St. Louis Argus
Friday, November 17, 1922
St. Louis, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
ELECTION WAS DEATH BLOW TO LILY-WHITEISM
Associated Negro Press
Washington, Nov. 15—It has happened! The election. The "I-Told You So" Society is now functioning in enthusiastic assemblies. Election returns tell a most interesting story Political leaders in all sections are studying them religiously. The Associated Negro Press has carefully coined the entire field for unvarnished what it is worth for information and guidance in future—to say nothing of present activities.
The election reveals first of all that Colored voters took President Harriard at his word, in his message at Birmingham, Alabama and divided their votes as never before. This, is one of the amazing facts of the election. The votes were not divided because President's suggestion, but in spite of it. Throughout the entire North, Democrats made open and unqualified bids for Colored votes. In such states as Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, West Virginia, Michigan, New Jersey, Delaware, New York and Massachusetts, Democratic organizations plead and labored for, Colored votes, and got publicists were advised of this state of affairs, but in many cases, were either indifferent or refused to take the matter seriously.
Specific Cases.
Democratic politicians played to the cause—party advantage—for the effect-votes and office. For example in Missouri, where thousands of Colored voted for Senator Reed, the wet and dry issue was used and the other thousands voted for Governor Edwards, instead of Senator Frelinghuysen. In some other states, Illinois, Ohio, and Indiana, for example, the Ku Klux Klan issue was used extensively, and effectively. Democrats "branded" Republican candidates with the approbation of the Klux.
Republicans waved aside Democrats and depended for the most part on legislation and buck. They failed in many important instances.
"Discontent," is the general term used for the results. That is a good term; but the cause, so far as colored roters are concerned, must be traced back to the beginning. Here are some:
1. Lily White policy of the South.
2. Reduction of representation in National Conventions.
3. Failure to make larger number of appointments and promotions.
4. Failure of Senate to confirm Henry Lincoln Johnson.
5. Failure to finally pass the Dyer Anti-Lynching Act.
6. Failure of internal of leaders in party organization program.
Lily White Idea Murdered.
The Lily White idea of increasing Republican power in the South has been murdered in cold blood. The critical Democratic South rises, to laugh to storm Republican offices in the South" ousely proclaimed in the laws of the adherents of Abraham Lincoln.
Tennessee went back to the Democrats, and Texas, where hope spreads, eternal vote in their Ku Klux Senator, a Democrat. Virginia, the state of Rascom Slemp, originator of the new Lily White policy after a series of campaigns from the district where, Slemp lives in seeing the "handwriting on the wall," and refusing to be crucified.
Michigan defeating Senator Townsend, Republican, and friend to all appeals in the Senate former Governor Ferris, "Newberryman" was used as an issue, but the strategists also said that Gov. Ferris is a friend of Colored people," and proceeded to prove it by the record.
Indiana, state of vice-Presidents and all-year-round politicians, voted to confirm Albert J. Beveridge at home. Colored voters taking the stance that Beveridge while protecting friendship now, failed to exercise much of it while Senator, and nicked the party traces in 1912.
The St. Louis Argus
Senator Lodge of Massachusetts Republican leader of the United States Senate, received a fife showing of Colored votes. It is believed or every hand that Senator Lodge will use every influence to have the Dyer bill acted upon at the Special session of Congress. In Illinois, the state was Republican, but the county of Cook was Democratic. Early election night reports throw a scare into the friends of Congressman Madden and Mann, who represent districts largely inhabited by Colored voters, when it secured that both might be defeated. Final results showed their election, but also showed that the Democrats pulled thousands of votes among Colored citizens.
With the majority election on next April, in Chicago, and Mayor Thompson, announcing that he will again be a candidate if the people desire him, and the showing made by Democrats in Colored wards, there is consternation in Republic in circles. In Ohio, Colored voters split their votes, and the showing made to elect Col Thompson as Governor, is regretted by Colored voters, the defeat of Senator Pemerone and the election to the Senate of Congressman Fess, shows a division of Colored votes. Some, for each candidate, in Pennsylvania, Colored voters do some divider, but Senators Pepper and Pemerone politize, while the defeat of Senator Sutherland of West, Virginia is not attributed to defection of Colored voters, but to local matters.
Starting For 1924.
Chastened by the election of 1922 Republicans throughout the nation by the Republican efforts in 1924. Their efforts will meet a newly militant - Democratic party that neither knows nor gives quarter, but it appears that the Republican leaders are determined to play "old time politics" and bring out the Rosseau than "Square Deal" motto to be used from now on.
The air will be rife with politics until after November. 1924. Talk of a Third Party continues, but it will be clear that Colored voters will give ear to Republican pleadings, if they "come clean" rather than trust the Democrats for a President, or Third Party in which there would be some leadership of questionable sincerity.
INFLUENCE OF COLORED NEWSPAPER IN POLITICS RECOGNIZED BY ALL
INFLUENCE OF COLORED NEWSPAPER IN POLITICS RECOGNIZED BY ALL
CHICAGO, Ill., Nov. 15.—Attention is directed to the part played by Colored newspaper in the recent election. Only a limited number of the papers urged their readers to "Vote the Straight Republican ticket." The majority of them gave preference to Republican news, while a number gave liberal space to news of local events. The newspapers vertirements from both parties, as the daily papers do. In a few instances, newspapers normally Republican, openly opposed certain Republican candidates.
The newspapers, were quoted both in
editorials and news articles by stump
speakers. The great influence of Colored
newspapers is recognized by all
political parties, leaders, candidates and
the people themselves.
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE
FOR GOVERNOR CARRIES
HARDING'S HOME TOWN
Represented. Negro Press.
Marion, Nov. 18. Marion County
bride of President Harding was carried by Democrat. Democratic nominee
Governor, operating for congress.
Republican, 1. 097. Democrat, Democrat,
1. 024. Republican, carried by
the voters. The press publishes
to 100,000 and the Press
Published In The Interest Of Colored People
HUBBARD HEADS MISSOURI NEGRO INDUSTRIAL COM
HUBBARD HEADS MISSOURI NEGRO INDUSTRIAL COM
Principal Of Lincoln High School At Sedalia Made Chairman. A. E. Malone Of St. Louis Elected Head Of Executive Committee
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. Nov. 22.—The Missouri Negro Industrial Commission was called to order by Temporary Chairman, A. E. Malone at 10 o'clock Saturday morning. After brief addresses by all of the Commissioners and by Dr. Wm. Pickens of the National office N. A. A. C. P. The following officers were elected: Chairman, Prof. C. C. Hubbard, Lincoln High School, Caldia; Vice President, Mrs. B. Foster Cook, Kansas City; Secretary, Robert S. Cobb, Jefferson City. The Chairman then appointed the following Committees:
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
A. E. Malone, Chairman, Mrs. Cook, Messrs. Tomb Bass, Dr. H. A. Longdon, Dr. J. E. Smith.
Legislative Committee: Mrs. Cook, Chairman: Mrs. Booker, Messrs. Malone, Fields, Nance.
Agricultural Committee: Mr. Ben Superior; Messrs K. D. Smith, Geo. Renfroe, Theorr. Morton, and Tomb Bass.
Health and Housing Committee: Dr. H. A. Longdon, Chairman: Dr. J. E. Smith. Prof. Nance, and Messdams Cook and Booker.
Educational Committee: Prof. O. O. Nance, Chairman: Messrs Malone, K. D. Smith, Morrison, and Mrs. Booker.
Industrial Relations Committee: Mr. Tom Bass, Chairman: Messrs K. D. Smith, Morrison, Malone, Morrison, Malone, Renfroe and Sinclair.
Inter-Racial Relations Committee: Mr. Bass, Chairman: Dr. Smith and Longdon, Rev. Morrison, Moodsams Cook and Booker, Messrs Nance Renfroe and Fields.
DELANEY BOYS ON Y. PROGRAM
One of the most interesting features of the Father and Sona Programs at the Y. M. C. A., last Saturday and Sunday was the appearance on the program of Leon Delaney in a violin solo, accompanied by Leslie, his brother. Their selections were enthusiastically received on both occasions, Saturday night and Sunday in the cafeteria, of 12 and 14 years respectively, their knowledge and technique of music was quite surprising. Their father, H. W. Delaney, believes in his boys and is anxious that they make good in their chosen profession. He is in the Railway Mall service and is out of the City a deal of his time, but when at home, he is a "pill" to his boys. Mr. Delaney, a widower, his wife having died about a year and a half ago, but their father and are chums with him.
The boys are thrifty and intelligent, both of whom have nice savings accounts.
NATIONAL BAPTISTS TO MEET AT CENTRAL AND FIRST CHURCHES IN DEC
NATIONAL BAPTISTS TO MEET AT CENTRAL AND FIRST CHURCHES IN DEC
At a meeting held by the Committee on Arrangements for the National Baptist Convention, it was definitely decided that the sessions would be divided between the Central Baptist and the First Baptist Churches. The Committee was unable to arrange for the Colleumi because, of a circus to be given there, dripping the time the Baptists will be in session, December 6-11.
The plan is to have the General Headquarters and the setting of the Convention in Central Church. The Woman's Body will convene at First Baptist and the business headquarters will be at the Tabernacle Baptist Church. The Convention is expected to be unusually large in point of delegates because of the accessibility of electing a president to succeed the late Dr. Morfia.
FATHER AND SON BANQUET AT "Y"
Big Event For The Boys And Their "Dads." Spirit Of Pals Prevailed. Speeches Toasts And Music.
About two hundred proud fathers and sons filled the gymnasium of the Pine Street Department Y. M. C. A last Saturday night. The light and Son Banquet was the attraction, and we venture to say that Saint Louis is just that much better and happier a town to live in as a result. Could one look down those long tables, note the happy faces of the boys and the pleased countenances of the fathers, feel the atmosphere of comradeship and joy, and notice the most of that peculiar happiness on the faces of sons, that peculiar pride on the part of fathers and that type of companionship and devotion to characterize the attitude of both fathers and sons towards each other, the purpose of the banquet would be clearly revealed to him and the value of it would impress him beyond description.
The Mixer.
Before the banquet the fathers and sons present spent the hour-getting amused. Not only did stranger meet stranger, but the foes were in amused games on the lobby floor, together Dads were introduced to the fine kind of playfellows their boys are. Oh it was fine!
After siren "What's the Matter with Father?" and other songs, the banquet was opened with prayers by Master Milton Moore, Clyde Ridley and Mr. P. J. Ridley, Mr. J. W. Meyers, Chairman of the Boves' Work Committee, gave the word of welcome, which was relied to by Rev. C. A. Williams Fred Nelson, Jasper Bland, Harry Hawkins, and Story Yashon gave toasts to their "Dads" Later James Bradford recited the poem "Take Me with You" and the matter of taking the boy along in work, play, church and about town was discussed by Messrs. William Mitchell, J. B. Steele, Wm. C. Moten and T. L. Gehry. This was followed by the restation of a poem "Father and Son" and a poem "The White John Theotton followed with another poem." Wanted a Mun to Lead." Mr. Frank C. Yashon held the banquet spondbound as he recited a poem "My Son." Then Lee Debney delighted his marries with a video selection which was accompanied by his little brother Leslie. They were called on for an encore. Their father was called for and introduced He spoke briefly.
Mr. J. A. Welf. Secretary of the Father and Son League delivered the principal message of the occasion He spoke on "Fathering the Boy." His message was quite worth while to every one present. He spoke of the value and possibilities of a boy, the fundamental virtues of greatness and appended to fathers to cultivate these virtues. Their boys living in mind that "What you do speaks loud that the boys can't hear what you say." It was a wonderful occasion and it must reach the entire city next year.
REPUBLICANS APPEAR DETERMINED TO PASS LIBERIAN LOAN BILL
Will Give Lecrative Positions To Serene American White Officials Who Have Been Selected
Associated Negro Press
Washington, D. C. Nov. 15.—President Harding two days after the disastrous election returns, has called an extra session of Congress to begin a vote on a bill pending among them the $5,000,000 Liberian Loan, which is the second bill on the calendar, the ship subsidy having the right of way with the Anti-Lynching Bill third. The Republicans are reported to be determined to pass the Liberian Loan, American and International banks that the bill is would be without means of collecting unless the loan was made are said to be exerting pressure.
Comment made by leading colored men here disclosed considerable doubt as to the actual benefits Liberia will derive in the event of the Louns passage. American势力 have impaired the ability of the government to agree proposed. Several American officials are down for iterative positions and white men are salto be already selected. President King's salary will be increased, but by the time obligations are paid there will be no change in the number of people according to these informants.
An interesting development in the Liberian situation is the offer of the Commercial Securities Co. of Dufam, N. C. W. Gomex, Press, made to President King, to float a popular loan to the colonies the colorful people of the country.
The Dyer Anti-Leaching bill is said to have but little change of passing the Senate. The Democrats have promised a billiger if attempts are made to force it through, but the colonies have been reluctant. The colored voters who evoked no derogation in the Northern states on election day. In the basement, everybody has his car to the ground.
American officials have said they will have the life of a slave in the colonies that have no public, the derails may occur on another occasion.
NEGROES WIN THEIR POINT IN VIRGINIA
Independents Draw Enough Votes To Completely Annihilate Matt Lewis And The Lily Whites.
Associated Negro Press
RICHMOND, Va. Nov. 15.—The independent colored ticket made its fight in the State and won its objective, the complete annihilation of the July Whites. Matt Lewis, candidate for U. S. Senator and the three congressional candidates all polled a re spectable vote and announced in time in years carried every District in Virginia. Where there was no colored candidate, the Negro voter supported the Democrat in an effort as the statement issued by Mr. Lewis said "to assert our political freedom and do the best we can for our own interests and the four wards in Richmond gave Claude A. Swanson, Democrat, 5269; McFauconk, 356; and Lewis, Independent, 107. In this District the colored vote went to Montague, Democrat, and he won over Ward by 5,000. C. Bascomb Slemp's district the 9th was carried by the Democrats for the first time in the District, and the father having held it prior to his ascendancy, Slemp, the leader of Lily Whiteslum, saw the handwriting on the wall and declined to run. Chairman Joseph G. Pollard expressed himself as亮然ly pleased with the result. He said: "Never before have the groups of Whiteslum pursued to announce their political independence, and then take the position to have it known that they propose, in the future, to make their independent felt. In every State similar movements to this one in Virginia are taking shape, and what the Virginians have to develop an armed force, and next presidential contest the Negro will be in splendid" organization to demand their proper recognition."
COLORED VOTERS ELECT
SOUTHERN CONRESSMAN
WHO FAVORED DYER BILL
Associated Negro Press.
HOUSTON, Tex. Nov. 15—The only Southern candidate to vote for the Anti-Lynching bill was Congressman Wurzbach of the 14th district returned "to office today after a hard battle. Wurzbach who is a Republican brought down the wrath of the white Democrat and Republicans alike on him after a closed meeting in Washington and termed his audience "bodies and gentlemen." The Democratic candidate. Harry Hertzburg stooped to every means to defeat him addressing colored meetings and accusing Wurzbach of tricking a well-educated woman who applied for a position.
The colored vote rallied to the Con
admitts his election to their apport
COLORED MAN WINS FOR N.Y. STATE LEGISLATURE ON DEMOCRATIC TICKET
COLORED MAN WINS FOR N.Y. STATE LEGISLATURE ON DEMOCRATIC TICKET
Associated Negro Press
NEW YORK CITY. Nov. 15.—One-colored candidate won in New York and his victory was a big surprise. Lawyer Henri W. Shields, Democrat as president from the 21st assembly district, was sent to the Republican candidate, made a good run, but the general disaffection from the Republican ticket by colored voters caused his defeat by a few hundred. Oliver Randolph, the only colored candidate in New Jersey was elected, the Republican Parker who voted against the Anti-Lynching bill met the dust. He was fought as bitterly by colored voters as was Layton of Delaware who bit the dust when Robert Nelson's cohorts took the field against him. DuPont of Cleveland lost for the legislature. The terrific fight against Pomerene by the labor unions nullified whatever colored support he won.
FOUR COLORED CHILDREN
BURN TO DEATH IN GA
ATLANTA, Ga. Nov. 15—Pent. Negro' children all under six years of' age burned to death Sunday night when a house on South Row, East Point, occupied by their mother, Corey Dolez, burned to the ground.
Rev. H. W. Evans Will French Sunday
Sacred Concert Will Be Given At
Church Sunday Afternoon.
Rev. W. H. Evans a past pastor of Lane Tabernacle C. M. E. Church, Newstead and Enight Avenues, who has been absent from the city for several days has returned and will fill his pulpit. Sunday morning and night. The Lane Tabernacle organization will formerly welcome: Rev. Evans the author of *The Avenues* present will be served free of charge. A susceptible sacred concert will be given by the Trustees Auxiliary Board at 3 p. m. Sunday. These who love classic music are expected to attend this affair in large numbers. The Shrine Glee Club Bibles Glee Club; Misses. Jenny Tyler, Brothers; Prof. Mix; The Everready will serve dinner and refreshments Francis Howell, and Elizabeth Edwards, a four-member selected group that will make up the program announced by Mrs. Eunna Bradford, the President. The Auxiliary Board will serve dinner and refreshments all afternoon.
VICTOR MILLER TO SPEAK SUN.
VICTOR MILLER TO SPEAK SUN.
Attorney Victor Miller, ex-president of Police Commission, now treasurer of Board of Police Commissioners, prominent leader and upholder of law and order, will address the Manhattan Mids Meeting at Pine St. Y. M. C. A. Sunday, November 19th at 4 P. M.
Mr. Miller addressed one of the largest audiences ever gathered at the Y. M. C. A last year. He brought a message that was full of information and large audience was very appreciative and enjoyed very much his instructive and inspirational address. It is said that Mr. Miller was largely responsible for the addition of Colored men to the Police Force. He is known to be an advocate of justice and square dealings in all matters of interest. Mr. Miller comes to us again next Sunday with a message, which will be no less interesting and instructive than the one last year.
Music will be furnished for the occasion by Mr. Wilson Robinson's famous Orchestra. This Orchestra composes some of the musicians of the city and is planning an extensive tour of the East very soon.
A large crowd is expected to hear Mr. Miller next Sunday. Hours open at 3 P. M. Public invited.
Five Thousand Dollar Plum
SPRINGFIELD, Il. Nov. 17.—Gov. Len Small has just announced the appointment of John B. French, a Chicago business man to the Chairmanship of the Industrial Commission at a salary of $5,000 a year. Mr. French is the father of Mrs. Chip Phillips Jr. of St. Louis and for many years held political appointments under Mayor Thompson of Chicago.
Word has been received in St. Louis of the marriage of Dr. Amanda Gray former Executive Secretary of Wheatley Branch X-W, C. A., of this city, Andrew Hilly of Washington, D. G. Dr. Gray returned from a trip abroad a week ago, landed at Quebec, was met at New York by Mr. Hilly, where the ceremony was performed November 15th. Dr. Gray wore warm friends in St Louis who wish her much happiness.
Crusader Service.
BAY SHORE, L. I. Nov. 18.—The first box of the Klu Klux Klan was delivered tonight was interfaced with by Catholics Jew, Negroes and others, including better representing Organized Labor, not in sympathy with the Ku Klan movement, who called upon the state troops to stop the meeting价前 there had been considerable hurling from the interruption that the interruption was that the Klu Klux principle made a hardy exit and the troopers declared the meeting adjourned when the troopers did not return to the hall.
A Square Deal For Every
WOULD KEEP CRIT. CLARK FROM OFFICE
Although Colored Justice Of The Peace Elect Has Won Five Times, Efforts Are Still Being Made To Rob Him Of The Office.
General Conspiracy On The Part Of Certain Politicians Seen, Jealousy Said To Be The Cause.
When Crittenden Clark gets his certificate of election as Justice of Peace, he will doubtless say as the poet, through many dangerous tales and smears they already come." And the bishop will agree that Celt Clark has had a fight on his hands ever since it first looked like he was a winner, in the primary election.
After having won five times in his contest for the office of Justice of the Peace, now comes one of his democratic opponents with a brand new suit instituted in the Court Court he helped the office to which Clark was duly elected on the ground that Clark is not a resident of the district.
It will be remembered that this was the alleged, grounds upon which Harry McChesney contested Clark's election following the Primary, and the Supreme Court decided in Clark's favor.
Those who are well informed, say that, the complaint has no issue but this is a gift to Clark which financially to the extent that he will not be able to pay the high attorney fees necessary to his defense. Mr. Clark in the meanwhile has employed two of the best informed attorneys, on election law in the State to defend his right to the office which he has justly won.
The case will be heard by Judge Hall in Division Fourteen of the Circuit Court next Monday, November 21st.
The ideal of significance is attached to the fact as it is generally believed that a general conspiracy on the part of certain politicians to rob Clark of the office.
MASS MEETING AT THE
PLEASANT GREEN BAPTIST
CHURCH SUNDAY, 4 P. M.
A mass meeting will be held at the Pleasant Green Baptist Church this Sunday at 4 p. m. under the auspices of the Kiel, Koeln, Mohlread Club. The object of the meeting is to discuss the contests instituted by Democrats against Justice of the Peace Clark and Constable Dorsey; two of the four colored men elected to office Tuesday, November 7. The public is requested to attend. I. H. Wheeler is President of the Club.
MAYOR KIEL GOES EAST TO STUDY THE NEGRO ON GOLF PRIVILEGES
MAYOR KIEL GOES EAST TO STUDY THE NEGRO ON GOLF PRIVILEGES
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—Mayor Kiel and Director of Public Welfare Cunliff of St. Louis, departed yesterday for New York and Boston after a brief visit here.
The Mayor told inquirers he and Cunliff were studying the methods of Eastern cities in dealing with the use by Negroes of public recreation grounds, such as golf links and tennis courts, with a view to finding a solution of a problem which had proved troublesome in St. Louis. He was in formed that in Washington one day a week is set apart for Negroes on the municipal links.
Three colored children, Wylter Adams, 4 years old; Richard Evans, 4, and Ruth Evans, 3, were suffocated in a fire which started about 11 a.m. Tuesday on the second floor of the house at 519 South Ewing Avenue. The children had been left alone in the building as Mrs. Magnolia Adams, aunt of the Evans children, had gone out to look for work. An older brother of the Evans children was at school.
Society
AND LOCAL NOTES
Tonight, Pore, 8:15. Myrtle A. Burgess and Leumyon G. Amqreux in piano and song recital.
The Booklovers will meet with Miss Lillian Vanderberg of 4140 Enright this Saturday afternoon.
The Bachelor Girls Club will be the guest of Mrs. Mable Dobson, 4141 Cook this Saturday afternoon.
Master Harold Taylor of 4228a Fair-fax Ave. is attending school at Geo. R. Smith College, Sedalia, Mo.
Mrs. W. P. Curtis of 4215 Flinny was hostess to the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Saturday evening.
Mrs. P. P. Flowers, 4204 West Cote Brilliantine, underwent a successful operation at Rochester, Mn. Nov. 8.
Mrs. Margaret Saunders of 4342 Cook Avenue was hostess to the West End Matrons, Whist Club, on Monday.
Don't fail to go to Whettley Y. W. C. A. on Friday evening, 24th to hear of The Passion Play by an eye witness.
Mrs. Belle Cope and daughter, Madge of McMinnville, Teen, are visiting Mrs. O. J. Rankins, 4351a Cook Ave.
Don't forget December 8th is reserved for Lafford Girls. Will make a big hit that night at the Pythian Hall.
We must go out as I heard that there would be several new clubs introduced that night. Oh! What a night. Adv.
Mr. June Scott and wife will leave Sunday for Chicago to attend the P. P. B. A., as a candidate for Grand Secretary.
Mr. W. P. Smith, delegate of the Local P. P. B. A., No. 7, will leave Sunday for Chicago to attend the P. P. B. A.
Mrs. C. E. Taylor of 4061 Cook Avenue gave a neighborhood-wist on Thursday afternoon. An enjoyable evening was spent.
Say! Girls after club we are going to the Belmont Boys' Club Celebration Dance, next Tuesday night. You know us? Adv.
Mrs. Thomas Marshall of 2629 So. Copton was hosted to the J. M. S. Tuesday evening. There were seven tables at 300'. The evening was delightfully spent
Mrs. O. P. Perdue of 2801 Franklin Ave. has returned from New Orleans La. where she spent two weeks visiting friends and relatives.
Woman's Union Auxiliary will meet Sunday, 2. P. M. at Northern Bagst church, Ewing and Scott. Mrs Lee, pres. Mrs Griffin, sec'y.
Mrs Win English of 2255 Finney Ave. is much improved after three weeks of illness. Her son Nathaniel Jordan is very sick at the above address.
Rev J R Tunstell of Kirkwood, Mo. State Missionary Union Missionary Baptist Association of Missouri, made a business trip to Truesville, Mo., this week
Mr P. P Flowers of 4204 West Cedar Brilliant, left a few days ago for Rochester, Minn., to be at the lodgeside of his wife who was operated upon the Sh inst.
A bevy of pretty girls, styled the "Yummyn Club," has sent out invitations for Carnival Dance on Thursday the evening of November 23rd at the Pythian Hall.
Aw! Let's don't have any meeting next Tuesday. Why? Why have you forgotten the Big Club Celebration bounce given by the Belmonts on the 21st of November?
Mr. and Mrs. A. Learville of New York City who have been visiting their sister and brother, Mr. and Mrs. Forcen, 4231 St. Pendidan Ave. left Wednesday. Nov. 14 for some.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Tarly newlyweds of Pittsburgh, Pa., were the honor guests of the Friella Girls and Dunkar Boys Clubs at Delmonton Wednesday evening, November 8. Mr. Tarly is a cousin of Miss H. Juanita Wallace and Mr. Cliff Wallace of this city.
Mine Rhoda, President Rhodao Beauty Culture College and manufacturing Co. Nashville, Tenn., will speak in Louisiana. Mo. at A. M. K. Church, Monday, November 20. Mrs. M. Norman, formerly of Helens, Arkansas is manager of Madam Rhoda's branch in the city at 305 N. Ewing Ave.
Mr. Samuel Barnett formerly of St. Louis, but now of Detroit, is spending a few weeks in St. Louis visiting friends. Mr. Barnett is well known in St. Louis as a member of Central Baptist Church and an active member of the Y. M. C. Co. While here he is stopping at 336 Lucas Ave.
Mrs. Lucy, Donald is home again from Gayton, Ind, Sedalia, Kansas City, and Columbia! Mo. in the interest of the United Sons, and Daughters of Ethiopia which went over the top in each city, Mrs. Donald left her important offices in Columbia filled by their prominent persons: Wm. Burton, L. J., Williams, Clarence, Tillard, Washington, Buckner, Mrs. Lovey Tibba, Mrs. Maude Williams, Mrs. Delia Sniff, Mrs. Maggie McQuillay, Mrs Sarah Clash, Mrs. Hannah Williams and Mrs. Melissa Redham.
"Say R While Dancing"—The Fidelda Girl.
St. Cecilia's Guild will give a whist at Paradise Hall, December 5th.
Mr. Clifford Evans of 4210 West Belle, was host to the Boules Saturday.
Don't miss November 24 Why? The Melrose Girl's House Dance at 3300 Lucas Ave. Adv.
Miss Sophia Hopkins of 4010 Finney Avenue who has been ill of tonsilitis is convalescing.
Mrs. Raymond McClosky of 4580 Garfield was host to the Progressive Art Club on Saturday afternoon.
