The Peoples Elevator (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 23, 1922 Page: 4 of 6
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'J i j ^ i I- • J I'..,!. . A 1 Jtt.
(Successor f.? Oklahoma Guide.)
GUTHRIE, OKLAxIOI IA
NEGROES
whom
FBW CHANGES TO BR"EFFECTED H ATS OFF TO THESE
IN PRAYER BOOKS ! The 67,245 Negroes who h
Portland, Ore., Sept|—Prayer book ' Kaged in professions, among
revision was the order of business are:
in the house of Bishops and the house: Five hundred authors, 578 dentists,
of Deputies of the trennial conven- 1279 actors,
congressman dyer scores
northern negroes for
apathy on anti-
lyncii1ng bill
Northern Negroes, feeling safe
59 arc hitects, 123 chemis
tion of the Protestant Episcopal cjy j an,| niin.ng enginee.s, 12,000 N nchers, are not doing their ut-
Each house assembled separately fol- javVverS) judges, justices, 24,0 p ysi^ ;mcs^ jn fight to secure passage
lowing a joint sessior yesterday and cianB an(, surgeons, 32,500 trained
it revision of the nurs{,.
each had before
prayer book, one of the important
tasks which the convention has to deal
«
with. ,
The house of Bisops took up those
sections of the prayer book which
the race
the firs twoman flyer of
Chicago colored girl has received the
first pilot's Hcense granted to an
American woman in Germany, and it
is said she s the first of her race to
become a full licensedflye r. She
ho'ds a brevet license in France and
has flown ekntensive in Holland, She
of the anti-lynching bill which will j started back to Chicagoyesterday. "i
i put an end to lynching in .his country, [; ]j].>e flying." she said, "and I am go-
ing the business, I shall start a pilot s
The 1,000 Negro inventors who have jecjaretj Congressman L. C Dyer i,
been granted patents. 'Missouri, father of the anti-lynching
The 22,440 Negros in the employ o ^ bill, according to a letter from Mr.
school in Chicago."
Miss Coleman refused an offer frmi
the United Slates government. j Dyer to the National Association for; Mosecow to teach flying to women.
----- ( , i T|ie Negro landowners whose com",the Advancement of Colored People,
had been revised at the las> trunnia holdings would equal Ireland in ma(]e public here today.
convention and which are up f«>r
final action at this convention. These
include a substitute pi. y<' h inks and publishes 398 news-' to the fight, the bill would be passed
president of the Uuited St.i es an y j anil a death blow struck to thc barbar-
nxinor changes.
aiea.
The ra e w
"If all the Negroes of the North
hich owns 500,000 homes WOuld throw themselves vigorously in-
papers.
The 500,000
I think it would be well
the America
Negroes who served in ism of mobs.
an Army and Navy-during for you to issue a special appeal to
. i , * the colored people in all the State.-:
WELL GUARDfclJ I the recent war. , , . ,
at* l\ST STRIKE VIOLENCE Thc 5 000 men of the two Negro, where they have votes to ge. busy
•r i , Kans 'sem 4.-Extra pre-1 reEjments which were cited for brav- ■ and write letters and telegrams to
lopek.i, Ka ..., . . , k I the Republican United States Sena-
ihem to pass the anti-
tind piepared
the event of an
Reports that
nis
/ V 'ichi1 a
Mr. H. F
Elevator
rautions were taken in railroad y New : tors urging
strike centers of Kansas. i The 200 ' S ' f h re-'lynching bill before this session of
United Stated District Attorney A. York.s Fifteenth, each of whom M ^ ^ ^
p Williams, admited that the Depart- , , the Craox de Guerre. |
of Juetic, already has "under The NeRr0 patriots whose subser.p-, tmued.
,,ur men" on duty in the strike towns tions to the United War Work Drive
to take action at once 11. tota]ed $2,000,000.
outbreak. i The most religious of all Americans,
attempt was to be e;Rhty pcr cent of whose wealth is in
„1Bde to blow up the Rock Island round c!iurch pr0perty the Negro.
house at Herington were being investi-
' Additional guards were p'aeed at all
bridges of the Kansis City; Mexico and
Orient Railroad.
V ILEY UNIVERSITY
thc
N. Warbash
rh«o!a Lonelj
gents for
Hert 150
Phone D. 2559 J. Mrs.
110<i E. 15th St.
j The two names above have prooven |
| very helpful to c'rculatii g the Eleva
I tor in the <"it\- of Wieshitn.
I Mrs. Lonely has secured about two
I hundred subscribers and has rendered
I great assistance in many other ways
, | in helping to give the paper a start hi
Marshall, Texas I
,i , fi —f- < \, bv Texas. LouHm:'. Arkansas V ich.ta.
