The Afro-American
Friday, September 26, 1919
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
KOCH RETRACTS STATEMENT BEFORE A. M. E. MINISTERS U. S. TO SEND MARINES TO HAYTI AND SANTO DOMINGO NO SCHOOL BOARD APPOINTMENTS UNTIL AFTER SURVEY
TWO EDITIONS The First Edition Is Out Thursday Afternoon. The Last Edition Is The City Edition And Is Out At Noon Friday.
KOCH RET
U. S. TO
NO SC
MAYOR MEETS
EAST BALTIMORE
DELEGATION
Says Stiff Opposition has De-
veloped Against Colored
Member of Board.
FOUR VACANCIES NOW.
But None Will be Filled Un-
til School Survey Has
Been Made.
The publication of the letter of Mr. C. Marcellus Jersey in last week's Afro-American, in which no spoke plainly about conditions that tended to retard missionary efforts among other ethnic groups, was vowed to that truth, created wide-spread interest. Colleen of the Afro-American were eagerly sought and as eagerly good. The matter soon became a general topic and was discussed by the Catholic missionaries last Sunday. All have have turned to Washington this week, where the bishops of the Catholic Church have been assembled in council since the beginning of the mission. The bishops to consider general affairs affecting the commission within the last thirty-five years. The meeting in Washington had its beginning in the summer of 1915, when golden jubilee in Baltimore of Cardinal Gibbons' elevation to the episcopate. It will cover a range of subjects.
The question of Negro missions, and especially the lack of work among the principal toques to come before the bishops. It is said that the belief has been grown for some time that the work among the principal toques to come before the bishops. It is said that the belief has been grown for some time that the work among the principal toques to come before the bishops. It is expected that the council will prove the way for dative action.
FAILED TO BLOW WHISTLE
Jury Exonerates W. B. and A. Railroad. However.
Camp, Parade, Sen. 25.—Also a number of white men in the vicinity of the railroad trucks where an express of the W. B. and A. ran down and killed two colored men, father and son, last week, were willing to testimony that the accident was the crossing, the coroner's jury brought in, the verdict that the accident was unavoidable. Robert L. Wemps, who was the first person on the scene after the accident took the matter up with State Supreme Green and was awarded $40,000 for his responsibility for accidents at private crossings.
ACTOR BLACKMAILS BOOKKEEPER
New York, Sept. 25.—James Marshall 26, an actor is held under $8,000, ball pending, the trial in the criminal court. Two detectives hidden under the bed in the room of Earth Glenson, West 1425th street will testify that the accident of four firefighters is obtained $40 in marked money from the young woman. Marshall is known as the man whose testimony in the celebrated Boeker case some years ago, sent the believe he imparted to the electric collector at the Glenson home, and only seconds before threatening to oust the past life of Miss Glenson.
ALUMNI IN BIG DRIVE
New York, September 25—In a one-on-one drive for the extension of Lincoln University, an institution for the higher education of colored persons located at Chester county, Pennsylvania, held in a meeting of alumni and friends held in this city. A young colored physician contributed $500 and four others pigred like amounts.
BOYS SENTENCED
FOR RECENT RIOTING
Chicago, Sept. 25—Walter
Colson 16. 2988 S. Dearborn street,
and Charles Johnson 18. 55 W.
Thirty-six street, two colored
boys, were sentenced to life
imprisonment by a verdict of a jury
in connection with the race
runs. The verdict, marked the
triumph in prosecution of
crowd cases. Several colored men
were acquitted.
New York, Sept. 25—The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, today made public a letter to President Wilson calling his attention to the fact that no Negroes had been admitted to the country invited to meet in Washington on October 6, to plan new relations between labor and capital.
The letter which is signed by John R. Shillard, asks the appoinment of Negroes to the commissioning that Negro labor forms of she country's total labor supply namely 12 percent.
There are hardly attentive accords from office, police, and Norm School. 1,067.
Street 2,299.
John R. Shillard, asks the appoinment of Negroes to the commissioning that Negro labor forms of she country's total labor supply namely 12 percent.
There are hardly attentive accords from office, police, and Norm School. 1,067.
Street 2,299.
John R. Shillard, asks the appoinment of Negroes to the commissioning that Negro labor forms of she country's total labor supply namely 12 percent.
VOL. XXVIII. No. 5
None of the four vacancies on the School Board will be罢免 until the General Educational Board or some other selected agency has made a survey of the city schools and handed in to the Mayor's office. All other vacancies are accepted by Mr. Browning. Dissappointment was written on every feature of a delegation of East Baltimore citizens, including Dr. E. Maysfield Boyle, Mr. John E. Jones, Rev. E. Carter, Neal, and a representative of the City Hall office, with the head of the city office in office in the City Hall last Monday morning.
The delegation, representing the Northeast Baltimore Welfare Association and previously sent to Maysgrg a response, sent the delegation at least two colored representatives on the School Board, and called in a person to form of Mr. Browning's attitude. He also called the attention of the chief executive to the recent utterances of Superintendent Jim to investigate with the aid of preferring charge against him.
Mr. Brooming told the education
at a still opposition had developed
against moving in school more
than he did not state who the
colleagues were. He said, that as
many people had been to his
class to promote education, he
advertising colored representation. He
attempted to colored schools
should have a colored superintendent
and still colored superintendent
to help him to decide how to deal with their own
problems, but he still had an open
mind as regards a colored member
of the school board, until after
he did the city schools had
made pride.
The Mayor said that it was his opinion that the colored people wanted results more than they wanted representation on the school board and the school board and the school board and the school board just for membership on the board. He said that he knew the probable condition of the High School that it was only recruiting at present the beginnings of such participation is now offered to the colored people and we want to now have higher offering full educational success. The Mayor mentioned the overall condition of the Polytechnic Institute and proclaimed that similar courses offered in the colored High School would be equally as popular as an addition to the regular school curriculum. He said that the colored people wanted more in need of projections for the recent college forces that represented the School Board. He announced that the School Board that was planning declared that the colored people would be included in his fullness of the convention. The counsel of Rev. D. C. New for the high school or colored people for East Polytechnic in the neighborhood of the Polytechnic School would be represented from the Mayor and the Bath Commission.
DUDELEY NOT DEAD
Dr. Telephone
Report in a Detroit paper of the sudden death of S. H. Dudley, noted comedian and movie manager is altogether famous. "Dudley and his mule" are widely known all over the country. Mr. Dudley's home is in Washington, B. C.
Wanted 50 Operators
ON OVERALLS, PANTS, ALL
PARTS, BEST PAY, NEW MACHINES. 203 HANOVER STREET
4th FLOOR.
Detroit: March. September 24-
The conference on Industrial Problems
in Urban League to be held in
Detroit: October 14th to 19th.
Bypasses one of the most
practical, constructive and inter-
esting programs presented since
Dr. John Howe, president of Moorhouses, later returned from France, and Dr. James H. Dillard of the James and Shater Fund, and Miss Josephine Tynan, of the University of Burlington, and Dr. B. J. Moton of Tuskegee Institute, will speak on the educational phase of advancing Negro workers. Mr. W. T. E. Williams of the James Fund and Tuskegee University Pittsburgh and Dr. James E. Gregg, president of Hamilton Institute, who have made such a contribution on Negro Migration, have asked to analyze this situation. James Bureaures of the National Training School and William Pickens, just returned from an extended stay to coast with the great public favorites, will also speak. James W. Johnson of the N.A.C. University, just work on organization, Dr. G. E. Haynes has been asked to drive the conference the benefit of his wide experience with the Lahore Bureau.
The annual problems of health, recreation and housing will be dealt with in their immature relation with the social institutions, and sessions will be conducted largely as round-tables so that the benefit of the experiences of all social and welfare workers may be had.
IN THEATRE
Chicago, Sept. 25—Jay Mauger, white, 125 S. Hibbard street, the district, which fomented much of the strike during the race riot, exhibited in a most disgraceful way the violence of the interistering in a movie theatre, when he brazenly annoyed beautiful little Margaret Baker, colored ten years old. The little girl rushed out of the theatre crying, and told several colored men what had happened in a hurry, and gave him a severe beating. Bauer was then arrested, and before Judge Hayes, on a charge of disorderly conduct, was fined $50 and costs. Nothing was done until the beating. Bauer is over fifty years old.
Wilmington, N. C. Sept. 25.—News has been received here of the planned uprising of the Negro population of the little town of Shallotte, north of Branswick county. The several hundred citizens of the place were started. Monday morning when they found backed up in different public places in the town notices of an incessant the white population to beat it. The notices read: "White people Get Out. This means Death. Remember the Routines and Lashings that Were on the warnings and written and the citizens of the town started to investigate. By comparing writing on deeds, mortgages, notes etc., available, it was found that indications pointed to several more prominent crimes being mixed up in the affair.
Washington, D. C., September 25-There are over twelve thousand children in local colored schools, and counting those in vocational schools nearly seventeen hundred children are attending the high schools of the city, according to the figures furnished from Superintendent R. C. Bruce's office.
The figures are as follows: Minor Normal School 25; Armstrong High School 366; Dunbar High School 1067; Cardoza Vocational School 3209; 110; Division 2749; 12th Division 7,636; 12th Division 7,715.
The total number of pundits enrolled so far is 12,120, and large numbers of new pupils are entering
PROMISES TO RETRACT STATEMENT IN WRITING
Divergent views on the face question, in which farlay to the colored people was kept confidential, were expressed in a meeting of the A.M.E. Ministry of the city and vicinity held at the A.M.E. Church Monday. The apperance of Charles J. Koch, Superintendent of Public Schools, before the ministers, to explain the horrors most which had been occasioned by a published interview in the Afro-American Journal, was asked as saying that the colored people should seek jobs as street cleaners rather than a member of the School board caused a large amount of the ministers, augmented by a number of well-known men and women.
The discussion was carried on with almost candor, but yet was good-tempered throughout. The superintendent admitted the interview, and said he now behaved inducted too much and also indicated a willingness to retract. The minister, providing that, the another would be dropped when Mr. Koch restraints in writing.
The cause of Mr. Koch's appearance before the ministers was due to the fact that the ministers and Bishop John Hurt were introduced by Bishop John Hurt in the last week, sharply criticising the superintendent for the remarks and calling upon Mayor Browning to remove him as he is an "apostate of fair administration" and to remove him from the high position he holds. A copy of the resolution, along with a clipping of the interview that appeared in the Afro-American was sent the Mayor. The publication of the resolution in the African-American caused the superintendent in touch with Bishop Hurt and to seek to appear before the ministers.
EXPLAINS RACE POSITION
Bishop Hurt asserted that the colored people of this city resented the fact that the superintendent and given intercourse to such views. He was asked to explain the people of this country were arrogated as never before about matters affecting their rights and interests. Mr. Koch told the ministers that he recalled that he had been visit
REED OPPOS LEAGUE
Declares White Nations will be Outnumbered and Outvoted.
EXCORIATES WILSON
President Said To Have Favored "Racial Equality" With Japanese.
Staff Correspondence.
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.—Reiterating his protest against our League of Nations consisted of seventeen colored nations and only fifteen white nations. Senator Reed of Missouri held the floor of the United States Senate for more than four hours on Monday.
"Since a majority of our partners belong to the darker races," Senator Reed said. "it is therefore perfect that the majority of the league will always vote for racial equality."
Besides exocorting, President Wilson's speeches for the League of Nations were noteworthy. Senator Reed accused the President of voting with Japan for racial equality, when the matter was before the Peace Conference. On the question of composition of the League, Senator Reed defended Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, and the North European Countries.
Citizens, Sept. 25—A careful and vital view by the Associated Newspaper of concern in through all the country discus s and uncover the causes and causes of the present riot have not the ordinary form far as the conditions of the future is concerned. Conditions are practically normal in Chicago and all people are going about their daily duties as usual with a feeling of ease but not as usual with a feeling of alarm. The person is truely on the streets so that he will not incur any moment. The number of thousands of unarmed civilians and hundreds of armed civilians in the streets feeling of fear now constructed and vicious preoccupation in the city have large numbers. The Boston police station has been walled with water and the city is still under the control of the police and the great movement of people and its activities and incidents has started President Wilson's congress and Filling Clinton's action. The police have recently been the main force in the government itself is very apparent and the control people of the country are firmly on the side of law and order and are involved over the first three something this weekend for justice law and order.
LUCY CLOWN, NOW
A. PRINCIPAL
Mike Larey Stowe has been appointed principal of the new Junior High School, opened in Washington Mountain in the old M. Street, High School, Building
The Junior High School is for girls who can not take the full Junior School course. Junior enrolment is the fifth grade. The course is three years long during this year. Junior enrolment is the sixth year. Junior enrolment is the eighth year. Miss Shawer who was a former teacher in the Baltimore High School designed. Some years ago, Miss Shawer with Principal Mason Hawkins, Major Hawkins, and Principal position in Washington Schools. Since leaving Baltimore her pre-profession has been rapid. Last year she was made assistant principal of girls in Armontress High School. Since being appointed of the Junior High School.
TWO LYNCHED THIS WEEK
The Jules de la Chochette is a traditional art, and is known as Anonymie. A quinze villes, Lev务am
ROSAMOND JOHNSON RESIGNS
New York, September 15, 2005. Louis
Switzer, National and International
Scholars, National and International
member of the Cole and Johnson Museum.
Cole and some years ago agreed
to compose a composition.
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
PETER H. HARRIS
HISHION JOHN BUETT
ed by Mr. Carlid. Murphy whom he did not know, and asked who attended from whites at the meetings held on September all. He said that he took Mr. Murphy just back into the separate meeting idea by Moses. Mason A. Hawkins and Joseph H. L. Hawkins.
Mr. Koek allowed that he knew what colored people wanted and depended largely on advice of principals of the war in schools.
"I never read the Atro-American," said Mr. Koek and therefore did not see the issue in when the interview was published. My attention was called to the issue, when I read. The Atro-American did not read the School Board and sometimes the Board held a secret meeting as to what should be done about a severe criticism that appeared in it against the Board I was decided to ignore. I went to the Board and then went on to say that he said that the colored people should seek jobs as street cleaners rather than membership on the School Board. He said that what was said about the colored people suffering this was better.
"I mount no despair in the coarred people," he said. "when I said they should seek street cleaners' jobs. In fact, I tell my boy I think shirts than salves, then wearing thick shirts than salves. Mr. Koek said he paid attention to unsolved articles in news continued on page four.
were not to be members. The result is there would be 60,000 white people not members, to 288,000 white members. Therefore there are approximately three dark skinned men in the League for every white man in the League.
Liberia with 50,000 civilized inhabitants and Helding with 200,000 population were referred to as African Americans, received into membership.
"A pernicious civilized Norem from Liberia has representation equal to 2,200 white Americans, or 2,200 colored Americans, and the colored American as this country does of fact, by this provision are as the whites.
"Embracing every kind of State from the most powerful nations to subject countries and dependent colonies' ranging in civilization from the harshest insurrection to the lowest from the depths of innocence to the heights of knowledge, in religion from the divine doctrines of Christianity to the child sacrifices of Yokooism. In governance and equality the dependencies of chains and slavery the membership presents an inhumorous blending of diversions, fides, conditions, and civilizations incapable of either a common interest or a common destiny.
"They not written. "Their shall not give the ox and the ass to together."
were proceeded near. Mr. Micco
did a winter walk in the
borewell. He made the most
mindful man. man was
to be a true heartless,
a hard work. H. Had
Heavily had been with bouncing youngsters, the stock visited five local homes within a single square last week, making a record for himself, and new mark for Carlisle Place. The happy parents are Mrs. and Mrs. Johnson, son, 1792 Carlisle, Mr. and Mrs. Valentine of Richmond, Vauxhall, on a visit, a daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Win, Bowes, 1792 Carlisle, a son, Mr. and Mrs. John Pat, 1791 Carlisle, a daughter, and just around the corner, at 1295 Chatham street, the old bird life, Mr. and Mrs. Carone Stokes a healthy son.
SUPERVISORS HERE
FOR CONFERENCE.
Supervisors of colored schools in sixteen counties gathered at McCoy Hall Wednesday morning for their annual meeting before the county supervisors. The supervisors were welcomed by L. W. Huffington, state supervisor of all the colored schools, and in the round table talk that followed, plans for the coming year. Short addresses from each of the supervisors regaled the fact that the outlook for the record breaking attendance of pupils and for greater interest of parents in the bright as in the present time. In response, to the request of Mr. Huffington that the meeting take a dominant stand for or against the State Normal School at Iowa City, he told the supervisors the fact that lack of equipment and poor administration were responsible for the small attendance at Iowa last year. Some of the supervisors said that under the new plan, the school would recommend the school to pupils from their county.
A committee consisting of Edna Moore, Dorie Miller and Stephen Long offered a resolution extending sympathy to the family of the late Barbara Harris, superintendent of schools in her week done by her for the schools and for the colored people in her section.
WIDOW DYNAMITED
Oklahoma City, Oklah. Sept. 25. Jeansies whites dymantled, the home of Mrs. Bishul Maxwell and Jennifer and Lydia here last week showing the rear pearson to pieces. No one was hurt. Colored neighbors are on the lookout for those second attempts.
Pittsburgh. September 25.—Robt. H. Logan, 8th Ward, was nominated for Alderman on the Republican ticket last week over four white candidates; by 151 votes, Otto Simpson, was nominated for Ward Consul by a safe majority.
PRICE 5 CENTS
3000 MARINES ON WAY TO THE ISLANDS
Machine Guns and Hand Grenades Carried to Subjugate Natives.
CENSORSHIP IS STRICT
News of the Massacre of the Natives is Being Kept From The Press.
Hand greedies and machine gears are to be used in submarines. The first one was built by Dominic, according to David Davies, who dodging censorship, told for the first time atrocities of the last Sunday, New York Headquarters.
Very soon, 2,500 marines are to be sent to San Domingo to cooperate with the 2,500 marines now there. Marines have been in the war since the start of the war, of the natives and the resistance to having their independence taken from them, are making preparations for active warfare. Almost all of the consigny has been sold to strider that outside the State Department, more known what is going on down on the islands. A returned marine, whiffle bounce has been shot by gunners, told this story of his revenge to A. I. Woolley. I womned into the town, and received to get as many blocks, as I could before they got me. I had decided that a rifle would be too slow, and took my machine gun. I got eighty-nine of them before I a marine officer me out with a bounty on the head, using his revolver to hand out the bumps. There was excitement to peddle and for it to hook, enough to make it go bolt-ball in general. You know we really were at war with those Haytians; they were killing us and we were killing them. I guess I was a bit busy but—well it was all in the war. The marine, Mr. Davies says, was REDUCED IN RANK.
MEETS IN SALISBURY
Salisbury, Md., September 24.
The Salisbury Bible Conference
Conference, W. E. Zion Church is
in session in St. Louis Church, Rev.
W. W. Plume is the entertaining
pastor and Rev. J. S. Shaw, inter-
sisting elder. A varied and inter-
esting program is being carried
out.
THIRKIELD AT HOWAED
Former President, now Bishop W. P. Ternholt, said a visit to Howard University this week, where he was the guest of President Robert E. McCormick, who is going forward for the inauguration of Howard's new President this call.
According to Mr. Emmen J. Scott, Secretary Treasurer, more students are expected to enter the college department than ever before.
MISSION HERE
FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 1919.
Happenings
STROLL TURNS
INTO A SCRAP
Whife of Lodge Brother Objects to Husband's Atten-tions to Another
Passersby noticed a well-dressed woman standing around Moses Hall on Wednesday evening of last week. Presently one of the lodges let out, and with the outpouring folks were the lady's husband, Aligonon Jackson and Miss Lillian
judges. They started up *Eutaw street, Mr. Jackson stopping at a store to by some fruit for the body*. Mr. Jackson said of the Afro-American building, Mrs. Jackson says, that Miss Young locked arms with her husband. The husband carried the young woman's books, she being
The couple strolled out Eutaw street, trained by Mrs. Jackson. They turned east on Hoffman street and were soon seated on a Royal Station. Mrs. Jackson walked up to the couple, surprising them. Words followed, and the husband struck Mrs. Jackson on the shoulder. Things were getting warm and the fruit was rolling around the street when the police came. The trouser hustled into the patrol wagon and carried to the Northwestern station. Things were getting warm and the fruit was released on collarline, but the other two had to remain in cell all night.
After listening to the evidence, the carriage hurried past, Justin Brendel dismissed Mrs. Jackson but found the other two ten dollars and costs each. The Jackson have five children, Mrs. Jackson lives in John Drury Bridge and John Drury Bridge and St. Mr. Jackson with his parents on N. Carneane St.
NEW MEMBERS
ON HOSPITAL STAFF
Staff of Provident Hospital meet Monday night and admitted the following physicians as mem-
bers: Dr. Hakey Jackson, Dr. Matthew Hakey Jackson, Dr. Hawkins, Dr. C. Carper, Dr. Wm,
T. Coleman, Dr. John E. Thomas
and Dr. M. Harris.
PO START PRIVATE BANK
It has looked out that K. Bernard Taylor, the well-known caterer and C. Henry Jenkins, insurance man, will open a private bank. Manus have been seen on the Hill street scene. Business will begin as soon as improvements are made and fixtures installed. New venture will be the third of its kind operated here by the race. Harry O. Wilson operating one in connection with the Annual Benefit Society and J. Whitfield Thomas, being in the business on South Shore street.
A big honour for George W. F. McMechen, the newly elected grand exalted ruler of the Grand Lodge of Elks, will be held at St. Paul's Church on October 18. The grand officers and leading officers in other triennial offices will be among the invited guests. George T. Event, of Monumental Lodge, is chairman of the committee of arrangements.
WAR "VETS" TO GATHER
The Maryland Branch, American legion, will hold its first annual convention in this city on Friday and Saturday of next week. Among the guests will be Walter Green, Benjamin Bammer and Lather Williams, of this city; Fort Cumberland, and another in the latter city that has not been named.
ELKS CONDUCT PRAISED.
Invited By Mayor Bachurach To Cull Again.
George W. F. McMechen, grand exalted ruler of the ELKS, has received the following letter from Mayor Harry Bachurach, of Atlantic City, commending the Grand Lodge of ELKS for his department while in session there. The letter follows:
"I desire to take this opportunity to congratulate you and the members of the I. K. I. O. Elks of the World for having made a valuable voyage in this city. The searching was excellent and each individual member not only marched as a soldier, but behaved in the line of parade in a most creditable manner. There was not a single person smiling in the courtyard, acting in an unbecoming manner. "There never has been a parade in this city wherein a better showing or more discipline was shown in the World. It also desire to congratulate your members for the manner in which they conducted themselves during the entire convention. We never had a more order, or more gentlemanly or womanly." "Atlantic City is very happy to have had you in our midst and I assure you, you are welcome at any time in the future."