Skating is the latest recreation, why not join the Wheaten Brach Class at the Gymnasium every Saturday from 8:30 to 10:30 P. M.
Miss Phillomena White of 404S W. Belle was quietly married to Mr. W. Williams, Saturday, November 11th, Dr. Geo. E. Stephens officiated.
LOST—A pocket handkerchief with sen se in it.
FOUND—The pocket handkerchief at the Melrose House dance at 3300 Lucas.
WHEATLEY BRANCH X. W. C. A.
Hello Everybody. Do your Xmas shopping at the Wheatley Branch Annual Bazaar, 703 Garrison Ave., on Dec. 7th, 8th, 9th. Besides an interesting program each evening, many features are being planned and the beautiful booths will be a joy to the Xmas shopper.
There will be gifts for Father, Mother, brother, Sister, Sweetheart, Wife, Husband and the Kiddies. O, but won't the kiddies be happy when Old Santa comes in with his Pack. All purchases will be 10 to 15% cheaper than any where else
During the Worlds Week of Prayers we have thought and prayed together more earnestly than ever before with the women and girls of the whole world, that the spirit of real fellowship may be developed. The Pine St. Y. M. C. A., will join in the special services to be held at the administration Building. Every one is invited.
A Musical treat is in store for those who will attend Vespers Services Sunday 4:45 P.M. Mr. James Harris assisted by his pupils will be heard in the Recital.
Mrs. Ruth Shelton's Musical Comedy "Feggle Dear" at Pete December 5th. Admission 50 cents. Go!
MISSIONARY SOCIETY
ANNUAL CONFERENCE
MISSIONARY SOCIETY
ANNUAL CONFERENCE
The Missouri Annual Conference Branch Women's Mite Missionary Society of the A. M. E. Church, met at Wayman Chapel at St. Louis, Mo. October 20th, 1922, with Sister A. B. Green 1st Vice President, presiding owing to the absence on account of illness of the president, Sister W. H. Spurrock. At this meeting enthusiasm was rampant and the financial mission seemed peerless. The financial year of both districts exceeded the expectation, as the amount of money raised was $1250.35. The Society was addressed by the wife of the Right Rev. Bishop H. B. Parks which was timely and encouraging. After this officers for the ensuing year were elected as follows, Mrs. A. B. Green, Pres. whom afterwards was elected as delegate to attend the annual convention, which convenes in New York, in October, 1923. Sister S. R. Stanley was elected alternate, Mrs M. E. Oaks 1st, Vice Pres.; Mrs L. J. Eakes 2nd, Vice Pres.; Mrs M. Harvey, recessing pres.; Mrs Jessie Jolson, corresponding secretary; and Mrs J. R. Hopkins, treas. The following members elected to consist of the Executive Board: Messdanes J. W. Graham, American Watkins W. H. Peck, Wm. Ridley and Minnie Oggs.
Mrs. A. B. Green, President: Mrs. Wm. Ridley, Reporter. P. S. The error in this report in last week's issue was typographical. Mrs. Ruth Shelton's Musical Comedy "Pergle Dear" at Pore December 6th. Admission 10 cents. Go!
HOME COOKING
Home cooking from 6:00 a.m. to
9:00 p.m. Special meals served at
any time by call or telephone. Linda
2008. 3008 W. Belle. Best cooking
guaranteed by Mrs. Beatrice Clarke.
Prop.
Mrs. Ruth Sbellon's Musical Comedy
"Pyggle Dear" at Pore December
5th. Admission 30 cents. Go!
LLOYD LEAVES FOR KANSAS CITY.
A. W. Lloyd, Grand Chancellor
Knights of Pythias, State of Missouri,
left Thursday night for Kansas City,
Mo. to attend the meeting of the
board of the Mid West Life Insurance
Co. He will offer other insurance
white offer.
THANKSGIVING.
We come to you at this time with a worthy cause asking you for a donation for the 18th Annual Free Thanksgiving Dinner, November 30th. Any amount is highly appreciated.
We commend you to Him "Who said your prayer and alms have come up before Him as a memorial." Acts 10:4- "God loveth the cheerful giver." Youngs for the cause of humanity.
Rev. J. K. Parker, Pastor; Martha Hott, Church Clerk.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Mrs. Della B. Broomfield, the Hortona Hair and Scalp specialist,
4208 Finney Ave. Phones, Lindell 2787. (Adv.) 312-1ndf
Illinois Soldiers' Bonus
Apply at Calvin Hyde Pue No. 184
American Legion, 2022 Chestnut St. for information concerning Illinois Bonus. R. Brown, Luther Lea Mahn.
THE ST. LOUIS ARGUS, FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1922
MRS. AGNES PAYNE.
We wish to extend our sincere and most heartfelt thanks to our relatives and friends for their kind expressions of sympathy shown and the beautiful floral offerings tendered during the recent illness and death of our beloved wife, mother and sister. Agnes Payne who departed this life November 9, 1922 at 4:15 p.m. we also wish to thank Rev. H. Harris for his consoling words, Dr. Breedlove and Dr. Tyler for their faithful service. We also wish to thank Gates and Manuel Undertakers, for service rendered and Tennessee Star Temple No. 20, Daughters of Tabernaress. John G. Payne, husband; Alfreda, daughter, sisters and 84-others. — Adv.
Mrs. Ruth Shelton's Musical Comedy "Flegle Dear" at Pore December 5th, Admission 50 cents. Go!
SONG RECITAL
Tuesday evening the Combine Crusis of Berea Presbyterian Church will present Shelby K. Nichols, barrisons in a song recital. Program begins at 8:30 sharp. Admission 25 cents. Mr. Nichols has appeared at many of the large churches throughout the city recently appearing at Central Baptist Church as soloist with a chorus of sixty voices. He will be remembered by the music lovers of St. Louis through the All Artists' Concert he gave December 18th, 1921, when the greatest number of artists ever presented to a St. Louis audience, appeared at Berea Presbyterian Church. Mr. Nichols began singing in public at the early age of six, singing soprano in the choir of the Presbyterian Church at his home town in Kentucky, the best teachers in Chicago, Boston and Louis. For sometime prior to the illness of Mr. Gerald Tyler, Mr. Nichols coached with him almost daily. Mr. Nichols is open for concert engagements. For particulars, call or write Mrs. Rethel Davis Dowd, 2821 Laclede Ave.
Phone Bounty 2172 J.
Mrs. Ruth Sibelson's Musical Comedy "Pergle Dear" at Palm December 5th. Admission 50 cents. Go!
Wholesale And Retailers In High Grade Anthracite And Bituminous
We are taking advance orders for Keystone Domestic Lump Coal. A clean high grade double heating standard coal. That will stand the test with the very best grades of bituminous on the market.
We are offering; this coal to you for the rest of the month for $6.50 per ton delivered.
The operators of the Keystone mines are doing this in order to introduce the product in St. Louis. And have offered to sell at the price of production plus the freight to St. Louis for the next fifteen days for cash on delivery. Therefore we quote the following prices;
Keystone Egg $5.75
Keystone Domestic Lump 6.50
Keystone Special 7.50
We beg of you not to delay in putting your orders as the shipment of this coal will begin on the 20th inst., so rush your orders in now. Don't delay.
The Douglass Coal Company Distributors.
H! Ho! We are off for All Saints
Sunday School skating party Friday.
November, at the Y. W. C. A. gsm.
From six to six. Admission 15 cents.
NOTICE
Baptist Attention!!
There will be a general mass, meeting and rally given at the Calvary Baptist Church, 26th and Morgan, November 20th, 1922, for the benefit of the Local Committee's expenses in the care of the National Baptist Convention which meets in St. Louis, December 6th to 11th inclusive. All sister Baptist churches and pastors are carefully requested to be on hand with a donation for that purpose. Pastors will please take a collection on Sunday and report it at the mass on Monday night at Calvary. If it possible, please offer on next Sunday, please be sure on the 4th Sunday and report same to Headquarters, 2722 Pine St., on the following Monday. By order of the Committee on Entertainment.
Rev. K. A. Moncky, Chr.
Rev. O. C. Maywell, Gen. Sec.
Rev. H. Howell, Harris, Sec.
of Publicity Committee.
50—PORO DINNER—50
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19
Relish
Chicken
Two Vegetables
Ballad
Dessert
The morning students of TUCKER'S BUSINESS, COLLEGE have recently organized a club known as TUCKER'S COMMERCE CLUB. The participants are putting forth great efforts to make the Club a success. The following officers have been elected: David Essex, Pres; Elmer Hubbard, Vice-Pres; Harriett Hopson, Seys; Sadie Hardie, Librarian. Other Club in the school are being organized by students attending the afternoon and night classes, and are used such an extent it will soon be necessary for the school to occupy larger quarters. The Bookkeeping Dept., will open the first of January, which will be modern in every respect. The Twentieth Century Bookkeeping System will be taught, and several new studies will be included in the Bookkeeping Course. Persons interested in taking up the Course are urged to register immediately, to take advantage of a SPECIAL OFFER. TUCKER'S BUSINESS COLLEGE was the first school of its kind in the metropolis of the west, and owing to its merits, the school has grown to include more than one hundred. The Business Training Course may be completed in four or six months. Diplomas issued and positions are secured.
A Public Service Dept., is in connection with the school. This Dept., serves the general public in typewriting, all work first class, reasonable and strictly confidential. There are many regular patrons of this Dept. Persons in need of a proper printer in your day, week or longer, are asked to phone the school your work can be done in your own office or at the school.
Filling is one of the subjects taught students. Every business firm or individual should have their files revised or gone over before the first of the year, in order to start 1923 BUSINESS in a clean and correct file. This is very important: take advantage of this offer—it is the FIRST TIME in the history of your business, such an offer has been placed at your door. Your files will be revised or gone over in your own office (small index files may be brought to the school) at a very low cost. All work on files will be personally supervised by Mrs Tucker in your office or at the school. You are urged to place your order for the revising as early as possible. Many orders are already in, each will be taken up in turn. Have YOUR work done before January 1st. No files to complicated, too large or too small for this group of energetic workers at the TICKER'S BUSINESS COLLEGE you may obtain any assistance in your business, even a notary.
The Wonderful Passion Play as presented by the peasants of the village of Oberramenau is to be the special feature of the Travelogue on the evening November 24th at the Y. W. C. Museum. Don't miss again the beautiful story.
LIFE
By Thoa Atkins.
Thon art the seed we are thy fruit.
We are the offspring and thou art the root:
Like a torch into a gas filled room is
burged.
So man with life is lit when comes
he into the world.
Though in this prison house.
Caged like an entrapped mouse.
Reckless is he until he finds.
That this his prison tightly binds.
DO NOT FORGET THE LOCATION
OF TUCKER'S BUSINESS COL
LEGE. N. W. COR. of COOK &
PENDLETON.
Announcement
To the Members and Friends of St. James A. M. E. Church:
Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Peck, request your presence at a reception at the parishage: Wednesday. November 22 1922; hours 4 to 10 p.m. The reception committee in arranging the larger dinner who will attend, the person who can find it convenient to come between 4-6 instead of 6-8, or between 8-10 than 4-6 or 6-8, will confer a favor on the committee by so doing and same will be highly appreciated. It is the desire of the pastor and his wife that they receive all of the members and friends of St. James, at the parishage this
Respectfully yours.
We respectfully call your attention to the following
to the following:
Be a member of Mr. Wm. H. Peck, fr. fr.
have a deep sense of gratitude to the
members and friends of St. James, who
have made possible by their co-operation
a pastorate of seven years, have
decided that on Nov. 22nd, at the
parsonage, they will be pleased to receive
all members and friends between the
hours of 4 and 11 p. m.
Yours in service
Wife and servant B. Peck
Pastor and wife at St. James A. M. E.
Church.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Chayton
Charles Mitchell, 24 Lukas Ave.
Orville Brown, Wisteria Grove, Mo.
Odell Duke, Chayton. Mo.; Tennis
Porter, Chayton, Mo.
William Robinson 4114 Emright
East; Estella Phillips, 3846 Cook Ave.
C. and L. Cook, 420 Biddle.
S. and A. Hall, 4235 Lucky.
L. and M. Hudson, 2202 Clark.
E. and V. Keya, 432 N. Market.
P. and S. Flowers, 1 N. Garrison.
E. and N. Walton, 1128 N. Chan-
ning.
Girls.
E. and E. Tyler, 4214 Cote Brillante.
lincoln.
H. Aung J. Hicks, 4453 St. Ferdl,
J. and L. Johnson, 2000 Morgan.
C. and E. Dess, 4002 Cook.
L. and G. Hackney, 3727 Cass.
L. and M. Levielle, 4231 N. Mkt.
J. and B. Milton, 3203 Lucas.
J. and E. Yaughn, 3203 Morgan.
A. and E. Hunt, 4414 Maitl.
D. and E. Miller, 528 S. Garrison
BURIAL PERMITS
Mary Martin, 50, 1012 N. 14th St.
W. Barnett, 1, 1724 Hinden.
Annie Seay, 25, 4242 W. Lucky.
Pannie Ashby, 48, 2204 Papin.
M. Holloway, 68, 1807 Goode.
Annie W. Dockery, 26, 1120 N.
Compton.
* W. Butler, 53, 1016 N. High.
W. Hollis, 42, 2454 N. Market.
G. Coleman, 47, 1102a Cardinal.
Julia Holman, 30, 2117a Lucas.
Emma V. Hodges, 11.
Ervaline Pete, 35, 3122a Clark.
Laura Jones, 40, 314 Montrose.
Helen Duke, 6, 517 Gratl.
Agnes Payne, 37, 4071a Newton.
Maria Albert, 35, 4071a Kennedy.
Terry Hughes, 41, 1024a 21.
Mamie Hughes, 44, 1512 Wash.
Nancy Gibson, 65, 525 S. Ewing.
Georgia Brown, 5, 2026 Pine.
Cleota Clicks, 2, 1000 O'Fallon.
M. Lewis, 30, 3101 Pine.
Saffie Clark, 80, 2836 Baldwin.
Cord B. Campbell, 47, 4129 Sote Brillante.
Laura Walker, 50, 3101 Adams.
A large crew attended the funeral of Mr. J. C. Campbell wife of the Steward Board president, Lane Tbernacle last Tuesday afternoon. Rev. J. C. Colcough, pastor of Parrish Chapel affiliated in the absence of Reverend Erans.
SANDERS—Mrs. Annie Sanders.
2017 Bernard Street died Tuesday,
November 14, at 4:30 a.m. after an
illness of more than a year. Funeral
Saturday, November 18th from St.
Dougless Primitive Baptist. Church
2018 Laclede at 1 o'clock. Wake will
be held Friday, November 17 at the
Church; body at Emmett Toney under
taker, 2129 Morgan St. —Ady.
CARD OF THANKS.
I wish to thank the many friends for kindness shown, cheerful visits and donations during my husband's long illness and for the sympathy expressed and flowers given in my sad bours. The officers and members of the A. U. K., and D. of A., and the music choir, officers and members of 81 Paul. Mra. B. A. Holloway, 1807 Goode Ave., Adv.
IN' MEMORIAM
In loving memory of my dear daughter Lula Johnson Penrose, who departed this life five years ago. Nov. 8, 1916, and son, Lee H. Johnson, who departed this life three years ago. November 3, 1919:
The month of November is here.
The saddest month of the year.
I think of my darlings in silence;
No eyes can see me weep.
But many a silent tear I shed
When others are asleep.
'Tis not the tears of the moment
shed
That told how I love the souls that fled;
But the silent tears that I have wept
And fond remembrance I kept,
died in 1916.
IN MEMORIAM.
In remembrance of our little darling
Dorris G. Hubbard, who died Nov. 17,
1918:
Days of sadness still come over us,
Tears in silence after, flow;
Sad 'and sudden was the call,
Yet, we know that you are happy,
in the sweet eternal rest.
You are sadly missed by mother
Mabib Hubbard; father, R. C. Hub
bard and one sister and two brothers
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of our beloved father, Egypt Wellington, who died November 20th, 1916, James Wellingbrothers, Willie Wellington, who died November 20th, 1916, James Wellington, who died, November 21, 1913. The month of November is here again. To us the sadest of the year. What grief we felt since that sad day with one so loving. Kind and pure. How hard it was to part with you. Sadly missed by the family. Signed, Mrs. Minnie C. Shepperd daughter. Adv.
IN MEMORIAM.
In loving memory of our dear brother, Walter Moman, who died November 15, 1913. Not dead to us; we love you dear; Not lost, but gone before. You live with us in memory.
Sadly missed by sister and brother,
Mrs. Ada Gibson, Gene Monsan, Adv.
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of our dearest
mother, Mrs. Katie Jackson who de-
parted this life November 15, 1914.
There was a feast in heaven on that
morning.
That had a vacant chair,
So God broke our hearts to make it
complete.
His line that she was all the mother
had told her and old friend.
That is why he wanted her so
As the 15th grows nearer, we can feel
her suffering, her p resistance, we
wanted to dear.
Keep on good naught while the leaves
are fading best by leaf.
Open Until 6:30 P. M. Saturdays—the Year Round
A Four-Post Bedstead of the Finest Colonial Traditions for $25.50
In richness, beauty of finish, in comfort and sleeping qualities, the new Simmons "Colonial" four-post design is by far one of the greatest Bedstead values at this price.
Come in and let us show it to you. See for yourself how splendidly it harmonizes with the other furniture you have or need to purchase for your bedroom.
Reupholstering and recovering of all uphostered furniture on easy credit terms our specialty. Prices and terms to all who phone for estimate.
Come in tomorrow and see the wonderful specials we are offering to shoppers in Living-Room Suites. You can beautify your living room with a real quality Living-Room Suite at a genuine saving. Some of these are Sample Suites and are offered at tremendous reductions.
Early Disnified Credit Extended to All
The Only
MNICHULS
A Columbia Phonograph
THE RECORDING CABINET
The Columbia is well known; it is not necessary to dwell on its superior points. This one is a Queen Anne Model, beautifully finished in either oak or mahogany. Price... Terms $1.50 a Week
Reupholstering and recou-
fiture on easy credit
Prices and terms to all u
Autumn Sale of L
$149 $189
Easy Cre
Come in tomorrow and see t
offering to shoppers in Living
tify your living room with a n
at a genuine saving. Some o
are offered at tremendous re
Easy Dissolved Cre
The Only M N
MARKET STREET
Phase Corp. 1929-R
In memory of Mrs. Lactuca Williams
who died November 16, 1916. Sadly
mourned by daughter, Dove Merrill.
Adk.
A grand sale on all fall and winter hats to make room for our ready ordered spring stock "Out they go" at 33% less than cost. Large amount of sport and trimmed hats. Sale begins Thursday, November 9th and closes Wednesday, Nov. 15th. Thursday, Nov. 16th, sale on children's hand made clothes, for one week.
TUCKER'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
Discontinued Columbia Record—jazz, popular songs, patriotic music, blues, etc.; also some sample Records at the same low price... 59c
powering of all uphostered
dit terms our specialty.
who phone for estimate.
Living-Room Suites
$225 $249
dit Terms
the wonderful specials we are
Living-Room Suites. You can beau-
real quality Living-Room Suite
of these are Sample Suites and
reductions.
dit Extended to All
CHULS
T AT ELEVENTH
IT'S CHEAPER NOW
Spare For Winter Than Let Winter
You. If You Want To Look Drowsy
at, SKE—
AKE JICK
YOUR TAILOR
2624 Market Street
MADE
DER
$25.00 AND
UP
REMOVAL NOTICE
Dr. G. B. Key, physician and surgeon, formerly located in the Midway Building 3243 Olive, corner Jefferson, is now located at No. 4 South Compton Ave. corner Laclede Ave. Sarge Brazelton's Drug Store, Sarge Bell Phone, Pomont 3258; Kinloch, Central 3263.
He is still receiving patients as his residence, 4279a West Pinney, corner Pendleton. Hours 5 to 10 a.m.; 4 to 5 p.m. and at night. Phone Bell. Lindell 2279-W.
Have You Seen... A, ah | | . ? ADMISSION 10c WITH, DANCING FREE EVERY NIGHT,
Deatitital: New « .@& ‘te Pe } @ i FINESB'DANCE FLOOR |: .““Phankegiving Farm panes
ioe Satetnebeniise, ear ow | OSE
NOW OPEN!. ‘ : ; | “y yr] .¢ 3 ] / ENJOY. 2,200.0" AND DANCE TO G@OD MUSIC
monaree. ~| CHAUEF. EURS’ CLUB |. Sosiee
= pera ieee Ue fe Role hg AER “ WINTER GARDEN. ous — : : talners: Messrs. R. Q. Dickerson And Rose Kippy.
Weeder Botanical Gomes, "(| $138, PINE STREET -~ Joe Marshall, Mgr, t. BOMONT 9581 -+: SPECIAL SUNDAY CHICKEN DINNERS
Amouncing—-i HORE RODERN’ TIME WITH THE MODERN... GIVEN By THE-——- Ms = a MUSIC BY
Ter di Nor dara” ETOrnat Boy Monday Nite, Nov. 20 rears sazens
3, AND A FARMER VELAGE STORW DANCE. OFMNEL DOYS —arrimaur junronumfegigne
Vebod ode oe
“CLUBS
» "ROBINSON: GUIDE. *
‘Th Robimon Guldo Christian “As
sociation visited he poor infirmary at
Hoepital. No, 2. Sunday. November 12,
and’ served 135. .4p old-fashlowed
Serta sermon pondered by Mev, Hob
ful sermon rendered by Key,
ere Raley. ae
ROYAL SOCIETY EMBROIDERY.
The Ro; 1 gostnty Emo
1 Embroldery Chul
wact Detober 20 with itra Be Dh Tne
Ang. After busluces was over a de-
Aghifal luncheon was_servea_by_the:
‘hoetoas. The next meeting will be at
te home of Mire. 2, Long, 2719 Clark
Aves November 2k — Stra t—Longs
‘Reporter.
g , .. ORIOLE GIRLS,
* me’ Grtote, Girls Social Cluty,tield
thelY usual meeting at Miss A. 1.
Jones, $082 Vine St, Nov. 17. Busl-
ness was transacted and a dainty and
deliclous Juncheon was served by Mra
Jones, * Two née members were wel-
comed: Misses” B., Morrison and. A.
Anthony. The ‘club adjourned to meet
at thelr’ same ters, Nov. 23.
‘Visltora are {uvited. Miasew 8. V., Rows
Prealdent, A. L. Jones, Seeretary, E.
Vitts, reporter. |
——_____.
LA JOVIAL GIRLS.
fhe LaJovlal Girls met. at the res
fdence cf Miss Corinne Ballard, 2120
Pine St. After the transaction of all
Dusiness, a three course Tupeheon was
served and enjoyed “by alt: The meet
Ing adjourned toymect at the real
- dende...of. Ming.."Mtelia Washington
8222 Lawton. Mrs Rerttin Fain, Pres
{dent, Mrs. Bessie Dickeus, Reporter
THE CARNATION EMBROIDERY
a cLuB, ©
‘The Carnation Enibrollery Crut
held ‘their ast meting at the resi
dence of Mrs. J. L, Kingsley, 4550 Gar.
field Ave... with 12 members present
At wus detided that the club continue
with to charity work, There was ap
Invitation “extended, by a friend of
Mrs. Fannle Pittmon in the peron of
Mrv. Bliza Parks for the club to hold
thelr next meeting with ‘her. She bas
beet a visitor sereral times and mb
admires the work of the club se much
‘The invitation was gladly reeelted aid
accepted. A two course luncheon, was
verred by the hostess and enjoyed bj
aL The Club adjourned td mee
Friday, ‘Nov. 24th, with “Mrs, (Kila
Parks at 8950 Cook Ave. All ‘mem
Berd are. requested to be present a9 |
fe the desire of the hostess to enter
talg att the members also-by order 0
the president. Mra J. L. Kingsley.
“Mra. 8 A. Dixun, Sceretary and Mrs
MiisieK Warren, ‘reporter.
~_’ BOSE" BOYS
‘The Ta Romo Boys held "their regular
meeting, Thursday, November. 7, 1922
at thelr club room, 2700 Lawton Ave.
Mr.’ George Foster. wes weleomey into
the club ns a niember.
‘The’ Club elected. new officers, Rob-
ert Wright, reelected President ; Geo.
Green, Vive President; Clifford My-
lett, re-cheetey! Secretary; Ged, Don-
nelf, re-elected Ansistaut Secretary;
Pete Quinn. reelected Business man-
ager; Samuel Overstreet re-elected
Entertainer; Walter Howell elected
Treasurer: George Fonter elected
Masige of Ceremonies ang Chas, Hédg-
ea, reporter.
Membera: Alfred Dayis. J. MeClen-
non, James MeCiain, L. Lee, Orlin
) HM, Owen Crockett...
|” mukese socaL cue.
) The Melrowe Soclal Club, met at the
of Miss Magdalene - Smith,
e , Leftingwell, Tuesday eyentug, No-
vember 14, We are glail to wetcome
back to the club, Mise Mattie Hedge-
show, a popatnr member. A dainty
Tepest wa served. ‘The ‘club adjourn-
ed 'to hold tts next meeting ut the
Feslitence “of Miss ‘Thetma Smith,
‘3823 Lucas Ave. 7
. FLOR DE MBLBA GIRLS
“The ior De Melba Giris will xiv
thetrnest Whit party OE the season
renlilenee of Miny Bernice’ McGraw
B17 Clark Ave, Wednesday | evening
Nox. 22, 1982 at 8 vielock. *Refreal
ments. “Admission 10 eants.
inte May, Johema, Fase en
Magoo, Sec.) Tommie "Mag 3
‘Treas’ All clubs are: sna ee
‘The Flor De Melba Girls will give’
ele frat plat arty. of the seneon at
vedjence of Miss Bernice MeGraw; |
‘S117 Clark Aye.
“after the routine of business a)
‘three course luncheon was’ ‘werved,
after which, the... club adjourned to)
miket at Ube. same place’ - Thursday,
Nov. 16th,
‘Misy Willie Mac Jounsea, President ;
Mise, Lucile Maina, Reporter. |
.., SURPRISE CLUB. x
‘The Surprise Club — will Seats
fourth Friday evening: Nor. 24,
‘AG the reaidynce of Sister Marie Book-
ef, 18tl Wash St. Visitors welcome,
‘Visitors at our last meeting were,
‘Mr, Jerry Claxton, Wille Berieston,
7j.Xinginla Williams, Premiliee: Wats]
oe Nhe. Pres; Bennie ‘Sees
Larsog, Supervisor.
e ns .
“The ‘Roop? Boy's Club, rooge
for rent for all scrasions such as ban
aia an Rear ee
Gia arlgs Pe fertber Igorma
For further informa:
Hom call at 2790 Lawton.
