The Afro-American
Friday, January 20, 1922
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
COURT ORDERS BROWN TO APPEAR
Furniture for sale? Put it in the AFRO want ad columns at 2c per word, where everybody will see it.
30th YEAR No. 20
COUR
President of Black Star Line in his official robe as Provisional President of Africa.
$2,000,000 WILLED FOUR SOUTHERN COLORED SCHOOLS
Little Known Alabama School Bequeathed Huge Sum of $800,000
New York, January 18—Special to the Afro-American—By the will of the late Calista S. Mayhew, wealthy white woman filed for probate in Newark last week; four colored schools in the South will divide among themselves the huge sum of two million dollars. This is the largest sum given for the education of colored people since January of last year, when John D. Rockfellow gave the colossal sum of $2,914,737.50 to three colored colleges and medical schools. By Mrs. Mayhew's will Hampton and Tuskegee institutes and Atlanta University will each receive $400,000 and Snow Hill Institute at Snow Hill, Alabama, will receive $800,000. Other bequests include $800,000 to the Good Will Association of East Patrish Maine, (white) and $50,000 to friends of the two relatives. Snow Hill Little Known Snow Hill Institute, is located in Wilcox County, Alabama. 125 miles from Tuskegee. Its Principal, W. J. Edwards graduated from Tuskegee twenty-five years ago, and with three pupils and fifty-cents started a school on the model of Booker Washington's. Today the property is worth $125,000 with twenty-four buildings and 154 acres of land. Of these teachers and 200 pupils mostly in elementary and secondary grades. Fourteen trades are taught, but the specialty is agriculture.
92-Year-Old Woman Made Moonshine
Thomasville: Gail, Jan. 18—An aged colored woman, 92 years old, was convicted on the charge of making "hooch" to the charge shirt and drinkables were found in her home. She was paroled on account of her age.
Asheville, N. C., Jan. 18.—Brack L. Johnson is in jail here charged with using the mails to defraud the Masonic Insurance Department. He collected large sums of money by signing certificates of death of policy holders who were enjoying the best of health.
1000 BOTTLES
HERBS OF LIFE
Yes! Absolutely free of Charge! To our
finest Drug Store in the city, we have
Free of Charge 1000 Bottles of Herbs of
est tonic).
Your health is your best friend. ST
this wonderful medicine today. Just
and present at our store together with
one Bottle and we will give you one Fri
COUPON.
Good for 1 Bottle of HERE
BUY ONE AND GET ONE
Name..... Address.
Good this week only
LAURENS PHARMACY, 1800
ERNEST PURVIAN
Yes! Absolutely free of Charge! To prove that we have the finest Drug Store in the city, we have arranged to give away Free of Charge 1000 Bottles of Herbs of Life (the world's greatest tonic). Your health is your best friend. START on a treatment of this wonderful medicine today. Just sign the Coupon below and present at our store together with One Dollar to pay for one Bottle and we will give you one Free of Charge.
Name..... Address.....
Good this week only at
LAURENS PHARMACY, 1800 PENNA. AV.
ERNEST PURVIANCE
Syncopation plus Accentuation plus Determination equals Jazz De Luxe
ST. MARY'S HALL
GARVEY FACES TRIAL TODAY ON FRAUD CHARGE
Head Of Black Star Line Prosecuted By U. S. Postal Authorities In New York
USED MAILS WRONGFULLY
Inspectors Say He Advertised Passage To Africa On Mythical Vessel
New York, January 18—(Special to the Afro-American)—On the charge of advertising and selling passage to Africa on board a mythical vessel called the Phyllis Wheeler. Marcus Garvey, head of the Black Star Seamship Line will have a hearing in the United States Court today.
The Crusader, a colored monthly journal, wrote to the Department of Commerce to report whether such a ship was listed. No record was found. The Crusader launched a bitter attack on Garvey.
Pressure Yacht in Fleet
The Federal authorities insist the Black Star Line is composed of but two vessels, unlisted: The Shady Side, used as an excursion boat to the Hudson, and the Kanawa, a pleasure yacht, now in Cuba, and according to the authorities, in the custody of the American Consul there, for reasons as yet unknown, which is made of the Yarmouth maiden ship of the Line, which collided with the Federal authorities when it attempted to carry a cargo of whiskey down the coast. After legal entanglements it went forth, only later to be laid up. Apparently the way of the Black Star Line was rough and choppy. The Shady Side, a river boat, was damaged by fire, what use it is now made of the Yarmouth cane be learned
Pictured Great Fleet
But the advertisements of the Black Star Line ran in this current:
"A line of steamships to run between American, Africa, the West Indies, Canada, South and Central America, carrying freight and passengers."
The Black Star Line will open up untainted possibilities for the race. Stock sold only to Negroes.
"You can buy one to 200 shares in $5 each. Buy your shares today."
Unofficially, Federal men said Garvey's company had taken in more than $1,000,000—that he had sold stock all over the country, through the West Indies, where Negroes are found. For Garvey's appeal emphasized:
"The Black Star Line Corporation presents to every black man, woman and child the opportunity to climb the great ladder of industrial and commercial progress. If you have $10, $100 or $5,000 to invest for profit, then take our shares in the Black Star Line, Inc."
Garvey's fame waxed "brightest when the Black Star Line was launched upon its uneven course. Seven years ago he came from unknown. It took him only three years to rise to dizzy heights, and up to yesterday he stayed there, pulled down occasionally by interference, but not for long.
He had met temporary official shacks previously, Assistant Attorney Kilrope compelled
Mob Hangs Another
Oklahoma City, Jan. 17.—The body of John Brooks, colored, packing house employee, who was kidnapped Saturday, was found hanging by a rope from a tree six miles from here today.
THE AFRO AMERICAN
MORE FOR SNOW HILL
DEFRAUDED MASONS
BENJAMIN LOCKS OUT OF DETROIT SCHOOL SYSTEM
Michigan Mayor Wins A Bitter Fight For Former Baltimore Boy's Dismissal
CHARGES ARE. SERIOUS
Colored Public Opinion Decisive Factor In Securing Dismissal
By telegraph to the AFRO
Detroit, Mich., Jan. 18.—Benjamin Locks, a Baltimore, graduate of Baltimore High School, Howard University and Columbia University, is now out of the Detroit school system.
Ousting of Locks followed a bitter fight between the Mayor, James Cousens and the School Board in which the former won. Mr. Locks won the second years ago as principal of a colored school in Ypsilanti, Michigan. This was abolished, the children sent to white schools and Mr. Locks given a position in the Detroit schools.
On three occasions the local daily press carried news items of his arrest for disturbing the peace. He was thought to be a homosexual.
While this information was carried to the School Board by Attorney Robert Willis, Superintendent Cody, white, dismissed him but the School Board, by a vote of four to three exonerated him and gave him a position as clerk, increasing his salary from $220 per month to $400 per month.
Here the Free Press, a local white daily, took up the fight against Professor Locks in special feature articles and editions. Cody took a hand and prevented the appointment. Professor Locks is now out of the Detroit school system and colored public opinion is strongly opposed to his reinstatement.
ABBYSINIA CAN GET ARMS
France Has No Right To Hold Up American Shipment
Washington, Jan. 18—Officials of the State Department today could not throw any light on the London report published in the New York World stating that a consignment of American ammunition intended for Abyssinia is being held up at the French port of Jibuti.
Apparently nothing was known at the State Department, either concerning the consignment of American arms or, the alleged widespread prevalence of slavery Abyssinia, for which British correspondents charge the arms are to be used.
It was pointed out that American manufactures have a clear right to ship arms and ammunition to Abyssinia. In some quarters the suggestion is made that the slavery situation in Abyssinia may have been painted blacker than the
Monrovia, Liberia, Jan. 22. (by mail). Bishop Brooks has accepted the honorable position as chaplain for the Supreme Court of Liberia.
50 YEARS A COP
Chicago, Ill. Jan. 18.—Policeman Wm. D. Smith, ex-slave, fifty years a member of the Chicago police force, died Friday. A son is clerk in the office of the Chief
NEW BANK IN NORFOLK
Norfolk, Ill. Jan. 18.—The Union Commercial Bank opened last Monday at 1124 Church street, for business. The new institution has an authorized capital of $100,000.
TO REBUILD SHORTER HALL
Wilberforce, Ohio. Jan. 19.—The Board of Trustees of Wilberforce University authorized a public campaign at its last meeting to raise $400,000 by public subscriptions with which to rebuild Shorter Hall, recently destroyed by fire.
FRONT PAGE
FOR RENT—Four bright cheerful rooms at 1329 N. Mount street. Apply evenings after 6 o'clock, except Sundays.
FOR RENT—Two rooms for rent, bath, use of house; rent reasonable for man and wife; no children. Apply N. J. Lindsay, 1904 White street.
CORRECTION
The concert that was to be rendered by the A. Jack Thomas' Band, January 22 at Sharp Street Church will be rendered February 12th.
FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922
MRS. LONG ASKS $30,000
Widow Of Dead County School Team
Men Who Slew Him
Snow Hill, Md., Jan. 19. Suits aggregating brought into local courts by Mrs. Victoria L. Pilchard (white), and his brother, William, who several months ago.
One of the suits claims $20,000 from John B caused Mr. Long's death, and $10,000 from William. Stephen H. Long, supervisor of schools of W Grand Master of Odd Fellows, was cut down in store in Pocomoke, Md., by the whites, who a drunk at the time.
COL. YOUNG'S STATE
BODY MAY BE ROBBE
BROUGHT HOME UNDER
$30,000 DAMAGE H
School Teacher Sues White
Slew Him
its aggregating $30,000 have been
s. Victoria Long against John A.
s. William, who killed her husband
0 from John Pilehag, who actually
00 from William, who assisted him.
schools of Worcester County, and
cut down in front of North Gunhy's
whites, who are said to have been
STATE TEACHERS
ROBBED OF $330
UNDER COOK BILL
Snow Hill, Md., Jan. 19.—Suits aggregating $20,000 have been brought into local courts by Mrs. Victoria Long against John A. Pilchard (white), and his brother, William, who killed her husband several months ago.
One of the suits claims $20,000 from John Pilchard, who actually caused Mr. Long's death, and $10,000 from William, who assisted him.
Stephen H. Long, supervisor of schools of Worcester County, and Grand Master of Odd Fellows, was cut down in front of Noah Gunny's store in Pocomoke, Md., by the whites, who are said to have been drunk at the time.
Supt. Cook's Measure Introduced In Legislature Duplicates Previous Inequalities COLORED GET $320
While Minimum Salary for White Teachers Is Fixed At $650 Per Year
Staff Correspondence
Annapolis, Md., Jan. 18.—Duplicating the old policy of robbing the teachers and citizens of tax payer's funds, the education bill of State Superintendent Albert S. Cook, white, was introduced in the legislature last night.
During the Cook plan, the minimum salary for any colored teacher in the State would be $40 a month or $320 a year. The minimum salary for any white teacher would be $650 a year. White teachers throut the State will therefore draw more than twice as much as colored teachers doing the same work.
The bill likewise provides for raises in salary based on grade of certificate and length of service, but is so drawn by Superintendent Cook that the highest-paid colored teacher will not receive as much as the lowest-paid white teacher. With School Teachers Suffer.
The Cook bill places the minimum salary for colored high school teachers at $95 a month or $760 a year. The minimum salary of any white high school teacher in the State is set down at $1150 a year. The difference in salary between white and colored school teachers doing the same work therefore amounts to $550 a
The appropriation for the Bowie Normal School this year is put by Superintendent Cook at $23,000, an increase of $9,000. No provision is made for the replacement boys dormitory by fire a few weeks ago. White state normal schools are allowed increases of $7,000.
Hazelhurst, Md., Jan. 16.—Thad Shooter, colored, 15 years old, accused of a $300 robbery, plunged through a window of a Southern Railway train near here this afternoon, escaping from the white herif. He is spending the nights in swamps. The boy, whose home is in North Carolina, was captured at Jassup this morning. Track dogs are leading a posse in the boy-hunt tonight.
Boddy Trial January 23rd
New York City, Jan. 19.—The trial of "Sure Death" Luthie Buddy will come up before a jury next Monday on the charge of killing detectives Buckley and Miller, both white. The court-room was crowded with colored people at the preliminary hearing last week. Bod
dy's lawyers gave an intimation of the probable line of defense when, just after Boddy was led away to the Tombs, he said to reps: "If this man we have to change and we can get twelve jurors with open minds, rest assured he will never go to the electric chair. We have some genuine surprises. We are going to open the eyes of this community and it is about time this was done. After taking intimately with Boddy, a sense and understanding him, it seems absurd for any one to class him as a desperado." Boddy has said he shot the detectives because he feared they would beat him.
Heavy Penalties
Given Students
Augusta, Ga., Jan. 19—For beating up a white special delivery boy who entered their class room without taking off his hat. Allen Padden and Henry Oglesby, students of
Separate Entrances For Street Cars
Nashville, Tenn. Jan. 19—If the Jim Crow window in the City limits passes, local street cars will have sections set apart for each race with separate entrances and exits.
Payne institute, located
sentenced to six and three months,
theseptively, in Federal prison at
Atlanta. The reason for the heavy
penalty, Judge Evans said, was that
the students were interfering with
the United States mail.
Nashville, Tennessee, Jan. 15-19 The Jim Crow bill now in the City Council passes, local street cars will have sections set apart for each race with separate entrances and exits.
The reason for the heavy penalty, Judge Evans said, was that the students were interfering with the United States mail.
Highest Commissioned Colored Officer In U. S. Army Reported Dead In Liberia
WAS RETIRED BY WILSON
Action Was Taken To Avoid His Promotion To Brigadier-General
New York, N. Y., Jan. 19.—As detailed in an extra of the AFRO-AMERICAN last week, a cablegram, announced the sudden death of Cohl, Charles Young, military attache at the American Legation, while on a trip to Nigeria, West Africa.
M.
Preparations, it is said, are being made to ship the body to America for burial here.
Colonel Young was born in Kentucky in 1868, and was educated in the public schools of Ohio. He was appointed to the West Point Military Academy from Ohio in 1885, and since graduation in 1901 and 1906 Calvary, and the 25th Infantry of the United States Army. He was Major of an Ohio battalion during the Spanish War. He was a Superintendent of Sequoia and Grant National Parks in California, here his interest and ability were commended in formation as a 9th Infantry. He was made President and declared that "by his energy and enthusiasm and business qualities displayed, the money set aside for him wisely and economically expended." In 1964 he was sent to Haiti, and thence twice to the Philippines, where in the absence of the Colonel, he was commanded and served on several occasions. He was promoted to the rank of Major in 1912, and was then sent as military attaché to Liberia. There he undertook the work of the Liberian Constabulary and it was especially for his brilliant work in this connection that he received the Spinarn Medal awarded him in Boston, February 23
In June 1917, President Wilson, aroused the enmity of colored people all over the country by order of the retirement Young with the rank of Colonel net carrying a salary of $6,000 per year. This was done. It is said, to avoid sending him overseas with colored troops where it is not safe to commission him as brigadier general. Under a storm of protest War Department officials gave out the report that Colonel Young was sufferer, although he had never been ill a day in his life. In list at Camp Grant to train development troops. He remained in the Army. Last year he was sent on special work to Liberia for the United States Government where he died.
"Boss" Of Cambridge School Is Dead
Boston, Mass., Jan. 18-With the death of Miss Maria L. Baldwin last week the little "boss" of Cambridge schools passed away.
Miss Baldwin was colored. Twenty-five years ago she was elected principal of the Agnese Public School here, which all of the pupils attended. She was with the title of "master." No changes were made in the administration of the city schools without consulting her.
Magistrate Scott Gets Threatening Letters
Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 19.—A number of threatening letters have been received by Magistrate Amos Scott and Rev. Charles A. Tindley who participated in the capture of Luther Boddy, charged with the murder of two white detectives last week. Both the magistrate and the minister say they are not frightened.
Republican Leader Mondell To Call It Up For Amendment Next Tuesday
OHIOAN CHAMPIONS BILL
Representative Burton Declares South Has Had More Lynchings Than Legal Executions.
Washington, D. C., Jan. 19—Staff Correspondence—The program of the Republican leaders in the House this week calls for the closing debate on the Dyer Anti Lynching Bill, H. R. 13. It will come up again next Tuesday according to the Republican leader, Representative Mondell, or amendments. With these out of the way the bill will be well on the way toward its final passage. For more than an hour Representative Burton, of Ohio, championed the Dyer Bill. He said, "This savage practice of Lynching takes its name one Ohio citizen who lived between the years 1736 and 1796 in one of the southwesterly counties of Virginia. The town of Lynchburg was named after his brother. He with others in a time of trouble from Tories and lawless persons, during the Revolutional War, formed a kind of vigilance committee, meeting out punishment, because they never claimed the right to take life. Castigation, whipping or something of a similar nature, was the limit of their activities.
More Lynchings Than Executions
"It is startling to note that in the 28 years from 1890 to 1917 inclusive, the number of death by Lynching was appalled by those electrocuted or hanged under sentences of the courts. Three thousand and thirteen is the number counted for the former and 3,193 of the latter. If full statistics were available it is most probable that the number of those whose lives were taken by Lynching was greater than the number of those who were hanged or electrocuted in accordance with sentences of the courts.
In 17 states the number Lynched surpassed the number of those put to death by judicial sentence, and in some of those States there were twice, three times, or even four or five times as many who were Lynched as those who met the hands of the legal executioner.
There are only six States in the Union that can claim exemption from Lynching. There is Connecticut—although one suicide there was set down to Lynching Rhode Island Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Utah, is a general question, it is not a question of color, or of North or South.