Voters Register
Only 295 colored men registered voters in supplementary sliding in the city Tuesday. Those who register last fall will withdraw their time. Hundreds of voters insisted to be placed on the books and they will still have a chance to go on October 7 or 11. Hundreds of soldiers who have fun, returned from France should get their money on the books. Those in the town whose minutes are polling time register Tuesday. September 7 or Tuesday October 7.
in Baltimore
Coming to Albaughs.
"The Smarter Set" which comes to Albany's theater next week will offer the coming season an entirely new musical comedy entitled "children of the Sun" adapted by Gee, Wohl Parker, which tells of Dean Kelly Miller of the Howard University at Washington 1, C. and his successful voyage of 400 miles of iceberg, available records which he claims establishes the authenticity of the Negro face. These people having been translated are be held at a race congress to be held in Washington at the Howard University.
A Japanese student attending Howard, tells of his people being Sumatran, home-blooded, home-blooded to Japan. Also, and Gabe Washington, the person of their previous expedition are elected to lead the search through the Indonesian Java, Persia, and Egypt in a fruitless search, at last arrive at the site of ancient Ethiopia, and begin true story of the "Children's Them."
The funeral of Columbus Gordon, who died on Thursday of last week and a seven-month illness, was held at Californias Fishermen Hospital. The remains lay in state between one and two o'clock and hundreds of his friends passed by the flowerbed casket. The Masons had been the first to pay tribute to the Gates of Trinity, M. A. E. Church, delivered the eulogy, paying a line tribute to the life and labors of the deceased. Interment was in Mr. Arthur Gordon, who was well known in fraternal circles. He was one of the most active spirits in the Californias Fishermen, serving for many years at the Gates of Trinity. Mr. Gordon was also connected with various departments of the Masonic Order and the Good Hopes. He has been a member for the past 45 years and was secretary of the Sunday School.
The colored auxiliary of the Maryland branch of the Rosewood Memorial Committee hold a meeting at Typhoon Castle Tuesday afternoon, at which plans for morking a satirical cartoon, and a political memorial were considered. Units will be organized if each county, chairman appointed therefore and a most active campaign waged. None of the money collected will be used. Custodian Castle has been demoted as headquarters. These present included: George A. Watty, chairman; George A. Owens, secretary; Joseph P. Evans, press secretary; Howard A. Johnson, chairman; Kenneth Lyon, John H. Murphy, Rev. Junius Gray, chairman of the speakers' bureau; W. T. Andrews and Bishop Hurs; Rev. C. E. Stewart, M. H. Davis, Rev. W. Willson will form a committee from the A. M. E. Prescissors Meeting.
At a large and enthusiastic meeting of the Walter Green Post on Sunday afternoon, August 21, the following day, the Post Convention which will be held October 3, 1919 of the Emerson Post: Messrs. John Love, John Berry, Milton Dorsey, Frank Seidel, Alternates, Albert Holmes, trafford James.
All plans for the memorial services to be held on Sunday afternoon, 2 o'clock at Michael Holmes in memory of the post, for whom the post is named, have been completed. It is meet and proper that such a service should be held, and it is hoped that the post will be in attendance.
Dr. Weaver of the W. C. S. C. will say the invocation, "Chapinam Eldie Love will deliver the obeyment. Post Historian of the life of Capt. Green. Miss Jessica Johnson will render a vocal selection and the Post Oetet will render favorite selections of the deceased. Mrs Green will post a post "a her husband."
The same afternoon at 4:30 at the W. C. C. S. a meeting of the Luther L. Williams* Post will be held. Members of the Army and especially of the 86th Infantry are to be present in John M. Johnson is in commander of this Post*. The Walter Green Post will have a Benefit Dance at the Old Fifth Regiment Armory on the 15th of If you want your skin clear and healthy free from pimples/blebs, boils and soreness you must remove the CAUSE OF THEM by thoroughly PURIFYING THE ELOD. Free creams and powders are a poor make-shift and often do a great deal of harm.
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BIG BOXING SHOW COMING TO LYRIC
Never in the history of boxing in this city has there been a contest of as much interest, to the colored patrons of the sport as the one which the armored man arranged for a week from next Friday (October 3) at the Lyric and which will be together those two great colored heavy-wights, Kid Norfolk, of this city, who was born in New York. In the years gone by Joe Giants was the big Baltimore favorite and since his time nobody ever approached his popularity until the advent of Kid Norfolk, who now has the lightweight champion ever laughed.
The entire card which the American Athletic Association will offer is confined to colored loggers. Baltimore boys being engaged in every event against out-of-towners except one bout, in which both
participants will be honorary winters.
Kk Norrøn, the winters winters winters
of Irmant, emblematic of which he has a very handmade
gold bed. He is also the light
heavyweight "champion" of the
United States by reason of his
defeat of Billy Miske and Battlef
Lavynkey, both of whom claimed
their winters in the situation by
bettining both of them decisively.
Johnson is a full dugged heavyweight and a man reckoned by boxing experts to be the equal of the Baltimore bay in every way, including generosity and everything that goes to make a man a great fighter. Both Norfolk and Johnson have both defeated all the coloured heavyweights of prominence in the game, and both other fights were matched here some time ago but an injury to Norfolk's eye while in training resulted in the match being called off for the time being. Norfolk has carefully avoided him for a long while he stirred up considerable added interest. The fact remains that Johnson is head and shoulders far above any man Norfolk has ever seen, and he has all been clinches, more or less, but this trip it is realized he has a contest on his hands that means he will undoubtedly be forced to fight every time a stock in order to as good as hold his own.
One thing the contest will do that is decide who is the best big man in the ranks of the colored baggers. For bringing these two men here and deciding the election deserves great credit, Jack Dempsey, who is the heavyweight champion has announced that he will draw the color line, an announcement which did not meet with favor in any place by bringing the colored heavyweight, the club brings about a situation that may eventually force Dempsey into a match for the real heavyweight title. The act that the winner of the contest will be the best man among the colored heavies will give him the chance to seek a match with Dempsey and a mere reply about the so-called drawing of the color line will be a bane excuse and that is bound to be a real challenge, even throughout the country in sport circles. Certainly Dempsey will not be pleased and a continued demand on the part of the colored champion will surely tend to bring Dempsey around to the table if he is given the demands of the public if for no other reason.
The record house for Allaugh's Theatre was established last year when Kid Norfolk not Battling the Titans were turned away that night due to a following. With the Battlement we against a man of admitted class this time and with the fight fans chanting for the match, the crowd would have to get the largest possible place to accommodate the crowd and accordingly arranged to have three other hosts will be on the same program. An eight round contest will be bringing Morris Tasee of this city, and Battling the Titans, to the arena. Men are middleweights and should furnish a great contest. Tasee is well-known here and has just been released from the United States, which he served throughout the war.
HOUSES FOR SALE
Houses for Sale by Arthur L. Johnson, 2016 McCallum Street.
Phone Mad. 7170-W.
See Arthur L. Johnson
FOR SALE: Arthur L. Johnson
1300 block Winchester St. 6 rooms and bath; electric lights, etc. Gr. $60.
See Arthur L. Johnson
FOR SALE: One $3 story house
1100 block Meyer avenue; 3 rooms and bath. Gr. $75. Immediate
See AUTHOR L. JOHNSON
FOR SALE--One 2 story house
900 block Pierce St. 6 rooms and
bath. Gr. $36.
See AUTHOR L. JOHNSON
FOR SALE--Three 2 story
house 1600 block Riggs avenue.
Gr. $65 each. Will arrange terms.
See AUTHOR L. JOHNSON
FOR SALE--Large 3 story
house 1800 block McCulloch St.
rooms. Also garage in rear. Gas building in cellar.
Now vacant. In A 1 condition.
See AUTHOR L. JOHNSON
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
1200 block Myrtle Ave.
1500 block N. Glincoe St.
1700 block Baker St.
1700 block Riggs Ave.
5 homes on Mount St. near Baltimore St.
Phone Madison 7630
Garrett Street
2525 Ridge Hill Ave.
FOR RENT - Building known as the Old Bash Hotel, 21 miles from Baltimore City on Baltimore, Philadelphia Stage, Pike, half mile from Sewell Station, E.&O. R. R. Double brick building and store with four rooms, built in back with four rooms, long front porch and acre of good garden land. Fortune for a man looking for a business place for a general county store. Every and every kind of business and school. Expenses only $175 the whole year. Apply J. Daniel. 218 Market St., Chester, Pa. 41-Sept. 12.
FOR RENT - Large room, suitable for Storage or small Factory. Apply 543 Mosher St. 19-26-3
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE 1914 Indian Twin fully equipped. Good condition. Price $125.00. Apply 731 W. Lexington St. 11.
FOR RENT
Large furnished room for rent at 2072 McCullah Street. Apply any time.
HOUSES FOR SALE BY
P. H. PRATT
1428 MCCULLOH STREET
Madison 3485.
1-2 story 12 rooms and bath
1100 block Draid Hill Ave.
1-3 story 9 rooms and bath, 1000
N. Carrillon Ave. Gr. 675.0
N. Carrillon Ave. Gr. 675.0
5-2 story 8 rooms and bath, 1000
block N. Mount Street. Gr. 675.0
Pricy reasonable.
5-2 story 8 rooms and bath,
Furniture A. beauty. Gr. 755.0
block McCullah street.
3-2 story, 2200 and 2400 block
McCullah St. steam boat, electric
lights. Gr. $65 & $72.
Custodian
1-2 story, 500 block Prostman
street, Gr. $57.
152 story 2 rooms and both, 500 block N. Glimnor street, Gr. $67. Excellent condition.
Also 1 bat 50$6. Excellent location for a garage. Very cheap.
Apply to P. H. PRATT
1428 McCULLOH ST.
Phone Mail 3485.
--------------------
NOTICE
This is to notify the public that I have moved my office from 2032 Drulid Hill Ave., to 1512 Pennsylvania avenue. Watch for advertisement in the next issue.
Respectfully submitted to the public.
GEORGE WINGATE.
U512 Pennsylvania Avenue
Baltimore, Md.
HOUSES FOR SALE
RENTS COLLECTED. LOANS NEGOTATED. APARTMENTS FOR RENT.
FOR HIS.
Two rooms with balconies for
respectable couple. Applies
1808 E. EAGLE STREET
FOR RENT
One small apartment for rent
with all conveniences. Apply to
MRS. HALL, 1612 Dridl Hill Ave.
Hours from 6 to 10. Home all
day Saturdays.
FOR RENT—2nd Floor Flat for
rent. Modern convenience.
Cluse & Cathedral St.
Laporte Heumkamp Motor Co. 21
WANTED—COOK. Reply to
MRS. M. S. GRIFFITH, Edmond-
son Ave., 2nd house from North
Rend Rd. Cottonville.
WANTED
A nice colored middle aged
woman. A nice home.
310 ARLESTON AVENUE.
J. HOWARD PAYNE
ATTORNEY AND
COUNSELLOR AT LAW
Office 514 St. Paul St.
Mt. Vernon 2171
Residence 1006 Linden Ave.
Mt. Vernon 3019-J.
ROY S. BOND
LAWYER
Residence 1411 DRUILD HILL AV.
Houries 7- to 9 every eight
Office: 215 COURTLAND ST.
Before you lay in a supply of O'c
winter hiosiery drop a postal or
call on MRS. SADIE E. BOWMAN.
11538 N. CARE ST., and see her
address.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
THE LYRIC—FRIDAY, OCT. 3
..PRINCESS ANNE ACADEMY.
In order to complete the new buildings at Princess Anne Academy and to have them ready to offer you the best advantages, we have postponed the opening of school to OCTOBER 15th. All students are urged to report on this date. Entrance and deferred examinations will begin at once.
Under Personal Direction of Mr. P. H. W. Scott
AT OGDEN HALL
Don't Forget the Red Moon Dancing Class every Saturday at
Ogden Hall, where you will meet your old Friends.
Fees 15 Cts. Before 9 O'Clock 20 Cts After
SECOND OPENING DANCE GIVEN BY THE FAMOUS BALTIMORE
CITY PATRIARCHIE DRILL CORPS AUXILIARY No. 9
G. C. O. of O. F.
HARRY
Fine Selection of MELTON OVERCOATS
Chance to Save at least $10 on any overcoat you order from Me
Look my stock over and convince yourself that
I will save you money.
Deal with me and you will always be satisfied.
All you need is a small deposit and I will have your Overcoat
ready just when you want it.
ASK YOUR FRIEND-ABOUT HARRY'S WORK
Be sure you walk into Harry's place: Don't take chances with others.
SPECIAL OFFER
THIS COUPON IS GOOD FOR $1.00
in Payment on Any Suit or Overcoat ordered
HARRY, THE TAILOR
Pay Every Day
Apply BURNS & RUSSELL
DUNDALK, SPARROWS POINT
Take Sparrows Point Car and get off
Dundalk Junction.
..CREMENS' GARAGE...
FIREPROOF MODERN SANITARY
YOUR CAR IS SAFE HERE AS IN ANY PRIVATE GARAGE
STORAGE AT REASONABLE RATES
BURTON'S
Ladies and Gentlemen, who are interested in the purchase of Wearing apparel for the FALL, SEASON, allow me to advise you to lay aside all cares and anxieties surrounding your call purchase, because I have already interested myself to the extent of providing for you at the pressing for comfort and convenience, both in MERCHANTISE, PRICES AND TERMS.
Notwithstanding insulated conditions of the market you high cost of Bling, I have declared a plan to put my customers on the profit-sharing plan with myself. There is no profficiency here. We do NOT add 10 per cent for charge account. Come in and be convinced.
LADIES’ SUITS
Our line of Ladies’ Suits are of the smarter design and neatly tailored. Made from the latest creations of cloth in all shades.
THIS ARE BEAUTIFUL.
$29.75 up.
Our line of Ladies’ Couture is the collection of beautiful garments, made from Velos, Bofkia Tursline, Bokhara, Broadcloth, Flush, Chameleon cord, PRICES $19.50 up.
LADIES’ DRESSES
Our dresses are exceptionally well selected, featuring strongly the straight lines so much in evidence, with tauke and cote effect, heavy cord encircling the waist, ornamentally finished with tassels. We also carry the more pliably made styles in Sergei’s collection.
SUITS & O’COATS
Men and Young Men’s Suits and O’Couts are a specialty with us. The line is always bright with a newly bought stock of latest styles. You can always get what you want we are carrying a large variety of sample cloth that you may make your selection and have a suit made to your individual measure and style. I have the pick of cloth of three sizes and you can’t help from being suited here. PRICES $25 up
We carry an up-to-date list of skirts in Plains, Serges, Silks, Poplins, plain, pleated and cauffed bottoms. PRICES $3.50 mp.
We are inviting you to come in and examine our FALL stock before buying elsewhere. Prices Right. Terms Easy
SAMUEL L. BURTON
1108 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, near Hoffman Street
Phone Mt. Vernon 3134-W.
MR. WM. HARROD
GEO. H. SIDDONS
Is Now in Business
For Himself
At 831 Druid Hill Ave.
Near Biddle Street
C. & P. PHONE
MME. M. S. JOHNSON'S
Hair Food and Straightener
Preparation.
Makes the hair soft and glossy.
It especially recommend it after
having tried it with success for at
least three years. What it has do
for me is be done for others.
Give it a trial.
MME. JOHNSON
1428 Druid Hill Avenue.
Commercial Casualty
Insurance Co.
Office 2216 Druid Hill Avonue
Respectfully solicit your patronage
THE GROSS-GRANT
The oldest colored real estate company in Baltimore. Office: 1100 Hill Ave Baltimore, MH. 7630 John B. Ross, Executive Wm. E. Gustaf, Treasurer Samuel E. Robinson, Secretary
Mime, George H. Carter,
1914 DRUILD HILL AVENUE
BALITMORE, MD.
Hair dressing, facial massage.
Manicuring and Weaving. Try my
hair pomade and be convinced. My
school is open for teaching of the
shoe punches. I am a phone call.
2002-w Mime, George H. Carter is a graduate pupil of Mime, M. A. Hunter.
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 & Specialty.
Open daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
until 9 p.m.
Sundays from 1 to 6 p.m.
Silas C. Carter and E. V. Wright.
$250.00 CASH
1397 Ashland Ave. Price, $400
1397 Ashland Ave. 7 floors Gr $18;
Price, $15,000
1392 Ashland Ave., 7 rooms Gr $18.00
1392 Ashland Ave., 7 rooms Gr $18.00
200 Back Schueler street, 6 rooms
& Ruth Price, $1500 Gr $5.25
200 Back Schueler街, 21 floors
Gr $25.00
Third Floor
1728 BRUNT STREET
Orders Promptly attended to
Phone Madison 1334.
THE WHITE MAN DOES
NOT KNOW IT ALL.
My wife suffered from lung trouble
and had three different doctors. The
doctor on the left was sitting on Connecticut avenue. He gave up my wife declaring that he
needed nothing more could be done for her.
He left her counseling 105 degrees few
years ago and advised us to call Dr. D. Newton
E. Campbell, the Lung and Nerve
Doctor, to see him, and he being to Washington,
October 6, 1918. In less than a month
fever and pulse reduced to normal.
She has gained more than 16 pounds since and is able to do part of her house work. Christmas I told the white doctor of my wife improve my health and would take his hat off to the doctor who could do such grand work. Anyone can come and see my wife now. Her address is 1928 15th Street, N.W.
Churches and Church People
MRS. CAMPBLE
SHAPE STREET CHURCH
Steward place for support and interest
missionary and educational
quilt of West Africa were
made by Mrs. Alexander Capphorp,
wife of the Methodist Episcopal
Episcopal Church, speaking in
three local Methodist churches
She spoke at Ashbury M. E. Church in the morning, giving a graphic picture of the homes of people in the village. She joined a Women's Home and Christian Missionary Society of St. Paul Street Memorial Church in the afternoon and was greeted by a home reception at Metropolitan Church in the evening. Good collections were given at each meeting.
HOW TO LIVE
HOW TO DIE
Rev. A. K. Parker, pastor of Reverend Green Baptist Church, St. Paul, delivered a session at Eun Baptist Church last Sunday morning and at Union Baptist Church at night. He distributed cards at each meeting, which bore the following inscription:
"Live to live to die. Live to talk in public shows that you have lost control of yourself.
2. To talk of your domestic affairs in public is a sign that you are
1. To sit on street cars with your knee and foot in the shoes, is it trouble?
2. To block the sidewalks when other people want to pass is not showing some sense.
3. In the house with your feet in the window shows that you have neither mind or brains.
6. To bring around saloons and great restaurants in gangs has become an exclusive affair to Heaven above and earth below. You can book with a savings account in a good recommendation.
7. A boy man is always in favor of a strike.
8. You should always take interest in the work of those whom you are working for and your job will be much harder away from the clerkship will get keep you from the indemnity bar, so come and be registered and be the ect of God.
Rev. Joseph C. Hull, a Gerner Palmerson, new pastor in Arkansas, officiated at the Jackson Street Church and Sunday worship.
SPECIAL NOTICE
REV. C. E. HISPALD, pastor of St. M. E. Church, will present a great sermon to the congregation on Saturday, 26th in Trinity, A. M. E. Church, 8 in all organizations of other churches, pre-commissioned invited. Rev. A. L. Lester, D. D. Pastor.
1
DR. W. SAMSON BROOKS, of Baldwin, M. E. Church, will preside at Cincinnati A. M. E. Church October 2nd at 8:20 p.m. To A. Willett Awy, our marshal Hilbart and get off at Sunbury Station Road. Ten minutes walk to church.
NASHANIE G. HENRY, Born Prentice, G. E. Living of Palmhill in Pa. will make his first appearance at the Lumbethall St. Baptist Church Sunday September 28, 1999. He will hear the little wobble.
NOTICE
You and your friends are invited to be present at the Cradle Rale Anniversary of St. John's A. M. E. Sunda School. Location: September 25th at 3 p.m. Miss Nemo N. Lloyd, speaker. Elmore Pfluger, Sipu. C. R. Martin, Sipu. S. Bertin, Flamingo. Toussaint Mutilh, Socky. J. W. Woodhouss Sipu. Rock M. J. Davis, pastor.
ANNOUNCEMENT
A company of young men met the residence of Mr. H. Parne special works into, and organized a company which will be known as Harvey Parne & Co., Dry Goods and Necessions, dr. Harvey Parne who is well known as the most trusted president. Which this paper for their first lecture of Dry Goods, which will be delivered at L42 Orchard St.
The prizefighter and liaison of the Baltimore Conference, A. M. K. Church, have notified that the Baltimore committee has finally denied. This comes to say that the nonperpetuer of the clan was obbed in the harbor of the publishing house in Philadelphia, as is the custom in May. The committee thought the work was overly expensive when the Philadelphia firm introduced the committee that would be impossible, because of the shortage of help, to complete the work, until late fall. The work was therefore the hands of the Commonwealth Publishing Co. of Baltimore, which firm has promised the Minutes by the first of October. The committee will serve to clear the publishing committee and secretaries of all blame for the discommerce.
M. A. Young, Conference Society.
All mails are requested to be present on Sunday September 28, 1819, at Laurens St. Epiphany Church at 2 p. m. Rev. Matthias Williams will preach, accompanied by his chair and congregation. For more information, G. U. O. of Old Follows New Hall.
Mrs. A. P. M. Jordan, Queen Rev. A. B. Callis, pastor.
...Ladies and Gents' Tailor...
Suits from $20 up.
Cleaning and Dyeing
1212 Pennsylvania Avenue
Baltimore, Md.
SANDERS—in loving remembrance of my dear sister May Sander
were departed this life on Sept.
15, 1981, one year ago.
How long she struggled against
disaster
That haunted skill and care,
How long she fingered racked, with
pain,
And suffering hard to hear.
Her willing hands are folded.
Her tots on earth is deformed.
Her eyes are enclosed.
Her heavenly grown is won.
By her loving sister Anne Horney.
SAUNDERS—In loving remembrance of my dear mother May Samandra
who departed this life on Sept.
27, 1918, one year ago.
She once enjoyed
Hawes' memory still.
Land death has left a vacant chair.
The world can never fill.
Tobethy I missed and cared for her.
Trying to restore her health.
And prayed she might longer stay.
She may more than wealth.
Her loving daughter Mrs. M.
Braunin.
IN MEMORIAL
Farewell dear mother in a long farewell.
For us we have loved for many years.
You always served to do your best.
And now you have gone,
But not forgotten to take your rest,
From Father and Children.
**BROWN—In loving memory of one**
father Jerry Brown who departed
this life Sept. 24, 1916 one year ago,
and who is now the only
tourist invited father and to the.