OS Brawn 32
gsi atin 8 eit es
ea ae a
: 2 ;
yn a a en
ae Oe eae ee ee aaah
‘ eu se
We et Here a
Met eget we
Se, EE. ON
T s— COLORED |
ATTEN a w I
; omen and Girls
CARD @F THANKS, THE SILENT MYSTERY CLUB. | BONCILLA GIRLS SOCIAL CLUB.|
_— ‘The Silegt Mystery Club: niet Nov.| The pote Girls Soclat Club held
We, the Arrow Boys wish to extend] tet, at the residence of Mins Tillte| thelr weekly meeting at the resldence|
our hearty thanks and appreciation | Sdutherland, 2616 Bernard St. After the| of Miss O. L. Taylor. A dainty tres
tw the Delancey Girls of which we| regular business of the meeting five| course moau was served by the hos-||
Were honor guests, Faiday evening, | new members were added to our club,| tess. Next meeting at 2228 Washing:
November 3, at the residence. of Ming after wh{cla three course luncheon | ton Ave., at the residence of Joysle Mc: |
Blanch Tatum. 4518 West Belle PI” | was served. Millian, November 22, , \ Anne, Jeter, |
Signe. Arro® Boys.. Adv. ‘The Club adjourned to meet at the} Reporter. 1|
seca residence gf Mrs, ‘Tillie, Young. 1012 so
CARD OF Al ATION. Loffingtvell_ Ave., Nov. 19th. Something for all at. Pythjan Hall, |
‘We beartily thavk all chute and} 0. Smith, Pres.; T. Sutherland, Sec.,| Deg. 2... Fidela Girls Ady.
the genentl-publtc for. having-attend.|"T. Youngs. reporter. Se
ed, out Atiistice Dance, which was a ———— ST.-1OUB SUJAL, CLUB.
tremendous success, BELVEDERE BOYS or |
The 20th Century Club. Ady.|, We sincerely thank-the many glubs.| ‘The St, Loule Sgclat Chub guve tts
‘i ee cnr friends and the public in general’ first Hense Social af the residence of}
THE INTERSAY GIRLS. ~ | for aiding us in making our Intro-{ Mra Holt, 806 N- Jefférson Ave. Each |
‘The Intersay Girls held its régulac|ductory dance a tremendous success | one present eujoyed themselves until |
meeting at the residence of Mie Le- fot Thursday, November Oth. It tthe }a wee: hour of the morning when all| |
nora Murphy, 3947 Cook Avenue, After| sole desire of the Belvedere Boys at] departed expreaging thdniselves as
the’ routine of businés, “Mise Gladys | any soclat function or dance to look | having smeat an enjoyable eventing, |
L. Alexander, a very popular young] to the enjoyment of our guest. It ugh White, Reperter,. i
lady of the clty was welcomed ay a| is not the purpose of this club tof <= = —————_-_—__|
member. A dainty tliree cvarse lunch-| make any great amount of money, but | Don't send me posies"when Roscs are
con was served by the Hostess The| to promote social functions regardless} What 1 necd, * |
edt meeting will be at the residence] of the cost to tts members. ‘The club] Dot veal ste shoes when fun is 1,
‘of Cora Spencer. 2124 Olive St. {4 compoucd af ‘employees or former ‘What I mean. .
Ethel Nurgett, President. Annie M.}empkyees of Famous Barr Co. It be-| At the Del Monte Girls, Pre-Chelst-)
Geclh Mecrctary, Cora Spencer, Treas] lng agaloat the policy of the sare to mss Adv.
a allow the use of Ita name, we were}: ———__
GOLDEN RULE CLUB. NO 50. | oblicea to use: another name. In FIDELA GIRLS |
Abe Goken File CHS. Na, 38, mes
at ie regular meeting, ‘Thursday.
evening, Nov. 9th at the residence of
Ernest Emery. After the regular
ronting of business a delightful Iunch-
con was served. Next meeting Thurs.
evening Nov. 23, at the reidence of
Mr. Robert Gunell, 2214 Frapktin
Ave. > t
“Mrs, Auanda Jackson, resident,
Mist Ethel Clay, Reporter.
+ BELMONT BOYS
‘'Thé Belniont Buys eld: thelr regu:
lar meeting, ‘Tuesday evening, “Nov.
14, at the residence of Mr. Julius OF
iver, 3122 Lawton Ave. After a ¥ery
succesaful business mecting, tbe boss
‘were serred a delicious repast after
which the club adjourned to meet at
the residence of Mr. George Rice.
‘The Regent Club ‘held their regular
meeting Friday, Noveniber 10th, ut
the residence of Mr, Alpheus.’ Bass
Matters of tuiportance were takey wp
apd some Introductions adopted. — We
bad the. very great pleasure of ‘hay.
Ing Mr. Bruce Macklin, Secretary. of
the Vandykes ite us a very, insptea
tional talk on tbe routine of club du
Yes“ We all Joln in. Im thabking the
Yabayace' for senda, tha wom
ful treat. We adjourned tu hold
next regular meeting at the residence
of Mr. Ernest Jones, 2533 N. Leffing
well Ate.
_ Geo. Kelly, reporter.
SOUTH SIDE SOCIAL CLUB’
The South Side Modial Club met
with Mr, and Mrs. Henry Carter,
S18, Irun'St., Monday evening. Novem-
ber 13, 1022," Hutinew attended. the
evening’ was spent in playing progres:
sive whist.~—"Mr.- Oscar” Ingletoy be-
ing winner of the,Ist prize. A most
appettaiig and delicious dinner | was
served'by the hdstess, whose table was
very . prettily decorated in keeping
with | Thankeriving. Next meeting.
Momiay evening at Tenklence of
Mr. and’ Mrs E, O, Bradley, .906
Tron St. eons sitet
Arthur Thomas, President, Violet
Allen. reporter." a
Se MONTANA, BOYS. CLA,
The Montana Boys held thelr ftrdt
Meeting of the season at thi residence
of Mr. Richard Hudsdmy 4219 Fairfax
Ave. Turkday evening, November 14,
After trausactiin of all business, they
adjourned to bare their next meeting
fae sono weet Bella PL Wate ae
jet biz dencePacon.
Richard Hudson, President. David
Jenes, .reporter. i
ARROW BOYS SOCIAL CLUB.
‘The Arrow Boys held: {thelr reg-
war meeting at the 7 s of Mr,
James Suuth, WS N. Hth St. After
the transaction of “alt Abe Important
nals the cn adjourned to ee
“2921 Lucas “Ave... Wilber Clark
° doueph, aly. reporter. >
mmr rerrmamemas <9 5
=e: thelr regular
ineeting upday.. November TE
the“ meaidngce of Mins Cleoré — Hl
S828 Cook “Aye. The ext ting
wil be Sek Navember 20th af
ee
Soy Warr, Sugar ©
the ‘Notel games of whist. let xed tad
ering an Mee. 3 oe sexi
emis gees ee
he-cheb sillunrnnd te mnet’ at,
|. THE SILENT MYSTERY CLUB.
‘The Silent Mystery Club- niet Nov.
Ist. ~ at the residence of Mins Tiilte
Sdutherland, 2016 Bernard St. After the
regular business of ‘the meeting five
new members were added to our club
after whfcla three course luncheon
‘was served.
‘Tho Club adjourned to meet at the
residence gf Mra. Tillie, Young. 1012
LeftingWell. Ave., Nov. 10th.-
©. Smith, Prea.; T. Sutherland, Sec,
‘T. Young, reporter.
BELVEDERE BOYS
We sincerely thank the many clubs,
oar friends and the public Ia general
for alding us in making our. intro-
dyctory dance a tremendous success
at Thursday, November Oth, It ty the
tole Wenire of the Belvedere Boys at
any social function or dance to look
to the enjoyment of our guest. It
fs not ‘the purpose of thls club to
make uny great umount of money, bat
te promote social fenctione regardlens
of the cost to ite’ members. ‘The club
4s compoucd of ‘employees or former
caplyyees of Famous Barr Co. Tt be-
Ing against the policy of the store to
alfow the use of ite name, we were
dbliged to use) another name. In
adopting the name, of Belvedere, wy
id so fully knowing what the name
means Belvolere ‘means ‘On top”
and beautiful. We stand ready at
all times to cooperate wlth any of
the Soctal Clubs in any way. Watet
for the date of ur next dance, Ther
will alwaya be a special featur
attached: to our dances.
Oficera Ernest Mean, Pret;
Wm, (Bell) Williams, Vice Pres.; Ed
ward Lewls, Secretary; Edward, Mf
Tones, Asst. Secretary. and Reporter.
3." W. James, Treagurer; Howark
inith, Manager.
Menibers—Geo. Campbell, “Clarene
Armour, Garfield Lindmy, —Arthu
Turner, Clifford, Rease, Thomas Ed
ards,
+ CABD OF THANKS.
The Marchenell Girls wish to thank
the various clus for thelr presence
At thelr: Introductory Party, November
10. We ala wish to thank Mr. Vir:
kil Allen, of, the Florlent, and Miss
Ella. “Mae Harris fo. the music they
rendered. :
‘The Marchenell Girls,
é : aay.
WEST END WELFARE CLUB.
‘The West End Welfare Club met
Nov. Int, at’ she . residence of Mrs
Worille, 462° W. "Finney Ave.
fine: teport of work ut the House o
Detention the past month was made:
‘The talk Gf the club now ts for 2
colored matron for the Colored Girls
Disision at the House of Detention
We had wx our guest, Mlsx Jessle E
Lee, the school teacber at -the hous
of Detention. She; made an. interest
ing. talk six to the welfare of the girls
the club had an entertainment anc
realized-"a~nicg stim ifor—whieh — we
wish to thank all thit sok part i
ietping to make It x miccess. Mrs. J
PH. Mitchell, wife of the Argus Edt
tor. waa the. winner of the quilt. ‘Th
next meeting: will’ be Dee. 6, at th
vealdunce ,of Mrs Sam Secton,. 446
AW, Belle.’ . Mrs. F. D. George, Pres.
‘Mrs. Champ, Secretary, Mra.’ RC
Blurton, Reporter..
MELROSE ART CLUE.
jPhe Melrose Art Club met with
‘Mra:~Alice-Mitchell at 4904-.W.- Pine,
BL, Nov. 3rd, 1922 with 14 members
and. 3visitord. present. Miss Do-
Janey, Miss Mitchell, Mrs, Clay, each
‘ope made an interenting talk. We
were giad to haye Mra Mamle Bas-|
sot becomes: member. ‘The Club ad-|
Journed tc meet with Mrs. Priscilla
‘Murphy, at 3147 Laclede, Awe, Norv,
Hie Prigcla” Marphr, Presiden.
irs. Prigel . 4
pire. Hester Cah, Secretary, Mrs,
Blanche Lexing, Reporter,
» PEERLESS OLUB AT “FORO”
-On December Sth, Tucsday evening,
‘at 8:25, the Peerless ivy a
Ruth. Shelt pew
eee eee
kpowa at “Poro” on
se ae iad! and Mr. Chitord
(ge a ined et nee se
niug, Mr, ‘the. noted
{ane wit ze “Coals.
Pais: will be we the *
on sy. Tie fa ont hanes
* Benge oo Pe
aes Capen caied eA
ee eae
yeh ere OF 7 Remmiony
Secu hres Oct Se Ale te
soatine of benthtap 2 extety te
aceon: Gk Nerwuaber T, Wee. 5
ae as ene
Be ee oe
® fae RENE oe iaath- Sate
BONCILLA, GIRLS SOCIAL CLUB.
‘The Posi Girls ‘Soclat Club held
thelr weekly meeting at the residence
of Miss O. L, Taylor. A dainty three
course menu was served by the los-
tesa, Next meeting at 3228 Washing:
ton Ave. at the residence of Joysle Mc-
Mililon, November 22, , , Anple, Jeter,
Reporter,
Something for all ait, Pythjan Hall,
Deg. D Fidela Girls ~ ‘Ady.
ST.-1OUB SOUIAL, CLUB.
‘The St. Louis Social Ciub guve tts
first Hoose Social at the residence of
Mra Holt, 808 N: Jefferson Ave. Each
fone present enjoyed themselves until
a -wee-hour of the morning when all
deparied expressing thqnisclves as
having spent an enjoyable evening,
jugh White, Reporter,,,
Dow't send me postes"when Roses are
What 1 need, *
Dog vem she shoes when fun ts
‘What 1 mean,
At the Del Monte Girls, Pre-Christ.
mas. —Adr,
FIDELA GIRLS
‘Miss Minrose White was hostess to
the Fidela Club Tuesday, Noveuber 7,
uit 4370 W. Belle Place. Miss G.
George, one of our members, was iate
in arriving, but she only stopped to
say “good bye as she was leaving,
with ber husband. Mr. Wr. Davis, for
Chiengo. After all business ‘was
transacted, the boston served a dainty
menu, . The cid adjourned to hold
‘its next meeting with Miss Marie Wil-
burn, 4201 Cook Ave. A. Walker, re,
porter.
LOIRE GIRLS:
‘The Loire Girls met Tueeday. Nov.
14 with las Sidney Haekner: | After
the routing -of business a dainty re-
past was served. Mise Margio. Rob-
inson was guest of the clad, Coins !
What? Why. our dance of course.
Georgia Keeth, Reporter.
ANNOUNCEMENT
The Loire Girls wish to inform tbe
Public that they are not, tn any, way
connected: with any other Loire
‘Gitls, Katherine Minnard, President.
Al T-want ia a pair of shoes,
‘One sweet thirty-five pennies
‘Ani, 1 dm’ on the right track to the
Del Monte Girls Pe-Christmas Dance.
Dee. 18th, Ady.
LASPEMEAR WAIST CLUB
‘The Laxpemear Whiat Clab met at
the residence of Mra. Keynolds. 4210
Cook, November 11. A delightful lan-
cheon Was served. The next metiog
will be held at the residence of Mies
Chapman, 3910 Cook. - Mra. Mary
Blanton, Reporter; Miss Olivia Rey:
nisde. Pumiaeak:
Don't - forget. the. Melrose, Girls’
House Dance November 24, at 3806
Tocay Ave. ‘Ady.
| SeMeyNE CLUB NOTES.
‘The regular monthly ase
held Friday evening, November, 10th,
at MePheeters Presbyterian “Ohurch,
Goode and Cote Brilliante Aves, with!
Rev. dnd Mrs -H.-E. Humphrey as)
best and oe oe ‘the business
on spicy program war
Feoderele Among. those wo appear.
oon. preeTAM . Wore, Miss Mikdred
‘Humphrey, who enlivened the heat:
ers With a sweet plano solo, and Mas.’
‘ter Paul Todé thrilieg tbe hearts of
those present with sweet strains of a
violia. “The ‘presiiest ine few choice
words presemted the Kev, Hl. 1, Duna,
Rk ene ae
ont. ape tk ae
i ‘served a three course
i ae wa enjoyed by all. ‘The
pext.mecting will. be held with Mr.
and Mra, W, B Moore, 2700 N. 1th
St, December, 8 1922, The life af
"Paul: ‘Lawrence Duntetr will be dis-
0 bry. Carrie V, Todd leader.
cea. Braxton, President, Mra
rr arene with -3r. Creath
eA GAMA. wee
| Dela Eddings of Bi
| Be v to the Delta.
Gale <ianday, November 12 A“
a a gslnens | was transact
Pn wie eo oe 5
ae eee on ae a
She tbls Genes Gis gvé ¢ mle.
= “abower in. homer of thetr
cae esa
ere tea =: Se
sd vi i _ for ly
ea ee een ©
sav) " ; " i
ESS aa
SE SBS SE
COSTELLO’S .” Branch Office of the Pace
Novett 2303. MARKET. ST. a Bolben
‘Not Orchestra . {li * = te nome?
iawReody foe Ali Uagseensct} f Stree oe coopr, mas
/E ARE PUNCTUAL ii
axD Give coop sanvics, |{{' A- Full Lin
aoermases.l Black Swan Re
WILLIE AUSTIN, Leader, :
a ee Corb. Gall and'Hcar them pinged.
Better Than The Rest.
Coming Events q BEFORE PLACING YOUR !
ELABORATE PREPARATIONS FOR PURE ICE C
CLEVER CLOWN CARNIVAL = || Asai &
For weeks {t has been announced
thru this paper that December 1st
and nd are reserved for the Clever
Clown Carnival one of the greatest
events of its kind comivg to the Pine
Street Dopt. ¥. M. C. A. in the month
of December. It ix gaing to bea reat
treat for the members and friends of
the YM. C. A. Elaborate prepara-
tlons“tre already under way and the
occasion promises to be first class.
You can't afford to miss this. mem-
orable event. Come and sce the fun-
ny clowns of every description. See
Mutt and Jet, Burney Google, Bring
ing up Father In real live acts. . Thett
pranks will be side-splitters. Fun!
Fun!!:Fun!!! for everybody. Comedy
‘concerts with an entire change of pro
gram ‘each night.. Slsteen mystery
Nboothe, ball tossing, «ring throwing.
stocking machine, radio, fortune tell
ing ond many other interesting’ fea
tores. z
Tickets are’ now on sale. “16 cent
admission for adults and 10 cents fo
children, Prizes will be given away!
Wafeh for details
DON'T BE LAT.
TL tel you it'll be mysterious,
Se cpihinn tau eet week
We know there's somethinIn the wig,
‘Winn these Floriest Boye speek
vat tres dont have sky bese,
eee neces alla
Antk everyone stonds around — |
‘When you enter with your beau,
may will crimp ber hair an awful
ot
Ant" ght the parlor thehta
She ix afraid wbe'll be late,
‘So Moming atte. the Sth date,
Pa kinder ebucklea to himself,
He sings bis favorite song.
pontis tents coat go Wocs.
At supper. she's “no appetite.”
But fixes up a plate
of apoten sake asd eingertread—
ren cent
‘The Flariénts are always prompt,
‘Abg always begin on time, -
She must get there carly,
‘If she expects to be in line.
cetne
T
Puce 2506 Lucan Are.
‘Time—S till late. ~
Thate—November 34. *
sRarticipants—Melrose Gitts. - Adv
LOOK! LOOK!! LOOK!!!
Took! Look! $10.00 will be eat
‘away for the best dreased lady an)
map at the Wang Wang Girls’ Fash-
fou Dance, Thankagiving Night Nov,
Ge WER et alten Ball Lever,
‘Music by Neal's Jdex Kings.
Magic SPO 8 (62. Adhilaion Bex
Bach ‘chub’ is requesied to have 9
representative. ee
Nov. 29 By The Milton Club
P Anritations ‘ave’ been fiuaiied: for
be ree ‘Angaal Costume gr
em, Gnd.
lcaken ts te urged
}to ‘come in costume, the Fral enjoyment
Ra ee
“Edward F Builte, Erscet Bigwardn,
Light Free Stat Chaser’
(eam sole) ad
Des ee cae
EEE Ee ae
b. Cambriden, Mae... Ner. 15.
wo bling given Netiondn~ na
"Branch Office of the Pace Phonograph Corp.
2303. MARKET ST. -. . ST. LOUIS, MO.
Peo) RE OOO DE MANAGER,
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q BEFORE PLACING YOUR NEXT ORDER FOR.
Call SMITH & SMITH i 2
We Supply In Bulk Quantities, Quality and ome oo
Lindell 2380 14 N. Theresa Aye
ph sc
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‘A ina rehinled to | contempate HRS CHAS. BRYANT
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taxation agatems are In question, Oneryant Grocery
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SNOWS COLLEGE OF DRESS:
MAKING,
‘A thorough coiurse of (nstruction cov-
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The latest uptodact methods, Short-
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able tigtuctlo teed.
ss ie bel te
MME. EVA HAMILTON, Mee.
“Lady. —tod
READING, WRITING,
ARITHMETIC and LANGUAGE
“Welle Now For Appelntments
‘Address BOX 2 & V.
ros ite eats Argus
—Adt.
———
~ Le Holman who was ‘the treasurer
of. the Acnle Real Estate and Invest-
mont Company has withdrawn from
‘said Company. and is now president
St the Progressive’ Really [aad tn
meat of ‘
Tee Muivay Mutlding: loom 204,
‘2nd floor. Money-to-ioan, houses. t
rent, houses and flats for sale, We
hope to be as reasonable in the fu-
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See us at Midway, Building, Joffer-
‘nam: and Olivo’ streets, Room 201
Phone, Bomont 112i and Lindel
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PAGE FOUR
THEATRES
MARJORIE COHEN AND COMPANY
FULL OF FUN, PEP AND
MUSIC AT THE BOOKER
WASHINGTON
Marjorie Cohen and her "High Life Set" Company have a peppery show at the Booker-Washington Theatre this week. The members of the outfit are young and ambitious and the patrons are enjoying a lively entertainment. Le Roy "Snowboy" Johnson and Harry Brock are the comedians and they keep the fun going furiously. Johnson, singing and eccentricity takes the house by storm. Song and dance specialties with Company support are given by Miss Cohen, Lee and Lee, Brock and Johnson. Among the features are "Free, Single and Disengaged," a parody on "Georgia Rose," "No Body Lied etc," "Some Sanng Day," "Cast Away," "The Sheik," "Mammy," and "Home Again Blues."
The finale is a comedy entitled "The Ghost." Its a hilarious round of happenings growing out of a make belief death and a "wake." The fun is furious. 'The show is making a hit with the patrons' and will continue to draw well the balance of the week.
CLASSY VAUDEVILLE NEXT
A Class vaudeville has been booked for the Booker Washington next week, beginning Monday. It will include pretty Eleanor Wilson, the talented popular singer formerly of Morton and Wilson; Zack White and Strong, a pair of laugh producing comedians; Taylor and Peggy, in a singing and musical novelty, with several instruments; and Bill Willis, a loan dispenser of run.
The patrons will receive their weekly pay envelope on Monday at the entrance.
A feature said to be a real stage sensation will be, Sugar Food Snowballs the Colored Harmonica Playing Food, with 'Hipppy Hop' at the Gayety Theatre next week beginning Sunday. This musical Comodell has been the magnet of attraction in every city where the Company has appeared and special conventions have been arranged for the colored Theatre goers who will attend the daily matinees and night shows at the Gayety. The company numbers close to 5 burlesquers and comedy purveyors. The show is in two acts and 14 scenes. It is said to be wholesome and clean, with gorgeous costumes and pretty girls. Matinees at 2:15, night shows 8:15.
THE PICTURE THEATRES
AT THE COMET
Norma Talmadge in "The Eternal Flame" will be featured at the Comet Theatre this Saturday.
William Duncan will be seen in "The Fighting Guide" on Sunday. It is a tale of an Englishman who wanted a guide to act as a nursemaid and a guide who was a red blooded man. Perfumed baths and silk underwear got under his skin and things began to fly.
An extra good feature at the Comet will be "Man's Law and Gods" on Monday. It is a thrilling story of the Northwest Mounted police and filled with situations that reach the height of excitement.
On Thursday and Friday the Conset will present "The Climbers" an exciting and thrilling photodramma produced by an all colored cast including Elma Morton, G. Edward Brown, Lawrence Chipman and others who have won fame on the screen.
THE STAR
Marie Provost will be seen at the Star Theatre Saturday in "The Married Flapper," in which she portrays a young wife who regards her husband chiefly as the source of income that keeps her gorgeously clothed, incessantly amused and in good standing in her set.
On Sunday Richard Talmange will be presented in a "Putting It Over." It is a story of a political frame-up, a mix-up generally, and thrills. The hero's father send him to a nearby town to defeat the reform candidate for mayor. The son has already fallen in love with the candidate's daughter, not knowing who she is and of course, resigns from his father's employ to help her father. Then follows plenty of action, chief of which is a prize, fight.
On Thursday and Friday, the Star will show the big special "Where Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?" the B. F. Zeidman production which enjoyed a run at the Criterion theatre in New York, and which is creating a situation in every city in which it is shown. The story was suggested by the bymn of the same name, and the pathetic tale of a country boy who follows the lure of the big city is unfolded in such a way that it is bound to grip the attention of all.
AT THE LINCOLN
Hope Hampton will be seen, in "Star Dust" at the Lincoln Theatre this Saturday. It is a fascinating human interest story of Lily Becker, the lily offshoot of an onion family, who misunderstood and derided for her love of music, flees from the trying environments of her home to the big city, where she struggles for an operatic career and finds tragedy and love, romance and adventure.
Manslaughter will be featured on Sunday. Thomas Meighan, Leatrice Joy and Lois Wilson head one of the largest and finest casts ever assembled for any picture. The story is dramatic and there are many powers of tremendous interest. The story deals with a girl who is a speed maniac and who pays the penalty. The downfall of Rome is a finely pictured interlude which adds value to the picture.
Marion Davis in "Enchantment:
Continued on Page 5
#
T
will be the special next Thursday. It
the tale of a pleasure-mad debut-
ute who "got beyond" her parents,
he got to the point where she
ought that her wealth and her
lifted her quite above "old
key" conventions. While she was
making hearts and "doing" New
ok she had many thrilling events
t cured her.
THE JESTAMERE
Hildred Harris in "The First Woman will be featured at the Jestamereatre this Saturday. It is a comedy the story converts a group of art folk of the stage and shows howally brilliant young actress proves a doubting impresario that she can in Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, an Talmadge will be seen in min' "through." Norma plays the role of Mowrycee and Kathleen-former a girl of the sixties and latter a girl of modern times, each in a romance of her particular lot. The scenes are laid in Ireland, Ireland and France. The costumes settings are sald to be among the beautiful and striking ever worn in any motion picture.
The Unconquered Woman" will be feature next Thursday and Fri-
It is a drama of modern life, ling in the frozen regions of the la, where elemental passions supreme, where men play poker a woman's body and soul-ending the gay restaurants and studios of York, where the artist husband lives in wild orgies, ignoring the stage tie.
THE CASINO
"The Hate Trail" George Chese
who is starred in this production
the part of a sergeant of the
west Mounted Police. This pie
will be shown at the Casino
later Sunday. The Star is given
specially hard territory along the
a and is especially thrown in
a gang of rum runners, that
a lot of dramatic action into
picture.
tured Curtains" will be featured
Monday. The stars are Henry B.
Hall and Mary Alden. the sensu-
l of the screen world as a portray-
r of mother love roles. This picture
fled with romance, pathos, humor
thrilling adventures.
the Fighting Guide" will be
next Friday. Bill Duncan is
star, and he furnished a lot of
expent after he gets tired of the
heralded job he gets hooked up
THE PENDLETON
turn To The Right" will be beaten at the Pendleton Theatre on day, Monday and Tuesday. Two sons and an innocent sufferer at the site of the law have the leading role. The innocent boy has "done" as have the two crooks, and it is over they all repair to the entry, where the boy lives. Here also men of the dark nights are red loose upon the innocent and suspecting country bumpkins with their humorous results.
"Monte Cristo" will be shown on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. It is Fox production dealing with stirring adventures of a young French filmmaker Edmond Dantes, who on the basis of his marriage, is arrested and thrown into prison on false charges. He stays there for twenty years and finally makes his escape. A fortune lies to him from a former fellowisoner. He then seeks revenge and now he succeeds, without actually bedding any blood by his own hands, makes this a story and screen drama of uncommon worth.
AT THE OLYMPIA.
"When Romance Rides" will be presented at the Olympia Theatre on Saturday. It is a Zane Grey picture and contains one of the most thrilling horse races ever staged and as a climax, the heroine is seen, tied face down on the back of a fear-maddened horse recently reclaimed from a wild state, riding towards a precipice. The photography for this Mazeppa-like ride and for the great horse race at the rodeo is a fine example of how emotion-stirring mere motion photoplay can become.
Hairof Lloyd will be seen in "Grand Ma's Boy" on Sunday. Lloyd is the boy who, all his life, has been gripped by fear. One day, after his weakness had been driven vory forcibly home to him, and he is filled with shame, his little old fashioned, grandma tells him a marvelous story of how his grandfather, who had distinguished himself in the Civil War, overcome his cowardice with the aid of a charm given him by a gypsy. Grandma gives the Boy the charm, and what he does then is too good to offell. Suffice to say that the Boy finds that courage is a matter of self-confidence, and he comes at on top.