Representative Dallinger of Massachusetts read in the Record a memorial and petition to Congress against lynchings passed by the Second Colored World Democracy Congress which met in Washington, December 14, 1921, assigned by one of the leaders of the killing Mrs. S. J. James of Maryland, Rev. D. D. Turpureum Trotter and Rev. A. J. Mitchell. A number of Southern Democrats and Representatives Reavis, Republican of Nebraska argued against the bill.
New York City, Jan. 19.—Cable
advices received here from Paris
announces that the German town
of Doppard is greatly concerned
because French garrisons were
withdrawn. The townpeople
miss, it is said, the large sum
money that was spent by the
troops.
In a complaint forwarded to
Civil Guard Goutte, commanding
officer the townpeople asked to
be supplied with garrisons. They said,
"If no white troops are available,
send colored."
Fifth Of Series Of Fires In South
ern Schools Does $50,000
Damage
Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 18.—Fire
destroyed Crary Hall on the campus
of the Morristown Normal and
Industrial College, forty-one miles
from here last week.
The hall was a large brick building
containing the boarding de-
partment and dormitories. Damage
was temporarily set at $50,000,
but may reach $100,000. Insurance
amounted to only $35,000.
The Morristown College is a high school with an elementary
department. It has 258 pupils,
twenty-five teachers, most of them
white and is supported by the M
U. S. Weather Report
January 10 to 21. Inclusive
North and Middle Atlantic
States—Fair and cold weather
first part of the week; unsettled
weather, probably snow and nor-
mal temperature second part of
the week.
Cents in Maryland—10 Cents elsewhere
PEAR
BANKER STILL MISSING
Jefferson City, Mo., Jan. 18. Under the administration of Governor A. M. Hyde, and a Republican majority in both the House of Representatives and Senate, the Negroes of Missouri have been well provided for:
Lincoln Institute, located at the capital was changed to Lincoln University and was named the appropriation of more than three-quarter million which was the appropriation ever given in the history of the school.
For the first time in the history of the State a Negro sat in the House of Representatives: Hon. Walthal M. Moore of St. Louis made a conservative leader and largely through his efforts Lincoln University was provided for.
Hon. Sam. A. Eker, State Superintendent of Public Instruction has added New Inspector of schools to his department, Mr. C. C. Williams of Booneville, a prominent educator who is making good
The Negro Industrial Commission which was established during the 50th General Assembly was given an appropriation and permanent quarters in the new capitol; Mr. Robt, S. Cobb, B. Cobb, and J. Mo. has charge of this department which is doing much to increase the efficiency of Negroes generally throughout the state. The Board of Curators of Lincoln University has three Negro representatives; Dr. W. P. Curtis, Kansas City; Mrs. W. P. Curtis, Louisville; and W. Logan, of Columbia. No representation has ever been accorded Negroes before or this Board.
France To Enlist More Black Troops
Paris, France, Jan. 13.—Colored troops will replace in France regiments which are being disbanded. A measure shortly to come before the Chamber provides for maintenance under in France of a total of 356,000 men, or about 293,000 Frenchmen and 63,000 natives. 4
Have You Entered?
The AFRO'S Douglass Contest, awarding prizes in money for the best essay of not over three hundred words on any phase of the life of Frederick Douglass. The first prize is three dollars, the second, two dollars, and the third, one dollar. All essays must reach the AFRO office before February 4th. Address Douglass Contest Editor, 628 N. Eauwat St.
J. FRANK WHEATON SUICIDE IN NEW YORK
Former District Attorney And Elk Found Dead In Gas-Filled Bath Room
BORN IN HAGERSTOWN
Held Offices Under Republicans, Including Membership In Legislature
New York. N. Y., Jan. 19.—J. Frank Wheaton, prominent lawyer and former Assistant District Attorney, committed suicide yesterday at his home at No. 208 West 137th street.
He was found on the floor of his bathroom with a rubber tube, connected with an opened gas jar. In his mouth. Investigation by members of the Medical Examiner's staff made definite that death was seri-fied.
Mr. Wheaton was one of the most successful lawyers of his race. He was the only Negro elected to the Legislature in Minnesota, where he formally lived. He was Assistant District Attorney in New County the first four months of 1920.
Despondency brought about by the fleeing of a man for whom he had put up a $10,000 bond caused him to take his life, Mrs. Dora Wheaton, his widow, said.
According to Mrs. Wheaton, her husband had told her Saturday that he faced the prospect of financial ruin because of the disappearance of the man he had idi-ected strangely, she said for several days, although he did not intima- tion, would end his life.
Beside his widow, Mr. Wheaton left three sons, Layton, thirty of the New York Dental College; Frank, twenty-nine, a lawyer, and Richard, twenty, a student at Columbia.
J. Frank Wheaton was born in Hagerstown, Md., May 8, 1866, son of Jacob F. and Emily Green Wheaton. He attended public schools of Hagerstown and graduated from St. Mary's College in 1881. He graduated from Dixon Illinois Business College in 1882; studied law, Howard University, Washington, D.C.; L. L. B. University of Minnesota; and Harried Ella A. Chambers, June 6, 1889. He began to practice law at Hagerstown, moved to Minneapolis, Minn., where he was clerk of the Minneapolis County House of representation. He moved to New York and founded the law firm of Wheaton and Curtis. He was a delegate to many Republican conventions and exiled ruler.
$750,000 Appropriated For Missouri University
(Associated Negro Press)
WINGATE AND BROWN EFFECTS BRING $1,489
Contents Of Bank, Movie Studio, Printing Office And Dwelling Sell For A Song
Court Orders Him To Appear Monday, January 23rd
Furniture and fixtures of Brown and Wingate, bankers, moving picture studio, printing office press of the Maryland Volce and furniture of Brown's, 500 Gold Street. brought $1,489.45 at public auction Thursday. Between fifty and one hundred persons followed the auctioneers through three buildings, the entire con-
$400 safe, six feet high, was sold to $120 and the smaller safe for $23. Four typewriters brought from $6 to $30 each and a chuck protector, $10. Moving picture projectors, graphascopes and other equipment, in which the bank had invested $8,000 went for a little over $100. A moving picture camera, complete, sold for as little as $70. At the Maryland Voice, the big cylinder press, on which theaper was run, sold for $41 and a small press used for printing tickets and programs brought only $5.50. A 1918 Chandler automobile, seven passenger, was sold for $295. Both men and women bid on the furniture of the Gold Street home of Brown. Before leaving the banker, whose whereabouts is unknown, stripped the home of much of its valuable furnishings. He also carried away much of his clothing. An upright piano for $53; sewing machine for $5.50; four of room's five piece parlor set for $5.50; refrigerator for $7.00; rug for $5.90; x12l for $3.50; $7.00 gas range went for $10.50; clothes basket and contents, $1.50; contents of pantry, including canned goods and preserves, $5.00.
Brown Ordered To Appear
An order of the United States District Court signed December 30th, directive from James Brown, to before the court, Monday January 23rd, at ten a. m., and show cause for the bankruptcy of his firm. Brown could not be found to serve the summons and it is not expected that he will appear. A creditors meeting will be called by Referee Meyers at a date to be announced later and the accounts of the bank will be gone over. If any shortage or absconding of funds is discovered a bench warrant will be issued to search made for the missing banker. The books of the banker are added to such a tangled state that it will be impossible for the receiver, Harry O. Wilson and U. S. referee Meyers to make a full and definite report.
Taylor And Jenkins Effects. To Be Sold
By order of the court signed January 14th, office furniture, adding machine, typewriters, etc. of Taylor and Jenkins, bankers, will be sold at 323 West Biddle Street and 505 N. Caroline Street, at a date to be announced later. Referee Meyers is expected to set the date for a meeting of the creditors of this firm next week.
Lodge Official
Is Short $8,000
Little Rock, Ark., Jan. 19.—The International Order of the Twelve Knights and Daughters of Tabor, a fraternal organization, has filed suit in Circuit Court to compel the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company to make good a shortage of $8,000 in the accounts of George Buchanan, treasurer of the Order.
Buchanan skipped town a month ago. After his leaving his accounts were found to be $8,000 short. He has not been located and he is under $10,000 bond. Suit was instituted against the bonding company.
Wills Beats Langford
Portland, Ore., Jan. 18.—Harry Wills, the colored heavyweight challenger of Jack Dempsey world's heavyweight title holder, met Sam Langford in a 10-round bout here last night and won the decision, the bout going the full 'oute. The fight was slow, with Wills doing most of the leading.
Lost at Louisville 30-44.
Lost at Cincinnati 22-56
Ce ae eR a ca EM Baga
A Strictly Sacred Musicale by Commonwealth Band
: AT AMES MEMORIAL M. E. CHURCH +
my Carey and Baker Streets
‘ SUNDAY, JANUARY 22, 1922, AT 4:30 0, M.
_aduuspices Epworth League Silver Offceltig’ At Door
Ariss Ete Bishop, Mistress of Ceremonies Mr. Charles Pulley, Pres
Prof, Charles. Li Harris, Director
_FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922 |
SUNDAY SCHOOL
LESSON, JAN, 22
ELUAH'S FLIGHT AND RETURN
int ee
1 Kings iy; 9-10, Alsu 2 King:
19; 4-9, L331
Jt is’ sud tuat en elephant i
mortally wuntid OF & luuse ait ex
Hiss signs of exureme lero)
whenever ne sees one.
Bias was brave enough wite
faving Ahi und velling mw Ure
There would ve ny rain tor ure:
years, die exnibiwed nut Un
Slightest hesiucion, wae ne re
turned fron hs exite, ana com
Manded Anay Wo aeseIIDIE aL
Jsracl wo the lop of ML Carmel t
determine ter eice and ur a
Lime who was the real God. How
he mocked te tour avadred and
Inty prophets vt baal when ines
culled upon thet god fron stutt
To fate In the eternuon sue ater
ward. Siew) unc: at the bevul
Kisnun, | Wit wnat seengtn ty
Tan beture Anwb aid geting down
tu Jusreel in advauce yt ine King:
chariot. | Buc with ai vf ms nar
ery belure, he ttned Guu ratte
JAE us he pussiviy count aad he
cBimseit, becaawe s woman crea:
ened him.
Seemmugly, he Ind turgetter
where bis sirengin mind nu pre:
vious tu this inte. <“Heture tu
Lord God uy Isreer before wl |
Stand.” he hau repeatedly | std
Dut now he is reising enurery: Wer
Thjan, wand beeatice be is riya
omy upon ljah he falls. I he
Gomes neeessry, theretore tot
God to Fecal elijah to tainsctt
Not oily to slow mia chit wer
Were other ways than the knvek
own and drag out methods £0 1
used. but to show tin srise Uh
there were some tniugs he dil nv)
Know. among whien that thers
were others fuishial as he wus
AST hind to fern his lesson a
“Well ay Ahab hud to learn his anc
So he is led t tloreh, Here In
xaw the hurricane that vent the
gmountian; the extrthauielie Unt
Sent the rocks tumbling down ts
the valley below. and the Bee te
Consunied ses it went: Tut Uiis wits
not,Gow's Way, and Ebith: tad
Understand it. | AMD ot tiwse things
were useful in “Useit way and it
the right tine, ONL Were Hot Ly be
used all the Gime. And su. there
came tie “SUI Small Voiee” and
after Gis anew. sonierhing i in
done. And so after selimuniiiow In
ig sent on anuther creand. 0K
was not tteouste witht iljal yeu.
Dijk. setter cdl was ima
And this ig Just what this lessen
Ja desizned 10 tearh, bth
thought hke we. at mies uak,
the best way to ket vid, wot only of
our enemics. Mit Ue eneniies of
the church, relision suid Gol is. tw
Kall thes, bar that ts nol alwieys
God's wis, AU ines we are rus
and ‘willing: tw ge at the whote
World singte handed, and the nest
Uke Peter, denying our Lavd. Af
ter all, the best of us are lait bu:
man, “When the enemy gets he:
hind us and gets ex un the run We
quickly hun a finuper tee, and
think we are tne only ones Ut
can do anytins. or have done any-
thing, (So ENF is sent to Uy the
SSUM Small Voies” and see what
tha would do and so he goes about
establishing schonls, un the Sun-
day School urder ‘perhaps. Me
called then the schools of the
prophets, but it did not snatier
what they were called. the jr.
ose was tw educate insiead of KiU-
ing.
Tam jus. wondering after al
prould Wonot he jist as well if we
vere tu set abou educating foiks
Instat of passin we many AWS t
Forge them tagsce uur point of view.
Down tc Annapouis there will he
progably imosed a lute uf laws te
propibir, peovie) pluving, laschall
peoijand doing viher things oe the
Sabbath day, Why bless your deat
sone they have been doing that
ind ofthinga mighty long time
Jandwill probably Keep on doing St
Jor some time to come. Suppose
Wwe Start a few schools of some
King and ty to show) the other
sidecof the question, fi the mei
time we might Ly Prayer.
Elijah forzor to pray when he
got scared at wit deaebel said
and that is Just whit got bit
down there ‘under that” jimipet
are. God can and will take rare
of things if we will just give hin
& chance. Hut i we are xving to
fake the whole responsibility ” on
our: own shoublers, passing hors
anda! that sort of thing. instead
of asking Mis help then ht ie ne
Wonder we do not get any further
on the way. Lat us get down to
Dusiness and give God a chance
to do something. Let us have
Teal good. old-fashioned prayer
meeting ail around) in ali the
churches, Sunday-sehouls, Yo Me
Wae¥. W.C. a's, CEs, BY.
sand all other Kind of initialed
jociaties and sce if we cannot ge
elp of another Kind than con:
edses, legislatures and — Gij
oUnES.
’& Strictly Sacred Musical
(ome - Hey
ee. Gumi. :
: SR,
ee
| fee aes
| as
: a
; Fs a at
| Sete ta
a epee oc ee nh eee
Re oat ence
Oe era eee a
eh, a
aes ‘
feo ee
ig 0 7 a ee
Bible Thot For, The Week
RULES FOR
LAVING:—Let all bitter
nese, and wrath, and
unger, and clamenr, and
cv “speaking, be’ put
Bre ee eats) gine Nace
LIVING: —Let all bitter-
nese, and wrath. and oy
unger, and chuneur, and’
Chil speaking, be’ pa
‘way Irom sou, with all
malice: and be ye kind one to an-
other, tender-heurted, forgiving one
‘another, even ay God for Christ's
sake hath forgives you.—Ephe-
sans 4: 31, 32.
3. S. CAMPAIGN ON
Revy. Junius Gray, Ernest Wil-
liams, John Tayloc and WW. J. Win-
stun met at Lhe office of the Mary-
tand ‘Sunday School Association.
Se Paul street, tals week. A big
campaign to "bring 39,000 new
members into the Sunday Schools
of tdtimure and 5,000 into the
Cradie Hull is planned.
SPECIAL NOTICE
‘The Class Lenders’ Union of Bal-
Gimure, May. WH) worship, with
Kev. BH. Kaight and eungrega-
tion at their temporary, location,
Summioga “street near Poppleton,
inis “Sunday afternoon, dan. 22,
fign P.M. All are invhed.
Trev. BH. Knight. Pastor.
Ranticst Ministers Elect
‘The Chited GApst eet ny
(Conference elected the | following
follivers at Hbenexer Baptint Church
fast Monday. ev, Albert.
Greene, president: “Rev. J. A.
Mviittley, vice president; Rev. W.
F, Dirkerson, secreuary, aud Rev.
I, GH Green, treasttrer.
Veiinning wich nest Monday, the
weekly sessions will be held a
few calvary’ Bapust Chureh, Bid-
die Street, between Druid Hi and
Mennagivanie Avenues,
| MID-YEAR CONFERENCE
| ‘The mid-year seston ot tht
[olor Mahnlatrotestant, Com
ference will he held al MG ‘Tabor
IChureh, Washington, on February
[Poth
YALES ‘TO MEN
tev, CY. Tries “delivered ar
juuldress ty men arly at Shacy
Suet Memorial M. 7B. : Church
Sunday atwernoon au a0" Py Ml.
MGs MEET
Su a payer read “before, the M
G. Ministers. Meeting Wednesday
Rev, W.-C. Thompson. of Annapo-
economic conditions had affected
[ehurch work.
| scscesscusrapp CCH A RURINEE
| tural Baptist churches will hole
lan ait day mencing at Fisst Colered
(Gaptist Church, Fairfield, on Sun-
Ming ctamuars. The: meetings
fare’ held every month carrying Ave
Sunda
Chisel at tkridge, Me. Wines
fimticott City, and, Gove are
Lamon these patrticipating,
ro REID CHURCH
hunt are under, was te build
santut hone tor Asiary Me &
Shure, Harrisburg, ba Special
Stag: xeevices wilt be helt ths
Kuaday Win ket, Dee We AG
Hughes and ew Dh B. 3 | Wil
Titan sujmintendent of the Balti
nore Distriet, sanumi the spenkers
see ae iedtand iy the pastor.
SOvICE
AU Swekliolders and Prosies of
tne joint Stott Association of the
Creu Cited Onder, oF Nagarites
fare notined. ew meet at the Tuber-
Tineke Monday Evening Jan, 80
Tide at s orclock to receive the Te-
hor of the spect committee ap-
Hotnced au the lame special meetin
Signed? Win, Holland, 5 3d
tohusen. Wet, Greenswood, Mes
Morenes Oliver, Jas. Gray. doe
Jonna, We, Ake West, Jos. Sewell
Mist Vittoria ‘Ciark. Wine Nast.
