERY
Bell Phone Clifton 914
The best equipped Livery Company in the city for
ole. Closed cars and touring cars for funerals, part-
y calls. Each car is operated by the owner and
nt drivers. Cars first class.
A splendid offer for the ambitious woman to do residence homes of the wealthy and earn from five to ten dollars per day
Music, medicine and law are successfully taught through your mail box, why not BEAUTY?
We teach scalp cure, facial massage, face bleaching, marsel waving, water waving, manicuring and all secret recipes of a profession that has a big future before it.
Write for our booklet.
CALIFORNIA SUN PARLOR AND SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE.
PIONEER AUTO LIVERY CO. Bell Phone Clifton 914
The best equipped Livery Company in the city for Colored people. Closed cars and touring cars for funerals, parties and all livery calls. Each car is operated by the owner and all competent drivers. Cars first class.
HOME BARGAIN
Woodland—5 room, modern.
and Harrison—6 room, modern, brick.
Topping—4 room, modern.
Garfield—8 room, modern, brick.
Any of these can be handled on easy term.
Fortune J. Weaver
The Locater
1626 East 18th Street, Opposite Gem Theatre
Clifton 3485
Home, Ben
RS. CADDY JETT LAWY
2305 East 19th St.
City Culture, Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Arching
Dyeing, Bleaching and Manicuring carefully done by a
and competent operators.
Beauty Culture Taught in All Lines
Bell Phone Melrose 4025-W.
HOME BARGAINS
2230 Woodland—5 room, modern. $3000
23rd and Harrison—6 room, modern, brick. $3500
3607 Topping—4 room, modern. $2000
1408 Garfield—8 room, modern, brick. $4500
Any of these can be handled on easy terms.
Fortune J. Weaver
1626 East 18th Street, Opposite Gem Theatre Bell, Clifton 3485 Home, Benton 5886
MRS. CADDY JETT LAWSON
2305 East 19th St.
Beauty Culture, Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Arching Eyebrows,
Dyeing, Bleaching and Manicuring carefully done by skilled
and competent operators.
Beauty Culture Taught in All Lines
Bell Phone Melrose 4025-W.
GOODMAN BROS
Dealers in
NEW AND SECOND-HAND FURNITURE
Stoves a Specialty
Bought, Sold and Exchanged.
6 East 18th Street STORAGE Kansas
BELLE COLLEGE and HAIR EMPO
GOODMAN BROS.
We guarantes to cure all scalp diseases and to grow from 4 to 6 inches of hair in six months with our electric scientific method if treatments are taken according to direction.
The La Belle Preparations Know No Equal and Have No Superiors. Try Them.
Manicuring, Facial Massage and Artistic Hair Dressing a Specialty.
A full line of Toilet Articles, Hair Goods and Hair Dressers' Supplies For Sale Call or write. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Agents Wanted. Can earn from $2.00 to $5.00 per day.
1607 E. 18th St. Mme S. E. LAING, Kansas City, Mo.
Bell phone East 2508W
D
PEARL RILEY, Proprietress.
WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY.
Clifton 914
Chas. J. Adams,
Jesse W. Bell,
Luther Dade,
Clyde Fulcher,
Bill Page,
Buddy Watson.
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE
Home Phone Main 9286
ENT
and Sunday
less.
CITY.
can to do residence
five to ten dollars
course.
taught through your
the bleaching, marse
secret recipes of a
SCHOOL OF
Omaha, Nebraska
VERY CO.
the city for Colored
materials, parties and all
owner and all cem
Chifton 914
GAINS
$3000
$3500
$2000
$4500
easy terms.
Weaver
from Theatre
home, Benton 5866
LAWSON
Arching Eyebrows,
done by skilled
Lines
ROS.
FURNITURE
Clifton 914
Kansas City, Mo. EMPORIUM to Order professional cases and to grow us with our elect
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
ce aah ;
ik For Long Hair and
| ¢ Beautiful Skin.
t Every woman wants a beautiful head
f of hair and lovely complexion. Every
} . H woman wants to make big money. You
i may have BOTH, if you use» HOR-
‘aoe TON-A Hair Grower and FACE Prep-
arations, and the Evelyn Horton Sys-
Honton-a Grew Thie tem. 12 years in use, Never known
Hair, WecanProveit, 10 fail. Guaranteed to grow the hair
in 3 months or your money’ refunded.
Hortona Hair Grower Hortona Temple Grower
Hor-ton-a Special Hor-ton-a Tetter Salve
Hor-ton-a Mint Shampoo Jelly Hor-ton-a Face Bleach
Hortona Beauty Creme Hor-tona Face Powders
Hor-ton-a Vanishing Creme White, flesh, brunette, medium
(Non-greasy—pink and white) sete
Horton-a Deodorant Powder
Hor-ton-a Pressing Oil Hor-ton-a Dipilatory Powder
10,000 Agents Wanted
For sale at all leading drug stores in both Kansas Citys.
EVELYN HORTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY
St. Louis, Missouri,
©. Tucker, Dist. Agent, Clifton 2052.
DENEAL MODERN METHOD
Head Office 1319 East Pine Street
Seattle, Washington.
REAL HAIR DRESSERS VY
ARE IN DEMAND, LEARN THE LATEST METHOD
Our DIPLOMA stands for EFFICIENCY and SERVICE
IT’S “SOMETHING DIFFERENT
Mads and Ming Sep" DENELO CREAMS cad Porden te Merle Sono
Branch School “AGENTS WANTED
) Kas Coy, Mo, Phone Eat 131.
SNe UL te rer.
“THE NEEDY NED YOUR AID”
—Allied Charities.