"Where Is My Wandering Boy Toight" on Tuesday and Wednesday. I'll be a big mild week feature. "Blood and Sand" will be shown on Thursday and Friday.
A.
OLYM
1420-22 Ma
MARKET STREET'S MOST
OPEN FROM 10 A.
Showing The Best Selected Pictures,
And Of the Most Popular Stars And St
Is The Cost Too Great For Our Patrons.
ADMISSION EVERY I
10c--ADU
5c CHILDREN 5c
WHY PAY
CASI
1618 Mark
Open From 10 A. M. To 11 P. M.
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COME AND SEE THE BEST
PEN
EXTRA SPECIAL—SUN
The Great American Com-
edy of Farm. And Fortune.
A Rex Ingram Production.
Wherein two lovable crooks, a ra-
mother, combine to turn peaches into g
It will keep you in a state of Blubb
wreathed in smiles or exploding will det
with humanity and humor of a quality
Showing The Best Selected Pictures, Made By The Foremost Producers, And Of The Most Popular Stars And Stories. No Picture Is Too Good, Nor Is The Cost Too Great For Our Patrons.
Open From 10 A. M. To 11 P. M.—Program Changed Daily
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
We Have Reduced The Price Of Admission To
5c CHILDREN 5c NO WAR TAX WHY PAY MORE? COME AND SEE THE BEST FOR THE LEAST MONEY
It will keep you in a state of Bubbling Expectancy Whenever You are not wreathed in smiles or exploding will delighted laughter. The piece is charged with humanity and humor of a quality not strained but robust and racy.
a strong; gripping Western story that will enjoy a white success in those theatres that play western subjects. It is crammed so full of good entertainment that it is somewhat difficult to point to the one big thing in the picture, unless it be that tremendously exciting and thrilling scene in the river rapids and the fight in the boat.
Next Friday, Zena Keefe and an all star support will be seen in "The Broken Silence" The story tells of the love of Cameron Bruce, an officer in the Royal Northwest Mounted Police, for Jeanne Marat, Jeanne, by the way, is more than ably played by beautiful Zena Keefe, one of the most talented artists before the screen today, while the roles of Bruce is in the capable hands, of Robert Elliott.
Coolidge Sees Prosperity As Country's Curse
Champion Seer of Republican Party Again Seeing Things.
Crusader Service.
CHICAGO, Ill. Nov. 15—Vice president Coolidge, stopping off here a few hours on the campaign trip, spotted his opining that there was too much prosperity among the workers of this country and that this was the cause of elopement of young people, murder, be women and other recent sensation. He evidently believed that if the children were kept to a steady grind in the factories, they would not have time to spring elopements; on their displeasing others and if women were all forced to scrawl for their attention, they should have no time to think their murders of catfish, crush the bearer's weekly hide. From the hive in the Cottage, some are
A Smashing Story of Stunts
Drama And Romance
ALSO SHOWING
TWO PART COMEDY
and News
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18
Goldwyn Presents
Zane Grey's Super-Feature
"When
Romance Rides"
SUNDAY
HAROLI
"G"
NEWS
ALSO SHOWING
TWO PART COMEDY
and News
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18
Goldwyn Presents
Zane Grey's Super-Feature
"When
Romance Rides"
It's the Most Thrilling of Motion
Pictures. As Big as the Great Out-
doors. Your Heart Will Beat To The
Clatter of Racing Horses' Feet.
SUNDAY
HAROLL
"G"
Each Fl
Bit, A Hit.
The Picture Magnificent
THE BIG SUPER-SPECIAL P
"Where Is My
A Dramatic Thunderbolt That H
To The Heart. You'll Say—How Vamp
Victims To Ruin; How Money, Jewels,
and High Jinks Drag Young Men Down
Magnificent
BIG SUPER-SPECIAL PHOTODRAMA C
Here Is My War
The Thunderbolt That Hits Straight
You'll Saw - How Yamps Lure Their
Husband How Money, Jewels, Jazz, Palaces
Drag Young Men Down.
Dramatic Thunderbolt That Hits Straight To The Heart. You'll Sell How Vamps Lure Their Victims To Ruin: How Money, Jewels, Jazz, Palaces and High Jinks Drag Young Men Down.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19
George Cheseboro
SUPPORTED BY
AN ALL STAR CAST
IN
"The
Hate Trial"
A Gripping Story of the Great
North-Woodz and the Mounted Poli-
George Cheseboro
SUPPORTED BY
AN ALL STAR CAST
IN
"The
Hate Trial"
A Gripping Story of the Great
North-Woods and the Mounted Poli-
ce.
See the Thrilling Fight
Between a Bootlegger and
a Mounted Police on the
Edge of a Steep Cliff.
TON NOV.19,20,21 The Right"
TON 4264
Open 2:30
OV. 19, 20, 21
The Right"
If You Take Your Laughter Straight
—If You'd Give Your Blues the Gate
"Turn To The Right"
—ALSO SEE—
Fox News and Comedy
WILLIAM FOX
"M
F
Tw
The Ste
LOV
MU
Y THEATRE 14th and Lo
THEATRE 4th and Locust
Each Flash, A Laugh—Each Scene, A Scream—Each Bit, A Hit. One Day Only! Don't Miss This.
This Story is Full of Romance . Humor, Pathos and Thrilling Adventure. One Day Only.
No Advance In Prices. 5 and 10 Cents
"MONTE CRISTO"
Laughs and thrills—Glorious Mildred Harris, fresh from her triumph in Cecil DeMille's "Boo's Paradise," in a role as gay as a sophyr and dynamic as a whirlwind.
Also Laura La Plante In "THE TRAIL OF THE WOLF"
and FRIDAY, NOV. 23-24
SPECIAL ATTRACTION—
Le De Remer
In The
Squeered Woman
BING BODY, AND SOUL
nature, the beautiful Screen Actress
of the emotions. She sacrifices body
family; she hates intensely, forgives
grendly. Whether stressed in the
of the North, the poor garb of the
the magnificent evening gowns of
is equally appealing.
Bewing—Other Subjects
"KINDRED OF THE DUST"
NOVEMBER 19
In His First Five Riotous Reels Of Joy
Ma's Boy"
Each Scene, A Scream—Each Only! Don't Miss This.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21 & 22
PATHOS, JOY and LAUGHTER
Boy Tonight?"
Father, Father and Child Should See this
MOTHER-LOVE STORY EVER TOLD
ADVANCE IN PRICES
Come Early
NOVEMBER 20
althall
er Call"
in,
e Old Nest"
es of Self-Sacrifice
ever Been Screened.
tains"
Humor, Pathos
One Day Only.
5 and 10 Costs
FRIDAY
DOUBLE P
Willia
A
FURNISH A D
A Stirring
Figh
A Red
Blood Peed
Knocked T
Blow.
WEDNESDAY, THUR
Rudolph Valentino And Lila Lee In The Love-Epic of a Spanish Toreador Blood And Sand
Actual Scenes In a Real Arena The Greatest Triumph Ever Known. Two Days! No Advance In Prices. 5 and 10 cents. No Tax.
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 24
DOUBLE PROGRAM EXTRAORDINARY IN William (Bill) Duncan And Edith Johnson FURNISH A DELIGHTFUL ENTERTAINMENT IN A Stirring Drama of The Open Country
"The Fighting Guide"
A Red-Blooded Tale of a Red-Blood People. See How Duncan Knocked The Rascal Out With One Blow.
DAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY
Every Mother, Father and Child Should See this
GREATEST MOTHER-LOVE STORY EVER TOLD
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES
5 and 10 Cents. Come Early
And Edith Johnson FURNISH A DELIGHTFUL ENTERTAINMENT IN A Stirring Drama of The Open Country "The
A Red-Blooded Tale of a Red-Blood People. See How Duncan Knocked The Rascal Out With One Blow.
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY
NOVEMBER 22, 23, 24
Extraordinary Engagement
CRISTO"
BERT, Supported By
Known Screen Artists
Passions Known In A Life Time.
E! REVENGE!
UNDERFUL PARTS
PRICES
Reserved Section
First Balcony
**MATINEES
27c & 3c --- 30cts
NIGHTS
36c & 4c --- 40cts
SUNDAY
Featuring JOHN GILBERT, Supported By Twenty-Five Well Known Screen Artists
RUBYE DE REMER
IN ACTE FROM
The UNCONQUERED WOMAN
PROGRAM EXTRAORDINARY
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
NOVEMBER 23-24
In This Picture You Will See Valentino Risking His Life In The Most Spectacular Sport Known To Man— BULL FIGHTING.
'MONTE CRISTO'
WILLIAM FOX SPECIAL PRODUCTION
MATINEES DAILY 2:15
NIGHT SHOWS 8:15
ST. LOUIS ARGUS PUBLISHING CO.
2841 MARKET ST. ST. LOUIS, MO
Phone, Houmont 1462
J. R. MITCHELL ..... MANAGING EDITOR
HERBERT T. MEADOWS ..... CITY EDITOR and ADV. MGR.
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intered on second class matter April 6, 1912 at the Post Office at Saint Louis, dissuasion, under the act of March 2, 1870
MEMBER
MISSOURI PRESS ASSOCIATION ASSOCIATED NEGRO PRESS
NATIONAL NEGRO PRESSS ASSOCIATION
Foreign Advertising Representatives
W. B. Ziff Co., 608 South Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.
We have read with a deal of interest the address delivered by Senator James A. Reed at the Armory on Armistice Day. During this address, he is quoted as making these remarks:
All Fought for Liberty.
"So all races and all creeds fought for liberty. What was to be this liberty? A government where there would be no prescription against a person because of race or religion. Each was to be entitled to stand on his own feet. We were to establish a democracy. Any man who will proscribe a man because of race or religion is not acquainted with the principles of American liberty.
Accepting these words as being sincere, we must confess that they are encouraging to us coming as they do, so closely after the Senator has been re-elected for six more years. If he believes in what he says, surely he will have the courage to work for it.
Yes, we fully agree with the Senator, that during the late war, all races and all creeds fought for the same liberty. The Negro was among those who made the sacrifice and "did his bit." So we are wondering if Senator Reed is among those who would now deny the Negro that democracy for which he so nobly fought and died.
We are thinking of the words of Senator Reed when he said: "Any man who will proscribe a man because of race or religion is not acquainted with the principles of American liberty." As a lawyer and senior senator from this state, we take it for granted that Senator Reed is acquainted with the principles of American liberty; and for that reason, we shall expect him to work for those liberties to which all men are entitled, regardless of race or creed.
Let us hope that not mere words touching upon these vital questions will satisfy Senator Reed, but let us hope that all of his power and influence will be used to bring about these things. When this is done then we can truly say, "he is a representative of all the people."
The success of four Negro candidates in the recent election presents a most hopeful sign of a better day for the race in this city and state.
The election of three constables and one Justice of the Peace was not due to the loyalty of the local Republican party, but it was the result of the Negroes being loyal to themselves.
It was fortunate that the Fourth Constabulary District, in which two constables and one Justice was elected, the Negroes were in the majority by large numbers, and of course, their loyalty was attested by the returns which gave the Negro candidates such nice majorities. The combined vote of the whites, both Democrats and Republicans was not enough to defeat the Negroes in the district.
There is no doubt in our minds what would have happened if a trade could have been made without letting the Negroes in on it. A striking example may be seen in the case of Walthall Moore.
We are glad to see the Negroes beginning to think for themselves. We are a power in politics in this city and state if we only knew it.
Congressman L. C. Dyer and "Billie Huble" were quite active in the behalf of John W. Shine on the ground that Shine was on the Republican ticket. Mr. Dyer, it is charged threatened to get W. E. Osborne's job if the latter opposed Shine. We do not see how the congressman is going to harmonize his arguments for a square deal to the Colored man and at the same time, support a man like Shine. As for Billie Huble, we are only "biding the time."
President Harding went fishing in the South with lilywhitism as his bait. He made his draught during the recent election, but caught nothing. From all indications, his net must have broken and he lost some of those that he actually had before he went fishing in the South.
The Republican party in St. Louis, taught us a lesson by which we should be greatly benefitted in the future, and that is we have been shown that all republicans are not "angels" and all Democrats are not "devils."
It's pretty hard some times to be what you "ain't."
We hope that the victory which came to Senator Reed, in the recent election will make him a better man and more considerate to all the people.
Looking over the field for the right kind of timber for a Federal Judge, let us turn our eyes upon Conway Elder. He is an upstanding, capable man. He is the right kind of timber "Uncle Sam."
Frank Slater, Committeeman from the Seventeenth Ward, has either lost control of his ward or he double-crossed Walthall Moore.
Despite the fact that Senator Peter Anderson denied that he had any part with the so-called O'Fallon Park Protective Association, he received a hell-of-a scratching in the Negro wards.
The Argus wishes to direct the attention of the voters to "Billie Hoble" committeeman of the Seventeenth Ward. His ward sure "fell down" when it came to supporting Walthall Moore.
Say what you may, but the road to the office of Justice of the Peace, over which a Colored man has to travel is not strewn with roses.
A striking example of co-operation was shown recently, when a group of representative Colored men appeared before the Board of Aldermen united in their protest against a certain form of segregation. It is useless to state here that they got re
PAGE SIX
The St. Louis Argus
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
BY THE
LOUIS ARGUS PUBLISHING
2841 MARKET ST. ST. LOUIS, MO
Phone, Housewnt 1462
L MAY
HEADOWS CITY EDITOR
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Advertising Rates Furnished On Request
January matter April 1912 at the Post Office at San
MEMBER
ESS ASSOCIATION ASSOCIATED
NATIONAL NEGRO PRESSS ASSOCIATION
Foreign Advertising Representative
Cliff Co., 608 South Dearborn St., Chicago
SENATOR REED'S SPEECH.
All Fought for Liberty.
all races and all creeds fought for
was to be this liberty? A government
should be no prescription against a pe
race or religion. Each was to be
on his own feet. We were to est-
ify. Any man who will proscribe
of race or religion is not acquainted
to us of American liberty.
in these words as being sincere, we
encouraging to us coming as they
has been re-elected for six more
he says, surely he will have the co-
nally agree with the Senator, that d
and all creeds fought for the same
long those who made the sacrifice
are wondering if Senator Reed is
w deny the Negro that democracy
t and died.
inking of the words of Senator Reed
will proscribe a man because of ra
ed with the principles of American
nior senator from this state, we tak
Reed is acquainted with the princ
l for that reason, we shall expect
ties to which all men are entitled,
be that not mere words touching up
satisfy Senator Reed, but let us he
influence will be used to bring about
one then we can truly say, "he is
people."
A HOPEFUL SIGN
of four Negro candidates in the
hopeful sign of a better day for th
of three constables and one Justice
the loyalty of the local Republican
of the Negroes being loyal to thems
eunate that the Fourth Constabular
stables and one Justice was elected
priority by large numbers, and of cou
ced by the returns which gave the
majorities. The combined vote o
s and Republicans was not enough
district.
I doubt in our minds what would h
have been made without letting the
ing example may be seen in the car
to see the Negroes beginning to th
e a power in politics in this city an
BE CONSISTENT. MR. DYER.
L C Dyer and "Billie Huble" went
to John W. Shine on the ground tha-
tian ticket. Mr Dyer, it is charged
here's job if the latter opposed Shin
agressman is going to harmonize hi-
tal to the Colored man and at the sa-
shine. As for Billie Huble, we a-
darding went fishing in the South wi-
tit. He made his draught duri-
caught nothing. From all indica-
tive and he lost some of those tha-
This Week
This space will be deyed each week to a discussion of Community Problems and Current Topics.
By Geo. W. Buckner
LAST IMPRESSIONS.
The popular belief that the first impressions people make upon one another largely determine later actions has been very much over emphasized.
A careful study of the application cards of any well kept employment purpose has one of the most important questions asked is: "Where did you last work?"
If a man is personally being interviewed by the head of a large firm the interviewer is very sure to ascertain where the prospect is now working, and why he left the last place.
If his record at the last place is good he is likely to be hired. If his last record is bad, regardless of previous records, his chances of being hired are considerably lessened.
Your last impressions can either
The business world is often described as "hard headed," "cold," "iron fisted," and the like. But it soon forgets a man's past. What it wants to know is: "What impression are you now making?" If good, can you and will you keep it up? Many men build a promising pathway to success and then let some little bright their future aspiration.
On every hand are people who have made inviable records over a period of one two, three, or more years, then it happens that one mishap proves their undying. Their one failure becomes their last impression. They stumble. And finally they sank into the crowd of "never-wills." The world is not so much concerned about what a man's future impressions will be. It largely assesses the value of a man upon the basis of his last impressions.
A next "trust" may help a man to grasp that a man takes continuous piling up of favorable last impressions to hold a job.
First impressions soon pass away! last impressions endure.
Many people are quick to quit their jobs when slight misunderstandings and confusion arise demand their pay, and "bawl out" their employers. How foolish? Whatever may be your job regardless of the difficulties leave it so you can return to it. Do your work a little better each day! Make your last impressions the best.
Rep. Moore Expresses His Appreciation And Regrets
So general has been the expressions of regret on the part of many of my colored and white friends, for the political defeat I experienced at the recent election or rather that the race suffered through loss of representation in the States' law making body, that I feel impelled out of respect for my appreciation of the manifest interest and concern evidenced by the many expressions of deep regret, to the generous support given to the confidence that is so eloquently expressed by the large vote of the people. I think that it is generally understood that any one who serves the people in the capacity of legislator does it at a personal sacrifice. Particularly was this true as to myself.
The recent election result viewed from a selfish and monetary point will be of personal benefit to me, but it will be hard to estimate the societal occasion occasioned by it. Stated: Waltshill, *The People: EXPRESSION OF REBELT*
Among the many expressions of regret received by Mr. Moore, he seems to cherish, most highly, a letter from his friend, Attorney General Jesse W. Barrett, who saw Mr. Moore daily while he was at Jefferson City.
I regretted the news that you were not registed to the legislature. The people, do not always choose with wisdom and justice. You deserved rejection, for your every move while in the legislature was for the good of the State. You had a most difficult path to follow. Newspaper correspondents seeking to make partisan capital would have been, very pikilc to write unfriendly articles if you had made any mistakes or alips. You worked earnestly and with real effort for the good of your race and did it all such tact and good judgment that not only the word was said about you. My judgment is that you did more for your people than any other man could have done. I hope you will continue your usefulness and helpfulness and I wish you the greatest personal success and happiness.
Langston Harrison Is Grateful To Voters For Electing Him Constable
Langton Harrison, one of the successful colored candidates who led in the race for *Constable* in the Fourth District on the Republican ballot, in the recent election, told an Argus reporter that he had 'never felt so grateful' to the poor as since his election. He 'especially appreciated to the voters of the Fourth Constabulary district who bought him the victory.'
THE ST. LOUIS ARGUS, FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1922
The Negroes' three hundred year long slumber seems about over. We are beginning to rub our eyes and stretch St. Louis has heard the voice of progress.
The People's Finance Company is one sign, the Douglases Life Insurance Company another. No company has ever met with more instantaneous respuse from the pibble than the People's Finance. The Douglases, although working against some serious handicaps and fighting a hard up bill, fight is also on the Jump. Big things will probably come to us at St. Louis, these two companies.
All Together.
We don't have to prove our capabilities as workingmen and subordinates, but we have a long way to go before we have proven our ability to measure up to American standards of business conditions and responsibility.
Jews long ago recognized the financial opportunity of the Negroes' class division. More Jewish fortunes have begun amongst Negroes than any other class of American citizenry. It's about time our own men began reeling immigrants of the responsibility of supplying our race with necessities.
The Disabled Vets.
A big mess of crocodile tears have been shed over the plight of the Disabled Veterans of the World War. She men and he women have melded with the work of the Veterans Bureau until already difficult task has been made more difficult. Teaching the physical and mental stresses of war is one of the biggest jobs ever undertaken by government. Thousands of men were dislabeled and other thousands have claimed to be disabled. Teaching children new tasks has pizzied educators since the dawn of civilization; training uniformed minds is a far less difficult task than training the minds of men.
Added to the natural difficulty of training men though, the Veterans's Bureau has been working in better terms of choosing and advising the best training for the different types of men they have to deal with.
With the Colored trainee the Bureau's task is even greater. Conditions over which neither the trainee nor the Bureau have no control have narrowed the possible remunerative vacations for Colored ex-soldiers. Other conditions in the South have left the average prospective trainee of our race without any foundation upon which propping could be built.
Festis Wade.
The Klan has developed another powerful enemy. The President of the Merchantile Trust Company, has the sort of power that counts in America—money.
As we said of the Catolicic Church some time ago, it is probable that Mr. Wade has given but little thought to the fact that the K. K. K., is opposed to Colored Americans' progress. Klan's greatest strength lies in the fact that it opposed to various racial and religious groups most all of whom are opposed to it. So far as the Colored American group is concerned it is just possible that any of the other groups of citizens care very little what the Klan does. We must fight our own battles.
A WORD TO THE COLORED METHODISTS IN ST. LOUIS
Editor of the Arms:—
I am asking you to let me as a pastor of Parish Chapel Church to say a word of greeting to the C. M. E's in St. Louis without a Church and to those coming into St. Louis daily from Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi; Alabama, Georgia and elsewhere. There are about 75,000 colored people in St. Louis and about 7,000 of these are C. M. E's or they are so inclined. We are in St. Louis at present only one St. Louis Church, the Tarnaberc. It is already full of meeting places on Sunday is at a premium. We are planning to purchase another large and beautiful Church for Colored Methodists, in St. Louis. We are getting our forces together so we may see and know "who is who" in the organization for the new arrangements to be made when we occupy the new Church home real soon. At present we are wishing at Parish Chapel in Belle Glade Ave., near Evanston. We need you and we invite you to come to us here so that when we move into a large Church you will be, and feel quite at home!
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. P. Preschool at 11 a.m. M. League at 6 p. m. and preaching at 7:30 p. m. on Sundays, and Class meeting services on Wednesdays, 8 p. m.
Yes, this Dr. Colclough is from good old hours.
Greater Jieghu, "they sold into Egypt." Lets put the new Church over.
REV COLCLOUGH
THE MISSOURI NEGRO
REPUB. LEAGUE CLUB
一.
The Missouri Negro Republican League Club met at their Headquarters 3434 Market Street. Monday night. November 18th. A very interesting and instructive session was held. Secretary E. T. Sumaytt was instructed to telegraph President Harding and Senator Spencer, protesting against the appointment of Senator John K. Shields of Tennessee, to the U. S. Supreme Court. The following committee visited Bellefontaine Farmers last Tuesday to interview Patillo, Chairman Mrs. Jesse Neal.
Welter S. Lathen, Mrs. Carriag S. Tillman, Thos. H. Tolliver, Mrs. Katie Cooper, and Irs Neal. They will report Monday night.
The Parlor Social given for the Club by Mrs. Katie Cooper at her residence 3213 A Morgan St., was a huge success. Everyone reported a most wonderful time.
On Saturday night, November 18th the men of the Club will give an oyster supper for the ladies of the Club, at the Club Headquarters There will be music, dancing and cards. All guests are at liberty to bring their friends.
The Board of Directors will meet Friday night, November 17th.
The Club will meet Monday night, November 20th. All members are requested to attend.
IDEAL NESTMENT CO. WINS $10,000 SUIT AGAINST J. M. NIMOCKS
IDEAL NESTMENT CO. WINS $10,000 SUIT AGAINST J. M. NIMOCKS
All Shares Owned By Former President
Except 44, Canceled By Court And
He Is Ordered To Turn Over All
Books, Papers, Records Etc.
To The Company.
State of Missouri
S S
City of St. Louis)
IN THE CIRCUT COURT, CITY OF
ST. LOUIS.
OCTOBER TERM, 1922.
Monday, November 6th, 1922.
IDEAL INVESTMENT COMPANY,
a corporation, E. R. )
Freeman, Robert Jackson, John
F. Elemay, William Stanfield,
William Barr, E. C. Lawrence ),
W H. Edwards and Wilson )
Dawson ),
vs-1924-B )
John M. Nimpos )
Now at this day come the parties hereto by their respective attorneys and the cause coming on for hearing, upon the merits, said parties submit the same to the Court upon the pleadings and the evidence and the proof adduced, and the Court, having heard and duly considered the same, and being fully advised in the promises, doth find in favor of the plaintiff and doth find that the plaintiffs are entitled for their petition. The Court further find that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff Ideal Investment Co., a corporation, in the principal sum of $10, 076.00.
WHEREFORE, it is ordered, all judged and decreed that the temporary injunction hereof hereby granted be made permanent and that the defendant, John M. Nimocks, his servants and agents, are forever enjoined from collecting any rents belonging to the Ideal Investment Company, a corporation; from mortgaging or attempting to mortgage or encumber any of the property belonging to the Ideal Investment Company, a corporation from interfering with Wilson Dawson in the discharge of his duties as president of said company; from acting or attempting to act in any manner as president of the corporation; that he be further enjoined on the property interfering in any way with the property which now may hereafter occupy the property of said/Ideal Investment Company, a corporation; that all of it of the Ideal Investment Company outstanding in the name of the said John M. Nimocks, defendant herein, excepting 44 shares thereof, be and the same are hereby cancelled and ordered for night held, and the said defendant, John M. Nimocks, is hereby enjoined and restrained from voting any of said shares of stock, excepting 44 shares as aforesaid.
It is further, ordered that the defendant, John M. Nimocks, his servants and agents, immediately turn over to the "sold" William Dawson, President, all books, papers, records and the corporate seal of, said Ideal Investment Company which are in possession of said Nimocks, his servants. It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the deed of trust heretofore executed on the Lithography of September, 1922, by and between the Ideal Investment Company, party of the first part, William Willingham, party of the second part. John M. Nimocks, party of the third part, recorded in Book 3725, page 141, in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, be cancelled, set aside and held for naught. It is further ordered that the deed and decreed by the Court, that the plaintiff, Ideal Investment Company, a corporation, have recover of the defendant the sum of Ten thousand and seventy-six dollars ($76,000).
It is further ordered by the Court that the defendant pay the costs of this proceeding and that execution issue in conformity with this judgment.
It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that the injunction bond heretofore given be and the same is hereby released.
The Court, having heard the testimony in the intervening petition filed by J. k. Claitborn and others August 22nd, 1922. It is ordered and adjudged and decreed that the said petition be dismissed. Draft filed. State of Missouri) W.
City of St. Louis. L NAT GOLDSTEIN. Clerk of Circuit Court, City of St. Louis, within and for the City and State aforesaid, certify the above form, going to be a full, true and complete transcript of the judgment and permanent injunction in the above entitled raise, as fully as the same remains of record in my office.
IN TESTIMONY, WHEREFOE, we have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the said Court, at office, in the City of St. Louis, this 8th day of November, 1922.
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DR. GEO. M. CATHRELL
DENTIST
3200 LUCAS AVE.
To The People of St. Louis
We Announce The
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BLUE TO HAVE CHARGE OF A. W.
Former Band Master Of The 350th Field Artillery To Direct Work Of American Woodmen Here In A Short Time.
Mr. Wm. Blue, formerly bandmaster of the 350th Field Artillery, A. E. F., for many years an honored resident of St. Louis, and a member of St. Paul Church is soon to return to this city and take charge of the work of the American Woodmen here. For the past year Mr. Blue has been filling the capacity of Musical Director of the American Woodmen. He has organized one concert per year and helped to put them over. In many ways he has been instrumental in building up the finer parts of the Order.