M. Webb.
THE BLACK WAS
FY Bis gis wii
Rr Cae
Rs ogy ee
ee :
Cia 8 ee ee sai
ae eo
Siar: . Se
ee ae
will be shown in_maving pictures
and views and lectured upon by
dev. James at Webb, of Chicaze,
The ar ''Bethel Aw aL. E, chureh,
Dhaid MilAyenve and lamnvale
ktreet, ‘Thursday night, . January
2h 12.
Don't Mise ‘This: Biblical
"Tree
Mewes fonndby a volored woman,
Snioman's Teme buite by black
The Queen of Sheba questions
solomon wisdom. "
NoKdminsion 25 cents, Rev, Bred
eee ane
Annual .
EVANGELISTIC CAMPAIGN
ender the Auspices of
Religions Commitice-¥. MC. A.
Druid Hill Ave. Branch
St. John. A.M: Es Church
‘Lexington St., neirPine St.
January 16-27, inclusive
“QUR FATHER”
Opening Sermon—Don‘t Miss It
Big Chorus, 200 Voices
‘under the Direetion vf
DR. CHAS. E. STEWART
Tai yoads lead to St, Jono dur-
ing-thie Campaign. - Every night
the night. ne
‘—Everyuody 1g Wetconice—
- Dr.A. Clayton Powell
* One of, America’s Greatest
* ‘Preachers -
“The Salvation Of Israel”? — A Sacred Cantata
Reudered hy Junior Choir
AT AMES MEMORIAL ME. CHURCH, CAREY. AND’ BAKER STS,
MONDAY. JANUARY 23, 1922, AT 8 P.M,
Admission: 15 Cents os
Mes, Currie Dorsey, Pianist Airs, Annie ‘Thomas, Directress
Tev, Willlanr 11, Dean, Pastor
———$— $< $< $$$
THE KNICKERBOCKER BUILDING & LOAN ASS’N
1137 N, EREMON'T AVENE —near Lafayette Market
MMenty of tones to Tuan on frst and second mortgages on easy’ terug.
Houses bought and sold. — Phone, MAdison 3271
. W.W. Allen, President
> Residence: 1117 N. Carey St Phone, MAdivon 1856-5
Notary Publte Drop a card or call
—_SSS—S—SSSSSSSSSSSSS|]
sys
YOUNG MAN! MAKE THE“Y” BLOG, YOUR HOME
52 Comfortable Rooms Sirus, tees, Moe
Comfortable HOOMS sina’Coia' Water on Evers Floor
— The last word in Service —
Building open all the time, You exn't he to early, nor too late.
Rooms: $3.50, $3.00, private rooms per week
$2.25, $2.00, double rooms per-week
GET CHE MOSE FOR YOUR MONEY Call Mad. 1120
VICTORY SONG BOOKS—New Supply Just Received
Latest Popular Hymns |
“YLL LIVE ON”. “OVER LN THE GLORY LAND", “PROMISE
TO MEET ME THERE” and many others.
For Sale — 45¢ euch; 84.80 per dozen |
: E, NATHANIEL REDDIE |
224 N. Arlington Avenue Baltimore, Md. |
| 224 N. Avtington Avenue Baltimore, Md.
IN MEMORIAM
eer
| ALEINS—In sad, but loving
remembrance of ny dear husband
James. Atkins, sho entered In-
io rest Gvo yours ago dan, 20.
1920,
Gone, but not forgotten,
Two years ago Jamex, God called
you home" *
‘Ang ‘Ieft_ine in this cold dreary
world to roam
surrounded by friend, falve, un-
kind untrue
But 1 know dear ‘ord
He would not have departed from
|. me
‘only to come unto sou,
IMy heart Is sad and lonely
My grief (oo deep to tell
But Time will come, when we will
meet
And wi to you TH tell,
Jezus speaks in time of sorrow
[And his blessed peace imparts
Tn the desolated homestead
Hie ‘wilt comfort broken hearts
Ry bis beloved wite,
CORA BL ALKINS
) BEDDLE—In loving remem-
brance of my beloved xon Authur
Biddle, died Jan, 18. 106.
"the midnight stars are shining
Upon the silent grave
Where sleepeth the one
T could not save.
Gone, but not forgotten,
Ry’ bis mother,
EMMA BIDDLE
BISHOP—in sad und loving re-
membrince of our dear mother,
Mary &. fishop. who passed away
January 18. 117. Gone, bur not
forgouen.
The momih of aniwery wed bs
here.
‘Ko ug the suddest of Une year,
for it wax ona anus day.
That our dear mother went away.
But someday we will meet, where
no farewell Gets are shed.—By her
children and grandchildren,
CHARLES and CARRIE BISHOP
* CUSTIS—in loving remembrance
of my dear mother Mary «Custis,
who departed this life. TH. years
age, Jan, 18. 1906.
Some may think | have forgotten
oe 'you 2
Phough from earth you long have
a. Rone.
But in memory you are with me,
As you were hefore.
| By her loving daughter,
MES. EMMA GAINES
HIGH—Gane. but net forxutten.
A tribute wt Iny dea husband, Jos:
eph't. High, tho departed this tite
two years ago, Jntuury 20, 1920,
Clit a bill aching bearts,
Piewe annay male Che woth bose
‘Hime will never stop the longing
Bor my: dear husband, whe has
gnine hnvtare.
Survotnded hy friends, 1am dome
| some.
Stn the midst af pleasure 1 any
ines
A stuile on my fave and a heartache
Tajo always thinking of sou.
From’ the world of pain and
sorrow, :
To the lind of pence and rekt,
God bas Giken you, sear husband,
Where you found eternal rest,
His Wife, 5
MARIE HIGH.
HAMMOND—In sul, but loving
remenitinnice ef mg dear wit, whn
denaried this life ane yer ace.
January 1, WL.
Hyom this workl of pain and sor
row.
‘To the ind of Pewee and Test,
God bas taken you, dear wie,
Where you have found eternal
rest.
By her devoted hustand,
JOSEPH 1. HAMMOND.
HAMMOND—In sed but loving
remembrance of mse dear. friend
Tia ‘Homimond «ner Pennington),
who died ane Year age, danuary 16)
121.
You are not forgotten. dear Ida.
Nor ever will you be;
For long as life und memory last
Twill remember thee.
By her friend.
ESTELLE TATE QV IBLI.
JONES—Sarah tones, who died
Jamuuy 17, EAS. four sears azo,
Nv one knows my loneliness,
Hut few have seen ine weep:
U shed my rears from an wehing
heart.
When others are fast asleep.
hy hor mother.
FRANCIS HAWKINS.
THE ‘AFRO-AMERICAN
_
KING—In memory of our helov
ed daughter, Virginia King, whe
died two sears ago, January, 1926
wo years have passed with oul
hearts still sore,
[AN lime goes on we mist her more
Her loving stniles, her welcome fac
No one can fill hee vacant place,
rhe loss was bitter, the sting severe
iro part with her we loved xo dear
[she shall never be. forgoxten,
Never shall her memory fade:
[sweetest thoughts will always lin-
ger
Avound the grave where she wis
kid.
—by her’ Pavents, Sisters und
Brothers, Hagerstown, Md.
LEE—In sad, but loving re-
Imembrance of my dear mother,
Alice ‘Lee, who deparved ule te
two years ago, Jafiuary 12, 1920.
May you rest in pence dean mother
Each day we iiss you more
Frovtung sad years” have passed
away
JYow are Kone, Dut not forgotten
JAS. 1 think of you cach day,
Ly her devoted daughter, MRS.
RICHARD CURTIS, 1455 N. Carey
eel
PURNELL—In sad, but loving
remembrance of my dear daugh:
ter Mamie, who departed this lif
4 years ago, dam. 21, 1918.
My dear beloved daughter
it is sweet to breathe thy name
in life 1 loved you dearly
in death f do the same,
Noble xt her post she stood
}\ daughter kind and true,
Love by rll her friends so well
And kind to all she knew
‘rhe month of January again i
here
"rhe saddest of the year,
I was on this January ‘day
Hrhat my dear daughter passe
away
1 never will furget you daughter
While in this life f stay,
My heart has never been the sam
Since you have passed away,
Hy her loving mother.
"ANNIE PURNELI
| RANDALL—In sad. but loving
remembraiee af my dear futher
Solomon” Randall, who dequirted
this life (wo. venue Ko today, Jun:
jury 11, 1920.
Dear father, two years have passed
‘And 1 miss you’ still:
Your plice ean never more be filled.
Sleep on, deur futher. sleep. Utke
your rest:
GoW knew your sufferings, und He
did the best,
He saw your pains here were xe
po great,
[nl opened wide (he Golten Gates.
| tear, fife, ia death, eeotem
bored, by her toving daughter,
VIRGINIA, BROOKS.
‘Today recalls sid memories
OF father xane tu rest,
And those who think of him widay,
Are the onew whe lpeet hin west
[Net dead, there's a sttorious pope
stat owes our serra andl,
Then help us, 0 Lord, to be faithful
That wee may meet father again,
lig his toving son-in-law,
* JOOSEPH LROOKS.
ROSS-— Tn loving remembranee
lof our dear wite and mother Mary
Br, Ross. who departed this” lite
anuary 22, 1915
Jud a Mhoughe of sweet Pemetn-
brance,
Just a memory fond and true,
Just the love ut sweet devotion,
of the ones who think at you,
hay her devoted HUSBAND’ and
‘CHILDREN.
| SUMMERVILLE—In loving re-
wcimberbrance of my dear mother,
Cora, who sweetly sell asteey in
Jesus, January 2h, 1921, one year
ago. touts.
When the world is chegefu? mother.
And siniles ave ‘on each row,
“Oh blame me not for weeping,
For (have no mother now.
Cun L help dut feel so lonely,
When your siveet voice 1 do not
hear,
Kor no words were ever sweeter,
Phan the words of oather dese,
| By her loving daughter,
| MISS ANNA SUMMERVILLE
| WILLIAMS—In sad. tut loving
remembrance of my deay father
Samuel fH. Wiliams, who depart
ed this ite January as, 12%,
‘Mere and more cach day) L iniss
you
Friends may think the wound &s
heated,
But they little know the sorrow
‘That tes in my heart concealed,
‘Sudly missed by.
WIFE AND DAUGHTER
‘Gaston, iA.
PARKER—In loving remem:
brance of our dear daughter, Ber-
nice. who died January 1918,
[Phe midnight stars are -beaming
Upon a silent grave,
Where aleepeth without dreaming
The one 1 could not save.
time eannot iieal my aching heart
Jor Alt her vacant chair,
T iiss you. Oh, how 1 miss you
11 mise you everywhere,
‘By her loving father, and mother
MR. AND MRS, EDWARD PARK-
ER and brother EDWARD, 1126
N, Varey Street.
* CARD OF THANKS
Mv. Perey P. Pride and sister,
Misy Daisy. P, Pride, wish to thank
the Flower Circle of Metropolitan
M. 1. Chureh, the LF. FP. Em-
brotdery Club, their many trlends
and the public in general for their
Kindness dutring the illness of their
mother, Mrs. Surah Ann Pride, snd
for their expressions of sympathy
and bewutiful floral designs at her
death, which took place Monday,
January 9% 1822. Interment in
Richmond, Va., Thursday, January
run.
carp OF THAXKS .....
Mrs. Richard Wafford Sr., of 426
Hutchins Avenue wishes to thank
the many friends and ‘Teacher's
‘Training Class of 1921 for their
sympathy and floral designs xt
the death of Miss BE. Adewide
Watford.
_—<—<—$$—$—_ -——___—
WHAT DOES 1922
te
Will another year tind any |
HH] condition, Your ability to ree
UW tunity shall be the answer.
ate TRE
——_———_
Will another year find any: fmprovement in your Hnancial
condition, Your abllity to recognize and grasp your oppor-
tunity shall be the answer.
. FILM CABINET
‘An estublished manufueturing concern "whieh his more
orders than can be filed with its present cupaelty is desirous
GE raising additional capital for the purpose of increasing
ius output. .
PROTECTION FOR YOUR INVESTMENT
our film cabinet has been appraved by_the Underwriters’
Laboratories, which is maintained by the National Board of
Fire Underwriters and is protected by Patent and applications
for letters patent both in the United States and foreign
countries. .
AN UNUSUAL INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
‘The management ix entrusted 18 men of manufacturing and
lusiness experience who are presatved to offer you an excep
tlonally attracttre proposition in urder to raise the reguired
amount quickly, . s e
We nave prepared a special booklet. setting Forth,
in a more detailed manner the operations, id sy
vantages, and possibilities of our company #3"
and we shall be glad to forward same on ee.
request. Fil in coupon aiached snd ier
maid today or rill at sales offices. sé = of .
' ee oe sx
AMERIGAN FILM-SAFE Se"
Ae
CORPORATION ==
SSS EN
99 : F - me ng
22 Light Street oe is ew
a8 Sf oy
* “ ,
ee 1 ten A dAwerti
Classified Advertisements
—_ a
~Sggrehia Tor rene fovr! WON SALE te com
and five small rooms. Price $4.50| corner, Lifiyette and Division
per Week, at 312 N. Gilmor Street.| Women's and children’s shoes,
‘Apply, MRS. L. WILLIAMS, jand wu. “Childcen's: cteihing
226 Druid Hill Ave. | pecially. ao
$-t 17-Jan.22;
ee Ss Be ee
FOR RENT—One nicely furni¥h-ltinn, ata sacrifiee for auick
ed room far rent: steam heat and [cose $800, will sell Cor $35. A
Cleewie Hghted. Anply. 2437 Me-|Rox L, AFRO-AMERICAN 0
Culloh street BU 15-20-27 |
ee | FOR SALE—AFRO- Route
FOR RENT—911 N. Stricker St.|sale! 50 customers; price $
for rent, furnished or unfurnished |Appiy 3106 Barclay street.
rooms, or apartments. 2t-19-20]/———
rooms oF apartetente, 2-18-20
FOR RENT Secon Noor apart WANTED
mdutn Myint 1500 We hating:
ton street, see WANTED
[APARTMENTS For rent 4884 sees wate with Aint
eter ta the tenon Base er reference to sell cupital stoc
Waele, 312-8. Gilmor Street. Ap- {he Manhattan Auto Company
ph to. rs. Willams 1226 ‘Druid Cement Block Works, | Ine.,
Diy to Mrs. won dnd pice at the Phila
ae sansa Auer, She ee
— FE a EE and women can earn $10 per ¢
FOR RENT—Two neatly fur- |" rite for information.
oiahed front roonis for rent,.xec~ MANHATTAN AUCTO CO.,
piaheg, front, roomie far Tee tet CEMENT BLOCK WORKS i
‘ply 2303 MeCuiloh Street. | Main office 54 Ave, AL Pac
fe 2308 ecutten Steel | age ate are!
FOR RENT—Three-room house- | N. J. es ave AsbURS
keeping apartment, with private ® ude; Ts
bath, ht 1531 MeCulloh street. Ab- pee: Orta
atl ot lea? Mellon sree AG
FOR RENT—House or flats,
2213 Druid Hill avenue. Apply to
Gs W. Suratogn street.
FOR RENT—Up-to-date apart:
ments: gus, electrictty, heat, juni-
tor service. Prices. $10. $12, und
815. Apply, 1608° MeCulioh street.
Cali ALNdison 5446,
FOR RENT—Houses for rent,
1621 W. Lexington street. and 1405
Mosher siteet. Best condition.
Apply 1606 MeCulloh street. Phone
MAdison 5448.
——_______________,-
FOR RENT—Basement for rent
cheup: Suitable: for any purpose.
Apply at 2117 Division street,
FOR RENT—Two furnished
rooms. Price $2.50 and $2.00 per
week. “Apply after 5 p.m. to 147
N.-Fremont_ Ave.
POR RENT—Two four-room
apartments, including gus range
and cabinet, 116 W. 23rd street,
Reasonable charge.
POR RENT—1-3 story house for
rent, 924 N. Stricker, 4 rooms and
bath, “Apply 1356 Fremont ave.
FOR RENT —Two _ furnished
rooms, apply to 383 Druid Hill
‘Avenue.
FOR RENT—Furnished —rooms|
by the week $3.50 of night $1.00,
Apply to 1335 PENNA. AYE,
FOR RENT—2 rvoms furnished
or unfurnished together or sepur-
ate. Apply 1874 N, Carey St.
FOR RENT—Four-room apart-
ment, 953 Diuid Hill avenue,
‘Apply on premises. +
SAFE - T - FiRST
| GARD OF THANKS
We the husband and mother o!
Mrs, Alverta, ‘Palmer, who depart.
Mf ialiite Baturday Dee. 22, 192:
at 6.30 A. M. ‘extend: our sincere
thanks to her pastor Rev. M. H
Davis and Rev. Fredecick Doug-
lass who officiated. ‘We also wish
1o thank her many friends for
to thanuuitol fora) designs and
for their assistance,
fone. paimer and ¥. Clem-
mons
KNIGHTS AND DAUGHTERS
OF HONOR’
Mes Lillian Prattis, Impertal
ontuix of Knights and) Daughters
of Honor, was in the city last week
ax the guest of Mrs, Mary Moseley,
locu! organizer of the ‘Order.
a. W. Harrison Council No. 46
wind oepanized danuary 13, 1923 at
ie deans Hall, “The Imperial
Oratrix associited with Mrs. Jane
ras noth of New York, installed
Darhy lowing ofivers: Andrey
Brown, Regent: Nellle Paul, W.