‘The funeral of Mrs. Polly Booker,|
who died Ootober 30 was held at
Green Chapel under the auspices of
Sprig of Myrtle Temple No. 49, 8. ,
oy
Mrs, L, L, Caston of St, Louis,
[Grand Princess of Missouri was u|
dinner guest of Miss M. J. Canterbury
last Thursday.
Kansas City, Kansas, has the build-
Ing fever; the Masons, K. of P's, and
U. B. F's are planning on building
“new halls,
| Mrs, C.D. Burton of 2612 N. Sth)
‘street has been seriously fil the past
"week. Her relatives and friends wish
her @ speedy recovery. .
Fee Bt ai, she
service is strictly high class. Special
[prices on funeral designs, Johneon
|Floral Con 19th and Paseo. Bell phone
3081 Grand,
Mr. S, M. Johnson of Chandler,
| Okia., was hurried to the bed aide of
‘his sick daughter, Mrs. C. B. Bruton,
jot 2612 N. sth Street
“YOU KNOW NOT WHAT HOUR
YOU MAY NEED SWEET CHAR-
ITY”—Allied Charities,
Mrs, W. T. Vernon was guest of
jhonor at a luncheon given by the
| Ladies’ Art Club of Quindaro at the
[residence of Mrs. J. A. Brown. The
afternoon was a very delightful one
|and all present enjoyed themselves.
| Mossrs, Claude Walker, Clyde Phil-
|lips and Eddie Landor were hosts at
| Hallowe'en party last Monday night
‘given at the home of Mr. Walker,
| Decorations and costumes were beat
tiful and after enjoying music, games
and refreshment the guests departed
saying these three young men were
real entertainers,
8 DAYS—COMMENCING
Last Performance Sunday, November 21.
THE BRONZE BOSTONIANS
Musical Revue Supreme.
35 People A Riot of Fun
A GREAT CAST:
Jerry Mills Medil Thompson
Sidney Kirkpatrick Laura Bowman
Lovie Taylor Blanche Mason
Big Bronze Chorus
Jacksons’ Jazzonian Orchestra
Nothing Like It Since the Days of
WILLIAMS & WALKER.
Largest All Colored Organization on the Road.
Special Prices.
Lewer Flor - - - - - - - - Toand $1.00
Bihy oh Ss eS ee OS AMA IBO
Boxes and Loges - - - - - - - $1.50
Phone Harrison 6931
“The people have placed the re-
sponsibility of front line leadership
on our newspapers, and we have as:
sumed the duties with solemn earnest-
ness. Products of long sacrifice, in
tho days of prosperity, our publishers
Will not fail the people, nor will we
place job-seeking and self promotion
above racial welfare, We know no
North, South, Bast or West, but we
do know results, and that is what we
demand. In previous years the peo-
ple have been cajjoled and fooled into
following blind leadership; now they
have repudiated it everywhere, and
the newspapers must not only point
the way but lead on to victory.”
MONEY TO LOAN
On Diamonds, ree sonal, ay ae Suitcases,
ELGIN LOAN OFFICE
‘AH. P. Harrison 4156 1412 E. 18TH STREET
The Standard Life Insurance Co.
Home Office, 200 Auburn Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
CAPITAL $125,000. Reserve, $500,000.
Business in force, $15,000,000.
‘The strongest and only OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY owned and operated by Colored People.
Before taking out a policy be sure to consult a Standard Life
Agent. For an appointment, phone L. C. Stewart or L. C. Smith.
STEWART & SMITH, Agency Directors.
1515 East 18th St. Kansas City, Mo,
Bell Phone Clifton 4863,
. iT ea ae
;
Davis
; :
avis :
; :
F i |
; ;
- Furniture :
3
;
Co. ;
: 3
; Furniture Bought, Sold and |
;
: Exchanged. :
3
: Come in and look us over.
; 1628 E, 18TH STREET :
;
;
Fe a
SAVE YOUR MONEY!
The W. L. Martin Ladies’ and Gents’
Furnishing Store
Will Show You How to Save Money and Time
Buy Your Children’s Clothing Here.
1313 E, 18th STREET.
M. MYERS,
MERCHANT TAILOR
1433 E. 18th Street
Formerly at 1518 E, 12th (12th & Vine)
At your very earliest convenience, call and look over
our fall and winter stock of hard finished worsteds which
wears better, lasts longer and keeps in better shape. You
have your choice of a large selection of guaranteed abso-
Iutely 100% all pure wool fabries and your garment will
be hand tailored in correct fashion,
Whether you purchase or not we will be glad to show
you our line.
Yours for fine eustom tailoring,
M. MYERS,
Bell Phone, Grand 2963 1433 E, 18th Street
THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
. ‘Will Promote a Full Growth of Hair;
Will also Restore the Strength,
Vitality and the Beauty of the
La Hair, If your Hair is Dry and
, Fae Wy ty
Be san) EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
i oe = If you are bothered with Falling
i, 4 Hair, Dandruff, Itching Scalp, or
‘ any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a
iL jar of EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER.
The remedy contains medical proprieties
i that go to the roots of the Hair stimu
lates the skin, helping nature do its work
Leaves the hair soft and silky. Perfumed with a balm
| of a thousand flowers. The best known remedy for
Heavy and eBautiful Black Eye-Brows, also restores
Gray HC to ite Natural Color. Can be used with Hot
Trice, Sout by Mail, 600; 100 Extra for Postage,
AGENT! OUTFIT.
gist Gromer 1 tangle] 8. D. LYONS, Gen, Agt,, 314 Bast 2d St
eas | Okiahoms ity, Okla,
Willie Herndon, Jr., the seven year
old son of Mr. William Herndon,
1614% Locust street died Saturday
evening, October 30, at the residence
of his aunt, Mrs. Emma Straughter,
3300 Linwood boulevard, The funeral
services were held here Monday, No-
vember ist from Watkins Brothers
Undertaking Parlors, Interment was
in Highland Cemetery.