It is felt that St. Louis will very likely be the headquarters of The American Woodson and for that reason the management is very anxious to have a large representative membership there. They believe no one could be selected to put it over better than Mr. William Blue. We are sure that all the members will give him their hearty and closest support.
Kiddies Korner By Ophelia B. Hamilton
Kiddies Korner By Ophelia B. Hamilton
BABY LEAF
Chapter I
Little Baby Leaf was the last to
langer with her Mother Tree and the
happy mother was glad to have her
baby near.
She laughed and sang, she clapped
her little hands as leaves sometime
do, but along came Naughty Wind.
He cried, "Ooooo" and Baby Leaf was
almost snatched from Mother Tree's
arms.
Now Baby Leaf began to fret and
sigh for she knew that if Naughty
Wind would blow like that again she
would soon be blown away to the far
off hand Slumber and she did not want
to go, for all the other leaves that
went away never came back any more.
So she said to their mother, "ah
me Naughty Wind will blow me away
if he blows like he did..." But
before she could finish what she was
about to say, along came Naughty
Wind again, "Ooooo, Ooooo" He said.
Door Baby Leaf what was, she to do?
She ching to her Mother Tree with, all her might and after Naughty Wind had gone down the road she opened her eyes and closed her mouth. For that is the way Naughty Wind had left her.
She was almost afraid to try to go in. But in a low whisper she felt the wind. "Tree. Mother why is Naughty Wind would?" The good mother answered. "He is not rough my dear. Every one has his task to perform. He's only doing the work his father gave him to do." "See these beautiful clouds calling wonder?" Baby Leaf looked up with her eyes full of tears. "Now," replied the mother. "He has gone to the cloud ships around, soon he will be back again. He is as busy him as he is. He has more work to do than him and I have together. He is the watchman of the Cloud Ships to see that they go the right way.
Then he has to watch our world home, if it gets too hot he fan it, and in winter when the snow and ice is in our arms and around our feet, he bounds down from his work minding the Cloud Ships and gives us all such blow for fun that we almost snap in. If they are any little boys and girls walking on the street, he bites their noses and plucks their toes until they almost cry aloud. Then he jumps back to mind the Cloud Ships."
What did Baby Leaf think?
(To be continued.)
BOY WANTED
To shine shoes evenings after school,
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2708
Wm. Pickens
WEEKLY-EDITORIAL
The Argus has secured the service of Dr. William Pickens, who will contribute his strong editorials each week on matters of great importance to the race. When you see them under Pickens you will know that something is said.
JIM CROW IN ST. LOUIS.
Slowly but surely Jim Crow is sneaking in on the colored people of Missouri—while they sleep. The porters say that on some lines they Jim Crow Colored passengers right out of St. Lolls, on trains going south. In some of the towns in the lower part of Missouri, they have separate waiting rooms at the railway station for colored passengers—without any warrant from state law. In no such place is a colored person expected to buy a seat or birth in a Pullman car. But the worst condition of all is right in St. Lolls, the great city of the upper Mississippi Valley. When a Negro goes to the window to buy a Pullman ticket, on the Missouri Pacific to Jefferson City, over the Burlington even toward Quincy, he is told by the ticket agent: "You will have to go and get an order from the passenger agent for a Pullman ticket."
If the colored person asks why, he hears: "Well, we have orders not to sell Pullman to any colored people, unless the passenger agent O. K. it." When the Negro goes to passenger agent, that offer may be "out," and may return just before train leaves, with the news: "The diagram is out to the train now, too late to get a seat." If the Negro knows the law, he will, of course, go out to the train and go no Pullman and take any vowent seat, which has been placed though the列车 will ask you if you have a Pullman ticket" in a voice and manner to impress you that you cannot ride unless you have.
They know that all this trouble will keep nine-tenths of the Colored people who want Pullman accommodations from getting births and seats. They calculate, and rightly, that the average colored person can be worried, insulted and humiliated out of the determination to ride in comfort. They expect to get rid of the average Negro when they tell him to go and see the "passenger agent," and they do get rid of him. Against the more persistent they will then employ further subterfuge: the "passenger agent" will dodge and lie and as a last resort the Pullman conductor will try "bull" and bluff.
IF THEY GET AWAY WITH TH$ FOR A FEW SEASONS, next they will simply turn down the Negro flat without sending him even to the passenger agent.
The time to defeat this devilment was the day when it began, but NOW is always the best time left. And the people to do it are the Negroes of St. Louis. They should make an organized assault on this discrimination. They must not see the ticket agent and the little mock passenger agent at the station, after they establish a good case, but the very heads of the railroads in St. Louis, and the railway commission of the state. And they should carry their fight so far as to influence the colored traveler not to disillusioninate roads except when very necessary for colored person, but to use competing lines when possible.
If the discriminating roads get away with it, the others will follow in shameful self-defense.
Ed. Prentiss Acquitted On Charge Of Stealing Watch
Ed Prentiss of 2004 Pine street, charged with the crime of Grand Larceny was acquitted by a jury in Judge Killourn's Court Wednesday, November 15th. The case against Prentiss grew out of the loss by drinkman. Prentiss' employer, of a gold watch, reputed to be worth $250. The case, at the outset, looked rather女 S. E. Garrier, who represented Prentiss finished his searching cross examination of the State's witnesses was all very plain that Prentiss did not steal the watch.
Do You Want The Negro Trade? See That Your Advertisement Appears In This Paper
The St. Louis Argus
Lloyd Answers S. W. Green On Pythian Temple Tax
Letter To Kansas City Sun, The Grand Chancellor Of Missouri, K. Of P.'s Cites Facts And Figures To Show Justification In Refusing To Pay Temple Tax While Nothing Is Being Done In Good Faith On Part Of Supreme Lodge Officers. Looks Like A Fight To The Finish.
To the Editor of the Kansas City Sun.
Kansas City; Missouri.
Dear Sir:
Under the date of October 23rd, 1922, a circular letter issued by S. W. Green, Supreme Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias, addressed to you, was mailed to me in a plain envelope. This letter is meant to be an attack, or reply to the article published in your issue of October 14, 1922, relative to the Pythian situation in Missouri. This same letter has been circulated over the state of Missouri, in the same surreptious manner as the one mailed to me, with a view, I presume, of stirring up internal strife.
Missouri is highly pleased at the opportunity afforded it by the act of the Supreme Chancellor, who has discovered that he has a decent regard for the opinions of the loyal Knights of Pythias of the Jurisdiction of Missouri.
This "decent regard" which now moves Sir Green to set aside the "rules of his office" and fly to the newspapers in a vain effort to discredit the facts with regard to the contention of Missouri, was not strong enough to move him to give Missouri the N. A. P. W. for which she had paid more than twelve hundred dollars; it was not strong enough to move him to give the representatives a fair opportunity to be heard upon the floor of the Supreme Lodge session in Topeka, Kansas; it was not strong enough to move him to present the whole question to the Supreme Lodge. The loyal Knights of Pythias of the jurisdiction of Missouri are not deceived by this sudden high regard (?) for their opinions, not only by his recent hostile attitude toward their interests but by his persistent disregard of their opinions as expressed by their vote in their Grand Lodge in regular session assembled, three years in succession.
In the third paragraph of his letter, Sir Green says: "It is true the Supreme Lodge paid the expenses for the injunction to allow the representatives of Missouri to be seated at the Supreme Lodge session at Topeka, Kansas, 1921, which amounted to the sum of $30.00, and I am also reliably informed that the Grand Lodge of Missouri paid attorney fees to the amount of Five hundred ($500.00) dollars for securing the injunction." *****
The above paragraph is so childish, that it reminds me of the story of the two boys who had both been spanked by their respective mothers for going in swimming, and when they met next day at school, one had said to the other, "you got a good kicking yesterday!" when the other had replied, "yes, and did you, and you got a worse one than me!" Brother Green loses sight of the principle of right and justice to Missouri, and glories in the fact that he forced Missouri to pay out $500.00 to secure her right of admission, while the Supreme Lodge only paid $30.00 as a penalty for being in the wrong. However, it is significant to any thinking man, that Missouri paid only her attorney fees, while the Supreme Lodge paid court costs.
This is a fair example of the kind of brotherly love to expect from Sir Green. Not content with having denied Missouri representation, he ghosts over the fact, that by his unfair ruling Missouri was forced to appeal to the civil courts for justice and expuse of $500.00. The Supreme Lodge was ordered by the District Court of Topeka, Kansas, to admit the representatives of Missouri forthwith, which was done, and the Supreme Lodge was given until Friday to come into court and show cause, if any it had, why the injunction should not be made permanent.
The Supreme Attorney well knew that he could not show good cause to the satisfaction of a court of justice, and he therefore shrewd enough to seek a compromise by having the Supreme Lodge pay the court costs, and inducing the representatives and Grand Chancellor of Missouri to agree to stipulations upon which the suit was dismissed, they believing that this was done in good faith.
The ruling of Sir Green after the Missouri delegation was admitted under the order of court, was on a per with his former hostile attitude, and although he was in contempt of Court, the representatives from Missouri were too disgusted to make further complaint at that time.
In the 4th paragraph of the letter of Sir Green he says: "The proposition submitted by Grand Chancellor Lloyd to place in scrowm the Pythian Temple-Sapientian Tax for the Grand Lodge of Missouri, that was collected by authority of the Suffice Lodge and held as a Trust fund for the years 1919-1920, could not be placed in scrowm except by authority of the Supreme Lodge K of P. N. A. ater. Sir Green has authily made another discovery, most startling of all, and that that the Pythian Temple Tax (so-called) is a "TRUST FUND". This indeed encourages scrowm Missouri tax. ALWAYS contended that these funds were all Trust Funds, and must be used for any purpose other than that for which they were collected. Now since Sir Green confesses that this is a TRUST FUND, why not have a "decent regard for the opinion of" ALL Pythians, and explain where the thousands of dollars collected on certificates and as taxes have gone, since the Temple has not been built, and the Pythian Temple-Sapientian "Trust Fund" is compulsive by its very small balance, Sir Green well knows that it is just as much a violation of law, right and justice to use the Pythian Temple funds for general purposes, as it would be to use the Endowment funds for general purposes, both being collected for a specific purpose, cannot lawfully be used for any other purpose.
Now, as to his statement that, the money collected for this "Trust Fund" by Missouri, could not be placed in scrowm except by authority of the Supreme Lodge, I need only state, that the proposition was drawn up in writing and directed to the SU PREME LODGE, and not to S. W. Green as an individual, but he refused to present it to the Supreme Lodge, and the SUPREME LODGE has never said whether it would or would not accept the proposition, at least officially.
Yes, as Sir Green says, I was present when the Supreme Lodge authorized the issue of bonds for improving the "Sanitarium," to the amount of One hundred thousand dollars, and I held them, as I hold now, that the Supreme Lodge was lead outside the scope and power of its charter in so doing, but I cannot at this time discuss that feature of the case. I deem it sufficient to say, that the work of establishing and maintaining a Temple and Sanitarium had been carried out in good faith as intended and, planned by the original Commission, of which I had the honor of being a member, the fund would have been held sacred for this purpose, and the work kept within its financial limits.
Sir Green says, "Up to the present we have spent on the Pythian Bath House and Sanitarium one hundred and eighty-six ($180,000.00) thousand dollars.
$180,000.00 for improving the Bath House, which cost only about $220,000.00, and it cannot be denied that the Bath House was ample to accommodate all the members of the Order who were able to pay railroad fare to Hot Springs and half rates for baths. If the improvements are for the accommodation of the general public, then the institution ceases to be for the benefit of the members of the Order who have been taxed for it, and once more, we step outside the rights of our charter.
Sir Green says, That the records of the Supreme Lodge shows that the Grand Lodge of Missouri has paid Pythian Temple-Sanitarium taxes to the Supreme Lodge as follows:
ST. LOUIS, MO., FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1922
SPRINGFIELD, O., NEGROES RESENT SEGREGATION
Grand Court that has received ONE CENT on their INVESTMENTS. No need of paucing for reply, there "is no such animal."
Now, Mr. Editor, here is the weakest alibi of all those given by Sir Green. "He (Lloyd) did not tell you that while we were collecting funds for the erection of the Pythian Temple at Chicago, Illinois, the white Pythians of Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama and Pennsylvania filed suits against our Order to stop us from using the name and emblem of the Knights of Pythias, and we were forced to use a LARGE SUM OF THE PYTHIAN TEMPLE SANITARIUM TAXES, to fight for the life of our Order, etc.
Crusader Service.
Springfield, O. Nov. 15. Resenting the action of 10th Bd. of Education instituting segregation in the public schools here, a large crowd of colored people attacked policemen stationed to guard teachers and pupils. Bulletin School set a siege. Board of Education an IJm Crow School for Negroes only. All Negro pupils in the city were to be sent to the school under the order.
Now, Mr. Editor, a "decent regard for the opinions" of all members of the Order should have "required" Sir Green to give the FIGURES SHOWING THE AMOUNT SPENT IN DEFENDING LAW SUITS IN WHICH PYTHIAN TEMPLE SANITARIUM TAXES WERE USED, as he handled the money, and then after giving those figures, let one of his 10th grade school boys show us what became of the DEFENSE FUND TAXES, and the EMERENGY FUND TAXES WHICH WERE assessed for the specific purpose of fighting those suits. Missouri paid the following amounts into the Defense Fund, and Emergency Fund, checks for which were endorsed by S. W. Green;
Emergency Fund: Defense Fund:
June 17, 1910. $100.00 Feb. 19, 1912. $ 408.15
Mar. 23, 1911. 174.00 Apr. 22, 1913. 411.50
July 21, 1911. 183.50 Aug. 26, 1913. 440.00
Aug. 24, 1911. 190.35 Total. $1,295.65
Total. $656.85
Emergency Fund. $656.85
Defense Fund. 1265.65
Sub-Grand Total. $1922.50
Pythian Temple Tax paid by Missouri. 3230.00
Grand Total. $5152.50
The colored residents resented this attempt to Jim Crow Negro children and threats were made against teachers and parents who permitted their children to attend the school. More than 100 students attended the school yesterday and began tainting the guards and teachers. Trouble grew until stones were thrown and several windows of the building shattered, and the reserves had to be called to drive off the crowd of indignant citizens. City has been the scene of several serious riots in past years, the last being in 1920, and fears are felt that unless the Board of Education rescinds its Jim crow order there will be a repetition of the tumultuous days of 1920, as the colored citizens of Springfield determine the fate of the order in which the action of the board hurts at them.
What Sir Green is trying to do, is to resort to the cheap political trick of "throwing dust in the eyes" of importing Pythians, by confusing the main issue with material matters outside of the record. I have never received one penny from the Supreme Lodge that was not honestly due me, just as other men received for like services, which has absolutely nothing to do with the money paid into the Pythian Temple-Sanitarium fund by the Grand Lodge of Missouri, amounting to $3,230.00, upon which Missouri has never received one penny in interest, and if I, as an individual had received $5,000.00 from the Supreme Lodge for services rendered, it would not relieve the Supreme Lodge of its obligations to keep faith with the Grand Lodge of Missouri.
Protest mass meetings are being planned and resentment is running high.
No. Sir Greco, the Grand Lodge of Missouri never paid one dollar toward my per diem and expenses in my trip as an offer to him, but contributions to the contrary were paid by the Grand Lodge of Missouri will be me out.
THROWS WOMAN OUT OF FOURTH FLOOR WNDOW
Now, Mr. Editor, I have shown in figures that cannot be disputed, that Missouri has paid for the years given, more than $5,000.00 Pyllanthe Temple and other taxes, but those figures do not include the amount paid in REFRESENTATIVE taxes of ten cents per member, which for the past two years amounted to more than $1,300.00, for which we hold receipts from Sir Underwood. Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal. This amount is not included in the figures. This Lodge for the years given, $6,452.50, and I defy Sir Green or any one else to disregard it, because we hold official receipts for every penny of it.
Associated Negro Press
CHICAGO, Ill., Nov. 15—Mrs. Steina Johnson, 29, colored, 4312 Langley Avenue, sustained a fractured skull and broken legs, and is believed to be in a critical condition of the South Side Hospital, a result of being injured at a fourth door window last Sunday noon. Thaddeus Johnson, her husband is being held for having thrown her out of the window. Mrs. Johnson was moving her furniture from the apartment, following trouble with her husband, when a new quarrel started.
Now, Mr. Editor, the LOYAL Pythianis of Missouri and other states are becoming weary of unending taxes and no benefits, and, personally, I am beginning to wonder if the Supreme Lodge taxes are not becoming like the famous brook of which the author said: "men may come, and men may go, but I flow on forever."
Now, Mr. Editor, Sir Green says in the last paragraph of his letter to you: "The amount paid him (Lloyd) for attending the sessions of the Suprime Lodge alone is more than 10% of the total taxes paid by the Grand Lodge of Missouri, and yet Sir Lloyd asks the question 'why the $3,100.00 of our hard earned money has not brought one cent income in 17 years, we pause to wonder why?' The argument of Sir Green in the paragraph above quoted, is extremely absurd and bears no relation whatever to the issues raised by Missouri.
Sir Green then concludes his remarkable letter by saying, "The above answers (?) are some of the reasons why."
Sir Green then what amount the Grand or Supreme Lodge has paid me for my services, it has absolutely nothing to do with the money due from the investment of the Grand Lodge in the Pythian Temple-Sanctarium proposition.
ANOTHER OF GARVEY'S ENTERPRISES FAIL
Temple-Sanitarium property
In proof that the Pythian Temple-Sanitarium was a business venture pure and simple, I give here a verbatim copy of the CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT issued for money paid into that TRUST FUND, according to the provisions of the laws creating and governing that department.
Founder and "Founders" of Black Star Line Has Another Set Back
"No. 13 — Certificate payments No. 64.
TEMPLE SANITARIUM CERTIFICATE
NEW YORK. Nov. 15—Giving positive proof of his self-heralded ability as a business genius, and negative evidence of his increasing popularity among the masses in New York City, one more of the money-wasting, entrepreneurial genius all "founderess" of the Black Star has closed its doors.
The Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia. THIS CERTIFIES that Grand Lodge Jurisdiction of Missouri under the Jurisdiction of the Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, has deposited with the Temple Sanitarium Commission of the Knights of Pythias aforesaid, the sum of Six Hundred and Forty Dollars, being equivalent to 64 Certificate payments to the two members of the non-transferable Knights of Pythias aforesaid, regulating and controlling the same.
LONGE
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the said Knights of Pythias has caused this certificate to be signed by its duly authorized officers, and to be sealed with the Seal of the said Order and corporation.
After struggling along for months the grocery store conducted by African Communities League at 646 Leslie Avenue was added to the long list of failures that seem to be characteristic of the presiding genius of the U. N. L. A. It is reported that increasing debts, decreased sales and bad-management are responsible for the inglorious result.
S. W. Starks, Supreme Chancellor,
C. K. Robinson, Supreme Keeper of Records and
Seal.
Edw. D. Green. Secretary.
Missouri bases her complaint and claim on the above CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT, and in further justification of that claim. I give the following verbatim copy of Article XIV, of the P. T. S., laws, as adopted by the Supreme Lodge in Pittsburgh, Pa., 100th page 152 of the official proceedings. ARTICLE XIV.
The two remaining stores, which someone has characterised as "holes in the wall to catch the unwary", are, to judge from their vacant shelves, likely to meet a fate not unlike that of the two stores above referred to.
"That all revenue to be derived from INVESTMENTS in this department, after deducting all expenses for the operation of and maintenance of said ENTERRISE shall be pro-rated among the aforementioned Grand and Subordinate Lodges and Grand and Subordinate Courts in proportion to the amount of CERTIFICATES OF STOCK held by them." If the Supreme Lodge did not intend in good faith, to return earnings on the money invested, then the issuance of these certificates constitutes fraud. But no further proof of the intentions of the Supreme Lodge is required than to quote the words of S. W. Starks in his address at Louisville, TN, 1907, followi
Minimum Wage Law Invalid
At the present rate of advancement and under our method of business the Order of things will soon be transformed, and means of coming up with them will be brought to our hands. We are ready to bring back the dividends due on its holdings.
D. C. Supreme Court Strikes Vicious
Blow At Workers Workers
If the statement of Sir Green is true, that this fund is a TRUST fund, then why did he not hold it, sacred, and prevent its use for any other purpose other than that for which it was collected and paid in, since he is the treasurer, cashier and paymaster? $10,622.50 of which was collected in 1906. Now Mr. Editor, the half has not been told relative to this matter, but I will be greatly pleased and gratified. If I may get the information desired of Sir Green through the pages of your paper, since it seems impossible to secure it from him direct.
WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 15—The Decision, by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia declaring the minimum wage law unconstitutional, may have a nation-wide significance for women in industry. The decision, by the William A. Lyons and the Children's Hospital against the District Minimum Wage Board, in which the adverse decision was handed down by one of the servants of the people will be applied to the United States Supreme Court.
Pushkin, Greatest Of Russian Dramatists, Part Negro
Port. St. Joe, Fla., Nov. 15. After a strenuous chase through the woods seven miles from here, Grace Patton of Port St. Joe, and W. H. Covington of Panama City, filled a black bear weighing 330 pounds.
Seven white persons were injured in the fight which followed after he was bared. "Jes" like a lynching. It took about one hundred white folks to kill one black bear, excaliated an old-colored man who stood looking on
Should the decision of the highest capitalist tribunal sustain the contention that the minimum wage law to protect the workers and especially the laborer population as an encroachment on the most holy and sacred 'rights' of property, it would effect wage laws for women in twelve states and employers in those states would again be absolutely free to engage rigorously and greatest interest in the exploitation of women workers.
CHICAGO. IL. Nov. 15. Commenting on Puskin in a recent lecture, Louis K. Anspacher, playwright, author and publicist, said: "Puskin, one of the greatest of Russian dramatists and authors, was part Negro. His grandfather was an Abyssinian slave of Peter the Great. That is one reason for his greatness. Half of his brain was an leberg—Russian; the other half was a simoon—African."
Only recently the little protection which the capitalist state vowed to the weak-bodies of young children was withdrawn by the Justice of the Court declared unconstitutional the child labor law.
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WRITE FOR AGENTS ATTRACTIVE PROPOSITION
SKIN WHITENER
POLISH RATIONS
NOTICE—Out of Town Correspondents are warned to write plainly with TYPE-WRITER or LEAD PENCIL on one side of the paper only. Use plenty of paper and do not crowd words. Copy that must be guessed at will not be handled at all. Only important notes will be published.
WELLSTON, MO.
Ebenezer Baptist Church is about to be sold. Watch for Ebenezer. **** Rev. G. W. Dickerson is out of town. Rev. Cleaves is in charge of the church. We are getting along nicely. **** Mr. E. J. Pierce, 6311 Wagner Ave. has purchased a new Hudson Super-sig. **** Any one having news for the Argus please see Mrs. C. G. Bryant. 6322 Minerva Ave. **** Miss Bertha Kaiser, 411 Geyer Rd. will leave this week for Cincinnati. Ohio. **** Mrs. Florence Latham, moved from Webster Groves to Kirkwood, on Prospect Ave. **** Mrs. Jannie Davis, left this week to go to Barnes Hospital. **** Mr. L. C. McCrair, is about the same, yet confined to bed.
WEBSTER GROVES, MO.
H. J. Simma
In loving memory of our dear mother, and loving and faithful wife, Agnes Wester, who departed this life, just one year ago, on the 12th of November, 1921.
Sleep on beloved and sleep.
And take thy rest:
Lay down thy head on thy Saviour's breast.
We loved thee well, but Jesus loved
thee best.
Sad that we lost
CRYSTAL CITY
Miss B. Moore and Mrs. B. R. Green worshiped at St. John's M. B. Church. Therea Randol returned from St. Louis. She handed out several tha'Rev. J. D. Wilking of St. Louis. is in the city, railing on old friend.**Mr. Richard Mosby is still confined at home on account of illness.** Little Margaret Clark had been sick for over a week. we wish her her best return to school.**Margaret Humphrey entered school Monday morning. We welcome her.**The reception of the Miss School are beginning a
THE ST. LOUIS ARJUS. FRIDAY. NOV. 17. 1922
the boys enjoyed themselves at Jazz land last week.**Rev. P. Chandler pastor of Grant; Chapel A. M. E. Church and family were the diner guests of Mrs. Malinda Kepton, last Tuesday evening. Slater Keeton 'loyed to her church and is also one of the beloved guests he is deeply loved by both pastor and chandler. She is faithful in the discharge of her duties to her Goq and church.**On Sunday morning, we had the pleasure of listening to a sermon by the Rev. W. R. J. Robinson of Brazil South America. His sermon was an excellent one, and all were made to rejoice. Rev. Robinsau and Mrs. Hannah of St. Mary's church dinner guests of Rev. and Mrs. Chandler.**Rev. Robinson was entertained during his stay in the city from Friday night to Sunday evening by our pastor; being royally entertained and also given an after collection Sunday morning to assist him in his work.**Mr. Henry Cockrell is busy beautifying his home. The electric light in his room illuminates his rooms.**Rev. M. C. Morton Glideon, Mo., visited our school Monday.
PACIFIC. MO.
By Gladys Marshall.
At the Hoc'clock service, Rev S. Paterson prescheduled a wonderful sermon. His text was, "The Purpose of Daniel." 1:***At night, our pastor, Rev M. E. Ewing, preached a powerful sermon. His text was, "Take My Yoke upon you and learn of me." St. Matt. 11:20:***Rev. Wallace of St. Clare was guest Sunday of Wm. Lane.***Rev Morris of Mossell, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson.***Mr. A. W. Lloyd of St. Louis, the Grand Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of Pythianus of Pacific Mo., on legal business, Mr. W. T. Ancestor of St. Louis, the Grand Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of Missouri, was the guest also of the Knights of Pythians of Pacific Mo.***Mr. A. M. Goude of St. Louis was the guest of Mr. Phil Macedrego.***Mr. C. M. T. Stanley was the guest of his aunt. Mrs. Laura Lane.***Mr. Wm. Jackson was the guest of Mrs. M. S. Jackson.
HERCULANEUM, Mo.
By Wesley McGuire
Service was held at the Baren Chapel A. M. E. Church at the usual hour, Rev. Theodore Morrison preached a wonderful sermon. His subject was, "What then shall I do with Jesus, which is called Christ?" The A. C. E. League met at the regular hour. The tople was, "Better. Church membership." Quite a bit of excitement was created in our town when a truck caught fire near the church Wednesday night. "Mr. Allen Nelson has purported to have been the Garner of Festus is teaching him how to drive." Mr. Samuel Matthews was a Festus visitor Sunday night." Mesdames Nettie Coln, Ophelia Smith, Cornella Kaiser, Katie Coulton and Sampson McOtley moved to St. Louis Monday. They reported a pleasant trip." Mrs. Lucinda Johnson is spending a few days in St. Louis. Master James Walker is able to be on a farm after a day's illness." Mr. Jesse Colin is on the sick list." Miss Cordia Cassey is better." Say! Wait a minute. Did you read the Argus last week? When you don't you miss everything. Its Five Cents a copy.
DE SOTO. MO
Lawrence Abington
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Johnson of Valle-
were guests of Mrs. V. Sides and M.
Johnsane of St. Louis is visiting his bro-
ther.*Benish Scott is home for in-
definite stay. Her school mates welf-
come her return.*Mr. and Mrs. Adol-
djenkins Jenkins and Mrs. Janie Gor-
don spent Sunday in the city.*Rev. Cl-
inton is on a vacation.*Rev. Higginbottom preached both morning and evening at Williams Chapel.*Rev. Treadwell spent Thursday night here.
