The Afro-American

Friday, July 25, 1919

Baltimore, Maryland

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54 VICTIMS OF WASHINGTON RIOTS Capital Quiet After Week's Disturbance Victory Hospital Edition Full Report In This Issue "The names of persons who sub-charged to Negroes were frequent- verified $25.00 or more during the commi- lated by white men who man- campaign will appear in this article. " It appears it will be owing to "A recent case," said Mr. Sili- ndy, "is that of Shil- linda Wilson, the fact that during the busi- ness of the campaign, not having enough helpers at headquarters, charged with attempted criminal some names might have been ever- booked in making up the list, but every card is on the file and full of Wilson, the night of the campaign, not having enough helpers at headquarters, charged with attempted criminal assault upon a white relative by marriage while she was on her way to school. Wilson, who had blacked his face, was recognized by the girl. He escaped having been arrested shot Dotty Sherif B. C. Worl of Seventh, impress it upon the minds of every subscriber, whether the amount was a dollar or a hundred dollars, such reports to the Natio- nation we think every person who sub- Most popular person in town. Man or Woman. VOTES, one cant each. Person getting highest number of votes—gets free Transportation to and from the ELKS' CONVENTION. Second winner—gets Transportation to the CONVENTION. WANT TO BE THE Winner? Madison Avenue and Preston Street Phone Mt. Vernon 5139 Lime, Cement, Plaster, Ready Roofing, Cold-Water Paint, Oil Paint, Brushes, Glue, Nails, Etc. WE SHIP ANY QUANTITY TO ANY PART OF THE COUNTRY We Deliver Free of Charge WRITE US FOR PRICES We Deliver Free of Charge VOL. XXVII. No. 46 54 V $52.000 RAISED FOR HOSPITAL Full Report of Receipts and Expenses of Victory Campaign. Sum Now Over $52000 Ahead of all other Fraternities. School 113 leads. Capt. Brown Gives $500 "Tabulations of the subscriptions to the Victory Hospital campaign fund, including the date of - July 19, 1919, showed the total to be $2,125.16. "The leaders of the campaign who were much gratified to know that the price of the Victory Hospital was obtained and they feel confident that those persons who were not approached and some who were not ready during the campaign to subscribe will bring the total to $2,125.16, the next few months. Although solicitors will not go around seeking subscriptions for the hospital fund, the people who have not subscribed are urged to come to the Campaign Headquarters and do their bit toward helping this movement, who subscribe now or a little later on will receive window cards and buttons and their subscriptions will be as just as thankfully received as if they had subscribed the first day of the campaign, if the remaining $2,125.16 would be subscribed authorities will be able to install in the new hospital all necessary equipment, and have money with which to run the hospital for the first year. "The names of persons who subscribed $25.00 or more during the campaign will appear in the campaign to appear in any form to appear, it will be owing to the fact that during the business nights of the campaign, not having enough helpers at headquarters, some names might have been overlooked in making up the total, and full credit given for every subscription. Space will not permit our publishing all subscribers' names, but we wish to Says Crisis Editor Wanted to Comercialize His Patriotism. No time For Bicering Now Stating that he had now entered upon his new duties as secretary-treasurer of Howard University, and had little or no time to devote to personal contact, Dumbo invited assistant to the Secretary of War replies in the New York Age, current issue, to Dr. W. E. B. DuBois recent criticisms of the conduct of his office. Mr. Scott tells of the objections of many persons to his advice for specializing his patriotism" by securing a captain's commission and holding his Crisis salary at the same time. In spite of these protests, Mr. Scott says, he endorsed the Doctor for the position because "he with both the radical and conservative groups in handling the affairs of the War Department. In part Mr. Scott's statement concluded: "At a time like the present, when all elements and influences among the Negro people should be united against the common ties of secrecy "FREEDOM" which should be shored in and enjoyed by black men as well as white men—it is to be deplored that Dr. DuBois or anyone else has seen fit to divide counsels among the Negro people by adopting a policy of personal clammer merely because doing not once to the time of his hide, fiddle. WHITE CRIMINALS IMPERSONATE NEGROES New York, July 24.—John I. Shilliday, secretary of the National Association, for the Advancement of Colored People, has issued a statement charging that crimes charged to Negroes were frequently committed by white men who had blackened their faces. COLORED MEN NOT TO BE IN M. N. CUARD General Warfield Says Organization of Separate Company Will Have To Colored national guardmen, will not form a part of the organization of the 1600 Maryland National Guards now being formed is the sense of a letter to the Afro-American From Adjutant General Warfield. When General Warfield was reminded that the colored people were due two companies of National Guard based on the fact that 17.9 of the people in Maryland are colored, he replied that "the organization of colored units cannot be taken up at this time." Later, he said, he hoped to "recognize the units that secured in Maryland before the war." General Warfield's letter in part follows: State of Maryland. Office of the Adjutant General. Ammanpur. July 19, 1919. The Afro-American, Baltimore, Maryland Sir: I am in receipt of your letter of yesterday's date in regard to theorginal Guard of the National Guard of Maryland in which you suggest the reorganization of the last Separate Company (colored) and perhaps another colored company as part of the National Guard of this State. The organization of the National Guard your suggestion will be given every consideration. In the organization of the units which have been stipulated by the War Department and the number of men to compose these units being limited to 1,500, the organization cannot be taken up at this time. This office believes that the present allotment to Maryland is a beginning; and that additional units will be organized, until our National Guard is as large, or larger than it was at the beginning of the century, nor nearly as possible, reorganize the units that existed in Maryland at the time our National Guard was drafted into Federal service. Very truly yours, R. W. WALKER The Adjunct General. BRITISH VISIT TUSKEGEE Tuskegee Institute, Ala., July 13 —The British Commission on Village Education in India, consisting of seven members, spent two years researching and visiting information and visiting the various departments of the school. Thomas Jesse Jones was with the party. WOULD JIM CROW NATIONAL GUARD Columbia. S. C. July 24-While white young men over the State are displaying a reluctance to enter the National Guard under the present regulations which require African Americans to Negroes in some counties are making application for permission to organize. CITY DIRECTORY COMPILED BY NEGROES Memphis, Tenn. July 24.—With in the next few weeks, Memphis can boast of a real, first class Collegiate university, perhaps to present in systematic but concise form the most important facts concerning the Negro population of City. WASTED TO CARRY FIRE-ARMS One hundred twenty-white men applied to the District of Columbia courts this week for permission to fire firearms in the city. None was granted. MOB LAW SELE DETERMINATION IN WASHINGTON. BETTER MAN SAY EXPERTS Army Records Show Negro To Be Physically Superior To Whites Which is the better man in the physical sense a white man or the colored man? After comparing the records of the whites and blacks in the United States Army, where they lived under exactly the same conditions the writer concludes that the Negro is a better physician than from unimissified statistics, it appears that the Negro is less subject to disease than the white man. He has less power of resistance to certain diseases, for example tuberculosis and small pox; but in general he resists disease germs better. The Negro has a healthier skin. This is particularly true of the "infolded skin" which forms the lining of the mouth, nose, and throat. White skins in comparison are characterised as "degenerate." Furthermore, Negro corps are to be found in the areas not so subject to alcoholism. They have better eyes and better digestion. This, naturally, is not calculated to minister to the racial pride of the Caucasian, who likes to feel that he is the name of the less unstable race in America and not so subject to alcoholism. They have better eyes and better digestion. There is a law of compensation which pays the price for every gain St. Petersburg, Fla., July 23.—Negroes of St. Petersburg were much excited last night when they saw a big steamer tie up at the A. C. L. pier and many thought that a African-colored woman has been preaching here that June 28th the white people were going to deport all the Negroes sending their back to Africa and many believed this. Dr. Walter J. Jackson, surgeon in the 267th Infantry, wishes to announce that he has returned to the city and re-opened offices at 1618 W. Mulberry street. Telephone *Gilmor 1718. Pythians Close Annual Session Grand Chancellor Watty Reciecied. Attorney Nice Delivers address. Parade A Big feature Frederick, Md., July 23. - Following one of the most successful sessions in the history of the order, the 30th annual session of the Grand Lodge Knights of the Order, we were here today after a three day session. The session opened on Monday when a parade was held by the uniform rank under Brigadier General Lewis E. Williams. The parade was the largest in recent years and created favorable commences. On Monday morning public exercises were held at which the delegates were welcomed to the city by Edward S. Delpainia who was introduced by Dr. U. G. Bourne, chairman of the locus mutuum. Harry B. Hale, chief officer for Governor, was introduced and delivered an address on fraternalism. Alexander Armstrong, Republican candidate for attorney general, also delivered an address. Neither candidate was referred to this department. Other addresses were delivered by Rev. J. U. King and Attorney W. C. McCard. Following the session a number of members were referred to Mrs. Rosa J. Richardson, grand worthy counselor of the Grand Court of Calamthe. The business sessions began Tuesday afternoon when the Grand Chancellor, Geo. A. Watty, delivered his annual address, involving the past two years. He reported that the order had increased in membership over 500 members, making a total of nearly 4,000 members and a boon of over 100,000 members. PROTECT THEMSELVES The Parents' League of Washington, D.C., with the police distributed 10,000 circulars in colored sections Tuesday telling inhabitants to stay and PROTECT THEMSELVES THE NEW $75,000.00 VICTORY HOSPITAL COLORED MAYOR FORCED TO FLEE Head of Colored Town Compelled to Leave Town By Violent Threats Amiston, Ala. July 23.—A black hand letter submitted by an inmate in a cross room, usually used to spell death in all its horrors, followed by an alleged assault against his person, by two unknown men is given as the reason for the deputy's neal, mayor of Hobson City, the exclusive Negro town near Amiston. A few weeks ago, The Hobson City mayor is said to have received a warning that he left these parts immediately. A short time after the receipt of the letter, the mayor claimed that he had been assaulted near his home, and announced to his Friends that he intended to obey the warning. Accordingly, he gave up his position as head of the government at Hobson City, and went HIS LETTER BEGINS WITH "DEAREST W" Northwestern Crowded with Spectators at Custis-Green Trial Ministers Letters To Mrs. Hilliard Read. Rev. John Offer Custis, pastor of Tyson A. M. E. Church West Roland Park, spent an hour crowded by the courtroom at the Northwestern Police Station Monday afternoon. Justice Brendel testified in a disorderly conduct charge that was on the docked feet of a man accused of crowding him street, since the evening of July 8. As it was shown that Rev. Mr. Custis did not done any fighting, the himself had been caught in a boat he had just brought into a sewer, pummeled that Mr. Green admitted giving him, a charge of assault preferred by Green was dispassioned. The men were each hooded with a collar on the disord- Rev. Custis was represented by Attorney C. C. Fitzgerald and Mr. Green had J. Stewart Davis as his lawyer. Wordy passages between the lawyers, as well as that fact that Mr. Green is in-law of Green, objected to some of her son-in-law's statements, made the trial a lively one. Justice Brendel threatened at one time to exclude Mrs. Hillard from the courtroom on account of her interruptions. Mr. Green objected that the time in an envelope addressed to Mrs. Hillard, were introduced as evidence on the part of Mr. Green that the minister had been writing to his wife. The missives were mailed in an envelope bearing a special note. One begins with "My dear 'H. A. H.' which are Mrs. Hillard's initials. The salutation of the other was, 'My dearest W.' Mr. Green testified that the latter letter was contained in an envelope enclosed in the letter he enclosed enveloped and thereon the initials "S. J. G.", which are those of Mrs. Green. Rev. Custis denied that he had enclosed a letter intended for Mrs. Green and that the initials were, and Mrs. Hillard asserted that her son-in-law had them. There are four. CLUB EXCLUDED NEIGHBORS Worcester, Mass., July 23.—Rice produce exists at the Worcester Boys' Club and girls were deduced admission to the swimming pool a week ago, on "Women's Night," by Superintendent David W. Armstrong, according to charges made by George T. Domini, attorney, on behalf of a special counsel. Worcester club members have sent a strong post letter to Reginald Washburn, the Club's president. MIS. TALBERT ABROAD Paris, July 23.—Mary Talbert, of Bufalfa, walked into the women's cafeteria of the hung Men's Christianillian Hairy uniform, Mrs. Talbert has come as the representative of the National Association of Colored Women, of which she is president, and with a group of other women of her race is leaving for Verdun and Chateau Thierry, where are located many other engaged in work in industries. SOLDIERS TRY TO TERRORIZE COLOREDFOLK AFRO AGENT HELD UP IN WASHINGTON White Soldiers Demanded Papers or His Life.—Organized Colored Citizens Armed Themselves to Protect Their Homes (Special to the Afro-American) COLORFUL CASUALTIES 3 killed—6 wounded—8 beaten WHITE CASUALTIES 4 killed—22 wounded—12 beaten Washington, D. C. July 23, seven persons were killed and five wounded and beaten according to the figures kept by the Afa. American's representative in the race riot, which began here Sunday night and lasted three days. The majority of the people knowing that the colored population was well armed and able to take care of itself The city is quiet now, but the colored population is still under arms and ready for a renewal of the forces thousand soldiers are in guard. The trouble started on Saturday, when molts of white soldiers, sailors and marines, holding the whole colored population of Ingham town for the recent assaults on white women, began to take colored men off street cars, beat them, and in general maltreat every colored man or woman found on the streets. Two days no colored resistance was organized, and many individuals were beaten, whose names were not obtained by the newspapers. On Monday, the colored people infuriated by the infliction retaliated by protection retaliated by shooting and beating every white person that came into the Southwest seattle. Motormen and conductors were pulled off street cars, and armed SAW MOB ANTICS Mrs. A. J. Mitchell Sees. Whites Chuse Colored Man in Washington. Mrs. A. J. Mitchell wife of the pastor, A. J. Mitchell, president M. E. Eichscher, was in Washington Sunday while the howling mob of soldiers, sailors and other whites were indiscriminately attacking colored people. She was sitting on a Baltimore car at New York avenue and Fourteenth when a mob chased an inoffensive and badly-scared colored man there. The mob did not follow the man on the train, and he escaped unhurt. Mrs. Mitchell related the episode to her husband when she arrived home early Monday morning. BRUCE CAN GET MANASSAS Washington, July 24—Now that Dr. Van Schnick, president of the Board of Education, has called a special meeting of the board for the latter part of this month, many believe that the light being waged against the retention of R. C. Bruce as superintendent of schools, Bruce can, it is claimed, land the vacant principalship of the Manassas (Va.) Industrial School. Bismond, Va., July 24—The colored Baptists of this community are all gentle, preparing for the re-union meeting of the colored Baptists of Virginia which is to take place in this city July 9 to August 3rd individually, building smaller state organizations of colored Baptists. The Baptist General Mission of Virginia Mission and Educational Association of the Virginia Baptist State Sunday School Convention and United Church Young People Fellowship, besides a large number of visitors from other states, North and South, will be made to raise not less than $25,000 for missions and education. The first premature registration of all the belles will be held at the First Baptist Church, Rev. W. T. Robinson, Rev. A. B. Cullis and Jaunice Gray are among the Baltimoreans expected Happenings in Baltimore The War Camp Community Service Club passed the first anniversary of its beneficent activities Sunday. During the past year 29,999 soldiers have spent three, 1863 have used the cafeteria during the past year, 29,999 have used the dormitories. Besides the welfare work for the soldiers in organizing women and girls who work in ministries and nonprofit services they are the owners of its officers. Athletic events have been given and social service work has been a common activity of the soldiers who cooperate with the camp. DEC 21, 2014, weaver is associate secretary of the camp. A member of the hard work web of the assistant. Next Time, Maybe He'll Count His Money on the Inside George Scott, 1827 N. Vaughan St. and his money at Hampton and Lee streets last Saturday afternoon when he gave, he dropped a dollar bill from a pot containing $12. A white man of a foreign birth, nee claims, picked up the $4 and thereby began. His little camera stopped on Scott, started to zoom, out exept and a friend overropped foto. Scott grabbed the camera and ran over when it stopped at when a small crowd began to connect. Another foreigner, who kept a store at the northwest corner of Scott and Lee streets, ran over and deserved the camera. The man gesturing toward the camera accented together. A friend of the late department store, Scott was at the officers. Nos. 925 and 929 of the Southern district came up and No. 929 began questioning. The man arrested and the latter again proceeded and then the officer said No. 929 did not arrest him. The did not see him, as it happened a book away, graced one white man. Officer No. 650, who talked what his comrade looked at his face, led the stakekeeper off in the same way as he occurred foreigner. A name which address at 922 South Sharp Street was given. Toss other No. 650, who handed to Scott with the advice to go and get a warrant. The officers then crossed the street to the stakekeeper's corner, where no fireman was gone upon the arrival of the police. Scott and his friends were angrily discussing the matter and regarding that the man seemed have been in rested, when No. 650 returned to the street and in a and again was the men that they had not congressed there and that he had not got about what to do. "We are going to do light," said one as they started to go. "My name is Edwin Chuges, since he is a witness, and can't say. Scott wrote it down, but neglected to get he address. Judging by a statement made by John Wilson, who serves as a sergeant with the South Regiment, got Afro-American war a prison sentence in France, some of the soldiers wangled for five miles or more to secure a job. "All was necessary," he says, but "they just received the Afro-American army the men would get busy to get a job." The new army of the new home of Africa gave them more time to see an issue. And one paper was sometimes read by a child who was something particularly not to or a copy was set wilt some of the letters, was something a wringing order for the boys in France. Vaulting ambitions are, likely, to make the *Little Ward* a seething force of political rights this fall, caused by a number of Richmonds being in the field for the Republican State Central Committee. "There is no compact organization in the ward like it was in the days of Harry W. Mummsen by Henry and Harry W. Mummsen by Henry and things now seem to be a grossly purposeless attempt. Who has gathered around many of the our organization workers, is in the race for executive and say, is in the race for president, Richardson, William Layton and John W. Stirton, who jumps on the success the are among those boosted. And there is one issue assured, for this position in those any of apparent Republican ascendancy. "I have repeatedly told the leaders of the Republican party that they should give more consideration to colored voters of the city and state," said Robert L. Stevens, retired mayor of Branch City Commission of the Second Branch City Commission of the State, administrator the other day. "I know that player processing data is a big part of what he does," said Mr. Stevens, but he received the larger part of the mayoralty election in Augusta than other day by a little over a hundred candidates. The interest of a candidate debating to vote. The interest of a candidate by recognition by those in authority and materiality. "With Savage, Stratton, coming thousands of females will be given voters and it shows the Republican port from every element, a beloved share of the colored Republican workers' work," recognized in the distribution of patron CATONSVILLE Catonsville, Md., July 21. Rev. J. B. Thomas died at the pupil Sunday morning at Grave Church, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas's home, and summer here, Mr. Wilbert Washington has re-enlisted in the Army, and is now at Fort Sierran to be assigned to Siberia. Mrs. Majorski Majorski will be with Willis of 1994 David Hill Ave. spent DON'T BE BAMBOOZLED! Cocolatum TRADE MARK REG. QUININE HAIR-TONIC SOFT, SILKY HAIR is the result of using this wonderful Hair Dressing. It promotes the growth of hair and is beneficial to the scalp. It will not gum the hair. Made by men who know how. With a trip to Atlantic City to attend the Elks Convention and return the first prize, the XM, C, A, begging next week a popularity contest for men or women in the city. The contest will be held in conjunction with the annual street carnival of the Association. Votes will be sent each week. The second popular person in the annual convention will be the Atlantic City, but will have to set back the best way to win the second prize way back. One hundred seven seven seventy-seven members of the sessions of convention attend the burgers every day from July 2nd to August 11th. **Secretary S. S. Lockner of the Jenkins Association, returned to the city last week to discuss co-ops in history of the city and that their courses I taught was "Work. Work. Work. Little Story. Work. Work. Work." of ming younger servitudes to enjoy on their work to better align servitudes. P. Morrow was merely a secretary in the country was presented in honor of his birth century of servitude in his own office the other than in the Association, most striking feature of the session was the summer school appointment and to more directing of a board of trustees. Owls Lose Suit May Secure Colonial Theatre Binder has it that the *Columbia* theatre will be or has been secured by the quality *Amusement company* on the current circuit of phantasies sympathetic by it, *C. Y. Brown* (formerly present), *C. Y. Brown* (formerly present), *C. Y. Brown* (formerly present), will be on the playhouse theatre, New York with Leaster, at Brenton, managing the new *C. Y. Brown* age as manager, one to the largest剧院 in New York, where it was purchased to the playhouse on Friday of last week, at 9:30 p.m. Holds Auto For Debt Raymond Custer, owns an automobile, which he took some ago on Charles K. Chiemens, manager of the Parking Garage, garage, and W. P. Pregston to pay required. When he received the bill for $299.99 Mr. Custer refused to pay the same, asserting that the charges were excessive. W. P. Pregston was security for the bill. Tomtaugh his attorney, George W. P. Pregston, asserted in the City court to repurchase his income last Saturday. The host has determined what the proper costs would be in the fall. Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Sue United As a result of alleged injuries on June 21st, when the automobile in which she was riding was struck by a Pursid Hill Ave. car at Pressman street, Mrs. Estebla Arnold, outfitter at the City Court charged $2,000 in damages from the United States Army. Her husband, for Oliver L. Arnold, was charged with the loss of his wife's services and another for the same amount or alleged damage to his car. W. A. Metcalf is her attorney. Miss Murphy Returns Home Miss Frances L. Murphy, teacher in the Training School, who has spent the past weeks instructing students in the nation's largest lion dance Louisiana, has returned to the city. Miss Murphy's work was done under the nascisses of Dr. L. E. Moore of Washington. FARE FOR THE ROUND TABLE LEAVING AUTO HIRING CO. OFFICE, 541 DRUID HILL AVE. For further information see Witterie Co. call Mt. Ver. 301 SUNDAY, AWUWY, WASHINGTON, D. C. L. B. 19, E. N. 19, E. P. and friends, we are now making reservations for both Baltimore to Atlantic City Excursions during weeks of both concerts. Tickets good for entire week. "The darker races of the world are interested in us, but they want the American odored people to do something for themselves," asserted Rev. Dr. W. H. Jernagain, of Washington, in an address at Ames Memorial Hall, held Monday night under the auspices of the local branch of the National Race Congress in the interest of the $250,000 emergency defense, and Dr. Jeremiah was the president. The meeting, though not largely attended, was characterized by enthusiasm. Mr. Marcelius Goodrich delicately offered his advice which was followed with response by Rev. W. J. Winston. The race has been doing many things, Rev. Mr. Winston said, but now is the time to do large things. He said the surest ways to make the race able to defend itself is to start, patronize and develop Negro enterprises. Baltimore, with its large colored population, he decried, should be a leader in such a move. Rev. James Gray and Rev. Albert J. Mitchell made pleas for general interest in the defense of the race, Rev. A. E. Cattiz, who presided, said that the wiping out of slavery took off the letters from the freed people, but that a large manry are under a galling yoke of virtual slavery now in the South, the mentioned disfranchisement, "John Townsman" and other race prescriptions in support of his argument, and urged the raising of the race. Rev. Dr. Jeremiah told the audience that the race must prepare for its own defense by raising the money out of its own pocket. Mentions the outbreak on the part of whites against Negroes in Washington, said that it indicated that no place, even the nation's capital, is immune from such occurrences. Mentions the long and successful right made by women for the right to vote, the speaker said the race must, raise sufficient money and put its influential persuasions up to fight the battles of the race. "I have been asking members of congress for the past seven years," declared Dr. Jeremiah, "to do the rightly, the legally placed burdens upon the race." "Some of the claws of the best and most ardent friends of the race may be summed up; 'Your race has made remarkable progress along some lines, but what are you doing among yourselves to bring about the change?' Assuring that in organizations in which the whites put their money the donors shaped the opinions and courage of the race, President Demain said that a new effort is needed to be of humane service. Taking up his recent visit to France, he said leaders of all races were anxious to know what the colored people of the United States doing to lift the unequal condition of the race, which they are forced to live. Propaganda against Negro soldiers, he declared was started in prisons, and in some sections of the city, in the South. He dealt summarily with any acquired colored soldier whose lightning in positive under Southern conditions; Dr. Jeremiah urged many resistance against black prescriptions, but insisted that right conditions not be brought about by violence. A collection was taken for the defense fund and a few subscriptions thereto given. AFTER BIGGER PRESS Mr. J. H. Murphy, managing editor of the Afro-American is spending his vacation in Soc.比亚, N. J. During the week, he will run down to New York, and let the contract for the bigger press that is to print a ten, twelve and fourteen page Afro-American next year. WANT $8,000 A financial crusade to raise $1,000, the income from which will be used to pay the annual lumber-decimal ground rent of 3360 on St. John's A. M. E. Church, is in Rev. M. K. Darls, is in GRAND ALL DAY A TO ATLANTIC CITY, SUNDAY, JULY FARE FOR THE RO LEAVING AUTO HIRING CO. O. For further information see Walter SUNDAY, AUGUST 2d T. L. B. P. O. E. and K. of P. and rei tions for our Grand Baltimore t week of both conventions. Ticke DON'T BE IBOOZL olatw QUININE HAIR TO the result of using this won hair and is beneficial to the who know how. 15 Cents Everywhere ANY Old Citizen Dead Philip Stewart and old and respected citizen of East Baltimore died at his home 1606 Monument street, Tuesday-after a long illness. He was a member and class leader at Waters Church and a member of the Order of Job. For the past 42 years he was employed by the Tyson Crome Works. Abbysinjans Invite Afro The Afro American is the recipient of a court-courts worded petition of the Abyssinian mission to an interview. The Headquarters of the delegation are in the Waldorf Astoria in New York. 900 On Trinity Excursion Nearly Nine hundred persons were carried to Brown's Grove with Trinity A. M. E. Church on Wednesday. The showers did not interfere with the enjoyment. Club Tournament At Park St. Swainbier interfered with the beginning of the annual club tournament of local tennis players, which was to start at Druid Hill Park on Monday. They will continue this week and some sharp matches are expected. Upsets are good and will not be surprising to see younger men like the Williams boys displace some of the older men in the list of the first ten players. POSITION WANTED A pastor desires to pastor a Baptist Church, in any section of the country. Address, Rev. E. G., 1337 N. Fremont Ave. 34 FOR RENT—Third floor flat. Two rooms, kitchen, Party with no children. Also one furnished room. Can be seen at any time. 1320 MCDLL OH STREET 7 18-25. WANTED—A. Farber, Salary or Commission, excellent chance for dignissim man. Address F. L. WHEELDIN, 9 Morgan St., Hartford, Conn. 7 18-31 Mrs. Georgia Edwards, agent for Nurture Treatment of the sick adult. Instruction given in the FOY Sys system. 589 W, 11000 E STRIKE FOR SALE - A Story House semi dartment in four shiny. Two baths 1029 McCLISH ST. FOR RENT - A nice large front floor, brick house, two married couple. APPLY TO 692 N. FAVA STREET. FOR SALE - A House 225 N. Eden street. Ground Rent. Cash: $17000. APPLY TO 1213 K. PREGSTON ST. 2 food power machines. Button sink and button sewer. Light lights display and 600. Floor cover. Floor thin. APPLY TO 1213 K. PREGSTON ST. after 6:30 P. M. PLAT - FOR RENT Third floor. No children. APPLY to 1211 BARO AME. FOR SALE Need! furnished apartment. Apply 123rd Brindle Hill Ave. Asso. at勒尔, Bonkens. POLL RENT - Two rooms for rent, unfurnished or unfurnished, apply to gross and gross. $250 Brindle Hill Ave. G, and L. telephone. A settled man and wife wish unfurnished kitchenette and bath in W. Washington, private residence. State Tax. Private family. Address Moe American. A 2 story house $181 Rustland Ave. A 2 story house 2363 McCallum Blvd. Three 2 story houses 1700 black One 2 story house 1223 White St. One 2 story house 1922 White St. The Gross Grant Real Estate Co. New Office; 2330 Druld Hill Ave. Mad. 7039. When you consider buying a house, it would pay you to consult The Gross-Grant Real Estate Co. The oldest colored real estate company in Baltimore. Office: 2053 Drudg Hill Ave Baltimore, Md. Mad. 7030 John R. Gross, President Wm. K. Grant, Treasurer Samuel E. Robinson, Secretary N. J., AND RETURN 27th AT 8 A. M. BOUND TRIP $10.00 OFFICE, 514 DRUD HILL AVE. or Hickman or call Mt. Ver. 3071 TO WASHINGTON, D. C. ends. we are now making reserva- to Atlantic City Excursions during sets good for entire week. LED! m ONIC wonderful Hair Dressing. It se scalp. It will not gum BALTIMORE, MD. CLEARANCE SALE AT BURTON'S Ladies and Gentlemen, your attention is especially called to the very splendid stock of up to date Merchandise that I am offering at a very LOW PRICE and on EASY TERMS. Consisting of Ladies' and Gentlemen's Wearing Apparel, Bed Linens, Etc. LADIES' SUITS. There are a limited number of these suits that we are closing out at a price less than cost, to replace same on today's market. Prices $10.50 up, while they last. SKIRTS. In this assortment of Suits you will find beautiful White Flannel, Gaberdine, Satin finished, Panamas, Serges, Poplin Silk, Linen, Prices 95c, 1.95, 2.98, 3.98, 4.98, up to 12.95 DRESSES. There will appear in this sale some very special bargains in Dresses in the latest designs in Silk, Satin, Serges, Voils, Georgette, Crepe Dechine, Prices 3.50 up. Baltimore offers none better for the price. LADIES' WAISTS. A very large selection of Waists in Organdy, Voil, Jap Silk, Georgette, Satin. Prices 89c, 1.49, 2.50, 3.50, 4.45, 6.95, 7.50. Sizes 38 to 52. Ladies' Coats and Capes. You should not allow this opportunity pass unheeded as you cannot duplicate these garments at similar prices and terms in the larger stores of the city. Prices 4.50 up. MEN'S SUITS AND O'COATS. Men, take a tip from me as an advisor in this particular line. If you must buy a Coat or Suit this fall begin now and place your order while this sale is on, or you will be confronted with a much increased price later. I have a most excellent line of cloth and consider it a pleasure to show these excellent values to the trade. A few more Summer Suits 7.50 up. If your credit is good with others, it is better with us. If you have no standing credit, we will help you make one. If you cannot come to store, PHONE, Mt. Vernon 3134 W, and our Salesman will call at your home. FURS---Summer Furs and Marabau RAIN COATS: The 2-Ply Rain Coat, a Coat of service and appearance 7.50 to 26.50 Yes, we sell Furniture and Cash Government Checks and Bonds SAMUEL L. BURTON 1108 Pennsylvania Avenue The New PATTERSON THEATRE Dr. Charles H. Fowler MONDAY "THE The Supreme Sensations The greatest scandal of globe. A true story of principal roles. The story of Gold. The most notable from beginning to end, TWO MONDAY & TH WIL "THE CA Supreme Sensation of Modern the greatest scandal of the press. A true story of Love, Intrig roles. The story of a man an The most notable picture ev beginning to end, the greatest "THE CAILLAUX CASE" The Supreme Sensation of Modern Times. The greatest scandal of the present age and one that rocked all four quarters of the globe. A true story of Love, Intrigue, Treason and War, with World Figures as the principal roles. The story of a man and woman who sold their souls for power and German Gold. The most notable picture ever produced, depicting the famous Caillaux Scandal from beginning to end, the greatest international drama of modern times. JULY 31st, 1919 Constance Tallage in 'Constance Tallage follows in The Honeymoon with "The Stuart Nightful Comedy." As Celia Laird this captivating mother to her list of portraits of the escapes from a loveless man Count by hiding in the Tonneau he is returning to New York after haven, Celia's home town, and she friendship with him there. Frazier her girl, but he soon realizes his Country Maiden. How she aids her engagement and also to evade theor which the Villege Constables makes a thoroughly enjoyable comedy. STANCE TALNAGE in "The Studio" INSTANCE TALLAGE follows her smashing Honeymoon with "The Studio Girl" another Comedy. Celia Laird this captivating Connedienne ad- dies her list of portrayals of regular Ameri- capes from a loveless marriage with the boy hiding in the Tonneau of Frazer Ordwa- r returning to New York after a vacation. Celia's home town, and she had struck up ship with him there. Frazer is engaged to but he soon realizes his real love for the ly Maiden. How she aids him to get out ment and also to evade the charge of ab- ch the Villege Constables come to arrest a thoroughly enjoyable picture of d Constance Talimage in "The Studio Girl" CONSTANCE TALLAGE follows her smashing success in The Honeymoon with "The Studio Girl" another delightful Comedy. As Celia Laird this captivating Comedienne adds another to her list of portrayals of regular American girls. She escapes from a loveless marriage with the Village Count by hiding in the Tonneau of Frazer Ordway's Car; he is returning to New York after a vacation at Cliff Haven, Celia's home town, and she had struck up a warm friendship with him there. Frazer is engaged to another girl, but he soon realizes his real love for the little Country Maiden. How she aids him to get out of this engagement and also to evade the charge of abduction, for which the Village Constables come to arrest him, makes a thoroughly enjoyable picture of delightful comedy. Don't fail to see these Big Shows. SPECIAL ADMISSION CIAL ADMISSION FOR CHILD SPECIAL ADMISSION FOR THIS SHOW LAURENS ST. NEAR CAREY. CHILDREN. 11 CENTS Near Hoffman Street THEATRE John W. Rich 28th & 31st CASE" By an All-Star Cast ked all four quarters of the in World Figures as the prin- buls for power and German the famous Caillaux Scandal modern times. LEWIS J. SELANCH CONSTANCE TALMADGE "THE STUDIO GIRL" SELECT PICTURES 17 CENTS What's Happening in Church Circles "If the members are not in your church, they are somewhere," was the statement of W. H. E. Taylor, an evangelist of Washington before the weekly meeting of the Baptist Taylor added that there are 225,000 members in the Baptist demonstration all over the country, and the number is constantly increasing. (Other visitors, who addressed the meeting, are the Ams of Arm of E. H. G. Murdock, Chister, Pa. E. H. Williams of Richmond, Va. F. G. Thornton of Washington, and T. S. Hendertl.) The essay of the day was read by F. S. J. Edwards, pastor of Beacon Baptist Church. Pimlico on subject "The Church of the WELCOME TO SOLDIERS Brian Baptist Church, Rev. S. J. Edwards, pastor, are to welcome the guests of the community on the church grounds on Monday July 16th. Sage and club staff will be invited. Local Councilmen and newspapers may have been invited to make addresses. LOTT CAREYS MEET The Lott Carey Eptis, Foreign Missionary held their meeting at Sawrens Point on Thursday night. Important business was transacted Dr. Brooks Preaches At Annapolis Amphitheatre. Mk. July 22—Masonss and their friends crowded the main hall, which opened first Sunday afternoon when Kw. W. Simmons Brooks of Bailiway College brought hedge and the ledges of the curtain number of prominent officials of the order was present. Preceding the trenon, bribe addresses were the Thompson, Thompson and Grand Eyes. In a speech that held the close attention of the large audience, Dr. Thompson and Grand Eyes conferred leadership. "Most leaders in any great cause," Dr. Thompson said, "are conscripted to their work. There are people who say the preacher should interfere in politics and not other who holds his hand out behind him for ministers being in politics. Be a minister in order to be a real minister that makes for the best interpersonal of the people and therefore, be a minister when they weave toward the end." For the fundamental principles of Ministry, Dr. Brooks said that those who squared their lives should be living lives better. Following the sermon, the Grand master entertained at dinner by Universal Dance at the Masqes Temple on Chip and toward little secretary St. Bernabes Catholic School has been the old McMurray mansion at the school. The building is now being used as an annex to the Biddle Street school, which is located in a dormitory for the parish school provided. The large yard on the east of the building will be used as a playground. It is now a Kid's Play Area. The process of Sharp Street Memorial Day observance in the 1900s and two in hold blacklockfitting店, all lease hold as income producers for the district. The district's activities may be used ultimately for some of the activities of the church services during the summer months and being held in the best church cross and shrubbing gift an appearance like the country in a series of serpentus Sunday夜 on the "Church and Eldhill the great reformer." Following a meeting of the Baptist district, the district Monday, at the office of the district superintendent, Ray Euston N. Williams, it was decided district conference for the first time. METHODIST MINISTERS CLOSE MEETINGS The rain weather prevented the Baltimore Metropolitan University's closing session from from summer at Morgan College on Wednesday of last week. The session will be held at Morgan Church instead. Ross, M. J. Naylor D. W. Hays, C. H. Hobbes, and J. D. Jowett were among the committee of arrangements. Mrs. D. G. Mack had charge of the ladies. Meets: Day services will be held at the center at Mr. Zinn R. Church after a month's meeting will follow. A new steam heating plant for John Wesley M. E. Kitchen will cost $4,000 us well as other improvements which will bring the cost up to nearly ten cents per gallon of electricity. Behind them, Son are the contractors. Their persuasion is being remodeled thoroughly. The dining room of the persuasion is being enlarged and beamed and an addition will be built to the appointments and rise will make it one of the most desirable in the city for a master Pest. Dr. Ernest Levin. AGED FOLK SURPRISED The inmates of the A. M. E. Aced on Asiputh street, were tended a tendered man, and the Doctor's Coachmen's Association Jr. and Auxiliary July 15th. A very many freshmen were served. Two tons of coal were donated. The Committee of Angiampati: Erikah Malmquist, Alfred Neale, President of Association; Indiana Gray and Vilah Magrura President of the Auxiliary. AGED MINISTER DIES Washington, July 23.—The funeral of Rev. Thomas H. Brooks, a superannuated minister of Washington. The E. M. E. Church Thursday of last week. Dr. Brooks Receives Felicitations Rev. W. Sampam Brooks, who returned a few days ago from a trip that took him as far as Waco Texas, says that the people everywhere know that Bethel A. M. E. Church has raised $74,000 to pay off the mortgage-indebtedness and the debt of one of his children. "Everywhere I was introduced," said Dr. Brooks, the people almost-invariably said, "You are the minister that raised $74,000 at Bethel Church. Baltimore." "Of course, I do not consider myself a financial king and whatever is due to the devotion of the people Many do not seem to know that 1,100 members have been added to Bethel Church during the past two years. Dr. Brooks was warmly greeted at Bethel Church last Sunday morning at Florida, presided in the morning and Rev. F. D. McDonald at night. Mon's Day Services were held at First Baptist Church last Sunday, March 16, 2014, in the morning. In the afternoon an open forum was held. Fellowship is a song service at night, Dr. R. H. McCarthy, the collection during the day exceeded $700.00. This amount is expected to considerably increased this Sunday. Mrs. Jennect Coates, of McCarthy, will be her guest to the month's Journal, Mrs. Mary Blake of New York City. SPECIAL NOTICE. Rev. Joseph L. Butler will fill the office of Grace Presbyterian Church day, July 10 to Sunday August, 10. Bathing streets, from Sunset 10th inclusive. During this time the services at 10:30 a.m. to Sunday August, 10. Nine street will continue as usual, with Rev. George A. Hall in m. and courtyard propping bore, $2.20. Sabbath School at 2:30 p. M. NORFOLK BETTER D. B. Young, editor of the Norfolk Journal and Guide and President of the Tidewater Bank was refused a stateroom on board a Chespakeap Line Stateroom from Wheeling. He was Wheeling. The seller stated that all staterows were "sold out," but Mr. Young stood one side and watched him sell staterows to white persons. Mr. Young went back to the apartment to told him he could not move might in Baltimore as to be able to sleep in a bed rather than a chair. Mr. Young says Baltimore is worse than Norfolk because color can not red staterows from Norfolk to Baltimore when any trouble. PUDLEY VISITS HERE S. J. Dudley, who is running a number of theatres and shows, spent several days in the city this week. He hurried out of theington, he said, after witnessing the horrowning scenes of the race. INMEM ORIAM GOLLISBROUGH—In sad but loving remembrance of my dear wife, Lilith, who also departed this life, two years ago, July 29th 1917. Gone but not forgotten. You missed me. Since from earth you passed away. And our hearts are nothing yet. But her loving PARENTS SISTERS, AND BROTHERS. GROSS—In sad but loving remembrance of my dear wife, Lilith, who also departed this life, two years ago, July 29th 1914. My heart is sad and lonely. My grief to dear you. But when the will come, I care not now. That I may with her dwell. From a world of pain and sorrow. To a land of peace and rest, To a land of death and death. Where you have found eternal rest. We loved her, yes we loved her But angels loved her best And angels loved her best To sonnies shining shore. By her husband and children, JOHN W. GROSS, MARY M. GROSS AND LEROY. SIMMS—In loving remembrance of my dear nephew. Gordon H. who lived his life one year ago, July 1918. By his loving aunt. MRS. E. HENDERSON. YOUNG—In sad and loving remembrance of our dear mother, Annet, who departed this life two years as July 23rd, 1917. We loved her, dear mother, But not with outward show; For our hearts that mourn sheerly Mourn silently and low. We often sit and think of you, But not with outward show; For memory is the only thing. That grief can its own. MRS. MARY TURNER, MRS. LARA GREEN, MRS. ALVENE WORTON AND MRS. J. F. OLIVER There will be a grand pastoral wedding reception held in St. Luke's Church. Spring 2015 will be held on Thursday evening. First list, at $3.30 O'clock in honor of the pastor. Rev. R. C. Williams. The committee is preparing to make this event a special occasion. The special program is being prepared for his special occasion. Same well known ministers will be bcordially invited. Tickets for sale by commu- NOTICE! Sunday, July 20th, was one of the biggest events of the year. It was a Church for a long time Following Evangelists were present and conducted the services morning Mrs. Phoebe Wheatly, Mrs. Cora Banks, Mrs. Martha Dorey, Mrs. Matilda Kersey, were among those who rendered both services were inspiring. Our pastor is at Frederick, entertaining Grand Lodge of Knights of Templars. B. Coy. B. Bishon, pastor Margaret Wilson. Secretary. THE TWENTY-FIRST ANIVERSARY RECORDING AND PRE-SENTATION Given by the United Standing Association at SHARP ST. MEMORIAL F. CHURCH, Dohlin and Slinger Wednesday. July 23, 1919, at 8 Menu- Chicken salad, ham, rolls too. Course of admission, 25 cents. Mrs. Maggie Parker, president Mrs. M. J. Naylor, pastor. Rev. M. J. Naylor, pastor. J. HOWARD PAYNE ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Office 514 St. Paul St. Mt. Vernon 2171 Residence 1006 Linden Ave Mt. Vernon 3019-J. THE REAL BOX TAILOR HARRY THE BUSY TAILOR (SOUTH GREENS) HOTEL INDIANA 22 N. INDIANA AVE Atlantic City, N. J. Invites your patronage Satisfaction Guaranteed. The largest, the best, and the nearest hotel to the boardwalk. W F. Cozart, Prop. Real Estate, houses and apartments for rent in all parts of the city. Phone 2374-J CARTER AND WRIGHT'S STUDIO MORGAN BUILDING 902 N. EUTAW STREET Where to go to have your photo taken by first-class artist, E. Victor Wright, 18 years experience. All work guaranteed. Babies a Specialty. Open daily from 9 n. m. to 6 p. m. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday until 9 p. m. Sundays from 1 to 6 p. m. Slias C. Carter and E. V. Wright. TRADE MARK BY GARDEN "Good Health from long life and rest, To those who a Fairy Stone Purses" HOW MANY OF YOU in this great city of ours are unhappy? How many of you are drifting away from home and into the path that leads to wreck and ruin? How many of you have brains and best use of your life in order to improve your life, your business, and realize your everlasting treasures? How many of you, obessed by some evil person, tormented by evil habits, obessed by some evil spirit, in a vision God revealed to me, to organize a benefit. The movement to benefit you, though God has started, a membership, will succeed. The instructions to use and Set on the right road to happiness and a successful blessen. 166 No one can be more or successful than God, without good help. The lasting good comes from God through Writer, Preachers, etc., God's word dertful words and works recorded in books. You can learn general life conditions and every thing that goes to make you happy in the future Society and the advanced helping knowledge. Spiritualism is not fortune telling, and it is not religious, like religion and a science. Spiritualism means to converse with unseen intelligences and is an ancient Egyptian the spiritualism was the very foundation of the National Library. Baugh taught the illiquid that the soul was immortal and the invisible world is but the picture of the invisible spirit. The Disciples were all Spiritual, not house not made with hauds eternal in heaven! He had visions eternal in heaven! Spiritual intelligence speaking to him out of the unseen. Read what the Bible says: "Now concerning spiritual gifts, brethren, would not not diversify of gifts but the same spirit. But the manifestations of knowledge fulth, gifts of healing, the working of miracles, prophesy, discerning of spirits and all other gifts" God sends his spiritual teachers and preschoolers one every age, to every church. ARE YOU TROUBLED? Let Rev. Leo, S. Osman unfold your life, to through his powerful Spirit. Guides is our Scripture Society Membership are now extended to all who have left, lingered in institutions of improving life. Private consultations and readings only on Mondays, Tuesday and Weekends. Of rehearses all days and evenings. Hours from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 909 N. Fremont Ave Bet, Mosher and Lafayette. CLOSED SEPTEMBER 10 ..THE OCEAN HOUSE.. SEA ISLE CITY, N. J. This hotel is right on the ocean front. It has wide porches, large conservatory, dining room, where one can a beautiful view of the sea while dining, and every room opens on the ocean. Write for special rates for July Room and Board. Personally managed by N.Y. June 14. Ph. Thurst, Embrust street, Embrust, N.Y. Address after June 22. Ocean house, Sea Isle, N. J. OPENS APRIL 1 UNTIL NOV. 15 1919 HOTEL DALE CAPE MAX. N. J. e Comfort and Elegance without Extravagance IHIS MAGNIFICENT HOTEL LOST IN THE MOST BEAUTIFUL SEAHOUSE RESORT IN THE WORLD, is replete with superlative in construction, appointments, service and refined patronage. Orchestra daily, garage, bath houses, the most beautiful premises. Special attention given to ladies and children. Send for booklet. With Sanfarlamn added in plumbers, the University of Penn in attendance. E. W. DALE, OWNER CAPE MAY, N. J. and all ARTHUR L. MACBETH PHOTO, ARTIST Studio: 1030 PENNA AVE. BALT/MORE FIRST CLASS PHOTOS Goss On. Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Daily Sundays by appointment Thursday and Saturday Evenings Until 10. If you have none we make it. If you have none we make it. Phone Mt. Vernon 1434-W Established 1886. LIFE BETTERMENT BOOKS The rivers hand book and 2 packages of the great fine book $1.99. The great dream book and 2 packages of helping income powder $1.99. The Great Book of Moses Spirit art the 6th book and 4 packages of the wonderful book $1.99. The Science of a new healthy life and 4 packages of income $1.99. Secrets of success books, tells how to advance in life in every way and 6 of the great incense powder $2.00. Mental intelligence develop your mind and brain power, let us then mind powers and tells how to overcome the evil influences on book and two packages of incense powder for $2.00. Psychology, the art of telling the events in life by the crystal guide the book and two packages of the great incense powder for $2.00. The great palm book and 2 packages of incense $1.00. The great palm book and 2 packages of incense $2.00. Personal magnification, the secret knowledge of missing people like you and treat you right in love, friendship and marriage; social, business, how to draw the things to yourself through the second knowledge and you like the magnetic lode stone. It is a great book read with great profit by the smartest people in the country, the great incense all for only $2.00 The power of concentration is another great book, which teaches you to control your mind power and how to cultivate the concentration so as to achieve the greatest business man have used contrition with the most wonderful results to every condition in life and what you want to improve. It is a wonder book and 2 packages of incense for $2.00. Business power, a wonderful book in life, in book and $ packages of the incense for $5.00. Success power a wonderful book read and studied by our best friends in life, in book and $ packages of incense for $10.00. A very complete book on Personal Magnetism, the secret power of achievement $3.00. A great course of the higher helping knowledge, the secret powers of concentration, then, in type written style, $15.00. s and tuesday k. all 9 a. at Ave Hundreds of other great works that cannot be listed here, but can be seen at the police. Call or send your order to Rev. Leo. S. Osman, 909 N. Fremount Ave. Baltimore Md THE CHURCH A RELIGIOUS AT THE PEOPLE Bond and Joie One of the coolest Church FROM JULY 15th REV. HELENA A. A. (Better Known as I The Great World's Evangelist. Each night 8:30. Except Sat. Come and bring a friend. Mr. C. E. Perry, church clerk. VICTORY $33,000 AUSPICE Bethel Church to WEDNESDAY, A. Every one who assisted in the and assist the Bishops, Press Archbishops, W. Sampe this HARRISON M. DO. Lunch and Befre Thaddeus Coppe Fare Round Trip Boat leaves foot Broadway Well, what do you know? Methodist Brotherhood —WILL GIVE FIRST GRADE AT GREENWOOD Take Elliott City or Rolling Rock Tuesday, Aug. 5th, 5th Southern Star Band, PA ADMISSION 25 CENTS Thomas H. Franklin, Pres Robt. H. Shep R. B. H. Johnson, Gen. —THE M MT. CALVARY WINDSOR HEIGHTS, ANNUAL CH BEGINNING SUNDAY CLOSING SUNDAY Many friends who would like to city are invited to worship w and shade. Come HOW TO REACH THE GROVE Hill car, get off at M. Holly Road, where you can be secured by a 10 CENTS FOR ROUND TRI JACOR TRIPP, Captain REV. W. T. Grand Sunday School WEDNESDAY, A. EBENEZER A. M. I. FARE ROUND TRIP, TO MUSIC BY THE SOUTHERN S Rain or shine. All Sund Tickets can be secured by a Culinary Dock, under manager Society, Mrs. Margar Rev. Charles Stewart, Pastor. FOR SALE—LARGE 3 1800 BLOCK EAST $1350.00. Term Apply any day after 6 1911 EAST C WANTED—A FIRST CITY $8.00 Per Week and No washing, ironing or h Mrs. L. Friedenwald. Park Heights Avenue Take Emory Grave or Pilsenh ave, and Pinkney Road. Large AGREAT ENDING Prices Reduced to one half A Special Price Men's Suits Made to O Don't Miss This Chance. C. H. CO LOUS AVENUE PEOPLES CO. and Jefferson St. West Churches in 15TH TO THE NINA ARKANS on as Rev. Le angelist, will con- cept Saturdays friend. Come co- mmercial. 1 33,000 A RELIGIOUS AWAKENING AT THE PEOPLES CHURCH One of the coolest Churches in East Baltimore FROM JULY 15th TO THE 31st, 1919. REV. HELENA ARKANSAS MASON (Better Known as Rev. Lena A. Mason) The Great World's Evangelist, will conduct a series of meetings Each night 8:30. Except Saturdays. Sundays 3 & 8 p. m. Come and bring a friend. Come early. Come praying. Mr. C. E. Perry, church clerk. Rev. C. Ed. Browne, Pastor VICTORY $33,000 EXCURSION AUSPICES OF Bethel Church to Brown's Grove WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13th, 1919 Every one who assisted in the great Rally is invited to go with and assist the Bishops, Presiding Elders, Pastors and the Archbishops, W. Sampson Brooks to celebrate this event HARRISON M. DODD'S ORCHESTRA Lunch and Befreshments on sale Thaddeus Copeland, Chairman Fare Round Trip - 25 Cents Boat leaves foot Broadway 9 a. m. and 2 p. m. Well, what do you know about that? The Methodist Brotherhood of St. Paul M. E.Church FIRST GRAND OUTIMG AT GREENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK Take Ellicott City or Rolling Road Cars, get off at Winters Avenue. Tuesday, Aug. 5th, '19 2 to 11:30 p. m. Southern Star Band, Prof. Fred Pinder, Leader ADMISSION 25 CENTS WAR TAX 3 CENTS BEGINNING SUNDAY, AUGUST 3rd, 1919 CLOSING SUNDAY, AUGUST 17th Many friends who would like to spend a few hours out of the hot city are invited to worship with us. Fresh water, pure air and shade leaf. Come out and enjoy yourself. HOW TO REACH THE GROVE-Take or transfer to your Window Hill car, get off at Mt. Holly Bridge, go on your Windsor Hill Road, where you will be greeted from the church. 10 CENTS FROM BONN TRIP. Wait for the conveyance. JACOB TRIP, Captain JOSEPH GROSS, Chairman REV. W. T. BROWN, Pastor. Grand Sunday School Outingto Brown's Grove WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6th, 1919 PRENZEER A. M. E. SUNDAY SCHOOL Tickets can be secured by any of the officers and teachers. Culinary Dept. under management of Woman's Mite Missionary Society. Mrs. Margaret Stewart. President. Rev. Charles Stewart. Pastor. Charles Tolson. Superintendent No washing, ironing or housework. Home at nights. Mrs. L. Friedenwald. Telephone 171 Liberty Park Heights Avenue and Pinkney Road. Take Emory Grove. Pikeville Car, get off corner Park Heights ave, and Pinkney Road. Large white house with stone wall around. AGREAT ENDING OF SPRING SALE!! AGREAT ENDING OF SPRING SALE!! Prices Reduced to one half on Skirts, Silk and Serges. A Special Price on Ladies' Suits Men's Suits Made to Order and Ready to Wear. Don't Miss This Chance. Come see for yourself at BISHOP'S CUT-RATE BEAUTY AND HAIR ST 1425 PENNSYLVAN Branch; 1313 Arctic We make the old look beautiful. Use Bishop's 3 in 1 BISHOP'S CUT-RATE BEAUTY PARLOR AND HAIR STORE 1425 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., Balto. Branch: 1313 Arctic Ave, Atlantic City, N. J. We make the old look young and the young beautiful. Use Bishop's 3 in 1 Hair Grower, Tonic and Shampoo, and keep a healthy suit of hair. It's good for bad hair and not bad for good hair. For Sale at Drug Stores and Beauty Parlors. 533 McMECHEN ST Etting and Dolphin Streets Dr. M. J. Naylor, Pastor CAMPING IN THE WILDERNESS Beginning with Sunday,the Church will camp in the basement with the musicians approaching those of the wilderness. Music by our great choir n. specialty. A special sermon series by Barton. This Sunday. Be sure to hear the first. S AWAKENING PLES CHURCH Farerson Streets Archives in East Baltimore TO THE 31st, 1919. BASKANSAS MASON Rev. Lena A. Mason) will conduct a series of meetings sundays. Sundays 3 & 8 p. m. Come early. Come praying. Rev. C. Ed. Browne, Pastor 2000 EXCURSION CICES OF To Brown's Grove AUGUST 13th, 1919 Great Rally is invited to go with leading Elders, Pastors and the Brook's to celebrate event DDD'S ORCHESTRA freshments on sale Island, Chairman p - 25 Cents way 9 a. m. and 2 p. m. Now about that? The of St. Paul M. E. Church THEIR AND OUTIMG ELECTRIC PARK Cars, get off at Winters Avenue, 1919 2 to 11:30 p. m. of. Fred Pinder, Leader WAR TAX 3 CENTS Richard White, Treas. Board, Fin. Sec. Rural Manager of Outing MEMBERS A. M. E. CHURCH WILL HOLD THEIR CHURCH CAMP AY, AUGUST 3rd, 1919 AY, AUGUST 17th spend a few hours out of the hot with us. Fresh water, pure air and cooler or transfer to any Windsor Bridge, go down the Windsor Hill way to and from the church. Pait. Wait for the conveyance. JOSSEPH GROSS, Chairman BROWN, Pastor. Outingto Brown's Grove AUGUST 6th, 1919 E. SUNDAY SCHOOL ALL 25 CENTS EAR BAND, Prof. Pinder, Leader Day Schools are invited. FORMATION SEE BILLS y of the officers and teachers. of Woman's Mite Missionry Steward, President. Charles Tolson, Superintendent HISTORY 6 ROOM HOUSE ST BIDDLE STREET can be arranged. p. m. Sunday all day. HASE STREET. CLASS COOK IN SUBURBS Carfare. 2 in family housework. Home at nights. Telephone 171 Liberty ce and Pinkney Road. Car. get off corner Park Helghts white house with stone wall around. OF SPRING SALE!!! On Skirts, Silk and Serges. On Ladies' Suits Order and Ready to Wear. Come see for yourself at NAWAY'S NIA AVE., Balto. Ave, Atlantic City, N.J. k young and the young Hair Grower, Tonic and healthy suit of hair. It's not bad for good hair. stores and Beauty Parlors PHONE Madison 3533-J ARLOR E PARKSIDE CHURCH S. p. m., Sermon by Rev. Albert Hamilton. Wednesday night, Class Meeting Thursday night, Prayer Meeting. Sister Lucy Brown, Secretary. ALLEN A. M. E. CHURCH Corner Lexington and Carlin Sta. Corner Harold, Stephanel, Pastor. We corollarly parents and scholars. Special program and install S. p. m., Platform Meeting by the women, Good singing, good singing from the women. All reports from the women. We cordially invite all women from everywhere. Mrs. P. S. Stephan, chairman. Howard D. Brenn, S. S. LEADENHALL ST. BAPT. CHURCH Leadenhall School. Brown Pastor. WOMEN'S DAY ALL DAY 11 a. m., Sermon by Dr. Anguilla Bishop Brenn. 2:30 p. m., Sunday School. Wm. Roberts, Supt. at 3:00 p. m., Meeting at time the Ladies' Auxiliarities of all the churches are requested to be present. S. p. m., Sermon by Dr. Beale Elliott, pastor of Sharon Baptist Church. Special music has been by Mr. J. K. Wilson, musical director. Take McMahon or Fremont Ave. car south get on at Hamburg St. John Wilson, Church Clark AMES MEMORIAL M. E. CHURCH Carey and Baker Streets Rev. Albert J. Mitchell. Pastor The Community Church was a Com- munity Hall. 6:30 a.m. Class, Thos. Lane, Leader. 9:20 a.m. m. Sunday School. 9:30 a.m. School, Depot. 11 a. m. Sermon, the Rev. J. W. Lemon, D. D. Gloucester county, Va. 8:15 to 9:15 Sermon and Song-serve. The Daily Vacational Bible School will observe its closing and exhibition Tuesday night, interested in becoming members of the I. O. St. Links are invited to be present Tuesday, Juvi club which time a new club will be formed. ST. LUKE U. A. M. E. B. CHURCH Surg. St. near McElerry. Spring St. near McElderry. Rev. R. C. Williams, Pastor. 11 n. m. Meeting. 11 n. m. Preaching. 2:30 p. m. Sunday School. Mrs. Offord, School. 7 p. m. New Jersey League. 8 p. m. Preaching. Charles Offord, Church Clerk. All are welcome. Rev. L. Powers, Pastor Res. 1156 Drulid Hill Avenue Baltimore, Md. subject "I am not Worthy." Bro. E. Foster, leader; Bro. Warner, trucker; Bro. Fred, McCray, band coach. All are welcome. ST. MATTHEWS EVANGELICAL METHODIST CHURCH Spring, Sermon; Rev. Middleton Fraser, Pastor Res. 2:82 Ashlain Ave. 11 a.m., Sermon by the Pastor. 2:24 Middleton School. 2:31 J. N. Hodges, Surpt. 8 p. m., Sermon by the Erangellies Thursday night Class Meeting. You are welcome to worship with us at all our services. THE PEOPLES CHURCH Bond and Jefferson Sts. Rev. C. Ed. Browne, Pastor 2:24 Middleton School. 9:30 a.m., Class Meeting. 11 a.m., Sermon by the Pastor 2:30 p. m., Sunday School. 2:30 p. m., Sermon to the Honorary Society by Sister Mattie Lewis. 8 p. m. Sermon by the pastor to the Lower Board. Tuesday night Rev. J. W. Norris D. D. pastor Waters A. M. E. Church will preach with choir and congregation. Thursday night, Rev. Ennela will preach. C. E. Perry, church clerk. WATERS A. M. E. CHURCH Rev. J. W. Norris, D. D., Pastor. 127 Alsquith Street. Wednesday 8 p. m., all the Classes and Twentieth Century Class will meet. Thursday 8 p. m., Band Prayer Meeting. Friday 8 p. m., Boys Training Class Mr. J. Woodhousen. And the Official Board. Mr. J. Woodhousen, Supt. Mr. J. W Woodhousen, Sec CHRIST INSTITUTION CHURCH Epst. St. near Monument Sunday 6:30 a.m. J. Javier and Pralee Services Rev. Rev. J. H. Donghua, leader. 6:30 a.m. Sunday School. 2:30 p.m. Mr. Sunday School. 6:30 p.m. G. Weal, Super. 2:30 p.m. Class meeting No. 8. 6 p.m. Preaching services. 2:30 p.m. Sunday services. 2:30 p.m. Monday, class meetings Nos. 2-4-10. 6 p.m. Tuesday, class meeting Nos. 1-4-10. 8:30 p. m. Wednesday class meetings. Nov. 3-2 ings, everybody is wowre at these services. J. R. Ayers, Secretary. CENTENIAL M. B. CHURCH REV. W. R. Jackson, Trustor 11 a. m. Sermon by the Pastor. Subject "Half an Hour With One of" 2:30 p. m. Sunday School. Mr. Luther Mitchell, Acting Supt. 8 p. m. Sermon by the Pastor. Subject "Half an Hour With One of" The Pastor will preach to a spiritual summer on the 12 Apostles and the Prophets, Beginning Sunday 10:30 a. m. 7:20 to 8 p. m. "Come where His Honor Dwelleth and give Praise unto Him." ASBURY M. E. GHURCH Rev. C. E. Hedges, Pastor. 11 a. m. Sermon by the Pastor. Subject "Sunday School. Mr. C. T. Stewart, Supt. 5 to 6 p. m., Vesper Services. All are welcome. MADISON ST. PRESBYTERIAN Madison St. near Park Ave. Milton, Minister Residence 552 Dolphin Street 11 a. m., Sermon by the Pastor. 3 p. m., Sunday School. APOSTOLIC FATHA ASSEMBLY 1122 Lexington Street. Filzer J. M. Turpin, Pastor. Sunday, m. and p. m., and Service Services not except Monday and Saturday at 8 o'clock. GLACE A. M. M. MISSION Rev. J. H. G. Dougues, Pastor Will hold its first Woman's Day Rail- way on Sunday. In St. John's C. M. P. Church, corner of Orchard and Tessier Sts. All missionary societies are invited. Mrs. Dingis, Mrs. Rev. W. W. Hoy, Pastor. ST. MATTHEWS E. CHURCH 2121 Broad Street. Rev. R. A. Green, Pastor Sunday, July 27th Great Rally known as Joshua Day. Lowest lift, led by the 10:30 a. m. Lovecast led by the Class Leaders. 11 a. m., Sermon by the pastor or stranger. 12 a. m., Sunday School. 12:30 p. m., Rev. W. C Tongue. 12:30 p. m., pastor or stranger. 12:30 p. m., pastor or stranger are requested to pay in their full amount as we hope to raise the $1,000.00. ST. JAMES U. A. M. F. CHURCH 1006 Whatcat Street Republican Hospital Order of services Sunday, July 27. 11 a. m., Rev. D. D. Lee. 12 a. m., Rev. D. D. Lee. 12:30 p. m., Special sermon to the Boy Scouts No. $8 by Rev. Wm. J. Robinson. 12:30 p. m., Special sermon to the Boy Scouts No. $8 by Rev. Wm. J. Robinson. 8:30 p. m., Rev. C. H. Chester. Rev. R. L. Williams, presiding elder. Hold Up Your Hand For Jesus At GRACE M. E. CHURCH N. CHURCH ONE YEAR.....$1.50 SIX MONTHS.....$.85 THREE MONTHS.....$.50 SINGLE COPY.....$.05 The new Mercy Hospital in Philadelphia plans to be the largest institution in the North' to care for Negroes. Baltimore is willing until the Victory Hospital is completed. Teachers in Georgia are paid an average of $119 per year, next to the Carolinas the lowest wage in the United States. Ought to be more money in working after school. Two whites have been sent to penitentiary and twenty eight others, who pled guilty of complicity will receive terms, following the lynching of a white man in Alabama. The first time Alabama has punished lynchers. Alabama places itself on the map by refusing to adopt the suffrage amendment. Reason: scared of the votes of colored women. Hundreds of colored laborers are said to be leaving Northeast Alabama, lured from farms, mines and lumber camps by high wages up North, says the Atlanta, Constitution. Thus far town laborers only have moved, but the movement is beginning to reach the country. It appears as if the motto of the Southern Negro is: "No vote, no work, move." The only thing that kept the Washington riots from causing as severe a loss of life as the East St. Louis massacre was the preparedness of Washington's colored population. Not in all cases, but in a fair proportion, armed colored men and women used revolvers to good effect on mobs attacking their homes. The result has been that white marines, soldiers and sailors inciting the outbreak confined their attentions largely to single individuals that to be unarmed and without hope of early assistance. Inability of the Washington police to locate the maniac, who has assaulted one colored and several white women is given as the cause of the riot. Whites angered, began to hold the whole colored population responsible for the assaults, and attacked innocent Negroes wherever they could be found. One of the lamentable features of the affair was that in practically every instance, white sailors, soldiers or marines were foremost in the fighting. With disgraceful disregard for the obligations which go with the wearing of the uniform, these men took the lead in fomenting riots and assaults relying on their familiarity with firearms to cow the Negroes. To the credit of the colored citizenry in the Capital, it can be said that in the first stages of the riot, no single colored man took the initiative in creating disturbances. Every time whites were the aggressors, until human nature could stand it no longer, and in pure defense groups of men in fifties and hundreds went out to show the attackers that the colored population was not altogether defenseless. One of the results of the rioting will be the bringing home to President Wilson of the disgrace and the extent of mob reign in the country, and the necessity of a firm Federal hand in nipping it in the bud as well as in punishing the offenders. President Wilson's proclamation has had as much effect on mob violence in the country as water on duck's back. With riots at the very door of the White House the President must see, unless it is impossible to get his thots home from Europe, that sterner measures are necessary. DR. FLEXNER ON COLORED REPRESENTATION ON SCHOOL BOARD. Asked to express his views as to whether or not colored people should have representation on the Board of Education. Doctor Abraham Flexner of New York, secretary of the General Education Board writes to the AFRO-AMERICAN: "I should not like to express an offhand opinion as to the question of representation on boards of education. What you want on boards of education is people interested in educational and social problems, not representatives of this, that, or the other interest. The question is, however, a difficult one." As the executive secretary of the General Education Board, which Mayor Broening is arranging to have make a survey of the local school system, Dr. Flexner's view is worth more than passing notice. Coming from New York where, the people all go to the same schools, white and colored together Dr. Flexner will meet an entirely new situation when he comes to Baltimore where white and colored schools are separate. He will find a School Board in Baltimore that admits colored schools to be inferior to white, and that colored teachers ought to be paid less than white teachers in the higher schools. Unless the report is, but a rumor, even now the School Board has under consideration the recommendation of a new salary scale in which salaries of white elementary