“HELP RAISE THE MORAL TONE
OF YOUR COMMUNITY.65—Allied
Chafities,
MDME. L. B. HANNERS
Hair Culturist
Using Madame M. B, Jackson's
Preparations.
1314 E. 14TH STREET
Kansas City, Mo.
Rheumatisum
A Remarkable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It.
Tre are te TH koeps ates
ene cae Uetian ee aees
See ae eee el
EAviy ee emer wie?
te ney ceceteseae ala ee
fein dean ote eee ci ger
received was only temporary, Finally,
rinan Satie eg acer
iste Arita atta rena
Pca ste neta ed
Pere ct cal are Sealans
with rheumatism, some of them 70 to.
Re ere ee ee ee
Brera ae
en ee iva nic
Sire acne ene te
eer amen bat ane
bate Tecate ee
Ses etre etnies ea
fea Ran Ee eat taehe vane
re lohs Ut Canaan ge:
Het RS oe ae
Bet ent ca neal io
PRS A
iy he eummerstiere vias
Bt Saree anne” Bek
ee
ag ft tee elt ltsc, cues
ee ge aes te
BEE Ne Aue
THE TOWN OF DEARFIELD,
WELD COUNTY, COLORADO.
Ernest W. Miller, 2208 Vine Street.
Farms, Tracts, Lots—Easy Terms,
Both Phones: Home BeBnton 4011;
Bell Clifton 2182,
| (oa
i Poa ‘
r _ ae
' Aes
\ Bigeye
‘ po
Preeti SS |
Mrs. Allen Moore-Coates, teacher of
piano ‘and violin at the Albert Allen
Studio of Musle, 2735 Highland
Wabash 347.
Page ”
DOWN IT GOES.
“ ‘
DR. WM. ALEXANDER
SCIENTIFIC WATER TREATMENTS
MEDICATED VAPOR BATHS
Why go to Hot Springs or to
he ‘ Excelsior Springs, when you
Ge . can get the name treatment
be \
. bat your door?
1 FAMED) A sepcialty of Rheumatism,
| e : Neuralgia, Nervous Headacke,
| 4 ae Kidney and Bladder troubles,
fi : Lumbago, Dropsy, Heart trou:
i ble, Serofula, Piles, Cancers,
I Old Sores, Weak Lungs, Fe
male Trouble and Gall stones
\ bh Office hours 9:00 to 12:00 A.
\ M., 2:00 to 6:00 P, M. Spec
fal arrangements can be
% made for other hours exeept
x Saturday and Sunday. Lady
“ y attendant can be bad by re
a quest,
1707 EAST 11TH STREET KANSAS CITY, MO:
Bell Phone Clifton 4704
au tte A eh oan Has DR. WM. ALEXANDER
Hie? nlartcontes, "BILE, table tinene, 2.60 SCIENTIFIC WATER TREATMENTS
Gia ue righ 4 leit ge" tt ee ae oe
Hooster ‘kitchen cabinets, $45: $110 ma- Why go to Hot Springs or to
Bp sonk ten iy panera ¢ : See wil the Kea Waaee
Tanges, $58; galvanized tubs, $1.26; gar-| my i ,
148 gallons Get tre Hat place, | a eee Sere
SAVE.U-MONEY CO | Pamea\ «A sepclaity of Rheumatism,
oe | 5 AOlPLiFa. Hedicos tadachs,
ee ren Lesaabs, Dropiy, Beart troe-
ere arms | | da, GershainYitaa, Canaan,
| Old Sores, Weak Lungs, Fe
FOR PROMPT SERVICE ||| y tnile Trouble and Gal tidues
CALL CLIFTON 1350 ||) \ y Office hours 9:00 to 12:00 A
THE MODERN : Piggeeitrea st tee dger
PRESSING SHOP x Saturday and Sunday. Lady
Si y attendant can be had by re
Cleaning and Repairing. a quest.
Hats Cleaned and Blocked. 1707 EAST 11TH STREET KANSAS CITY, MO:
ee i Bell Phone Clifton 4704
= | Come where Style, Quality and Service are combined with
FOR PROMPT SERVICE
CALL CLIFTON 1350
THE MODERN
PRESSING SHOP
Cleaning and Repairing.
Hats Cleaned and Blocked.
Used Clothing tor Sale
Full Dress, Suite ented
WE CALL AND DELIVER.
1801 PASEO
Come where Style, Quality and Service are combined with
Scientific Testing and Fair Prices.
DALE AND PENFOLD
OPTICIANS
1103 Walnut
Our Glasses Satisfaction
Always Fit. Guaranteed.
| FRANK MARTIN
Instructor in Violin.
| Will be at his Studio at
; 1831 PASEO,
} megianilda’ Baylastiee: 10; on
: Wednesday and Thursday.
Bell Phone Clifton 4818,
THE
Ideal Barber Shop
| HIGH-CLASS WORKMEN |
{ D. 8. Greggs, Prop. ‘
905 Wyandotte St. K. 0. Mo.’
SPECIAL NOTICE
M. A. Saferstein your Jeweler
and Watch Maker is back in
the same old location and will
appreciate meeting all his old
and new customers.
1324 1-2 E. 18th Steet
Madame E. Neff Barber
For first treatment $1.00. We make
ap combings. Also teach method ot
doing hair in seven differen!
branches, $15.00.
1 grow hair on bald spots. I abso
‘utely grow hair and cure all scaly
diseases. Guarantee three months
treatment, If not satisfied money re
funded. Fill orders for hair grow:
and straightening oi! through mall.
Ten year's experience in hairdress
ing.