Was it because we loved him so,
That叫alled him from this world.
Grant us Lord content to roar,
Knowing not thy will is best.
By his Children
WHITFIE—Sneered to the memory of our son and brother Theoreme B. White, Corporal Company I 372nd, infantry, who fell in action one year ago, teaching the shades of evening gather around my door;
Sleuthy they bring before me Fines I shall no more, no;
o the best the interrogation, the best the bounty, Though the world be off forget; In our hearts they perish not!
Living in the silent hours,
Where our spirits only blend.
They unified with certain trouble.
How such holy memories clutter,
How such holy memories clutter,
Like the stars when storms are past.
Coining up to that fair heaven
We may hope to gain at last,
Mr. A. White, Sister, Flosse,
Reproducers, Robert, Lee, and Nathan.
JOHNSON—Departed this life
September 12, 1919, in Philadelphia,
Tn., William Johnson, son of
James and the late Fran James,
and the late Spring Valley, Christolane,
Md. He is survived by:
father, five sisters, Misses Josephine and Ella Johnson, Mrs.
Elizabeth Brown, Mrs. Mamie Griffin, Mrs. Carrie Washington,
and two brothers, Alfred and Levi,
Johnson.
Mrs. Sadie B. Bowman, 1538 N.
Carey street, takes this method of
extending thanks to her friends
and neighbors for their expressions
of sympathy in lieu of her companion, Mr.
Charlese B. Bowman.
In the graveyard calmly sleeping
lug the one I loved so dear;
Rip I hope to meet him yonder
Where we will never say farewell.
The family of the late Columbus Gordon wish to thank his many friends in church and fraternity, in social life and in business for their kindness and wisdom sympathy and for the many, many handsome rift tributes.
SPECIAL
The members of St. Lukes Church wish to note their sympathy in respect of Mrs. Rachel Ruly, the beloved wife of RL Rev. William Philadelphia Diocese, who departed this life Monday, September 15th. Funeral services were held in Mother Church, Wilmington, Del. Thursday, September 18th. Buried Friday, September 19th. Rest in peace.
WESTON— in memory of my mother Jermain Weston, who died Sept. 25th, 1914. Gone but not forgotten. Buried Friday, September 19th. Rest in peace.
You have gone from me dear mother. You have won the heavenly glory. Which is for me to do.
By her daughter, Annie Weston 126 orchard St.
MITCHELL— In sad but loving remembrance of Elizabeth A. Michele who has passed away. my heart is so As time flies on I miss you more. She sheeps; I leave her in peace to rest. The parting was painful, but God bests her.
to, how sad was the summons,
When word came to me she was dead.
For she left me bright and cheerful.
We was brought back to me dead.
We was brought back to my dear
Mrs. McChelleb.
On blessed Lord, win a weight of
sorrow.
Must we the lonely ones, hear;
The silent place, the empty room
of my heart.
By her Children Anna and William
and sister, Clara Smith.
CHAMBERS—In sad but loving resemblance of my dear husband and father, Perry Chambers, who died on year ago, September 26, 1918.
Dearest husband how we miss you in the year that just rolled by Slowly fading from our presence.
For your home beyond the sky.
When we saw our darling father
Whom we tended with so much car
Slowly fading from our presence
How our aching is disappeared.
By his Mrs. and children.
Mrs. Jennie Chambers.
Leadenhall St. near Cf65s,
Dr. A. Brown, Pastor
10 n. m. Dovetonian Exercise led
by J. A. Green
11 a. m. Sermon.
225 p. m. Sunday School
Mr. William Roberts, Supt.
1 p. m. Sermon by Rev. J. H.
Green, pastor of Elen Bait, Church.
At which time the School of the
late box No. 1098 will turn out.
7:30 p. m. the Grand Gilad Order
of Nazarets, King David Pasture
No. 5 will be present. Good
music all day.
John Wilson church clerk.
SOCIAL FREE BAPT CHURCH
Rapid, New York Group Sg.
Rev. G. H. Cornish, Pastor
11 a.m. Preaching by Rev. Fenda
2 p.m. Sunday School
8 p.m. Preaching by Rev. Lee
Wednesday, 3 p.m. Class Meeting
Thursday night, Praver Meeting,
Wednesday night, Class.
Salus and simers all invited,
Sister Lucy Brown, Secretary.
AMES MEM, M. E. CHURCH
Cor, Carey and Baker Sts,
Community Church and Community
Program.
Rev. A. L. Mitchell, Pastor
Rev. 1823;
6-30, Class Thurs. Lanceleader
11 a.m. Special sermon by the pastor subject "A Man Who Darred"
2:30 p.m. Sunday School.
H. Johnson, Sept.
2 p.m. Sermon the Rev. J. W.
Dewey, Sept.
8 p. m. Sermon by the Pastor
Subject "Selected Men."
The second week of the Continental
Tally. A week with "Euro-
mor," Mrs. Sullivan,
Singer supper by Crazy People,
Admission 10 cents, Super free.
Tuesday—Special
Wednesday—Special.
Thursday, Lilliputian Queens' Hall
Silver.
Special—Special, 2nd quarterly conference.
Come and worship with us.
Rev C. E. Hodges, Pastor
Parsonsage 1830 E. Kager street
110 u. m., Sermon by the Pastor
Sunday School, M. C. T.
Stewart, Sip!
m. Union Church Memorial
Service
$ p. m., Preaching by the Pastor
GREAT ELITIES
Organized For The C
WEEK OF SEPTEMBER
Westport Bar
SPECIAL FEATURES
Monday, Sept., 29th, Voting
ular School Teacher of Baltimore
Tuesday, September 30th,
Prize awarded to the smallest,
between the ages of six and tw
ENTER THE
Wednesday, Oct., 1st, Voting
ular Colored Community Work
Thursday, October 2nd, P
Friday, 3rd, O
Saturday, Grand Get Toget
Come out and meet
Handsome Prizes will be a
each of the ab
Dancing Each Evening
Don't Miss This Plent
P. S.…Contestants in the ab
Blanks each Evening at the Park.
Westport Cars did
BASEBALL!! BASEBALL
BLACK SOX, Colored C
WILDOW ATHELETIC
Champion Colored Team
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER
AT THE WESTPORT
GREAT ELITE CARNIVAL Organized For The Colored Population WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 29th, 1919 Westport Base Ball Park
SPECIAL FEATURES EACH EVENING
Monday, Sept., 29th, Voting Contest for the most Popular School Teacher of Baltimore City.
Tuesday, September 30th, Grand Baby Show, 7:30 P.M.
Prize awarded to the smallest, fattest and prettiest Baby between the ages of six and twelve months.
ENTER THE HABIES
Wednesday, Oct., 1st, Voting Contest for the most popular Colored Community Worker, Male or Female.
Handsome Prizes will be awarded to the Winners of each of the aboze Contests.
Dancing Each Evening Plenty of Amusements for All.
Don't Miss This Plenty of Room Come Out
P. S....Contestants in the above Contests will be given Entry Blanks each Evening at the Park. Get happy and enter Westport Cars direct to Grounds.
BASEBALL!! BASEBALL!! BASEBALL!!
BLACK SOX, Colored Champions of the South.
Special Reservations for Ladies
above as you carry it
in every day. With all
of惊喜, this offer
that sent for it to be
them, all for $2.
The great dream be
dreams, and what the
packages of contents
consume all for only $1.
The 6th and 7th he
1 package of the ince
Albergras Mergues, for
secrets revealed book
Are you anxious to improve your condition in life, realize your wish, gain knowledge, success, health, love, happiness, or anything else in life? You can have it with each other and with each other goes along with wonderful success concentration helping income powder.
Crystal making and psychrometry lie in the crystal and other methods: the book and a crystal glass globe for $340, the most of your life, and rise in life and good fortune. Men and women have become successful by this method. The book covers the stages of the helping mouse, only $2.
Personal magnetism, the secret of making people happy, friendship, sociality, marriage, etc. It is a great help and used by the smartest people in the book and 2 packages of the helping concentration temple incense for $2.
Birthday reading book free to you. It tells character life of every one of your friends, family, your own and any one you meet you can read up about them at a glance; no study needed; it is handy to take with you and use for pleasure or profit. It is a great bit; while they last free to you. You only send $2 for the great income powder that so many smart and successful people all over the country are using with great results.
The power of concentration brings everything to you. A wonderful system, it is used and recommended by great people with sure success. It reveals the secret power of realizing your wishes, it is complete and easy to understand and apply; with it goes: packages of concentration temple incense all for $2.
Our great mascot booklet, it is sacred and lucky to have and use it. A great helping power comes to you from
Morgan College and Branches.
John O. Spencer, Ph.D., President
Win, Pickens, Littt, D., Vice Pres.
MORGAN COLLEGE Ballimore, MD
LOCATION—In great college
town between the North and the
South
POLICY—Co-educational.
COMPOSES—Four years, appropriate
degrees, Preparation for pro-
fessional study, Advanced education.
Graduates certificated for
elementary and high school
teaching in the State.
FACULTY—College and university
trained men and women.
NEEDS—Eighty acres of most beautiful scenery, stream, hill and forest.
LOCATION—In the suburbs of Baltimore on a beautiful campus. Healthful surroundings. DORMITORIES—Equipped and supervised. PRINCIPAL—Lee M. McCoy, Litt.
COURSES—Preparatory, normal,
industrial, domestic, music.
DORMITORIES—Carefully supervised;
furnished.
TERMS—Free tuition, other ex-
penses.
PRINCIPAL-Thos. H. Kiah, A. M.
All Schools Open Sept. 29, 1919
Dormitories open Sept. 27, 1919
MARRIED
The marriage of Mr. Frank Williams and Miss Augustus Springs took place at the parsonage of 24 Dolphin street. Ceremony was performed by Rev. Henry Thomas. Those witnessing the ceremony were Mrs. Etta E. Lacey and Miss Hannah Johnson.
THE CARNIVAL
Colored Population
MEMBER 29th, 1919
Base Ball Park
ES EACH EVENING
Citing Contest for the most Pop-
more City.
n, Grand Baby Show, 7:30 P.M.
t, fattest and prettiest Baby
twelve months.
THE BABIES
Citing Contest for the most pop-
perker, Male or Female.
Prize Jazz Dancing, 9 P. M.
Old Time Cake Walk, 9 P. M.
together Night.
Sweet your Neighbor.
awarded to the Winners of
aboze Contests.
Plenty of Amusements for All.
enty of Room Come Out
Move Contests will be given Entry
Get happy and enter
direct to Grounds.
BASEBALL!! BASEBALL!!
Champions of the South.
CLUB of Annapolis, Md.
um of Anne Arundel Co.
ER 28th, 1919 AT 2 P. M.
RTT BASEBALL PARK
above as you carry it with you and use it in every day. In this book, this offer is obtained by all that son for it to be of great help to them, all for $2.
The great dream book. Tells all the dreams, and what they mean and 3 packages of concentration temple incense all for only $1.
The 6th and 7th book of Moses and 1 package of incense both for $1.
Alberius Murgus, forbidden Egyptian secrets revealed book and 1 package of incense both for only $1.
The great palm book printed in extra large type, easy to read and is of great help and comfort; with it gives 3 packages of the great incense, only $1.
The essence of a new life and a new body. It tells you how to take care of your health through your own efforts, and it gives you a copy, as it surely saves many doctors' bills and is a wonderful help, with its great temple incense, newel all for $2.
How to get what you want. Those who require this knowledge may good in every area, but the secret is what you need to apply it to any condition in life and improve it. It is easy to amass thousands that have made great use of it. Book and G packages of the wonderful concentration temple for all for only $2. Mental influence, now to influence your affairs in life for the better, keep away evil influence too, a wonder of the wonderful temple, all for $2.
Full instructions how to use the license with each order.
The Great Sacred Serifure movement is helping thousands of worthy people all over the country through its helping movement by sending for 2 booklets and 3 packages of the great Success FRIRE membership and begin to derive the Helping benefit. All for $1.
All goods are as represented. Send your order any day or call any day from our offices. Spiritual Sees, consultations and advice on life improvement prospects given by Oman only on Monday or call on
REV. LEO S. OSMAN
609 North Fremont Are., Baltimore, Md.
Noted Platform Orator and General Secretary of Epworth League of the M. E. Churches of America.
Subject: "The Negro, The World And the League of Nations." ...SPECIAL MUSICAL NUMBERS...
General Admission - - - - - 25 Cents
Auspices of Union Baptist Sunday School
Dr. HARVEY JOHNSON, Pastor. S. S. Booker, Pastor.
AT EVERGREEN A. M. E. CHURCH CARROLL, MD.
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 28th
Rev. Clifford Brown will preach at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. 3:30 p. m., Time and Place Meeting conducted by Leaders from each County. All persons who are residents or former residents of Calvert or Queen Anne Counties are requested to see that their counties are represented. Those who cannot be present on this occasion can send contributions to the following representatives:
FOR CALVEST-Mr. George M. Johnson. 218 W. Biddle Street; Joseph S. King. 563 Gold Street; 263 Richard Street; 263 Calvest Street. 263 Calvest Street.
FOR QUEN ANNE=Philip A. Handy, 433 W. Biddle street; Jesse
Hougly, 1005 Arlington Avenue; Mrs. Lucinda Dauro, 1022
Division street; James Johnson, 598 Oxford Street.
For either County—To the Pastor Rev. T. Brown, 1936 White St.
FREDERICK BROAD AND COMEY THOMAS WILSON, JR. CHARLES I. BAXKS, Secretary
DEK. W. T. BROWN, PASST.
..OPEN FOR MEMBERSHIP...
JOIN NOW
JOIN NOW
Baltimore Council Number 13
KNIGHT'S OF ST. PETER CLAVER'S
Largest Colored Catholic Secret Order in the Country
Iniation Fee $1.00 for three degrees
Sick Benefits $4.00 per Week
Death Benefits $100 00 ..... Fees 50 Cents per Month
All Catholic youth men between the ages of 18 and 50 years are urged to join this great Colored Organization with all colored Supreme and Subordinate Officers
Meetings held every First: Thursday in this Month at
ELK'S HALL, 414 W. HOFFMAN STREET
Applications may be had from any of the members or the following Committee:
T. WALLACE LANSEY, Chr., 1634 Drudl Hill Avenue
ROBERT BUTLER, 1211 Drudl Hill Avenue
GEO. A. RROWN, G. K, 1200 Argyle Avenue
CHAS. A. IRELAND, 1122 Etting Street
CHAS. F. WOODLAW, 1205 W. Argyle Avenue
REV. N. P. DENNIS, 401 Courtland Street
LEWIS A. CHELESY, 1334 Argyle Avenue
G. H. MADDQX, 911 Drudl Hill Avenue
Sunday, Oct. 5th at 3 P. M., Sermon by Rev. W. H. Weaver, D.D.
Monday, Oct. 6th at 8 P. M., Opening of Penny Club at the Church
-SPECIAL MUSIC.
William D. Holland, Chairman Finance Committee.
Mrs. Bertha Scott, President Penny Club, Rev. Thomas H. Lee, Acting Pastor
The Public is Cordially Invited.
TRY A BOTTLE OF MY SPECIAL HAIR POLYAMIDE
Diplomas awarded. For terms apply or phone Mad.4892J
Mme. M. B. Moorehead is a graduate pupil of Mme. Reynolds of
Pittsburgh, Pa., and has had ten years experience.
THE BALTIMORE SCHOOL OF MUSIC
The Best and Most Modern Methods
PIANO, VIOLIN, CORNET DOUBLE-BASS, TROMBONE, MAN
DOLIN, CLARIONET, SAXOPHON, DRUMS and VOICE CULTURE
A complete System of Local Education, Including Elementary, in
and Departments.
Ladies Coats & Suits in all the Latest Styles A Special Price on Ladies' Skirts Men's Suits Made to Order and Ready to Wear. Don't Miss This Chance. Come see for yourself at C. H. CONAWAY'S
BISHOP'S
3-IN-1 HAIR
GROWER
Bishop's 3-in-1 Hair Grower promotes the growth, cures diseases of the Scalp and prevents the Hair from falling. Price 50c at Drug Stores and Beauty Parlors. By mail 60c. We teach the 3-in-1 method of growing hair at a reasonable price. Live Agents Wanted THE J. H. BISHOP HAIR-GROWING COMPANY 1425 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., Balto.
THE CHURCH
A Great Lecture and
UNION BAPT
Monday Evening, Oct.
DR. W. W.
Noted Platform Orator and General
M. E. Church
Subject: "The Negro, The Wor-
...SPECIAL MUSIC.
General Admission
Auspices of Union E
Dr. HARVEY JOHNSON, Pastor.
—NOTICE—THE
CALVERT AND QUE
RAIN
AT EVERGREEN
CARRO
SUNDAY, SEE
Rev. Clifford Brown will pres
3:30 p. m., m. and Pip
Leaders from
All persons who are res
Calvert or Queen Anne Co
that their counties are repre
be present on this occasion
following representatives:
FOR CALVERT—Mr. George M.
M Joseph S. King, 563 Gold Street;
Mrs. Emman Wilson,
FOR QUEEN ANNE—Philip A. H
Honess, 1065 Arlington Aven
Division street; James J.
For either County—To the Pastor
HOW TO RE
Take or transfer to any of the C
int Frederick Road St.
Frederick Road on
THOMAS WILSON, President
REV. W. T.
...OPEN FO
JOIN NOW
Baltimore
KNIGHT'S O
Largest Colored of
Initation Fee $1.00 for three degrees
Death Benefits $100.00
All Catholic young men between
to join this great Colored Organizat
dinate Officers
Meetings held every First-Ti
ELK'S HALL, 414 W
Applications may be had from
ing Committee
T. WALLACE LANSE
ROBERT BUTLER, 12
SHARP ST. MEMORIAL CHURCH
Eiting and Dolphin Streets.
Dr. M. J. Naylor, Pastor.
Rev. M. J. Naylor D. D. pastor.
11 a. m. Sermon by pastor, subject "The Church and Elisha the Great Reformer," the 5th sermon of the series.
2:20 p. m. Bible School.
7:20 p. m. Pentecostal Service.
8 p. m. Message by the Pastor
A neatly welcome to all.
MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT
PIST CHURCH
October 6th, 8 P. M.
V. LUCAS
Secretary of Epworth League of the
States of America.
And The League of Nations."
LOCAL NUMBERS...
25 Cents
Aptist Sunday School
S. S. Booker, Pastor.
ARE WILL BE A—
SEEN ANNE COUNTY
ALLY.....
A. M. E. CHURCH...
MILL, MD.
TEMBER 28th
Beach at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Face Meeting conducted by
Beach County.
Indidents or former residents of
counties are requested to see
presented. Those who cannot
can send contributions to the
Johnson, 219 W. Biddle Street;
Gerone Brown, 502 Orchard Street;
1633 Ellipson Street.
433 W. Biddle street; Jessie
Jane; Mrs. Lucinda Dour, 1022
Jason, 508 Oxford Street.
Rev. W. T. Brown, 1938 White St.
ACH THE CHURCH
Montville or ivington cars, get off
walk west on Old
block to the church
CHARLES H. BANKS, Secretary
BROWN, Pastor.
DR MEMBERSHIP...
JOIN NOW
Core Counell Number 13
F. ST. PETER CLAVER'S
Patholic Secret Order in the Country
Sick Benefits $4.00 per Week
Fees 50 cents per Month
the ages of 18 and 50 years are urged
with all colored Supreme and Subor-
saturday in the Month at
H. HOFFMAN STREET
any of the members or the follow-
y.
Chr., 1634 Druld Hill Avenue
1 Druld Hill Avenue
1280 Argle Avenue
Eating Street
1208 Nylery Avenue
HER, 624 W. Biddle Street
Ol courland Street
1334 Argle Avenue
Druld Hill Avenue
CLUB RALLY...
Pierblylerian. Church
Brown by Rev. W. H. Weaver, D.D.
Bening of Penn Club at the Church.
ADMISSION FREE.
Ferman Finance Committee.
Club. Rev. Thomas H. Lee, Acting Pastor
Cordially Invited.
AD, School of Instruction
AVE., Baltimore, Md.
Maging, Manicuring, Weaving
pomades, nail paste, nail
and cuticle removing.
My school is open for
the above branches.
NIGHT CLASSES
SPECIAL, HAIR POMADE
Imply or phone Mad.4892J
graduate pupil of Mine. Reynolds of
had ten years experience.
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
PETERSON, Directress,
HILL AVENUE.
Methods of Teaching.
DOUBLE-BASS, TROMBONE, MAN
DRUMS and VOICE CULTURE
Education, including Elementary, In-
grams.
ED FOR ALL OCCASIONS.
ER OPENING SALE
in all the Latest Styles
on Ladies' Skirts
Order and Ready to Wear.
Come see for yourself at
INAWAY'S
Phone Madison 3533-3
A
Air Grower promotes the
uses of the Scalp and pre-
selling. Price 50c at Drug
lors. By mail 60c.
method of growing hair at a
Live Agents Wanted
AIR-GROWING COMPANY
NIA AVE., Balto.
EBENEZER A. M. E. CHURCH Montgomery St. near Charles
Chas. E. Stewart Pastor
11 a. m. Preaching by the pastor, David
3:30 p. m. Anniversary Sermon to Knights and Daughters of Jerusalem
lemon.
7:45 p. m. Special Sermon to Lexington Peace and Pleasure Aux.
Miss Daisy Cook, president.
9:30 a. m. Sunday School.
Charles Tolson, Superintendent
9:30 a. m. Sunday School.
PARKSIDE CHURCH
ST. JOHN'S A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. M. H.
10 a. m., Men's Bible Class.
11 a. m., Sermon by the Pastor
215 p. m., Sunday School, Mr. J.
215 p. m., Leaders Love
8 p. m., Sermon.
Class Leaders of St. John's A. M.
Love Pray Sunday, September 28th
of whatever denomination are invited
BROOKLYN, M. M. E. CHURCH
At 3 p. m., Mt. Sinai M, K. Church
at Brooklyn, Mk., sermon on
Sharp St. Church, Histimore. His choir and
congregation will be present.
GENTENNIAL M. E. CHURCH
Caroline and Banks Church
Rev. J. P. Pastor
10 a. m., Junior Church
Miss Clara Signley, Supt.
Sermon to the Juniors by the
journal.