He was touring from Jefferson City
to Jackson. Mo. Rev. M. L. Smith ac-
companied him this far and spent
few hours with old acquaintance.
Mrs. Maggie held the city this week.*Remember the Dame-
tic Science Department of Langston
School is in town in real fact. These
Those who have neither visited their
room or contributed should do
more.*Mrs. Sarah Rozier is
house guests Saturday and and
her sister and husband. Mr. ar
Jas. Wilkerson of St. Louis is an
guests Sunday. Mrs. Holle
and Miss Randall.*Mrs. Gran'
as dinner guests Nov. 5. Mr. and
K. D. Smith and the Abington
children.
IN MEMORIAM.
In loving memory of my dear wife
and our mother, Jennie Mitchell,
departed this life Nov. 18, 1921.
Dear is the grave where our loved one
BONNE TERRE.
By Walter Wright.
You should come out to chat, and hear Rev. E. D. Abbott preach. ****Sunday night sermon was very good and instructive. He gave this, reasons why Christians should not inace. ****Mr. and Mrs. Grant, Mrs. Laura Townson and Mrs. Mary Thompson all of Desoto motorized, over Sunday and spent the evening with the reporter's family. After Sunday School the reporter took, them out through the lead. ****Mr. and Mrs. William McCulrush, Katherine Butler and Mr. and Mrs. Corpullois Wintried, Mrs. Ida Washington of St. Louis motorized down and spent the week and with the families of Moses, Baker and Williams and Herrington. ****Paul Alexander has just purchased a new vehicle Auto and motorized to Farming. Mr. Edwin and Mrs. Ellis and Mr. Saterfield of Crystal City and Hewlett-Packard motorized down Sunday and spent the day with Grands. ****Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Warner.
end with home, folks.**Mr. W. E.
Wise left for St. Louis to see his wife
who is there having her eyes treated.
CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO. FLYING MISSILS.
By J. W. Curry.
The Hon. Mr. Wm. Pickens, Field Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People spoke Tuesday night at the 7th inst. to the pleasure and delight of the appreciation of the large congregation assembled at St. James A. M. E. Church. Mr. Pickens is a brilliant speaker. He carries enough wit and humor to interest keen and open minds and hearts to receive the information and inspiration of the logical facts of vital interest sent home to the heart. The Local Branch wishes to express appreciation to the National Association for such a prepared man on the field and 'to Mr. Pickens for his efficient service. J. W. Curry, President of Local Branch and Miss H. N. Jones, Secretary.***
FREDERICKTOWN, MO.
Mrs. Chira Kinder returned Friday from Arigama and has been quite ill
*****Arigama and has been serviced at Ipson Sunday*****Mrs. Id. is
ad dinner Sunday, Mrs. A. E. Milegou, Rer. and Mrs. J. M. Wade and daugh-
ter****Mr. R. Madison, of Farming
ron notored here Sunday****Mrs. Emma Hanik returned to Alton, Friday
****Mrs. Eman Matthews purchased
a car of the Jelly make.
ST. MARY'S NO.
The rain that rain has not yet was
blessing to our community. **Mr.
Joe Foley** has been very kind to us.
If your Hairdresser Cannot Supply you, get it from the nearest Drug Store or direct from
MMe. KELLY LADIES TAILOR
I specialize in designing. Let me design and make your wedding gowns, party dresses and coat suits. I guarantee perfect fit or refund the cost of your material. I am a specialist in refining and remaking garments. Whether I make your garmental or not, call upon me, let me advise you as to colors best suited for your complexion as well as figure, and the material needed to make same. My advice is free and will save you money.
2841 Luang Ave. Phone Permanent 1208
513 N. Grand 5 Doors North of Olive
Save this Coupon and On Every Purchase of $5.90 We Will Allow
You $1.00 In Trade. See Us For Bargains in Christmas Gifts.
Make Good Selections Now and We Will Hold Same For You.
one of our old veterans at church again. *** Mrs. Dora Hamilton left Sunday for Crystal City to visit her father. *** Mrs. Mack. Mack is giving a Thanksgiving ball at Dickerson's Hall. *** Mr. Rufus Smith, head mixer at the Self Raising Flour Plant, got his corn in before the rain. *** Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Coffran and daughter, speak Saturday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Coffman. *** Mr. Evans and Mrs. Johnson made a visit to Mrs. Mack and Coffman Sunday. Mrs. O. Rinsey, worthy Zephro mistress of Good Hope Chamber that they have issued a new policy for delinquent members. *** Messra. Miles. Mack and Ned Coffman contemplate visiting Festus Sunday evening. *** Read the St. Louis Argus.
CHARLESTON, MO.
By C. Alexander
Mrs. Etta Strand of Chicago, Ill., in the city on account of the serious illness of her mother, Mrs. Annie Jordan.**Mrs. Ella Robinson gave an entertainment Friday night at the Baptist Church. Mrs. D. E. Sykes was lucky and received a hen.**Mrs. Della Means returned home. Sunday from a visit at Poplar Bluff.**Rev. J. G. Haynes and members had the big rally-Sunday. Rev. King and members of Perry Chapel came ever 'surd' the total amount raised' for the da. is known at this time.**The program given Saturday night by the B. Y. P. U. was quite a success.
FARMINGTON, MO.
Dayse F. Baker
D In Trade At
Y AND LOAN CO.
Doors North Of Olive.
Every Purchase of $5.00 We Will Allow
For Bargains in. Christmas Gifts.
We Will Hold Same For You.
won't ever tell that it did not reach
us until Monday. Some days must be
dark and dreary.
COMMERCE, MO.
Mr. Walter Lomax of Sedalia, Mo., who has been at the bedside of his wife returns to his home on Friday Nov. 10. We are pleased to say that Mrs. Lomax is in conversation. *** Mrs. Mary Ross has been feeling badly this week. *** Mrs. Evelyn Lomax and Emma Harris dined and spent the night at the home of Mrs. Lizzie Scott. *** Quite a few were present at the 6 o'clock dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wilson. Tuesday night, honor of Mrs. Lomax. *** Ella Green, Miss Mabel E. Galvin and Mr. Kenny,ook it a flying trip to Carlo, Miss Scott spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives here. *Services were well attended here. Sunday. Rev. William preached an interesting sermon***Begun E. School had an entertainment Saturday night. For some cause there were not many out. *** Mrs. Splius who has been on the sick list for some time is very much improved.
KINLOCH, MO.
The congregation was inspired Sunday morning and night with a wonderful sermon by the pastor. *** The Ladies Aid all met at Mrs. Phoenix with eight members present and one visitor. After the transaction of all the business the ladies were served a delicious luncheon by the hostess. Next meeting will be at the residence of Mrs. Mann. A Grand Musical Concert by a Quartette from Sinning Concert Band will be given Wednesday, November 28. The Lane Tabernacle Choir will render a sacred concert Tuesday, Nov. 28. Rev. G. Hancock, Pastor; Mrs. R. W. Mann, Reporter.
The Broadway Baptist celebrated its Fifty-ninth Anniversary and the Second Anniversary of our pastor, Rev. J. L. Caston. In the morning we had a program for the Sunday School and at 11 o'clock we entered into our morning services; with a sermon by the pastor and songs by the quartet. In the afternoon at 3 o'clock we had another very interesting program in the evening we had song and prayers services by B. Y. P. U. Aunt Emma Shields, one of the oldest members is out against. She is asked to be our church again. **** Rev. E. S. Redd pastor of Hunville Church left Monday. He is always welcome in our city. He is Rohmanns is ill at his home on 5th Street. **** Mrs. Ella Jackson is still on the sick list. Mrs. Rebecca Turner, who has been ill for the past eleven months died last. Thursday. The funeral was preached by Rev. Caston. Mrs. Turner was a devoted Christian woman. **** Mrs. Jane Sellerenger and Anna Scott are still on the sick list.
LOUISIANA NEWS
The last few days here have been very rainy, but, the temperature remains about the same.**Services at each church. Sunday were well attended. Rev. L. P. Bryant, pastor of A. E. Church, and Rev. D. J. Mitchell, pastor of E. Church each preached splendid sermons to their people morning and evening. Rev. M. F. Craven and wife arrived on last Wednesday from Quincy, III. Sunday, he began his labor on this field as pastor of Maryland Street Baptist Church. The outfit for Rev. Craven is very good in this job to a young minister and a splendid pastor.**The services at Baptist Church well attended all day. Covenant in the morning afternoon a splendid program served by some of the best talent of the different churches. Rev. D. J. Mitchell spoke on the Resell of the mid-week prayer meeting to the church. Without prayer the church is empty. L. P. Bryant spoke of a First Baptist Sunday Resell all engaged each other in prayer.
day was more than $20.00**Mrs. Ethel Heverly, is seriously ill at her home.*Mrs. William Stewart of Chicago is here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Llevels and sister, Mrs. Ethel Beverly,*Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beverly,*Batting in Chicago.*Mrs. Etta Beverly, sitting home on Thursday the 8th, after being several weeks. We are glad she is very much improved in health.*Rev. O. F. Nelson visited home folks last week and left for his church at Parina, Mo., Saturday a. m.**Mrs. Silia Cochran is seriously ill at his home in the country.*On Monday after she was a "Parent Teacher's Association organized" in this place. We wish the organization much success.
FULTON, MO.
By E. A. V.
NEW HAVEN, MO.
The Ladies' Club of the Christian Church met with Mrs. George Kalser last week.***Rev. Glbos, Jefferson City, week preceded *Sunday* to an appressive congregation.***The children will render a Thanksgiving program at the Christian Church, November 30th.***Our school is progressing nicely with 'Mrs. C. M. Kalser, teacher.'***Mrs. Brigs,碧斯, Maplewood Mo., is the guest, her sister, Mrs. William Rose.'**Mr. John McAllister has just completed the new addition Mr. Joseph Jacob's house.'**Mr. Joseph Jacob's Mason of St. Louis, was the guest of his brother, Charles Sunday.'**Mr. Charles Rose and Paul Pryor drove to Warrenton, Sunday.***If you want the news, read the Argus.
VANDALIA, MO.
Rev. T. H. Wartfield reached at the Methodist Church, Sunday night, very large attendance. All enjoyed an intellectual sermon, *Mrs. Mary Sturkes of Jacksonville, IL.* returned home Sunday night after a two weeks visit with relatives. ****A mule kicked Fred Gibson on the hip last Thursday. Didn't hurt old Spuddy very bad he is able to work again***Mrs. and Mrs. Chas. Jefferson and son spent a days in the country with Mrs. Buren. ****Mrs. and Mrs. P. J. Nickens, Mr. Eugene Brooks and Mrs. Manuel Nickens motorist Martininsburg Thursday afternoon for a few hours, visit with her father. ****Mrs. and Mrs. Mat Collier returned from New Florence, Mo. ****Mrs. and Mrs. Rae Doothn gave a dance at Walsh's hall Saturday night. Several attended and danced to the musical strains of "Jazz."
derson and sons were the guests of parents last Sunday. Meet me at R. A. Lee's Nov. 25.
KIRKWOOD, MO.
By A. S. Fields.
Our Sabbath School was all that could be expected Sunday considering the inclement weather. The pupils show signs of improvements along many lines. The 11 a. m. Service was above the average from a point of attendance, interest and finance. Dr. Smith proved himself equal to all of the former recommendations that have been given him as a master in the pulpit. He preached from the Golden Text of the Sunday School lesson. His argument was so forceful that the congregation could hardly sit still or hold themselves to a usual stand when he is preaching. He was successful as a teacher in the public schools, entering the ministry and be more than a master in his present calling. At the cindusim of the 11 a. m. service, a lady of one of the better families of Kirkwood united with our church. Some one or more person has joined the church every Sabbath since his return.**Our Improvement League is making improvements under the management of Mrs. S. A. Fishback as president.**The Junior Choir has reached a height under the management of Mrs. Victoria and Miss Ethel Crewel as president and vice.**Leander James of Newport Ave. Webster Groves entertained Stewardess Board No. 2. at her residence Friday afternoon.**The Teacher's Association and the guests were Rev and m. S. Smith. Mrs. James served a fine four course luncheon to the perfect satisfaction of the entire board.**Dr. Smith was on programme at the County Teacher's Association last week. Rev Smith spoke on the subject of Teaching Beginners to Read. The address was one of the many proofs of the doctor's ability to lecture interestingly on almost any topic that is worth while. After quite a few comments by the conductor. Prof. J. H. Davis, principal of our public school in Kirkwood and some of the white teachers that were present. The high school teacher had been requested to reap pear with the Comic Drawn, entitled Maranda's Trouve, November 23rd at our church. Admission 10 cents **The St. Louis' Co. Branch of N. A. A. C. P., will hold their regular meeting Tuesday evening at Olive Chapel. All members and friends that wish to unite are cordially invited to attend.**The arrangements for the Big Thanksgiving rally will be completed after the Trustee election Thursday evening. Let each member see to it that they are interested in this rally. Pray for us this year.
CARD OF THANKS.
We desire to thank our many friends and neighbors for their kindness and sympathy shown during our bereavement in the death of our mother, Mrs. Alice Lemmil and for the beautiful floral offerings. We thank our friends, we thank our Douglass for his consoling words, also undertaker scout for services rendered.
Mattle Collier, Daughter. Louis Lemmie, Son.
FESTUS, MO.
Mrs. G. E. Treadwell, daughter Flossia and Mrs. Scott visited friends several days. They were enroute to their home in Jackson, Mo. **** Mrs. Ada Smith and friends from St. Louis, moved down and spent Sunday as guests of Mrs. St. Louis, visited relatives, and friends here. **** The servies at Ward Chapel were well attended. **** The Stewardess Boards of Ward Chapel were entertained at the home of Mrs. McKinley Johnson. After the regular routine of business a daly repast was served. **** The Grand Deputy of the Masonic Order paid our little-town a visit on the 8th. His lecture delivered was quite a treat to all present. After which a banquet was given at the Masonic Hall. Guests of honor were, Greg Palibroths, Rev. H. W. Prof. John Carr, and others. **** A surprise party was given at Mr. Phillip Carr's residence in honor of his 70th birthday, last Saturday evening. Quite a number of presents were given. All left at a late hour, after having enjoyed the evening. **** The Box Sucker given by the Court of Heroes proved a success. **** The pastor preached us a good sermon at 11 o'clock. Text, St. John 21:19. At 8 o'clock we enjoyed a soul stirring sermon by Mrs. Moore,衣瞒hed with us at Sunday at 11 o'clock. **** Sunday, Nov. 18, will be Rally Day. **** Rev. Jackson and wife wish to thank the members and friends of Crystal City and Festus for the surprise given them last week. The surprise began Saturday morning when Brusher L. G. Matthews came to the parasite at an early hour of the morning thing and rescheduled the elixum on Monday evening when the good people of Crystal City led by Sisters Luke Johnson and Fannie Smith and Ada Cady stormed the parasite, leaving a table well laden with choice things to eat. We pray God blessings upon these good sisters and all who graciously garrs of their earthly goods. May their sustains and storehouses be continually filled.
POPULAR BLUFF, MO.
By Mrs. C. Curry
Mrs. Nancy Steele died Sunday
noting, "Funeral was held Wed-
nesday, Nov. 11th at the Sultan
at the Sultanate Church."
Mrs. Merritt Powell of
Cleveland, Ohio, who had been very
ill, has returned from the Hospi-
tal. "Mrs. J. W. Curry of Cape Gir-
vard arrived this morning on a budi-
nism trip. Quite a Japanese surprise
to Mrs. Curry and Daniel. "Mrs. Ada
and Maries Grand Belle arrived from
Neiland, where they have been
visiting their parents." Mrs. Chloe
Jones who was seriously injured but
in a minor injury later "Mrs.
Lily Cohen and Daniel have very
much to say to the family."
THE ST. LOUIS ARGUS, FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1922
cest. *** Mrs. Gleaveen was reported
little Friday. *** Mrs. Hillebritt
is on the slick list. *** Mrs. J. H. Freeman
is still on the slick list. *** Little
Miss Lanter Sylvester is reported ill.
*** Mrs. M. Ramsbottom left town Thursday
evening to visit the bed side of
a sick sister. *** Mrs. Relh visiting friend. *** Mrs. Hanna home visiting friend. *** Town Monday. November
18th from Neelyville, Mo. *** The daughters of Mrs. Gertrude Harvey are reported ill. *** Misses Myrlea Flinny and Lily Johnson of Neelyville are attending Wheatley School.
ELSBERRY. MO.
Services were well attended at both Churches. *** At the A. M. E. Rev. Williams of Vandalia, Mo., filled the pulpit. *** At the M. B. Church, Rev. W. C. Allen of Fredericktown was the preacher, while Rev. White was at Auburn. *** The Revival meeting carried on at Scuffletown, at near settlement, was largely attended during the past, and when closed eight converts was the result. *** Rev. White and Rev. Allen are still going to Auburn, and on the 20th to Sunder. *** Mr. Sam Shepherd of St. Louis was a Sunday visitor in our city. *** The wedding bells are still ringing. ***Mr. and Mrs. Grimes had as their dinner guest Monday. Rev. White Rev. Allen and Mr. Wm. Steele. *** Our Argus list grows. Watch for the carrier, Eddle. Pay him a nickel and read all the news.
POTOSI, MO.
Services were conducted by Rev. T. W. Lee on past Sunday. The meeting was good all day. In the afternoon testimonial meeting was held and 31 testified for Jesus. At 8 p. m. regardless of the rainy weather a splendid congregation assembled and the pastor delivered a wonderful sermon.*** On Monday night we enjoyed another good sermon from 18th Division of Psalms of David. Aaron Johnson came forward for prayer. The pastor spoke on Tuesday morning. **Mr. W. Deepe is better. **Moses Jennings is numbered with the sick. *** Mrs. Lucy Thompson was confined to her bed* but is up and about again. *** This is the time of year that the man who left off their vests to make a summer suit, gird putting them on to make the winter suit. *** Miss Bessie Declue is the guest of her grandmother. Mrs. B. Robinson. *** Little Miss Unice Jennings the baby girl of Mrs. S. Jennings is sick.*** Messrs. Gill, Jr. A. E. Bendue and James Johnson, Christian Endeavor and applied job. Mrs. Church doors. looks as if real carpenters had done the work, don't it? Makes quite an improvement too Let the good work continue. *** Mr. Geo. is confined to his home or account of illness.
CAROLLTON, MO.
Services were well attended at St. James A. M. E.-Church, Sunday. Rev. Jackson preached morning and night. *There is also a Thanksgiving dinner planned at St. James. Come out and help eat all of the good things that are to be there.**Rev. G. C. Chinn preached morning and evening at Virginia St. Baptist. *Mrs. Lee Roy Johnson of Salisbury. Mo. will lecture at Virginia St. Baptist Church Tuesday evening, Nov. 14. *All that desire to take sewing lessons call at Mrs. Irine Chatmans, 410 Solon St. Saturday evening from 8:30 until 8; and make arrangements with Miss Marshah. *Mrs. Lorine McFern who will be lice Patrol Walker treatment will be lice Patrol Officer weeks at the residence of the landlord. Mrs. Amanda Cowe. All customers remember your dates and respond on time. *Miss Muriel White and Miss Eydth Strather spent Sunday in Dalton. Mo.* Mrs. Lottie Conn is real sick, she has been confined to her for some time. She is about one of the oldest citizens of Carrollton. Her age is 66. *Mrs. Mary Ferguson is improving slowly. Mrs. Harriett Jenkins is on the sick list. *Miss Myrtle Crossland of her been visiting at the bedside of her aged grandmother. Mrs. Jonnor. *Mrs. Marina Lee and Mrs. Minnie Miller have returned from Jefferson City Mo. where they were called to the bedside of Katie Leep, improvining when they arrived. *Mrs. Thomas of Kansas City has returned to Carrollton, where he will return a bartered item. The beautiful quilt that was given away by the Ladies Aid at Virginia St. Baptist last Thursday was won by Mrs Katherine Turner, the lucky number being 100. *Mrs. Harriet Reed who has been on the sick list for some time is mending slowly. *Mrs. James Smith has returned to Kansas City after four weeks visit with Mrs Corinne Boulne.
ST. CHARLES, MO.
By Ew. Kenner.
Services were fairly well attended at the A. M. E. Church Sunday. The pastor's sermons both morning and evening were enjoyed by those present.**The A. M. E. Church's organizing for their Thanksgiving effort, which they hope to make the most successful in the history of the church.****Ker. A. J. Uromwell, pastor of the Hon. Bishop Church, in all connection with home on account of the numerous footnotes which adduced at this writing, Mr. Dan Gay and Charles Harry are both secually ill.****Ker. B. R. Monroe preached for Rev. Jackson at Good Hope Church Sunday at 3 a. m. The occasion being a rally for that church.***Mr. Julian V. Clay formerly of St. Charles but now of St. Louis, was married in marriage to Miss Bertha B. Wheeler of St. Louis Ms. Thursday, Nov. 9 at the home of the grooms parents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Clay / Rev. Monroe performed the ceremony. Only relatives and a few indulgent friends were present. An elaborate Grace was served.***Mr. Mildle Clair was honored by the Mother of the Prayer. Nov. 9 at the
and little son were guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. C. Guyton on last Saturday **The St. Paul, M. B. Parsonage was wired and in new bloom with electric lights** **Mr. D. W. Breda of Chicago stopped over in St. Charles a few days, with his mother-in-law, Mrs. N. T. Howell on his way to Alexandria L., where he will spend Thanksgiving with his mother. **Mr. Gertie Blevens, of St. Louis, spent Sunday with her aunt, Bettie Bettle. **Ms. Margurtele Kenner, who has been confined to her bed for two weeks, is improving, will soon be out again.** **Mr. Moses O. Benson and Mr. Columbus Burton were guests at a banquet in St. Louis, Friday night. Nov. 10.** Central Star Lodge No. 79. K. of P. is putting on a successful drive for members. Send in your application Obu. Sneel, C. C., O. J. Ellis, K. B Seal, Edw. Kenner, M. J. **Mr. Oller Ellis, our successful contractor has the contract to plaster the new Franklin School Building.**
EAST ST. LOUIS, ILL.
Mrs. Emily Graham of Elkville, IL, has returned home after spending several weeks. In the city visiting Mrs. Richard Stevenson.***Mrs. Mary Winford and Mrs. Bubcea Ball of St. Louis, Mo., visited Mrs. Moody, 1704 Bond Avenue.***Rev. D. L. Davis, pastor of St. John A. M. E. Elphin Church is visiting conference in Arkansas this week.***Mrs. M. V. Lucas is quite ill this week.***Mrs. Wm. Duckworth is recovering from recent illness.***Rev. J. B. Scott is in Cairo this week, and will visit Arkansas before returning home.***The membership campaign at the Y. M. C. A. is in full swing. The slogan is 500 men in five days.***Mrs. Helen Jones, 1600 Tudor Avenue is quite ill. Sunday, October 8. S. Arlins preach the sermon at New York's Baptist Church, Cahokia. Ill. His subject was "Highlyeous exalteth a nation." Last Sunday, he filled the same pulpit, assisted by Rev. Ben Bell. From Cahokia, they will go to E. Carondelet to work in the interest of the church there.***The Missionary Club of St. Paul Baptist Church of which Mrs. Rosa Hourd is President met last Thursday night at the home of the President. It is reported that the receipts for the rally total $114.99 with more coming in.***Mr. Andy Lagrohe has opened a restaurant where it is much needed at 17 S. 18th Street.***Mrs. Lilly Brown of Edmunson, Ark., is making her home at 1119 Kansas Ave.***Owing to the wonderful growth of Sunshine School of Woodland, divided into four units known as Eastern, Wester, Southern and Central Social Clubs.***Among those that are sick are: Mrs. Julia B. Evans, 12 N. 24th St.; Mrs. Moses Clark, suffering with a lacerated hand, Columbus Casleberry. 2240 Gay Ave. and Albert McCray, who is rapidly recovering from the effects of amputated toes
CHICAGO ITEMS.
Williams filled the pulpit and delivered one of his master pieces at three o'clock. Every one enjoyed an old fashioned covenant meeting and seemed to filled with the Holy Spirit afterwards the Lord's Supper was administered. B. Y. E. R. at β o'clock at 7:30, the pastor upheld another strong sermon. Collection $30.41. *Sunday, at Mt. Olive Free Baptist A. A. Cam pastor, preached and the offering for the day was $20.00*
BHODAO SYSTEM
Fourteen articles manufactured.
Rhodo hair grower, 50c and pressing
oll $1.75, hair dye save $1.50, Plain
salve for availen joints, rheumatism
28c a box. Agents wanted. Rates to
barkers and hairdressers. First to
treatment $1.50. Every two or three weeks
50c. For a short while, children one
half price. Mrs. Norman. 305 N. Ewing
Ave. St. Louis. Mo.
Write Mme. B. Rhoda, President
Rhodo: College, Nashville, Tenn.
Eastern Branch. 350 4th St., Jersey
City, N. J.
HATS HATS
All Kinds Of Hats Cleaned And
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Between Pine and Olive
CURED HIS RUPTURE
I was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good. Finally I got hold of something that quickly and completely cured me. Years have passed and the rupture has never returned, although I am doing hard work as a carpenter. There was no operation, no lost time, no trouble. I have nothing to sell, but will give full information about how you can have a complete cure without M. Zorin, a pediatrician by Eugene M. Pullen, Carpenter. 109J Marcellin Avenue, Manaquan, N. J. Better cut this out notice and show it to any others who are ruptured—you may save a life or at least stop the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation.
HER PAINS GONE
Little Rock, Ark.—Before taking St. Joseph's G. F. P. I had a tired, worn-out feeling all time, pains in my back, bearing down pains, was not able to be up more than half of the time, and now I am happy to say that the pains are all gone, and I recommend St. Joseph's G. F. P. to every woman that has female trouble. I feel like a different woman. In fact, my health is better than it has been for years, and I only took a few bottles to put me on my feet. You have my full permission to use this testimonial as you wish."—Mrs. Nora Blackman, 3200 Gaines.
This lady says St. Joseph's G. F. P. restored her health. It should do as much for many other female sufferers. You can buy St. Joseph's G. F. P. from any dealer at $1.00 per bottle. The dealer will return your money if you are not satisfied after you have taken one bottle.
St. Joseph's G.F.P. The Woman's Tonic
SUCCESS! HAPPINESS!
Would you be more fortunate in business affairs, seeking a life of greater rewards, pleasures and delights in domestic love, or social conditions? Is your health what it should be? Are you undeceived or in doubt; do you require reliable advice and helpful assistance in your present dilemma? Is there an uncertainty of mind as to correct action pertaining to contemplated changes of undertakings? Do you wonder why others with, seemingly less natural ability forge the trout, attain results and influence and seem to be an animal betrayment? Are these hidden and mysteries characteristic holding you back? Adversary intentions that are insurplastic? Would you like to gain and retain the confidence, friendship, love, or esteem of any individual, even through far away? Write to this believed woman and make a request for information concerning her work; she will consider your letter strictly confidential. Do not send any money or postage unless you wish to do so on your own will. Keep NOW this information must be
GRACE DRAY BELONGING
To the New York Street
Broadway, New York, N.Y.
Note: For a questionnaire and more information, please contact the Little Town House, 1121 Broadway, New York, N.Y.