AGENTS WANTED, GOOD PAY
Call or write,
1715 EAST 18TH STREET
Bell Phone East 412.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
QHEMM DIRECT FROM MAKER TO WEARER
104 Stores ‘Treatment
Union Mae W H Seca
| Pay Middle-Men their high selling costs and profits when
you have the opportunity of buying DIRECT
Give a try-on so that we can fit perfectly,
which is most essential.
by buying during our introductory sale. ;
$55 Suits for $27.50 i
$75 Suits for $37.50 BELL TAILORING CO. i
$97 Suits for $47.50 17 W. 9th St. i
“You've heard of us all Your Life’ t
eer a
Seay Vn aN
Ba ane
Mackey's Liniment
Be it known to the public at large)
that the Rey. J. W. Hurse, pastor of,
St. Stephen's Baptist Church has,
moved his office back to the old stand,
800 Independence Avenue, Bell phone, |
Main 4017, We wish to say to the pub-
Ite at large that we are now fully pre-
pared to give treatments for all of the
complaints that the Mackey Liniment
cures: ten days for Rheumatism, im-
mediate relief Neuralgia; 43 hours for
Lumbago, 1 week for throat, 10 days
for lungs in first and second stages;
10 days for Asthma; and all pains
and stiffness in the body; a germ de-
stroyer for Appendicitis ‘and guaran-
tetd under the Pure Food and Drug
Act Serial No, 44333. To the many|
readers ot The Kansas City Sun we
absolutely guarantee all of our work.
Oft{co treatments $1.00 and upwards’
Office hours from 10:00 a, m, to 4:00!
p. m., and from 6:00 p. m, to 8:00 p.
m, ‘The liniment is on sale at 1205
Michigan Avenue, our residence, Bell
phone, Clifton 4880 and at 800 Inde-
pendence Avenue, Dr. G. W. Brown's
office, Grand Master of U. B. F, at
Dr, Miller's office, 804 Independence
Avenue, Bell phone, Main 8355, at
Deacon Chester Simm's, 2412 Mer-
sington Ave, Bell phone, Clitton 878;
‘at St. Stepnen’s Missionary Baptist
‘Church whenever the doors aro open
and at all the Colored Drug Stores
‘when arrangements can be made, We
have reduced the price of our Lina-
‘ment to the before-the-war price, $1.00
‘per bottle. Out of town purchasers
‘must send 25 cents additional for
postage, In connection with our
work we have added the Church Em-
ployment Bureau, We will furnish
work for first class help. Our treat:
ments out of the office will be strict:
ly attended to by engagements and
if we fall to help you we will refund
your money. We absolutely guaran-
tee every treatment und every bot
tle of lintment—when our orders are
carried out, It we help you, tell oth-
rs and if we fail, tell us and receive
your money back, My reputation as
‘& gospel preached and pastor of St.
Stephen's Missionary Baptist Church
and the power of an almighty God is
all that T have to boast of, My serv-
ice is offered to everybody, black or
white, poor or rich, high or low, saint
or sinner,
~ FACE POWDER |
- A. SUPERB’ TOILET NECESSITY
Wr eee y
Y EFour Shades! y
7} NATURAL—PINK—WHITE—BRUNETTE ie
4 One of these shades ts certain
4 ROW \ niesion, [vou"are certain toll
hi Wore pt te at eee eet
al} 4 SE Tance of the daintiest
H YAS I otal let prparatone dy
1 \_ Gea D \ Mae, \ win ine” velverlh
\ \ eae S7 PETA “smoothnons and ‘the {{]
U BAY we way. igh Brown
0 \W Eee AY K if Face Powder stays {J
A Wate h< 7 4jy on the face wna |}
A) Vath. \ 8h Sel
HW x co +N, Will be pleased Hf
A \O\ SNRs ace at
a a LL. comiplezion; er
\), — HE! L
Q (a La iy tng you 8 youth.
nt Yl WD Why not buy "aft
hal Yl box today? by
MADE ONLY BY pa
THE OVERTON HYGIENIC CO.
CHICAGO
ALL STAR NEGRO CAST THE LINCOLN ONE OF THE GREATEST COLORED PICTURES EVER MADE
FULL OF REALISM-ACTION-SPLENDID ACTION-THRILLS AND HEART THROBS-SENSATIONAL SITUATIONS "NOBODY'S CHILDREN"
BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE TO BUILD A SIX- STORY, FIRE PROOF, STRICTLY MODERN HOTEL IN KANSAS CITY. THE HOTEL TO BE FINANCED BY NEGRO CAPITAL AND CONTROLLED AND MANAGED BY NEGRO BRAIN
---
No Change in
Price of Admission
Lincoln Theatre Orchestra.
SPARKS
SPARKS FROM STARKS
FOR WASHING-DAY, FIRE PROOF TO BE FINANCEABLE
NO OF A FIRST CLASS NEGRO HOTEL
You are in need of a first class Negro Hotel. We have very few decent places for them in a first class hotel there is none. When City, we are not in a position to properly M. C. A. will answer the purpose, the "women. It is time that we should as a Rear women. We are greatly in need of a where the various clubs of the City can move one or two high-class cafes in connection center of our industrial and social affairs in great down-town hotels answer that purported also alleviate many of the unpleasant of house shortage.
NO FHOTEL TO BE BUILT BY BOO-INGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE.
