UK ILLUSTRATED KKATURK SECTION July 18, 10.1 1 Fwo of East*» Favorite Daughters Now on Coast AlxiVr arr two l Ihr favorilr mualrat com rdy n » winnlng nrw laurrls i>n Ilm Wrslern l'oost t'allowav. Ute Mar of "Blarkbtrds » h o madr u Ington tu Ix « Am:rli». Al the right la M s» Allna Mar* of the East, » h o are At ihr Irft I« Mus K s-r'rt Jump from Seattle, Wash- Travis. now ln Sun Diego SI F U N G '1 rHE i N EW S Uy MU AND M RS SA M U E L A L F R E D who shucked Nrw York « lim lliry wrrr married recently Alfred la a Coney Inland Knit Indain myntlr. Mr han appeared In various cities In runner lion with (liratriral troupe* llarsh Word* for Minnie I had «pent moat o f a hot aprtng afternoon in my garden, spading and planting Feeling quite proud of m y­ self, I went out after supixr to view ihe result of my labor. What a plc- tnre met my sight: There In tie middle of one bed was Minnie," our little b oys pet chicken and seed and soil were flying In every direction Minnie," 1 shouted, "get out of that garden or I'll break your legs Just then beyond the fence I i.iw our neighbor In her garden. And '.hr look she gave me? IP r name waa Minnie I turned and fled, too em- barrasM d lor explanation* A L cl Instantly --A mazingly Makes your hair Lay down / / Ash Your llarlier nr (trinity Parlor Operator llan l-tó-fflm b Fair ir* now rany to rom b nay nil the pretty boldx'd hair K "ls and Komi lookiriK men and hoys wlui uve Genuino lilac k and Whit«» 1*0made DreftAiriK* Thin iimazing prrp- n net ion lays your hair down instantly, keeps it m atly in l»lm*e nil duy Ionic and K've* it lots o f Iunter, umartnesn and sh«‘«*n. To these wonderful results, just do this: h irst cleanse your hair and scalp with Genuine Hlnck and White .Soft Shampoo (price '25c). Then apply Genuine Hlaek and Whit«» gvi l’iimado Dreusing. I*he reselts vHH ItenuintL ninnse you. This ftne dressinir contains is s to r oil and oth« r special in rn 'dim t h which free your hair from ta n gen und make it easy to comb. And It’* not Mh’ky, gummy or greasy. Go to your favorito drug store or toilet ffOorift counter and ask for Genuine Mark and White Pomade Pressing. Itig tin 20c. BLACK^WHITE P O M A D E DRESSING RALPH M ATTH EW s WOMEN MAK.C NEWS Women and feminine aflairs occurred often In the news this week flood lie » , and bad new». Not Ihe least of thrae ts the amiouncemrt of rorset manufacturers that a large Increase in the sales of tliat commodity over previous years is noted. To the Initiated tint Indicates a very definite trend towanls »h a t might be termed a move on tile part of woman to Jump out of the fire Inti the frying pan Ever striving after slimness and the boyish figure, they choose the lesser of two evils the girdle over dieting. Thousands ol women and young girls trying to remain thin have resorted to Uic pr.craa of starving themselves to death A pickle and a dash of fruit «us supposed to do the work of a good beef steak Yet «Idle fickle, frivolous fashion was partly responsible, not all together blameless « o s the ecoti mtc conditions under which our own gtrls and women arr foricd to « o ik Their earnings are ollwn Insufllclrnt to bu; both food and clothes Women being «om en prelrrrcd to look good outside even though they felt bin! inside Now they can rat and stay Uun and shaprly with the once discarded corset. THEY (SET T ilt BLAME To the fret of women greaj economists have laid the cause of the depres­ sion The buying power of the nation is largely In the hands of women, although men arr the breadwinners. Love for silk hose, silk mhat-ya-ma- ca ll-’ems ruined Ihe cation market. They say the resources of the Southland wrrr reduced Northern manufacturers were likewise afTrcted. They could not buy from the West. The West In turn could not buy from the East and Uie cycle was completed Women's ab.llnanre from fattening foods also put the farmers on the blink Interesting Is the news about the woman, 108 years of age. who Is pick­ ing strawberries at Taylor Island, Mil. Mrs Amrlta Keene Is her name. The question one naturally asks Is. where are the children of a woman 108 who permit her to go out and pick strawberries for a living. While we do not know to what she attributes her old age, we will wagrr that she neither wore corsets or dieted and wore clothes of wool and cotton In win­ 1 ter Instead of going half naked, Just to be In stvle. HOW MANY CHILDREN SHOULD A WOMAN HAVE? Even more Interesting, perhaps. Is the rase of Mrs Cora Jones Long, of Chailottr. N C . who at the agr of 40 lias Just given birth to her twenty-third child. Modrrn young women shudder at the very thought of having one child. Besides being costly propositions they are also a bother when one would like to stay out all night cl Hiring at a cabaret One such mother In Chicago, piit her five-year-old son. Robert CSray. on the train, placed a tag on him reading, "T o Grandma," and sent him to Washington, D C. Authorities are now trying to either locate the "Grandma," who doesn't seem to exist or else find the mother whose name and place of abode Is unknown Cruel, perhaps but not quite as cruel ns Baltimore's Vtnrlent White, who ts now on trial for slaying his own srvrn-m onth-old child to grt even with h:s wlfa. CAN A WOMAN HAVE LOVE AND A CAREER. TOO? Into the news this week also eomrs evidence to shatter Ihe old belief that women are more gentle, more kind hearted than men In New York, Magistrate Jean Norris, G otham s female Jurist, Is on Dial for siding and abetting greedy police to frame Innocent girls and send them to Jail on trumped up charges. * "Rlie made me ch.mge the testimony to suit her ends and not as it was given In court," staled the court stenographer In telling how the woman magistrate (who SI Hill Id have extended a mother'« sympathy to unprotected girls alone In New York) not only sent them to Jail but altered the records to prevent them from obtaining an appeal. This same method was employed by the court stenographer In the famous Scotlsboro. A la . legal lynching case where eight boys arr to be electrocuted for the alleged rape of two white girl hoodlums. FRAMING INNOCENT GIRLS Quite different from New York's woman magistrate was the action of llaltlniores Judge Eugene O'Dunne when Ague» Champion, Just here from Uie country was brought before him on a similar trumped up charge. Bald Agnes: "I was In my home and a white man, who Inter turned out | to be an officer In plain clothes, came In. He forced his way into the house and a few minutes Olflcer HlUelberger, who had sent the man In, poundetf i on the door 'Where ti the white man who Just came In here?' demanded Ihe officer. I looked around and the Ural officer had slipped out of the parlor where he was fittin g the moment before and was hiding In the bedroom He came out sherplshly declaring that I had offered to sell myaelf to him." The first ofllcrr was none other than Olflcer John Harry, Northwestern District clubber, whose hobby has been besting up unprotected colored , citizens. Baltimore's Judge O Dunne not only dismissed tlie girl but severely reprimanded both officers for their pains, warning them never to come before him again with such a put up case. The cose of New Yorks woman magistrate may prove that when a woman becomes ambitious to take her place In the world hcslde men, when she enters politics, places a career before making a home she loses the finer qualities with which she has been endowed T IIE WHAT-CHA COLUMN By W. I. GIBSON "After graduation—what?" Here ts a question which, during the month of June, has been asked by many persons. Including the thou­ sands of graduates themselves. The writer sought out Carl Mur­ phy. editor of the largest all-colored weekly In the world, to ask him «h a t advice he would give to gradiia’ rs, particularly those o f schools of | Journalism, and here