NOVEMBER 19, 1940


Faith Act Used to Fleece Woman Out of $50 in Cash

Mrs. Sallie Jinx, of 68-C Howell Street, S.E., was the victim of flimflam, she reported to police yesterday. Mrs. Jinx said a woman, known to her as Sister Bell, came to her home and, through a faith act, pretended to tie $50 of her money in a napkin and put it in a trunk with instructions not to open the napkin until four hours later. When the napkin was opened, the money was gone, the victim stated.

Toncille Robinson and E. C. Robinson are telling their friends they don’t care what the other does.

Missing from Our Alley

8th Avenue just doesn’t seem the same. Artis O. Peavey, that well-known fellow around town, has seen fit to exit to the Windy City. He is sorely missed by the female population, of that fact you can be sure.

We hear that Miss Helen Reid had to call the law over a late-night prowler trying to enter her home on Avenue F, and do her bodily harm … and when the officers of the law arrived, they apprehended a gentleman hiding under the house with an ice pick in his hand, who claimed that he was the iceman.

Could that gentleman have been Mr. Baby Shephard, who heretofore had been sweet on Miss Reid?

… The Esquire Club is preparing for its annual Limb Loosener …

Platter News

Ellington’s “Black and Tan Fantasy” is a new Decca release of considerable interest and novelty. The pianist in “Creole” gets on a boogie-woogie kick that’s odd but effective.

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