10:30 a. m., Praise Service led by
the Local Preachers. Brothers
d. A. Jackson, John W. Golloborough
until
n. m., Sermon by the Pastor
n. m., Sermon by the Pastor
"The Second Saying From the Cross"
2:30 p. m., Sermon by the Pastor
Mishel, Mitchell, Sitting Sup
s. m., Sermon by the pastor,
"Namman from Seven View Points"
Number one "Exposing His Mistaken
The leaders of the Centenary Units will make full reports by request of the local council and慈怀会. Mrs Helen G. Lees will send forward Mrs Lees, 28th, Centenary Drive Day, Mrs Alberta Hughes, Fin. Sec.; Mr. Jerome Wells, Rec. Sec.; A real live Prayer Day; Thursday evening. Come and get the strength renewed through prayer and song.
ST. MATTHEWS III, E. M. CHURCH East 23rd St. near Greenpoint Ave. Rev. H. A. Green, Pastor Sunday. September 15th at which time we expect our sister churches to help us.
11 a. m., Sermon by the Pastor 2 p. m., Prayer Day 2 p. m., Prayer Day by Rev. A. S. Henderson, the great wonder of the age, at which time the Janitors' Protective Association, No. 1 of North Baltimore will turn out. Come and help us to a day of a holiday to the Lord.
Officer: Wm. Price, president
Al. Smith, vice president
derson, chapter president
Blackstone
secretary Robert, Gray, recording
secretary Whitman-Marshall, Fin
secretary Harris, marshal,
unless hearing the great won
der preserver.
EASTERN M. E. CHURCH
McCinderry St. near Patterson Park A
Rev. C. B. Bishop, Pastor.
Res. 156 hymns, 150 chants, Home Like Church.
10 m. m. Class, Bro. Israel Barnes.
11 a. m. Sermon, by the Pastor.
Subject: The Good Samaritan.
2:30 p. m. Sunday School.
7-7:15 p. m. Sunday exercises of the Episcopal League. A super pro will be rendered.
8 p. m. Sermon by Rev. E. P. Digges, the Peerless pulpitist. Please remember your Contenary pledges and class meetings. The Ninth Day Military Hay will be light on Sunday, Oct. 12. Mrs. Mary E. Nichols, Mrs. Anne Hammond, Supt. Mr. D. I. Fowler, Pres. E. L.
CHRIST INSTITUTION CHURCH
Ensor Street
Rev. G. W. Kennard, Pastor
11 a. m. Sermon by the pastor
2:30 p. m. Sunday School
8 p. m. Sermon by Rev. Watkins and quiet test meeting. All are invited.
THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH
Corner Bond and Jefferson Streets.
Rev. C. E. Ed. Browne, Pastor.
Par. 423 North Bond Street
Western Shore Day.
9:30 a. m. Class Meeting
10:30 a. m. Sunny School
2:30 p. m. Rev. John M. Barnes.
Hullville, Md., will preach.
Pastor of Sharp St. M. E. Church.
5:30 p. m. Prayer Meeting Iel by Mr.
6:32 p. m. Y. P. League.
8 n. m. Rev. A. J. Smith will preach
Monday night. Rev. Alfred Young
will deliver his famous Railroad Sermon. Don't miss the train.
C. F. Perry, Church Clerk.
GRACE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Corner Dolphin and Eating Streets
Rev. John T. Colbert, Faster
At 11 a.m. Sermon by pastor.
Theme: "The Slide Stepping of
Amy."
At 8 p.m. Theme: "John The
Baptist."
Sunday School at 2 p.m.
Strangers are welcome.
Every day the school is
to be present; Sunday morning
to hear fall and winter plan.
ST. LUCKU U. A. M. B. CHURCH
Spring St. near McBEDARY.
Rev. R. C. Williams, Pastor.
Sunday, Sept. 28th Missionary Day
conducted by H. Carey in
Missionary Interior.
10 a.m. Class Meeting
11 a.m. Sermon by Rev. Cyrus
II. Carey.
2:30 p.m. Sunday School.
Mrs. Offord, Supt.
3 p.m. Sermon, Rev. Carroll A.
Davis of Faith Baptist.
6 p.m. Spencer Lease.
8 p.m. Spencer Lease. Rev. Carroll A.
Davis. Come and spend the day
with us. All are welcome.
Daniel Price, Pres. Trustees Board
BROTHER N. Thomas, Secretary
APOSTOLIC FAITH--ASSEMBLY
Eldred J. M. T. Munson, Pastor
Sunday Services at 11 a.m. 8 p.m.
Services every night except Monday
und Saturday at 8 o'clock
11 a. m., Union Service with the
M. Calvary A. M. K. Church of
Towson, Md. The congregation will
be present.
S. p. m., Preaching by Rev. F. D.
McDonald.
Montgomery St. near Charles
Stewart, Pastor
to Knights and Daughters of Jerusalem
Xington Peace and Pleasure Aux.
"Giggins Progress" Illustrated.
Charles Tolsen, Superintendent
Teacher.
Lexington-St. neat Pine
Davis, Pastor
Samuel Rozier, President.
E. Church will hold a Chass Leaders
1913, at 3 p.m. all class leaders
to attend. Samuel Rozler, Chair.
ALLEN A. M. E. CHURCH
Cor. Lexington and Carson Sts.
Rev. C. Harold Stephan, D.M. S.
Human Chain Linkedin
8:30 p. m. Seated to the Trinity,
Barnes, p. m. Seated to the Rev. John
M. Barnes, Come and hear him.
Brother Charles Jones, Governor.
You are welcome all of our service.
Congratulations on Good singing
and inspiring sermons.
H. D. Brent, Supt.
PAYCER MEM. A. M. E. CHURCH
Cor. Calhoun and Laurens Sin.
Rev. C. H. Murray, Pastor
Sunday: *Services*
6:30 a.m., Praise Services
Rev. J. H. Douglass, leader.
11 a.m., Proaching services
2:30 p.m., Class Meeting No. 8.
Mr. C. Neal, Supt.
5:30 p.m., Class Meeting No. 8.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at
8:30 p.m., Class Meetings.
The A. C. E. League will reopen the first Sunday in October at 6 p.m.
Mr. Nehimin Mishra, secretary.
Res: I. W. Hill Street
Service every Sunday at午
s. p. m. Sunday School at 2:20 p. m.
and worship with us. Mrs. Mamie Queen, Supt.
OAK NT. A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. R. E. Furd, Pastor
11 a. m. "God Our Father" (the
Lord's Prayer Series), Sermon by
the pastor.
1:30 p. m. Class Meeting.
2:30 p. m. School.
8:30 p. m. Lover's Sermon by pastor.
Mrs. E. F. Prison, Sept.
1 a. m. Sermon by Bishop.
2 30 p. m. Sunday.
3 20 p. m. R. B. Green, pastor of Fontainbaie Baptist Church, will preach for us with choir and congregation.
8 p. m. Sermon by pastor.
Werethday night, class, Max Dursley, leader, Sunday, Bro. R. L. Ashley, leader
WATERS A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. L. W. Norris, D. P. D., Pastor
427 Abquish Street,
Foxborough, led by Mr. Frederick Scott
All the boys and girls are invited.
1 a. m. Sermon by the Pastor.
2 20 p. m. Sunday School,
Foxborough, musical program by the English Lords Orchestra and other talent.
8 p. m. Platform Meeting at which the boys will present Hon. Warner T. McGillum, City Counselman of the Church.
1 a. m. Sermon by the Pastor and Mr. Frederick Scott directors.
Wednesday, 8 p. m. The Classes Thursday, —Band and Prayer Meeting.
8 p. m. Boys Training Class Mr. C. Cary Teacher.
4 p. m. Class A. Phillips, leader.
8 p. m. Sermon by the Pastor.
WAYMAN MEM. AME. CHURCH
2:30 p. M. Sunday School,
district superintendent will be with us.
8:30 p. m. The Alphian Auxiliary will sing, Mrs. B. Bunch, president,
come and hear them.
8:30 p. m. D. Porter, Classes Nos. 1 and 2, W. S. Johnson and Pastor, leaders.
TRINITY A. M. E. CHURCH
Linden Ave. and Biddle St.
St. Louis, M. Porter
Registeen: 1822 McCullob St.
11 a. m. Sermon by the Pastor
2:30 p. m. Sunday School session,
W. S. Johnson
8 p. m. Sermon by the Pastor.
GILLES MEMORIAL M. P. CHURCH
Stockton Street.
B. H. Knight, Pastor.
Trustees Day, Perry Stewart, Pres.
6 a. m. Class, Huston, Johnson,
leader.
11 a. m. Pastor or Stranger.
2 p. m. Sunday School.
7 p. m. Song Service
8 p. m. Electric lights will be turned on at
7:30 p. m.
Mrs. E. Brown, Superintendent
Wm. Bond, Ministry's Steward
MT. VERNON BAPT. CHURCH
MT. VERNON, BART. CHURCH
Oxford St. near Penns Ave.
Sunday, September 28th
11 a. m. Special sermon.
2 h. m. Sunday School.
3 h. m. School Superintendent's request.
The pastor will preach on the subject
Valley of Dry Honest "The Women's
Miniature Society will lift the collection.
George and Ossion St.
Rev. P. R. Williams, D. D. Pastor
Special Services for Sunday
11 a.m. Rev. J. Jos. P. Hill, D. D.
M. D., of Hot Springs, B.C.
but, for Garnett, will presh
and sain. He is a famous barbion
solost. He wishes to meet all of
his friends.
2:30 p. m. Sunday School.
m. $ p. m. Sermon by pastor also
on sacred concert.
All are welcome.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY
THE AFRO-AMERICAN COMPANY
OF BALTIMORE CITY
5. H. MURPHY, Managing Editor,
628 North Eutaw Street, Baltimore, Md.
Phone: Mt. Varnon 2288.
ONE YEAR.....$1.50
SIX MONTHS.....5.50
THREE MONTHS.....5.50
SINGLE COPY.....9.50
"INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS NEUTRAL IN NOTHING"
FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 1919.
Green Bag nothing, White Bag, and not a dart in it.
Vice President and Mrs. Marshall are children, but they have set the nation a good example, adopting a boy baby.
Will some reader, please discover what is difference between having a Republican and democratic administration in the City Hall, which comes to appointing colored men to positions.
Unless the Southern states get labor from sohere, cotton picking time will catch them with "pickers." S. O. O. signals are being sent by many industrial centers urging the recent migrants to please come back.
A Buffalo, N. Y. woman was arrested last week when $1,000 worth of "hard likee" was found home. She was selling it at 75 cents per dress doing a rushing business.
Pittsburg has nominated a colored alderman colored constable in the Republican Primary street, cleaning jobs for them.
Writing in the current issue of the BIRTH COLOR REVIEW Chandler Owen declares that Boston, Philadelphia, New York, Washington, Baltimore, it is difficult to find the more intelligent women, who have any children at all. "A good thing the world does not depend on intelligent" folk to perpetuate itself.
German women are lighting to abolish the question "MISS." They want all unmarried as married females to be called "MRS." For someone they point to "MR." as applied to married as unmarried males. They want equal rights.
A camp meeting held in Cambridge, Maryland, sorted to have had a very successful (?) selections. $1,400, conversions 7.—The carts are the horse, unless the camp meeting is primarily to raise money.
The Philadelphia Telephone Company has struck the Drug Stores of the city for a larger price of the amounts taken in at public telephone shops. The drug stores, which had to make make buttons, and phoney money put in the slots,搔赘ulous telephone users refused the raise, and there is not a single public telephone in stores of William Penn's city. In making missuffers, because it has to walk many necessary blocks before it finds some place with telephone connection.
X-Governor Goldsborough on the eve of his nomination for a second term, gave as his real not having made any appointments of color, that having a Democratic Senate he did not wise to make any, as he felt that he did not be confirmed. He was told by his former that it was his business to make the appointments, as he had promised, and leave the matter to hostile Senate. He would thus have fulfilled, misuse and exacerbated himself from all blah this he did not do. He was not renominated. We are aware of the fact that the Second Branch of the City Council, which has to do with confirming appointments of Mayor Browning, would in liability refuse to confirm a colored man, member of the School Board, judging from all this particular party, but that will cause the Mayor from making the appointment part of the transaction to make the appointment and endeavor if possible to have it confirmed. If he fail, he will at least have done his duty. This is all that any individual can do.
Green Bag nothing, White Bag, and not a dark spot in it.
Vice President and Mrs. Marshall are childless, but they have set the nation a good example by adopting a boy baby.
Will some reader please discover what is the difference between having a Republican and a Democratic administration in the City Hall, when it comes to appointing colored men to positions.
Unless the Southern states get labor from somewhere, cotton picking time will catch them without any "pickers." S. O. O. signals are being sent to many industrial centers urging the recent migrants to "Please come back."
A Buffalo, N. Y. woman was arrested last week when $1,000 worth of "hard likker" was found in her home. She was selling it at 75 cents per drink, and doing a rushing business.
Pittsburgh has nominated a colored alderman and a colored constable in the Republican Primaries. No street cleaning jobs for them.
Writing in the current issue of the BIRTH CONTROL REVIEW Chandler Owler declares, that "In Boston, Philadelphia, New York, Washington, and Baltimore, it is difficult to find, the more intelligent Negro women, who have any children at all." It is a good thing the world does not depend on the "intelligent" folk to perpetuate itself.
German women are lighting to abolish the distinction "MISS." They want all unmarried as well as married females to be called "MITS." For a reason they point to "MR." as applied to married as well as unmarried males. They want equal rights.
A camp meeting held in Cambridge, Maryland, is reported to have had a very successful (7) season COLLECTION $1400, conversions 7—The cart is before the horse, unless the camp meeting was primarily to raise money.
The Philadelphia Telephone Company has struck against the Drug Stores of the city for a larger percentage of the amounts taken in at public telephone booths. The drug stores, which had to make good the buttons, and money pocket, in the slots by unscrupulous telephone users refused the raise, and now there is not a single telephone in the drug stores of William Penn's city. As usual the publicsuffers, because it has to walk many unnecessary blocks before it finds some place with a telephone connection.
Ex-Governor Goldsborough on the eve of his renomination for a second term, gave us his reason for not having made any appointments of colored men, that having a Democratic Senate he did not believe it wise to make any, as he felt that they would not be confirmed. He was told by his interviewer that it was his business to make the appointments, as he had promised, and leave the matter to the hostile Senate. He would thus have fulfilled his promise and exonerated himself from all blame. But this he did not do. He was not renominated.
We are aware of the fact that the Second Branch of the City Council, which has to do with confining the appointments of Mayor, Broening, would in all probability refuse to confirm a colored man for member of the School Board, judging from past actions of this particular party, but that will not excuse the Mayor from making the appointment. His part of the transaction is to make the appointment and endeavor if possible to have it confirmed. Should he fail, he will at least have done his duty, and this is all that any individual can do.
TENEMENTS TO GO
the proposed housing ordinance sent to Madison last week by the chairman of the town commission contains some new regulations, which stated will, do wonders towards improving living in the city. The Ordinance, proposes, that every room must be erected in the future must have door in it facing a street, court or yard. Cell it be lighted and ventilated properly. Cell rooms must be at least nine feet high. Access to living rooms and to bed rooms shall without passing through a bed room, and a room shall have access to a toilet, compartment not passing through a bed room.
The proposed housing ordinance sent to Mayor Broening last week by the chairman of the Housing Commission contains some new regulations, which if adopted will do wonders towards improving living conditions in the city.
The Ordinance, proposes, that every room in houses to be erected in the future must have a window in it facing a street, court or yard. Cellars must be lighted and ventilated properly. Ceilings of rooms must be at least nine feet high.
Access to living rooms and to bed rooms shall be had without passing through a bed room, and each bed room shall have access to a toilet compartment without passing through a bed, bed room.
Every dwelling shall have a basement or rellar with at least six feet of head room.
Every dwelling of four or more rooms shall have
th room and set, bath tub, located elsewhere than
the basement or lartar.
All dwellings are to be rat proof, with cement
in cellars and basements.
The adoption, of the new housing law will mean an additional building cost to be added to the already high prices prevailing for construction, work, the doom of the unsanitary and disease breeding tenement house will be sounded, for once and
The current "Crusader" in an editorial entitled
"THE NEGRO GOES, LET HIM GO IN
PEACE" says among other things:
THE CURRENT CRUSADER in an ancient citrate
"THE OLD NEGRO GOES, LET HIM GO IN
PEACE" says among other things:
"The old Negro and his futile methods must go.
After fifty years of him and his methods the race
still suffers from lynching, disfranchisement, jim-
crowism, segregation and a hundred other ills. His
object crawling and pleading have availed the
Cause nothing. He has sold his life and his people
for vapid promises tinged with traitor gold. His
race s done. Let him go.
"The New Negro now takes the helm. It is now
OUR future at stake. Not his. His future is in
the graze. And if the New Negro, imbibing the
spirit of Liberty, is willing to suffer martyrdom for
the Cause, then certainly the very least that the
Old Negro can do to stay in the background for
his remaining years of life or to die a natural death
without in his death, struggles attempting to hamper
those who take new means to effect ends which
the Old Leaders throughout fifty years were not
table to effect."
In the plaint of the CRUSADER is a reflection of the eternal conflict between strength and experience, between the progressive and the conservative spirits, between impulse and reflection, between YOUTH and OLD AGE. At the bottom is the intensive desire of youth to assert itself and begin its manhood career, battling against the determination of old age to hold on a white longer.
Soll both are needed: Old men for counsel, young men for strength, runs the stage, and now as always, the best combination of the two wins over either.
Here in Baltimore, in politics, in social service on the school question, there is a healthy combination of young and old progressives, who are not only making a stand for racial recognition, but are also purging themselves of the ultra-conservatives and passyfooters. The political situation in the city and the school question call for the most sober that and determined action on the part of all the colored voters, and it is worthy of note that both young men and old men are attacking the problem TOGETHER.
THE CATHOLIC AGITATION
No one should insinuate the spirit back of the articles recently printed in the APRO-AMERICAN on the work of the Catholic church among colored people. Sentiment among thoultful Catholics everywhere is the same: NO EFFORT IS BEING MADE TO HAVE CATHOLICS DESERT THEIR OWN CHURCH FOR OTHER DENOMINATIONS. BUT EFFORT IS BEING, MADE TO BRING ALL COMMUNICANTS IN THE CHURCH INTO THE FIGHT FOR EQUAL AND JUST TREATMENT. The fight is being made within the Catholic Church. Just as a fight is being made within the Episcopal Church and the Metholist Church for colored bishops, a fight is being made within the Catholic Church for colored priests.
Longer than every other denomination the Catholic Church has kept its white priests, and it stands alone today as the single American Church, where practically all of its parish heads are white, and all of the communicants colored.
The Council of Bishops of the Church, which met in Washington this week, considered the platform containing planks calling for: Fixing the minimum wage; Establishment of co-operative stores; Cities to take up housing problem. Taxing child labor out of existence. Vocational training in public and private schools, anti prohibition, so far as sacramental wine is concerned; and finally this plank as proposed in a letter by His Eminence, James Cardinal Gibbons: "MORE EFFICIENT CO-ORDINATION OF MISSIONARY WORK AMONG THOSE OUTSIDE THE CHURCH, ESPECIALLY NEGROES." All of these planks in the platform are important, and, for the colored people, the last especially, but how can colored people look with favor upon a campaign for larger membership in any church, that insists on blocking the way for them to rise to higher positions within the church.
CHARLES J. KOCH
Charles J. Koch, white, superintendent of city schools, who in an interview published in the AFRO AMERICAN of September 12th, declared that COLORED PEOPLE WERE MORE FITTED FOR STREET CLEANERS' JOBS THAN MEMBERSHIP ON THE SCHOOL BOARD; and THAT RADICAL COLORED TEACHERS WOULD START RACE RIOTS, appeared before the A. M. E. Preachers' Meeting on Monday, and to use his own words, admitted that his utterances were IRELELVANT, and that he had expressed himself on a subject that was NONE OF HIS BUSINESS.
The Preachers' Meeting resolved not to push this fight with Mayor Browning for Superintendent Koch's resignation pending the receipt of his retraction in writing.
The attitude of the Ministers' Meeting was that it was not concerned with Mr. Koch's private views, but that it was tremendously concerned, with the statements he made for publication.
Mr. Kech's statements to the APRO-AMERICAN,
RETRACTED but not RECANTED are the best
argument yet brought forward, why the cofeded
people should have their own spokesman on the
Board of Education.
In Boston the police strike has been settled after
a season of rioting, this week rioting marked the
beginning of the strike of the men in the iron and
steel industry. The agitation among the ranks of
the workers is universal. Everywhere, until even
school teachers and ministers are included, there is
a movement to demand higher wages to keep pace
with the higher cost of living.
WHAT WILL THE END BE?
"Are we to face checks put upon the agitation of
the workers?"
Are we to see legislation enacted to prevent capital from raising the prices of commodities? Or are we simply and certainly coming to the point of regulating by public control both labor and capital? Either of the first two, questions answer themselves. The temper of the country is such that there would be revolution before labor alone will submit to control and a financial panic before capital alone will yield. The third way out is the only one that remains. Checks must be placed on both labor and
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
PEOPLE'S FORUM
Reader Says Mr. Koch is a Detriment to the Cause of Education
To the Editor:
Are not our schools supposed to be the foundation of not only education but also the means of elevating the moral, refining and social conditions of our youth?
This being the case, is it possible for a man of Mr. Koch's calibre to advance in these qualities in advance and women of any class or race of people?
Such a man, holding such an important position is only a detriment to the cause; destroying rather than strengthening it. We thirst for the former qualities and despair us as well as the mother of such.
AVONIA D. WILLIAMS
1632 Division St.
North Dakota Reader Declares for Colored Priests for Colored People.
To the Editor:
I greatly regret to learn that Mr. Wm. E. F. Eloyd, student, had left St. Joseph's Seminary, also in years of August 22th, 1929 some statements as to colored Catholic priests, reasons given for their need, prejudice said to exist among some of the white priests creating among the colored people. Well to my mind such a thing as that is unbelievable.
Yes. we should have colored priests for the self-defense of the race; for there is no use telling colored people they are good enough to celebrate the Divine Mysteries at the Altar. There is not one colored man in this country who would understand that kind of practice. The few colored priests that have been ordained have made gods and I am in the position to know what I am talking about, but the Catholic Church is going to settle that question. She settled it with the Japanese, Chinese and other races, and she is going to settle that question in this country. I care not for prejudice or opposition wherever it may be.
"Right is of no sex, truth has no color and all men are brothers." going to settle LANE, N.Y.C. Fullerton, North Dakota.
Authority: Based on Free Press Defense League. Does Not Appeal to Colored Catholics.
To the Editor:
When poor, impatient travels abroad he is more to be pitied than censured. A person who believes everything he sees is true, and is reedification, especially as from such journal as the Menace.