Modern fire-proof structure with one hundred have private bath. It is to consist of on top. On the mezzanine floor, a beautiful parlors and rest rooms for its people and spacious Banquet and Ball room, furnished to a thousand people with parlor with it for the ladies. It is also to have and floor with every modern convenience. Many other features too numerous to mans hotel for the comforts and benefit of out will cost approximately a quarter of
BOOKER W
STORY,
THE HOTEL TO
THE GREAT NEED OF A FIRE
Kansas City is urgently in need of strangers come to our City we have very we ourselves, desire to live in a first or convention comes to Kansas City, we are Some might say that the Y. M. C. A. we commodates men and not women. It is decent accommodation for our women, quiet hall and club rooms where the vast tertain. It should also have one or two This hotel should be the center of our in the same manner as the great down their people. This hotel would also all now existing from the cause of house s
SIZE AND COST OF HOTEL
WASHINGTON HOT
The hotel is to be a modern fire-pr rooms. Fifty of which will have priv with a beautiful roof garden on top, overlook the lobby with beautiful par guest. It shall have a large and spac accommodate from five hundred to a tion rooms in connection with it for the spacious lobby on the ground floor with tombary in a high class hotel. Many other will be connected with this hotel for a public. The hotel throughout will cost dollars.
THE GREAT NEED OF A FIRST CLASS NEGRO HOTEL.
Kansas City is urgently in need of a first class Negro Hotel. When strangers come to our City we have very few decent places for them to stop. If we ourselves, desire to live in a first class hotel there is none. When a great convention comes to Kansas City, we are not in a position to properly care for it. Some might say that the Y. M. C. A. will answer the purpose, the "Y only accommodates men and not women. It is time that we should as a face provide decent accommodation for our women. We are greatly in need of a large banquet hall and club rooms where the various clubs of the City can meet and entertain and also have one or two high-class cafes in connection with it. This hotel should be the center of our industrial and social affairs of the City in the same manner as the great down-town hotels answer that purpose among their people. This hotel would also alleviate many of the unpleasant conditions now existing from the cause of house shortage.
SIZE AND COST OF HOTEL TO BE BUILT BY BOOKER
WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE.
The hotel is to be a modern fire-proof structure with one hundred and fifty rooms. Fifty of which will have private bath. It is to consist of six floors with a beautiful roof garden on top. On the mezzanine floor, a balcony will overlook the lobby with beautiful parlor and rest rooms for its patrons and guest. It shall have a large and spacious Banquet and Ball room which will accommodate from five hundred to a thousand people with parlor and reception rooms in connection with it for the ladies. It is also to have a large and spacious lobby on the ground floor with every modern convenience that is customary in a high class hotel. Many other features too numerous to mention here will be connected with this hotel for the comforts and benefit of the Negro public. The hotel throughout will cost approximately a quarter of a million dollars.
For Bank Reference regarding the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE and its officers, we refer you to the President of the City Bank, 18th and Grand Avenue in the person of Mr. R. C. Kemper.
PRICE
10 shares..... $ 12.50;
15 shares..... 18.75;
20 shares..... 25.00;
25 shares..... 31.25;
50 shares..... 62.50;
75 shares..... 93.75;
100 shares..... 125.00;
500 shares..... 626.00;
1000 shares..... 1250.00;
BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL
from 10 to 25,000 shares.
NOTICE: THIS STOCK MAY BE PU
20% down and balance in t
5% discount for cash pay
... $ 12.50; $ 2.50 down, balance $ 1.00
... 18.75; 3.75 down, balance 1.50
... 25.00; 5.00 down, balance 2.00
... 31.25; 6.25 down, balance 2.50
... 62.50; 12.50 down, balance 5.00
... 93.75; 18.75 down, balance 7.50
... 125.00; 25.00 down, balance 10.00
... 626.00; 125.00 down, balance 50.00
... 1250.00; 250.00 down, balance 100.00
ON HOTEL SYNDICATE stock sold in
MAY BE PURCHASED ON INSTALLMENT
balance in ten equal payments.
10 shares..... $ 12.50; $ 2.50 down, balance $ 1.00 per month
15 shares..... 18.75; 3.75 down, balance 1.50 per month
20 shares..... 25.00; 5.00 down, balance 2.00 per month
25 shares..... 31.25; 6.25 down, balance 2.50 per month
50 shares..... 62.50; 12.50 down, balance 5.00 per month
75 shares..... 93.75; 18.75 down, balance 7.50 per month
100 shares..... 125.00; 25.00 down, balance 10.00 per month
500 shares..... 626.00; 125.00 down, balance 50.00 per month
1000 shares..... 1250.00; 250.00 down, balance 100.00 per month
BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE stock sold in any amount from 10 to 25,000 shares.
NOTICE: THIS STOCK MAY BE PURCHASED ON INSTALLMENT—
20% down and balance in ten equal payments.
5% discount for cash payment of stock.
LIBERTY BONDS WILL BE ACCEPTED AS CASH PAYMENT FOR STOCK. GO YOUR POSITIVE LIMIT. BUY YOUR STOCK AT ONCE.
By Chas, A. Starks.
EQUIVOCATION — DECEIT — CORRUPTION.
The above are the allied forces that come together naturally in unison to defeat the rock ribbed fortress of TRUTH. The effort, however, invariably fails against that which sets upon the hill of Zion, staid—impregnable within its own; withstanding all attacks from the outside; and ex punging the enemy from within who has crept through some crevice only to be discovered by the discerning eye of Right, and ousted again.
Personally, I glory in the fact that in my journalsistic work that I have adhered strictly to what I understand to be the idea of Truth. At least the people have never had cause to doubt just where I stood on the moral and political questions affecting the weal of the people. I would not equivocate, I would not deceive, I would not corrupt my soul by selling the interest of the people for the proverbial mess of pottage.
When Mattjoy was living and Negro-Democratism (not "democracy") was in the zenith of its queer and unreal power. I severed my connec-
Name of the Hotel.
It has been decided by the SYNDICATE to defer the naming of this Hotel until it was ready for occupancy of the Public. At that time, the stockholders of the great SYNDICATE will be called upon to have the honor of naming the Hotel.