Brome ure Thompson, H. D.:' Jox-
Mi Ce Langley. P. "Rt Charles
Eee ton, Car, Lucinda Galloway,
Bee ichand bawards, Te Gt
Maria. Morris, O. G.t Archie New-
ton, Orator: Annie ‘Wright. F. Sec-:
Delaware Brown, R. Sec,: Mary
pet eeron, Treus—Xt. 5. Moseley,
Jocal organizer.
FOR SALE—Visit the rummage
corner, Lafayette and Division Sts.
Women's and children’s shoes, 25¢
and up. Children’s clothing es-
pecially, B-6-13-20
VOR SALE—Piany. good vondi-
tion, at n sacrifice for quick sule,
Cost $490, will sell for $35. Apply
Rox L, APRO-AMERICAN Olttee.
FOR SALE—AFRO- Route for
sale! 50 customers; price $2.00.
Apply 3106 Barclay street.
Agents wanted with flrst-class
reference ty sell capital stuck of
the Manhattan Auto Company and
Cement Block Works. Ine., that
Won 2nd prize at the Philadelphia
Autumn Pair. Thrifty young men
and women can earn $10 per day.
Write for information.
MANHATTAN ALTO CO., and
CEMENT BLOCK WORKS, inc.
Main office 54 Avs, A. Factory
17S. Ridge Ave: Asbury Park,
Sd ,
4G Wee. 36, Jun.
NOTICE
Mine. A. J. Kennedy's Her Med-
icine, an old vetiable tonic, has been
on sale Cor yeurs at 1429 15. Monu-
ment street. Tt is still on’ sule att
703 Bradley street. Her successor
Is Miss Bennett. “who alsa solls
toilet articles and Indium Temple
Incense Powder, 25 celts at box.
MONEY TO LOAN
‘On first, second and third mort-
sages or notes on city ov country
property, Consult
PETTY B. GItoss
Duily from 3:30 # M., wo § P.M.
Real Estute Broker
2010 DRUID HILL AVE,
Housgs Bought und Sold.
ecu MAdigon 1403-W. ~
WASHINGTON TAXI Co,
Cars for hire, Sunday and even.
ing ovcasions, ‘Theater, Weddings
Dance and Funerals. Prices Mod:
erate, Day and Night Service, 1707
Druid Hill Avenue.
iia allt
Sa
e10F > Due 1 0Em
$1850 * Buys $1850 |
«i |
Fout-Room Stone Mouse |
IN GOOD REPAIR |
LO 110 BY ABOUT suo PENT}
i DEEP. —1N FEE,
Near Hilton Street, Two Squares}
From Prederitk Road}
REASONABLE TERMS. |
\ AUGUST W. SCHNEPFE|
(222 St.Paul St. PL 1650!
(22 Luz 16
FOR SALE
WANTED
CEE eee TIT IDCLI CERVIC
CHURCH SERVICES
MADISON STHEET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
‘i wv. wine e ‘Street ner. eat ‘Avenue
ev. W. W. Waiker, Pastor esidence 1826 MeCulls
EG Toteeieae ghee nem om
Eph HAR ae el pce, vara Webb, Sup,
8 FM tMfygucerne Banner Year for Madison, Street Church
“ST. JOHN'S A. M. E, OHURCR
Lexington street near Pine Rev, M. H. Davis, Pastor
Baraooage £8, Coors Sah
ES? Bo ai. Men's Bible Class. MWisy Mabel DeCoasey, res,
PEACE EE eee MSS Genet.
sn Speak, ‘Lat”overybody_hent_hlm een peat eee
AMES MEM. M. £- ‘CHURCH ALLEN A. di BE. CHURCH
ca st Cor, Lexingts «tC Si
MI, M. ©. CHURCH | cor. Lexington and ‘Carlton Streets
—sirtitiam BH, 2
Rev. William H, Dean, Pastor
1A, M, Class meetings,
SoA ML Adult Bible Classes,
10 A AG “pastor's sublect. “One
Man, And God Jn Battle.
ag, M Sunday School
FR Wy Megered Stusteale by Com
manweaith Band, Prof, Chest
tarris teader.._Auspices Epworth
League, Silver offering.
‘fo P.M. Brotherhood.
Sp Nk, Pastor's, subsect “Out
Afi Out For The Lord.”
Amie 8 Peat, A stand sacred
cantata “the ‘Salvation Of Janae
cana vy Junior choir—Sollsts;
rentéra Johnson, Jesse Bennett, Lola
‘Fhomas, “Mamie” McCoy, Maud” Mone
tae. Marin Holland,’ Pearl | Hil
Mire. Harry Dison, Ellsworth
Newey, Admission Ide. Refresh-
ments,
Friday $ P.M. Prayer Meeting
Teiday§ P.M. Children's” Church
School.
Wednesitay § P.M Jr. ip. League
Maes mectings each night 8 PM:
x'Warm Welcome Awaits You At
Ames.
ASBURY M. E, CHURCH
Rogers Avenue and East Street
Rev. 8. H. Brown, D. D. Pastor
Parsonage 1820 2, Eager Street
SUNDAY SERVICES
11 A, Ate Sermon No, JV “The Youns
Man Thinikimg" by Une pastor.
2130 P. aE Sunday School
Chas, °P, ‘Stewart, Supt.
SIP" y. tev, dW, Noctis of Waters
A.M. EE Choreh with chotr and con:
S40 PML Epworth League
730 1M. Sacred Concert by the
Regent Orchestra,
ve
CENTENNIAL M, B. CHURCH
Rev. Walter A. English, Pastor
Parsonage 84 8. Caroline Street
SUNDAY SERVICES
19.4. ML Junior Church, Miss Clara
suuntes, Supt,
Tix AM Sermon, by pastor. theme
“the ‘Vrotixal Son", All “converts
during tecent revival, and those con-
verted since the pastorate of Rev.
English, will be admitted nto full
membership. at" this. service, | Others
Sesleing. to unite with the chureh by
jlecter Will please be present.
30 "P.M -Sunday School, | Prot.
Wiiteru szrig, Supt, Mrs" Joseph
‘Ler, Assistant Supt,
(Fad TE St. Ridaleie Chapter 1:pworth
‘Ladsue, Mine, Helen Cooper” Dean,
Kresident. An” exellent program
will be rendered.
iad FM Sermon, pastur, theme
vesowings “And ‘Teapink” The hel
eney Conierenceo¢ the Baltimore
Bisteiee wit hold ‘ity first session at
ile chureh, Wednesday dau. “25th,
Res, HS. Williams 0. D. District
Suni. ee Baliminte, District wi
ines
FIRST COLORED BAPTIST
| CHURCH
| Corner Caroline and MeEiderry
‘Hee, Aibert J. Greene, A. B,D. D.
Pastor
Residence 1541 BE. Madison Street
SUNDAY JANUARY. 22nd
11 A. ML Serio be pastor
L30 BAL Bible Sehoot
PPB YPC
8 PAL Scrnion by pastor wy Volun-
eer ClReic,
| _. WEEKLY SERVICES .
_ Wednestiay night” Women's Mis:
sioiutry society
“Tharsis misine business: meeting
Friday hight Prayer: meeting.
Communion First Sunday 3.30 0, M.
Morris Myers, Chureh Ceri:
aie MEIC GE GUUnGA
fe Seon OPCs. een
| “Residence 1219 MeCulton St.
SUNDAY SERVICES
joty a. a Class
HON Ae Pretening by Hee. Join
ace,
SE0'Ti af, Sunday. Senoo!
Th Nagtors Bible Class
1D MC Cipltian ‘indeavor
SB OM Breathing by hes.
cal
Hovivat servicos sims on, all
invited. to take parti theee, sete
One Monday: wate we ster araira
will be, played bythe WB. S, Een:
Title “fe Way! of the Cross”
Ngo, ‘thomas: Mureay, Sept
Sister’ Hattie Woods; Pres: C. E,
CALVARY A. M. ©, %, CHURCH
Mulberry Bet. Pine & Myrtte ve.
Rev. Joseph L. Butler, Pastor
Tone Canert Ode
Ine Ee etinone the pastor
Bhd ts Suny Sesh
Ai" "Spel service Be the Ie
search Cireie ‘of Christe. instituton
tnten the direetion_of ates, ‘Ones.
nf ak Varick Cinteavor tease
4 FM. Steet. “Man ‘Overbonea
a lreuver’ meeting Weanetay en
im st xe
Tass meeting Eriday § P.M.
Miss" Gthering Howards Supt
Sampo, em ee
George E, Fating. Organs
Bro. Robert F. Wiltums, See
The Great Faith Healer
Of Roots Is Here!
Ay suns und daugiters of God,
are you suffering with this eating
cancer or sores of any kind, oF
swelling eg, feet or bad bivod
which you have been wishing to
hea of some one who could cure
them.Now is the Ume to get_ well,
My price is cheap. — Hale down,
Call or write, it you cans walk
Hours: 7 9 A.M. 6 to 10:30
aM. WILLIE DAVIS, 1349 N,
Stricker St, Baltimore, Md. (See:
und floor.)
eee eae
The pagernt. “the jvertasting
Light,” held at Centennial Mt
Church Monclay night, under the
digection of Mrs. Helen Cooper
Beun, was x grand success. ‘The
church was beautifully decorated
with streamers,
Among those who took prurt
were:
JIS. Wm, Blake, Mrs. George Wil:
Hains,” Mrs.” Betnucd Harris, Tenors:
Walter Queen, James ‘Travers, Verne
Bishop, Robert Collins, Bernard Short
et. Wilbert Harris: John Hughes,
Westy” Goldsboro, Bass: Joli
Hughes Jr, Wm. stohdewer, Asbury
Howatd, Win, "“Buike, taok Mon
downey, Jolin Hawks, Bernard
Marris," keaders: Mey. Walter’ Queen,
Mrs, Jolin F. Camphor, Miss inner
Goleman, Mr- Chas. Voders, electrician,
Children: ‘tide: Coviagton,'Sarah Hin:
gon, Helen Carr, Delle Carr, Margare
Curtis, Laure Fonteroy, Bernice Wil
Yaw, Glady# Camphor,” Blanore. Jone
Mildred June, ‘Berth’ ord, Gladys
Seott. Gertrude Fowler, Florence Pur
viunee, “Louise Purviaive. Madam
Helen "Couper: Dean Director, “Luther
C. Mitchel. urantst. Sopratios, Mes:
danies Jumey/Thomas, Janes Suinders
John E. Cuhper. Clarence” Marsal
Levi ‘Thomas, Walter A.” nislish
Howard ‘Terr’, Georgia Jones, Misses
Lilllay Fowles, “Carrie "Garr, Mary
Keyser, Louise Penn, ‘Coguine Yuung,
Sarah Bowen, Jerome Wells and Altos:
Mrs, Chatles Briscoe, Mrs.” Join
Hughes, ‘and’ Mrs, Leroy Jackson,
PAGE TWO
ALLEN A. MK, CHURCH
Cor. Lexington and Carlton St
Rev, C; Harold Steptest, D.'D. pester
‘segioning Of Wevival Sceviees
11 A. M.-Sermon- by Rev. Dre Na.
thanlel” Harghorne Jeltz B.D, van:
get at the Decota’s ” subleet Ua]
Speaks.”
9:30_P. M., Sunday School,
| You should come to this serviey,
4:30 BP. M., Allen C. 1. League,
Tho junior” League presenty
aria, unite, gue urate
Ts, Hear this beautiful dram,
SBM Hey. Dr. Nathaniel Har.
thorne’Jeltz, “Good Singing,
‘Arthur- Stansbury, Director.
HD. Brent, Supi.
Wim, i. Butler, Prom A.C. i,
WATERS A, M. E. CHURCH
Rev. J. W. Norris, D. D. Pastor
Parsonage 427 Aisquith Street
Revival Services. Continued
JL ALM. Sermon” bse Messenger
Gwynn,” 9." D.- subject, “Thank God
For Bread And Turkey. Too"
E20 P.M. Sunday. School
530 BL ML Allen C.E. League
Progra in eharge of Mr Charis
Langtord,
BoP. Mf, Sermon by Messeugee
Gwynn subject, “On Bruadway"
Friday 8 P. 36. Boy's ‘Training Cluss
Mr. C. A Cary, teacher
Mr, Frederick Scott, Supt,
Mr J.P. Waters, Secretary
Mrs,"itmma Stanter, Press of b,
‘TRINITY A. M. FE. CHURCH
Biddle Street and’ Linden avenue
Rev. A. L. Gaines, D. D. Pastor
Parsonage 1522 MeCulloh Stree
11 A.M. Sermon by’ jiustor,
2.30 PR. M, Sunday: Schou!
6PM. A.C. E League
7.30 P.M Sermon by i native uf
South Arrica,
[arse INDEPENDENT AE,
CHERCH
Biddle near Pennsylvania Avenue
Rey. L. C. Curtis, D. D. Pastor
Residence 1212 Argyle Avenue
32, Mt Sermon’ bythe ‘pastor.
230 b. St, Sunday School
| ©. Cairoli, “Superintendent
S o'clock League
‘T, B, Sinnibs,. Mresident
7.30 P.M, Sermon by the pastor
Ail are welcome to our setvieus
CHRIST INSTITUTION CHURCH
Ensor Street near Monument
Dr. G. W. Kennard, Pastor
1AM. Sermon by Kev. Wilbert
Brown.
£30 P.M. Sunday Sehoot
7.30 BOM. Sermon be Kec. Archer
AIS, Spiritoar and Test) serview
‘All are invited:
ST. JOHN'S M. P. E. CHURCH
Tessier and Orchard Sirects
Bishop Roy B. Mohr. D. D. Acting
mucins’
Rev, Albert 9. Juhneon Asst.
CAIN Bier ‘CotSty bs
TALS, Bighon Mobr subscet “And
Hee $a Him No Ainze"" 2 Rinse. tists
| a Pea. Rev. Aquitla, Brook ete bf
“his. famous ‘sermons.
asrother” John Kells, Wan fear
and Bands from the qoutes ik
Prayermeeting,
Bt ie Steuting
waver meetings
Sui ME Rew. 1, W. ores tum
Washington, D.C wit preach.
GRACE PRESBY, CHURCH
Etting and Dolphin Streets
Rev, JE. Cotbert, B.D. Pastor
Divine’ worship att". Maal 9
1 Me Sermon by the pastor
Sunday School ae gM
Supt. dtr. Wo Douighisa Jolasen
Yori" ee eotdalyweletie (tes
SE DURES U. AM. b. CHERCH
Spring; near’ MeiWierry street
Kev. J.-H. Johnson,” Vasor
Parsonage 1416 K, Madison Steet
Serelees’ as Follows
JL A.M. Sermon: by. the pastor
2.0 BAL Stnday’ Schon!
3PM, The savear atl bee Hevaeier
gC SL Like Orphan sevhint supe
by “hie “Juveniie Jubien Singer ant
4 Year old girl ii tie behalf at
Sister Maria chines sui sleter chioe
Efforts Yor said church
$30 2M Sacred Recital emndactel
by" Hrofesur Mares. Bil
§ BL Sk Setmion by. the. gaser
AU ave’ Welcome
Bro."'Enas. Ottord, Chureti Clerk
THE PEOPLE'S CHRISTIAY
Gants
| Cor. Bond and Jeiterson Streets
| Rev. C. Ed. Browne, Pastor
Parsonage 132 N. Boil Sireet
#20 A.M Class “meeting
31 AS SE Serinnn by the pastor
| 2302 3E Sunday School
BOP. Mt. Special serves by the
Ustier Bowed, “Kev. We. Enis
|Pustor or Cencenmias Ni. is. "eine
‘will preach, with ehvir and eonzrear
Yon AU Csher Boards) are respect
fully invited. ‘
820.P ay. p. Leacue
S/R. M Setmon and Tevival services
Nest week fevival services cl
Augted by the pastor.
The Friendly Chureh for Friend:
ly Folks,
CoE. Perry, Churely Clerk
ST. MATTBEWS M. F. CHURCH
E.'23rd St, near Greenmount Ave
Rev, i. A. Groen, Pastor
Parsonage 437 E. 28rd Street
John Carter, S. S."Supt.
Aine “Smith. “Assi, “Supt
Sunshine™ Social, Hisie, Jones, Pres
E, Leayue Vresitent, Sk. axland
Jr, "E, Leazue Present, Mant cary
Wrotherhood Joshua fuller, Cees
Ladios Nid Soviets. 2, Fuller. Pres
Childrei’s) services tinder auspices
ff dt. Be Ls field every: Tuesday’ ever
iz,
TL. ML Preaching services
2.30 PB, AT, Sunday’ Sehonl
P.M Lease Servier.
S$ in MM Sernion Uy the jastor to the
‘Sunshine’ Social»
‘All are invited.
Reopening of Music Stulio
WII Open Her Stuitio
MONDAY, JANUARY 2
At her residence
211 DRUID HILL AVE:
New students sre asked! to resister
av once for the mew term, hesiitiNs
January, Monday 2. 12+
Phone MAdison 5218
athens Manan etlS see
GUILD GIVES SUPPER
St. Joseph's Guild eve 16 Best
annual salad super at St Bethe
erine’s PLB, Church Weiluesdas
evening. “Joseph, friscoe Is pre
ident, tind ‘Phonvas 'T. Hoss, sete
tary.
Steer reer aa
DIRECTORS TO MEET
The old Board of Directors, of
the Grand United Order of Nit
arites, heudde hy: Addison Staevis
will Hotd es munuity weeting #8
Priday night. 7
‘The new board was recently We
strained trom serving Us cont
order, and ity eligibility will be Or
cided’ in the receivership Wrote
ings instituted by,the old board.