school teachers will be more than the salary for colored. The APRO-AMERICAN agrees with Dr. Flexner and the ideal situation demands a School Board interested in the school problem and not representative of special interests. HOWEVER, in Baltimore, WE ARE FACING FACTS NOT THEORIES. In Baltimore, WE HAVE TWO SEPARATE school, SYSTEMS, and as Bishop John Hurst suggests, it is a matter of "SIMPLE JUSTICE" that demands that representatives of the colored people assist in the administration of their own LETS LEND HIM A HELPING HAND OUR WEAKER BROTHERS YOU AND I THE ROAD OF RIGHTEOUSNESS AND PROGRESS VICE AND CRIME The "Big Sick" or the "Glad Hand," Which? PEOPLE'S FORUM Pythians Close The Abyssinian delegate left Washington last week for Detroit, Michigan. Henry Ford is not there at present, so that on their hunt for information they are just as well off. This column is reserved for our readers. They take the responsibility for whatever appears here. Letters, of not more than 200 words The young woman companion of a tall man took up the task of ensuing passage from patio passport was white, turned out to be colored, and it took three witnesses the best part of the morning to convince the police magistrate she told the truth. A large part of the time of otherwise sensible Americans is spent in finding out whether folks are white or colored. If Colored People Can Ride in Palmulms Then "To Hell With Government Control of Railroads" says Alabama Cracker. To Alabama State Legislature (Ala.) "On May 31, I left Baltimore on a train carrying a through Pullman car from New York to New Orleans. A lady, with two small children, had reservation in the same Pullman car that I had mine. The children were of an age with which I could speak with mother. The train left Baltimore about $ or $390 P. M. and Washington about 2:50 or 10 P. M. This lady had retired with her two children, occupying the lower berth. At Washington, a Negro man came aboard the train over this lady with her two little children. This Negro has a three ticket from Washington thru Virginia, Tennessee and little more of Georgia, that the state of Alabama down into or thru Mississippi. This was on from known as No. 41, leaving Washington on the night THE NEGRO IN THE CONFEDERATE ARMY It has always been a question in the minds of people how the slaves of the South could be true to their Confederate masters, when the Union forces were fighting for their freedom. Charles H. Wesley, instructor of History in Howard University, in the leading article of the current issue of the Journal of Negro History, answers this question when he states, "colored people living in the states in rebellion did not understand the issues of the war and of necessity could not until the Union forces had invaded the hostile sections and gradually spread the information . . . . that the war was to exterminate slavery." Mr. Wesley reminds his readers also that in the beginning of the war, runaway slaves captured by the Union armies were "carefully returned to their masters," which action undoubtedly served to confuse the slaves' idea of what the war was about. "Returning from Birmingham of June 5, after great difficulty, I managed to get reservation in a leather suit and covered all the way up, white passenger after passenger, to my certain knowledge, were returned reservation in this car; somewhere between Knoxville and Brisbane, two Negro men came into this car and were assigned to section I, the lower birth of section 2, opposite section I was occupied by a young lady. Section 2, next to section I was occupied by two women. General Butler, who commanded the Union army that took the city of New Orleans, asked several prominent colored men, why they had accepted service "under the Confederate Government, which was set up for the purpose of holding their brotheren in slavery." The reply was they dare not refuse, that they hoped, by serving the Confederates to advance nearer to the equality with the whites, and concluded by stating they hoped to throw the weight of their class with the cause in which their own deserved hopes were identified. "It is a well recognized fact that the newspapers moll public opinion. After reading your news item, I am wondering if the government control of railroads are under the operation of the railroads. During the war, Mr. Westley shows that the white South employed thousands of slaves in road building, supply and labor divisions, and in digging trenches, but it was not until 1864, and the war was nearly lost, that the Confederate Congress passed an act to raise and drill 300,000 able bodied colored men as fighting troops to repel the invasion. It is the opinion of Mr. Westley that these Negra fighting Confederate units been authorized a year sooner and put in the field, the war would have dragged at least six months longer. "Necessity," he says, "forced the white south to call upon their slaves as the last resort." How dire that necessity was can be seen from the fact that all able bodied whites from 16 to 60 were already under Confederate arms, causing General Grant, to remark that the South had robbed "the cradle and the grave" in order to fill their armies. "These facts which I have given you in regard to the passenger accommodation are not exaggerated. It is a fact, and every word of it is true. "If this is the policy of the government control of railroads, per cent of the revenue of one percent of the white men of Alabama with me, to hell with United States government control of railroads. "It is not at all necessary to call your attention to the annoyance of having to meet these Negro men in the toilet and wash room. You can imagine what it is." M. R. FELLOWS. Washington conferences Organization Holds Session Not only did slaves serve in the Confederate army, but many thousands of free colored men also enlisted and served with honor (?) The traitorous conduct of the colored soldiers, who served in the Confederate army during the rebellion, is softened by Mr. Wesley's narrative, which shows that the propaganda spread by the slave owners led the slaves to believe that the invading Union forces were ruthlessly attacking independent states and destroying the homes that the slaves held dear. Washington, July 23.—The nineteenth annual session of the Woman's Missionary Society of the Washington M. E. Conference, which opened at M. Zion M. E. Church on Thursday of last week, will be held Sunday night. The next session will be held at Parkersburg, W. Va. Rev. George Frazier Miller, the Socialist of New York, has stated on several occasions that the action of the Southern slaves in aiding the Confederacy was the darkest act of reason that the colored race has ever known. To the mind of Rev. Miller, slaves should have killed the women and children of the Confederate masters at the front, burned and laid waste to their homes and crops, armed themselves and cut their way into the Union lines. The convention voted to aid in the establishment of a seminary girls within the bounds of the concession grounds on an inspiring sermon-Sunday morning. The collections amounted to over $2,100. The officers include: Mrs. S. E. Baldwin, Baltimore; Mrs. J. E. Cammings, Washington; Mrs. J. E. Cammings, Washington; president; Mrs. Mamie E. Jones, Washington; correspondent secretary; Mrs. Hattie Reason, Washington; recording secretary; Mrs. Mamie Reason, Washington; recording secretary; treasurer; Miss Iris E. Cammings, Baltimore; secretary of women's work; Mrs. E. W. S. Thomas, Baltimore; secretary of women's work; Mrs. Teresa Lee, Baltimore; secretary of home guards and mothers' levels. Certainly the fidelity of the slaves to their Southern masters, is a matter that no red blooded Negro can view without being heartily ashamed of. However, it is well to appreciate the difficulties and the physical ignorance of the Negro in the Confederate army, who, without knowing it, fought to keep him- "ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUIVALENT." The Declaration of Independence makes this statement, but if it were true, there would be no need of the picture above. If the Declaration were true, there would have been no Revolution, and no Race Problem, and no Individual Problem, so that this is just the reason the cartoon in the next column is pertinent. Nature endowed every man with inalienable rights alike, but at the same time, gave some good eyesight, and others poor eyesight; some rich parents, and from others nature took away even the poor poverty stricken mothers and fathers that they had. Some children are born black, some yellow, some red and brown and white, and each of them has a varying chance for success or failure in life. Out of the inequalities with which NATURE has endowed her children, arise the responsibility of the strong for the weak. Either the strong must give the weak the gland hand or one day stand before the bar of public justice and admit they used the big stick. Where do you stand? Have you given to VICTORY HOSPITAL? Have you gotten behind the movement for a colored man on the school board and a better school system for the city? Are you going out of your way, when necessary to patronize the Negroes who are in business. Have you studied the CO-OPERATIVE PLAN with the idea of applying it to your church and fraternal organization, so that these institutions contribute something practical as well as spiritual to community life. Are you urging the city to provide for the children by establishing playgrounds and a swimming pool in the congested sections. In every one of these movements YOU ARE LITERALLY TAKING MOLD OF THE MAN WHO IS DOWN IN THE MIME OF VICE AND CRIME, which are at bottom only IGNORANCE AND POVERTY, AND HELPING THEM UP ON THE WAY TO RIGHTEOUSNESS AND PROGRESS. The job of helping our weaker brothers is bigger for than giving a beggar alms. It is a community job. Are you welding the BIG STICK or the GLAD HAND. Continued from Page 1 $2,000 in the treasury. The report of the Grand Keeper of Records and Seat, Josie Diggs showed the total worth of the subordinate lodges to be $8,175.22. The amount paid sick during the year was $4,676.72; amount paid funerals $4,160.47; widows $1,256.50; children $265.29; value invested $13,045.42; value on funds $13,579.00; balance on funds $31,799.92. Total number of members 2,618. Other reports were read by grand lecturer, Lonnie Branzby; grand medical examiner, Dr. C. M. C G. C. GEORGE A. WATTK. Fowler; grand attorney, Wm. C. Mcardell and, late, Rev. C. B. Bishop. The concluding session was held this morning when representatives from the Grand Court, the female branch of the order, brought fraternal greetings and reported over group members. Among the resolutions adopted were instructing the secretary to secure names of all Pythians who have entered military or naval service the same to be suitably printed and placed in the Castle Hall. The Grand Chancellor was also authorized to solicit the cooperation of the various lodges in the purchase of stock for the proposed New Pythian Castle. The salaries of the grand chancellor was increased $100 and the grand keeper of records and seal, $50. The next meeting will be held at St. Michael's Md. The following officers were elected: George A. Watty, grand chancellor; Dr. C. I. Browns, grand chancellor; Dr. J. Browns, grand chancellor of records and seal; M. F. M. Clair, master of exchucquer; W. C. McCard, grand attorney; AllenFritzmaster at arms; Dr. J. U. King, grand loguer; Dr. W. H. Hawkins and John Layton were elected past, grand chancellors, and Josiah Diggs, M. H. St. Clair, Truly Hatehate and Clinton A. Davis were elected represen- tors of the supreme lodge which will meet next month at Atlantic City. BECAME COOK TO GET ACROSS THE OCEAN Boston, Mass., July 22—Refreshed passengers to go to France by the Trainer, eighth-city edition of the Boston Timeline, crossed the ocean-know whereworld-worthy work went to New York and learned cooking in cheap lunch establishments, to be enrolled on our cookbook, having as soon as he got to France conference to the race simulation in America. Mrs. Thomas R. Smith, Mrs. Wittich, Mrs. Fitzgerald for spending the summer at Hampton and neighboring cities. A. N. P. Service TIT FOR TAT It is to be deplored that eleven Americans have been murdered in Shreve within the past 18 months, by eight Negro citizens have been killed in the United States within the past six months—Springfield, Mass., Republ A HOT RACE From Washington, D. C., the seat of the government of this country, comes the report that the police department of New York is in a race. A Negro is wanted for a crime. If the police catch him first, he will be tried for the offence. If the police catch him second, tortuosity, and without a trial—Battle Creek, Mich., News HIGH TIME If this country of ours is what we like to think of it as being—a land of justice—a true democracy—then it is an angst that it made a convincing demonstration to that effect by protesting Lyndhams—Syracuse, N.C. (standard) SELF DETERMINATION "Self Determination" is what Americans grew of this country, and why not, all other people are to have the ability to determine, Baltimore, MD. Man, man, man, man. AMERICA AGAIN The fact remains that the disgrace of one section of the country is the one that does not stop to consult the geography when lynchings are reported. It merely exclaims, "America's sign and symbol of the United States." (Uptheage johnlees Leager. GENEROUS HANDY Generous hands signify himself "Hunny" and process to object to any clauses and colored words and contemptive arguments. Hunny told us that we ought to have and then stops as subject to a brick wall, a brick wall, a brick wall. Listen to Hunny: "We do not need columns to state a working path between us and the church, and his right to worship in his church unimposed. Give him a drink, give him a drink, give him plenty of work to do, and pay him for the work he does. Give him the market price for his promise, honestly measured and weighted. Then close." Hundry, this stop is so sudden. New Orleans, La., Times Pleasure. READY FOR THE TEST Adams On Fire Committee Amnipolm, Md., July 21.—In announcing the committee assignments for the new U.S. Council Mayor Levy A. Albright, M.D., from the Fourth ward, on the Committee on Fire Department. EARL JOHNSON WINS AGAIN Pittsburgh, Fau., July 21.—After reminding bhine a swimmer in the mid-race of the anguished sueet of the Pittshill Press, making the fast time of 4 minutes and 34 seconds, Earl Johnson; Baltimore's perless long distance, runner entered the three mile race and finished only a step behind J. E. Wiegler, white, Johnson; E. Wiegler, white, Johnson wore the colors of the Scholastics A. A., a team of colored oath, trained by Hunter Johnson. The Scholasties were third in the meet. Old Timer Has Soldiers Try To Fourteen Pints Terrorize Color- Is Busy Writing Declaration On What Must Be Done For Race. Will Be A Hot Document. The reporter had been vainly looking high and low for Old Timer for several days and at last found him home working away in his den. The newspapers and books were plied all around him, and he had about 40 reams of paper, a gross of lead pencils and many pens, which led the reporter to believe that O. T. was working on some momentous document. "What are you doing?" asked the reporter. "Can't you see I am writing. 'I am working on my Fourteen Pins,' replied O. T. Well, if you were working on fourteen pins," said the reporter, "I might as well join you in a drink." "I didn't mean I was working on fourteen pints of whiskey, but on a declaration setting forth the race wants and must have," hotly man to the mistaken reporter. "I understand," the reporter said meekly. "You are working on Fourteen Points, like those President Wilson told Germany would be the only place which peace was considered." "Right, my boy! You have the idea." O. T. said joyfully. "With race riot in Washington almost as bad as in Petrograt descriptions still stalking abroad in the South, the colored Republicans of St. Louis up in arms because the city administration there only allows jobs and leading white Republicans in Baltimore and the State grabbing after the colored vote but not giving a dern after election. It is time to write Fourth Fists." "I heard that a prominent white man went to Comptroller Tome and asked him to appoint a colored man. The comptroller, it is said, asked such a thing might but the party." "You should said that before the election," the prominent white man is reported to have told tone, THOSE WHITE "is some white Republicans who say that colored men ought not to embarrass Mayor Browning for any office that might attract a white man. I heard that one Browning teacher should say: "You should not colored voters before the election, but we will be charitable enough to give them a few jobs." "We must have a School Board member and Mayor Browning be involved that committee of live be wants to work with that General Education Board in seeing what ails our schools." Our calls must work together for general good, like in that Victory Hospital drive. If John W. Hawkins, could dig down in his jeans and cough up $50 that he had been carrying for 50 years, then all of us can do something. I suppose your Tournament Points will not stuff, "broke in the reporter." "Hot! Well come around here nest wee and get a copy and you will see more pleas for the downtroden than President Wilson in Europe. I am going to fight like you colored soldiers the Huns, and want you to tell them Afo readers to look out. LIKES HARRY NICE "I like Harry Nice, but his political friends must do more than handshaking with the race before my vote is to help make him Governor. And you know I don't like Young man, you will have to wait until next week for a copy of those Fourteen Pints," said O. T. "You are kicking now about the Republicans making you wait so long" said the reporter. "Yes, but I will be derned If the reporter heard G. T. begin as he made a hasty getaway. EDUCATED NEGROES Des Moines, in, July 23, "No Negro with a high school or college education has ever been lynched in this country or accused of the heinous crimes which are cited for lynchings," said Lawrence C. Jones of the University of Iowa and principal of Woods school at Braxton, Miss, who spoke at Grade Methodist Church recently. "The Negro's education is neglected in the south because he has no vote. School officials know he will do for the Negro the better they will stand with the mass of their white constituents" he concluded. "Recognition extended the Negroes by white people of the south during the war against Germany has been largely withdrawn since the war ended. The paper controlled Vardman who attacked white candidates for office who attended Negro gatherings from patriotic motives. WANT PERMANENT W. C. C. S. John Berry, president of the EX Soldiers' Committee of the War Corp Community Club is circulating posthumously headquarters in New York asking that the local club be continued after the demobilization of the soldiers is completed. He also notes that the Club meets a vital need for supervised social recreation that no other local organization can properly satisfy. Card of Thans 3. We, the husband, daughter, and son, all live in Smallwood, deceased Saturday at her late residence, 96% Pleicher St. her ministers and friends who kindly provide her home during the closing hours of her life, tokens, and all kind expression of love which make us feel that earth has no place where we cannot cure PHILLIE. SMALLWOOD. GRACE DYSON, MRS. MARY E. KELLY, BENEANNE. REINAME SMALLWOOD. Continued from Page 1 men in motor cars took pot shots at police and whites wherever these showed themselves. Miss Carrie Johnson, II, shot and unloaded a motorcycle at attempting to enter her home, other white detective was wounded before she was shot in the side. Attempted up of a colored man on a motorcycle one square from the White House resulted the attackers facing a fuselade of bul- ley marine was seri- ously injured. IKE BANNISTER HELD UP Issue Bannister, special representative of the Afro-American, who sells several hundred papers each week in Washington was costed when he alighted from the W. B, and A. Electric Line about $80,000 in street and New York avenue by seizing white soldiers who wanted to know what he had in his package. "Afro-Americans" said Mr. Ban, nister. "Let's see, sell us a copy," said the soldiers, amam Mr. Bannister who opened his bundle and passed over copies. Instead of paying him, one of the soldiers said: "We have got enough of this kind of propaganda here, we don't need your Baltimore newspapers, so you just leave them with us." The soldiers were obturate and demanded either his "newspapers or his life." She slezinz some forty or fifty copies, Mr. Bannister dashed thru the crowd, that had collected and knocked over several persons eleventh street, car, and escaped. A little later when walking up You street near Seventh, an unknown colored soldier deliberately shot a white automobile driving by, the car out of control up against a nearby telegram post. An unknown white person shooting out of a second story window shot a colored man in the leg not twenty-five feet from where Mr. Bannister stood. COLORED PEOPLE DETERMINED Influential colored people are bitter over the riots, and are not in uniform for holding the whole race responsible for the assault committed by one or two persons. At the recent meeting of the Parents' League, leading speakers stated that they believed the assaults committed upon one colored woman and five white women to be mounted for the occasion. National Equal Rights League has sent a protest to President Wilson following a mass meeting at Metropolitan A. M. E. Church on Sunday, where police authorities on Sunday and asked for police protection, stating if it were not given, the colored people would protect themselves. STATIONS: FULL Located in the city are full of colored and white people arrested on the streets for rioting and maximum fines and sentences to jail being meted out. Colored people are said to have given police a machine gun ammunition to use in case of further rioting. Those who have no weapons are being armed by friends. A representative of the Afro-American was offered a service revolver by three armed persons before the war was not armed. More than a hundred persons made the trip to Baltimore and purchased arms and ammunition before police got onto the game and stopped the sale in Baltimore. casualties among the colored are: Killent: R. Broadus, unidentified boy, R. Neale, Wounded Miss Carrie Johnson, unknown girl, M. Williams, J. Harris, Roy Diggs, Frank Dused: Beaten: G. Dent, W. Tolliver, H. Fuyne, W. Thompson, W. Rollins, M. Blair, L. Jones, N. Galloway. Washington, D. C., July 23.—Dr. Carter G. Woodson, professor at Howard University and editor of *The History of the World* history, narrowly escaped a mob Sunday night. He was walking along Pennsylvania avenue, when he saw a big man in an unnexistent beating. The professor wisely retreated his steps. General Hahn, white, commanding the marines on duty in Washington issued a statement Tuesday telling them to keep the guns, but not to keep them into the streets. SOLDIER CONVICTED Amiston, Ala.,—Sergeant Edgar Caldwell, the Negro soldier convicted at a special term of the Circuit Court of Calhoun County for the murder of Cecil Clinton on the afternoon of December 15 will hang in the Calhoun County jail eight months after the commission. The Supreme Court of Alabama has handed down a decision sustaining the verdict of the Calhoun County Court and jury which inflicted the death penalty on the slayer of the street car man. The only thing which can save the from the hangman's mouse is the Thomas E. Kirby, or some unforeseen and unexpected situation, and the chances are that the soldier will pay for his crime on the gallows. Haltimore Nest No. 1, A1 American canter 'O'r Owl, wishes to thank the public for its anxiety to joinin the excursion planned to be given by Brunswick Stree, on May 16, 2014, at the airport at that onward with that money returned promptly. Those still have tickets for the design. IN THE WHIRL NOTICE TO READERS Births, marriages, and other matter for these columns may be phoned in to the Society Editor up to Wednesday night. Call Ms. Cyronn 2833, ask for society editor. Mr. and Mrs. Google Grant and cathy are spending the summer in Parkersburg, W. Va., the guest of her parents. Miss Beatrice Weaver, who has been in the city visiting and Mrs. Weaver is visiting and the editor. Miss Marion Holmes expects to spend the month of August with friends at White Hall Ma. Mr. Hamilton Murray, has had as his guest Dr. L. T. Marshall of Philadelphia. Mr. J. W. Price a leading under-taker of Richmond, Va., stopped over in Richmond to see Mrs. Lancea Price and her daughter Miss Dawney Mine Price to visit Mr. and Mrs. Hughes, and party were motoring to New York. Mrs. F. Hughes Carter and her children are spending the remainder with relatives in Lonoxie. Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Payne are receiving congratulations on the arrival of a line son born Saturday July 19th at Johns Hopkins Hospital Mrs. Adah M. Hawkins, of New York city passed through the city this week en route to Sydney. Mr. Samuel B. Attend, spent Tuesday afternoon, attending the convention of the Pythian. Mr. and Mrs. E. Leroy Taylor, have returned to the city after an extensive motor trip through the North. The infant of the late Matthew Sunday afternoon at the residence of his parents by Father Deverish, of St. Catherine the sister of Mrs. Cook, who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins, of the residence. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Wright, Dr. and Mrs. H. S. McClard, Dr. and Mrs. Titus Hawkins, Professor and Mrs. Carrington L. Lewis, Dr. and Mrs. Brown. Misses Juliett and Lucille Brown, and Mrs. Mary Smith, formerly of this city, have gone to spend the summer at Cathe Cod, Mass. A presentation of a gold watch under the aurea of theiliary of Mrs. J. Job, was made to Mr. W. H. saunders, of the P. G. others by Mrs. Emma Hall. Master Vernon Harris of 2227 Exploring the summer at City Cod. Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Hill and family of 1845 Division St., mother end and the guest of his sister. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jackson of 75 W. Mulberry St., spent last week in Cincinnati, Ohio. Mr. Clarence Johnson entertained his orchestra. Monday evening last night attended dinner at his home in Bountiful Park. Mr. Isabella Macer of 704 Tess St., daughter of Mrs. Clara Egertt the guest of join her husband, Mr. Matthew Macer. Mr. Grant Johnson, and Miss Greenson Castanion of Lexington Va., were visiting the city as guest of Mrs. Jamesurgan, of 1912 Arvette Avenue. Miss Mary T. King of 1495 Fremont Ave., has returned to Baltimore after visiting Mrs. John Wesley Hooper, of Taylor St., the guest of her sisters James Hunter, 1521 Drum Rd. Ave. Mrs. Emma Anderson of 1222 N. Carte street is visiting her mother, James Hunter at Tappanhill Virginia. Mrs. James A. D. Wilson has returned from several weeks' stay in New York City. His address was in Sumter, South Carolina this week attending the annual session of the South Carolina Grand Lodge of Pythians. Corporal Joseph T. Wilson of St. Louis street has returned from Prince William, M. W. Mrs. W. H. Wilson of 817 Washington street has attended the summer at Camponville, Md. Miss Pamie H. Smith of 2006 McCation street has been visiting friends in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Mr. L. B. Gray, of Boston, Mass. moved here last week. Miss Tigela L. 12718utter street has returned from a three month stay in Carver County, Mo. Private Benjamin and Alex. Cobert are visiting their father Mr. John T. Cobert of West River. Miss Loretta and John Cobert are visiting their father Mr. John T. Cobert of West River. Miss Loretta and John Cobert are visiting their father Mr. John T. Cobert of West River. Mrs. Benjamin Jones of 351 West Holmston street is spending the summer with relatives in Charlottetown. Mr. and Mrs. George Perkins of 125 West Holmston street are spending the vacation in Virginia. MissVivian Bannister, of Calvert Co. is the guest of Miss Ozella Davis or 218 Ritter street. Miss Margaret Taylor, a nurse in Merge Hospital, Dinamacus, is the street manager of another Carrie district of 351 West Holmston street. The Camp Fire Girls of Sharp St. Church have returned from a trip to Burlington. Md., where they camped a few days under the curre of their instructor, Miss Alexandra. Miss Charlotte Brown, of Drill Hill avenue is visiting in Annapolis. Miss Ethel Scott of Dolphin street is visiting relatives in Virginia. Mrs. Elizabeth Moulden of 126 West Holmston street is spending from a visit to readings in West River, Md. Miss Golda Tipes of 1721 Etting street is spending the summer in Atlantic City. Mrs. Rose Brown of 1821 Drill Hill avenue has returned from New York and has been visiting for two months. Master Lewis Sewell of 564 Presman street is spending his vacation in Jessup township. John of Johnson the U. S. N. has returned to his ship after spending a tornight in the city. Miss M. Theresa Hicks of 554 N. Johnson is spending their vacation at Holiday Park, Md. Mrs. Pearl Johnson and daughter, Sarah, are spending their vacation at Champaign, Va. Rev. Edward Jeffries of Chester- land County, Va. was the guest of his son Mr. James Jeffries of 700 Mosher street, last week. Mr. Janie Grayson of North Northeast County, named from a walk to visit in Chester County. Mr. Jand Bourne of Calvert Co. is visiting relatives in the city. Mrs. M. Costley of 926 N. Howard street is confined to her home with Mrs. Frances Froger, teacher of the public school at Piney Grove, Borling, Md. was in town last week and met her Sunday to take part in the Children's Day program at the M. E. Church. Mrs. Mary B. Herndon, 772 Alga brother, Sergent Henry Williamston 3524 Stevie Regiment that he has mustered out and return to Baltimore in a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wesley and Mrs. Julina Stokes motored to Annapolis Sunday. Mrs. W. Samson Brooks is spending five weeks in Denton, Md. Mrs. W. Samson Brooks, her sister, Mrs. W. Samson Brooks, accompanied by the latter's little are spending several weeks at Buckingham Square and Flitzgerald will spend brief periods with their wives. Rev. J. T. pastor, pastor of Grace Church, will be a purse of 525 by his congregation Sunday. He left Thursday for a trip west. Rev. Joseph L. Butter Kain and muddy grounds stopped a train from Westport to Westfield. Mrs. Jessie C. Collick and son Alen, have gone to spend the summer at Pocosin City, Md., the guest of Mrs. Blanche M. Quinn. Mrs. Amie M. Franklin of 708 N. Wayne Street, by her cousin, Mrs. Sarah Smith, are spending their vacation at Atlantic City. Miss Alice Waring, has as her guest Miss Dorothy V. Meyers of 708 N. Wayne Street, by her grand-daughter of Miss Isei Meyers 1218 Jefferson street. Miss Meyers is an exclusive tour of the East, visiting Washington, Highland Beach, Newark, New York, and Atlantic City. Mrs. Collick is formerly of this city, has returned from visiting relatives and friends in Philadelphia, Baltimore in the eastern shore of Maryland. Mrs. Jennie H. Ross, supreme north senator since 1991, chaired the chairmen; Mrs. George A. Owens, grand conductor; Solomon L. Owens, chief director; the Baltimoreians who at tended the annual session of the National Congress of the Kunguis of Fythians, Eastern and Western Homestheses, at Delaware home on Wednesday and Thursday of this week. Mrs. Spaulding Dead Mrs. Spaulding Dead Durham, N. C. July 20—Mrs. C. C. Spaulding was buried to-day Church by Dr. E. M. Brawley, Mrs. Spaulding was the president of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company and was the sister of John Merrick, president of the Company. JAMES ADAMS HERE James B. Adams, former secretary of the "X" at Camp Meade, and known to hundreds of local ex-soldiers in this city, Mr. Adams's secretary of the National Colored Soldiers and Citizens Council of New York City. Thanks Afro For Helping Celeste I am enclosing receipt for $59.77 the amount forwarded by you of the fund raised by Afro-American subscribers for the $15.66 which was amounted in at your office after the close of your campaign, makes a total of $66.82 resulting from the campaign which you so generously waged in behalf of this little tubercular can find space in your paper. I shall appreciate it if you will convey to the subscribers to the fund for little Celeste my sincere gratitude of their response our appeal to the teacher and the amounts am sure they have been able to secure from other sources will assure Celeste the care she needs for the remainder of the year. She is very happy in her boarding house in the country where she is having the opportunity to grow into a well-educated woman. For the large part which you and the Afro-American have played in helping this little girl back to health and happiness we are indeed grateful. Very similarly yours. THE FEDERAL CHARTLES Hetty L. Sorden, Extension Secretary. Scott May Run Again A well defined rumor has reached this city that Armand W. Scott, of Washington, or his grand exalted ruler of the Elks, has held the office for the past three years and is well known throughout the order, having George W. F., Metschen, of this city is in the field, the present president of the Qedra withdrew from the race i mavor of Mr. Scout last year. Mr. Scout last year. Mary Ann Wheeler aged 12 years at Richmond, a. n. present grand esteemed lesi ng Knief, are also regarded as candidates. Mary Ann Wheeler aged 12 years at Richmond, a. n. present grand esteemed lesi ng Knief, are also regarded as candidates. Mary Ann Wheeler aged 12 years at Richmond, a. n. present grand esteemed lesi ng Knief, are also regarded as candidates. The La France Club's picnic at Greenwood and Electric Park despite the rain, attracted about 400 persons Wednesday night. Charles E. Gladden is the president. TO CONCLUD? Mrs. M. N. Conrad, revivalist will conclude three weeks of listicic work at the WenghuangNan A. A. A. B. Zion Church this Friday night. NOTICE TO READERS Births, marriages, and other matter for these columns may be phoned in to the Society Editor up Wednesday night. to Wellesley Call Mt. Vernon 2833, ask for society editor. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. R. her mother, announce Miss Myrtle Y. Porter to 01426 Drill Hlvx. Ave., on Sunday, July 11th W. Ward, S. New York City. Her parents returned to her home after a brief visit to her son-in-law and daughter, and Mrs. and Mrs. This young couple are traveling exquisitely around New York to Cleveland for Chevy. They will be wedding party to go to Chicago and from there to the wedding home - the 15th of April 1929. MARRIED On Sunday, June the 29th at 7 Octeve the wedding of Miss Lillian Brown announced at St. Tewsors Church. The brides mother was Christine. The brides father was Hattie Paxon was flower girl. Mr. Joseph Thompson was seated with Mrs. William S. Morton of 235 Lillian B. Morton and Mrs. Kurtis Minters of 235 and Mr. Kurtis Minters of Baltimore and Mr. Kurtis Minters of Erie. Pn. the Mrs. and Mrs. Henry Minters of Erie. MARRIED On July 20th at the residence of Mrs. Sarah S. Stevenson 144 Welch's Chester, Pa., John A. Kelly, of Newark, N. J. and Mrs. Henry's Coope of Philadelphia, Pa., were united in the body of matrimony by the Rev. Thomas of Chester, Pa., Mr. and Mrs. Kelly will reside in Philadelphia, Pa. They have our hearty congratulations. A SURPRISE A surprise was (tendered) Mr. and Mrs. Sharice Clarke, the wife of the defense and the parents of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ringdell of 920 Warner street. Wednesday July 16, 2004, the parents of Ibachar A. M. E. Church. The pastor, Rev. C. E. Stewart, the pastor, Rev. C. Stewart, then in honor of her zealous work as Secretary. Afterward they were dining room and a reposs was serve amid patens and flowers. Brown, Mr. John Smith, Mrs. Charles E. Stowart, and Mr. Toney Gaines, Mrs. Amie B. R. Jones, President Mrs. Sidia N. Quill, Treasurer, Mrs Sidia N. Quill, Treasurer, Mrs M ARRIAGES Richard I. Hogt, 40 widower; Leila I. Roane, 18; Jimmy I. Hogt, 25; Annapolis Bishop; Tanner, 26; William D. Payne, 22; Nancy Pruitt Jerry Peterson, 27; Matilda Peterson, 22. Charles Meeker, 24; Emma J. Johnson, 44 widow. Solomon Drummond, 29: Ruth Heid. Thomas Bailey, 31, Eubie Stansberry, 31, Matthew Matthews, 1261 N. Monroe Avenue, Joseph Morrison, 21, Josephine Stilwell, Edward A. flail, 27, Mt. Washington, Emma J. Payne, 25, Pamela Hobson, 22, Marie Jenkins, Louis Hobson, 22, Marie Jenkins Alfred Strowers, 22; Alverta Brown 18. Clarence Holland, 27; Helen Hayman, 24. Isidore Jaunice, 21; Sarah Fisher 33. Rufus Langston, 23; Leslie Valentin, 20 Lawrence M. Miller, 21: Dian Thomas, 29 Passes 70th Milestone Mrs. S. E. Holmes, wife of Rev. John A. Holmes, pastor of Whatcoat M. E. Churen, was seventy years old last Saturday. She was in Washington attending the annual Women's Missionary Society of the Washington M. E. Conference. When the delegates heard that it was her birthday, they crowded around and offered her congratulations on her good health and wished her many move years of activity. She was a member of the society. Mrs. Holmes and her husband were graduated from Storer College in the first class-1872. She taught school in West Virginia before her marriage to Mr. Holmes 48 years ago. Mrs. Holmes is a remarkably well-preserved woman with a highly interest in the current events. "I attribute my health," Mrs. Holmes said the other day, "to keeping regular hours and treating my stomach correctly, not over eating. I never learned to throw in many of those things that make so many of our young folks loose need rest." Professor Dwight O. W. Holmes former vice-principal of the Baltimore Colored High School and registrar of Howard University, Washington, is a son of Mrs. Holmes. JANITOUS' DAY AT BROWN'S GROVE The organization of the Bank Perpetual and Janitous Bank is given on our first time in its history. We have never been before the public or asserted authority, but now we ask the sympathetic support of every individual in this city. This outing small but large says we have copes therefrom shall be put into the treasury for the purpose of caring for the sick and disabled men. This shall be known as juniors' day, be off in the third part in the days pleasure. We shall spend the day at Brownsville. Show us how well you like good juniors. They are very important in the summer. Get your tickets NOW. Any junior who name himself juniors for that great days pleasure on July 20th, which is juniors' day, be characterized by the association and some of its members, they are officials of chaperones, and we will adhere to the policy of the library Loan buyers. W. M. C. A. officials and workers, and the policy of the library Loan buyers. Every minute of this type ought to be a member. Applications are being received at the low Then there is fishing, bathing, boating, crabbing, directing and assisting the employees, so that the employees are being perfused with the employers, so that there is this one of the sweetest件事 that ever went out. Forty members of the staff will be served with refreshments will be served by Mrs. Elizabeth Keys, whose residence is on the basketball home, she will have a large number of waitresses, quick and refined service, responsible day. All are welcome. In North Baltimore tickets can be obtained in that section, prominent in that section. 111W. 20th street. MRS. ROSA BUTLER. Mrs. Rosa Butler. 228. S. Dallas street, died last Saturday after an accident in months. She was buried Tuesday. His Letter Began With "Dearest' Continued from Page 1 A comparison of the letters was made in order to establish similarity between the handwriting, if any. MR. GLEBEN'S TEENAGE, Mr. Gleben, was in his testimony, that the minister had been a frequent visitor at the Hillard home, and eaten many meals there and that he entered an objection against his coming there. Then the minister would only come on Wednesday and four days in summer, other times when it was known that he was gone, he testified. He told the court he had intercepted the letter, spied Riv. Custis talking with a man at the corner of McCulloh and Biddle streets, on the evening of July 7. Jumped into the minister's car to hear the minister to explain the letters. The minister had finished talking with John Handy, sexton at Trinity A. M. E. Church, and they had started walking on Biddle street, when Mr. Green faced the Rev. Custis, who was few minutes, when Handy and Joshua Northern noticed that the minister was being punished. Mr. Green swore that the minister struck him first, and his feelings had been seen on his face. The minister said that a plot existed between his mother-in-law and the minister. Mrs. Hillard testified that both letters were intended for her, that she had taken motherly interest in the minister for the past twenty-five years, that she was being untruthful and "no good in general principles." When pressed for a specific instance of her allegations against Mr. Green, she replied that he had shown it in a number of instances and that he himself, during the twenty years she had been married MINISTER ADMITS LETTER. The Rev. Mr. Custis says that Green beat him, that he did not strike back and that he had to stay at Provident Hospital for a week as a result of his injuries. When asked why he wrote two letters two one person, which he claimed he had done, and why he relied on the same person, he replied: "Thus my business." In reply to further questioning about the different salutations, he said that he had done that frequently. When asked if he were courting the mother-in-law, he replied: "She is a widow and I am a widower." He denied any undue relations with Mrs. Green, who is organist at his church, and he declared that he met my final I am telling the truth." The "H. A. H" letter, which was read in court, was a brief missive, contained a reference to the death of Dr. Whitfield Winsley and wished "the W" letter, the "W" according to Rev. Mr. Custis, meaning "woman" was full of rhetorical phrases and contained references to queens of Biblical women who encountered "DEAREST W" LETTER "I trust and pray you are just as bright this morning of delightful and healthy weather as Queen of Sibona when she visited Solomon; Queen Esther, with her sweet influence upon the King, and virtuosity and also conquered Futh; when through her influence she was able to move mountains, make straight many crooked paths of life, was able to live in the valley and hills and once said to her mother in-law your lodging place will be my lodging place; where thou goest I will live; and I will die with thee and I will be buried thee. Entreat me and from following after you will tell thou die, not forseke thee, After mentioning affairs at Tyson Church, the letter continues: "D. V. (presumably, God be willing), the letter ends; I will ever in the morning, if possible, I know Wednesday morning of every week is my time, but I am crowded to the utmost now. "My dear darling and precious loved one, will ask you kindly to come this time. I will make it if I can, and if I fall, make it. I will ask you please excuse me this time. I will see you Sunday morning at Tyson. Green, who seemed to be the bone of contention, was conspicuous by her absence. When Justice Brendel announced his decision, both sides marched out, confident that each had won the victory. Among the ministers noticed at the were: Rues, A. L. Gaines, C. H. Murray, M. H. Davis, C. H. Steppleton and P. J. Jordan. To Hold Field Day To Hold Field Day The Children's Playground Association invites you and your friends to enjoy our beloved Playgrounds in Orlando Hill Park Grove No. 2 on Tuesday evening July 25th 1915. Playground opens on July 1st in case of rain, postponed to July 30th. Playgrounds to be represented by members: Play leader; Louise Parrott; Constance Murphy; assistants. Playgrounds 118 and Guild players Marshal Marshall. Play leader; Elizabeth Bortham; Bessie Tongue. Assistant. Playgrounds No. 112 and Drudg Hill No. 2. A Abelian Green Thair leader Hattie L. Hawkins Assistant STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! You are certainly invited to the Centenary Automobile ride and block Carmin under the auspices of the Embassy of the E. Church Monday and Tuesday evenings July 25th and 29th 1925 at the United States Mines. A. Hammond C. Brooks A. Powler, M. Wilson, M. Jiburn, Rev. Powler, Rev. C. B. Brooks. A CORRECTION In the publication of the death of Mary M. Sewell age 70 years, which was published in the paper those names were omitted JOHN F. and CORNELIUS SEWELL Lan F. and CORNELIUS SEWELL Plater has returned to overseeas and removed to the home of Mrs. Key. Women's Day services were held on Sunday, Mrs. Fry in chairs You Can Make $10.00 Per Day By Selling COLORED PICTURES OF REAL CLASS Panel Photogravures of America's Foremost Colored Lawyers—Wm. H. Lewis of Boston, W. Ashlee, Hawkins, of Baltimore and A. Lee Beaty of Cincinnati. Also a Panel of the three leading Colored Surgeons of this country—Dr. Daniel H. Williams of Chicago, Dr. S. L. Carson of Washington, D. C. and Dr. John A. Kennie of Tuskegee. Individual pictures of Mr. W.E. B. DuBois, the fearless Editor of the Crisis, and one of Mr. Emmett J. Scott, late Assistant to the Secretary of War. Wall pictures that are a credit to our race and an ornament to any home. Racial Mottoes that are inspiring and instructive. All Pictures and Mottoes are complete with frame, glass, hook and cord. Big money selling these, Agents wanted in every City and Community. For terms write. ROBERT B. HOLMES Charlottesville, Va. KETT BALTIMORE, MD and Go With GAMES OUTING..... RK, Catonsville Y 31st, 1919 ORCHESTRA orator. on evening of pleasure Mr. Youngge Robinson Gwathney. Secretary off at Winters Ave..... 25 CENTS S BY WATER School Brown's Grove th, 1919 d for the occasion and their friends to care to the choice. ated Orchestra. 25 CENTS orator. Hillsville; J. Edward 1405 McBiderry St. 1414 Jefferson St. 0 a. m., as no Moon- date. S. Hill, Secretary. OR ATTING Social Assoc'n Ave. Catonsville to 11.30 p. m. s and Auxiliaries THESTRA Treas. E. E. Brown. Bus. Mgr. MAX 3 CENTS W-OUTS tubles to us UBE REPAIR Street tubes split or blowout normal cost. PHONE, SOUTH 1280 LUD HILL AVE. BALTIMORE We Art. Some Jazz. Come and Go W THE COLONIAL DAMESSE IN THEIR FIRST BIG OUTING GREENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK, Cat THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 31st, BY DREXEL THE SYNCOPATED ORCHIE Prof. Joseph Rochester, Director. Attire will spare no pain to make it an evening COMMITTEE: Aa Campbell, Mrs. A. Gawthney, Mr. Young, Robinson, Mrs. James Morton, Open at 6 P. M. Refreshments on Sat Cott City or Rolling Road car, get off at Whit DIDS OF ADMISSION 25 CEN GRAND OUTING! WATERS BY W Waters A. M. E. Sunday School WILL PRESENT THEIR Annual Outing, at Brown's O MONDAY, AUGUST 4th, 1917 Enter Starlight has been secured for the 425 Sunday School workers and their date in the great day of pleasure to the of their selection. Music by the Drexel Syncopated Orche E FOR ALL, ROUND TRIP, 25 CEN Prof. Joseph Rochester, Director. AGENTS—E. S. Hull, 1817 Druid Hill avenue. Central Avenue: Joshua Northern, 1403 Mei. 1228 Edwards street; Samuel Giles, 1414 Joe take the boat leaving at 8:30 a.m., a high light for the boat for this ride. Northern, Superintendent. E. S. Hull, Sc DR. JOHN W. NORRIS, PASTOR GRAND OUTING! By Mt. Olive Beneficial A wood Electric Park, Winters Ave. C Tuesday, July 30th, 2.30 to 11.30 Net Fraternities, Clubs, Socials and Au are cordially invited. MUSIC BY ROGHESTER'S ORCHIESTRA Mer, Pres. John Stecum, Vice Pres. Paul, Secretary Mary Sheppard, Treas. Jannie Blaze, Chaplin Martha Plauter, Founder Andrew E. Brown KETS, 25 CENTS. BRING YOUR BLOW-OUR and all other Tire or Tube troubles to ALSTON AUTO TIRE & TUBE RE SHOP, 428 W. Henrietta Street to give satisfaction on all repair work; tube puts of all descriptions relined at a very low cost and deliver the goods. PHONE, TO GREENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK, Catonsville ON THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 31st, 1919 MUSIC BY DREXEL THE SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA Prof. Joseph Rochester, Director. MRS. MARTIN CAMPbell, MRS. JAMES MORTON, Mr. Younger Robinson, Chairman, Mrs. A. Gwatham, Secretary -Take Elliott City on Road car, get off at Winnes Ave.