THIS PICTURE WILL BE SHOWN---ONLY At The LINCOLN THEATRE ONE WEEK Commencing SUN., NOV. 14th
tion with the Call, the other local weekly. In announcing this fact I then said in part: "I cannot subscribe in any way to the political policy of your paper as demonstrated in your issue of the 10th inst. I hold that the subscribers of the Call are entitled to a more definite and clear attitude of the editors on political questions so vital to them. It appears to me that your handling of the matter in question but simply gives aid and comfort to the Negro's worst political enemy." (The Call had celebrated a recent political meeting of Negro democrats, giving the celebrities considerable advertising and what prestige goes with such).
The editor of the Call replied to my statement in part as follows: "We have no apology to make for giving Democratic news space in this paper, nor advertising space either. Likewise every political party. Our political views we shall express editorially from time to time, and until we offend any reader by them we expect fair minded people to give us credit for news gathering as it should be done."
SHINGT
PROOF
ENCED BY
NEGRO HOTEL.
Ass Negro Hotel. Whenaces for them to stop. Ifis none. When a greaton to properly care for it,purpose, the "Y" onlyacould as a Race providein need of a large banieCity can meet andenes in connection with it. social affairs of the Cityanswer that purpose amongthe unpleasant conditions
LIT BY BOOKER
CATE.
with one hundred and fiftyto consist of six floors,one floor, a balcony willoms for its patrons andBall room which willwith pariors and receptele to have a large andconvenience that is cusnumerous to mention hereand benefit of the Negroa quarter of a million
Officials Bonded
Each official of the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE who is to handle its funds is under a Ten Thousand ($10,000) dollars bond which is also a guarantee to the hotel that all invested in this Syndicate will be used exclusively for the purposes above mentioned.
Bank References.
PRICE LIST.
The Negroes of this town will not accept equivocation, deceit and corruption on the part of those who essay to speak out on political questions. This is especially so regarding the two major parties.
It is a matter of history that no Negro or Negro institution that ever seriously flirted with the democratic party lived politically or even socially thereafter. The Negro people simply will not forgive them. I do not say this is right. I do not say that public utilities (newspapers rightly conceived may be classed thus) should only serve one political faith, but the Negro people say it. They say it because they are sorrowfully bent, torn and bleeding from the wounds that their manhood and womanhood has received from the one party. So it is these people, not I, though I am one of them, who have decreed that the newspapers which they support shall not connive in any manner with that party. In face of Negro history, in the face of the warning that it has received, in the face of the existing bad conditions the Coll dared to give aid and comfort to this political enemy.
Before the election the Call was "a paper for all the people." this liberalism took in the democratic party. But since the election it has become "a race paper first." To which we simply say, BOSH!
If the Call was a race paper first it would have played Pro-race politics instead of playing Anti-race politics. If it had been a real race paper it would not have sold its columns to the enemy of the Negro in this campaign, the greatest of all campaigns in the history of the government.
But the Call figured, and with some degree of logic, that the results of the election would be entirely differ
HINGTON HOUSE
MOOF, STRICTLY
BAD BY NEGRO CAB
HOTEL.
Hotel. When
to stop. If
en a great
care for it,
only ac-
pose provide
large ban-
net and en-
on with it. Of
the City
pose among
conditions
KER
and fifty
six floors
alcohon will
patrons and
HOTEL TO GIVE
OR MOOF
Stockholder
The hotel to be
will not only be a g
City, but it will also
following positions is com-
great Hotel is com-
PRIVATE OFF
stenographers.
LOBBY—One c
house detectives, o
stand girls, five bell
two messenger boys
CAFES—One h
cashiers, four bush-
KITCHEN—One
table cooks, two h
ver pantry girls, two
kitchen men, two c
ENGINE ROOM
WASH ROOM-
that is cus-
sention here
the Negro
of a million
MEZZANINE—
waiters, two cheek
LINEN ROOM
three house men.
These and po-
Negroes of Kansas
WASHINGTON HO
will be given the f
Bonded.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1920.
HOTEL TO GIVE HIGH CLASS EMPLOYMENT TO AT LEAST 100 OR MORE OF OUR YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN.
Stockholders of the Syndicate to Be Given First Preference.
The hotel to be built by the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE will not only be a great blessing and service to the Negro community of Kansas City, but it will also furnish many good positions and jobs for our people. The following positions and jobs will be opened to the Negro public as soon as this great Hotel is completed:
PRIVATE OFFICE—One chief clerk, two bookkeepers, one auditor, two stenographers.
LOBBY—One chief clerk, one day clerk, one night clerk, one cashier, two house detectives, one public stenographer, two telephone operators, two cigar-stand girls, five bell boys, two elevator boys, two porters, two telegraph operators, two messenger boys, two check-room boys, one door-man.
CAFES—One head-waiter, ten waiters or waitresses, three hat girls, two cashiers, four busses and porters.
KITCHEN—One steward, one chef, one second cook, one fry cook, two vegetable cooks, two helpers, one head baker, two bakers, two pantry girls, two silver pantry girls, two glass pantry girls, three dishwashers, two pot washers, two kitchen men, two checkers.
ENGINE ROOM—One chief engineer, one electrician, three firemen.
WASH ROOM—Three wash-room men and bootblacks.
HELPS HALL—Help hall man or woman.
LOCKER ROOM—One porter and bootblack.
MEZZANINE—Four beauty parlor experts, two ladies' maids, two party waiters, two check-room girls, one hat girl.
LINEN ROOM—One housekeeper, one linen room girl, six chambermaids, three house men.
These and possibly a few other positions and jobs will be opened to the Negroes of Kansas City. It has been decided by the Directors of the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE, that the stockholders of this Syndicate will be given the first preference to the appointment of these positions and jobs. In this way, many of the stockholders of the Syndicate will be thus receiving employment therefrom and the public will at the same time receive the best of service at their hands.