The truth of such statements of the Free Press Defense League and the Menace are as much value as its publication about the enemy. The bound secret organization which taught treason against the government of the United States, where as this society permitted high Masconic officers to examine their ritual and absurd refuted the
Their past achievements in this Great World War speaks for it itself. Happily the doctrine of the Catholic Church is not taken from such anti-Catholic papers, but it is the teaching of Christ which has us from the Bible and tradition.
The gentleman may better cultivate his reason by reading such standard Literature as the "Puth of Our Fathers" by Cardinal Gibbon and review and compare these with his life and activities and get a correct premises of principal upon which to stand.
As a temperance advocate, he stands as model of constructive behavior as a Bishop of the Catholic Church, he has given the pledge to hundreds of boys to abstain from intoxicating liquors, until they have reached the ages in which he been made to die.igion, but then been made a long rut yet to travel. Let's classify all the people and be fair about it.
a large per centage of them have never touched liquor. He has fostered schools and orphages where large numbers of boys and girls have been educated in good citizenship and are men and women of respectability in their communities, active in social, industrial and professional pursuits. He has ordained three Negro priests to the ministry and we feel proud of their service. Mr. Mackenzie shows us where the Free Press League or the Menace has donebine concrete constructive work for the Negro. The Federated Catholic Societies three years ago protested to the President of the United States and Secretary of State, John Kerry, who were murdered, outraged and their property confiscated in Mexico under the Carranza government and were strictly within their rights, for the same reason we protested against the persecution of the Negroes and the truque make the most of it. Neither does Cardinal Gibbons or anyone else carry a brief for all the social evils of Mexico, Spain or the United States. The fallacy of the quack line of legislative prohibition for all is emphasized in the increased lynchings, race riots, strikes and general unrest.
ROYAL G. ADDISON
TRAPPE
Trappe, Md. Sept 21—Rev. Raymond Winston preached an excellent sermon. Misses Malyon, Elise and Emily have been invited to parents have after spending the summer at Cape May, Mrs. Sophie Brown visited her brother; Mr. Moses Banks, Mrs. Mary Crawford in Trapppe; Mr. Bruton Purnell left on Tuesday for Dover. Del. where, he will attend school. Mr. Cecil Brooks is visiting his father Mr. Jaymond Brooks, Mr. Mary Crawford, and Esther Dashible spent the Sunday in Euston visiting Mrs. Maggie Elliot Mrs. Chase's sister, Mr. Prince A. Copper is home again after spending
TRAPPE
THREE NEW BOOKS BY CO
Volumes You Need to
"Africa and the War" by Benjamin Brawley, published by Duffield Company, New York, is a little volume of 84 pages that in a very readable fashion tells something of the historic significance of Africa, and contains the argument made by Dr. DuBois in the Crisis, that the disposition of colonies in the Dark Continent was the cause of the European War. This event is the Christianization and education of natives by American Negroes. He wants agricultural and mechanical training, engineering and the professions, especially medicine.
The Africans themselves are spoken of as Gods chosen people and Mr. Brawley says:
"Never did nation wrong them but that the judgment of the Lord overtook it. England trafficked in them and log the richest shaved than and bled thru four years of civil war. The Boers oppressed them and lost their independence. Belgium mutilated them and witnessed her fields made desolate. Germany harrassed them and the hour of her death caused they are poor and mutilated and unorganized, let us take warning for the future."
"History of the American Negro in the Great World War" by W. Allison Sweeny. 1919 illustrated by one hundred photographs and eight colored plates, privately printed in Chicago, Ill. constitutes an ambitious attempt at a popular war. There are such chapters as previous wars in which the Negro figured; Roster
Reviews and Opinions from
iated Neg
Why do we keep on talking and
bothering about a name? It's a con-
tention as old as we, Fletcher's pup, and
it "can't settled yet," and never will
be that's true. The vocate recently had a scholarly
written editorial deering the use of the term "Negro." Followed a brief
informal in the Perth Times, de-
nouncing the term "Colored." Both
arguments are good, as such arguments go, but it impresses us as a
language” and that is determined by the leading thinkers and writers and by “Negro” while many just as able use “Colored,” and a diminishing few use the hyphenated “Afro-American.” In follow up to what he said “Sometimes I call my wife sweetheart,” other times, sweets, and then at times “Hate,” and again by her first choice, and in the second by her second choice, the song he might have added, “It’s nobody’s business but my own.” If we would spend as much time in constructive discussion as we do over the course of our lives, before our GROUT—how’s that? that would get somewhere.
LET'S CLASSIFY THEM
It is high time in this adjustment of human relations to classify individuals. It is just as unnificantly unfair as it is to say that we are as it is for them to say “I hate black people.” The meanest people we know all have some individuals by whom we are by until the last ditch is reached, and it is very evident that there are some
The first baby of cotton for the season to be ginned in Harris county was grown by a Negro living on a rented farm near Houston. The producer of the cotton William Whiting, of Houston, after getting the bale picked, be handed it to the city during the night, arriving at 2 o'clock in the morning, for fear that some one else would beat him to the honor of selling the first bale of Harris county cotton. He took his bale, for in addition to receiving a good price for his product, he was given a premium of $25 by cotton men. The interest this Negro has shown in his work on farm is to be commended. He is the type of Negro that is a credit to his race. What the country needs is producers, not actuators. There is a place in the country where who else pride in producing and the farm ownership his best opportunity to be economically independent. The white people of the South are glad to encourage and aid the impatient hawking Negro.
*New York Globe*
There is a good deal of bank
about edging out the stock
What I mean is that somebody else
could come along and produce
THE PERISCOPE
of Nogro officers; Over_there; Mid
Shot and Shell; Shell? who never
will Return; Homo Coming Nogroes;
Nogroes; Nogroes; Nogroes; America, and others, thirty
three chapters in all.
The volume is based on the
official war dispatches from the
front, addresses and letters to
Colonel Charles Young together with a
summary of the activities of the 5th
Illinois Regiment by Adjunct
John Patton, a scientific treasure, but a
worthy tribute to America's
400,000 black fighters.
"The Negro in Literature and Art" by Benjamin Brawley, dean of Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia, 1918, Duffield Company. New York, with appendix, bibliography, an index, 176 pages, price $1.35 net, includes critical estimates of the five great Negro writers, Phyllis Wheatley, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Charles W. Chestnut, W. E. B. DeBols, W. S. Breathwalt, William S. Crawford, and separate chapters on Orators, the Stage, Palmers, Scultures and Musicians.
Perhaps because Phyllis Wheatley is least known to the reading public Mr. Brawley devotes his longest chapter to her and his next longest to Dunbar, the poet. While not by any means, the last word, Mr. Brawley has taken the step that will bring the serious work of Katherine Wheatley to the work of Nerayah authors and artists. A remarkably full bibliography and index will prove helpful especially to students.
"You see I am not used to writing letters for I am only eleven and the only person I ever write to is my sister from here. But I am sure you will understand what I write about. I was very sad when I read that I visited in Chicago throw glues "and killed a Colby boy in the water at a ranch and "Then they had a race riot, and of people were hurt and some killed. "Then I read that there were thirty-three Negroes lived in Chicago in one day. "Then say Negroes fires homes of whites in stockyard district, rendering more than 1,000 Poles and "Then Mr. Wilson sends commission to investigate complaints of Jews in Poland and I wondered if some of those same Poles come to Chicago as they fight the Jews in Poland.
"Then Negroes, barred from stock yards and not allowed to return to work. With no food in Negro section, many Negroes were leaving Chicago. I was told that they wanted what those Doles and their friends wanted the Negroes to do, go away." "Then I read last Monday that seventeen Negroes were indicted for murder in the race plot. That thirty-three were whites, and I listied for them were whites and twenty blacks, but the blacks must have been terribly afraid of the whites and committed suicide for I have not read yet where any whites have been indicted for murder. I listied for people to be so afraid as to commit suicide." "You see I am a Little Colored girl and love to draw the Plag and sing the African Spangled Banner, but I am not a good where there is a race war."
"You see, Dear Dr. Crane, that does not do my good job: if I write this to the newspaper, the would not print it in the paper, but if I write it for write about it they will have to because everybody looks in the paper for what you write and read it because you write it and I am going to cause you it won't have to, because I won't have to, bother you later by writing to thank you.
"I am your friend,
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
And if that is not good straight thinking and first class utterance, then I am no judge. It is so well done that the judge's case were alive would think he was "putting something over" on me.
ISLANDER" WILD JAY BALK
Lord Baldrener's suggestion that Great Britain regulate some portion of its debt to the United States by the British and some the Bermudas, the British and some the Indian Islands but not Jamaica, Barbados or Trinidad, is offered, of course on the presumption that their people may be easily obtained.
There was a time when many of the people would have regarded each other with respect, but differences if not with favor. During most of our existence as an independent nation we have cherished the greatest blessing that could come upon our neighbor and that to some extent were conscious of the fact.
whether Lord Rothenberg's proposed real-estate transaction meets the approval of this country or not. It is probable that the inhabitants of the islands concern will offer serious objections. British subjects of the Caucasian race are not pleased with our Probation laws as recent letters to the World have shown. The negroes present the treatment accorded their brethren in this country; and particularly our frequent enemies, then, of equal justice in the courts of these dependencies secure in their personal, liberty and the blasses assured of the protection of the laws, as they are, an attempt to bring them under a flag which guarantees them the ability to prove embarrassing to concerned.
.....THE JOY OF LIVING.....
Wise guys call it
The SOCIAL INSTINCT.
But I have that
That the desire
Of the Younger Folks
To get together.
And get acquainted.
Was nothing more
Than the simple wish
To taste a little
Of the JOY OF LIVING:
But, ANYHOW
The great big crowd
Of boys and girls
That heard the music
Of a six piece band
Down on the street
The other night.
Felt what it was.
Somebody said
They were holding a carnival
And the money raised
Would go to the church.
But the main part was
PROMISES TO RE TRACT STATEMENT IN WRITING
PROMISES TO RE TRACT STATEMENT IN WRITING
Continued from Page 1
papers, which was construed to
mean that the first article in
the Afro-American caused him
no trouble.
RACE POSITION OUTLINED Bishop Harst again came to the defense of the race in words that showed no equivocation. The man that hints at riots between women during fire," he said. "Turn the rabble on Pennsylvania avenue loose and Mr. Koch would be killed. His life would be no safer than mine when the rabble had his crew in mind and want to see such a situation arise whereby his life would be endangered. The colored people certainly took care of themselves in the riots in Washington and would do so here. We want no talk of riots here.
"The colored people here regard the Afro-American and the Commonwealth in the same way the whites regard the Sun, American affairs and our games compare favorably with those on the dullies. Mr. Carl Murphy is the equal of Mr. Koch, having been educated in our high school. Howard University, Harvard and in Central University of being dictated to by people who have palenesses."
The superintendent resuming his narrative, stated that he was not responsible for prejudicial conditions against the race and did not want to be involved in that he was wrong in expressing his views about the question of a race member of the School Board to Mr. Murphy, but did not think he would be quoted. He admitted that the member of a colored member of the School Board was without his province.
"I am here because I want to be fair to the colored people," he said, "and not because I am after the colored people." He would principle for the school. At the very time Mr. Murphy sought to see me I was in the room with a committee of the School Board arguing that the teachers in the Colored High School be given the same status as those in the other high schools.
ADVISED BY TEACHERS
"I have relied upon teachers in the colored schools for advice regarding matters affecting the colored people," he went on to say, "Hawkins and Lockerman have been brought into this matter."
Mr. John H. Murphy came to the defense of the policy of the Afro-American and asserted that Messrs. Hawkins and Lockerman "I have nothing to do with the policy of segregating teachers on account of race," interjected Bishop Hurst, "but rather than submit to such I would resign, were I a friend." He coy. C. H. Stephan asked Mr. Koch if he thought such remarks as the colored people should seek jobs as street cleaners were inspiring to colored youths. The super-intendent replied that he did not. Mr. Koch asked why he, Mr. Koch as to how he had come to the conclusion that it was not time for a colored member of the Board. The latter replied that it should be a matter of evolution. Mr. Koch insisted in holding the colored people down to one position or program.
EDITOR MURPHY'S VERSION
Carl J. Murphy told the ministers about the circumstances of his Jewish coincidence with those given by the president, then asserted that the people had the say about the schools and not their servants and launched into further litigation given the Colored High School. As Mr. Koch showed a willingness to retract, the ministers displayed, an equal readiness to drop further litigation. In resolution, introduced by Rew, Charles E. Stewart, passed without a dissenting vote.
passed without a dissenting vote: "The A. M. E. Minister's Meeting readiness instruction of last Monday (September) 15th, with the assistance of the Koch and his interances as published in the Afro-American of the 12th instant, and shall insignia upon final action by the Mayor, unless Koch shall refract in writing that Koch, admitted to have made and which he confesses to be extraneous and irrelevant to this Preach-
That here was a chance
To have a dance.
And right in the middle
Of the big, smooth street,
Two hundred couples
Danced and swayed,
And hummed and giggled,
Or passed the time
In innocent chatter.
So it occurred to me,
Just as I know.
It has occurred to you
How nice it would be
If the War Camp Club.
The Civic League.
Or some of the other.
SOCIAL WORKERS
Would lay their plans
In the winter months
To give street boys
And street girls too
The chance they need
To get their share
Of the JOY OF LIVING.
Green Bag Nothing But Lemon Bag Says Old Timer.
"What have you got in this bag?" the reporter asked. Old Timer when he spied him at the Republican State Convention Thursday, and see for yourself" the old man said testily. The reporter took the bag, looked edy in and, lo, he beheld lemon. "I thought Mayor Browning we going to take care of you in Green Bag" the reporter said at a little further away from O. T. The old man swung his sick agnity, with the reporter at a safe distance, and said sharply: The lemon bag is what you want, the bag you don't look sharp. I am going to be generous with mine, however, and divide it with Charley Norris." "Everybody's yelling for Harry Nice in there," said the reporter T., as he looked from the lobby down the first floor and onto stage.
"Let 'em yell!" thundered O. T.
"November mint here yet." I
going to be on the warpath and
just go to the mall. I just
the same as them prowlers
shot it into Koch. I will fill some
of them big Republicans so full of
shots that they will have to go to
care. I will be fitted for the shot
curse, believe me.
Jug then everybody in the con-
vention broke out into three
cheers for the G. O. P. and Old
Timer and his lion bag crushed.
THE SONG OF THE MARCHES
IN AMI—BROWNS 1899
Were going with the Sharry. Flag
across the trapped sea.
As we go marrubing on,
We're marrubing on with Pronon
now
Glory!' Glory! Haldjahjah! etc.
Jumping up with Freemason in
The ever winning right,
For endless days of Freedom
For endless days of Freedom
And in this Holy Conflict we
Are doubly armed with Right-
As we go on marching on,
Glory!' Glory! Haldjahjah! etc.
STOLE $2,000
WORTH OF CLOTHES
New York, Sept. 25.—Epimrhn
Tree and Samuel Smith we are
about to purchase a clothing house
about to put $2,500 with a goods
in a taxicab.
THE BROADWAY
DORCHENTER DELEGATE
TO THE
REPUBLICAN INVENTION
JOSEPH F. HENRY
LAWYER
QUICKLY DIVORCED
Mrs. Cherry & Wiggins, of 1115
N. Carger Street, where she
lived a bill for an absolute divorce
her husband, Edward Wiggins
Philadelphia, Pa., was granted
the same in Circuit Court, Part two,
today. The minor child, in the
case, she was allied with Wiggins,
her maiden name. She was
responded to by Lawyer Roy S. Bong.
-IN THE SOCIAL WHIRL..
£
FRIDAY, SEPT, 26,1919.
IN THE
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BRINGING NEW YORK TO BALTIMORZ. ~
Fre THE. O..M. BLE. AS.
Ball & Modern Fancy Dance Contest
eee AT RICHMOND. MARKET ARMORY |
Friday Evening, September 26th, 1919
MUSIC BY THE INTERNATIONSE JAZZ SAND.
The Contest is between Profs: J: Wise, M: Clark, E. Purviance:ané
Prine cun:be seen-at Fennell's.Phermacy, Druid Hill, Ave. & Biddle.Sts:
Admission, 40-Cents-- “No War Tax
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fart atter spending a> waeh Wb
tech aunks mem Heahie salen, 28
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S16 Pecte Blashowitl and Sti
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Now: aid Mise Juwex Carr.
Peincetene X. a weet the Event
Men Sobel Moore, Hut White
Aue Masco Maurier tues
five Svidined home front # dulizhe
fnb- vpeation in Havre: der Grace,
Ma
BRINGING NEW YO
| Gp. _THE 0..M.
- WILL G
sO. MES ee
“6S ANNOUNCEMINT.
Rive and Mer Rohert 2 Totter
Migs of" 2925: Ditision’ wtzeeh ase
Jiobaiw “tae anarmiage ef 2 bese
duvehicr, Keadie go tn, Ma. Ler
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sauctier in Seb Tete Bremer
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Mein Shaak, Cstuaiue wenn
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H&S BIG” ENROLEMENT:
Enresinent oats dighert.« Zrows.
micgmiteGs eh ee Pup eon te
ing tage leben. Brean. Jeter
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thie Abie Clase aie guerre a
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Nidenu’. Batu fisut “Tengu wi
Heidt. Metronwellian, ay aE
Chereh wn, Tuek@ays - Wedmsan,
nd, Thursday 00 his Week
Monzoe Feoster, Uf. Boston. Who
Pesos werntenutiee, Wap am cisese ok
Ent pretegin ae petting aie
inde Rute Gale be “hie oye
Hae gBemjble peeini oer hl
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Gees on the wenraey ob Aden wae
Gue of the davaer S62 3Re WOT
Wars Be eraiinaied, 82 2
BY Abkuld Gouee,son ion” GRA
shear Gis Une tana ae KiBed
‘Afior ating: thu Cont is’ stich
the eylured man Bids * ie
whive, mutt xuald Seon Ree wo
relingnists his ‘suremner, 5 ane
syezker seid. wait’ Southern Wise.
women seemingiy fuera tte ce
seury with waielr biaer she vex
reece thes durin tie CR!
War, The speuke® spoke wh she
cause and history of raew viecs
OS aivers. sha. delivured addres
sin whieh the question uf whi
rushes. for the race wes Kept in
the foresvsund. —fneledes= 3 ev,
Byron Guiiner, of Now Trek. press
Benz of the Haees Wi, a: Tay
Rev. Be Marvel Miniewuee, dee,
BOW. Sain, Hinton. Mee Edis
Wells Barnett Chinen and. Wins
B. Carin. Sere,
STUMIE texto! pine Wore Sadcnt=
ination based on race. aed valle
Tor dheuneaetaion (6 MCUES Cie
eriminating, lust
Mine Marie Comper Mee Mar)
iaens sands ve: sinesniey te tenes
Mire wiht abe, Geese Lanta cue
Mouidusy, "yas ies Iehunidace eri ea
Rises Mens fier Ueteia ete
ter BEFrtw uk Blew Sadie) oe
THE AFRO-AMERICAN OR
aa
EOCAL NEWS BAUGH'S =
_ n (ALBAUGH’S
aca w “hodewus § Week Starting
Uo a | Wtonpay, SEPT.
ee : cic eae Matinee Thursday—Satu
Spee Mm ee THE SHOW THAT HAS STOOD
bor Gee a ey ‘AMERICA’S BEST COLORED S
Peel Shah denice ie ee
SE erence SALEM TUTT WHI
ie pa RI ne Sarg and J; HOMER. TU
Looe Seomeotie BEE Presenting THEIR LATEST MUSICAI
mer cite atid on ce 5.
1 The Children of th
abso MAME A i BY GEORGE WES PABREK. OF SAM
Ge ing Tat og 8 EVERYTHING NEW THIS SEJ
' fii eee hae. Fens vOu! § Special Scenic Eifects Beautifu
adh gee te: MAREN Mas
Ne ass naaee ah aie Meitt
Ci mike ate 9 San
nae a de bers wean Rees
ehh ee Re Eats Bande’
Soiled op eka eae wae
sates Ae cao aces ena ety
LM cagaige meee cae are ie
TE ee pie er
metbisls eee ete
Sema bie Ntrryd aacheness oe Ma
cds SE ecae idig amin pat Pt
Sree wenn costs ate code Ae tetas
ee
F ae PER / fie aN |
ff 8 on Ts me N |
ee I Meme
eA” Bae oo SS |
ne Le erat : {
pe Sees te eae oF on every pair of eveplasses
Sones SO one
Ae .
Ee @ 2
FRVODAY marks the fst sear of the invis service in Baltimore. In this short time we {
Bo have captured the hearts of the people.
of ine ledsae sig LEAN EE 3 mma ea
By a Ge “oN
Fe pm SP eg 2s eee
PN ae BEGINNING. TOMORROW Yi)
frops. 2 Sveolascts on Spectades—3 |
si \ Fromi..-The now shell frames gees
Ws are included, fe
i) Mee pHOUSANDS RAVE fi
Geer | ONEAISED RELIEF fy
ESR Nuun organization have been oe Eg
BS ee Ss Non Liberty Sana
gs Se omiah tain. What WeDo |
\ Ne Mc ten tre above, Fis For $3 a
eee hive: G49, farther sequaint ta wemtisicnhesicinn aay |
BS fp Mahe wate ae tert head eben ag. |
fe Kryptok Bifocals and Jee
N° oes specially-ground: Jenses ~at. Alsen g
= yeaa, bomet atlas:
ese Heniosznen i the Famous Reso Sa ee
Biipat_—To See ar and Near With The No Waiting; 3 Experts At Your Service:
= oF SF Pew s : 4
PRBER TER! Eee Opienties
ee ‘afar Be &) Inc 215 NORTH
ae © 9 Ba ‘LIBERTY STREET
< aR ° 3 __AvFew Steps From: Lexington
Se nee Sots sien Tilt 6 P.M" Saterday 8PM E58 i
RNISTEAD’S:
® 2a
GREEN GROCERY AND GENERAL PRODUCE STORE:
—— NOW OPEN———. =
LANVALE AND: DIVISION: STREETS:~ i
Fresh: Vegetables, and:Groceries. at Wholesale: Prices. :
SATURDAY SPECIAL—FRESH DRESSED POULTRY. ‘
STRICTLY: FRESH BUTTER AND EGGS. x
Call or Telephone Madison 4144. 1
WSIS LONG TE TOR TS
TO. BE ABLE TO SELL YOU HOUSES IN-ANY SECTION OF CITE!
Tolson Bros. Realty Company —
OPFICRS 106 RARER STREET «-_ svet MeCULLOM STRIET./
Se een plies adler 13006 Wr,
nee 68 Fe ae s
1 three story house 1200 block Harlem Ave Etec. tight, heat Gre 390.