ELOSO HAIR GROWER
Guaranteed to beautify and promote the growth of Hair. Agents wanted everywhere. Don't delay, write today, a penny will do it. Phone, Lindell 3222
Send all orders by Money Order to Madam J. Nelson
ELOSO COLLEGE CO.
1121 Whittier, Cor. Cook
ST. LOUIS, MO.
CAGO
rid trains leave St. Louis
on daily at 12:20 P. M. -
Delmar Ave. 9:46 P. M.)
driving at
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cud of St. Louis, you will find
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THREE splendid trains leave Union Station daily at 9:30 P.M. (Delmar Ave. and 11:52 P.M., arriving at DEARBORN STATION C.
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Tickets at 328 N. Broadway - Or Delmar Avenue.
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Tickets at 328 N. Broadway - Union Station Or Delmar Avenue
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St. Louis
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1
Alderman Harris
of New York
Indorses 'r. Siegert's
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Expert Auto and Traction Mechanics in Demand
You train with us by actually doing homework yourself under the careful instruction of the highest paid teaching staff. Like security. Any unfit man can learn in a few weeks without previous experience.
FREE—Write today for lilies talking telephone but you can own more by traveling more. Address your letter for the personal attentio
of P. W. ERNED, President!
CENTRAL AUTOMOBILE AND TRUCK SCHOOL
Philadelphia, Ks.
PAGE NINE
PAGE TEN
CLASSIFIED ADS
RATES
ONE INSERTION
Personal, Business and Professional Cards, Business Chances For Sale or Rent Houses, Stores, Flats, Help Wanted, Situations Wanted, For Rent Rooms, Rooms and Board, 5c per line; minimum 15c.
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms,
3810 Enlight.
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms,
3810 Enlight.
ROOM for rent for gentleman with or without board. Lin. 5462.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms with furniture heat. 4106 Flight. (11-17-4).
FOR RENT Room for doctor or dentist. Reception room. Bomont 1046.
FOR RENT Next furnished rooms 3210 Lpnss Ave Call Bomont 1062 J.
FOR RENT Hall room. Lin 1017 M. 3202 W. Belle P. (11-17-2).
FOR RENT Neatly furnished room with furniture heat. 1221 W. Cote Brillante.
FOR RENT Two connecting rooms bed room and kitchen completely furnished 2803 Pine Street.
FOR RENT Room for a working girl. Will be treated as one of the family landed. 2421 R.
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished room. Modern conveniences. 3890 W. Belle Lindell 3721 J.
FOR RENT - Neatly furnished rooms
for gentlemen only.7 Modern conven-
ence. Phone Romont 1735 W. 3220
Lucas.
FOR RENT Furnished room in private
home with all conveniences for
gentleman. $300 per week. Forest 6458
M.
WANTED - New appearing girl to
make home with family of two and
go to school. Box No J. B 15 Argus
Office. (11-17-2).
A young lady desiring pupils for
piano lessons. Learn to play in
twelve lessons. 30 cents a lesson. Lin.
5462. (11-17-4)
FOR RENT One neatly furnished
room with modern conveniences. Priv-
ate family. Lin. 2466 J. 1713a Goode
Ave.
WANTED - A good colored barber
Shop furnished. Write for terms to L.
H. Cunningham. 311 E. Main St. St.
Soto, Mo. (11-17-2)
WANTED - Ten young ladies to
take orders for Coal Apply Doughless
Coal Company. Sunday at 11 a.m.
2225 Market.
FOST A gray scarf on Newstead
between Cook and Eright Finder
please return same to 387 Cook Ave.
and receive reward.
FOR RENT Large front room furnished
for two girls or couple. Steam
heat electric, bath gas and phone.
For rent 1041 Cook.
FOR RENT A neatly furnished
room with all modern conveniences to
an employed man or man and wife
Rented people 1854 W.
For fancy dressing beading and
enamelling children's dresses, snuck
cols and suits retired, alterna-
tions of all kinds, see Mrs A. Helley,
1114g N Leonard, Bomont 1858 J.
114174)
WANTED 50 Colored girls to sort
and old rags. Steady employment.
newment; good wages. Apply Federal
Epaper Stock Co. 1812 McKissack
Ave.
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished rooms
in private family with modern convenience. Couple preferred. Phone
Lindel 3571 J. 4266 W. Belle.
(11-17-2).
WANTED—A refined young couple
desire a flat or consider three unfurnished rooms on first floor in a private respectable family. Will exchange references. Phone Lindel 1718 J
after 6:30 p.m. J. A. Thomas.
FOR RENT—One neat furnished
second floor front room, in private family Heat, electric, bath, gas and
phone. 4446a Enright. 11-3-4
DRESSMAKING—Gowna. Snow's
Dress Shop. 2836 Olive. Bomont 407.
Mine Eva A. Hamilton. 11-4(8-).
FOR RENT—Three furnished rooms for house keeping with gas, electric and heat. Lindell 5379-R. (11-10-2)
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished room. Hot and cold water, furnace heat n private family. 4114 Cook Ave Lindell 3017-R. (11-10-4).
FOR RENT—Elegantly furnished room for lady, or man and wife, reduced rent. Electric light, gas and bath, use of parlor, dining room and kitchen and gas range. 3108 Monton. Address 2541 Lucas. (11-10-2).
FOR HIRE — Horse and wagon. Apply 4199 W. Belle. Lin. 5837-W. (11-3-2).
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished room for gentleman with conveniences. 4049 Enright. Lindell 2771-J. (11-3-4).
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished room on second floor. All modern conveniences. 4457 Enright. Forest 1973-W. (11-3-4).
FOR RENT—Four unfurpliated rooms on the second floor modern conveniences. Must have good references. Mrs. Williams. 4418 Enlight Ave.
FOR SALE—Two heating stores for sale. Mrs. G. Budd. 4538 Kennerley Avenue. (11-10-2).
FOR RENT—Neatly furnished rooms modern conveniences. Men only. 4439 Euright. (11-10-4).
FOR RENT—One neatly furnished room. 4012 Euright. Phone, Lindell 4079-W. 13-2-2
FOR RENT — Furnished rooms newly decorated with furnace heat. 4046 Cook Ave., Lindell 2031-M. (10-27-4).
HAULING — When you need hauling done, call Townsend's Express. Our rates are lowest. Lindell 1837, rear 4320 Washington Blvd. (10-27-8).
TRAINED NURSE—For private cases. Miss J. E. Purcell, Douglas Hotel, Phone Central 5306-L. (10-0-12).
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished rooms, newly decorated, 3117 Washington. (7-28-ind.)
SEE—John Whitlock for special pipe fitting and plumbing work and repairing. Phone Lindell 1837, 4320 Washington Blvd., rear. (9-22-8).
FOR RENT—One furnished room with all convenience, furnace and gas heat.
See Mrs. E. H. Wilkins. 4400 Enright.
(10-27-4)
TYPIST WANTED—Man or woman who has rapid speed and correct writer who can serve evenings, office work from 6:30 to 9:00 m. Work indictively to the right party. Address W. H. E. Box 4, St. Louis Argus.
FOR RENT—Two neatly furnished front rooms for light housekeeping. Modern convenience for married couple or single persons, respectable people only. 4235 W Finney Ave. (10-27-2)
Good industrious men and women can make good money in a pleasant way in handling Exclusive Agency contract for International Distributors Memphis, Tenn. See Fair-Plex ad in this paper. Write them for free information about this great offer today.
(10-13 Ind.)
TEACHERS
We filled two good printpalphals
this week. Enroll with us. Mid
W. Colored Teachers Bureau. P.
O. Box 321, Jefferson City, Mo. (6.33)
THE FIRST CHARTERED COLORED CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE IN THE WORLD
THE FIRST CHARTERED COLORED CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE IN THE WORLD
Devoted exclusively to teaching the science of Chiropractic in all its branches - Opens Nov. 15th 'Enroll now! Day and evening classes. For information call 800-255-2555. Open from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. except Sundays.
Dr. J. K. MAIER. Registrar.
Health Parlors 1049a Grand Ave.
Corner Finney.
M. B. CAREY REAL ESTATE AND INVESTMENT CO.
We take care of you on First and
Second Loans at reasonable rates. See us for homes in out-of-the-city im-
proved property, and lots in the county. Business address. 810-81-84.
Charles street. Phone. Main 3787.
Residence. 4422 Enright. Phone Forest 8364-W.
Watkins & Agee
REAL ESTATE CO.
DISTRICT MANAGERS OF
REPUBLIC HOUSING AND
INVESTMENT ORGANIZATION
STOP PAYING RENT
Buy or Build a Home At 3 Per Cent.
Before Buying, See Our Complete
List of Improved Real Estate.
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT
OUR TERMS MUST SUIT YOU
We Are As Near You
As Your Neighbour.
Lindell 2916 Notaries
1040 Whittier St.
SINOT 1S
FOR SALE
BEST BUSINESS BUILDING
IN WEST END
N. E. Corner
West Belle And Whittler
Suitable For Any Business
PRICE REASONABLE
SMALL CASH DEPOSIT
Phone, Forest 6281-J.
If you listen to the neverdo's it'
Aprons, belts and surgical reducers
Will show samples. Orders taken.
Mrs. Hatch, 4306 Labadie Ave Phone
Lindell 4576-M. ( 10-20-ind.)
By John Louis Hill
For The Associated Negro Press
Chapter X
30th Installment
SOME OUTSTANDING EXAMPLES
WHEN BLACK MEETS WHITE
By John Lewis Hill.
Chap. X
31st Installment
SOME OUTSTANDING
EXAMPLES.
Associated Negro Press
Indiah T. Montgomery, was born a slave in Mississippi; and belonged to Joseph Davis, Brother of Jefferson Davis. In 1883, Mr. Montgomery founded Mount Bayou, in Mississippi which became probably the most fortified Negro town in the United States.
Robert L. Smith, born in Charleston, South Carolina, founded the Farmers' Improvement Society of Texas. He was graduated from Atlanta University and for a time edited a paper in the journal Wright & Texas and served in the Texas legislature. "The members of the Farmers' Improvement Association, which he organized, now own over 75,000 acres of land, worth over $1,000,000. This Society has an Agricultural College and a farm school. It organized a bank at Waco, Texas. The Society also operates an overall factory at Waco. Under its auspices, Farmers' Institutes and Fairs are held. It will be noted that the above mentioned successful business mer were born and remained in the South during the working examples of an national ability, far above the average of any race.
In the North, there are, of course proportionately more successful Negro business men because the colore population is smaller and the general average of ability higher than in the South. This higher average of ability is due to the fact that a certain amount of initiative is necessary to cause people, particularly Negroes long accustomed to the climate and general conditions of one section, to go to another section as did the colored people to the South when they migrated to the North. They not only believed great success in the North, but also in their ability to take advantage of that opportunity.
To mention the names and fame of the large number of Negroes in bushes and professional life in the North is quite impossible. In Chicago alone there are more than 100 lawyers, business executives, teachers physicians, bankers, editors, preachers and other professional men whose influence and ability would do credit to any race, anywhere, anytime. This is proportionately true of the Negro businessmen and writers such as New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Chicago, St. Louis, etc.
With no intention of slighting other in Chicago, equally eminent and worthy, it is fitting to mention here the name of William Randolph Cowin. Because of the moist gracious reception, cordial treatment and very marked assistance extended the writer by him. Because he is eminently worthy of all the respect and by whose friendship and esteem anyone is honored, this book has been dedicated to him. He was born in Danville, Ky., and came to Chicago over forty years ago while yet a young man. From the beginning, success crowned his endeavor. In real estate and other business interests he has accumulated a comfortable fortune. For years he has been sole manager of an estate owned by white people, worth several millions of dollars. For business ability, integrity, integrity no name is better. He not only is well cared for, Out of a gracious heart he put much into life and consequently get much out of life. He believes in the possibilities of his race and one of his chief pleasures is to aid others who are worthy to achieve as he has done
Physically massive, perfectly dressed, commanding in personality, cultivated, gracious, charming but withal becoming modest. William Randolph Cowan is a main prospect and honorary member of the Society. The titles of articles WHEN ACK MEETS WHITE by John Louis Hull may be had in book form, prepaid upon receipt of $1.50 by THE ARGYLE PUBLISHERS, Office Suite 222 224 Monadnock Block, 53 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois.
CURRENT AND OTHERWISE
By, W. H. A. Moore
Associated Negro Press
It has become a real probability that the first Eastern Hemisphere discoverers of the Western Hemisphere were Negroes. Earlier rather than first is that they may have been in which to put forward the above statement. Earlier than the Italian discoveries and more impressive if not earlier than the somewhat mythical excursions of the Vikings to Iceland, Greenland and the frozen prospects of Labrador and the contiguous mainland. Dr. Lee Wiener, professor of Slavic Languages and Literature at Harvard University, declares that these Negro adventurers influenced American civilization to a greater degree than has hitherto been suspected. It was they who introduced certain edible plants, cotton, tobacco, shell money, and the religious beliefs and the various weave call fetchich. These are the inventors of Dr. Jefferson's second volume, *African and the Discovery of America*. My attention was called to this second volume by a friend attached to the faculty staff of one of the local universities with whom I had read the first volume some two years since. I fancy that it is immediately possible that Dr. Woodson and his very capable staff will finally give us the discussion and the results of their studies in the directions in which Slavic has broken what looks like a boundary for us. Hence I feel I may be ground for an advert to a few tendencies which appear to be leading us away from what might be called the male mode of
THE ST. LOUIS ARGUS, FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1922
our course through the labyrinthal maze of bays meeting us every where in the polyglyphic exasperations of Western Hemisphere civilization. There is the Premiership of the race. Why wouldn't it be a good idea to organize a "battle royal" of our mith-provoking intellectual giants and then stand aside and let them fight it out to a finish—in the hope that there wouldn't be one of them left to tell the story of the battle—and when the sobs had been hushed and the blood wiped from the floor of the arena set up a coronation scene for the winner that would make the recent motion exercises of the Roumanian Perlman. What a country fair on a rainy day! thing was over we could fix his salary to a good, round sum and turn him loose to go whither he would. Fix his salary! That is the big item. After that is done let him whither wheresoever his little mind prompted him to whither. That being out of our way we could settle down and for our kind something of the same quality as the work of Dr. Wrieer's in his really remarkable effort to set up a genuine measure of the influence the Negro has exerted on the "American" civilization. These "Main Guys" and "Main Streets" with their movements." "centers" "languages," and not tickets ought to be given a one way ticket to Nowhere, dot wot 'em. Force is the embodiment of the big thought in modern civilization. This thought, however, has always been the unmistakable sign of the beginning of the end of all the dominant historical threat in the method is to set out a velled threat—that is, to attack and almost tender in its primal capacity, and quickly followed with a spectacular showing of the visible potentialities of power that have calculated to put the desired "punch" into the prospective "licking" in store for whomever falls to take reasonable heed of the warning. The late lamented Roosevelt tried his practiced hand on the Japanese and sent a powerful fleet of war vessels to visit the Japanese. It was common talk, at the time, that the peeky "Jape" would sit up and take the notice of the great power of the United States. That is exactly what they did. When the American fleet entered the Bay of Tokyo they were met and saluted by a fleet of Japanese war vessels which matched in tonnage and fighting ability the armada of the visitors. It was a case of threat meeting threat as well as an instance of what standing-on-one's own feet will do for a fellow who feels he has a just claim on the right to make his way in the world. England is just now busy threatening the Turk. The Chicago Tribune recently, published highly velled threat of extermination for vergroes because a Senegalese flag hand by force, presumably, painted behind him, bared arms of members of the Paris Demi-monde. The American Democracy is probably the last stand of an already decadent civilization. It possesses some elements of character, it has shown a few signs of a possession of the genius of government. But most of the indications what is in store for it in the future point downward. Power is of no avail to an individual or to a nation unless there is the will and the knowledge of when and how to use it. Herein lies a fine object lesson for Negroes. Seek your rights with all the strength at your command. First, however, learn how to use them should they become into your possession. Duttes, rights power in the order I have named them as the seventh self-appointed "Leader" of the race. I thirsty have spoken.
Finds Husband Is Negro And Sues For Divorce
Finds Husband Is Negro And Sues For Divorce
Associated Negro, Press.
Eikton, Md., Nov. 15.—State's Attorney Henry A. Warburton, of Eikton, as counsel for Mrs. Irene Peters of Washington, D. C., has filed suit here for an annulment of her marriage to Paul Peters. The bill states that the defendant was indicted by the court for the law by unlawfully marrying the plaintiff, a white person, and charging that the defendant is a person of Negro descent to the third generation, inclusive. The plaintiff declares that she had known the defendant for about five years and that she had ways led to believe that he was of Indian descent. Mrs. Petera further states in her bill that as soon as she discovered that her husband was of Negro descent she left him.
You will find it less easy to unpropt faults than to choke them by gaining cirrus. Do not think of your faults, still less of other's faults. In every person who comes near you look for faults in your life, and try to imitate it, and your faults will drop off like dead leaves when their time comes. Rinkin.
$100 GIVEN AWAY $100
I will give a price of $100.00 in cash,
to the person who sends in the largest
list of correctly spelled words made
by the word *Camouflage*. "You can
win if you try."
How to win: All you need is to send fifty cents with your list of words for a box of Oriental Balsam Towel Powder. It is a costly, but very fine tooth powder. A capital remedy for Pyrohema. Ulcerated and soft gumma Gangrenous ulcers, sore throat, and is also some service in Chronic Catarrh and humoral Asthma. Ananace and stomach disorders. All who order at once will receive an extra prize.
$10 Extra: If you will send your order before Dec. 1, if your list was first prize, you will receive $10.00 extra. making a total of $110.00. The way to do is send your order of 50c for a box of powders at once, then send your list of words later.
Rules: Use no obstructs, prefixes, suffixes and no hyphenated words. No one in Atlanta is eligible. Webster's New International Dictionary will determine the winner of the prize. Send your order all once and be sure that you are qualified for the $100 extra. Do additional work.
Advertisement: Wellness Books 814 Pace Road
SundaySchool Lesson
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.,
Teacher of English in the Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union.
LESSON FOR DECEMBER 17
JESUS AMONG FRIENDS AND FOES
LESSON TEXT-Luke 10:38-41; 11:14-54
GOLDEN TEXT-Ye are my friends, if
ye do whatsoever I command you John
11:14
JUNIOR TOPIC—Jesus Among Friends and Foes.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—Friends and Enemies of Jesus.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—Christ's Methods of Dealing With People.
1. Jesus in the Home of Friends (Luke 10:38-42).
There is no place where true character is so clearly revealed as at home.
1. His Reception (v. 88). Martha was the head of the home, therefore she received him. It would be a fine thing if all homes were open to receive Jesus.
2. Mary Sitting at Jesus' Feet (v. 89). She, of fine spiritual discernment, knew that sitting at the Lord's feet and hearing His Word was that which would please him most.
3. Martha Cumbered About Much Serving (v. 40). Both sisters loved the Lord. It would be impossible to say which loved the more; but Martha was bent on providing a fine meal for Him. She was trying to do so many things that she was on the verge of distraction. This had so completely got on her nerves that she found fault with Jesus for permitting Mary to leave the kitchen to listen to His teaching. Not only did she criticise her sister and Jesus, but she assumed the authority to command Him to send Mary back to the kitchen to help.
4. Jesus' Answer (vv. 41, 42. (1) Rebuked Martha (v. 41). He did this tenderly, for He knew that she loved Him sincerely. (2) Defends Mary (v. 42). He declared that but one thing was needful, and that Mary had chosen that good part which could not be taken away from her.
11. Jesus Among Foes (11:14-23; 29-32; 37-54).
1. Charged With Being in League With the Devil (vv. 14-23). Being unwilling to receive Him as the Son of God, and yet unable to account for His mighty works, they declared He was casting out demons through Beelzebub, the chief of demons. Jesus exposed the fallacy of their reasoning by showing that in that case Satan would be arrayed against himself, and therefore would destroy his own kingdom.
2. Refused to Believe His Miracles (vv. 20-32). They asked for a sign, to which He replied that they would have a sign from heaven in His death and resurrection. He reminded them, however, that their request showed unbelief surpassing that of the heathen queen of the South, and the wicked people of Nineveh.
3. Wickedness Denounced (vv. 37-54). He pronounced six woes upon those who were opposing Him and seeking His destruction.
(1) The Pharisees (vv. 37-41). These He denounced for (a) punctuously observing some minute rites and at the same time breaking the Ten Commandments. They carefully tithed the small herbs of the garden while practicing injustice to their fellowmen and withholding love from God. He pointed out to them the folly of attending to these external acts while the heart was filled with wickedness. (b) Desiring public recognition (v. 43). This is a common sin today. (c) For feigning humility (v. 44). He compares their hypocrisy to graves which are on a level with the ground and may be stepped upon unconsciously by someone, and thus defiled. We can avoid those who make their vanity known by beating, but some are filled with this same wickedness who do not thus make it known.
(2) The Lawyers (vv. 45-54). Jesus strictures on the hypocritical Pharisees aroused the lawyers, one of whom indignantly declared: "You are insulting us also." In replying to this Christ pronounced three woes upon them; (a) for placing burdensome requirements upon the people to which they themselves would not sumbit (v. 46). (b) For the murder of God's prophets (vv. 47-51). He showed that their attitude toward Him was the same that* was shown to the prophets by their fathers. (c) For keeping back the knowledge of God by false interpretation of the Scriptures (vv. 52-54). There is no wickedness perhaps so great as that of supposed teachers of God's Word who keep its precious truths from the people by perverting its meaning.
Book Ye.
But seek ye first his kingdom, and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you—Matthew 6:33.
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THE WEEKLY NEWS
If any one needs instruction in any way, call and see her. No Sunday Work. Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Reading from $1.00 up. Phone: Canyon Jany 1348-W.
Thoughts For Mothers Who Wish To Safeguard Their Families
There is a simple, inexpensive way that 300,000 mothers have of providing a safeguard against colds, coughs, hoarrances, spasmodic group, and catarrhal alliments. All members are not serious if given proper attention—but many a child has been of a dear one from influenza, diphtheria or influenza.
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The great National Baptist Convention, with an attendance of more than 5,000 men and women, will commence in our city (St. Louis) December 8th to 11th inclusive. They will pay $2.00 per day for lodging and two meals. We want to show them the old time hospitality of St. Louis in the past and quarter them comfortably in some of our best homes. All persons wishing to entertain either men or women will send in your notice at once to the Committee on Entertainment and we will register you for as many delegates as you can take care of. Please state the number of delegates wanted and whether men or women are preferred. No delegates will be assigned to you unless you register through the Entertainment Committee.
Address the Headquarters: 2726 Plne St. H. Howell Harris, Sec.
Committee:—J. K. Parker; O. C. Maxwell; H. H. Harris; J. D. Howard; Geo. E. Stevens.
SPIRITUAL CHRISTIAN UNION
CHURCH
The Spiritual Christian - Union Church, 2727 Lawton avenue, holds divine spiritual services every Sunday Friday and Tuesday with sermons and demonstration of the spirit forces. All services begin promptly at 8 p. m. J. S. Weatherford, rector, assisted by L. Cooper, secretary (11-25-Ind)
REDEMPTION OF SOULS
SPIRITUALIST CHURCH
815 N. Beaumont St.
Order of Services; Sunday; Sunday School at 9 a. m; Preaching 11 a. m and 8 p. m.; Messages and Laying out of hands. Rescue Club 6:30 to 7:30 p. m. Monday, Developing Class at 8 p. m.; Tuesday and Friday Seance 8 p. m.; Wednesday, Redemption Prayer Meeting 8 p. m.; Thursday Laying on of hands and messages. Mrs. Julia Y. Johnsen, Oracle; Rev. Henry Green, pastor.
FIRST CHURCH DIVINE SCIENCE
The First Church of Divine Science and Practical Christianity (colored) 4314 Aston Ave., will celebrate its first birthday Thanksgiving night; Nov. 30, with a program followed by free ice cream and cake. Sunday services 11 a.m.
Healing meeting and instruction every Thurs., Spain. Learn to live the life more abundantly by attending these Sunday and Thursday lectures. Mrs. E. A. Nordman.
MT. CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH
901 S. 10th Street
Sunday School at Mt. Cavalry Baptist Church at 9:30 a.m. Preaching at 11 a.m. Scripture reading by Bro. Williams from 15th chapter of St. Luke 1-10 verses. Song and prayer by Sister Fletcher after which Rev. Fletcher preached a most wonderful sermon from St. Luke 15. 17 verse. Malle Wyatt; reporter; Rev. J. W. Fletcher
LIBERTY CONGREGATIONAL CH
The Liberty Congregational Church is holding services in the Jesus more Theatre, Finney Avenue and Whittier Street. Sunday School 10 A. M. to 11. Preaching 11 A. M. to 12. An especial feature of the Sunday services will be musical numbers furnished by a quartette composed of Mrs. P. Harrison, Miss M. Criswell, Mr. A. B. Montgomery and Mr. Marshall.
The public is most cordially invited to attend these services. Rev. H. H. Dunn of New Orleans, acting pastor; Mrs. Ruby S. Scott, church clerk.
SEVEN CHURCH UNION
Monday Night the Seven Church
Union met with the First Free Baptist
Church, 2510 Wash St. Scripture
reading, by President. A wonderful
paper by Mrs. Perkins was read. 11
verses of 18 chap. of Matthews. A
soul stirring prayer by Rev. Thomas.
Next meeting at 14th and poplar-Sts.
Paper by Miss Thomas; Sermon by
Rev. A. J. Ponison.
Rev. B. Robertson, President; C. E. Martin, Reporter.
PROVIDENCE BAPTIST CHURCH
Providence Baptist Church has on a great meeting with the Rev. Dr. John R. Shields of St. Paul's Baptist Church of E. St. Louis preaching. The meeting will close Friday night. Dr. Shields is planning to build a $35,000 church on the East Side.
MT. OLIVE BAPTIST CHURCH
The attendance was good. Prayer meeting at 5 a.m. m. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. Remarks by Brother F. Z. Wilkerson. Mission Circle met at 3 p.m. h. 9:15 p.m. m. Sermon by Brother F. Baker. November 29 E. B. Club No. 1 will give an entertainment for the benefit of the poor and disabled members at Odd Fellows Hall. Admission 10c. The sick are improving. Visitors are welcome. The Sisterhoods met Friday evening. G. Miller, reporter.
reaping. Will your final harvest be wheat or chaff?
WAYMAN CHAPEL
Wayman A. M. E. Church. 23 and Wash was well attended both morning and evening. Good attendance at Sunday School and A. C. E. League. In the absence of our pastor who is visiting in Oklahoma and attending the Conference there, Rev. H. Dreer of the Summer High School delivered a beautiful and instructive sermon. Madam F. E. Ausbome, under the auspices of Wayman's Choir will give a Grand Recital Monday night, Dec. 4th at the Church. All lovers of classical music should not fail to hear this distinguished Artist. The district captains are expecting good reports in the next special offering. Remember the Thanksgiving offering and don't forget Unit Rev. A. A. Dobbins our new pastor will preach for us next Sunday.
IMT. CALVARY CHURCH.
We had a great time all day Sunday. The pastor preached a wonderful sermon at 11 o'clock. The subject was "In the cause of Christ is uncertain death is sure." The afternoon service was grand. The speaker was, Rev Wilkerson. Charge to the pastor by Rev. Lankford; to the Church by Rev S. M. Cole, Paper by Sister Perry. Her subject was "Faithfulness." Come out and hear this great man from Pine Bluff, Ark. Rev. I. H. Harris, Pastor; Watsie Perry, Reporter.