- CARDS OF ADMISSION 25 CENTS 65th Annual Outing, at Brown's Grove MONDAY, AUGUST 4th, 1919 The Steamer Starlight has been secured for the occasion Wanted 2425 Sunday School workers and their friends to participate in the great day of pleasure to the choice of their own selection. Select Music by the Drexel Syncopated Orchestra. FARE FOR ALL, ROUND TRIP, 25 CENTS Prof. Joseph Rochester, Director. TICKET AGENTS—E. S. Hall; 1817 Druid Hill avenue; J. Edward Fisher; 507 Central Avenue; Joshua Northern; 1403 McBleirst R. F. W. Scott; 1225 Edwards street; Samuel Giles; 1414 Jefferson St. To avoid the rush take the boat heating at 830 m. m., as no Moon- Joshua Northern, Superintendent. F. S. Hill, Secretary. DR. JOHN W. NORRI, PASTOR A GRAND OUTING Given by Mt. Olive Beneficial Assoc'n At Greenwood Electric Park, Winters Ave. Catonsville Martha Planter, Founder Andrew E. Brown, Bus, Mgr TICKETS. 25 CENTS. WAR TAX 3 CENTS BRING YOUR BLOW-OUTS And all other Tire or Tube troubles to us THE ALSTON AUTO TIRE & TUBE REPAIR SHOP, 428 W. Henrietta Street We guarantee to give satisfaction on all repair work; tubes split or blowout ROBINSON & CLARK'S It Big Souvenir Da GREENWOOD ELECTRIC Dance METRIC PARK Y 28th, 1910 EXTRA Bed with Souvenirs 25 CENTS Literary Circle Dawn's Grove 1919 have the patron dels Lated Orchestra Served. Purviance. Treas. Willie Collins, Sec. Iger. RENTS USIVELY G CLASSES City L Avenue July 3rd, 1919 erson Anderson, Director RENTS GE Antic City, N.J. . Boarding o NDAY EVENING, JULY 28th ROCHESTER'S ORCHESTRA It 200 Ladies will be presented with S SON 2 Maple Leaf Musical and Literary Excursion to Brown's SUNDAY, JULY 27th, 1919 our first attempt we hope to have the age of our many friends by Joe Rochester's Syncopated Orc Lunches and Refreshments Served. MONDAY EVENING, JULY 28th, 1910 ROCHESTER'S ORCHESTRA The First 200 Ladies will be presented with Souvenirs ADMISSION 25 CENTS As this is our first attempt we hope to have the patron age of our many friends Mrs. V. T. Ross, Pres. Mrs. M. Purvance, Treas. John Williams, Vice Pres. Mrs. Willie Collins, Sec. J. Elliott Thomas, Gen'l Mgr. ROUND TRIP 25 CENTS FOR THE CLASSY EXCLUSIVE TOPOLITAN DANCING CLUB Catering to Select Society AT OGDEN HALL Biddle Street near Druid Hill Avenue Thursday, Beginning, July 31 From 8:30 to 11:45 Direction of H. Fred Johnson Titan Jazz Band. Prof. H. J. Andersson CLASS FEE. 20 CENTS THE ELITE COTTAGE Tennessee Avenue, Atlantic City open for the summer. Boat by the day or week. 600 N. Tennessee Avenue, Atlantic City, N.J., is now open for the summer. Boarding or Lodging by the day or week. MRS. CHEW, Proprietress --- SURGEON DENTIST Catonsville, Md. COMMITTEE A CLASS SOP Cream Bro EVERY USER SOPHIA'S team Brown Pom Cream Brown Pomade THE HAIRDRESSING WITH A BLESSING IS A WITNESS. If you are having hair troubles try it. No lady's table is complete without SOPHIA's preparations for scalp and skin. Sold entirely on their merits. They do we claim. Sophia's Cream Brown Pomade, 25, 35, 50c; Sophia's Shampoo, the hair wash that leaves the hair clean, shuffy, 50c; Sophia's X-Hay Hair Shine, a perfect straightening cream, 35c; Sophia's Whitening Cream feet skin cleanser and face bleach, 50c; Sophia's Crown, the life-giving invigorator.$1.00; Sophia's X-Hairdressers' Cream, $8.55 short time only; OLMAX, king of hair straighteners for men, will stubborn coarse, kinky or curly hair in 5 minutes. No by water. Price $1.00. Special terms to barbera. U best barber shops. Sophia's preparations sold by all Druggists and He everywhere or by us direct. Agents wanted. Special G. T. YOUNG, INC. IS A WITNESS. You are having hair troubles try it. No lady's complete without SOPHIA's preparations for dry skin. Sold entirely on their merits. They go on. Sophora's Cream Brown Pomade 25, 35, 50; Sophora's oil, the hair wash that leaves the hair clean, 30; Sophora's X-Ray Hair Shine, a perfect cleanser, 35; Sophora's Whitening Cream in cleanser and bleach, 30; Sophora's Cake the life-giving investigator $1.00; Sophora's Lazers' Conubia, $3.75 short time only. AX. king of hair straighteners for men, will, course, kinky or curly hair in 5 minutes. No. Price $1.00. Special terms to barbera. Uber shops. Sophora's preparations sold by all Druggists and He here or by us direct. Agents wanted. Special G. T. YOUNG, INC. If you are having hair troubles try it. No lady's dressing table is complete without SOPHIA's preparations for the hair, scalp and skin. Sold entirely on their merits. They no more than we claim. Sophia's Cream Brown Pomade, 23, 35, 50c; Sophia's Glycerin Shampoo, the hair wash that leaves the hair clean, soft and duffy, 50c; Sophia's X-Hay Hair Shine, a perfect gloss and straightening cream, 50c; Sophia's Whitening Cream, the perfect skin cleanser and face bleach, 50c; Sophia's Cream Hair Toum, the life-giving invigorator $1.00; Sophia's Large Steel Hairdressers Comb, $3.75 short time only. OLIMAX, king of hair straighteners for men, will straighten stubborn, kinky or curly hair in 5 minutes. Not affected by water. Price $1.00. Special terms to barbera. Used in the best barber shops. Sophia's preparations sold by all Druggists and Hairdressers everywhere or by us direct. Agents wanted. Special terms. G. T. YOUNG, INC. 4000 SOUTH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. For Sale in Baltimore by Fennet's Drud Hill avenue and Blade street; Stokes and Derry. Drud Hill Ave. and Oxford St.; Young's Drud Hill Ave. and Hoffman St.; Bishop's Hair Shop. 1425 Pennsylvania Ave.; and Johnson's Barrier Shop, 544 West Langle street. Mine. Alberta Holiday, 1602 E. Madi Erd. Jordan, 832 Laurens St. near Fremont Ave. For Sale in Baltimore by Fdle dire street; Stokes and Derry, Young's Pennsylvania Ave., and Lanvale street. Mine. Alberta Fred Jordan, 652 Laurens St. Male in Baltimore by Fennel's Drud Hill avenue; Stokes and Derry, Drud Hill Ave, and C Drud Hill Ave, and Hoffman St; Bishop's Indiana Ave; and Johnson's Barrier Shop, street. Mane, Alberta Holiday, 1602 E. Madi drian, 832 Laurens St. near Fremont Ave. ```markdown ``` A. Phone, Mt. Vernon 1890 FENNELL'S Baltimore's Busies PERSCRIPTION MAIL ORDER THE BUSY CORR Mt. Vernon 1890 ANNELL'S PHARMA Maltimore's Busiest Colored Drug Store PERSCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED BUSY CORNER DRUID HILL COR. BIDDEN Phone, Mt. Vernon 1890 FENNELL'S PHARMACY Baltimore's Busiest Colored Drug Store PERSCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED THE BUSY CORNER DRUID HILL AVE. COR. BIDDLE ST. Restaurant TRADE MARK 4 REASONS WHY You should use Restorin H. 1. Because—They are composed of SCAIP and HAIR trouble. Go 2. Because—KINKY, Hair, Glossy, Beautiful and Straight. 3. Because—They restore you and VIGOR. 4. Because—ITCHING and DATH their use. PRICE For your gray or faded hairs, Get a 500, bottle Restorin Hair S erful results in the course of a Coughing?. That's a danger hair Restorin Cough Balsam. 500. BLEACH WITH DARK SKIN plies. Blemishes. Have So RESTORIN SKIN W Sold on MONEY BACK GUARAN or Postpaid by REST 1539 E. MONIMENT St. REAL ESTATE. HOUSES FOR SALE ON LOANS NE PHILIP I 1428 McCulloh St. USE Restorin Hair Grower & Dryer They use Restorin Hair Grower & Dryer & Hair trouble. Guaranteed non-injurious. KINKY, DRY, LIGHT, LESS Brittle Hair beautiful and Straight without a Straightening They RESTORE your SCALP and HAIR to IGOR. ATCHING and DANDRUFF are entirely use. PRICE 15 AND 25 CENTS. gray or faded hails, don't use dyes; these bottle Restorin Hair Stain and be delighted with it in the course of a few days. 7. That's a danger signal and nature must be brought on hails. Never Falls. AGENTS FOR DARK SKIN. Remove Freckles, Tan, Blemishes. Have Soft, Fair, Bright Skin by RESTORIN Hair WHITENER. 25c. A JAR HONEY BACK GUARANTEE at your drugstreet, or Postpaid by RESTORIN DRUG COMPANY 9 E. MONUMENT STREET, BAITMORE. TATE. RENTS L USES FOR SALE ON REASONABLE T LOANS NEGOTIATED PHILIP H. PRATT McCulloh St. Phone: Ma You should useRestorin Hair Grower & Dry Shampoo 1. Because—They are composed of the BEST ingredients known for SCALP & HAIR trouble. Guaranteed non-injurious. 4. Because—ETCHING and DANDRUFF are entirely stopped by their use. PRICE 15 AND 25 CENTS. For your gray or faded hair, don't use dyes; these are dangerous. Get a 50c, bottle Restorin Hair Stain and be delighted with the wonderful results in the course of a few days. Coughing? That's a danger signal and nature must be helped with Restorin Cough Balsam. 33c. Never Falls. AGENTS WANTED. BLEACH YOUR DARK SKIN. Remove Freckles, Tan, Bumps, Pimps. 1529 E. MONUMENT STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. IDEAL DENTAL PARK N. W. Cor. Penna. Ave. & Dolphin ENTRANCE ON DOLPHIN STREET OFFICE HOURS 9 A. M. TO 9 P. Specialists on Nervous Women and Expert Crown and Bridge Work. MOD PAXLESS METHODS PRICES RU DR. O. H. ARNOLD. Chief Operator. Phone SHEURE WHITE--THE NEW AND HARMLESS Whitens Your Skin and Removes Unsightly Pimple While You Sleep Shure White lightness, the dark pigment, in dark skin, without the most delicate SKIN OR HEALTH. It is not a page that makes it for a short time and then rub it against a sensitive complexion, color, pigment of the skin cells, making it others, smoother, firmer, and emptier in only a short treatment. One box will convince you. Try a box, and tell your friends now. RAL DENTAL PARL Cor. Penna. Ave. & Dolphin St. ENTRANCE ON DOLPHIN STREET OFFICE HOURS 9 A. M. TO 1 P. M. Specialists on Nervous Women and Chil- crown and Bridge Work. MODERN LESS METHODS PRICES REASON ARNOLD. Chief Operator. Phone M. WHITE...THE NEW AND HARMLESS SKI Your Skin and Removes Unightly Pimples and While You Sleep The dark pigment, in dark skin, without the SKIN OR HEALTH. It is not a pear that makes the skin and then rub off, but a scientific compound that works better, smoother and freeing in only a short treatment. All you need to. Try a box, in your dark skin. IDEAL DENTAL PARLORS N. W. Cor. Penna. Ave. & Dolphin St. 2d floor ENTRANCE ON DOLPHIN STREET OFFICE HOURS 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M. Specialists on Nervous Women and Children Expert Crown and Bridge Work. MODERN Dentistry PAINTLESS METHODS PRICES REASONABLE DR. O. H. ARNOLD. Chief Operator. Phone Madison 1497. SHURE WHITE---THE NEW AND HARMLESS SKIN BLEACH Whitens Your Skin and Removes Unsightly Pimples and Eruptions While You Sleep Shure White lightens the dark pigment in dark skin, within the lens, to the most delicate Skin. It makes the skin appear whiter and then rub off, but a scientific compound that actually lightens the color, pigment of the skin cells, makes it whiter, smoother and frees it from pimples and eruption in only a short treatment. One box will convince you of the benefits, and tell your friends about SHURE WHITE. Full directions with each box $19.90 a box, postal from our laboratory on receipt of price. have proven their reliability Truth is established by witnesses and worth and thousands both at home and abroad can testify to its merits. Ask your neighbor; ask your friend and above all, test them for yourself. EVERY USER OF PHIA'S own Pomade WITNESS. problems try it. No lady's dressing PHILA'S preparations for the hair, in their morns. They no more than. Inde, 25, 35, 50c; Sophia's Glycerine it leaves the hair clean, soft and shiny, a perfect gloss and Sophia's Whitening Cream, the perle-bleach, 50c; Sophia's Cream Hair-creator.$1.00; Sophia's Large Steel short time only; lightensers for men, will straighten very hair in 5 minutes. Not affected terms to barbera. Used in the by all Druggists and Hairdressers Agents wanted. Special terms. OUNG, INC. PHILADELPHIA, PA. gennel's Druid Hill avenue and Bld- Drudl Hill Ave, and Oxford St. Huffman St.; Bishop's Hair Shop. Johnson's Barrier Shop, 544 West Holiday, 1602 E. Madi near Fremont Ave. EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER WILL PROMOTE A FULL GROWTH OF HAIR. WILL ALSO RE- STORE AND SHOWHOTH VITALITY AND BEAUTY OF THE HAIR IF YOUR HAIR IS DRY AND WET, SHOW IT NEXT WEEK. EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER. If you are bothered with failing Hair, Dandruff, or itching, we want you to try a jar of East Indian Hairstrigger. The remedy canotains medical expertise to stimulate the skin, helping mature to do its work. Leaves the hair sort and Silky. Fortified the hair with a blend of the best known remedy for florally and beautiful Black eye-brows, also restore gray hair to its natural color, used with hot iron for Straightening. Price sent by mail.....50 Centa 10 Cents Extra for Postage D. L. Hale, Oklahoma City 214 E. Second St. Oklahoma City, OKLAHOMA AGENTS OUTPUT 1 Hale Grower, 1 Temple Oil, 1 Shampoo, 2 Cents Extra for Selling, $2.00 25 Cents Extra for Postage PHARMACY At Colored Drug Store NS A SPECIALTY ORS SOLICITED NER DRUID HILL AVE. COR. BIDDLE ST. REASONS WHY Hair Grower & Dry Shampoo: of the BEST ingredients known for guaranteed non-biurious. BLESS, BRITTLE hair becomes Soft without a Straightening Comb. OUR SCALP and HAIR to new LOVE. ANDRUFF are entirely stopped by 15 AND 25 CENTS. don't use dyes; these are dangerous. stain and be delighted with the won- few days. signal and nature must be helped with ever Falls. AGENTS WANTED. Remove Pregnancy, Pun Bumps, Dip- tion, Fair Bright Skin by using HITENER. 25c. A JAR. TREE at your druggist, Hair Dresser CORIN, DRUG COMPANY STREET, BAITMORE, MD. RENTS COLLECTED ON REASONABLE TERMS EGOTIATED H. PRATT Phone: Mad. 3485 TAL PARLORS live. & Dolphin St. 2d floor DOLPHIN STREET S 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M. us Women and Children Work. Modern Dentistry PRICES REASONABLE rator. PRICES REASONABLE AND HARMLESS SKIN BLEACH Uses Unsightly Pimples and Eruptions You Sleep In dark skin, within the least harm to the not a gene that makes the skin appear white scientific phone number: 1107 smoother and freeing it from pimples and tell your friends about SHIRE WHITE. Rev. Dr. Junius Gray was choosing through the door one other day going contrary to traffic rules, but not who he was busy talking to some citizens. The paraphraser was violating the rules and yelled for him to come back. the traffic "Don't you know you are violating the traffic rules" demanded the cop I passed you while you were still sitting. I passed you while you were still everything was alight," replied Dr. "It is none of your business to whom I was talking," he said, with regulations, so some along with me. Straight way the minister and police are at the station house, you put up two dollars collateral you may," Dr. Gray was told. "You are from Baltimore, and you don't know you were the dating rules." If I put up collateral that means I will have to return here, said the minister. "You wont have to return, but you will lose your collateral by not doing so." ing so, he let it go at that, and was soon back in good old Rattlesnake territory. He was caught, he was caught, as he was caught, as it was caught, right on the grounds where law make Rally for Baptist Orphanage. A rally of local Baptist Churches in the interest of the campaign to raise funds for the church was held at Leadenhill street Baptist Church Monday night. DR. BRAGG TO DELIVER TER-CENTENARY ADDRESS Upon the invitation of Rev. Dr. A. L. Gaines, the pastor, Rev. Dr. George F. Bragg, rector of St. James Episcopal Church in the nearby address on next Sunday evening in Trinity A. M. E. Church. The service preceding the address, will be choreally rendered by the junior vested pastor, and the church who will accompany their pastor. The address will deal with all the important happenings as concerns the Negro, from the hating of the slave trade to the church who will accompany Virginia, August 1613, to the present time. Black Sox Change Schedule The Black Sox, colored champions of the South, were scheduled to play the Washington Navy Yard Gun Club on Sunday, July 27th at Westport, but owing to a misunderstanding, the team will be invited to fill the duties and the Yankees Athletic Club has been selected to try conclusions with the Sox. In booking the Yankees Club, the management has selected one of the strongest baseball teams in the eastern section of the city. They have met and defeated the very best team this season and are noted for their steady and smany playing. The Sox line-up is now complete as Charlie Thomas, their ministry back of the bat has returned from France and will take his regular place. The management desires to state that a new stand with a seating capacity of about 700 people has been created and there will be a plenty of room for all. OFFICIAL DEATH LIST Turtle White, 22: 766 Vine street June 21, 1912 H. Roberts, 16: 1619 Charlotte 14, Roberts 16, 1619 Boston 14, Roberts 16, 1619 Sydney Anderson 38, 1519 1827 Bristol 17, 1519 July 15th 19, 1519 24th of Calver Bollington 17, 1419 Riley Butler 644 Monsoer street Tane Hopkins 48, 4819 University Hospital 16, 1619 Malone 45, 149 East street July 17th Larry Field, 16; Fairfield, Md., July 19th. Pacific Avenue,街, July 19th. Nolte Hall, 29; 252 N. Mount St. July 18th. Wm. South, 58; 1314 N. Schroeder Street, July 18th. Virginia Beane, 50; 1117 Whitewater street, July 18th. GIMG, 121; 174, Jackson, Virginia. Hill Ave. July 17. Mary Carr. 60: University Hospital George A. King, 51; 222 N. Ambity street, July 17th. Gerald Henderson, 614 City Hospital July 17th. Carlie Raley, 10; St. Elizabeth's Hospital, July 18th. Thomas Covington, 54; Mery Hospital, July 18th. Municipal Tuberculosis Hospital, July 18th. Louis Anderson, 22; John Hopkins Hospital, July 18th. Danbury Davis, 57; New City Hospital, July 18th. John Nees, John Hopkins Hospital July 18th. A CORRECTION Rev. Dr. Bragg's article on "Mother Bethel," the statement should have been "Daniel Coker, organizer and first pastor of Bethel Church, Baltimore" was elected by the A. E. Church altho he afterwards declined and Richard Allen was elected. Twin O. Anderson, beloved son of G. W. and Elba Anderson of Lincoln Md., formerly of Calhoun street, died at Johns Hopkins Hospital on July 39th after an operation on the Madison St. was buried from the Madison St. Presbyterian Church on Tuesday. He is survived by his parents, three sisters, Mrs. Bertha Hudgins, Misses Viess and Louise Anderson. Mr. John L. Johnson and two sons, John Henry and John Allen Johnson, of Columbia, S. C., spent a week in Baltimore visiting his brother, H. P. Johnson of 1724 Dilphin street. They left for home Dilphin. See Arthur L. Johnson FOR SALE—Three story house and bath, in A. 1. condition. Gr. 559. Mitchell Home From France. Mr. George Mitchell, 429 Somerset street returned from France last week, where he met seven of the officers given the seven of attending the Sorbonne Others included Oscar Johnson, New York, Charles Johnson, Charlotte, S. C., Charles Wilkerson, Virginia, T. R. Williams Virginia, T. M. Williams Virginia, and M. G. St. Louis. Mr. Mitchell all of these men were given $30 per month by Uncle Sam for expenses in addition to their regular pay. Speaking of opportunities for college in business, Mr. Mitchell spoke of the importer's shop of A. D. Andre, whose American home is in Martineau. Andre's store is one square from the Place de in Concorde, one of the streets in Paris, and this Nogro is Contrasting treatment of soldiers in Paris and New York, Mr. Mitchell said, he picked the list when he logged his list when he visited Paris, and did not stop to ask whether they were white or colored. Frenchmen did not bother about color and looked at place they happened to be going. In New York on landing, one of the first things he heard was a snaker general ordering skirrles" to get on one side of the road. GARAGE BEING RUSHED Work is being rushed on the garage now in course of erection on Wilson street near Division; and according to Mr. T. C. Creman, the owner, the garage is early in September. The garage will be one of the largest in northwest Baltimore and will be able to accommodate nearly two hundred cars. This will be the first large garage in the city catering especially to colored, patronage. Washington, July 24.—With the passage by Congress of Civil Appropriation bill, Howard the House struck out of the bill on the motion of a South Carolina number. It was restored by the Senate and the conference committee agreed to let it remain. WASHINGTON NEWS Washington D. C. July 19—Boy- Russell, and Granholm, have reside- ment home from Columbia Ohio, Mrs. Giovanni, from Columbus Ohio, Mrs. Giovanni, from summer in Washington 1219 T. Jefferson, Mrs. F.C. Grand- ly, of Jackson W. Wagner, was resident of Jackson at 1342 Wel- lohne Jackson at 1342 Wellohne campus, to Y. where she reside- d. The District Convention of M. Railroad Association, and in the Roe- tham district, to Y. where providing services were held. The following officers were selected for the district, including Dannel, SoeT. The convention an- ointed Mrs. Mammie Davies, pro- fessor, for Williamsburg. The convention sponsored the parish will meet at 10th St. Daniel Martin, president of New York will be the principal minister at Vermont will be the principal minister at Missouri will address the Grand Array of Apples. Sun- day July 22nd, at 2 p. m. at SUNSET ST. VERONA BAPTIST CHURCH n. m. at. OXFORD St. near Pennsylvania Ave. W. P. Dickerson, D. D. AGE. Siemon by the pastor. Subject: Power The St. n. m. Sunder School. Louis to Women's Missionary Society consults call to the Dead. You are cor- lally invited. BASE BALL BLACK SOX Champions of the South (VS) the grand jury at Arlington, Sun. M. M. VERONON BAPTIST CHURCH 22nd, al 2 p. m. Howard Square, W. W. P. Dickerson, D. D. NEWSPAPERS MERGE St. Tonis, July 23-The St. Louis Clarion and the St. Louis Independent News have consolidated. BASE BALL BLACK Colored Champi (V St. Louis, July 23—The St. Louis Sindler School. Special comment by the late Louis Clinton and the St. Louis Louis to World Affairs Society. Society Independent News have consulted call to the Dead. You are invited. VARSITY ATHLETIC CLUB SUNDAY, JULY 27th, 2 P. M. WESTPORT BASEBALL PARK Special Reservation for the Ladies DR. FRE PALM TOILET REQUIS DR. FRED PALMER'S T. REQUISITE A Beautiful Fair C Bright and lustrous, free from blotches, is within the reach by the use of Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Thousands of men and women have dark, sallow complexions with this wow not you? Keep your skin fair and soft, by bath with DR. FRED PALMER'S SKIN WASH using DR. FRED PALMER'S FACE POW preparations will make your skin the admin. Woman's crowning glory is her long, silky and fluffy, by applying DR. FRED DRESSER. 25c each at your druggist or toilet postpast upon receipt of price. AGENTS liberal terms. DR. FRED PALMER'S TOILET REQUISITES DR. FRED PALMER'S SOAP WATERMARK SOAP DR. FRED PALMER'S SOAP WATERMARK SOAP A Beautiful Fair Complexion Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener JACOBS' PHARMACY COMPANY With nearly three hundred dollars worth of canned beans, Ello School, School Corner and Chapel streets, last Thursday and $180.00 worth sold up to mornin' morning, the school has many supplies by the Women's Cooperative Civic League shows signs of real helpfulness. Fostering a sense of community and the opportunity to put a dent in the high cost of living and food loads goods to the homes of the buyers. In addition to the corn, peas, beans, corn and hens are on the menu this week and won't fine. Next week it is hoped to add Karo syrup to the Another new feature this week was the appearance of the white, of the Maryland Agricultural college, assisted by Miss Alma McGinnan, and these demands included canned meats, and offered delectable samples to cautious buyers. Recipes for incorporating the canned anecdote beef by KATHERINE POLLON BEEF. Two cans beef (diced). 