Those who are qualified and desire any one of the above mentioned positions or jobs should become stockholders in the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE at once. They should buy every share they possibly can; in so doing they will be at the top of the list for one of these positions or jobs when they are ready.
LOCATION OF HOTEL
The location of this hotel has been decided upon and is in one of the best Negro Business Districts in Kansas City. As the negotiation for the ground is not wholly consummated, the city will be disclosed until a later date.
SAMUEL R. HOPKINS.....President Q. T. GILMORE.....Treasurer
G. H. PURNELL.....Vice-President B. H. PAYNE...
M. E. OLDEN.....Secretary .....Chairman of Board of Directors
ent locally, and having espoused the side it thought most likely to win it (the Call) would be setting on the moon; that it would be in good. But how disappointing!
And now, how lovingly, how pointedly is the Call "a race paper first!" Yes, about ninety first!
THE B. C. OF C.
By way of explaining what the above letters stand for we might state at once that we are speaking of the black Chamber of Commerce that is now in its infantile existence. We attended one meeting of this organization last Wednesday and will likely attend the meeting tonight at the Community Center.
So we will not rush to comment broadly upon this government, but will rather wait and get a better line before making any serious report to the public.
We are in need of all the constructive movements we can master in these parts. And the progressive citizen should be alert to aid all of the worthy ones just as much as he should frown upon and denounce all the unworthy ones.
In determining the character of an organization people will invariably scrutinize the personnel of such. This, they believe will always give them a line.
This is not a bad way, because in doing this we find that we are following the ancient logic that birds of a feather will be found together.
But when one mingles and investigates and then finds that deft moves and oc-culture instead of plain culture are in order, then he is apt to become suspicious.
In the game of life, which is a business, the fair player likes to see the cards above the table instead of under the table. And in the show-
HOTEL SYNC
BETTLY MODER
CAPITAL AND CON
A HIGH CLASS EMPLOYMENT T
ARE OF OUR YOUNG MEN AND W
ers of the Syndicate to Be Given First.
Built by the BOOKER WASHINGTON,
great blessing and service to the Negro,
furnish many good positions and jobs
and jobs will be opened to the Negro
related:
CE—one chief clerk, two bookkeeper
chief clerk, one day clerk, one night cl
e public stenographer, two telephone
boys, two elevator boys, two porters, t
two check-room boys, one door-man,
head-waiter, ten waiters or waitresses
boys and porters.
steward, one chef, one second cook, o
steward, one head chef, two bakers, two
glass pantry girls, three dishwashers,
seckers.
—One chief engineer, one electrician,
Three wash-room men and bootblacks.
Your beauty parlor experts, two ladies room girls, one hat girl. One housekeeper, one linen room girl. Similarly a few other positions and jobs City. It has been decided by the Direc TEL SYNDICATE, that the stockholder preference to the appointment of the of the stockholders of the Syndicate room and the public will at the same time qualified and desire any one of the above stockholders in the BOOKER Wice. They should buy every share the at the top of the list for one of these
HER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNC
Capital Stock . . . $250,000.0
amount of shares now selling at $1.0
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.
KINS.....President Q. L. GILMORI
.....Vice-President B. H. PAYNE.
.....Secretary .....Chairman
WASHINGTON HOTEL
315 EAST EIGHTEENTH STREET
Kansas City, Missouri.
TO BEGIN BUILDING IN THE SPRING.
The Syndicate expects to begin the erection of this Hotel in the Spring. Arrangements are being worked out with the architect to rush completion of the plans.
down he likes to see the faces up—so the world may see. Why is this? It is because that the face is the mirror of the soul, and that not even dissebling feature can' wholly prevent a revelation of that within. WE SHALL SEE WHAT WE SHALL SEE!
LEARNING ECONOMICS
(The solution of economics is the basis of all culture.)
An employee, hearing me blow off so much about "Economics," asked me what is economics. Then I asked him this question: "Have you noticed that when you quit a job that your pay stops?" "Yes," he replied. "That was your income," I said then. "Then, too, have you noticed that even though you may draw down a nice little sum that it gradually or soon dwindles away," I continued. "and, that you finally wake up some mornings broke" "Yes," he answered again. "Then that was your economic question with emphasis." I said.
All economic questions are based upon WANT and supplying that want. What ever is wanted in this material old world the genius of economies, which inspires the industrial, must be called upon to supply. It matters not whether the person wanting something is a producer or non-producer, if the want is supplied it necessarily comes from something produced, and therefore the recipient of the thing produced is a beneficiary of industrial economy exercised somewhere. We are always wanting something in this human experience. And what we get somebody, has to work for. Some may be the recipients of gifts, but the great majority has to work for what it gets. And those who get and do not work simply get what the other fellow works for.
INDICATE THE BURN HOTEL I HANDLE CONTROLLED AND ENTERED AT LEAST 100 WOMEN.
Preference.
HOTEL SYNDICATE community of Kansas for our people. The public as soon as this rises, one auditor, twoerk, one cashier, twooperators, two cigar-to telegraph operators, three hat girls, twofry cook, two vegetarian girls, two two pot washers, two three firemen.
es' maids, two partyirl, six chambermaids,will be opened to thectors of the BOOKERers of this Syndicate these positions and jobs. will be thus receivingone receive the best ofwe mentioned positionsWASHINGTON HOTEL possibly can; in so positions or jobs when
YOUR
Few town hotels to bushigh classgreat proly invited
Hotel obtainably seldom, hotels for their most mensely propositively SYNDICATEgreat Syndic sound in
Officers
Exp
Much Muehlebschtributed manager, to this many ofout Europe edge of the ground of the gmentioned Directors INGTON all Hotel
SYNDICATE
10
Non-Accessible.
25 per share.