Le Ny Nee ees arnaptvuaie stores Ge ENTRY
ssw node Att Bibek Manner oe at sea
, Ste oie 1208 Blow Silane Tet Cae, Greune sant ATES
9, heee 7 nentet THEe afoek ilulbersy Bc Oreund’ rant Seed
ALSO HOUSES. AND LOTS SOLD: 8T WILSON PARK & PIMLIOO!
peSRDeDSDEDE OOS ED EDEEERODOUODERECOODeODINNS:
Z 3
3
E have proves thelr rellabiliny >
2 | rum te established by vitnomen
ee ud) nent a4) Mourands teat:
; fede eee. | ot bome xad abrowd can testify 8
Ee | 0 v0 ments, ase your net 3
: Be PMH por: ase your trend. nad avove &
ee ee
A : 3
. FVERY USER OF .
°. m
; “SOPHEA’S :
iC Br Pomade!
sLreain Drown romake:
$ -maE BAIDRESSING WINE 4 BLESSING :
$ IS A WITNESS. $
° Mf you are having hair troubles. try tt; No lady's dressing:
3 table is eombivie without SOPHIAS preparations zor the mais;
fealp and ukin. Solé entirely ow Wieir merits, They co more than
$ we claim, $
‘Sophia's Cream Brown Poiande. 25, 35, 50c: Sophia'r Glycerine:
§ cascttn! Sic rtir wasn thas eevea the hair slots: nol ane
@ fuffy, 50c: Sophie's X-Rey Hair Shine, 2 perzect floss and $
8 ecraigntening cream, 35c; Soplile’s Whiteaing Crom. the ner @
Bea eacrer and taee beach, seer Soplive Gren Baie &
Soule, the Ufe-giving invigoraior $1.00; Sopbiis's Large: Stoel S
3 Buirdressers’ Combs, $5.75 short time only; e
B cuDEax, king of hair ecuiehionore for men, wil mraiehton S
scstboras conend tinhy ce surg bale fo & onion Nov atantod B
by water, Price $1.00. Special terms to barbers. Used to the. S
RL verber chtee 3
sophics proparaslone aot bi ait Drlgsete ano. ettdraiede
§ evsowbere or bun dser “aucta waned Spel tem
GE yoUNG. Ie. :
$00 SOUTS STREET PHILADELPHIA, PAS
For Sale in Baltinore’by Fennel Braid HI avenue and Bide @
gue tat Stokes tod Docs. Druid all Ave: ang O2ford BL;
8 Soung's Drala silt ave, and Mosman Si: Bishop's Balr Shop, #
$ 102s Senacplvenia. Ave; and Johnson's Bacher Stop, 544-Wene
8 Lnnvaie eceen. Mme alercs Holdas. 2608 © nal
§ Fe Sethe ee tavern 8 see emer :
| aaa ener ee ae Te a Rca eee tes
} CULE ya
eee UE,
ero
You should useRestorin Hair Grower &Dry Shampoo
L. Becanse—Tbey ure co:uposed of the BEST tnxredicuts known for
SOALP @ HAI trouble, Guaranteed nou-tajurious
2. Bocate “HINES. DUS, LIFELESS, BRITTLE, bulr Dooomos Bott
Glory, Besuufu) and Soaighr siubout a Siratienins, Com
3. Becans—Thes RESTORE your SCALP and EST? w new LIEB
tad, VIGOR.
€ SomoscCITORING -and DAXDECET ure ondrely topped bz
tel se. PEE 1h AND 26 CENTS,
Por your gray or faded sir, Gon't wee avec; these are dankoroud
Gera foc, bere Mestorin Hair Stalo aad be Gelignted wkd te wom
Sectal reels ie the sourie of 4 few asi
Goughing?..That's u danger signal and nature must: be helped witht
nestorin Couch Balsam Soe. Never Falls, AGUNTS WANTED.
Simson YOUR DAEE SEIN. eave Freckles, Tan, Tampa, Pisa
Dies, Dlaminues Have Soft Pals, Brisht Skin by. ine
‘RESTORIN SHIN WAITENER 200. 4 74%
60d on MONEY BACK GUARAN'EE ut your dragcist, Dalr Dressel
oF Posyaid by RESTOREY DRUG COMPANY
td EE MORGANE ERED BALTIMORE. Mii.
fae os
[BEER
LEY ee ea ee
j 3 eye
N. W. Cor. Perina. Ave. & Dolphin'St. 2d Soom,
ie ENTRANCI.ON DOLPHIN STREET.
OFFICE. BOURS 9a. M: TO.9:.P. M ae
— Specialists on Nervous! Women and Children |
Expert Crown and Bridge Work. Modern’ Dentistry.
PAINLESS" METHODS PRICES: RESSONAMLE
DRO. H. ARNOLD: Chief Operon. Povine: Maainon 330765
(FURR WHITETHE NEW AND HARMLES? EIN BIEACH
Wai. 1d Your Skin and Removew Uasightly Pixpies a @ Eruptions (<
_ While’ You Sleep 5 Bon
ot Gala sf Be HERRON 2 Soe EES topes coe
fora shart Hane, n@_Gieasubrof ute oupstise coopound tates gateoe tes
Spr pigiest! Neakis cole making uorhitar sowskar and teeoee fe srom ples
Sed ecapion ino ba anes eaten Rene eee
"Goa tex wi coccinne x. Ty asx. and ct Zour fends abort SHURE WHERE Fp
al Sein SEE reteset meee rome mer
‘Box 367.A Ss: SHURE Bi TECEEMCALCO: MAXPIELD, KE,
EE ee et te
;
; 3 Lyceum
‘ALBAUGH'’S mate
| Ureek Starting bs
MONDAY SEPT. 29th
Matinee Thursday—Saturday
ee
| | THE SHOW THAT HAS STOOD THE TEST.
: ‘AMERICA’S BEST COLORED SHOW
T® SMARTER SET
abe
: “CO-STARRING
:
| SALEM FUET- WHLTNEY >)
: and J; HOMER. TUTT :
Presenting THEIR LATEST MUSICAL COMEDY |
: 5 a
The Children of the $
The Children of the Sun
: AOAPTED ROM SEE HISTORICAT BOOK
Fo By GORGE WELES PARKER Om SAME TILE
: EVERYTHING NEW THIS SEASON
| Special Seenie Effects Beautiful Costuming
geek rene oc ae na
Seats on Sale at Albaugh’s City Ticket Office, Stokes
& Berry's Drug Store, Druid Hill Avenue and
: at Albeugh’s Lyceum Ticket Office.
Hlanciag Classes----Tuesday aad Friday Evenings
AT THE PYTHIAN CASTLE HALL. soo
Cor. Preston & McCulloh
—SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT—
One Hundred (100) Boxes of Candy given away FREE
to the Persons Holding the Lucky Numbers.
Special Features—Dreamy. Waltz and Jazz Music.
ADMISSION®: 20 CENTS: Before 9 p..m., 15 Cents.
PROFS. W. W. ROBINSON AND M. L. CLARKE |
Directors-in Charge.
Sk 9
THE FIRST DANCE OF THE SEASON
GIvEX EYTHE, 7, JOHN'S MUSICAL CLUE
AP BYTHIAS CASTLE THURSDAY: OCTORER 16, AT 83 ME
ADMISSION 2h CENTS
Be atime oe BALE.
pours E/ ate
ae
2 =
eee eae
AIR GROWER
win pRowoTe 4, FCyL GROWTH
Bet BROMO ae Cie Stee
cron che sfieore
Tiny tn Bike
GE tat Baie
w rove uke 3Vber asa
Yad See
gast bin Bald Geower
ESSER sougtee Clg alta
sui Danfrace Mesina” Seaip ne
Bee eee ce tant au to
$2 Be a la Nai Gee
SE SHAE Siatde seating meant
Spdlce Unt 0 ti rout gt ie
Fre ati tice Bade kde
Be gaa sa eon Leaver tnt
Brace? ata Suite Pfam
Fr oot an ekea Ue eat a
2 Se Slnom alae ee
temte a Mhac te fe macurecoe
Berek ee “ois” wot eee Tot
Seipienin
SHRP USGS atl ,.00, Guat
SF Sales ela Vag Paitege
5. 8, TEONe Geert Keenan
fisPe, Eels SP oiitiond Ga
‘aslo
asthe eee
assets Sigua 3 Eomie Ou 2 Shame
Jai Smne: Gie rack Cress
Bh Digeclony tar ‘Scum, £200
igeetions tur Seilinng.,, 25.00
FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 1919.
News From All Over The State
CATONSVILLE
Catonville, Md., September 24—Presiding Bishop D. G. Hill will preside Sunday in Catonville, Md., 8 P. M., the United Order of Sons and Daughters will have a sermon preached to them by Tev. J. A. Young, M.D., and John Pre accompanied by Mrs. Amie E. Cox, Mrs. Betty Elliot and Miss Brown motored to Frederick Co. and visited Mr. and Mrs. Wolf West on Sunday, Catonville, Md., Catonville Mission accompanied by his congregation and choir under the leadership of Prof. Alexander Leonon will visit Catonville church on Sept. 23 at 3 P. M., Mrs. Robert Williams, her son Melvin daughters Miss. Bortle and Miss. Alexander, her son Alexander, Virginia, and Charlotte are spending a few days in Milwaukee Clarke Co. Va., Mrs. Robert's burial his cemetery, 6001631 this season.
over fifty squirrels this season.
Mrs. J, P. Gough of Pittsburgh was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Philip London 152 Nwuest nov. last Friday Mrs. and daughter Mrs. London of Porto tide.
Mr. John brown of Harriestown is suffering from an infected eye.
Dr. Henry Campbell of Main Cave is making improvements on his bibbage.
Master William H. Jackson, son of Mrs. born H. Jackson left last summer for Wilberforce Ohio where he met his wife.
Mrs. adamn Worthington at the guest at dinner last Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Win. Adams of Long Green Md. were the guest of his sister and brother-in-law Mr. and Frank Burton.
Miss Corn Full of Philadelphia and batee of Baltimore and held a flying visit to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burton on Saturday.
Miss Pearl Dabney of Baltimore was the guest of Misses Lola, Alberta and Jodie a flying visit to Mr. and Mrs. Mary Burton celebrated her fifty first Birthday Sunday with a family dinner.
Miss John Boston left Sunday for her mother she is visiting her Aunt Mrs. Barber Gherber.
Mrs. Pamille Winkle of a Ritmite is spending a few days with Mrs. Eliza Crawford. She took part in the Million Dollar Wedding at Grace church Thursday night were Revand Mrs. J. H. Green of Knot Hall church joined her and cuddled with Jasper. Mrs. Frances Butler and Mr. John Woble all of Ritmite.
CHESTERTOWN
Chestertown, Md., Scot. 24—Sunday
was young Pepper's Day at Botel A.
M. E. church.
Mr. Horton Weight gave a help-
address to the young people in the
po. services.
Mr. Horton Fitchberg delivered
pu. services.
Mr. Cortlandt lives has returned
from a visit to Dover.
Miss Bertram Thomas and Miss Ida
Hill have home.
Saturday evening of last week.
Mrs. Sarah Riley accompanied by
her mother is visiting Baltimore.
Mrs. Ellen Halley of Christiana M.
is visiting her Sister Mrs. Joe
Brown.
Mr. Frank Mitchell, a member of
Mrs. E. church, died Friday
evening of this week.
EASTON
Easton, Mt., September 23rd—The Grammar School opened sept 15th teachers back, with one new teacher added to our Miss M. W. W. Bertha Musson, Mrs. Elisse Earle, Misses Bessie Dussie, Mary Biley and Stacie Jones Domestic Science teacher S. J. James Supervisory, and the teachers, Mr. Earnest Tarsons, of Harrisburg Pn. is spending two weeks with his mother, Mr. Barnes of Oxford, who the guest of his brother in-law, Mr Henry Jeankins. Mr. Wn. Jones of Phila, visited Easton on route to Baltimore where he will be the guest of his sister, Christian and Mrs. Horta Fletcher. Miss Nannie Hornley formally of Svickwiley Pn. is spending two weeks with her mother Mrs. Madeline Rey, W. A. Hallibald of Newark N. J. passed through Easton on his vacation and visited his mother Mrs. Lylia Rose. Nannie F. Johnson left for Dobbs Pn. N. Y. after spending sometime with her mother
Mrs. Edith Buchanan, of Delaware City, Del. is spending a week with Miss Mary Sherwood of 210 S., East St.
On the evening of Sept. 18th, there was a lunch party given by a company of ladies, namely Misses Mary Sherwood, Laura Ballard, Pauline Balley, Mrs. Edith Mrs. Della Sherwood, Mr. John Johnson and Mr. John Hubbard motored from Easton Point to Bellevue, while there they were served at the hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Boggs with a company of ladies mortered from Cambridge and visited Oxford and Easton where they attended service at Bethel church.
Rev. Collins preached a St. Michael's, for Rev. Daniels.
Mrs. Mary Johnson is visiting Bellevue.
Mr. Robt. Small is on the sick list for Mrs. Amanda Dockins left for Baltimore after spending a delightful time with Mr. and Mrs. James E. Johns and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harris of near Easton.
POMONKEY
Pomonicky Md. Sept. 22—regimental
Metropolitan M. E church on Sunday. Rev. P.
P. King the pastor preached.
Mr. Parks of Lexington Ky. has
supervised school of
Champions Co. B. E church on
Metropolitan M. E church on Sunday.
The remodeling of the M. E. pur-
sion寺 expects to move in this week.
The Jubilee given on Tuesday was success, Mrs. I., Hopewell was the principal speaker.
HAGERSTOWN
Hagerstown Sept. 22—The members and friends of Rev H. H. John, son, pastor of the Church of the Holy Name, donated last Monday. A purse of $50, was given, and groceries to the amount of nearly $50. Rev. and Mrs. Johnson left on a va-
---
cation trip Friday.
The union picnic at Cold Springs last Thursday was well attended. Walkers Band accompanied them.
The Girls Old Peep Club of Sheenzer A. M. E. church had a rally on Sunday and realized about $76. the club has only been organized two weeks, Mrs. M. A. Williams is manager, Miss Marion Chirk, president.
Mrs. Cora Fletcher, who has been married for more than a better and resumed teaching last Monday, Miss Amie Lynle is also improving, Mr. and Mrs. Houston Jackson were visitors at the A. M. E. parapage recently, Mr. and Mrs. Wim. Wheaton and Mrs. W. Hampton Wheaton and children are visiting Mr. John Wheaton.
CUMBERLAND
Cumberland, Md., September 23—The public schools have opened with increased enrollments and two new teachers jobb. M. Miss Mizgarra M. Bank's School, M. Miss Mizgarra M. Bank's School, M. Theorelle Jones left Sunday of this week for Washington to resume his studies at the Dumbar School. Miss Abrams of Providence, O. I., is the new domestic selene teacher. Fayler of Tambalown is one of the new teachers at the high school. Metropolitan A. M. E. S. Sunday School had a very interesting session Sunday with the classes striving for the best of both worlds. Snyder of Brooklyn Protestant E. S., gave a very interesting address.
Mrs. Born Freeman was buried from McKendree M. E. Church Sunday, Rev. G. A. Davis, officiating, and Mrs. E. Davis, a grandmother, under the management of Mr. Leroy Edmunds, Mrs. E. Rhodes and others, Mr. Elmer Jones and Mrs. Ammelbull Hall were quietly married at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, last week by Rev. F. D. Summers, Mrs. Nellie Wilson, Mrs. Ammelbull, Mrs. Mollie Jackson and Mrs. F. S. Dennis motored to Frostburg on Monday of last week, Mrs. Ammelbull is on the sket. list
BELLVUE
Boblevue, Md., Sept. 22—Simmany was quarterly meeting day at the St. Luke's Church. The district superintendent, Linda Larson, gave a line session. His subtest was "That shalt love the neighbor as myself" in the evening, Rev. L. E. Foulson preached to us. The church was crowded in both services. He gave us a lesson given for the school that Wednesday evening was a grand success over one hundred and fifty dollars being cleared, Mrs. Bertha Bond and daughter Mary, and son James have been visited by Mrs. Nicholas Gardner of Brownsville, a visitor here, Mrs. Carrie Jackson left for her home in Virginia Pursay, after spending some time with her husband, Mr. Nicholas Gardner, and Mrs. Sadie Goldsbourgh is clinging her parents in Virginia, Mrs. Gates, who was taken ill a few days ago is improving slowly. Examiner, Ms.
CAMBRIDGE
September 24—Mrs. A. C. West of 507 Central Avenue, Baltimore, is visiting her sisters Mrs. Mary Sanks and Mrs. Henrietta Kiah of Pine street,
Mrs. Mary H. H. of Baltimore, spent several days here, the guest of Mrs. Mary Sanks, Misses Palma and Gillian Wilson have returned from a month's stay in Washington, Carroll St., Clair, Frederick St., Clair, John Voolford and John Douglass. Have returned to school at Lincoln. Mrs. Ellie Jones of Philadelphia is visiting Mrs. E. F. Coleman, Rev. and Mrs. James A. Kiah have returned to Quantico after visiting Mrs. Henrietta Kiah of Pine street, Mrs. Mary E. Cornish highly entertained by Lady Ail of Waugh Cluireh, Mrs. Elizabeth Joshields, who spent the summer in Baltimore, has returned home. Mrs. Jennie Gillia has returned after a brief visit to relatives in Baltimore, Mr. Jerome Johnson has returned to Baltimore after spending the summer with his mother Mrs. Eunia Johnson, Mr. Fred V. Vait's of Atlantic City left Monday for his home after spending several weeks with his parents, Mrs. and Mrs. Wilbur Waters, Mrs. Brownie Fromwell entertained the Ladies' Mysteries Glee Club at her home on Cross street last Tuesday evening.
Mrs. bla Taylor and son have returned to their home after spending several weeks with his sister has bought a fine house, Mrs. Charles Chase is able to be out after a brief illness, Mrs. Mary Waters has returned to her home, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Waters, Atlantic City are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Waters and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Burrows, who are visiting for her home in Baltimore last week. Sarah's children have been very sick, but a improving, Mrs. Florence Cooper and little son left Monday for their summer with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Chester, Mr. Carroll 'cous is convalescent after being omitted to his bed for several weeks, Mrs. Jeff Chester, Mrs. Jeff Chester, left last week for their home.
Philadelphia after visiting relatives and friends here, Mrs. Henry Crawford, Mrs. Mary Crawford, delightful birthday party on Wednesday, September 17 | honor of her 18th birthday. Her guests were Myrna L. Crawford, Jr. L. Crawford, Alice B. Thelan,aves, Mary S. Chir, Mabel Black, Ielen Payne, Anie Webb, Edith K. Ellis, Elie Hue, Mabel Vaughan, Iabel Quentin G. Quentin, Lillie Tritt and Sarah Jackson.
Rev, and Wm. Wm. A. Harris, who attended the Mite Missionary Convention at Washington and visited the Orlando, Md., have returned home, Bethel camp, after a very successful season, closed last Sunday. Over ourteen hundred dollars were raised, the junior Mite Missionary girls were invited to the evening. Those in the party were kisses Ethel Harris, president: Elsie lay Jews, secretary; Milkred Human, treasurer; Sarah Waters, Amie human, Nelly Allen, Rosa Waters, Yil Waters Arenum Johnson, Gerode Fodderman, Margaret Chush, farne Kane, Celeste Cornell, Della human, Nicole Waters, Clyde Waters, Mrs. Clyde E. Harris, Zora Ears, Lula V. Matthes,ottie Dixon, Willis Bond, Mr. Cater Waters and Ernest Light. and Mrs. Wm. A. Harris spent "sweet" meals with Praacha "Meeting, bringing home them as their guests Rev. and Mrs. J. S. Collins, of Easton.
Rev. J, h. Fitchley, Mrs. Stewart,
Messrs. Barnes, Rebelon, Eighty and
Moore motored over from Chestertown to attend the funeral of Mrs.
Sally Bailley. Mrs. Bailley is not visiting her mother and other relatives. Rev.
and Mrs. E. T. Addison attended the preachers meeting at Vienna, Mt.
on Thursday. The funeral of Mrs. George Bailley was held Wednesday afternoon at Bethel Church. Rev. John Hammond officiated with Rees, M. V. Waters, Rev. H. Fitchley, Rees, Addison, Rev. H. Fitchley, Rees, Addison, Handy and Ward, assisting. The honourary pallbearers were Messrs. Howard Fitchley, Roland Fountain, Luther Holmes, Sidos were song by James Thomas and Mrs. Joe Brown.
CHASE
Clare, Mt. Sept. 23—Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rowen, Miss Margaret Johnson and Master Brown, Miss Margaret Johnson, all of Philadelphia were guest guests of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Logan, Mt. and Mrs. Carrie Finderlinghous were recent guests of Mrs. E. J. Purnell of Bengues. A ten day meeting last Thursday evening, on Sunday at 11 a.m. Rev. Norris preached, General prayer meeting at 2 p.m. and sermon at night by Rex Beck.
CHASE
Chase, M.L., Sept. 22—M., and Mrs. Jackson, Mrs Saddle, Blackson, of Thomas, M.L., and Mrs. Chester, who has been visiting Mrs. Philadelphia, were recent guests of Mrs. Elizabeth Ashley with her son, Mr. and Mrs. Michel Logan, Mrs. Salisbury at Salisbury, who is very ill, Mrs. recent guests of Mrs. E. J. A. Pursell, Kinnam Brown, who has been visiting of Bonges, A. ten day meeting with antl. A. J. has returned home.
The Boy Scouts No. 14 and the Camp Fire Girls of People's Church Baltimore, visited the local Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls, which have just been organized by Scout Master Williams of Baltimore.
September 15th was buried September
Mr. Charles Williams, who died on
their home in Middle River, was buried
here last Friday.
COLEMANS
Columbus, Md., Sept. 21—Rv. W. C. Boland presided at the church on the morning of the afternoon the pastor gave a congregational service. T. R. K. Randall at Davis Hill.
The picnic held on Saturday by the young men was a success. The proceeds will go towards painting the church, and the work will be stured shortly. Mrs. Reba II. Brown is visiting her parsonage. She spent the summer at Ocean City, Miss Mildred A. Roberts of Swartmore, Pa., is spending a two week vacation at the home of her parents. Miss Annie Brown, of Camden, is visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Clayton and son, of Baltimore, are guests of his brother, Mr. Edward Clayton. Miss Bottie Pratt, of Baltimore, is spending a few days the guest of Miss Margie Walley, Mrs. Ada-Dorsey, is on the sick list. Mrs. Mary Dorsey, Jones, of Germantown, is visiting her uncle, Edward Dorsey. Mrs. Bulah Jackson is spending some time in Philadelphia and Cantesville, Pa., Mrs. Pearl Colton, Wisher, of Denton, is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. E. Cotton. The stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Wilson and left a fine baby.