1 can of brown sauce, one half inch celery, one half inch potatoes, one half inch tomatoes, one half cup pans, one half cup potatoes, salt and potato powder are cut up in small pieces. The first ingredients in the list down to tomatoes are baked for an hour; the second added to the others and baked with them for the remaining half hour. BAKED CORNED BEEF Two cans meat. 1 can potatoes. (riced). tablespoon onion. 1 teaspoon celery. one eight teaspoon one, one half teaspoon salt. one brown sauce and potatoes, placing string of beans as a sparnish on ion of and bake. Mark were additional volunteers who added in selling the goods. Mr. Jason Hawkins is the founder of Lily and Mrs. Anne Smith is the cushier. GEORGE WASHINGTON Washington and died of Mrs. Missouri Washington, died at home, 713 W. Sarnath street. Tuesday, following a five-month illness, following a one-month illness of age. He was educated in at the Colored Polytechnic Institute, was his father. George O. Washington was his father. Funeral services were held at his home on Thursday afternoon. Rev. Robert Browist, Church officiating, Interment at Mr. Ambrose Cemetery. HELPING HAND DAY Y. W. G. A. 1200 Drund Hill Ave. Holding Hand Day, Dov. Bond will quizzes will reele, Mrs. Famma Downs, chairman. Good music. CARD OF THANKS Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Anderson, and family wish to thank their many friends for the many beautiful floral designs and letters of condolence in this sad hour of sorce bequest. Those rich and tender expressions of sympathy have created such sadness that he will never be held in sacred memory. Mr. James Allen of Tessert Street was born in illicit marriage and was given up by his children to thank the blessings for their lifelong faith. WAS 191 DAYS H. E. Caldwell, a Baltimore man, served seventeen months with various outfits as "T" secretary in the Army. He was wounded in WWII. When he was "Dock" John, another well known athlete and physical director, who had seen service, for a long time, Mr. Caldwell had charge of the hut of the 15th, New York colored troops, and with them, the 16th, New York troops under constant fire. Mr. Caldwell also worked with the 50th F. A., and the 221st Labor Battalion Bright and lustrous, free from pinples and blotches, is within the reach of every woman, by the use of Thousands of men and women have beautified their dark, sallow complexions with this wonderful preparation. Why not you? Keep your skin fair and soft, by bathing it each night with DR. FRED PALMER'S SKIN WHITENER SOAP and using DR. FRED PALMER'S FACE POWDER. These three preparations will make your skin the admiration and envy of all. Woman's crowning glory is her hair! Make yours long, silky and fluffy, by applying DR. FRED PALMER'S HAIR DRESSER 25c each at your druggist or toilet goods dealer; or sent postpaid upon receipt of price. AGENTS WANTED! Write for liberal terms. Forby, same property, GP. $78. Fannie B. Rhodes and wife, and to William Anderson and wife, nesc Drudl Hill Ave. near McMechen St. 13.71x100. Hoke and wife to William Sheppard and wife, nesc Myrle Av. near Dolphin St. Gr. $65. John W. Warren and wife to Arthur L. Macbeth, so Pitcher St. near Shields Al. 12x60. Gr. $50. Drayton M. Hite to Trustees of the Sharp St. Sin of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Baltimore City. 4 lots. Alfred S. Niles extr. to John C. Polster, nws Pitcher St. near Angle Ave. Gr. $60. Harry C. Wilson to Milton V. Amber and wife, ss Winchester St. near Woodyear, 12. 3x6x7. Gr. $60. John M. Forte to Fearless M. Williams 4 lots. Wm. H. Wright to Jos. H. H. hurnb and wife, sw Dwid Hill Ave. near Pressman, 1x888.9 $75. MORTGAGES G. Halliburton to Reverdy M. Hollir. et al $225. Miriam B. R. et wife to Stuart B. R. A. $2470. Milton V. Amphore and wife to Harri O. Wilson $550. William Anderson and wife to Fountable P. and L. A. $1040. Will Shenwood and wife to Aven B. L. A. $1560. H. Murphy to Wm. H. Booze $700 O'BAPS $700. Pearless W. Williams 10 J. Lincoln Ingram $250. Irving Boehmner $2500 Arthur L. MacBeth to W. La- gavette B. A. $1000 James H. Hilburn & wife to Ed- mondson Ave. B. L. A. $4000. Drop a card to the office or call HAVE THE AFRO FOLLOW YOU by phone and have the Afro follow you on your summer vacation. It is better than a letter from home Mt. Vernon 2833. Of Course There are OTHER HAIRDRESSERS BUT ONLY ONE ..POINDEXTER. EXPERT MANICURING AND MASSAGING. 833 DRUID HIL AVENUF Phone Mt. Vernon 582-J THE WHITE MAN DOES NOT KNOW (IF ANY) My wife was married and had three different doctors. The last was a popular white doctor residing on Connecticut avenue. He had done all he could and in fact more would be could for her. He had no coughing or allergies. He had advised us to call Dr D Newton C Campbell the Lunar and Neptune Consultant and I came to Washington October 6 1918. In less than a month, fever and pulse reduced to normal. She has been trained more than 15 months since and to able to do part of her house work. Christmas I told the doctor. He wondered and said he would take his hat off to the doctor who could do such grand work. Any address to 1922 15th Street NW Washington D.C. Mrs. Lillie Jones 1300 PENNSYLVANIA AVE. SCALP TREATED, with the wonderful PORO HAIR GROWER, which is guaranteed to grow the hair in six months. Instruction given in the Poro System. Mad. 2492 W. Attorney-At-Law 215 Courtland Street Residence Phone Mt. Vernon 854 Balto., Md. Mme. C. J. Walker's Cleansing Cream IT WORKS WHILE YOU SLEEP A Safe Bleach For Use at Night It is chemically pure and free from foreign ingredients. Harmless to the most delicate skin. No dilution necessary; no breaking out of skin on first application. For daily use you will find Mme. Walker's Superfine Face Powder delightful. Sent anywhere in U.S. for 50c, 3c postage and 2c war tax. Write Mme. C. J. WALKER MFG. CO., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. BIG 4 MOONLIGHT STEAMER STARLIGHT TUESDAY AUG. 5 12 THIN DIMES FARE THICK JIT 1 ICE CREAM Plain Cream Per Gallon $1.20 HARLEQUIN 1.40 PER GALLON HICKS ICE CREAM CO. 1305 ARGYLE AVENUE Phone Madison 1785 J. L. NORTHWESTERN GARAGE Let us do your work for weddings, receptions and other affairs. We have open and closed cars to suit any occasion at the most reasonable price. GARAGE. Auto Repairing and Supplies. Second Hand Cars Tought, and Sold. NORTHWESTERN GARAGE Robert M. Jasper, Proprietor 1800-40 Prescott Street. Phones Madison 599 and 2785. DANCING CLASSES TUESDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS AT PYTINHAST GASTLE Preston and McCullob Sts. Prof. W. W. Robinson and M. L. AUTOS FOR SALE Seven Passenger Studebaker Car for sale. Recently required, new newer equipment. New newer and tubes. $1,000. Also one three-quarter ton truck Also, one three-quarter ton truck $500.00. Terms are: GRECHT GRECHT 1020 PENNSYLVANIA AVE. Phone Mt. Vernon 1354-W Phony Madison 7342 W J. NELSON FORTUNE AGENT Commercial Casualty Insurance Co. Office 2216 Druid Hill Avenue Respectfully solicits your patronage L.'SMOTHERS 16. Laundry. Machine Work Class whitewashing. Machine Work and Brush Work on sashes. Garages, Colors, Apartments, etc. National Felding Bath Cabi MAMMA FOLDING IN CABINETS AND ACUIFACES The Folding: Bath Cabinet is ideal for general use, for with this installed soiled cloth, it also to take any similar bath such as Turkish, vase, shower medicated spray hot sulphur, or plain bath hot or cold. The Cabinet is portable so that these baths can be taken in any part of the house and in any room. July 4-41. Limousines and Carriages for all Occasions Reains moved from City Hospitals. Best Service. PHONE, Madison 5588 JOHN M (Formerly with the Funeral Direct Temporary Loc AUTOS AND CARRIAL JOHN M. JOHNSON buy with the late JOHN A. K. REAL Director and Embra- ratory Location 1234 Etting St. CARRIAGES FOR ALL 17398 BURGE H. HOOPER, 406 W. C. REAL DIRECTOR AND EMBRA- ther deceased husband, Geo- norm inform the public in genera- tion will be continued at the s- tranger years. Your patrona- ll will give satisfactory service as- sistance for past favors. AUEL T. HEMSCH SERVOR TO THE LATE ALEX. HI- RL DIRECTOR & EMBRA- COMPT SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT FROM $75 UP. Carriages for PHONE M.T. VERNON 2578 Residence, 578 W. BEN- LARENCE C. WRIGHT General Director and EMB- CAREY ST. BALTLE PEOPLE PREFER QUALITY, CHOICES. I CAN SUIT YOU. MY PRIVILEGE TO GO ELSEWHERE WE WEDERTAKER. None Madison 4464. Carriages for ROBERT A. ELL Directress and Embra- land Ave., cor. McDo- PHONE WOLFE 6590 504 EAST ST. 2109 DRI- MEDIATE SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT printer of this business and am r with anyone. LEADING COLORED UNDERTAKE JOHN H. OWENS DERTAKER AND EMBRA- land ST., Bet. Division St. and house and carriages. Also ma- taining the body, ad vorticing fun- d尔 door cargo. SHIPPING FUN- dments. Phone Med. 4057; and GUE NEVER CLOSED Auto. SON 5361 WARD RING GO encils for the past eight years. What he has entered the business REAL DIRECTOR & EMBRA- TE TO ALL THE BEST AND MOST POSSIBLE. Carriages to Hire for RTH CAREY ST. NEZ Temporary Location 1234 Etting Street AUTOS AND CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS Phone: St. Paul 7398 MRS. GEORGE H. H. FUNERAL DIRECT Successor to her decease Desires to inform that the business will be ment as in former year solicited. Will give satire Thank you for past SAMUEL SUCCESSOR TO THE FUNERAL DIRECT PROMPT SERVICE FUNERALS FROM $750 PHONE 1 Office and Residence Wright Quality. CLAREN ...Funeral Dir 1364 N. CAREY SOME PEOPLE AT PRICES. I CAN EXPAND TO AN UNDERTAKE Long Distance Phone Madison MRS. ROBE Funeral Direct 1725 Ashland A PHONE Branch Offices:— 504 EAST IMMEDIATE TO I am the sole proprietor of the wife BALTIMORE'S LEADING C $75 00 AND JOHN H UNDERTAKEN 538 DOLPH ST., BEI Including land, one locuse outside case, enclosing the grave, gloves and door crapes Carrings for all occasions. CHAPEL MORGUE NEW PHONE MADISON 5361 ...ED WARI With James H. Dennis for the that he loses FUNERAL DIRECT AND WILL GIVE TO ALL SERVICE POSSIBLE. O 1463 NORTH CA MRS. GEORGE H. HOOPER, 406 W. Conway St. FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Successor to her deceased husband, Geo. H. Hooper Desires to inform the public in general and friends that the business will be continued at the same establishment as in former years. Your patronage is kindly solicited. Will give satisfactory service as well as price. Thank you for past favors. FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER PROMPT SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT FUNERALS FROM $75 UP. Carriages for all Occasions PHONE MT. VERNON 2578 SOME PEOPLE PREFER QUALITY, OTHERS LOOK AT PRICES, I CAN SUIT YOU. MY PRICES MAKE IT EXPENSIVE TO GO ELSEWHERE WHEN YOU NEED AN UNDERTAKER. Lola Distance Phone Madison 4464. Carriages for All Occasions Branch Offices:— 504 EAST ST. 2109 DRUID HILL AVE. IMMEDIATE SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT I am the sole proprietor of this business and am not in partnership with anyone. UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER 538 DOLPHIN ST., Bet. Division St. and Penna. Ave. Including landline house and carriages. Also neatly ful casket, outside case, enclosing the body, ad vertising funeral, opening grave, gloves and door crepe. SHIPPING FUNERALS $50 & UP Carriages for all occasions. Phone Mad. 4087; and Mad. 4921-J CHAPEL MORGUE NEVER CLOSED Automobile Funerals PHONE MADISON 5381 NEVER CLOSED. .ED WARD RINGGOLD.. With James H. Dennis for the past eight years. Wishes to announce that he has entered the business of FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER AND WILL GIVE TO ALL THE BEST AND MOST COURTEOUS SERVICE POSSIBLE. Carriages to Hire for All Occasions. 1463 NORTH CAREY ST. NEAR GOLD C. & P. PHONE MADISON 692 GEORGE H. HOLLAND FORMERLY MANAGER FOR THE LATE ALEX. HEMSLEY FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER 1631 David Hill Avenue GEORGE FORMERLY MANAGER FUNERAL DIRE 1631 Dru Will furnish funerals Polite, Courteous and CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCC RGE H. HOLL MANAGER FOR THE LATE ALP DIRECTOR & EL 631 Druid Hill Avenue lish funerals at a price that will sa courteous and Expert Attention GUAR ALL OCCASIONS. OPEN DAY Will furnish funerals at a price that will suit YOU. Will provide funerals at a price that will suit YOU. CARRIAGE FOR ALL OCCASIONS. OPEN SATURDAY, WEDNIGHT. WINGT T NEW GUYACUCH No. 463—Price $10. ALL our wigs are hand made and strictly to order. from maker to wearet. WIGS, Transition mations, Synthetic Braids and all other articles of hair goods. WE carry the largest selection of Straight tening Combs and Hair Dressers' Tools. NO. 403—Price $10. KINKY HAIR MARY C. BROWN MARY C. BROWN Alaska, the Excelsior Coast, you can rent your also EXELENTO SOMADE you also EXELENTO SOMADE has done for your hair, skin, stag short and coarse, and now it is a luscious shiny that I can do it up on my own CELIA GELIA GELIA Don't let some fake Kink Remover fool you. You really can't straighten your hair until it's nice and long. That's what EXELENTO QURINEH SOA, removes Dandruff, feeds the shoo of the difference, and makes it grow long, soft and silky. After using a few times you can tell the difference, and long that you can fit it up to suit you. If ExelentO doesn't do we clim, we will give your money back, 25c by mail on our website AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. EXELEKTOR MEDICINE CO., Atlanta, Ga. Pomade Hat Dressing for makeagrace nappy hair grow长爬软,soft, fuzzy, silly, so you can do it up in any style. Removes DARRIFRONT and STITCHING SCALP. HEROLYN is delightfully perfumed and not sticky or gummy. SEND 25 CHIPS (stems or caps) for a big kit HEROLYN MEDICINE Co. Atlanta, Georgia AGENTS WANTED Write for Take no charge, After fourteen years of experi- ment, Laboratory hassened in manufacture that has no that has no the scand of dandruff, stitch itch, makes of the bair, makes short stub born hair grow born hair grow and glossy. GET THE BEST After fourteen years meeting The Reqnall Laborator has succeeded in manufacturing Regnall Balm, a hair grower equal. It clams the scalp of dand ruff, stops itch the roots of the hair makes short stub born hair grow right, hair and gloss. Give it a trial, one box will convince you of its superior mervils. Cocoa Balm SUCE- CEEDS where all others FAIL. Sold on a Money Back guarantee. Send 25 to and get a box of this wonderful Hair Grower. AGENT'S WANTED EVERYWHERE BRITE SKIN HEROLIN BRITE SKIN Face Powder HEROLIN MUNICIPAL CO. PRICE $2.50 EACH HEROLIN BRITE SKIN FACE POWDER, an elegant, fancy, highly crested, brown tint face powder gives your face, neck, arms and hands that soft, smooth, lovely delicate tint so much desired. Beautifies your compulsion. You will like "brite skin" better than any other Face Powder. Brightens up your dark or sallow skin. Try it. By mail 25 cents. Agents wanted. HEROLIN MEDICINE CO. ATLANTA, GEORGIA PSS SV JULY AS) Wp i9 Soares eee Se eee eR FE SULTS: ee a eS LSE DENIS SIN TIT 3 re 2 I Ee ee NN eR ATROSAMERICAN * ks : A ALAM = ce Stee agen CGE DUDE wa ie Tr Css Chartes,"'R. Shipley, E. asta Moying Picture. Benesits |i, bs eae Be é = [Semidng<Chas.- “-aiitchett, © Somuel| 55. Satter ET seh do| Boe en 7 ‘ a A. Furnes, ats Lavra’ N. Gus. Rev.| tar Fhe Haleke $e Beats Gana Mie eens tame ge Wm, ¢:,-Hudnah, Geo, F. Hill, Mrs Regent Theatre ig | omer. “Brown. SPANAIR GT |ii008 ruil. Linberry, Sirs. Maggie|ineo!n ‘Theatre fn ae ae \ 0 : Smid. Steward Davia, on W Organizations “> |Business, In Huncerson, ‘Thos, Kane, br. L. A! Knights, of Pythlas’ (Ar, Geo! Ad B “4 davon, UE George subsubss Jona. Wil yeasts ot Fyehias: (alt, Geer A meron’ H bun alumore Life Insurance Company...» WILLIAM 0, MneGLLE, "President, Ne Home Office: Charles. & Saratoga. Sts.,” Baltimore,’ Md. ‘Tho Feniting Tite 'Insurines’ Company im: Marsiand, __ Ae Foowrance, Polieles- Issued on Ages From 2° to, TP, __ Bieminma Gollectnit sfesiedy from {the homes of the taured. Lb, , Teste TMG 189 om = eae Sp HE! AOD, ——. FRIAS i at (es ny Magic—Postpaid Price $1.25 Agel . ace Pomade, oie i Bs NDT Risa Wintel We ericzarrs ~ Seip SuuurGD OBER COREA NR ENO Hieenpeliy Mises" ribed. ‘Those Who guve luxs tee thank the Rev. Dr. Win Et Beane nee far Victory Hospital Committee REPORT OF TEAMS Paeceper Vea (ore Marry Grown, etuatrmany” $30,109.33 hacen: Sloe we See aaa saat Balun dani 6ao3.u6 season Nantreness Looe TS ttn, tatty A "sae enh digs Seer i" anmnittes Chee : isc Mhacare!ehanrintny Sex 2 ns innit ae? BUGS Setece veauns, etes. Serre Sent, Canies” WOTt.oe sh attics snr iste ENS a0 i i AOE eto SUF pring Sec Se bales Hinata et Se rao ta Giea recent eal ccc 154,10 acsite ivan exsy times te mies vey weit” J Wutey's team S5ibu parma tials 16.00 ede Te et NF cine Ste ais wa te ; 149,80 Gia ws jguoun o Sis seutss.te Total eves (i on econ ot Ss car ceeding i aye sitaceos peste BGS gee Sat Bee ae Eaters fons SEES taincos aii See Nan ep ea Spanien “irae pia eg aia nts tie stew tespenses for 0 meni wy.009 win Yor mata EY Stake Bag aunt hee Nes cspeniea SH pan 8 iii, 814.058,095 4.038.084 Balance deposited in, eviun arum ts, gaaga're eters" eubut. Eaten eebugt Commitee, nicht Beta SSE w “tren te ee tbnet Ve ston CGisteins-and Wockaré Sot of tne Camis and. workers feist Natal ore ont a een the, Shocked, mata Benet Sone gantae De, Nha Corer, vhs Setunan Neaemee a! egaiun. "11," Suiurege Gunn Ate Ryo Ma Hen eaune sade TX moet Waray athe bin Ming hee Sek. shes “Anew Penne Let Pld" Stiettean ante dees ML Vet, Sirs ceil Gloster, Mra, Wea: Bethaes Sine Stars” katebad. dg ame Nintginas Sipe, Blan. WO dite nace ait, Stina hives Ne, sehcte, “anes ute Misa Rate jal Sits certo etahen Aira Biba rneshoa Moxy Addu He's ste day Ma, Be eae! Siu Mis and rs. sJon, Ieee re ta Satie: sth eae ramet tion Rell Lae, hs Kineton 2° ukemi tae. Chine Firsts “iy, TID” pana ain Hasina Sond. Eawaeed” Filer, nena asia Sipe, thos (ites art ine Ae Sa ean Tawa, Ci, Gree, Ane Artie tieas anh te ita Me HA" Deen Taaicerse SHS, den aeons Tae ti oa Aloe MME tre tone, Ati) Share ete Ue fanaa Mare “AP star ak Sie” Water ee" edn Shes, ime Seiler Mun Hai, Ming "Sarah doch” tga Nui” awning, ES Hanne’ tian. Sieg. ttatie’ Calm Vere Me it rattan Beate Ses" Tocsunt_atin Lannea a catia tines late Aa iinet Atay tubes SN B Movie Site ate ate Sati “Te Ht Stag Se yee te” nwo Abert thal vate Misuincuun Mra, the Brown re fona” Eethmaina es, Gare Bion “ionn Gaswawas: Mine Carte Kook Sivee AL Muay taghent Wie won suc Grin, “Mtoe ls Hite ices, “Warne Auge Rett sien ‘Painite Lase Mot et Waid “irs. “itimesissteeet SNe Fi, Meson ee, Wan, (ie ante at “Atlee Wei Mite ane angrtig, SM Be Ste amen Sea Ge Yona Hiei nh Wal We Wircinih “"Yivomhane Neuter 72: fits. hess lesegi Ce ine MESS Bio eS clarence Roberts BA Hci Wihsone We A Mall Mise Met Rouinon, “Walter vero ates, Gtewinee age Mate Aen iain alae elon Gray. He ciaeke: Ba teimors "Baraat Hic Sita: lc Sore. rang Pe an th tient Alt Sins clolisone Hagerstown Mie C. fares AIA tnncad ii Guee {Emote “sthkeFiorence Kelly Haney Babin: “Stes. Lawn lube. Mise Baer i R.A cumner das Sen tas “inh ted bancoln fie, Win, AE Aubtinyes od sand Wolée, Mix | Musial anti Mea Berend Tonkaed, “Miss Hattie L.. Nichols, Miss” Bila, is See Noel itoat Ss hom, Shed ee ange OR rt Aire eue scat Oa, Be eu nee Sane aa et Sas “AiR tes am LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS ude Saban te View irs. Van ker byuen ie $600,U0 ie aa Bl ta 100 NIMS Ione uta Bir dk Ervin, Be. 5 tuahey Te ei pe erat Beat be eee uated Chak Soe er ah AMEE BE asad Chis. dui as api tee tn Geta A he ttc Sahay Ba Sata, URE a gs cae Seok tan! AR gate Se RE es OEE dupe ons Rak ine asic, aeatFEE wr! eu is, deoblnson ‘su.uU - $50 SUBSCRIPTIONS. ine Hosing subseribed — $50,00 euen dang WY. Ethel Wn, Be Botan. ery, Mr. nd “Alix. A. Murra Carey Wag, Cassell, ate ind steed! Geran, De, tid tex de Ue Aion. Jt Mis" Attute “avis, WW. Mer fine ce te. unde the” Win Aeusies. "Mom. agites Frengon Baris abe" Mchoas’ seteier, arts, CecehG Maire, 1.1L “Davenport, Juni ty shteotke) Nin. “waite, burs Chas Voter “Nowe Murr. Mie gih M ‘Alisoit, “rnin ath tae Waikek, ASW. ‘Gitigitnyy Meg dem Aa ahtsuis, Jotun WW Hae Leh: tinin ssn, Henry. symeburn, SwuPUtON wuts, Airs, Vg SNE AMES. Andie: Davis, Hee, anak MuqUy Fa Le Sith isn ive", Ch bere Wi SAsiine “Hawise bis i tute, Ui Un br aun Lt. des, Better, vitae te Ssitin Sue bee S Nemiss Mes Ngote“tbuinter Mach Hirown, aor, “Jutiug Frredenwta Mrs,” Pioretice ‘Goswell, Dr. wind. ALPS Wo, Wenver, als. ‘thos Goodwente Mies, © ouura' Gane” He Gant Asictuer SE" Metutnnyatra” Sawes Kuuintson, Siew, “Aitue Fordy Str, Joh eh He Cu Garter Meu. Ke Mega. $44.09 OG. dita Fi 0.u0 $30 SUBSCRIPTIONS eae fuilowing persons suby:ribedt 20.0 lor. “J. M,. Wilkens, Migs anita 1 Whining, ““athag alice "CS aekiaon Loa ON. Jak” ‘Plone, icruest SSoomtis’daawretey, We Bate ase 1 Cutter, Bre Wan Be Bas, Spmaye Coubes. Mlsg Vailence Watson Je get 3 cucu eS Austin Joujang,” Alss. Layulse smith, Daan, “Aiken” Sunmuel ee” Brg ahs. chendurd Jin Suuti’ Ment WV Armistead. sylvester" Purcston, Win, i. Gaston, Atmstead, Pollard Cher! chive Wiitiins, Be Ss, Guurlive, Rev, Way eaters oorg. Ninn", ar anid “ate, Win Salih Mes “hasattret” A" egiew, 28,00; wavy Westey, $40.00, $25 SUBSCRIPTIONS, tga d be, COMO mIng * wetlin. *-gubivcetbed i Eaiwurd Lanses. bilgi, West ps. Cina, SE cath: Sank Min. Tet Hn Beucki MME. £..J. NORTHERN “HAIR VIGOR ‘Stimuiatey the: growth of the hair removes, Dandru and prevent preuuyare tallag out of hale, DIRECTIONS Apply to thy sealp dni, rubbing prise SIAL B,J. NORTERN 1408 MEKLDERRY “STREET thono Wolte 204-9. BAUHMONI, MD. MME. M. S. JOHNSON’S Hair Féod and Straightener| ~" Preparation: Makes the hair soft and glosey. t egpectaily. reconnmend It setter having: tried it with euccess £07 8 leust three years, What it has d 36) (or nv can be. done. for otnere Give kati Ribs" JOUINSON | 2428 Druid Hill Avenue. WHLETE SWANN HAIRDRESSING ROOMS Mme. George Mf. Cniter, Jou DRUID HILL AVENUE. | DRUID HILL: AVE Hair dressing, factal massage, Manicuring and Weaving. ty my ite pomade nnd be convinced. Ny schvol 1s open for teaching of the above branches. Diplomas award is For terins phone Mad, 2602-n Mme, Georgo-. Caster ise grade ate pupil of Mimo, M, a: Hunter. Ne eee aa > Beye ee ma a ee | TR A moe "Mme. M. J: JONES 4a, BIDDLE STRERT Hair Dressing and Scalp Treatment BLECTRIGAL MASSAGING se Sea ett Mime. oo at DM. Charies'R. "> Shipley, -'E. Austin Jenking, Chas;-'/~Mitche}l, » Samuel ftuirnes, Stas Lavra’ R. Gillis, Rev. Wm. G.Hudnal, Geo, F. Hill, Mrs oslo ruit. Linberry, Mrs. Magee Smith," 3. - Sueward Davis, John W. uencerson, ‘Thos, Kane, Dr LH. Biever, DE. -Geon a Stubs, sonia, W: Hiner, Sige Lita Muted Pits haa Stew, gies Emm 3 Stlotiors, tiegneid’” Smothers. aos Taner, . “Chenry Senkins Bat lei, Seymour Slandcbaum Dr CS Brooks, Froueric “Side Woot: “ite ones.” Dewitt’ “aivuinge” ales ile uewsoti's. H. Smith be. ANE Ateld"Sanes Co Shore Geter Went Geo Wings airs, Cte HUE.” He “otinson airs obi 2ivoik Jos, heayr Deed uy. Boi: fea Ur. uw, Snort. bk Luter Reein Ue Cee h” Cluster or, Gita Ze Wine i, Carga, toes © ete leo Carrara Sunita, atts “Georlana, Bes pare se icinsiey, Prune seb” Bawura init Shas" Ents “Ee Watt tare Fy nterson, sins Deiapnine “smithy Se “Juni Sead ete Son Hermes Sti Sotin: Sauimes, Shin’ Blarguerie Ghote, We Ht urn ale ai UN Mornei: “Beate! duvid’ wiliara Breck “airs. Almmte. C. iaurvey, ee Wilhuing, ‘rane weeks, ain. aud Sirs twtrd™ Vediauia, “Sojoman “becuur Wa “Greenicous Sites Suny aiison, "tls Geary. anma’ Wihtains ‘Ring aie dete eal ran letenon "Ai: SUSowage ce. Wed? MeNecHion “Aiieea ie atnoxe Wr, Lou Ste Fe” Sak ott ahd Stra tS Se ties 2! 