JAMISON MEMORIAL C. M. E. CHURCH
The closing program of the week anniversary, in honor of the Rev. Wm. Westmorland, P. C., was rendered by the choir, Sunday evening, November 12th. The prominent speakers were Lawyer F. L. Martin, Dr. Bracy and Rev. Dr. Cowelough of Georgia, Rev. S. S. Landers, the new Presiding Elder, will hold his first quarterly meeting, Sunday, Nov. 19, at Jamison Memorial C. M. E. Church, 413 South Jefferson Ave.
Rev. Wm. Westmorland, P. C., Leila B. Grady, Secretary.
WHITE ANGEL OF DEATH AMONG CHICKASHA NEGROES. By William Pickens.
Associated Negro Press.
White woman sells Negroes "medicine" to cure all fills of all sorts, and succeeds—for the Negroes die. One died in Chickasha and others are sick there, and four are reported dead in Ardmore. A colored doctor, W. A. Bullock, in Chickasha, who happens to be president of the local N. A. A. C. P., was called by one of the dying victims and caused the arrest of the woman and also of the colored preacher who brought her to town and recommended her "highly" to his innocent congregation. He carried samples of the medicine to the prosecuting attorney, and it is being analyzed in a college laboratory.
It is reported, however, that the white woman always "gave the first dose" to buyers, and that she put some brown powder in the glass before pouring in the liquid, and that it is this "first dose" that kills when 'it does not cure.
Just think how ignorant we are, when we "fall" for such miserable quackery. This woman was not selling any of this almighty medicine to any of her own race—only to Negroes. It costs one dollar a bottle, and three bottles must be had to do any good—all service cash. The woman had about $500 on her when the officers arrested her, showing what a profitable business it is to fool colored people, even when you offer them DEATH—or a "home in Africa" or on the moon.
And think of that Negro preacher! He brought in this white woman, who is from Waco, Texas, where he formerly "pastored," and he recommended her to his flock. He was fattered by the fact that he had ridden "all the way from Ardmore to Chickasha" in this white woman's car (a fool deed under the circumstances), and he bragged to his congregation that he had "learned more" about white folks on that ride" than he ever knew before. (Smile or swear, according to your reaction)
And this same Negro preacher, who recommends to his people to pay a friendly "white" woman, who know just how to use him, $3.00 for bottles of death, would not allow a mass meeting of colored people to be held in his church to fight lynching and distranchisement, and discourages them from paying $1.00 a year for that purpose.
So far as we have earned to this minute (and we are writing in Oklahoma City after a personal visit to Chickasaw), this woman has produced no patent on her "medicine," no license to sell it—and only God knows what the stuff is. Yet the colored people bought it, under the recommendation of their pastor—who liked the nice lady, who rode in her medicine car, all the way from one Southern town to the other, and taught him a lot of otherwise unknowable things about "white folks." This woman is now in the hands of the law. We will see what they do. She only sold her remedy to Negroes. She killed only Negroes. May God send the colored people a better, or at least a wiser "pastor."
Associated Negro Press.
"There is no doubt but that the French have treated their African Negroes more wisely since 1871 than we English have treated ours"—Sir Harry Johnston in THE OBSERVER.
Army, of course; they may and do marry whites; they are taught the French language and become citizens. And—if anyone has his doubts as to the wisdom of all this, it is for whom to speak? For the English." And he quotes Sir Harry. Johnston's statement, given at the head of this article. Now Sir Harry is an exceptional man. He is novelist, linguist, explorer, administrator. He has written grammars of a number of African languages. Thoroughly British, he is hardly typically British in his attitude on this question. He is exceptionally liberal, and he loves Africa. Read his novels; for example, "The Man Who Did the Right Thing." Editors and politicians in England have been giving the French, almost daily, high-pitched warnings about the folly of their African policy. Still these warnings, are perhaps merely additional evidence that the British consider the French policy wise—for the French. For Britain and France are off and on for nearly four centuries; again colonial rivals, as they have been of and on for nearly four centuries; and when the average Englishman criticises French colonial policy he is worried not because that policy may not be successful, but because it may be too successful. Sir Harry is of course an exception; a patriotic Briton; he is not blinded or embittered by his patriotism.
Mr. Porterfield finds it significant that the first widely accepted Negro novel should have been written by a Frenchman. France, he reminds us has a high culture of her own, a culture that has excelled for centuries; it was not her literary poverty that moved her judges to give the Government award to a black man's novel. He does not say that the judges did this as a matter of policy, does not hint that the novel did not deserve the prize, but, he believes, if I understand him, that it is extremely fortunate for France and for black Frenchmen that "Batouala" appeared and was graciously recognized at this time; it is in this connection that he asks what the position of the American Negroes would be today if one of their number had written "Uncle Tom's Cabin." I am not going to try to answer his question, but I am going to point to one fact that I think is apparent to every one—that there would have been much respect among white Americans for Colored people than there is, and a better understanding. Now France faces her Negro problem without the handicap of a national acceptance of black slavery. She hasn't the caste feeling, the natural resentment of a master deprived of what, he considered his property, and she will not find it necessary to build up an elaborate theory of Negro inferiority to justify an inherited tendency to oppress, nor has she the British caste idea. Frenchmen are as proud and stiffnecked as the British, but their stiffnecked as the British. The Britton has maintained his empire by heightness and exclusiveness, by surrounding himself with ceremony and reserve; his is an empire of nobilishness. Indian princes he can must come to him as subjects of his king. As for humbler nations, he does not perhaps just as excessive, does not result in so muchocuspocus; it is to a greater extent, a pride in intellectual superiority. The Frenchman, alert and gay, welcomes strange contacts. While the Britton, wandering over the earth, takes a closed brain that is always British, the Frenchman, staying generally at home, becomes cosmopolitan by the activity of his mind. France has always welcomed new ideas and incorporated them into its own spirit-life, and ideas come of free and equal converse, not from the stiff stereotyped master and servant intercourse. What an Austrian, whose name I have forgotten said of France and Germany before the war: "Germany wishes to conquer the world. France wishes to convince it," might be said now, with reservations, of Britain and France. It is this difference of temperament and natural aspirations, rather than any artificial and temporary political difference. I believe, that leads France to encourage Colored literature and Britain to ignore it, and I share Mr. Potterfield's beliefs that it is imaginative literature as much as anything else that makes nations prosper, and that the writing and the recognition of "Batouala" are of incalculable importance to France, the black race, and the world.
A SHARP QUESTION.
By Charles Cain.
Associated Negro Press.
"Where would the American Negro be today if one of his number had written 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'?" —Allen Wilson orterfield in THE BOOKMAN for Oblivion.
There are two articles of race interest in the October issue of THE BOOKMAN, one by the gifted colored historian, Benjamin Brawley, the other by Allen Wilson Porterfield, on "Batona."
Mr. Brawley's article was written by request, a sun exposition of colored views; in consequence, the author intelligent, forceful, honest, pleasing writer though he-is, handicapped, and does not do justice to himself, to THE BOOKMAN. THE BOOKMAN's readers, or his own race. The editors, I believe, make matters worse by putting in an introductory note; it is a if they had invited Mr. Brawley to speak at a social gathering, and held him outside a moment, while they explained that the gentleman about to speak was a colored gentleman, for whose strong statements they assumed no responsibility, but whose speech would be interesting as an illustration of the Negra's way of looking at things. What can Mr. Brawley do? There is a certain stiffness, part condescension, part hostility, in the audiences. Shall he bore these people with harmless plaintitudes about color progress or race equality as a theory, or shall he offend them with bitter accretion? He chooses accretion and preserves his self-respect. There is a third way, of course—that of self-revolution. Interpretation—the grand way; but there is no time. But that he would have to stop in the middle, leaving everyone with the most unpleasant of all feelings, the sense of having been ill, illuminated with strengths. He people himself as well as circumstances persons of finding the prejudices bearing the in-form and having them go on to make them worse.
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ed. They, too, were placed in a false position, by the complicated pressure of sickening prejudices and tradition which, even if they are themselves free from them, they must expect in many of their readers.
Now turn to Mr. Porterfield's article on "BATOUALA." Here the writer is not called upon to state his case in a controversy, to plead, or to enter the lists in a journey. Instead of being obliged to talk about an abstract type known as the Negro and associate in his reader's mind with servitude, inferiority, ignorance, laziness, (and distinguished from another abstract type. The White Man, personification of all that is noble), Mr. Porterfield can talk about a creation: individual alive, intensely interesting, and say: "This is the work of a Negro, M. Rene Maran. Without him this would not be."
There is the difference between literature and direct publicity, or argument. Argument may win an outsider: I believe news of rage condition in this country wuld arouse sympathy abroad and that foreign sympathy would arouse shame in-White America. But will argument ever win over an enemy, who, as soon as he hears the first word, smears, laughs or stiffens? Only a living creation, a picture that seems to breath and move, with the breath of life and intelligence of it: Black creator, can startle the white man out of his self-satisfaction and his pleasing inherited notions. Such a picture is "Batonala." But I must reserve further discussion for next week: meanwhile, Mr Porterfield's question keeps repeating itself to me: "Where would the Amercan Negro be today if one of his num ber had writen 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'?"
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WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION
If you suffer with FEMALE TROUBLE such as Ovarian Failure, Failure in the lower part of your Menstrual Hair-down Failure, Hairfall, Fainting or Irregular Period. If you have that condition, please contact your GP and inform them of your condition and treatment. If you have Failure all kinds of women have been treated and should be treated.
M.
CONSTANT CARE — NOT LUCK
Human history and experience have taught us that many persons believe that a head of naturally long and beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely smooth complexion come from luck, but they do not. Constant care and the frequent use of preparations of proven merit are the secrets.
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Tetter Salve
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Four preparations especially recommended for short, thin and falling hair;
tetter and eczema of the scalp. Sent as trial treatment for $1.50.
Complexion Soap Superfine Fane Powder Cleansing Cream
Witch Hazel Jelly Compact Rouge Vanishing Cream
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MADAM IDA B. JEFF
EVANGELIST 10th
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The Madam C. J.Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. 640 N. West St., Indianapolis, Ind.
MADAM IDA B. JEFFERSON, A WIDOW LADY EVANGELIST 10th EPISCOPAL DISTRICT A. M. E. CHURCH, NORTH TEXAS
A HEALER OF GREAT POWER
Every man and woman ought to see this wonderful lady, for she can tell you many things that will put you to wondering. Madame Jefferson can bring tangled brains to the light of helpful sensibility.
She can cure any disease you were not born with, in fact, she can locate any disease in the human body, and tell your complaint by your writing to her when other doctors have failed, then write her and she will give you full details of your disease. Madame Jefferson possesses a natural-born gift from birth and is one of the greatest licensed preachers of the age. She has a supernatural gift. God has given her power to heal and lead her people. Her advice on business problems is worth more than you will ever be able to pay. Only business matters will be answered. Send ten cents in stamps for reply. Madame Jefferson has discovered a wonderful hair restorative. It grows hair on bald heads. Agents wanted. She teaches the, art and gives diplomas. For consultation other than sickness, sent two dollars ($2.00) and if you take treatment, this will apply on your bill.
MME. IDA B. JEFFERSON, Longview, Texas, Box 648
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PAGE TWELVE
Upets seem to be Anite the thing in the football this year. Saturday, Nov. 4, brought to the fans the biggest upset of the season. Folks had hurled ceased taking over the defeat of the Lincoln University Lions by West Virginia College Institute at Richmond, Va., when they were dismounded to learn that Hampton, beaten by St. Paul's Industrial and the Virginia Normal and Industrial had been whipped into a shrap by Colon Smith late of the Michigan State by Coleman Cayes and company had ran off with a nine to seven score against Lincoln. Surprise was not the name for 8. It threw Lincoln followers up in the air and as a result, word came from Chester, Pa., to the Associated Negro Press that the 8, O. 8, call has been sent out to former captains of the teams to rush at one there in an off-season. The team's sound into shape to stand up against Howard who at this writing has gone through the season without a sting of defeat upon them.
Howard is having things their own way. There is no telling what the Wildcats may do in the coming struggle up the "Annual Class" at Washington. D. C. Thanksgiving morning. One thing is assured, how ever, with most of the Wildcats players back with quarterback position being cleverly occupied by that forward passing, demon, that who has the ball back from play by the Howard Faculty, the lime and White sound books like they will repeat their feat of 1921 when Lincoln went down to defend 12 to 0.
One can never tell about Lincoln. No one gave them a ghost of a show last year. They won. Won by good hard football. Howard was a big hammilated. They had a fast team, well drilled in all the fundamentals of the game, by Dr. W. W. Merrison former linebacker at Tufus' College Mass. The wet weather handicapped them somewhat, and now they have vowed to get even with Lincoln. Howard has got to stop. Whitjrwil Johnson. To this point they have been drilled indefinitely. Coutts, Derrick, Carter, and in fact the whole Howard eleven will go into the game, with one idea—vengence. Lincoln plays Willforce, while Whitjrwil Johnson against the competitor of Lincoln. The outcome of these two game will be closely watched. Brady Trump, an Athens, Ga., boy leads the Ohio squad. Bastard as captain for the second year. He made the All-American mythical, and last Season. Willforce has one of the best teams in the history of the school, and is coached by Dean Mohr of Evanston IL.
The advance site, of the Annual Classic has been heavy. Folks are sending in for tickets from far and near. The west will be well represented as will be most of the New England State. Washington is planning on the gayest Thanksgiving in the history of the city. A record breaking crowd is expected when the refreshed whistle blows on Tarkey day morning.
In the far South Atlanta Pivert site will be still clinking over their 21 to 22 win over Traegeries's football man although the Atlanta boys claim they should have won by a 21 to 1 score but allowed the refres to change his decision to keep the Alabama men from walking off the field.
Wilberforce comes back home to prepare for their Turkey day annual game with West Virginia College Institute. Folks are going to Zembra from all parts of Ohio, Michigan and Illinois. Chicago will send a number of the green and gold Alumni to the scene of struggle. It promises to be a hard fought affair. The bishop will send a message for the victory over Lincoln, but the Force eleven will work their over head game against the Hilliades.
Flick has proved to be weak. Talladega and Wiley have good eleven Morris Brown ranks about second in the far south at the present time with Moorehouse topping the list for championship honors this season.
HOWARD TRIUMPHS OVER VIRGINIA N. & I. INST 7-6
HOWARD TRIUMPHS OVER VIRGINIA N. & I. INST 7-6
PETERSBURG. Va. Nov. 14.—The Howard University football eleven after a sidelined and hard fought gridron battle, won its game against the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, of Petersburg, Virginia, played at the Petersburg athletic field, Saturday, November 11. by a score of 7 to 6. Battling before two thousand or more spectators composed of Faculty and students of the Institute, residents of Petersburg, and many visitors of Richmond and surrounding places, the Virginians put up the greatest sight of their lives in the effort to overcome the "Blue and White" warriors before whom they went down in defeat.
The game was pronounced the most hotly contested that Howard had had to play this season. Howard was required to put forth great efforts to subdue the plucky Virginians. The "Blue and White", however, used straight football throughout the game while the Virginians were compelled to resort to aerial attacks. Score by Periods:
Howard 0 0 0 7 0 7
Virginia N. & I. L. 0 0 0 6 6
Before—Henderson; Umpire—Douglass; Headlinesman—Elder.
Dope Goes Right As Fisk Wins From Tuskegee
By S. Theo. McLepoth.
NASHVILLE, Teun, Nov. 15—Tuskegee failed to stop Fisk in last Saturday's grid battle and was defeated by a score of 44 to 0. The simple forward passes and end runs were too hard for Tuskegee to figure out, and to gain through the Tiskag log
Arkansas Baptist College Geo. R. Smith Beats Sumner Downs Shorter 31 To 0
was impossible.
At the kick-off Tuskegee received and showed great speed by bringing the ball over half way the field before the first down, but this was her only chance, as Tusk tightened up immediately and after this they hardly could earn a first down. Very sad demons were able to hold Tubby Johnson in his start behind the Fisk line, who was almost entirely responsible for the seven touchdowns and two drop kicks of his klan.
During the first quarter Fisk played swiftly, getting two touchdowns and came back in the third and fourth with the same thing, with one in the second.
The fans are much pleased with the triumph of Armistice Day and look forward for a duplicate on Thanksgiving Day. According to dope the following results will insure a victory over Morehouse on November 30th.
Score by Quarters:
Fisk ..... 12 - 0 12 14 - 44
Tuskegee ..... 0 0 0 0 - 0
Referee: Simms
Touchdowns: by Fisk, 7; by Tuskegee, 0.
First downs: by Fisk, 20; by Tuskegee, 8.
Special To The Argus.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Nov. 14.
Arkansas Baptist College defeated
Shorter College of North Little Rock
31 to 9, last Thursday. The two teams
are old rivals and the students were
out on masse only to see A. B. C.
victuallily piling up 25 points the first
half not allowing Shorter a first
down. The Shorteres braced in the
last half and hold their opponents to
teach down.
This is the A. B. C.'s third victory
of the intermediate Association of
brigades, having defeated North
New York in the first round. A. B. C.
to 9.0. Neither team was able to
gass the 30 yard line, therefore A. B.
C. gass has not been threatened.
Fight Varsity men were host by the Graduation rodeo but Coach Oliver has built around the old men a machine that works with check like movements. The team no doubt has the lightest man in the College football playing Quarter, his name is Hibbler. 15 years old weighing 110 pounds but runs his team like a veteran. The other hoosfield members are Hooker fell back: Williams and R Illus, half books. The later adapt at broken blood running and is a consistent ground gainer. Men on the line who deserve special mention are $_{2}$ Stannard right knot: Capt. Jackson and Barker all State ends. They are all dangerous men on the offensive and defensive Barker does the kicking and most of the passing for his team. His right arm spells defeat to all corners. His running mate Jackson is generally on the receiving end. His longest pass of the season being 24 yards.
Penssauga, Fla. Nov. 15—Governor
Sidney J. C. Cartts of Florida went
trial last Monday in this city on two
charges of prosecution. The defendant
was governor when the alleged penn-
age was discovered. The trial is still
on.
RAZZ
By Robert Lee Beiser.
Associated Negro Press
(Continued from last week.)
The residents of Lakeland do not
know just where Razz came from.
All they knew was that a little fellow
was seen skating around on roller
skates. He had curly hair and was
dark of complexion. Suppose said
that it was Razz's girl. He was a
celered woman who worked for Miss
Saltie Rittenhouse.
Then it was mentioned as a curious fact that no one had ever seen the boy walking. Skates were one means of locomotion as a baby, she had no name as far as she knew herself and someone laughingly called her 'Razz' and the name followed her through life. She could become enough interested they asked her what her name was. She scratched her head and studied a bit. "Must have a name," she said. "Everybody has a name. Oh yes. I'm Angela Rittenhouse." Oh what a shock to the good folks of Lakeland. "A boy was a girl, And Razz was becoming a hero among the white children." In fact, as Razz grew up, the children could be considered it an honor to be seen with the boy/girl From that moment, the grower of Lakeland had h a problem on their hands. How to get rid of Razz.
Ragz was considered a wonder on the back of a horse. She camp or the laxusall held on roller skates, and when her turn came to a halt, opposing her came and held her. It told that she, could make Baba Rath book sick when it came to battling averages.
She rode a bicycle as though that machine had been invented especially for her no master, and she was the Ogrep of the high divers in the old swimmin' joke. In fact, she was not certainty recognized but as a leader in all games.
She never went to school. Often she would come tearing up to the school house on the back of a horse and watch the other children go in.
Now as she found against a foe post with a tear trickling down her cheek a friend inquired what her trouble was.
She pulled a handlerchief from her breast pouch, and wiped away the tear, ran a finger around the inside of her collar. Izzy always wore a white shirt, and I wore a brown coat to her trousers.
"Just think! when I could, go to
SUMNER WILL MEET THE SPRINGFIELD, MO., HIGH ON THE GRIDIRON SATURDAY
Local Foot Ball Squad Does Not
Seem To Have Struck Its
Stride Will Have To
Hustle Saturday.
Summer High will play the fast
football aggregation from Springfield
Mo. on this Saturday at the *Stark's*
Park. Springfield has a splendid team
one well drilled in the *fundamenta*,
and able to put up a good game
against the opposing team. Springfield has
been defended to date, and experts
to take Summer's scalp to be
numberer among her victims. Summer
on the other hand, does not seem to
have struck her stride. Her playing
in sports, she seems to lack the fini
something necessary to put over a
touch down after carrying a ball
down the field. The tackling of the
team is not up to standard. Her inter-
ference on plays does not get the
men. Summer will have to hustle in-
practice this week to trim Springfield.
The game will start at 2:30 Saturday.
Geo. R. Smith ended up the score with Summer when she defeated her St. Louis Rival by the score of 6 to 0. The game was a hard fought and well fought one from beginning to the final whistle. Summer used bad judgment in a number of instances and threw several opportunities to score. This poor head work has already cost Summer two games, and almost coast her a defeat with Dong-less High. Summer got the jump or Geo. R. but failed to follow it up. The game was clean through. There were few penalties. While the followers of Summer were disappointed nevertheless, they still have faith in their team.
Defender Organizes N. Y. Basketball Team
Associated Negro Press.
NEW YORK. Nov. 15—That the coming season will be the biggest in basketball history was predicted at the annual gathering of officals coaches and players for rules interpretation at the Hotel Astor last Friday night. The public becomes more interested in the game each year, and this season will find the fans more enthusiastic than ever. This prediction the Chicago Defender will make a New York basketball team to be captured by the great Sol Butler, former American Brand Jump record holder and last year's running guard for the De Fender's Western quintet. This team is scheduled to play several of the best teams in the country: their opening game in New York will be December 7, against Howard University, December 22nd, Lincoln University, December 26th they hook up with the great Chicago team after Western tour far as Kansas City. Teams desiring games with the New York team communicate at once with Ardle Morgan types of Defender, 255 Seventh Ave., New York City.
"Well, why can't I ask?" asked thi well meaning friend? "The yellow flashed into her eyes her teeth and clenched her hands."
"They say God makes everything. A white man and a colored woman were concerned in making me. And the white race made laws that keeps me out of their schools, and wors still, the black race looks upon me as a white man."
This was about as clear an answer as Razz could have made. It explained the situation exactly. The very man who caused her to be just "Razz" thought himself better than she was. But was he as good?
They say that Razz throws a wicked diee. Boys of the neighborhood wanted to fight the man who suggested that perhaps the cause of Razz' attack at this gigs would have nothing. Nothing but that. She was fair, sane, and the protector of anyone who was being imposed upon She has been known to rush in when others feared to tread. In order to save someone else. Still the real or the unpleasant world refused to admit that Razz was a real human beig.
On the hill, coasting in the snow she could handle a sled as well as she could sniff. Those who have see her shoot, will immediately say: 'Well then, she sure could handle a sled.' Here she was guardian of the young storks. Wose to the old boy or girl who crowded one of the little ones off the sled. Is it any wonder that the children miss her? What better quality could a human being show? Was she adaired for it? No. Razz was; half breed. (To be continued next week.)
KLAN CANDIDATE CARRIES OREGON
Associate Services.
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 13—In the heaviest vote ever cast in a state election here, the Ku Kun Klun barbade of Walter Pierce was cheered over the Democrat candidate and the Republican incumbent. Ben W. Gleason was a candidate to succeed him.
THE ST. LOUIS ARGUS. FRIDAY. NOV. 17. 1922
SUGAR-FOOT SNOWBALL
COLORED
HARMONICA PLAYING FOOL
SIKI ROBBED OF TITLE AND BARRED BY BRITAIN
Champion Suspended For Nine Months, French and British Act To Save Battered White Prestige, International Federation Asked To Deprive Senegalese Of Title.
Crusader Service.
PARIS, Nov. 15.—An attempt is to be made to save white prestige European officers are henceforth to be protected by law and the action of their governments from the mauling fists of the conqueror of Georges Cependant, the best product that the European ring has turned out in half century ago, has been forced to prevent the Ski-Beckett bout and thus save the British Empire the embarrassment to its brutally built up preface of having its foremost blower knocked cold by a member of one of the 'snowbelt races'.
The British Home-office today drew the color line around the grize ring and forbade the **the** the **Beeckett Mattings** Ski match in that country. The fight was scheduled for December 7, and was the outcome of the recent Beeckett-Moran bout wherein it was arranged that Ski should fight the winner. However, as Carpenter had often used Beeckett for a door mat it was the general] opinion that Beeckett would not have a shadow of chance with the competitor, of **Carpenter**, Meunyah, while prestige had suffered a tremendous act back in Africa. Beeckett's victory over the French Idol, and the British imperials, who do not want their rule, challenged in Africa and Asia by "subject people" accused to their importance and power, was at its wits' end to find a reason for preventing the bout. Then came a fine excuse in the fracas between Ski and the manager of one of two fighters in a bout in Paris last night. Ski, who acted as second for one of the men, resented certain remarks of the manager of the other fighter end, losing his temper, as assaulted the manager. But the London Home Office had already taken action against the Beeckett Mattings. This was the opportunity to make **issues** out of their action in drawing the color line. Furthermore, one Home Office official was **indiscreet enough** to make the following statement for publication:
"In contests between men of color
of the white population are cam-
panies."
SUGAR-FOOT
COLOR
HARMONICA P
AT THE GAYETY THEATRE, W
The
Vee
De
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NOT SNOWBALL
RED
A PLAYING FOOL
WEEK STARTING SUNDAY
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Nov.7,1922.
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table. Moreover, all sorts of passions are aroused. Such contents, considering the very large number of men of color in the British Empire are considered against the highest national interest and they tend to arouse passion which it is unadvisable to stimulate." In other words, the victories of the colored men over the pride and hope of the white imperialist peoples, tend to arouse aspirations and hopes in the breasts of the oppressed colored peoples of the colonies.
So the French Boxing Federation under pressure from both the imperial governments of France and England, have hastily grabbed up the attack made by Skii on a manager in an excuse for depriving the S-negeless battler of the title of big I-heavy weight champion. The manager rushed an appeal to the International Boxing Federation, asking to deprive Skii of his title of world's light heavyweight champion and European heavyweight champion which he won at the time he knocked out Carpenter. That the international Federation will gladly, acquiesced this request goes without saying. As The Crusader Service Correspondent warned some few weeks ago, so it has developed. White prestige must be saved at all costs to decency and fairness.
Associated Negro Press.
CHICAGO, May 10, - Skii is still a top page author. After Britain in the "Today" column delivered the following comment last Friday on the Senegalese fighter:
"Monsieur Siki, black price fighter from Seinegal, via Paris, became an acknowledge figure of world importance when he knocked out Carpenter. He was to fight Joe Beckett, the English student for whom the British Home Office officially declare that "such contests between blacks and whites are against national interests." That means "part of Britain's work is keeping many black, yellow, and half black people in their places. It is necessary that the black men should do what they want, not do that, with the white man lying at the black man's feet, knocked out. In other words, "we may not be able to beat you black gentlemen, but we can forbid you to fight white men." Why not stop prize fighting, black and white? Would that also be a blow at white civilization."
They who oftenes lead prey to the dotted line are our prospective leaders of to-morrow.
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If you're wise, when you have a chance to do the other fellow, you won't do it.
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