. "j, i y .,ston IhiWersity, Uni-1 Mr. Hert our other ;v?ent has not
• (Jl lahoma State Boanis <>t hducati<i . ■>> f.u-ultv One only seemed subscribers and talked
v. vsit> Of Illinois and U:nive: sit y of ]3i.,^920. Several «he paper up. hut has helped to build
I ■.ncivei' twenty-seven in < oiie_c i ■ >
i.ew buildings, steam heatd and elect r.
KLAN CHIEF HAD A QUART.
UNCLE SAM GRABS HIS GRIP
Indianapolis, Ind., Sept.—Edward
Young Clarke, acting imperal wizard
of the Ku Klux Klan, was expected
to confer with Federal officers here
today regarding a government war-
rant charging him with keeping liquor
in his traveling bag.
District Attorney Homer Elliott,
who issued the warrant, said Clarke
had a quart of bonded whiskey in a
traveling bag which he lost. Clarke
offered $300 reward for return of
the bag with contents "unmolested"
Elliot said.
Q 52E2EE2G3 ESQ GZ23EEB21EEI GESEfflSEDI EJ
[catarrh
OF THE STOMACH
Recognised as a college «..
Boards of
iehted.
M. W. DOG AX. President
THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPEN
By C-EKE BYRNES
0
tre troth,
and nothing
PUT THE TRUTH
\S MV |
kotto!
D
nimimiuu
CARTOON CO S I.
the office for the Elevator. His stand-
ing ard influuence mean much to the
inteerst of the cause.
Several of the busini ss men r re tak-
i ing o' ' ' '■ m '•••' i ■ c n-
' teres" in the ,::.er Wo wa::r the
citizen^ to feel that the I'le' atur is
their paper and fv.el free to send in
notes rnd write to the paper.
A'l of the pastors had fine services
.'••unday.
i'.p\ ElOIXiE ENDORSES ANTI-
LYNC "INC 1 ILL
"The crini' of iyn. liiiig is so atro-
cious and so subversive of the funda-
mental principh o!' g.)vcrnrient that
the most hoK.ugli i.rasures should
ie adoiite I to pi . vent it. Nothing
has thus far been presented >aht is
m3.-o e ective than the Dyer Anti.
nching Bill. Many ;imcs during
niv primar> c am: ai;:.n 1 publicly d - !
•lari d my supe. t of the Dyer Bill. 1
do not see how a iv i itizen who belie
ves in law and order can take any oth-
er stand."
! The K 'formed Church of Platte, S.
rpflOU CAN'T ENJOY LIFE
LSlJ with a sore, <our, bloated stora-
ach. Food doe not nourish.
Instead it is a source of misery, causing
pains, belching, dizziness and bead-
aches.
The person with a bad stomach
should be satisfied with nothing less
than permanent, lasting relief.
•J The right remedy will act upon the
linings of the stomach, enrich the bLoed,
aid in casting out the catarrhal poisons
and strengthen every bodily function,
tj The large number of people who
q have successfully used Dr. Hartman's
famous medicine, recommended for all
catarrhal conditions, offer the strongest
possible endorsement for
pe-ru-na
IN SERVICE FIFTY YEARS
0
D
TABLETS OR LIQUID
SOLD EVERYWHERE
cu -'eil
Rev. A.
a camp
Vandyke
uign in
pas or, eon
their town
j against Sunday "movies.' I hey put
ragraphs in the weekly papers, dis-
ributed handbills giving reasons
apr.in.st "having" moving picture exh:-
i b'tions on Sunday preached on Sun-
■ dav «'— l argued on wek-day., and
i a v vote" alongside
election. The pastor
i suit thus: "By a majority
t j'i° .r. ".'les are clcisi (1
th n
reguiar
K l ves
BISHOP J. ARTHUR
HAM LETT VISITS TOPEKA
Topeka and all of Kansas are proud
io£. the new bishop of the C. M. E.
I Church who was elected at the Gen-
oi al Conference in St. Louis last May.
When Pi-hop Hamlett visted Topeka
' a few days ago with his good wife,
he could hardly pass up Kansas Ave-
nue for his friends who congratulated
him oil being elected to the highest
position in the gift of the church.
He pastored in Topeka for several
years and made a host of friends o''
both racer-. Several social functions
were given in their honor. Oklahoma
and Arkansas will be blessed in hav-
ing him to preside over them.
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Brown, Walton. The Peoples Elevator (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 23, 1922, newspaper, November 23, 1922; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc94734/m1/4/: accessed February 11, 2026), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.