0 Mees, vlan Ranke Hews 0 Bowers, DF. Wat. Wate Asha Wasim, Bt, Nowe Ul Siete eat Mth ros Bowe, De se Lanoin. Wewseh oe Sins tt, “Akers, Gre We, Coleman or a Rete Ue Ve: Carper, be ida runt, dirs” Suns ae Soe suse doch, Bt Alt “Lian ‘homimon, ‘iho, Taste, HH. Jon fein Aira! Sophias Parken Hanis Shes a ey ae eee W Sais iss” velga® Nucl a isin’ ‘os Moot, Jom it Kee sacub A. "Ching “ee, th. Colts SiS iitew Coe Sgn bepiee, vane Ht, ‘Mise Shegnind Sonstcburn, Cen itmiugne’ Joh Y. rpary hn Bondo airy i. ahha, dee Behar Bred: Yoong ait aa iva Tade iigie, “ste an Mes AM “Raat, "WN Motoeie Ce aa seine Dore, JB stermio, suiun Sieh, Gas. ean i, Toho, “es Weuntcr Mawnan rune Catone sang Wn Slerete iri, Sante awh Mia Metang, “Man, i Hiompaon Abra ina Ie thant “Caroma Bld Dy Bin “F, “Lociowwot ar oma Yat. kes dunn oner CUS Als eile sonia Mt “Growginsehy dot Fount ihe Sis Mores, “es eorsionis Wt, “ier Neate Wehr loka. Gabi, des itatrs: “Rucker, John 3. Gibbs, Je, Hurry: J, | BALTIMORE SCHOOLS, ' Nod WO & Training: Saehgg) ne & NE. gusts isdn nig somos” gs" SET Solored igh Senvel Aint saveigtion 137.00 schowt So"bou | * iu Seool Sov awe ao Soot So, tos Seat Sclwot Sor soe aoete Schoat Xo tor ais Bewol. Ne Uy Branch 39% Bevel’ No, Yb ano Reheat No: toy abn Semmot Sor ite last Schuot Xe dtd give Sehoul. Nee iE ines Scoot Ae U8 ee Seitoot Nu. tte 2H Behhool Ser 13 ses San of Sed, Colored gh Soha 23.00 PERRY & BLAKE | AGENTS FOR LOO .Poro Beauty Parlor. Hair Cultico and Faclal stas- sage. "We: specialize on short aud stubborn hair. We are also. pre- area Yo tench the avatom at out vasior. * " 930 KODERY STREET - | Madison 5593-4, < COMBINGS MADE UP Mme. M. L. GRAY HAIRDRESSING Electric Massage ; and Manicuring. 1213 PARK AVENUE rhune Diudison 4757-W Bates a me 0b wel | MRS. L. J. PECK 521 MOSHER STREET Wishes to:introducd to” you’ the aupetionty of tho Walker Stethou, he more: you use the Walker Mewhou tie more you will be trres- istibiy drawn to use ty“ am ‘prow [pated to glve the teatment or 0 feeb we. method. SWALKUM'S PRICPARATIONS. FOR SALE AL Combinge Miue Up. Sind 2138-3 MME. KING’S Hair Dressing, Manictiring and Massage Parlors Dermat ‘Treatment 1510 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone Madison #708, GRAYSON’S BEAUTY PARLOR 1828. PENNA, AVE. * Hairdressing, Manicuring Manicuring etc. } Boure Ya, m. 9p. me See On cues Sek. 8 Mme. M. A. Hunter’s ‘SOUOOL OF INSTRUCTION | 1022 DRULD MILL AVE BALTIMORE, MD. Hair Dresolog,, Faclat: Massage, Manleucing and’ Weaving. Sty Sahoo! ie epen for tho’ texshing of the ‘above. ‘branches. Diplomas Awarded.» Try our Special Kalr Pomade, For terms, apply. Phone Madison °acd0-W. ‘Mime. Hunter a Deol of Be. Ie 8. Bandar. FREE STYLE BOOK : MAILED TO. aR Ea COLORED WOMEN GSI Ging es ir eget i AY an Boa ee eine) Satter Tene) Seta RINE ase free Noe eee NY Sore Hatrant |) * ones rounded cee ty a raat pase Se eens LIMITE Posrpaip $1.10: eee ec i ia a cone nf ELSE HAR COR Nn RACE, MEY AND WOMEN PROTECT YOUR FUTURE ~~ BY USING BLACK AND WHITE OINTMENT. BY MAIL 25¢. “om WHAT IT DID FOR VIOLA STEELE. .. cc - oe . a es A a ; as 2 Ce o fe Se. ae a as BN i. Ce fe ae fo es ee wa Wo eS SS AS eo PO wee a ee re ‘ee a Pe x ee was worried: with ‘plackheags, treckela snd sunburn. No other rematg bleached me e9 Binok and White Olntment. | will never uss pert Pie, Dear friends, If you want Weoutiful, gott. anooth sin tip a bor of Block and White Otntmont—Viola Gtecle, ‘Be attractive, ‘Throw off the chains that have held, sou beck trom prosperity ‘and happiness that rightly belongs to you. “Apply Black and White Ointment (for white and.colored folks) ae directed fon package, to your face, meck, arms or hands, It ts, very pleasant to the skin ‘and has the effect of bleaching dark, aillow. or blotchy ‘akin, clearing the akin of risings..burmps. pimples. blackheads. wrin- Kien, tan or frocklee—giving you ‘clear, aott. bright complexion, mak- tng you-the:énvy of everybody. Black and White: Ointment: ts aheed of many other-preparationg, which ony éover up piniplee oF sFupttone, Black and: White Ointment removes and heals them, Seld.on money hack ‘guarantes, Two slzeg,"25e and Se (large eize contains. 2 thmas ae much ag emallor alze), gent by: mall. It you sond $1 for four boxcs of Black and White Olntinent, « Ba Ske af Black and White Soap included fron, "> Patt ADDRESS PLOUGH CHEMICAL GOMMANT, MFAPHIS, TENN, BLACK AND WHITH OINTMENT. SOLD FVEREWHERE | 1 AGENTS MAKWA GOO LING ake ta copresentinig ut Apply foF cerrltory and pecial deal“ Black a0: White Olatment provides chance tor ‘you -to, make @ goad living. No axperlene cequired. Black and White Ointment sélis fast and oasr, ‘ovine Picture Benefite Moying Picture. Beneste - Dantar tieatre ob Bunter ate a HR Repent "Fhesive ae Regent Theatre ans | Kniglits. of Pytblas’ (Mr, Geo) A pelt hafinaa? Biniy Eouger No. 2g “3000 Sane utes Aes So. on Mates SSM: Matos °° ai tp Scewlor sage 0-8 2500 Einstin Lode Xo. 38 Biby Etveua “rogue Xo. ess Elo eytilgiy te'seneral bas Total H.019.0 Gameug Fishermen: Stock ue 100.0 Hailey: Xtnole Tab, ZA SoU ne aos 388 paltiai 7b So, 6.0. 7. Gas Se etla t S iB ‘Grand United Oniet of Nazazites sate taut ito ieieistePattore: sco 12° 5 ais Gea aner Gain sat 6 Suey sitar. cout Son's iin Monumental" Lge of ks $104.00 atteutal Ghat soy 2h SMettbcta of the, Chib 08.00 Moon Chapters He ae ‘aos Scio. in Lagan ro, c:Xe Bt intoia’ Pome ge Gate. Bay St. Juines Male. #énetleial “Soe 1yv.vu St Anew’ Weta Socety °° Ton Bi Anew Fell cy, "30 onary’ Suan Uebtueg’ cise e Tete as aed. Be Nin ae eich Patt ana 9 HR coe Wings, of watt He en ten BR EH Sneath iat fa edie, aati “Si Spee Soca 25.00 eaupste Neste, “Wnness te za00 eden. Society, nro ee Ne ce 2500 seeuataity EM ED cine eoaee Sta ita SS, 5.0 oval” Gui clus Es ting Cocopsrative civic ores 35.00 afvertiteriean Order of owls W000 [Assim liver Lest Ciro ae 001 wile MMH, ue. Be HORM a ie it GM BES! order of Job “SB. hana Gated Sedge oe 20 Se i te, ots ae aati suit Botta of stanasers of jludy Board of Managers ob gs | Religious Section Maeda Buptit Chureh “92,996.30 St ae tttts Sian Bent'sumse Chnge « euau Sion "Bis, “Car itn Sistine hdvemtet cureb, ter Seoetth Ue ane a See Ee ee Charen teady Fete ecg HB Can Soria Shure ou Hinge Iniehendent 8 seitupstlian M. a church Hngo cieeestan a. x chore 198 getcupalan a Geese 388 Sea” Si AE Ehureh eae tas aint Ehret Shoe Gini Mele Sa. Hee We We atu itor 396.0 beri’ C, i, "Chad ean, it 333.00 apie Mein at: Chure, 300.09 Si Shaatnens SRE, hch | “Sm Se Mathias, Ate Be Caren | pAntiochSapuist.Churchs 7.2 2166.00 ‘Agnes\: Mem.--Bapist “Church™ 259.06 Rlton sBepiiet Church" gee Bethel “A AL, “chursh "80,00 Chusch ‘ae Bastpore: nae ~ > eI fe. Brown. pastor. °° g0.3] ‘teiniy Aste Sunday’ Sensor 25.00 Business, Industrial Section The Emerson’ Hotel waters S"Crhru ait. Win, White)” $€22:00 e_Rennert: Hote) Walters » Berkleyy Se “ , 528.00) ‘The Baltimore Bargéln’ House MEnplevees 5094.73 Baltimore ‘Coser. Works ‘employees: a 790.00) Bethleliem Steel Co, = employees, §, 2 563.75 Mutual Benefit Society eMCtht tia Agenss) 1,125.25 Employees: of ‘The Hub 4%,00) Hochschild: Kotn & Co, 100100 Atro-Amerlean Pubitshing. Co, 120.00 Shipouliders “Linton 100.00 Hopper sleGew Co, 25,00 J, Henry $, Wampole Co. 36.00 A.. F.; Lawtence Coa} Co. 25.00) sath Bros, 33.00 Henson, Wescott Dunning’ 38.00 Joel, ritmane Con 36,00 Bitdebaker Automébile Co. 50:09 Blum's" Marguin House 25.00 Hub’ Furnitare” Co. 35-00 ‘he Gibgon. Co, 38.00 G0. Renny to, $0.00 Munnar “Chemeal’.co. 25.00) Mi, low at, EL Gin 351.00] Meson 'h. Ak. offlame’ > 380100 Neliemlall Pasture, GAWO.N, "25.00 PIANOS AND ORGANS TUNED AND REPAIRED Mull Orders Promptly Attended to) ‘All Work Guaranteed JOSEPH A HAYES, 705 ENSOR STREET. | Phone Wolfe 1612-3. 4i-4atp| WYATT SMITH Dealer tn Grocertes and Provlaona Pe Coal, Wood, Charcoal Coke : andes, 1728 BRUNT STREET | Orders Promp‘ly attended to’ Phone Madleon 1984, JOHN A. BISHOP FUNERAL ‘DIRECTOR & EMBALMER “1107 DRUID HILL AVE. Phone Mt. Vernon 834, — “CHARLES A. CHASE - 42 DRUID HILL AVENUE ‘Confectionery & Ico Orcam Parlor “Dealer in Gardiner’a Best Ico Cream Ail Flavors, Harlequin, Blocks, Sodas ‘and Sundaes, Fancy Cakes, Pies, Sott ‘Drinks. Clears, and Cigarettes, Partles ‘and. Entertainments, yervod- : ‘Phone Bit. Verhon 1366, Pata ye: aa ae ag ca irae ae Be RE Bh Y\” BE SURE to take-a little 4” NA upreeaution and care NOW, £7 ~ VA land insure EYE COMFORT AY. SO forithe days to come £7 g=\ Semars a OFFERS compkte MAKES oily ONE =a 4 eee and charge fo examine yy s Fe uri pleas GASSES you EYES, write ja aA As ow SD © fhe prescription & py \ As-* @i.— sake the GLASSES fy XQ Eencet Service & Porfoct Satisfaction i : aA ‘ fa wr EST ay 1905 le ft 83 mn Ta ae tea ge ER é AE Pr taaer a Cie NEU ALEC eat te cam) oan peas og emi] OUR NEW HOME : | ammo eee 8 ee | Byte f : Fee en be : we = [Pbe.. : yy s C| ba , At a a “haem oe Sy ee | enn aie i oa RS iil ee an — 2 See e i ' 5. 25,000;MORE{PORO'AGENTS WANTED | | iy --"pquipped with the Very Latest Apparatus for Taaching the !PorosSystemfof Scalp and Hair Culture: Gnd all Brenches of Beauty: Cultore ree woe Sere, fg Diplomas Given | EGE © 8 Sine todas: for, Rules Inlrmation ‘ Py core SBORGIROLEEGE ese a tg JS Lond Ma Bee ta sane een vee Stpsgn, ee Met eS Se ok age it eNO LEE: (BOS GUARANTEED! HAIR-GROWER 7, 4, ‘+ Nuehite: proparation' positively: rived: News Tite te; thehair, Nu- Lite bas won: tis tremendous success: shally? on merit." u-t.itebrt= cater the retin. Nuchite invigorates, (Ho pate" Nuifo™foedA. the Usineds Wo-LAre ‘prowidton tho’ grasel. Fone seats coviggahian il Nv-Life: til, Nu-bile aydleiy ‘Is sir! educational system, NUS, for tale by Droggsts and Salrdrcesora : i Fun sourse cin atl branches. of Denuty Culture, £26.00:-vayali wovkiy. Address Mme: Estelle, ‘ poo eee se) NUGLEFE COLLEGE oc 99 We 188rd SEREBT, OR: LENOX AVE, NEW YORK omy, . liga? ‘ i ey La. ea, a a 3 ANGE iy!” ‘Old Hast Indian Faun Hair Pomade Go 1413 PENNSYLVANIA JA¥ES UN Phone, Madison, “2276's, "°° nite ci air ginias iia sREE GER ee a el Te mt as a at tied Nha a Hower, but the 2Oid Est tee te Eomiudes rere in ated Ba cepts ars ta AE Gear, Hany cee, Ba en Seem yi ast ts Sahar Tease he ge ae ba Bloron and? Reanty Parlors. One, ton-| Hoes Seis as Oey Me Rati ut secstorss Keay deo, te grist ole, row I pie sinless, He Saal ET on eae ann Reomegiec Or ter, ara i A omen ean "Rheag mfticius by mall $1.25, Send] sas rien ei I Se aiborary, ait HEAL AVE DAM FOR HAT RENOVATING ;. Fry C. THOMAS [wERESSING TLUB.. lout, Mats Louk. Like - New” Alter Y'Bhey Are bows On. i Sylts:and Overeoata loaned, Dycd | Altered or-Teepm Feil lke News 400-402 Druid: Hill Avenua. t Ail Work Guaranteed. |__Puono ate “Vornon34s0-W, eet iu ate seen boli Lh hL metaehe tg) Se ee) Lelesacels hen ®) eran cr slat eae tennant id UCI BL ere eID esas ae Tae Peale ae aOR e WAITS OR Deets E Residence 1411 DRUH HILL AV. Home hours 7 to 9 every night Office: 215 COURTLAND ST. Rooms 49-51 Third Floor C. & P. Phone. Baltimore, Md. ...Willard W. Allen... Real Estate Broker. Houses for Sale on Reasonable Terms. Rents Collected. Loans 1117 NORTH CAREY STREET Negotiated. Music For All Occasions The Cosmopolitan Band Will furnish Music for any number of Musicians desired JOHN K. LYLES Manager 1302 Penna. Avenue THE NEW LINCOLN THEATRE 934-36 PENNA. AVE. NEAR BIDDLE ST. ONLY REAL COLORED VAUDEVILLE THEATRE IN BAITO. Entire change Monday and Thursday. ——ONE WEEK ONLY—— First Appearance in Baltimore. All Star Acts DIRECT FROM DETROIT, MICHIGAN DOOLEY and DOOLEY SOMETHING WORTH WHILE GREEN and BAILEY TWO REEL SINGING AND DANCING COMEDIANS ED. WEST THE FUNNIEST BOY IN THE SHOW BUSINESS JOHNSON and DOUGLASS DIRECT FROM THE WEST OUR FEATURE PICTURES—— MONDAY—“CRIMSON STAIN MYSTERY” No. 8 TUESDAY—“MACISTE” Episode No. 9 WEDNESDAY—"ELMO THE MIGHTY" Episode 2 THURSDAY—"THE TIGER'S TRAIL" FRIDAY—OUR FEATURE DAY—5 Reel Western. SATURDAY—"TOM MIX"—Western Man. We open 1:30 to 11:30 P. M.—Special Feature Pictures for our Matinee Only. Including our Regular Vaudeville. COME EARLY AND AVOID THE RUSH Trains Every 30 Minutes. 2 Minutes Walk From The Station To SOLD ON EASY TERMS. Commutation Tickets less than 11 Cents per round trip 12 MINUTES RIDE FROM CAMDEN STATION We will take you and your friends to the Park any time covenant to you. FREE OF CHARGE. PHONE, ST. PAUL 3119 106 LA W BUILDING BALTIMORE, MD. Work Started MORGAN We are putting in Sewers & Streets which will make Morgan Park the only Suburban section for colored people to have all the modern improvements. MORGAN REALTY CO., Agt. 900 NORTH EUTAW STREET, Cor. Biddle TRULY HATCHETT MANAGER --- Carey Theatre CAREY AND PRESSTMAN STREETS THE BEST IN PHOTO PLAYS Open every day from 2 to 11:15 Continuously PROGRAM FOR NEXT WEEK This is the most timeless picture ever presented. It will show you if "Bolshevism" is practical. Just imagine what would happen if every one had their own way. Where would our women be protected if everybody could do as they pleased? This picture will tell you more forcefully than words. "GIVES AND GRUBBERS" 2 Acts "PUT UP YOUR HANDS" Featuring MARGARET FISHER. This is a good Comedy Drama in 5 Acts. CHRISTIE COMEDIANS in a Good COMEDY WEDNESDAY—RUTH-ROLAND and GEO. LARKINS in "TIGER'S TRAIL" Last Episode JACK KERRIGAN in "PLAYING THE GAME" 2 Act Western Mack Sounect. Comedians in "NEVER-TOO OLD" 2 Act Comedy Lonesome Luke in "A SAMMY IN SIBERIA" some Comedy THURSDAY ANTONIO MORENO and CARROLL HOLLOWAY "PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN" She Danced Her way into his Heart that she might Kill him. PATHE REVIEW SHOWING LATEST EVENTS FRIDAY—DOUBLE SERIAL DAY:—Last Series of Cyclone Smith's Stories, with "CYCLONE SMITH'S PARTNER" EDDIE POLO ELMO LINCOLN and GRACE GUNARD in "ELMO THE MIGHTY" episode 5 Sunshine Fox Comedians in "HIS MUSICAL SNEZEZ"-Comedy KEYSTONE COMEDIANS in a Clever 1 act COMEDY PETE MORRISON in "GETTING ACQUAINTED" 2 act Western NEAL BURNS in "HAPPY RETURNS" 1 act COMEDY TOM MIX in "FORKED TRAILS" some WESTERN HAPPY HOOLIGAN in a Clever Cartoon COMEDY COMING—All Star cast in "MIDNIGHT PATROL" 6 Acta. Anna Luther in "THE GREAT GAMBLE"—Serial James J. Corbett in "THE MIDNIGHT MAN"—Serial DUNBAR IF ITS QUALITY SEE IT AT THE DUNBAR Central Avenue near Monument Street. JOSIAR DIGGS Proplrctors HENRY S. TRIMBLE PROGRAM FOR NEXT WEEK MONDAY—“THE CARTER CASE” Episode 5 Goldwyn Pictures Corporation Presents WM. DESMOND in “WHITE WASH WAIL” Full of Thrills in 5 Reels Screen Magazine Pokes and Jabs Comedy TUESDAY—“BOLSHEVISM ON TRIAL” Presented by Select Pictures EDDIE POLO IN CYCLOLNE SMITH'S STORIES, 10th PART 2 REEL WESTERN PATHE COMEDY—“THE MARATHON” WEDNESDAY—“TIGER'S TRAIL” Episode 10 Featuring—RUTH ROLAND A REAL PEPPERY WESTERN A GOOD COMEDY THURSDAY—“ELMO THE MIGHTY” episode 3 Featuring Elmo Lincoln and Grace Cunard. entitled “HOOP LA” featuring BILLIE RHODES "A Wild Goose Chase" 5 Reel Triangle featuring Matt Moore CURRENT EVENTS VERY GOOD COMEDY SATURDAY—PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN Greater Vltagraph Serial with Antonio Moreno & Carol Holloway 9th EPISODE WE HAVE WAITED A LONG TIME FOR THIS TO BE ABLE TO SELL YOU HOUSES IN ANY SECTION OF CITY Tolson Bros. Realty Company OFFICES—500 BAKER STREET 2027 McCULLOH STREET. Phone Madison 1613 J. Phone Madison 7550- W. THE LIST 1 three story house 1200 block Harlem Ave Eree light, heat Gr. $90 1 3-Story house 1900 Block Pennsylvania avenue, G. R. $75.00 1 3-Story house 1200 Block Striker street, G. R. $75.00 2 three story houses in 2300 block McCulloh St. Ground rent $75. 4 three story houses in 1600 block Mulberry St. Ground rent $60. ALSO HOUSES AND LOTS SOLD AT WILSON PARK & PIMLICO LOANS NEGOTIATED THE BALTIMORE SCHOOL OF MUSIC MME. LOTTIP A. PETERSON, Directress. 1627 DRUID HILL AVENUE. The Best and Most Modern Methods of Teaching. PIANO, VIOLIN, CORNET, DOUBLE-BASS, TROMBONE, MAN- DOLIN, CLARIONET, SAXOPHONE, DRUMS and VOICE CULTURE A complete System of Vocal Education, including Elementary, In- termediate and Advanced Departments. ORCHESTRAS PROVIDED FOR ALL OCCASIONS. 1 3-story house, ground rent $31.75, 300 block Schroeder street. 2 3-story marble frond houses 2300 block Barclay street. 3 1000 block House 1000 block McCulloch street. The New and Popular Lyecem Hall son, 2016 McCuilton Street. Phone Mad. 7170-W. :FOR SALE—Three store house 230 block McCuilton St. 8' rooms and bath. Gr. $72. In A. 1. condition. See Arthur L. Johnson. FOR SALE—Three store house 1104- Riggs avenue, now, being thoroughly renovated. Gr. $2.50. 8 rooms and bath. Price $2.50. Terms $300 cash. Immediate possession. See Arthur L. Johnson. 1104. Riggs avenue, now, being thoroughly renovated. Gr. $62.50 8 rooms and 2 bath. Price $22.50. Terms $300 cash. Immediate possession. See Arthur L. Johnson TRULY HATCHETT Real Estate and Insurance in All Its Branches. Notary Public Morgan Park Realty Company 900 N. Eutaw St., cor. Biddle. Regent Theatre Regent Orchestra, Paul Harris, Lender, in Attendance Special Feature—The REGENT CONCERT ORCHESTRA Paul J. Harris, Violin, Rivers D. D. Chambers, Pianist Little Jack, Marimbphone, Tympani, Drums etc. HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE YOUR FAVORITE COMEDIAN SANDY BURNS WITH HIS TEN STARS DIRECT FROM GIBSON'S THEATRE—1 Months Run MONDAY—Vitagraph Blue Ribbon Special Feature EARL WILLIAMS in From the Popular Novel of the Same Title MR. SIDNEY DREW IN COMEDY entitled—"HIS WIFE KNEW ABOUT IT" TUESDAY—Craig Kennedy Serial presents Herbert Rawlinson and Margaret Marsh and 7 other stars in the World's Greatest Detective Story. FULL OF EXCITEMENT AND A THOUSAND TRILLS Western Drama entitled "AGE HIGH" STAR COMEDY entitled "WISE WIVES" WEDNESDAY—A PARAMOUNT PICTURE CHARLES RAY in— "HIS MOTHER'S BOY" A Picturization of Rupert Hughes' Story "WHEN LIFE IS MARKED DOWN" Pathe Comedy "SPRING FEVER" DOUBLE SERIAL DAY THURSDAY—A Smashing Western Serial, featuring Harry C. Myers, Ruth Stonehouse and Paul Painze. "THE MASKED RIDER" Who is the Masked Rider? Sherlock Holmes and Craig Kennedy would have to sit up nights to solve the mystery of the Masked Rider. ELMO LINCOLN the wonderful Star of Tarzan of the Apes will be seen in the Serial entitled— "ELMO THE MIGHTY" Episode 6 Also "SAM BOS' WEDDING DAY—Comedy. FRIDAY—WESTERN SERIAL FEATURING RUTH ROLAND in "TIGER'S TRAIL" Episode 14 A TWO REEL MELDRAMA VARSITY COMEDY SATURDAY-Vitagraph New Wieland Serial featuring ANTONIO MORENO AND CAROL HOLLOWAY In "PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN" EPISODE 5 The Universal presents MARIE WALCAMP in a Serial of a thousand surprises, entitled OMING—Anne Lathert and Charles Hutchison in "THE GREAT GAMBLE." August 22nd. STAR THEATRE STAR THEATRE IF ITS GOOD SEE IT AT THE STAR PROGRAM FOR NEXT WEEK RE—ENGAGEMENT OF BROWN AND DEMONT EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION— ANITA BUSH with her JAZZ GIRLS MONDAY—Ruth Roland in "TIGER'S TRAIL" 12 STRAND AND LUKE COMEDIES TUESDAY—Wm. Duncan in "MAN OF MIGHT" 13 B. WARREN KERIGAN in "FOR HER HAND" —PATIE WEEKLY— WEDNESDAY—"THE RED GLOVE" Episode 12 FEATURING MARIE WALCAMP TOM MIX in "HEROID'S BAD MAN" "THE AND STITCH"—TAILORS A 2 Reel Comedy THURSDAY—MASKED RIDER No. FEATURING HERBERT RAWLINSON ELIZA BURBRIDGE in "THE BETTER WAY" COMEDY—"PAT THE DYNAMITER" FRIDAY—THE CARTER CASE—Episode 2 "VILLAGE BLACKSMITH" SATURDAY—Billy West in "Her First False Hare" A TWO REEL WESTERN DRAMA PATTIE WEEKLY MATINEE—MONDAY AND SATURDAY OPEN 2 P. M. Other Days 6 P. M. MOTION PICTURES and VAUDEVILLE FOR SALE! ANOTHER BIG DEVELOPMENT IN WILSON PARK Open to the race. Nineteen acres, 250 lots. The smallest lots are 25x112 feet; owned by one of our leading Business Men of Baltimore City, MR. HARRY O. WILSON. This beautiful site is located 3 squares east of the beautiful Guilford on the York Road. There is no low or marsh land on this magnificent site; it is located 400 feet above sea level overlooking Baltimore City. Five Cent carfare, 10 minutes ride from the City Hall. The prices of lots range from $300 up. Take York Road car and get off at Arlington Avenue and York Road; go east 3 squares and you will find the beautiful site on the left upon the hill. You may secure any of these lots on easy terms. FIVE DOLLARS DOWN AND SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS. Any one can begin buying a lot with FIVE DOLLARS. To think that the same size lot on Iuid Hill Avenue or McCulloh Street costs $400u,00; and here is a site that in a few years will be worth as much or more. AGENTS ALWAYS ON THE GROUNDS --- FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BROWN. 2103 Druld Hill Avenue Phone Madison 5507. OR W. R. LANGLEY, 1418 Jefferson Street The following dates have been booked DAYLIGHTS JULY 25-True Reformers. 27-Manle Leaf Musical and Literary Association. 28-Metropolitan Christian Union. 21-St. Matthews M. E. Ch. and S. S. 22-McCormick Lodge. 8. Good 24-Roslyn Sewing Circle. 25-A. M. E. Zion Church. MOONLIGHTS JULY # 28-Alleg. No. 4, K. of P. # 28-Leading Ladies: Auxiliary. # 28-Working Words: # 28-S. Mary's Household No. 87. # Wife, Men # Mary's Men Bain Association 23-Golden Jockey School -Bank Jorters & Jantforts Association 31-Ebenezer Baptist Church and Sunday School A. A. AUGUST 1-From Annapolis to Brown's Grove 2-Willing Workers Northwest Baton 3-Waters A.M.E. Sunday School 4-Waters A.M.E. Sunday School 5-Ebenezer A.M.E. Sunday School 6-Independent A.M.E. Church 7-Golden Key, Order of Moses 8-Federal Employees No. 21 9-Bettel A.M.E. Church 10-Franklin Dr. Commandery No. 1 11-Yarrow C. Church 12-Golden C. Church 13-Old Polks Excursion 5-Big Four 6-Rochester's Orchestra. 1-O. O. O. 8-Epworth League of Sharp St. Ch. 9-Household of Ruth, G.U.O. of O.F. 10-Jolly Old-Fellows 11-Rose Rose Club. 12-Atlantic City Pleasure Club. 13-Newfoundland Business Men 14-Piece and Pleasure Social No. 1. 15-1st Separate Co. 16-Association Co. 17-Lafayette Pleasure Club. Dr. Chas. H. Fowler and John W. Rich, Proprietors THE NEW PattersonTheatre L.211ens St. near Carey. SPECIAL SUPPER SHOW AT 7:00 P.M. Open from 3 to 11 P.M. Daily. Continuous Performance GOOLEST PLACE IN TOWN-48 BLADES ELECTRIC AIR PROGRAMME FOR NEXT WEEK MONDAY— THE CALLIAUX CASE A WM. FOX Super-production with an All Star Cast, see special ad on page 2. Adults 17e Children 11e Open 2 p.m. A Good Comedy AG at Five Reel Melodrama featuring LEE HILL. A Side Splitting Comedy "Grave Undertaking" "TIGER'S TRAIL" WITH RUTH ROLAND SHOUPD A WIFF FORGIVE A Five Reel World Picture with an All Star Cast "RED GLOVE" with Dashing MARIE WALCAMP Featuring CONSTANCE TALMADGE. See page 2. Admission 17c. Open 2 p. m. Big Six Reel World Picture featuring KITTY GORDON. This picture ran a whole week at Picture Garden at 25 oents admission. Also a Good Comedy A Wm. Fox Super Picture featuring PEGGY HYLAND This is one of the best pictures ever produced. ALSO A GOOD WESTERN COMING—"THE TURN OF THE WHEEL" with Leah Bond. "THE TURN of the WHEEL" with Geraldine Farrar Aug. 4. "S A FEAT TO TREAT THE FEET" FEET HURT? Why waste time experimenting with your feet when you can get instant relief by having your feet treated— without pain. THE NEW ESSENTIAL BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Formerly located at 1104 W. Lexington St., are now lo- Formerly located at 1104 W. Lexington St., are now loca- located at 1627 W. Lexington St., Cor Mount. After purchasing the above property at a cost of $300 with addi- dional improvements. We cordially invite the inspection of the pub- l and our former members. Meets every Wednesday and Saturday evening from 7:30 to 9:30. We pay 6 per cent interest on savings. Loans Negotiated. Houses bought on easy terms. Rents Collected Isaiah Smith, President. Willard W. Allen, Vice President J. Walter Jones, Treasurer. Wm. H. Butler, Secretary. Allen Pratt and Frank Tibbs, Asst. Secretnries