Treasurer
of Board of Directors
SYNDICATE
SET
Home, Harrison 3963.
per share
I un
above na
from wha
Mail you
all this
payment
Five
Advertise in the
E TO BUILD A S
SEL IN KANSAS CITY
AND MANAGED BY NEGRO
YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO OWN PART OF THIS GRE
Few people of this City have had the privilege of owning town hotels. Never before have the Negroes of Kansas City city to buy High Class hotel stock, or, in other words, become high class Hotel, controlled and managed by their own people great profits therefrom. Every Negro man and woman in Kansas invited to become a part owner of this great Hotel.
YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO OWN PART OF THIS GREAT HOTEL.
Few people of this City have had the privilege of owning stock in downtown hotels. Never before have the Negroes of Kansas City had the opportunity to buy High Class hotel stock, or, in other words, become part owner of a high class Hotel, controlled and managed by their own people and share in the great profits therefrom. Every Negro man and woman in Kansas City is urgently invited to become a part owner of this great Hotel.
Hotel stock is considered one of the safest and most profitable. Millions and millions are invested in high class, seldom, if ever, hear of a Hotel Syndicate failing. Take the hotels for instance, they are bringing their stockholders end their money. Many of the stockholders of these great hotels mensely rich. A first class hotel in our section would be a gry proposition, hence the stockholders of the BOOKER WASH SYNDICATE would receive large returns on their money. To great Syndicate, according to our judgment, is not a speculative sound investment.
Hotel stock is considered one of the safest and most profitable investments obtainable. Millions and millions are invested in high class hotel stock. We seldom, if ever, hear of a Hotel Syndicate failing. Take the great downtown hotels for instance, they are bringing their stockholders enormous returns on their money. Many of the stockholders of these great hotels have become immensely rich. A first class hotel in our section would be a great money-making proposition, hence the stockholders of the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE would receive large returns on their money. To buy stock in this great Syndicate, according to our judgment, is not a speculation but a safe and sound investment.
Officers of the Hotel Syndicate Experienced Hotel Men.
Much of the success of the great Muehlebach Hotel in our City is attributed to Mr. Joseph Reichl, its manager. Mr. Reichl before coming to this country was associated with many of the largest hotels throughout Europe. His practical knowledge of the Hotel business from the ground up has been one of the causes of the great success of the hotel mentioned above. The Officers and Directors of the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE are all Hotel men of wide experience.
MAIL QUICK.
Application For Shares In
BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE
1315 East 18th Street
Booker Washington Hotel Syndicate.
Gentlemen:
Enclose $..... in full payment or
..... shares of Booker Washington Hotel Syndic
per share fully paid and non-assessible.
I understand that this money will be used in carrying or
above named Syndicate and that this stock entitled me to share
1315 East 18th Street Kansas City, Mo.
Booker Washington Hotel Syndicate.
Gentlemen:
per knowledge gain that I have mastered.
I understand that this money will be used in carrying on the plans of the above named Syndicate and that this stock entitled me to share in all the profits from whatsoever source this Sundicate may ever earn.
Mail your check or money order or bank draft with this coupon at once before all this stock at $1.25 per share is taken up. Liberty Bonds accepted as cash payment for stock.
Five per cent discount for cash payment of stock.
A Wonderful Picture
6,000 Feet of Superb Film Portrayal
A Super-Feature
Mid-West Life Insurance Company
A Missouri Corporation.
Home Office:
The law of economy is another one of the inexerables. We who are subject to it must pay the cost. We must work and receive, or receive only and cause somebody else to work harder. Production must go on, someone must produce. It is this simple but grand fact that I want my people to understand. That whatever your problem along this line intelligent work will solve it. You want more to eat, better clothes to wear, better houses to live in, and want more than this—you want culture. But in order to secure culture you must first fairly solve your primary economic problems. And you can do this if you try hard enough. This brings us to two important questions: HOW MUCH DO YOU EARN, AND HOW WISELY, HOW ECONOMICALLY DO YOU EXPEND OR CONSUME?
We want agents in every town and city in Missouri.
KELLEY'S
BEST
HIGH PATENT.
BERTISE in the Sun
BUILD A SIX-
SAS CITY.
BY NEGRO BRAIN
OWN PART OF THIS GREAT HOTEL.
had the privilege of owning stock in down-
the Negroes of Kansas City had the opportun-
or, in other words, becomes part owner of a
managed by their own people and share in the
negro man and woman in Kansas City is urgent-
er of this great Hotel.
Advertise in the Sun
SOUNDNESS OF THE INVESTMENT.
of the safest and most profitable investments are invested in high class hotel stock. We Syndicate failing. Take the great downtown aging their stockholders enormous returns on holders of these great hotels have become im in our section would be a great money-making of the BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL returns on their money. To buy stock in this judgment, is not a speculation but a safe and
They know the Hotel business from the ground up. They are also practical and successful business men.
The Public's Guarantee in Buying This Stock.
The BOOKER WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE has arranged with the City Bank, 18th and Grand Avenue, that each subscriber when purchasing this stock, may have the privilege of depositing their money in person or by mail at the bank; thus, guaranteeing the public that every dollar invested in this Syndicate will be properly accounted for.
MAIL QUICK.
Station For Shares In
WASHINGTON HOTEL SYNDICATE.
Kansas City, Mo.
in full payment or part payment for
baker Washington Hotel Syndicate stock at $1.25
isible.
will be used in carrying on the plans of the
this stock entitled me to share in all the profits
1518 EAST 18TH STREET
Kansas City, Missouri.
Phone Clifton 2750
We need the services of men
and women to sell Insurance. If
you are not experienced in sales-
manship, we are willing to train
you. Some of the biggest and
most successful business men
and women of today got their
first business experience selling
Insurance.
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY!
FLOUR
Kelley's Best
Beat all the Rest
Kelly Milling Co.
K. C., U. S. A.
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