IN THE SOCIAL WORLD
Personal Notices, Births, Marriages, Receptions, and other Society News of Interest
HI JA
HONEY CHEESE
FOR SHELLS AND
BREADS
POKE 25 CIALS
Mr. Oscar Thompson, newspaper man, is out after a brief illness.
Mrs. Lavinia Smith has returned to Newark, after visiting Dr. and Mrs. Walter J. Jackson, 1618 W. Mulberry Street.
Mrs. Rita Dennis, 1529 Presstman Street, gave a dinner for Rev. and M. K. T. Winn.
Dr. John H. Dickerson, of Fellgate. Mih. was in the city the week visiting his mother, Mrs. Dickerson, and sister, Mrs. S. A. Viral.
Dr. Thomas H. Brown, 131 W. Hamburg Street, entertained a number of friends at his home at Magathay. Md., on Wednesday of last week.
Miss Martha M. Diggs of Atlantic City spent the holidays visiting her mother and sister Mrs. Chara Diggs and Iona M. Hill of Laureus Street, also relatives and friends.
Miss Pattiece Thompson, of Lutherville, Md., was the week-end guest of Miss Marie E. Springgs, of Ames Avenue.
"The Tourn" was the subject discussed by the Val Flitzgerald Medical Club composed of physicians which met in the residence of Dr. J. W. Ishwin, Monday. Ms. Wai Gaines of McCulloch's, who has continued to bed for a week, has recovered. Mrs. Phibiscus S. Moore has returned to home in Ashbury Park, after a pleasant visit with her family and friends. Mrs. Moore was formerly a school of this city. On Wednesday evening, the S. S. Bindleybury Club was opened by Mrs. Gilbert at her residence (the McCulloch street). The encore was Mrs. Clus, Powell and Mrs. G. H. Armstrong. The San Sandi Wah Club was elegantly entertained at the residence of Dr. and Mrs. Dan Brown of Pride and Prejudice. A most enjoyable evening.
Mr. George Birch, of New York City and Ms. Sasie Jones of Boston, were the guests of Mrs. Emma Hopkins of 1194 Lexington street.
Mr. Bradley Fisher, of Howard Faber, went to the week-end with her mother and sister at 1614 McCullah street.
The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. William Carter will be chased in that the small fire at their home last week; no one was seriously burned.
Mr. A. Moss H., of Newark, N.J. is getting her parents, Reg. and Mrs. A. L. Claines, of McCullah street.
Congratulations St. Chip, of Chelsea was in the city Monday morning My friend, George Watty, sworn in as Deputy Collector in the Internal Revenue Department.
Mr. Sarah E. Jackson, a prominent member of Hopkins M. E. Church, and December 26th.
Mrs. Mangle Stevenson, 545 Robstreet street have a party in honor of her two little nieces, Mildred and Amy Thompson of Churchton, Md. Quite a number of little folks were present.
The children of the Northwest section are buried in their premises of the Fontenelle Club of the N. W. C. A. which treated fifty children in the Christmas holidays, Miss Alma Francis, its president and Miss Cindy Barnes, secretary, and Mrs. Raymond N. May of 527 Burlington street, Baltimore, Md. are spending the winter in North Carolina, Mr. May is taking treatment at Oteen Hospital, N. C. They are hoping to join their friends in Baltimore in the early closing.
Mrs. Eibl- Thompson and two
daughters have returned to
Churchton, Md., after spending the
holidays with her grand parents,
fors and Mrs. T. H. Bryan and her
sister, Mrs. Ellen Trettor, 12061;
Mcculloh street, and her son,
Mrs. Mamie Stevenson, 515 Robert
Street.
Every Monday night at the
Community House you will bear
J.W. (Fess) and his choreo-
m of 100 voices in rehearsal. Wait
for this large presentation.
MISS FLORENCE COLLINS says III-Ha
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Send 50 cents today for a box of Hair Dressing and a bottle of Hi-Ja Cocoanut Quinine Shampoo, or send $1.00 and get four boxes Hair Dressing and 1 bottle of Shampoo free. It is necessary to use Hi-Ja Shampoo for best result with your hair. Start this Beauty Treatment today.
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HI-JA CHEMICAL CO.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA U. S. A.
Miss Maud Hayward is ill at her home 716 Dolphin Street.
Mrs. Lavania Smith has returned to Newark, N. J., after visiting Dr. and Mrs. Walter J., Jackson, 1618 W. Mulberry Street.
Mrs. Jane Darby, of New York, sister of Mr. Robert Turner, was in the city last week.
Mrs. Mildred Williams, 1214½ Pennsylvania avenue, is visiting in New York City.
Mrs. Estelle C. Young, of Drulph Hill avenue, spent the week end in Washington, D. C., as the guest of Mrs. Essie Biddle-Brown of L street, N. W.
The condition of Miss Anne Smith, high school teacher, who has been seriously ill with pneumonia, is reported as being improved.
Mrs. Albert Corbin has returned to her home in Gloucester, Va. after spending the holidays with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Eartow Morman, 220 W. Hoffman street.
Mrs. E. N. Parks, of New York City; Mrs. Eusele T. Mayer and daughter, and Mrs. M. A. Taylor, of Washington, D. C., spent Sunday with Rev. and Mrs. W. W. Walker, 1825 Mculloh street.
Mrs. Emily Johnson, 1523 Druid Hill avenue, spent a few days in Washington, visiting her sister, Mrs. Annie Wright.
Mr. H. Ramsey, of the Howard University Law School, was in the city and attended the dance given by Mrs. J. J. Wheeler.
Mrs. Lottie Peaker of 1499 Druid Hill avenue is seriously ill.
Mr. and Mrs. William Minor, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Minor, and Master is cousin to Washington, D. C., spent Sunday with their cousin, Mr. Ed. Harris, who has been critically ill, but is much improved now.
Miss Adelaide Wafford, who was buried on Tuesday from Antioch Baptist church was a member of the graduating class of June, 1821. Colored Training School, but owing to ill health has never been able to teach. She was the youngest daughter of Mrs. Emily Wafford, of 426 Hutchens avenue, Govans.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rochester celebrated their fifth anniversary of a dinner given on last Sunday evening. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. Albert Smith, Lawyer and Mrs. J. S. Davis, Dr. and Mrs. Robinson, Misses Alice Waring, and Evelyn Henderson, Dr. Walter Emily.
Mrs. Laura J. Wheatley returned from a tour of the West. Beginning Christmas, she was the guest of Mrs. Helen Armenstroff, St. Louis, Misses Purnis, and Evelyn Henderson, Dr. Walter Emily.
Mrs. Laura J. Wheatley returned from a tour of the West. Beginning Christmas, she was the guest of Mrs. Helen Armenstroff, St. Louis, Misses Purnis, and Evelyn Henderson, Dr. Walter Emily.
Mrs. Laura J. Wheatley returned from a tour of the West. Beginning Christmas, she was the guest of Mrs. Helen Armenstroff, St. Louis, Misses Purnis, and Evelyn Henderson, Dr. Walter Emily.
Miss Sophia Watty was the hostess at a very elaborate dinner given on Sunday, January 8th, at her residence, 808 Dallas street, at which time quite a few of her most intimate friends were present. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Juno, Nixon, Dr. and Mrs. Juno, Robinson, Mr. and Misc. C. Wesley, Mr. and Mrs. Dorssey, Mr. and Mrs. Merchant, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell, Mrs. Webb, Dorssey Glassee, Miss Myrtle Dorssey, Mr Watty, Mr. Juno, B. Lewis.
OUT OF TOWN GUESTS AT
THE ROYAL PALACE HOTEL
Goo, Socken, Philadelphia, Pa;
Frank Ellis, Jr., New York; Mr.
and Mrs. Scocavans, New York;
Louis Payton, New York; Mr. and
Mrs. E. V. Ewing, New York; Mr.
and Mrs. John P. Jackson, New
York; Mr. and W. E. Gonzales,
Philadelphia, Joa. W. E. Simmons,
Boston, Mass; Samuel M. H.
C.; G. E. Veat, D. C.; Mr.
John Pauftersoy, Hyattville, Md.
Rev. R. T. Winn, Rev. J. H. Tay-
lor, Rev. M. D. Willis, Rev. M.
Winston, Rev. Simon, Rev. W. W. Allen were guests of Rev. Junius Gray at a luncheon at the Royal Palace Hotel Monday
attention.
In the discussion of affairs of the
boarded Baptist Convention it was
decided that the Board of Managers
is responsible for activities
when the convention is not in session.
Miss Jennie Chambers, 516 W. Cross Street, is quite ill.
Music of French and German composers was discussed at the January meeting of the DuBois Circle, held at the residence of Miss Carrie L. Cook, 526 W. Lavale street, Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. E. L. Stephan presented a paper dealing with a group of French and German composers. B. Rhetta gave an outline of the work of several German masters.
Church Officials
Officials of Psalmist Baptist Church were guests of the pastor, Rey. Junius Gray at a luncheon at the Royal Palace Hotel, Thursday night. Matters of interest to the church were discussed. Those present included Mesdames Ida Johnson, Lucy Stannery, Steve Fields, Michele Stovall, Steven Curtis, Emma Fox, Agnes: Hall, Rosa Lane, Carrie Wright, Bertie Savage, 'and Messrs: Cornell Lewis, Pretty Cockrell, James Lewis, Ernest Harvey, Maynard McKenney and W. E. Hammond.
CORRECTION
Mrs. S. W. Miller had as herguis of honor at her home 1210 Harlem Avenue, January 2, among many others Miss Florence Clash a 1 Mr. Wydhe Johnson.
LADIES AUXILIARY ELECTS
The Ladies' Auxiliary of the David Hill Avenue Branch of the Y. M. C. A. hold their regular meeting at the "Y" building, and elected the following officers for 1922: Mesdames Ida Hilton, president; Sarah Dotson, vice-president; Kate Gwathney, vice-president; Lillian Lotter, recording secretary; Mattie Gwathney, corresponding secretary; Grace Murphy, treasurer; Ella Baskerville, chaplain; Elizabeth Keys, chairman house committee; Helen Smith, chairman of Sunshine Committee; W. S. Emerson, chairman membership committee; Ella Overton, chairman banking committee; Ella Overton, chairman will hold their winter festival February 14th to 22nd, inclusive. Many new features have been added to the program this year.
Married Fifty Years
Cards are out announcing the fifteenth wedding anniversary of Captain ant-Mrs. William R. Spencer, 4402 St. George avenue, Govans, Monday, January 30, 1922, from 8 to 10 p. m., at the residence of their daughter, Mrs. A. A. Denver, 1200 Argyle avenue.
The Mu-So-Lit Club of Washington, D. C., has elected the following officers for the ensuing year: President, Dr. C. Sumner Wormley; first vice-president, Maj. Milton F. Dean; second vice-president, Dr. U. J. Daniels, and secretary-treasurer, James C. Burils. House committee: M. S. Spencer, J. H. Polk and George H. Murray. Board of directors: Dr. A. M. Curtis, Mortimer M. Hays, W. L. Houset, J. C. Dowling, Walter J. Singleton, Dr. C. C. Terry, Morris S. Koonee, G. Fred, Cook, and Dr. C. S. Wormley. Auditing committee: M. Grant Lucas, Charles E. Hall, and William L. Wilkinson.
SOCIAL ORGANIZE
SOCIAL ORGANIZATION
The Golden Eagle Social
composed of members of Monumental Lodge of Elks, and the Woman's Auxiliary, has been organized for social purposes.
The officers are: E. L. W. Scott, president; Mrs. Laura Faggens, vice president; Harvey Waters, secretary, and Mrs. Bertie Williams.
A BIRTHDAY PARTY
Mrs. Georgia Jones was given a birthday party by her friends last Wednesday evening, January 11, at her residence, 1332 McCullah street. Those present were: Mrs. Percy, Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson, Mrs. Minnie Baker, Mrs. Benzenia Wilson, Mr. E. Goodl, Mr. Jerome莉, Mr. William Perry, Edward Scott, Miss Jenna Alexander, Mr. H. Hopkins, Mr. Robert Smith, Mr. C. Cooper, Mr. Edward Matthews of Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Minnie Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Hoppen, Mr. Griffin, Mr. Samuel Kai, Mr. Joe Bell, Mr. Alexine Missella Babb, Mrs. Alice Askins, Mrs. R Young, Mr. A. Collins and Mr. J.
Reuse.
The guest were ushered to the table which was laden with delicacies of the season. A very enjoyable evening was spent.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
The serious illness of one of Baltimore's oldest citizens, Mrs. Annie E. Shields, 1521 Drudt Hill avenue, remains unchanged. Her mang devoted friends wish her a speedy recovery, with sincere regrets for her illness.
MARRIED
Mr. Bruce T. Holland and Mrs. Martha E. Smith, both of Frederick, Md., were quietly married Tuesday evening at the home of Smith, 642 Josephine street, by Rev. M. H. Davis, of St. John's A. M. E. Church.
CLUB ORGANIZED
This is to hereby notify the public in general that, Mrs. Sydney Jane Frey, of 1618-Linden avenue, has been elected and officially recognized as the president of the 111th ward Colored Female Republican Club. The next meeting of the club will be Wednesday, January 25th, 5 p. m., at 823 Linden avenue. Mrs. Frey requests the presence of all the colored women of the 111th ward, as the meeting will have an important bearing on the
women voters of the ward.—Vice-
Pres., Mrs. Chas. Wise, Sec.; Mrs.
Mary Smith.
MADE OF PURE CREAM
MERINGUES filled w
1702 DRUID HILL AVE.
Clark
ICE CREAM
E OF PURE CREAM NO ADULTERATION
GUES filled with Assorted Cre
ND HILL AVE. MAL
Clark
ICE CREAM
MADE OF PURE CREAM NO ADULTERATION
MERINGUES filled with Assorted Cream
1702 DRUID HILL AVE. MAD. 7176-J
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We are offering our
and Women's Coats and
PRICE to make room
which is already begin
These garments are
tions of this season
minute in style, mat
Come in and secure B
SAMUEL
1214½ P
PHONE:
Opening Evenings until 9
BALTIMORE'S NEW
Royal Pa
We are offering our entire stock of M. Women's Coats and Suits at a very L. E to make room for our SPRING L. is already beginning to arrive.
These garments are all new choice so of this season's purchase and to date in style, material and workman
and secure BARGAINS while th
SAMUEL L. BURTON
1214½ Penna. Avenue
PHONE: MADISON 4821
Evenings until 9 Saturday, 1
BALTIMORE'S NEWEST AND BEST HOTEL
Royal Palace H
We are offering our entire stock of Men's and Women's Coats and Suits at a very LOW PRICE to make room for our SPRING LINE which is already beginning to arrive.
These garments are all new choice selections of this season's purchase and to the minute in style, material and workmanship.
Come in and secure BARGAINS while they last
BALTIMORE'S NEWEST AND BEST HOTEL
Royal Palace Hotel
Café D'Amour
THE HOTEL with
own home. The place
equipment and service
faction and complete
20 Rd
Cafetera and Lunchroomf
1631 PENNS
Next Door
CALL, WRITE OR TEL
E HOTEL with the quiet atmosphere
home. The place where refinement,
ment and service are combined to g
en and complete comfort.
20 Rooms, Sun Parlor
ea and Lunchroomf
Private D
1631 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
Next Door To Regent Theatre
L, WRITE OR TELEPHONE FOR RESERVE
THE HOTEL with the quiet atmosphere of your own home. The place where refinement, superior equipment and service are combined to give satisfaction and complete comfort.
NOTICE
MARRIED
C. H. JONES Prop.
Celebrates 53rd Birthday
[Picture of a man in a suit and tie].
Mr. Wm. A. Butler celebrated his 53rd birthday Thursday at his home. 1329 Myrth avenue.
COAT AND SUIT SALE AT BURTON'S
our entire stock of Men's and Suits at a very LOW price for our SPRING LINE running to arrive.
are all new choice selec-tions purchase and to the material and workmanship.
BARGAINS while they last
L. BURTON
Penna. Avenue
MADISON 4821
Saturday, 12 P. M.
WEST AND BEST HOTEL
Palace Hotel
MME. J. CREDITTE JONES
Manager
the quiet atmosphere of you
face where refinement, superior
are combined to give satis-
comfort.
Roms, Sun Parlor
Private Dining Room
SYLVANIA AVENUE
Or To Regent Theatre
TELEPHONE FOR RESERVATIONS
Prices Smashed As Never Before!
Our Entire Stock of Newark
Shoes For Women
Now On Sale At
Tremendous Reductions!
Women from all parts of the city and vicinity are flocking to this sensational bargain event. Never have we held a sale that proved so popular with thrifty folk. In this event you will see superlatively fine shoes at unbelievably low prices—far below anything you have seen in reliable footwear in many years. No woman with an eye to money-saving can afford to miss this wonderful opportunity. COME TO MORROW.
No matter what your ideas in footwear are, you will find exactly what you are looking for here at these astoundingly low prices. Boots, Oxfords, One and Two Strap Pumps and Sandals. Hand turned and welt soles; prime quality leathers—brown, tan and black calf skin, kidskin, suede, patent colt, patent kid in all styles of heels, Military, Cuban, French and Baby Louis. All sizes and widths, represented in these huge assortments. COME TOMORROW.
MARRIAGES
MARRIAGES
Licenses obtained from the
Clerk of the Court of Common
Pligs, Court House. Hours 8 to
4-Saturdays 8 to 1.
JOHNSON—GRAYS—Ell 24, 908
Elm Place; Della, 28.