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MILLINCTON
Millington Md. Sept. 24–The ten days meeting held at John Weisley Church was well attended both Sundays, among the visitors was Mrs. A. B. Clark of Phil. Rev. Gundy and Rev. J. E. Johns of Chestertown. Rev. John preached a soul stirring sermon on Sunday morning. Mr. Henry Adams of Baltimore visited his wife Mrs. Lotie Gracson and Mrs. Mary Kelly and brother, Mr. Benjamin Bailey. Mrs. Clara Ree who has been visiting Mrs. Henry Johnson for a fortnight has returned home to Philadelphia. Mrs. Holt is on the sick list. Miss Glyde's Company daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Conway. was quietly married to Mr. Oliver Riley last week. Miss Lotie Gould, of Willmington, spent the weeks and visiting her father and friends. Mr. Clarence Deffer was the week end guest of his mother Mrs. Sadie Jeffers. Mr. Cooper Kelly is visiting his sister, Mrs. James Jackson. Miss Sadie Blackson, of Chester, who has been visiting Mrs. James Brown, has returned home at Salisbury, who is very ill. Mrs. Emma Brown, who has been visiting Mrs. Father Leg, of Abercanyville, N.J. has returned home.
CHARLOTTE HALL
Charlotte Hall, Sept. 21 — The Camp at John Wesley Church was a great success. Sunday great crowds in attendance. Rev. W. H. begun of a great success. His most inspiring sermon resulted in the beginning of a 'great revival.' Also several conversions. Rev. Dean is the pastor St. Mary's P. E. church last Sunday. The celebration lasted Wednesday and was attended by able divines among whom were Rev. E. A. Jackson, Rev. Briggs, Rev. A. B. Jackson, Rev. Leland and Mr. and Mrs Silas Kernede materialed from Buffalo host last to visit Mr. and Mrs. William Marshall, Mr. Samuel Murray has returned to Baltimore after spending at Carnegie Rev. and Mrs. A. A. Murray.
Pursenburg, M., Sept. 21—24. Davis is suffering from an attack of hay fever. He was able to tilt the pill last Sunday. The father passed away after a three week battle with cancer. His mother and her brother at Elkhill bed, they had no seen each other for a number of years. Mrs. Eligia Trader, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer West and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Claird and Mrs. Elmer Claird and Mr. and Mrs. Charlotte Trader is home from city where she spent the summer. Mr. Howard Parker has returned to Phil, after spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Josephine are home for a short stay, Mrs. Nancy Collins and Mr. Josephine Price were married last week.
BERKLEY
Mid. Md.; Sept.23—Meet '18 was reckoned by Hammond '18 in church revival. Mid. Md.
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INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
drowned on, consisting of 25 members with Mr. Charles Archer as President rendered an interesting program at Hosanna Church Sunday night Sept 14. They were entertained by William M. Hosanna, Miss Susie Brumfield, of Philin, who is Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Webster. A rally will be held at Hosanna Church Sunday, Sept 25, to proceed to pay balances on mortgages.
POCOMOKE
Pascoe City, Md, Sept. 24—Boy Flicky Flicky filled the pallet at St. John's Church Sunday morning in the funeral of Mr. Chuck Church Thursday afternoon in Geneva, Dublin, Sturgis, and Wheatley connected the services. Those from Philadelphia who attended the services were Mr. Todd Wm. Gumby, Mrs. John Wm. Gumby, Mrs. John Henry, Mrs. Toske Vollar and Miss Magna Gumby, Mr. and Mrs. ... D Todd and Mr. Noah Gumby spent Sunday in New York visiting friends and relatives, Rev. and Mrs. Tom Church Visitors at the home of Mr. Frank Quinn, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Moses Merrill of Sorr Hill attended the funeral of Mr. David Gumby. They were accompanied by Rev. Gim and Mrs. Armanus. They were accompanied by Rev. Zm Church to a large congregation, Prof. Griggs, of Princess Anne, also delivered an address.
Robert Gillott, No. 43 of this city, had charge of the laying of the cornerstone last Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Turner, of Philadelphia, spent a pleasant time visiting friends and relatives at townville, where she is visiting his parents here. Mrs. Elsie Marshall of Philadelphia is visiting her mother. Mrs. Mary Dickerson is visiting her mother. Mrs. Harriet Dickerson
L. SMOTHERS
L. SMOOTHERS, Computing—First
Class whitewashing, Machine Work
and Brush Work on stables, Garages
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1112 Peesman St.
Phone Mon. 4111W.
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1016 Druid Hill Avenue
JOHN A. BISHOP
FUNERAL
DIRECTOR & EMBALMER
1107 DRUID HILL AVE.
Phone Mt. Vernon $54.
CHARLES A. CHASE
042 DRUID BILL AVENUE
Confectionery & Ice Cream Parlor
Dealer in Gardiner's Best Ice Cream
Shop, Ice Cream Parlour, and Sundae,
Farce Cakes, Pies, Soft
Drinks, Cigars and Cigarettes. Parties
Photo: John Burris, 1355.
..POINDEXTER.
EXPERT MANICURING
AND MASSAGING.
833 DRUID HIL AVENUE
Phone Mt. Vernon 582-J
PIANOS AND ORGANS
TUNED AND REPAIRED
Mail Orders Promptly Attended to
All Work Guaranteed
JOSEPH A HAYES,
705 ENSOR STREET.
Phone Wolfe 1642-J 41-1stp
Clean
IT WO
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ICE CREAM.....
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28 Blocks Harlequin (1 gallon).....$1.40
Vanilla Dip Cream (per gallon).....$1.10
OFFICE HOURS 6 A. M. TO 6 P. M.
.....HICKS.....
1305 Argyle Ave. Phone Mad. 1785-j
PHONE, Madison 5588
JOHN M.
(Formerly with the
Funeral Directi
Temporary Locat
AUTOS AND CARRIAGE
JOHN M. JOHNS
with the late JOHN A.
Director and Embe-
rary Location 1234 Etting
CARRIAGES FOR ALL
17398
MARGE H. HOOPER, 406 W.
REAL DIRECTOR AND EMBE-
rator deceased husband, Ge-
form inform the public in general
will be continued at the
former years. Your patron
will give satisfactory service a
n for past favors.
BUEL T. HEMS
SERVOR TO THE LATE ALEX H.
DIRECTOR & EMBE-
rator service DAY AND NIGHT
FROM $75 UP. Carriages for
PHONE V. VERNON 2578
Residence, 578 W. B.
CLEARENCE C. WREN
General Director and E-
CAREY ST. BALTY
PEOPLE PREFER EMBE-
RAGES. I CAN SUIT YOU. MY
SERVISE TO ELEWHERE WE
UNDERTAKER.
None Madison 4464. Carriages for
ROBERT A. ELL
General Directress and Emb-
land Ave., cor. McDo-
PHONE WOLFE 6590
MEDIATE SERVICE DAY AND NITE
504 EAST ST. 2499 DIR
printer of this business and am
with anyone.
WARD RINGGO
annals for the past eight years. W
what he has entered the business
DIRECTOR & EMBE-
RATE TO ALL THE BEST AND MOST
POSSIBLE. Carriages to Hire for a
WITH CAREY ST. NEA-
TON 5361
LEADING COLORED UNDERTAKER
JOHN H. OWENS
DERTAKER AND EMBE-
RN ST. Bet. Division St. and
home house and carriages, also
aiming the body, advertising fun
door crepe.
SHIPPING FUN-
cessions. Phone M. 4067; and Y.
JUICE NEVER CLOSED. Anno-
Phone: St. Paul 7398
MRS. GEORGE H. HOOPER, 406 W. Conway St.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
Successor to her deceased husband. Geo. H. Hooper
MRS. GEORGE H. HOWE
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Successor to her deceased
Desires to inform them
that the business will be cement as in former years, solicited. Will give satisfaction.
Thank you for past fare.
.....SAMUEL T.
SUCCESSOR TO THE
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
PROMPT SERVICE
FUNERALS FROM $75 U.S.
PHONE MADISON
Office and Residence
Quality. Wright
CLARENCE
...Funeral Director
1364 N. CAREY ST.
SOME PEOPLE PAT PRICES. I CAN EXPENSIVE TO GO AN UNDERTAKER.
Long distance Phone Madison
MRS. ROBER
Funeral Director
1725 Ashland Ave.
PHONE
IMMEDIATE SERVICE
Branch Officers:— 504 EAST S.
I am the proprietor of this with
..E D WARD
With James H. Dennis for the p
that he has cut
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND WILL GIVE TO ALL OF
SERVICE POSSIBLE. Care
1463 NORTH CAR
PHONE MADISON 5361
BALTIMORE'S LEADING CORE
$75.00
AND
JOHN H.
UNDERTAKER
538 DOLPHIN ST., Bet.
Including handsome house and outdoor ease, enclosing the be grave, gloves and doe crope.
Carrigues for all occasions. Phone CHAFEL MORGUE NEVE12
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.
FROMM TO MANDATORY
FUNERALS FROM 55 UP Carry cases for all Occasions
PIECE V. VERYOK #38
...Funeral Director and Embalmer.....
1364 N. CAREY ST.
BALTIMORE, MD.
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.
IMMEDIATE SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT
Branch Offices: 504 EAST ST. 2109 DRUID HILL AVE.
I am the sole proprietor of this business and am not in partnership
with anyone.
..EDWARD RINGGOLD.
With James ff. Dennis for the past eight years. Wishes to announce
that no he entered the business of
FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER
AND WILL GIVE TO ALL THE BEST AND MOST COURTEOUS
SERVICE POSSIBLE. Carargeles to Hire for All Occasions.
1463 NORTH CAREY ST. NEAR GOLD
PHONE MADISON 5361 NEVER CLOSED.
BALTIMORE'S LEADING COLORED UNDERTAKER IN PRICES
$75.00 AND
JOHN H. OWENS
UP
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
538 DOLPHIN ST., Bet. Division St. and Penna. Ave.
Including handsome heurse and carriages, also beautiful, casket,
outside case, embellishing the body, advertising funeral, opening the
grave, gloves and door knobs, SHIPPING, UPS, SO & UP
Carrieces for government phone. Phone Mail. 4067; and Mail. 4231-4
CHAPEL MORGLE NEVER CLOSED
Automobile Funerals
C. & P. PHONE MADISON 692
GEORGE H
FORMERLY MANAGER FOR
FUNERAL DIRECT
1631 Druid
Will furnish funerals at
Polite, Courteous and
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASION
BURGE H. HOLL
MANAGER FOR THE LATE ALE
DIRECTOR & EL
631 Druid Hill Avenue
fish funerals at a price that will g
startsions and Expert Attention G
R ALL OCCASIONS: OPEN 24H
GEORGE H. HOLLAND
FORMERLY MANAGER FOR THE LATE ALEX. HEMSLEY
FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER
1631 Druid Hill Avenue.
Will furnish funerals at a price that will suit YOU.
Polite, Courteous and Expert Attention Guaranteed.
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS. OPEN DAY AND WNIGHT
W
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Home Office: Charles & Saratoga Sts., Baltimore, Md.
The Loading Life Insurance Company in Maryland.
Life Insurance Policies Issued on Ages. From 2 to 79.
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SEPT. 26. 1919.
NEWS FROM WILMINGTON, DEL.
Armington, Inc., Sept. 22—As used in Bannon M. & Hirner services were well attended as Sunday, Rev. J. K. King, the pastor, preached a stirring sermon from the subject "The Mierces of Christ," Sunday, evening for King won to Middletown, Ind., where he preached the opening sermon of the diocese' anniversary of
The convention of the International Women's Education Council, which was held at Esson M. & Voss, closed in Friday evening on a�, a banquet after Unes was a more than an-endless session. The concert features Womens Women's program was the most important address by Mrs. Bessie, Bessie and the actress of Chavanh J. Edinemery's to Mrs. Alfred Bessie's. On Thursday evening the Plenary meeting was Mrs. R. R. Bessie's president of the Plenary Session of the National Conference of Colored Women's Clubs: Mrs. Emma Jackson, government of the Fawwae Bessie's, senior for Gork; and Mrs. Maria Bessie's, senior for Pancone, government of the National School.
Soldiers Journal, P. B. Bessie's, the then-new national-wives were tele类型 by Mrs. W. L. Larson, superintendent of the Women's Protective Association, P. B. Bessie's, president of the New Journal.
Reverend John Colossus, Women's Council, was at the close of the soldiers conference in members and friends, and in the future found in the control. The officers for two ensuing years are: Mrs. Bessie J. Bessie, president of the newлld-wives' secretary; Mrs. Mary H. H. H. H. secretary; Mrs. Mary E. A. A. American Womens's Club, Womens's, chairman; Mrs. Mary J. Wood, chairman; Mrs. Blanche W. Stowe, historian; Mrs. Alice Lunn, Director, news correspondent and editor.
Mrs. Liming was wise, but her
work was a wood light, palp-
ing.
ROYAL OAK
In a short time, Mr. E. was in a state of health. A day or two before he was in St. Paul's Church, he was in St. Paul's Church, and on Thursday, he got with us the exams for Nov. 8, a course. Mr. Annie was not returned, and after spending ten to summer here, Miss Frances Esmond of Rathmore is visiting her new place also. Esmond is a Thomas went to Bairnce, Penny, to attend marriage at her daughter, Miss Hattie Esmond. Mr. Esmond, the shill, was mother also deep. Oliver was a friend of Miss Esmond, and Miss Hattie and Miss Hattie were a friend of the same age. She had a Park. They live in a house, and are in a cold season. It is not a very nice moment now from the house, and we are going there. We are going to go. We are going to go. We are going to go. We are going to go.
FREDERICK
UNIONVILLE
University, Mrs. Sept. 24—The
Harvard University Law School prepared
a dissertation on the meaning of
Saint David's day and also studied
Sunday. There will be service all day and
music the congregation and portent
to the celebration. Mrs. Sept. 24
and Mrs. Augustine chart about
Sunday as Praying Mrs. John Sutton,
after spending a few days with
the Haitian community. Mrs. John
Sutton will be the Haitian
repairer in position with the Laredo
State University house. Mrs. Naiman
will be the Haitian house in Haiti.
Mrs. Willem will be the Haitian
house in spending some time with
the mother.
ST. MICHAELS
Mr. McIntosh, Md. Sep. 21—Linnaeus A. Müller who of Charles H. Müller, Sep. 11. She leaves in a mansion on Columbia and was born in Worcester. She went to Columbia Mrs. Müller was also the agent for the Afro-American The Immens Services were held at Loom M. K. Curtis of Worcester she was member of children from Jamaica and Tavares assisted to Jew Lembo and Tavares assisted to Jew Lembo. The services in Loom M. K. Curtis will attend. Mrs. Collins and Jamaica from Elsason presented services in Loom M. K. Curtis. The request Mrs. Linnaeus Müller was made to all members to all meetings auxiliary services. Secrets and "G" of the floral gifts presented in her home must their lives be being and happy. God bless you all, country.
Mrs. Lillie Jones
1206 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
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STEWARDSVILLE
Stewardsville, Md., Sept. 24—Mrs. Elinora E. Henson of Wilmington was the guest of Mrs. Elinora E. Rond last week at Perriville. From there came Mrs. Mary B. Powell of Wilmington, Del., was the week-one guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry-Bond, Mr. and Mrs. Harry-Bond were guests of Mr. Jermaine Wolfe, of Wilmington, Del., who was in honor of his wife, Rev. W. H. Williams with his choir and congregation motored to Aberdeen Sunday to help Rev. Powell, at his quarterly meeting of his wife with Mrs. Alberta Ross in teacher. Miss Excelle Bonn and Mrs. W. H. Williams spent the week in Baltimore, Mrs. Edgina Presbury, Washington, Magnolia and Baltimore. Rev. Winnifield Presbury preached at Aberdeen last Sunday, morning and accompanied his wife who came on Monday. Mrs. Jerry Presbury died Saturday and was buried Monday from St. James, A. M. E., Church, Rev. W. H. Williams, officiating.
FORT DEPOSIT
Port Deposit, Md. Sept. 21—Mississippi-Patterson and Pearl Timmons visited their mother who is at a hospital in Jackson, Miss. and visited their father M. K. Church closed Sunday. The sum of $189 was raised. Rev. I. C. Neal of Baltimore, devoted a strong serpon at the First Lutheran Church Sunday evening. Kingston of ryftians Tossey Sunday at Bethel Hull was largely attended. Mrs. Ann Lance is visiting relatives in Philadelphia. Mrs. Eddie Smith, Mrs. Edith Brown and Mrs. Edith Brown moved to Commencement on Saturday afternoon. The sisters of the Totses Lodge have their annual serpon, reached. Sister Mary is visiting the mason Rev. D. E. Beckett Mus. Austin Mason of Atlantic City is spending a few days with relatives. Rev. W. Smith and Mr. John Smith are visiting Sidney with Rev. A. Mettowell. Watch the date, Sept. 1, 1918. Dames until you get tired from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. in Hempstead's Famous Jail on Tuesday. At Town Hall Port Deposit.
RIDGELY
Dunley, Md., Sept. 21—Rev. J. W. Gillies and his people are preparing for their fall rally, Sunday, September 21st — was a big hit at Trinity University, where he presented in the meeting and also at night, over $200 was realized in the rally. Last Sunday, Rev. George W. Johnson of University of Tennessee presented in the meeting, over $200 was returned from Washington, where she attended the Miss Missouri Convention — Mrs. M. C. Conner, correspondent to Baltimore after spending several days in Washington, over $200 was made ready for the annual conference to be held in Baltimore next month.
ROCKS
Rockefeller, Mt. Scott, Tt. Mr. Sampson
Sampson is on site on the Mrs. Mrs.
Sampson's farm and is visiting polites and friends
in White Plains, New York. Sampson
songwriter Jt. will be the boy and
girl and the teacher and the friend
of the teacher will pray all days.
Boy John T. Stablock is master, Mr.
Harrison T. Riese is improving after a
year. Mr. Riese was a fine John
was the week end guest of the next
Bunnie Master.
LONGGREEN
Lowes (then 21.45. V. J. B. Bancroft, Sunder's morning of Mr. Zea's Choral, and to the New-tons, which went Sunday yesterday at 12. 29. E. A. Sacred concert was given at 31. Zea's Sunday visit in the 11th of November of October drive Mr. Zea's young clergyman. The Inver-l-Givin's in Wexham and Mrs. Liliah Lovey, on Wednesday evening was given. The Big Social giving of Mrs. Nollie Winter on Tuesday evening was also a success.
Mrs. M. J. Evelyn and Mrs. L. J. Pennington have returned home after a holiday visit to Rev. and also John Hammond at Bexen 3d. Mrs. W. B. Bancroft has returned to concert at Washington the W. M. N. Convention at Washington. Mr. Alexander Frazier Moets's Choir and Rev. Winter visited Mr. and Mrs. J. Stoney Winter on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Sonderman Wing of Mr. J. Washington was the guest of Mrs. J. A. Evelyn. Pride's evening was held at a concert at the concert given by Mr. J. H. Cromwell. A three-week solace was given to the guest, who was a father who is very sick in Anne, and the Co. Ltd. Mr. and Mrs. Powell and Lady were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Bancroft, just week-old. Mr. Harrison visited Mrs. M. M. Chancourrier at Sunday. Mrs. R. Zea's was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Coel. Sunder's. Miss Marjorie Eaton and Miss Elizabeth Cromwell will hold a lay-up on Sept. 25th for the benefit of the victory drive raby of Mr. Zea's church, Ally M. M. Chancourrier will give a lurch social on Sept. 27th, or the raby. Mrs. Nollie Winter, of Towson Ltd, sent Sunday wish for England.
..Poro Beauty Parlor..
Hair Culture and Facial Massage. We specialize on short and stubborn hair. We are also prepared to teach the system at our Parlor.
536 ROBERT STREET
Madison 5543-J.
Mme. M. J. JONES
441 W. BUDDLE STREET
Hair Dressing and Scalp
Treatment
ELECTRICAL MASSAGING
Instruction given in
Museum of Art, Method
Houses 9 4 M in 7 F. M.
Insurance Company.....MACGILL, President
Aratoga Sts., Baltimore, Md.
Face Company in Maryland,
used on Ages From 2 to 79.
From the homes of the insured.
THE MAGIC DRIER
HAIR STRAIGHTENER
Magic—Postpaid Price $1.25
Magic Pomade, price.....80 ct.
Magic Heater, price.....80 ct.
Agenda Wanted. Write for literature
MAGIC SHAPE DRIER COMPANY
ELKTON
Elkton Md. Sep. 23—Services were well attended at Welzins A. M. E. Church, Mrs. Mary F. D. Booker, Mrs. Paul Poundeyer, and Mrs. Paul Poundeyer a few days visiting relatives. Pa. Privilege. Franks Williams has returned from over-see, Mrs Mammie Owens and Mrs Audie Huntley has returned from day with Mrs. E. Milburn, Mr. and Mrs. Wini. Huntley spent Saturday in Beerie to cruise. Mrs Poundeyer has returned to Cleveland. Mrs Irène Huntley has returned to Philadelphia after a visit to her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Kearnser Murder of Chester visited his brother Eleanor Huntley and Gladys Poundeyer visited friends in Newark Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wini. Murger and children of Philadelphia are the most of Mrs. and Mrs. Judene of Newark visited friends this week. Miss Herriet Piner is visiting friends in Wilmington. Mrs Mary E. Price of Chester visited Friends of Sunday. E. R. Adelson spent a few hours here Tuesday.
GREENSPRING
Greensburg, Sept. 21-31, and Mrs.
11 M. Washington with their daughter
11 M. Washington and their daughter
of Mrs. M. Washington
™ Mr. Aaron Hilton, of Philadelphia,
noted born in his new ear Sunday,
™ Mrs. Ida Shepard of Philadelphia,
noted being some of them
™ mother, Mrs. Turner, Mr. and
™ mother, Solomon Cannon gave a dinner
party on Sept. 18th, in honor of Miss-
lys Brown of New York and Miss-
lys Wright of New York,
present Mrs. Lloyd Johnson of
New York Mrs. Wesley Cummings
Mr and Mrs. Franklin Johnson, Miss-
ry Johnson of Currieville™ Mr
Honors Ester Mrs. Hintz Pemberton
of Mrs. Jones has returned
from excursions.
OUAKER BOTTOM
Quaker Bottom, Sept. 14—The Woman
January 17 which was held on Sept.
14 was quite a success. Total
attendance was 1,100. Mrs. J. L.
president was Mrs. J. Jones. Lucas
president and Mrs. L. Leet secretary
Mr. and Mrs. John Madden has
returned from a trip to New York.
Mr. Charles Johnson who flew
from New York to attend the
Simon school coming to life again
Mrs. Saran Cousson entertained
a few friends at a dinner on Wednesday
Sept. 17. Three present were Wes
Brown, Mrs. J. Jones, and Mrs.
Cousson and Mrs. Jones also of Her
tond, and Gov. and Mrs. Cous
Mme. E. J. Northern
Mme. E. J. Northern
Stimulates the growth of the hair
removes lambdraft and prevents
premature tearing out of the hair.
DIRECTIONS:
Apply to the scalp daily, rubbing
briskly.
MME. E. J. NORTHERN
PHONE WOLFE 2644.
BALTIMORE, MD.
DR. J. LINCOLN SHELTON
Has removed its office and
residence from 175 W. Hamburg
St. to 203 W. HAMBURG ST.
& P John 415
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
FALL OPENING
My School is open for instruction
in the following branches:
HAIR DRESSING
Diplomas Awarded
FOR TERMS APPLY
NADAM M. A. HUNTER
1824 DRUID HILL AVENUE
BALTIMORE, MD.
Plinie Madison 4640-W.
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 Cara Bought and Sold.
NORTHWESTERN GARAGE
Robert M. Jasper, Proprietor
1300-06 Pressman Street.
Phones Madison 599 and 2785.
COMBINGS MADE UP
Mme. M. L. GRAY
HAIRDRESSING
Electric Massage and
Manicuring.
1213 PARK AVENUE
Phone Madison 4757-5
Hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
MRS. L. J. PECK
521 MOSHER STREET
Wishes to introduce to you the
superiority of the Wax Method.
The more you use, the Walker
Method the more you will be irresistibly drawn to use it. I am prepared to give the treatment or to teach the method.
WALKER PREPARATIONS
FOR SALE AT
Combines Made Up. Mad 213-
MME. KING'S
Hair Dressing, Manicuring
and Massage Parlors
Dermal Treatment
1510 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Madison 5100
GRAYSON'S
BEAUTY PARLOR
1828 PENNA. AVE.
Hairdressing, Manicuring
Manicuring etc.
Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.
Phone Madison 2231.
Mme. M. A. Hunter's
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION
1324 DRUID HILL AVE
Hair Dressing, Facial Massage,
Municuring and Weaving. My
School is open for the teaching of
the above branches. Diplomas
Awarded. Try our Special Hair
Pomade. For terms, apply Phone
Industry #544. Muse. To apply,
graduate pupil of Dr. R. N.
Bunдуa.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
IN BOOK MAILED
IN REQUEST Real H
All our Wigs are hand-made
order from maker to wearer.
Wigs, Transformations, Swim
and all other articles of Hair G
We carry the largest selection
Combs and Hair.Dressers T
Free FASHION BOOK MAILED
UPON REQUEST Real Human Hair
All our Wigs are hand-made and strictly to order from maker to wearer.
Wigs, Transformations, Switches, Braids,
and all other articles of Hair Goods.
We carry the largest selection of straightening
Combs and Hair-Dressers' Tools.
The celebrated Madame Baum's Repeaturations make the skin velvet like, the hair silk like.
00 Write for
MAIL ORDER HOUSE
a Terminal Station.
been writing mention this Paper.
DON'T BE
IMBOOZLE
colatum
QUININE-HAIR TONIC
YEAR HAIR is obtained by
Hair Dressing. It promotes
a valuable aid in the e-
WILL NOT GUM THE HAIR
by men who know how
15 Cents Everywhere
BUG CO.,
BALTHU
President. W. H. JONES
MME.M. J. JONES
MAGIC NEVER-FAIL HA
Postpaid $1.00
MME. BAUM'S MAIL.
Pennsylvania Termin.
When written
D
BAME
Cocoa
TRADE MARK
REC
SOFT, SILKY HAIR
wonderful Hair Dress
of hair and is a value
dandruff. IT WILL
Made by m
15 Cer
ROMAN DRUG CO
M. J. JONES. President
MME.
WONDERFUL MAGIC
Postpaid $1.00 Write for Latchup
MME. BAUM'S MAIL GRDER HOUSE P. O. B. 14.5
Pennsylvania Terminal Station, New York City
When writing mention this Paper
Cocolatum
TRADE MARK
REC.
QUININE HAIR TONIC
SOFT, SILKY HAIR is obtained by using this
wonderful Hair Dressing. It promotes the growth
of hair and is a valuable aid in the elimination of
dandruff. IT WILL NOT GUM THE HAIR.
Made by man who know how
ITEN YORK
LIGHT
LIGHTEN YOUR DARK SKIN
RACE MEN AND WOMEN PROTECT YOUR FUTURE
SEE WHAT IT DID FOR VIOLA STEELE.
M.
If you send $1 for four boxes of Black and White Ointment • 250
cake of Black and White Soap included free.
representing us. Apply for territory and special deal. Black and
White Ointment provides a chance for you to make a good living.
No experience required. Black and White Ointment sells fast and easy.
```markdown
```
A.
BARK MAILED Real Human Hair
QUEST
Her Wigs are hand-made and strictly to
from maker to wearer.
Transformations, Switches, Brands,
other articles of Hair Goods.
Every the largest selection of straighten-
eds and Hair.Dressers' Tools.
DOON'T BE BOOZLED
Calum
UNINE-HAIR-TONIC
HAIR is obtained by using this
missing. It promotes the growth
valuable aid in the elimination of
NOT GUM THE HAIR.
men who know how.
Events Everywhere
O., BALTIMORE, MD.
W. H. JONES, Manager.
E.M. J. JONES'
NEVER-FAIL HAIR GROWER
Will grow hair three inches in 3 months
If your hair is dry and wavy try Madam
Jones' Magic Never Fail Hair Grower. It
makes the hair longer, shinier, and
fairer. Madam Jones' Shampoo, 30c;
Madam Jones' Never-Fail Hair Grower,
30c; Madam Jones' Gloss 35c; For sale
at Drug Stores, Agents Wanted. Send
for terms.
M. J. JONES
MANUFACTURING COMPANY
441 WEST BIDDLE STREET
BALTIMORE, MD.
BE SURE to take a little precaution and care NOW and insure EYE COMFORT For the days to come
OFFERS complete examination and furnishes GLASSES As low $2.00 As -
Expert Service
EST
SAMUE
Registered
Manufacturer
309 North
ABOVE
OUR
PENDLETON AVE.
25,000 MORE PO
Equipped with the Ver
Poro System of S
and all Bran
Terms Moderate
Write Today
Poro Corner
VICE & PERFECT
EST. 1905
UEL BER
SYSTEM OPTIONING
MACHINERY OPTION
North EDTAW
Expert Service & Perfect Satisfaction
EST. 1905
SAMUEL BERMAN
Registered OPTOMETRISTS
Manufacturing OPTICIANS
309 North EUTAW Street
ABOVE SARASOTA
RE' PORO AGENT
with the Very Latest Apparatus for
of Scalp and
and all Branches of Beauty Cure
Write Today for Further Informa
PORO COLLEGE
Old East Indian
Hair Pomade Co.
133 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
Phone: 315-222-2222
PENDLETON AVE.
ST. PENDINAND AVE.
THE OLIE RAST INDIAN HALL
PROMOILES are the only ones for you
you can always enjoy them. The
oldest pomegranate is on the market
today.
Other have bloomed and
feled like a flower, not the big
Indian Hair Pammes are here doing
their great work. Many women have
been benefited by them all over
the country, everywhere, it is no last
bedin Hair Pomegranate, 25c. at all. Drug
Stores and Beauty Parters. Our
the one last out, restless gray man to the
origins color, grows in the fields
75c. at all. Hermaphors. Our Shampooers
are wonderful for better, Excess and
Dandruft, a fine scalp cleanse, 25c. at
all. Druggasts. Don't accept any sub-
stitute or any of these articles.
Three articles by mail $1.25. Send all orders $413 PENNA. AVE. BALTIMORE, MD. Phone Madison 2278-7 Good prices to agents.
WANTED
Colored Man and Woman
Rag Factory. No Ex
Necessary
Apply 1162 Scott
BALTIMORE, MD
TED!
Woman to work in
No Experience
essary
Scott Street
ORE, MD.
Colored Man and Woman to work in Rag Factory. No Experience
[Illustration of a woman with long hair.]
MAKES only ONE charge to examine your EYES, write the prescription & make the GLASSES
PERFECT Satisfaction
1905
BERMAN
COSMETISTS
APOTICIANS
TAW Street
HOME
ST. FEEDINAND AVE.
AGENTS WANTED
Apparatus for Teaching the
Hair and Hair Culture
Beauty Culture
Diplomas Given
Other Information
COLLEGE
St. Louis, Mo.
Indian
Free Call and Delivery
Mt. Vernon 3820
OUR NEW HOME
PAGE 7
Satisfaction
MAN
STS
ANS
Street
ST. PEDRINAND AVE.
ITS WANTED
Teaching the
Hair Culture
Culture
Diplomas Given
ation
St. Louis, Mo.
Free Call and Delivery
Mt. Vernon 3520
C. THOMAS
406-2 DRUED HILL AVENUE
At Eutwu Street
Pressing Club & But Renovators
Ladies & Gent's Garmonts
Cleaned, Typed and Altered
Suits Pressed, Bats Cleaned &
Reblocked While You Wait
Ready Made and Made to Order
Clothing
WOMAN'S GLORY IS HER
HAIR
NO MORE
SANDWUB!
CALLING HAIR
TEETHING SCALP
TETTER, EZCLIMA
GIVES HEALTH TO THE SCALP
GROWING OIL
50c
PRESSING OIL
50c
TEMPLE OIL
50c
MADAME JESSIF CARTER
CREATIVE COLLECTION
AND MANUFACTURER, INC
7761 Clemarm St. Denver, Colo.
REPRESENTATIVES WANTED
EXCLUDE 30 STAMP FOR LETTERS
W/FLUKE
934-36 PENNA. AVE. NEAR BIDDLE ST.
ONLY REAL, COLORED VAUDEVILLE THEATRE IN BAUTO.
Vaudeville Changed Monday and Thursday
ONE WEEK ONLY
FIRST TIME IN BALTIMORE
Henry Bowman's
Comedy Company
12--PEOPLE--12
A REAL SHOW FULL OF FUN
SOMETHING WORTH WHILE
OUR FEATURE PICTURES
MONDAY—EDDIE POLO SERIES Episode 2
Special for Matteine 1:30 to 7 only—FIVE REEL WESTERN
TUESDAY—“THE RED GLOVE”
Special for Matteine 1:30 to 7 only—FIVE REEL WESTERN
THURSDAY—“MIDNIGHT MAN” Episode 2.
“YOUR GIRL AND MINE” 5 reels, 1:30 to 7 p. m. Only. Special
FRIDAY—GREAT GAMBLE—Episode 4
“GOING STRAIGHT” in 5 reels. Special 1:30 to 7 p. m. only.
SATURDAY—HOUDINI in “The Master Mystery”
“Butterfly on the Wheel” 5 reels. Special 1:30 to 7 p. m. Only
Why not make a habit and visit our famous Matinee. Open 1:30.
“Special 5 red feature matinee only, including our regular picture show and camille. Come early and avoid the rish.
PATTERSON
THEATRE
1202-04 LAURENS STREET
Under new management
Mr. Norman J. Fletcher, Managing Director.
THE MOST EXCLUSIVE COLORED THEATRE IN BALTIMORE
A HIGH CLASS THEATRE SHOWING HIGH CLASS
PICTURES TO HIGH CLASS COLORED PATRONS
PATTERSON THEATRE JAZZ ORCHESTRA
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK STARTING SEPTEMBER 2010.
MONDAY—NORMA TALMADGE in
"GOING STRAIGHT"
THEDA BARA in "THE LIGHT"
POSITIVELY THE BEST VAMPIRE PICTURE IN WHICH THIS
GREAT STAR EVER APPEARED
ALSO A ROARING COMEDY
WEDNESDAY—ALICE BRADY in
"HER SILENT SACRIFICE"
She was silent over something that occurred. Through the nights
she fought until.....well, come and see for yourself.
ALSO A ROARING COMEDY
This is a great hang-up Western that will make you hold on to your chair. See this one by all means.
ALSO A ROARING COMEDY
He was a soldier who taught for his country, for honor and for the rights of the civilized world. This is positively the best picture of its kind. Come. You will enjoy it.
ALSO A ROARING COMEDY
SATURDAY
GEO. WALSH in "HELP! HELP! POLICE"
If you can't laugh, don't come, because this picture will tickle you until your sides almost ache.
ALSO A ROARING COMEDY
CONTINUES FROM 2 P. M. UNTIL 11 P. M.
DON'T MISS THIS WEEK'S SHOW
Positively the Greatest Program Ever Shown in any theatre
Karl Leberman's Pharmacy
Riggs Avenue and Calhoun Street
Mail Orders are thandled by logistically here, but by Special Clerk's Glossary you buy wisely, for ward prompt and secure your endless bother. Try it TODAY
CUT-PRICES-CUT
Mad. 1864.
Phone your visit. Your orders will be given prompt and secure in Prescriptions called for and delivered
PRESCRIPTIONS compounded at a nominal COST
THE COMMUNITY CUT RATE DRUG STORE
Leberman's Pharmacy N.W.Cor. Riggs Av.&Calhoun St.
Carey Theatre
OAREY AND PRESSTMAN STREETS
THE BEST IN PHOTO PLAYS
Open every day from 2 to 11:15 Continuously
PROGRAM FOR NEXT WEEK
A story of the Circus upon which every human emotion is touched; Love, Hatred, Jealousy, Self Sacrifice and the Tragedy of Death are all represented. Fifty lions are trapped in a burning managerie. Pete, a monkey, with human intelligence, farnishes some exciting moments. The picture has played the biggest theatres throughout the country. Played Ford's Theatre and prices were 25 cents to $1.90. Carey's Price including War Tax: CHILDREN 11 CENTS, ADULTS, 17 CENTS
GALE HENRY in "THE FIRST FLAME" 2 Act Comedy
TUESDAY—BEN WILSON and NEVA GERBER in "The Trail of the Octupus." Episode 1
A Mysterious, creeping serial with many thrills and excitement
RUTH STONEHOUSE and HARRY MYERS in
Last Part of "The Masked Rider"
Pathe Features presents BESSIE LOVE in
"CAROLYN OF THE CORNERS"
A live act story from the novel of the same name.
WEDNESDAY—CHARLES HUTCHISON and ANNA LUTHER
"THE GREAT GAMBLE" Episode No. 8
Clara Williams in "THE FRONTIER OUTLAW" 2 Act Western Mack Seamont Comedians in "LOVES FALSE FACES" 2 Acts
LONESOME LUKE in "SPRING FEYER" Some Comedy.
THURSDAY ANTONIO MORENO and CARROLL HOLLOWAY
"PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN"
EPISODE NO. 13
Universal Features Presents CARMEL MEYERS in
MONROE SALISBURY and RUTH CLIPFORD in
"THE MILLIONAIRE PIRATE"
A Fine Drama With a Fine Cast, in 5 Aces.
BILLY WEST in "DON'T PARK HERE" 2 Act Comedy.
Al Jennings in "LONG RIDING CHANGES" 2 Act Western
Keystone Comedians in "TAKING HER MEASURE" Comedy
SATURDAY—JAS. J. CORBETT and NOBLE JOHNSON in
"THE MIDNIGHT MAN" Episode 2
HELEN GIBSON in "THE CROWD" 2 Act Western
TOM MIX in "MAN FROM TEXAS" Western Comedy
Eddie Lyons and Lee Moran in "A Doggone Schlange" Comedy
Judge REMHHAUSER in Clever CARTOON COMEDY
COMING—Florence Reed in "HER CODE OF HONOR.
George B. Seltz in "ROUND AND GAGGED" Serial
"THE GARDEN OF ALLIA" SEVEN ACTS
STAR THEATRE
IFITS GOOD SEE IT AT THE STAR
PROGRAM FOR NEXT WEEK
RETURN BY REQUEST
I. W. JAMES STOCK CO.
PRESENTING
SAMBO JONES IN NEW YORK HAVING A
GOOD TIME
MONDAY—TRAIL OF THE OCTAPUS Episode 3
STRAND AND LUKE COMEDY
TUESDAY—PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN
Fox Comedy "VIRTUOUS HUSBANDS" Pathe News.
WED —Elmo Lincoln in "Elmo the Mighty" No. 3
Patty Arhuckle in "CAMPING OUT" 1 Reel TOM MIX
THURSDAY—MASKED RIDER No: 14
Western "INDIANA MAID'S VENGEANCE" 1 Reel Comedy
FRIDAY—THE CARTER CASE—Episode 11
Triangle Comedy "VAMPIRE AMBROSE"
"LENCH ROOM FAKERS"
SATURDAY—GREAT GAMBLE Episode 4
Gale Henry in "HER FIRST FLAME"
Pathe Weekly
MATINEE—MONDAY AND SATURDAY OPEN 2 P. M.
Other Days 6 P. M. MOTION PICTURES and VAUDEVILLE
COMING—"CUSTER'S LAST FIGHT"
IN DIGITAL SERIAL "FATAL FORTUNE"
HELEN HOLMES IN A SCHATTER
Trains Every 30 Minutes. 2 Minutes Walk From
The Station. To
PATAPSCO PARK
8OLD 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 LAW BUILDING BALTIMORE, MD
ANNUAL BABY RALLY
At Trinity A. M. E. Church, Linden Avenue and Biddle St., Sunday, Sep. 28th, at 3 P. M. Under the auspices of the Young People's Auxiliary. Special Program. All parents are invited to bring their Babies. Mrs. H. P. Harris, Presidoat Miss Mary Quickley, Chairman Rev. A. L. Gaines, D. D., Pastor
Pennsylvania Ave. at Pitcher.
Regent Orchestra, Paul Harris, Leader, in Attendance
MORTON AND DADE
In a new act entitled "THE FUN FACTORY"
THE KENTUCKY TRIO
FEATURING EDWARD BERRY, TIMOTHY TROT-
TER AND L. DEJACACQUES GAFFNIE
SINGING, DANCING, COMEDY
MONDAY-Vitagraph Presents ALICE JOYCE in
"THE THIRD DEGREE" in 6 Reels
TUESDAY—NEAL HART IN
"A WESTERN WOOING"
A Woman of Impulse
Vanity, jealousy, love, hate and other freaks of human nature
has been painted by Lina Carvaliere like Old Wives for New.
PATHE COMEDY
DOUBLE SERIAL DAY
THURSDAY—A Smashing Western Serial, featuring Harry C.
Myers, Ruth Stonehouse and Paul Panzze.
"THE MASKED RIDER" 15
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"
FRIDAY—Western Photoy play presents
ANNE LUTHER and CHARLES HUTCHINSON in
"THE GREAT GAMBLE"
ANTONIO MORENO AND CAROL HOLLOWAY In "PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN"
COMING—JAMES L. CORBETT in "MIDNIGHT MAN"
HELEN S. COLUMBIN in "FAVAL PORTUNE"
WILLIAM DUNCAN in "SMASHING BARRIERS"
"TRAIL, OF THE OCTUPUS" by Ben Wilson
DUNBAR
Central Avenue near Monument Street.
JOSIAH DIGGS Producers HENRY S. TRIMBLE
PROGRAM FOR NEAT WEEK
MONDAY—“THE CARTER CASE” Episode 13
“THE TRAIL OF THE OCTUS PUS” Episode 2
Featuring Ben Wilson and Neva Gerber.
A VERY GOOD WESTERN A CAPTAL COMEDY
TUESDAY—“SALOME” In 8 Massive Parts.
Featuring the celebrated screen artist, Theda Bara
ADMISSION THIS DAY 17 AND 11 CENTS
“NEVER TOUCHED ME” Pathe Comedy with Harold Lloyd
WEDNESDAY—THE GREAT GAMBLE Episode 5
Featuring Anna Lather and Charles Hutchinson
WESTERN DRAMA Fox Comedy "Self Made Lady"
THURSDAY—“ELMO THE MIGHTY” episode 12
Featuring Elmo Lincoln and Grace Camard.
FRIDAY—THE MIDNIGHT MAN" Episode 5
Featuring JAMES J. CORBETT and NORLE JOHNSON
Pathe Film Feature "BISHOP'S EMERALDS"
CURRENT EVENTS No. 10 SPECIAL COMEDY
SATURDAY—"SMASHING BARRIERS" Episode 2
Featuring Wm. Duncan and Carol Holloway
L-Ko Comedy, Breezy 2-reel Western Hearsts, News No. 23
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 I uid Hill Avenue or McCulloh Street costs $400,00, and here is a site that in a few years will be worth as much or more.
AGENTS ALWAYS ON THE GROUNDS
Monday, September 29th, '19
THE MOST SENSATIONAL AND THRILLING
DRAMA EVER MADE
"The Masque
.....of Life"
7—BIG ACTS—7
"The Masque of Life!
"The Film of "Iocci Thrilla"
Practically every human emotion is touched in this film—love hated, jealousy, self-sacrifice and the tragedy of death are all represented. "In the more spectacular scenes, there are some of a burning messenger, where 50 lions are trapped in a fiery inferno, the acting of "Pete" a monkey, with almost human intelligence, and you will be thrilled by the scenes on the top of the 380 foot clapboard, where the heroine battles with the monkey for the life of a real baby, while far below the crowd watches and waits, and is finally aroused to action by dynamite. This picture has played the largest theatres throughout the country. Played Ford's in July and prices were 25c to $1
CAREY'S PRICE, INCLUDING WAR TAX
CHILDREN, 11 CENTS ADULTS; 17 CENTS
Gale Henry in "Her, First Flame," a Two Act Comedy
"TIS 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.
DR. JOSEPH B. MASON
CHIROPODIST
1623 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Morgan Park
The only development for colored people with all city improvements and suburban surroundings.
MORGAN REALTY CO., AGENTS
900 NORTH EUTAW ST., Cor. Biddle
Phone Mt. Vernon 2839
C. H.
BURDWISE
Music Store
ALL KINDS OF
VICTROLAS LATEST RECORDS AND PLAYER ROLLS
Ask For Our
EASY PAYMENT PLAN
13 N. Howard Street
Branch Store:
609 E. Baltimore St.
ARTHUR L. MACBETH
PHOTO.ARTIST
Studio: 1030 PENNA AVE.
BAITIMORE
FIRST CLASS PHOTOS
Sunshine, of Cloudy the work
Goes On.
Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Daily
Sundays by appointment
Thursday and Saturday Evenings
Until 10.
Advertise in the 'Afro'