TAYLOR—MACOB—JOHN R. 21,
1623 Riggs Avenue; Blanche C.
BAYONT—BAGLEY—Edward C.
21, 623 Broad Street; Genevieve
29, divorced.
GRAYS—PEATT—Thomas M.
37, Lessie C., 27, widow, 678
Sarahann St.
JOHNSON—JACKSON —William,
21, 312 Mytle avenue; Viola, 21,
COLTON—CASTON—James E., 21,
1434 Belvedere street; Estella,
1340 Cullibbon street; Edna, 24.
HATTEN-REPEAT Log. 26, 506 S.
Wilson; Wicka, 24.
JACKSON-BARNES-William, 47, 212.
Division street; Manie, 34.
COOPER-REYNOLDS - Thomas H. 29, 1106 Mculloh street;
Matilda, 23.
STEWART-DICKSON - Spencer 46, widower; Annie, 28, both of Wash. D. C.
TUTWILER-JORDAN - Payton 202 N. Central Ave.; Mattie 96.
CARRINGTON-RANDALL - Roland, 21, 347 Camel St.; Rhel 21.
WASHINGTON-HOPKINS - Wm R. 24, 735 Sarah Ann; St. Mary L. 22.
SAMPSON-BROWN - Clinton D. 29, 1071 W. Lexington St.; Margaret 26.
FISHER-PROCTOR-Wm. A. 57, widower, 1732 McCulloh Street;
Sedonia, 51, widow.
DR. HACHMAN
DENTIST
DR. HACHMAN
DENTIST
119 N. EUTAW ST.
Phone: Mad. 3198-W
MRS. M. E. WILSON
427 Mosher St.
DRESSMAKER AND LADIES
TAILOR
Price
Sma
As N
Befo
Women from all parts
bargain event. Never hav
In this event you will see
below anything you have
an eye to money-saving ca
MORROW.
Thousands
At Three
$1 98
Values up to
No matter what you
looking for here at these
Strap Pumps and Sandals
brown, tan and black ca
of heels, Military, Cuban,
ed in these huge assortme
Newar
The Largest
OPERATING
Tw
203-205 N. Eutaw St.
Opposite Lexington Market
103 W. Lexington St.
Next to Corner Liberty St.
919 W. Baltimore St.
Near Poppleton St.
1044 S. Charles St.
Corner Cross St.
114 E. Baltimore St.
Next to Hotel Emerson
BARNETT—BERRY—John H. 40.
Divorced. $62 Park Ave.; Carrie.
HUDSON-CORNISH — Leroy, 18;
Lauretta, 16.
HAYWOOD-THOMPSON — William,
22. Fremont avenue; Mil-
tured, 19.
GRAY-BROWN — Charles, 24.
1915 Pennia, avenue; Hannah,
18.
HOLLAND-SMITH — Bruce T., 40.
Frederick, Md.; Martin E., 50.
JONES-WOOLFORD — Charles A.
34. 1824 Druid Hill avenue;
Nellie, 26.
BILLINGSTER-SMITH — Howard,
21. Washington, D. C.; Thelma,
21.
COLBERT — PRICE — Herman, 44.
1250 Wooly Street; Julia, 41.
BERRY-ELLIES — William 20, 923
Morris Street; Rose, 18.
BYRD — CLEE — William 27.
Dladenburg, Md.; Stella, 25.
Dladenburg, Md.
Mr. John Ridgley of 1527 Argyle-
Avenue, has gone to Columbus.
Ohio to play with the Delaware
Orchestra.
Mr. George T. Brent, Past Exhalled Ruler of the Elks, of 124 N. Corcy Street, had as his house at lunchon on last Friday at noon, Mr. Easil F. Hutchins of Boston, Mass.
NEWPORT NEWS
Y. M. C. A.
VS.
BALTO. Y. M. C. A
(Big Five)
IN A
BASKETBALL CONTEST
AND THE
"Y" PIRATES
VS.
CUMBERLAND A. C.
(White)
Friday, January 20th
At 8 P. M.
ADMISSION: 25c
111
one eleven
cigarettes
Three TURKISH
Friendly VIRGINIA
Gentlemen BURLEY
The perfect blend of the three
perfect cigarette tobacco
in one perfect cigarette
one-eleven
cigarettes
15% for 20
GET THE DeWITT HABIT
Let Us Do Your Baking
THE
DeWitt Daylight Home Baking
COMPANY
562 Laurens St.
Bread, Rolls, Pies, Cakes
HOT ROLLS TWICE DAILY
Mornings 8-9 Evenings 5-6
Phone: MADISON 8213-J
FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922
REVIVALS
Revival services are in progress in churches throughout the city, many conversions being reported. Dr. G. Churchill of Edmond, Va., is in charge of the campaign at Macedonia Baptist Church, Rev. J. G. Robinson of Philadelphia, is conducting services at Trinity A. M. E. Baptist Church at Union Baptist Church came to a last Friday night.
One of the most beautiful events of the season was a formal reception and dance given by Mrs John Jones-Wheeler, on Tuesday at Phythian Castle in honor of her husband's fifteenth anniversary.
Some of those noted were:Mr and Mrs. H. Grafton Brown, Mr and Mrs. Ashbie Hawkins, Mr and Evans Fernandis, Dr. and Mrs Arnold, Dr. and Mrs. Dan Brown, Dr. and Mrs. John Dinkin and Mrs. P. G. Chissell, Dr. and Mrs. Frank Cardoza, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Callis, Mr. and Mrs. C. Carrington Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Braxton, Mr. and Mrs. Winford J. Braxton, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Bunkett, Dr. and Mrs. G. D. Gilbert, Dr. and Mrs. John Dinkin and Mrs. P. G. Poinington, Dr. and Mrs. H. S. McCard, Lawyer and Mrs. William McCard, Mr. and Mrs. Mason Hawkins, Dr. and Mrs. Thos. Hawkins, Mr. and Mrs. Truly Hatchett, Dr. and Mrs. Richard Wright, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Murphy, Dr. and Mrs. John Dinkin and Norman Bison, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. White, Dr. and Mrs. M. Scott, Dr. and Mrs. Howard Young, Misses Brenda Moryck, Pearl Fisher, Ora Weaver, Ephile Lewis, Ruth Gibson, M. Webb, Ruther Weaver, of Hampton, Va., Hermione and Constantia Japarton, Messrs. Japarton, Japarton, Teller, Leonard Gibson, Dr. Mayer, Dr. Mosby, Ralph Cook, Solomon Dcoursey, John Hampton, M. Johnson, and M. Ramsey, of Howard University, Washington, D. C.
Rev. Dr. Lacey is conducting services at Morning Star Baptist Church this week, while the campaign at Perkins Square Baptist Church will end with baptizing this Sunday.
Capacity congregations have been attending the services at Ames M. E. Church, where Rev. W. H. Dean is making an appeal to Rev. L. C. Buchanan, of the Delaware M. E. Conference, is conducting services nightly at Sharp Street Memorial Church this week.
Balnew M. E. Church, Turner's Station, closed a successful meeting night, the conversions totaling 30. Rev. Benjamin Gross is the pastor.
There were 4 conversions in the recent revival at John Wesley M. E. Church, Glenburnie charge. Rev. J. W. Dockett is pastor.
A number of conversions have been reported at St. John's Colored Methodist Protestant Church, Orchard and Tessier Streets.
The State-wide Colored Women's Republican Association is planning to go before the Legislature to push any movement launched for better for colored teachers, to urge colored school attendance officers in the counties and to get behind other measures making for general welfare. Mrs. Marie L. Williams is the president.
WHIST PARTY GIVEN
A whist party was given by Mrs. Blaney Parker, at her home, 1941 Drudid Hill avenue, last Friday night. Covers were held for 21. Those present we e rMran, s.Olesh present were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Robinson, Mrs. Jobees, Mrs. Ella Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Curr, Mrs. Marie Adams, Misses Gertrude Henry Mills, Washington, D. C; Lacie Pappina, Naomi Hays, Sarah Smith, Messrs. William Smith, Other Mrs. William cooperate, Google Robinson, William Watts, James Taylor, Roland Bett, William Johnson, Boston, and Mr. Smith.
"Jack' Owes Him
"Take this or nothing." Jack Johnson is declared to have told Harrison Foote, taxi owner, handing him $30 in payment of a bill of $48 incurred in rides around the city last week. Saturday morning, Mr. Foote says, thanks to champion Lois his bill was $39. "That is all right. I'll pay, don't worry." Mr. Foote said he then drove Jack around several places during the day and over to Union Station at 1 A. M. Sunday morning. Reminding the fighter of the bill as he sat in the "Fullman ready to leave, Mr. Foote handed him $30. "I spent $12掌握ed for him." Mr. Foote told a representative of the APRO.
SILVER SPRING LITERARY
A splendid service under the direction of Mr. Samuel Mills, was rendered at the Silver Spring Literary, Sunday, January 15, 1922. Rev. English, pastor of Ucentemal M. 12. Church, was the principal speaker. You are invited every Sunday, at 5 P. M., at 12:19 Mulkin street.
Mrs. Nellie Flint, of 36 Bloomingdale Avenue, Catonsville, entertained at luncheon Thursday afternoon the Beethoven Musical Mrs. Manna N. Smith, Mrs. Nellie G. Simpson, Mrs. Edith Davis, Mrs. Mary Smith and others were present. Quite an enjoyable afternoon was spent!
Inquiry at the Regent Theatre elicited from Mr. Charles Mosely that Jack also left owing a medicine bill of $1.44, and that none of the boys who waited on him last week any pay and that Jack did not introduce him for introducing him all the week after asking him to do so.
1731-33 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE Opposite Lafayette Market Yearly Clearance Sale on HATS, CAPS, MEN'S FURNISHINGS & PANTS
formerly chef of the Elkridge Club, wishes to announce the opening of her Restaurant
New Lincoln Theatre
BALTIMORE'S BEST VAUDEVILLE HOUSE
934.936 Pennsylvania Avenue near Biddle St.
Open Continuously 1 P.M. to 11:30 P.M.
SPECIAL MATINEE 15c. CHILDREN 10c.
VAUDEVILLE CHANGED MONDAY and THURSDAY
Special Amateur Contest, Friday night, open to All
COME ENTER THE CONTEST—LOTS OF FUN
THREE MONEY PRIZES
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
ONE WEEK ONLY
ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY
CRESCENT PLAYERS'
MUSICAL COMEDY
FREDDIE JAMES, the Boy Wonder, 8 years of age
Freaks—Frollicks—Fun
Monday—"HERMIT AND HATE" 2 Reel Western
Featuring EDDIE POLO. Not a serial
"SHOULD HUSBANDS DO" 2 Reel Comedy
SPECIAL 2 REEL WESTERN
Tuesday—Charles Hutchinson and Warner Orland
in "HURRICANE HUTCH" Episode 9
A GREAT SERIAL
SPECIAL IN 5 REELS
LOTTIE PICKFORD in "THIDY SHALL PAY" Wonder feature
GREAT FABEL COMEDY
Wednesday—First showing in Baltimore
EDDIE POLO in Universal Thrilling Chapter Play
"THE SECRET FOUR" Episode 2
Greatest of all Serials
SPECIAL ONE DAY ONLY
"NIGHT HORSEMAN" in 5 Reels. Featuring TOM MIX
SAMBO ONE REEL COMEDY
"DEVIL TO PAY" in 5 Reels. Don't miss this wonder feature.
GEORGE OVEY 1 REEL COMEDY
Friday—"WINNERS OF THE WEST" Episode 9
Greatest Western Script ever shown. Lots of action.
First Shown in Baltimore
"WHAT LOVE WILL DO" in 5 Reels. Wonder Feature
Saturday—"WINNERS OF THE WEST" Episode 9
Great Western Script with ART ACCORD
—First Shown
"CAPTAIN KID" 2 Reel Western. First showing.
"BONY PARTS" Mutt and Jeff Comedy. Fox News, the latest
Visit our famous Matinees and you surely get your money's
worth—8 New Reels of Feature Pictures—Changed Dally and
our usual Vaudeville Show. Open 1 P. M. Daily
ROOSEVELT
THE HOME OF QUALITY AND REFINEMENT
JACOB FRIEDLANDER, Proprietor
512-14 W. BIDDLE STREET near Druid Hill Ave
Adolph Zukor presents Experience
RICHARD BARTHELMESS
as "YOUTH"
EIK"
First presentation of Geoff. Meldon's masterpiece, a picture that has everything. Oriental love, scandal, surging crowds, the clash of men against men, heart interest that makes you laugh, and weep all at once, and the romance of a girl who was braver than a thousand men—
...THEATRE
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
Monday, Tuesday
First presentation of Paramount's second big picture this year, produced by ..... GEORGE FITZMAURICE which played for eight weeks at the Criterion Theatre, New York, at $2.00 (top). Its fame has already spread to every corner of the United States. Every man and woman in the Country is looking forward to the time when he can see this production which marks the ultimate in beauty and thrill and heart interest—
10
Monday
THE PATHE NEWS
******
Tuesday
PATHE REVIEW
******
Wednesday
FOX NEWS
A GEORGE
IZMAURICE
PRODUCTION
A Paramount Picture
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
JERSEE L..LASKY PRESENTS
Starring RUDOLPH VALENTINE and AGNES AYERS
RU
VA
I
Parcim...
Picture
the auction of beautiful girls to the lords of Algerian harems.
the barbaric gambling fete in the glittering Casino at Biskim.
the heroine, disguised, invade the Bedouins' secret slave rites.
Sheik Ahmed raid her caravan and carry her off to his tent.
her stampede his Arabian horses and dash away to freedom.
her captured by bandit tribesmen and enslaved by their chief in his stronghold.
the fierce battle of Ahmed's clans to rescue the girl from his foes.
the Sheik's vengeance, the storm in the desert, a proud woman's heart surrendered.
matchless scenes of gorgeous color and wild free life and love. In the years' supreme serene thrill—
In addition to this picture we will only show the NEWS PICTURES, owing to this picture being in eight parts.
The tremendous cost of this production compells the management of this theatre to increase the prices of admission on this picture only to—
Those wishing to see this picture should try and come early owing to the length of the picture and the popularity. Use the slogan: "COME EARLY AND AVOID THE RUSH."
NEXT WEEK—"AFTER THE SHOW"—Monday and Tuesday
"THE POOLISH AGE"—Wednesday and Thurs.
"A PRINCE THERE WAS"—Friday, Saturday
COMING—"GOOD AND EVIL"
PRISCILLA DEAN In "CONFLICT"
THE AFRO-AMERICAN Goldwyn Presents the Most Wonderful Story of Mother Love
The Old Nest
THE FAMILY
Irish and Mrs. Anthony have a large family of small children in a provincial town. Arthur, the oldest, is killed in a railroad wreck. Tom grows up to be a successful lawyer. Kate marries and lives in New York. Frank becomes a great artist in Paris. Jim, the would-be sport, is guilty of stealing and his father sends him from home. Emily, the youngest, goes to visit Kate in New York, and she too marries. The old nest is now empty, and year after year the aging mother waits for her birdies to fly back for a visit. One day Jim returns in need of money; the mother gives him her jewels. Finally Tom is made Attorney-general of the United States. In a nightmare the mother dreams that the high bridge where Arthur was killed is wrecked by a storm, and that she must cross it to signal the truth on which Tom is coming. She awakens terrified, and in comes Tom with his great news, and all the other children gather around her. Even Jim has made good at
DUNBAR CENTRAL AVENUE near MONUMENT STREET
Monday—"THE INVISIBLE RAY" Episode 6 Texas Guinan and Frances Ford in "THE STAMPEDE"
A wonderful drama full of heart throbs, adventure and pathos.
Different from the rest. See it by all means but come early.
Century Comedy "GET RICH QUICK PEGGY"
ADMISSION THIS DAY 17 and 11 CENTS
Wednesday—"THE WOMAN IN GREY" No. 15
"THE OLD NEST" in 8 Reels
Gathe Comedy "SHAKE 'EM UP"
Thursday—"The Hope Diamond Mystery" No. 2
Universal Western "THE ALARM" Star Comedy
Friday—"WINNERS OF THE WEST" Episode 6
Special Feature "OUT OF THE DEPTHS"
Featuring Violet Mersereaux
HAM AND BUD COMEDY
Saturday—"HURRICANE HUTCH" Episode 9
"BREAKING THROUGH" Last Episode
Western Fox Sunshine Comedy
Singing Midget Scandal
THE AMERICAN
THEATRE
941-943 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
OPEN 1 TO 11 P. M. CONTINUOUSLY
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
Monday—A Fox Special
WM. RUSSELL IN HIS LATEST SUCCESS
"BARE KNUCKLES"
A Thrilling 6 Reel Western
ALSO 2 REEL CHRISTY COMEDY. VERY GOOD
Tuesday—"SHADOWS OF THE WEST"
A Powerful 6 Reel Western Drama, featuring
HEDDA NOVA and All Star Cast
ALSO 2 REEL SUNLIGHT COMEDY
MONDAY—A Fox Special
WM. RUSSELL IN HIS LATEST SUCCESS
"BARE KNUCKLES"
A Thrilling 6 Reel Western
ALSO 2 REEL CHRISTY COMEDY. VERY GOOD
Tuesday—"SHADOWS OF THE WEST"
A Powerful 6 Reel Western Drama, featuring
HEDDA NOVA and All Star Cast
ALSO 2 REEL SUNLIGHT COMEDY
Wednesday—"THE WOMAN IN GREY" No. 14
"THE HALF BREED"
A 5 Reel Western Drama with All Star Cast
AND GOOD COMEDY
Thursday—First Colored House in Baltimore
"THE INVISIBLE RAY" Episode 10
Featuring Ruth Clifford and Jack Sherrill
ALSO STAR WESTERN DRAMA in 5 Reels and
GOOD 2 REEL TWEEDY COMEDY
Friday—First showing in Baltimore
"THE HOPE DIAMOND MYSTERY" Episode 14
Also Annie Little and Jack Richardson in 2 reel Western Drama
And 2 REEL ELECTRIC COMEDY
Saturday—By Special Request
RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF
JACK JOHNSON in
"THE BLACK THUNDERBOLT" in 7 Reels
Also "The Hope Diamond Mystery" Episode 14
AND 2 REEL COMEDY
Don't fail to see this Big Special
MATINEE, 10 CENTS. AFTER, 4 P. M. 15 CENTS
THIS DAY ONLY
The Largest Program in the City changed Daily
Admission Only 10 Cents
IN 6 ACTS
Wednesday, January 25th
CAREY
Carey, and Pressman Streets, Best in Photo Plays
Open Daily From 2:15 till 11:15 Continuously
J. C. Creman, Prop. Harry Duval, Manager
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
'The Woman God Changed'
Featuring
SEENA OWEN
E. K. LINCOLN
LILLIAN
WALKER
Famous Players-Lasky Corporation presents
"The WOMAN
GOD
CHANGED"
A COSMOPOLITAN
PRODUCTION
A Paramount
Picture
Once she had reigned in the gayest palace on Broadway. Until — ? Now, fled to a sleepy South sea isle, she danced to forget her fear. Hoping ever that the world had lost her. But a New York detective stepped from the motly crowd one night. That was where her real life began. This is a wonderful production. Don't miss it.
Larry Semon in
"THE BELL HOP"
Special 2 act Comedy
TUESDAY—ORIN JOHNSON, LOUISE GLAUM,
DOROTHY DALTON and Cast in
"THE THREE MUSKETEERS" 5 Acts
This is a recreation of D'ANTAGNAN by ALEXANDER
DUMAS, taken from the famous Novel. It is a dramatic
masterpiece and there is plenty of action, thrills and excitement.
Larry Semon in "THE BELL HOP" Special 2 Act Comedy
Bud Duncan in "SCREAM STREET" Song Comedy
WEDNESDAY—Clas, Hutchinson and Warner Oland in
"HURRICANE HUTCH" Episode 10
SHORTY HAMILTON and a cast of Western Players in "THE RUNT" 2 Act Western
Brownie and Baby Peggy in "CHUMS" Some Comedy 2 acts
LITTLE SAMBO in "SINK OR SWIM" Some Comedy
THURSDAY—
CARMEL MYERS and WALLACE McDONALD in "BREAKING THROUGH" Last Part
EPDIE POLO in Series 5 of Cyclone Smith Stories
"A RIDE FOR A RANCHO" 2 Act Western
Harold Lloyd in "AMONG THOSE PRESENT" 3 Act Comedy
KEITH'S HIGH CLASS VOD-A-VILE MOVIES, 5 acts
Animal Art, Biggerlists, Jugglers, Novelty Act, etc.
Grace Darmond, George Chessobro and Harry Carter in
"The Hope Diamond Mystery" No. 12
Jay Belasco in "DESIGNING HUSBANDS" 2 Act Comedy
Star Comedians in "ALMOST A RANCHER" Some Comedy
SATURDAY—
EDDIE POLO and CATHERINE MYERS in his latest serial
"The SECRET 4" Episode 2
RUTH CLIFFORD and JACK SHERRILL in
"The INVISIBLE RAY" Episode 9
Jack Perrin in "THE NIGHT, ATTACK" 2 Act Western
Gayford Lloyd in "ROUGH SEAS" Some Comedy
Aesop's Fabrics "THE CAT AND MICE" Cartoon Comic
COMING—Jack Johnson in "FOR HIS MOTHER'S SAKE"
Houst Gibson in "ACTION" His first 5 reader
ARGONNE
THEATRE
924-26-28 SHARP STREET
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
Monday—Antonio Moreno in
"THE SECRET OF THE HILLS"
ALSO SHORTY HAMILTON and LARRY SEMON COMEDY
Tuesday—All star cast in a First National Picture
"THE SKY PILOT"
Also Texas Guinan in a Fast Western and Smub Pollard Comedy
Wednesday—Mitchell Lewis in
"THE MUTINY"
Harold Lloyd in a Screening Comedy THE HAUNTED HOUSE
Thursday—Mack Sennett Comedy
"MARRIED LIFE"
ALSO A TWO REEL WESTERN
Friday—William Farnum in
"THE LONE STAR RANGER"
Also A Fox Sunshine Comedy "THE BOOK AGENT"
Saturday—Neal Hart in
"TANGLED TRAILS"
And Irwin Cummings in "STREAK OF YELLOW"
Mutt and Jeff Aesop's Fables
FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922
MOVIE OFFERINGS
DUNBAR
The week at the Dunbar was begun with a fine production entitled "His Enemy's Daughter". This picture drew large audiences on Monday both matinee and evening. On Tuesday and Wednesday, of this house were given an opportunity to feature "The Green-wood Monster" the fine production in which an all-colored costume is featured.
Special attention is called to "The Custard Nine" a comedy starring little "Sunshine Sammy" who won his way to stardom by first appearing with Baby Marie Gebroneh of Barbara Wood and Snub Pollard this comedy is based on stories of Negro life that appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. Fans can guess how good "Sammy" really is if they read in last week's Afro he has just signed a contract at $100,000. Tuesday which is special day the Dumbar "Old Nest" a big Goldwyn special will be the principal offering.
LINCOLN
Billy Ewing's Vamping Along Company is the stage attraction which that has been secured for the week's offering at this house, and a more accomplished aggregation of singers, jazzers and shimmy shakers has sold well if ever appeared in the hands of Hezekiah Jenkins superior in this line would be hard to find. He also won a big hand for some skillful mouthorgan or rather, harmonica playing. In the comedy line he is assisted by John Drake and John Jackson, both also in blackface, the latter immersioning a female. Billy Ewing in the straight played with his usual line
Heading the feminine contingent is Gilda Delayon whose jazz songs and dancing won her a big hand. Pushing her for top honors in this line was Ethel Gardner whose replication of "Daddy Beer" and "Bob the Beer" used the bob the ear's. Other members of the company whose work was mottorious were Dorothy Jenkins, Eva Roshone and Zellie Ponders. During the progress of the musical message that is offered, a quartet composed of Ewing, Jenkins, Roshone and Zellie "taught down the house". The usual picture program is presented. Raymond Wallace the Lincoln's baritone favorite is on the bill as an added attraction, and is featuring "Cust Away", a love ballad just like a boy Euston, Brown and Stephens a beat music publishing company.
THE CAREY
The work at the Carrey was begun with the "Green-eyed Monster" the big colored screen production featuring an all-colored cost. As told in those pages on the former occasion, an amount of the colored pictures so far produced, and notwithstanding that it had been shown previously in this city, it show large audiences on Monday which keenly appreciated its very splendid handling, as they likewise did the group myriad comedy videos entitled "The Lovey Bug."
On Tuesday, "The Killer" a big 500 production was shown, with a Buster Keaton comedy entitled "The Goat" as the additional feature. Special attention is called to the big program which will be offered on Thursday; the episode of "Breaking Through" the fine serial in which Carmel Myers and Wallace McDonald are the featured players; Eddie Palo in the 4th, feature of "The Cyclone Smith" series; "The Heritage of Hute" a 2-reed Western; Frank Braidwood in "The Eagle's Roost" another 2-reed Western; Billy Gilbert in comedy and Kubb's High-Classes A-Nil. You can't afford to miss this hit.
Next week the opening attraction will be "The Woman God Changed" featuring three big stars in Soena Owens, E. K. Lincoln and Lillian Walker. On this day the big comedy feature will be Larry Simon in the "Bellhop," "The Woman God Changed" is a thrilling story of a society butterfly who shoots her faithless lover and then escapes to some far distant island of the sea, seeming forever from the haunts of men, but the Law in person of the young detective even finds her, and it is the awakening of love between the beautiful fugitive from justice and the young sleuth that makes the show.
The Carey management also wishes to call the special attention of their patrons, to "Action" which has just recently been released being the first 5-register of the famous "Hoot" Gibson the ever-smiling ever-righting screen idol of both kiddies and grown-ups, which will be shown at the Carey on Monday, Jan. 30th.
NATIONAL
Hardtack Jackson's 20th Century Wonders began as the week's stage attraction at the National on Tuesday, the management having been disappointed by Lyon Daniels-Mae Kemp' Ragtime Stepers Company which it expected to open on Tuesday. The 20th Century Wonders got the same fine reception at 'this house that they received on the occasion of their appearance at other local houses previously. Owing to some trouble which Hardtack Jackson got into last week, he was not in the house Tuesday, but the making was also taken on by Paul Floyd who is always forcing to the front as a genuine courier.
Louise Jackson heads the feminine contingent and acquires herself finely. The original Jackson Quartet composed of Harry Jackson, Alexander Jackson, Holmes and Alphonse Robinson and of which the fine singing of which the audiences on Tuesday seemed impossible to get enough of. Other members of the cast who do good work are, Laura Badge, Marion Dodge, Arthur Jackson; Viola Smith, Adèle Cobb and Flora Scales. The management dosies to call the special attention to the big singing cast each week will take place at this house on Friday night between the Jackson Quaretet and East Baltimore Harmony Four said to be one of the finest amateur quartets in the city. The lat-
A drama with mother love
as its theme
Actual prize-fight of 10
rounds
Full of breath-taking thrills
Accompanying
Select Comedies
Monday—
"Torchy a la Carte"
Tuesday—
"Harold Lloyd Comedy"
Wednesday—Fox News
ter is composed of Luther Toy, first tenor; Oscar Wainwright, second tenor; Clarence Davis, baritone and E. Hill, bass.
REGENT
The Quintard Miller Regent Stock Company, began its third week at this house on Monday with a diversified style of entertainment which gives this very capable group of players another opportunity to display their versatility. This entertainment is divided into two parts, the first half consisting of a melange of song and dance is led by Parker and Mack, who have become favorites with Regent audiences since their appearance last week, by reason of the former's keen sense of comedy values and the latter's splendid singing and dancing ability, and charming personality, and the former's Miller chorus, which has been added some new members, and "Monkey" Johnson helps out with a "stuttering" monologue.
The second part of the entertainment consists of a sketch based on the faithless wife who is persuaded by her paramount to desert her husband and baby by her husband, and by the return of her husband who missed his train. In this sketch, Miller as the husband; Henrietta Loveless as the wife; Estelle Cash as a spinster; Purcell Cuff as the villainous home-wrecker; Parker as the man-of-all-work; and Eugene Shields as the protector. Miller did good work, especially fine being that of Miller, Miss Cash and Miss Loveless. Shee establishing themselves at the Regent, these three players have shown more than ordinary ability in serious characterization, as has also Purcell Cuff, Miss Loveless adds further fine work this week to be beautiful to "Tost's" Goodbye. "The Primal Law" with Dustin Farnum as the featured player, was the principal screen offering. In the picture line, the management calls especial attention to "By Night of Birth" the colored picture featuring an actress cast as Clarence Brooks and Anita Thompson, which will be shown at this house the last three days of this week.
Continued from page 1.
Garvey to promise to cease selling stock of the Black Star Line in June, 1919. Cyril Briggs, editor of the Crusader, brought charges of criminal libel in the same period. Briggs opposed plans, and Garvey claimed, Briggs charged, called him "white man". Mr. Garvey reported his statement and the case was squashed.
Denies Statement
An interviewer read to the "Provisional President of the Republic of Africa" figures of the Liberian Construction Fund. These purported to show that 145 had been collected. On this $44.46 is said to have paid the construction expenses $33,440 in Black Star Line Work and $46,555 for the good will of the Negro World; his publication.
Further, the figures show only a small sum sent to Liberia and $4.461 paid on a saw mill still in America. The statement left a balance of $8.530.
When told that the statement was submitted by an anonymous member of the organization, Mr.oney denied them as absolutely false. He disposed of these charges of irregularities by saying: I am clean of heart. Dollars and cents are insignificant. This isn't a money-making proposition. We have lost money because of the plots against us. But the chief thing is, we have helped the cause, stimulated morale. That's the big thing." Gary was surrounded by his office employees. He received few visitors. Apparently his supporters had not come to seek an explanation of the arrest, perhaps because it had already been promised for a meeting at Liberty Hall.
Ship Was To Be Bought
His interview者 asked Garvey about the charge that he sold passage on a mythical ship. He explained he was away at the time, but the ship was to have been bought yesterday. It had been named, however, before its purchase.
"I can't control all departments" he explained. "I have much work to do."
Asked to explain his plans for the African Republic, he snapped: "Did Napoleon make known his plans in advance? Does any general."
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Payne, of New York, are rejoicing over the arrival of a new baby. Mrs. Payne was formerly Miss Annabelle Gearing of Baltimore.
The Regent Theatre
MR. QUINTARD MILLER, Presents The Regent Stock Co. with MISS LULA WHIDBY and an ALL STAR CAST in "THIS WAY OUT"
A Brand New Playlet — with Music Brand New Songs
ROOSEYELT
The opening attraction at the Roosevelt on Monday, was "Cappy Ricks" featuring Thomas Meighan, this picture proved to be a very interesting story of the love of the daughter of a ship owner for a young sailor he was shown for two days. On Wednesday and Thursday "The Great Impersonation" a George McFord production, and said to be the greatest picture this famous producer has ever made for Paramount, will be shown James Kirkwood is the featured player in this picture supported by all-in-star cast. On and greatest picture of the famous William S. Hart, entitled "Three-Word Brand" will be shown. This production is now being shown in the leading white houses of the country, and audiences everywhere have declared it to be the best thing the famous Bill has ever done. This picture, played by the characters of two great pictures
which the patrons of this house have been looking forward to ever since the management announced that they were coming, will be shown, making up the entire week's bill, namely, "Experience" which will be exhibited for the first three days, and "The Shock" which will be shown on the last three. No picture-gourn needs be told just what positions these two productions occupy among the latest finest pictures ever presented. They too are now played in the biggest picture houses in the country, and that patrons of the Roosevelt are being given an opportunity to witness them simultaneously with the white houses of the first rank at once establishes the right of this house to be classed as the "colored Century" of Baltimore movies.
STAR
The stage attraction at the Star this week is the James Crescent Players Featuring Master Freddie James the eleven-year-old comedian dancer and singer who is creating a riot so to speak wherever the company appears. The company is headed by Tillie Johnson an accomplished and experienced performer. The comedy work is
JOSEPHINE THOMAS
Mrs. Josephine Thomas, wife of the late Dr. I. L. Thomas, and daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Ford, departed this life Sunday morning, January 8th, at 3:15 at her residence, 2111 Duddish Hill, avenue, Baltimore.
Mrs. Thomas was born in Charles Co. Md., fifty-six years ago. Her parents brought her to Baltimore, when she was quite young, and was educated in the public schools of Baltimore.
Mrs. Thomas bore her illness primarily, having been continued to her bed since August 10, 1921. She was always cheerful and full of the Holy Spirit, and was perfectly resigned to the inevitable.
She was buried from Sharp St. Memorial M. E. Church, of which she was a member. The second was delivered by Rev. W. J. Jackson, district superintendent of the Alexander District, assisted by the pastor, Rev. S. J. Trigg, and a number of others. The interment on the Cemetery.
was in the Army.
A son, daughter, and sister survive her—James S. and Elanda V. Thomas, and Emma Brown.
CARD OF THANKS
James S. and Elisandra V. Thomas son and daughter of the late Mrs. Josephine Thomas wish to extend their hearty thanks and appreciation to their many friends for their kindness during their mother's illness and sympathy and floral designs during their bereavement.
TESTIMONIAL FOR HAWKINS
As an appreciation of his services as Supreme Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias, Eastern and Western Hemispheres, during the past 16 years, local lodges and courts are planning to give a testimonial in honor of W. Ashleigh Hawkins.
The affair will be held at Masonic Temple on the evening of February 20. Since the recent death of P. M. Green, Mrs. Jennie H. Ross, Supreme Councillor, has been acting as chairman of the committee on arrangements.
CHURCH IN NEW HOME
The congregation of St. John's United Christian Church in worship in its newly-furnished home on Osterville street, near Scott, Sunnyville. The property was at one time occupied by African Methodists and later by Baptists. Bishop Williams will be in charge until the next annual conference.
Mr. Robert D. Able of 1518 Druid Hill Avenue, wishes to announce that his many friends that he is confined to his bed and invites his friends to visit him.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Regent
PENNA. AVE. A
Continuous 1.30
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGIN
R. QUINTARD IN
the Regent
with MISS LULA WHIDBY and
"THIS WAY
new Playlet — with Music
Brand New Songs
COMING WEEK OF JAN. 3
m. Russell in "SINGING RIVER"
legent T
INNA. AVE. AT PITCH
continuous 1.30 to 11 P.
FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY
ONTARD MILLER
legent St
LA WHIDBY and an ALLE
THIS WAY O
with 'Music
gS
WEEK OF JAN. 30: Tom M
NINGING RIVER" "RIP VA
PENNA. AVE. AT PITCHER Continuous 1.30 to 11 P.M. PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
COMING WEEK OF JAN. 30: Tom Mix in "TRAILIN" Wm. Russell in "SINGING RIVER" "RIP VAN WINKLE"
handled by Chrence Rucker who knows how to amuse an audience. Other members of the company are Frank Dearman, well-known William Pace in straight, Tiny Pace, Roxie Caldwell, Ethel Watters and Crawford Jackson, the latter in a blackface female impersonation. During the show a big hand was awarded the Jaws, the Rucker and Gladys Coldwell. The usual picture program complete the bill.
Lyons Daniels, better known as Skantum Lawyer, and his Ragtime Steppers are holding forth as the stage offering at the Rainbow this week. The ability of this company and the fine work of Daniels have been reviewed this place several times lately and needs no further introduction. On Monday they were well-received by the Rainbow patrons. A special feature of the offering was the fine vocal selections of Estelle Carroll whose voice is above the average.
THE STAR T
MONUMENT ST. N.
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGIN
THE
AR THEA
MONUMENT ST. NEAR BOND
1 FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY
STAR THEATRE
A. A.
Monday—"DIAMOND HOPE
PATHE NEWS and VAUD
"WILD AND WILLIE"
Tuesday—Jane Novak in "G
A Good Western "TOLIVER
Wednesday—Texas Guinan in
All Jennings in a Western. "T
Thursday and Friday—Special
DIAMOND HOPE MYSTERY
THE NEWS and VAUDEVILLE MO-
VILD AND WILLIE" A Good Comic
Jane Novak in "GOLDEN TR
Western "TOLIVER TRACKS"
Texas Guinan in "HERMIT
ings in a Western. "The Vagrant"
and Friday—Special Both Day
Monday—"DIAMOND HOPE MYSTERY" No. 4
PATHE NEWS and VAUDEVILLE MOVIES
"WILD AND WILLE" A Good Comedy
Tuesday—Jane Novak in "GOLDEN TRAIL"
A Good Western "TOLIVER TRACKS" A Comedy
Wednesday—Texas Guinan in "HERMIT GIRL"
All Jennings in a Western. "The Vagrant" a comedy
Jack Johnson at his best in 'For His Mother's Sake'
Saturday—"EAGLE'S NEST" A Braidwood Western PATHE NEWS' and SNUB POLLARD COMEDY
RAINROW
BILLY V. EWING Presents VAMPING ALONG CO. A Musical Extrava- ganza
N. 30: Tom Mix in "TRAIL
ER" "RIP VAN WINKLE"
Jack Johnson
starring in
For His Mother's Sale
At The
REGENT THEATRE
MONDAY. TUESDAY
AND WEDNESDAY
January 23, 24, and 25
THE
THEATRE
NEAR BOND
BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 23
OPE MYSTERY" No. 4
AUDEVILLE MOVIES
LE" A Good Comedy
"GOLDEN TRAIL"
LIVER TRACKS" A Comedy
Usual Chorus of Steppers Jazz Dances
At The
N"
AMERICAN
Th week at the American was begun with "Brute Island" starring Harry Carey. On Tuesday Shirley Mason in "Lovetime" was the special feature. Special attention is called to "The Raiders" the big feature which will be shown at this house on Saturday. On next Monday, the opening attraction will be "bare Kruckies" featuring Vin. Russell, on Tuesday "shadows of the West" will be the special feature and on Wednesday, the half-breed will be offered.
CROWDS HEAR
COLORED BILLY SUNDAY
Evangelist C. P. Dixon, known as Colored Billy Sunday, of Virginia, is preaching to packed house every night, at Fulton Baptist
VAUDEVILLE AT THE NATIONAL
Headed by OLGA BURGOYNE who spent 16 yrs. in Eur ope as Classic Dancer JOHNNY LaRUE Funniest of Comedians ZERALDE LaRUE, Sweet Prima Donna LEON CLAXTON, Remarkable Contortionist
WEDNESDAY
SHIRLEY MASON in
"QUEENIE"
Also "HEARTS OF DOREAN"
TUESDAY
Rialto Film Corp. presents JOSEPH MOORE in a
Mystery of the Southwest, cattled.
"THE WHITE RIDER"
Also Good Comedy, Mutt and Jeff in "BONY PARTS"
THURSDAY
Oarl Laemmle presents FRANK MAYO in
A blazing drama of the tropes where men must fight
to live and love, entitled
"THE SHARKMASTER"
James Oliver Curwood in "PLAYING WITH FIRE"
A wonderful show which no one ought to miss. Speaks for itself.
Also a Good Comedy, entitled "ROPES END"
GEORGE WALSH in "BLUE BLOOD AND RED" Also Harold Lloyd in "RAINBOW ISLAND"
MILLET OF P&C CUGAR!
"THE APPLICANT"
Featuring. Funny
Jimmy Aubrey
"YOUR FAVORITE"
Mutt and. Jeff
Friday—
"Hurricane Hutch"
Episode 9
SATURDAY— ROMAINE FIRE
"A MAN WORTH"
A daring drama with a mi
"FALLING FOR FANN
INE FIELDINDING in "NORTH WHILE" with a mighty appeal, and "FANNY" A Comedy
SATURDAY—ROMAINE FIELDINDING in "A MAN WORTH WHILE" A daring drama with a mighty appeal, and "FALLING FOR FANNY" A Comedy
Rev. C.
friendship
t Street.
chardison
ing ser.
Wil.
NEW WORLD CAFE
928-30 W. Saratoga Street
Will Celebrate Its
MUNSILLOL, O. Jan. 19—Rev. C. J. T. Speaks preached at A friendship Baptist Church, on Sunday. Rev. E. J. Richardson will preach morning and evening services next Sunday. * Mrs. Pearl* has an office at Mrs. Henry Hood, of S. Lincoln Street, over the week-end. * Rev. J. H. Smiley of Akron, Ohio,* will preach at a Baptist Church on last Sunday. * Mr. Henry Houston went to Cincinnati, to set up a lodge of the Brown Chamber.* * Mr. A. A. A. AFRO is sold at 426 Wisconsin Street.*
THE NATIONAL
beginning Monday, JANUARY 23
ILLE AT THE H
Metis Program for Week Beginning
BIG SHOW OF THE
Goyne's Oriental
PEOPLE
GOYNE who spent 16 yrs. in Eur
ist of Comedians ZERALOE La
N CLAXTON, Remarkable Contro
mpany of Artists that co
NATION
THEATRE
MONUMENT ST. at EDEN
FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY,
MONDAY
ants DUSTIN FARNUM in a sterring -
Western Photophy entitled
"THE PRIMAL LAW"
Monte Banks in "SQUIRRELL FOOD"
TUESDAY
orp. presents JOSEPH MOORE in a
Mystery of the Southwest, entitled
"THE WHITE RIDER"
Comedy, Mutt and Jeff in "BONY"
WEDNESDAY
SON in
"QUEENIE"
Also "HEARTS OF DOREAN"
THURSDAY
presents FRANK MAYO in
ling drama of the tropes where men mu
to live and love, entitled
"THE SHARKMASTER"
Oliver Curwood in "PLAYING WITH
FRIDAY
"GOOD AND EVIL"
I show which no one ought to miss. Spe
o a Good Comedy, entitled "ROPES B
LISH in
BLUE BLOOD AND RED
Also Harold Lloyd in RAINBOW ISL
PEPPY VAUDEVILLE EVERYDAY
ESTABLISHED NEW PRICES OF
ON CHILDREN 10c. AD
The only photoplay of its kind in the world. A daringly new story that for sheer audacity, mystery, thrills and amazement surpasses anything ever produced in Europe or America. Thursday
Church. The meetings opened on the 12th, and will continue for fifteen days. He preached two sermons Sunday. Twenty-five persons hitting the trail. Rev. M. D. Willis is pastor.
MASSILON, O.
SATURDAY
NAZARITES AT CHURCH
The Grand Encampment, composed of the sixth and seventh degree members of the Grand Order of the Grand Encampment, out at A.M.E. Church to listen to a special sermon by Rev. C. H. Stenteau, Sunday night. Henry L. Boyer is the presiding officer.
FIRST ANNIVERSARY
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25, 1922
Afternoon and Evening
Fine Lunches, Beverages, Special
Music and Souvenirs
William Wilkins, Prop.
Buddy Dent, Manager
Harry Newman, Pianist
FRIDAY. JAN. 20, 1922
TERRORFIED FAMILY SLEEPS NIGHTS IN ITS OWN KITCHEN
Family Which Recently Moved On McDonough St. Badly Frightened By Mob's Attack
Mrs. Brumby And Children To Leave The Neighborhood Soon As Possible
Terrified by the attack of a mob of whites upon their home, 1009 McDonough street, in which they had just moved. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Brumby plan to move today or tomorrow. The Brumby's formerly lived at 1100 E. Fayette street for two years, coming to this city from New York. Mr. Brumby works for the Horne Ice Cream Company. When the house was sold over their heads they rented the McDonough street dwelling from a landlord whom they did not know and moved in Saturday.
About ten o'clock at night they were started by yells of white neighbors in the street, and two bricks were thrown in the front room, breaking the parlor window, and a quart of white paint was thrown on the front wall. All of the children in the block were white, the brunneys had not expected an attack, and sought refuge in the kitchen. Other well-thinking neighbors notified the police station, which has since sent two patrolmen to keep guard over the house at night.
Not trusting to police protection the family, consisting of three girls and a boy, slept in the kitchen Saturday night and Mrs. Brumby says they will keep up this practice as long as they stay in the house. They have secured a dwelling in the 1700 block of E. Eager street, and plan to move Thursday or Friday.
other to join Lucky.
Acco. to Mrs. Berry, an officer of the Northeastern District whom she knows told her that this was a white block in McDonough street, and that she was lucky to be alive over night, and that colored people are not allowed to live in white neighborhoods. In spite of that, she was a number of residents on the left side threw tin cans into the Brumby yard on Sunday. The dwelling at 1069 McDonough is two stories with six rooms. Other houses in the neighborhood are occupied by a poorer element of whites.
Mr. Berry told a representative of the NAACP that she was naturally timid and of the repeated attacks by her neighbors and had kept awake all Saturday night.
CONDEMNED MAN SMILES
FOR HIS MOTHER'S SAKE
Samuel Smith Tells Afro Reporter He Was Surprised At Severe Verdict
When interviewed Tuesday at the jail by an Afro reporter Samuel Smith, sentenced to hang for the autumn rap Marion Davis Lyons, white, Goucher College, said that he was lieged.
"It is a frame up," Smith whispered thru the bars, "I never saw the girl until I was taken to the hospital. There are several cars of the same description in Baltimore but for some reason they picked me and didn't give me a chance to prove my innocence.
"Mr. Flamery and the housekeeper lied on me. Both of them keeper was at the house when the crime was unsolved, is any chance to take this case to Washington. I'm going to do so.
"I was prepared to serve 20 years which every one told me I would get but the death sentence surprised me, the I did not weaken. I haven't worried about it. I have to have mercy on my soul, and as I am innocent I am ready, if it must come." Smith, still wears a smile which he said he must keep for his mother, who was doubled a new trial last week. Squint Bench and now awaits fixing of the day of his execution by Governor Ritchie.
BEAUTY PARLOR
EMPLOYEE FREED
Her Duty Was To Give Male Patrons Perfume Bath
Miss Jennie Loman, 27 years old, of 773 Vine street, who was taken in the police raid on the Liberty Street Massage Parlor last Thursday, was dismissed by Justice Stanford of the Central Police Station.
Miss Loman had been employed at the parlor two weeks, and her husband, the parlor's pulpit, the first treatment, which was a bath with perfumed water. Other than performing her duty, she knew nothing else that took place other than the fact that white girls messaged the male patrons.
Feldenheimer Case
To Be Tried Soon
Harry Feldenheimer, white collector, for the Sun Life Insurance Company, will face trial in the Criminal Court, within the next two weeks on the charge of assaulting little Esther Shorts.
State's Attorney Leach told an AFRO-AMERICAN reporter this week that he is going to push the case and that his office will not discriminate against colored people who are alleged victims of serious offences perpetrated by white persons.
EIGHT REGISTER FOR SERVANTS' COURSE
Eight young women applicants registered Monday at Sharp Street Community House for the course in Household Training, under the supervision of the Democratic Efficiency Association, white. So far only one of these is living in the building.
In Making Your Own Toilet Articles, Soaps, Perfumes, Etc.
Formulas, $1.50, or complete set of more than 20 formulas for $15.00 for Cold, Cocoa Butter, Almond Bleaching, Camphor Menthol, Creamos, Peroxide, Vanishing, Message Creams, Sachet, Talc and Face Powders, Perfumes, Toilet Waters, Pomades, Straighteners, Hair Growers, Shampoos, ETC. Not more than two sets issued to a State. Formulas designed for anything, $5.00 up.
FREE—Colored Chart, 24 x 36 in., giving the full descriptions of the diseases of the anatomy of the Skin and Scalp, Rootheaths, Shaft, Bulb, Hairfollicle, Papilla, ETC., will be given Free to all Hairdressers (only) that buy set, or $15.00 worth of formulas, or $100.00 worth of chemicals, etc. Send only money order, or certified check. Write for quotation on Synthetic and Aromatic Chemicals, Lithograph Labels, ETC.
CAPITAL COMMERGE LABORATORY, 24 Calvert, Dept. C-6-14, Amuplois, Md.
Do Away
WITH
Wash Day
YOUR FAMILY WASH
CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED
Each bundle is washed separately and returned within 24 hours in sanitary bags just damp enough for you to start ironing.
25 pounds or less, 90c
4 cents for each additional pound.
Call MAdison 1664
THE DRUID LAUNDRY
1634 DRUID HILL AVE.
Our Drivers or Clerks will explain our new service to you.
THE QUESTION
What do you think of Judge Rose's intention to investigate the bank's objections of the bank's filings which failed?
THE ANSWER
B. E. S. Wright, 215 St. Paul street, street-broker.—It is a wonderful thing, it shows the intention of Judge Rose, to let the people know where their money has gone. Mrs. Julia Jones, 1615 Pena, avenue, waitress.—The people have a right to know where their money has gone. Wallace Johnson, Winners Lane, chauffer.—Yes it is the proper thing to do, though I hope they can give good account of it. Mrs. Esther Flannigan, 1012 Pemont avenue.—I hope they are able to give an account of every penny. Mr. Chester Irwin, 119 Fleet street, laborer.—Well, it don't concern me, I didn't lose any money with them.
Watty Takes Oath Of Office
George A. Watty book the oath of office Monday as a deputy under Collector of Internal Revenue Gaben L. Tait. William L. Watkins was also sworn in as messenger to the Collector.
Mr. Watty received a number of handsome floral designs, among them being a handsome one from the Board of Directors of the Pyttiant Joint Stock Association. He is Grand Chancellor for New York, also Supreme Marquis of Arms.
The position of deputy collector is the highest ever held by a collector, the local federal service, though years ago such men as Isaac Myers, Caesar Gaines, John W. Martin, de H. J. Brown, and Hiram Watty, all of whom are now dead, held responsible positions.
ROBRED BY WHITE MEN
While on his way from the National Bank last Friday with $120 to Uman Brothers, druggists, or Baltimore street, Van Crawford, a businessman, brought a porter by the druggists, to whom the money belonged, was held up by two white men and robbed.
FUNERAL OF MISS WAFFORE
The funeral services of Miss E. Adelaide Wafford, youngest daughter of Mrs. Emily Wafford and the late Mr. Richard Wafford who died at midnight Friday, January 13th, at her home in Gavans, were held on Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at Autochth Baptist Church, Waverly. Services were conducted by Rev. G. B. Lockhart, pastor of the church. Excellent music was rendered by the church choir. The funeral march and solo were touching and heartfelt, performed by Chamberls, organist of St. Barnabas Catholic Church. Eulogies of the deceased were given by Rev. S. S. Crocket of New Jersey and Rev. R. T. Keld of the Biddle Street Baptist Church, former pastor of the Antioch Church, J. A. A. Pleasant Reeves of the Mt. Pleasant Reeves Church Gavans.
The deceased was a graduate of the Teachers' Training School June 1921. Resolutions from the Teachers' Training Class of the Teachers Training School from the present Senior Class of Teachers Training School by Miss Mahlie Hamer, from the Good Hope Baptist Sunday School of which the deceased was joined and a teacher, by Mrs. Anna White, from the Good Hope Church charmingly redeemed by Miss Lillian Matthews of Class 1921. Floral designs were sent from many friends of Washington, Baltimore and Govans, from the Good Hope Baptist Sunday School and from the Training School Class of 1921. Mrs. White, from the Teachers' School, Wai, Hawwings, Alhune Butler, Win, Randall, Goo, Smith, J. Williams, and Leo Johnson, a cousin of the deceased. The Honorary palebearers, members of the Training School Class 1921 were Misses Martha Tawyn, Selma Brutal, and Leo Chase, Lillian Matthews and Uttle Hamer.
The deceased is survived by a mother, Mrs. Richard Wafford Sr., three sisters, Miss Catherine Calvert, and amie and james two brothers, Mr. Richard Wafford Jr.
DEATHS-AND FUNERALS
Luinda Ball, 80; 1027 Parrish Al.
W. L. Williams, 62; 2811 Sampon
Lavenia Tyre, 19; 810 Whatcant
Wm. Richardson, 37; 1345 Calhoun
Wm. Thomas, 48; 1014 Peach Alley
Calhoun, 37; 1345 Calhoun
Sloe Price, 60; Muni. Hosp.
Jas, Powers, 48; 328 Colvin St.
Avery, A. Avery, 706 Charles St.
Baby Curry, Jno. Hosp.
Baby Howard, 215 S First St.
Lloe Love, 23; 115 McCullough St.
St. Johns, 23; 115 McCullough St.
Adelalea Wofford, 19; 426 Hutchin
Roht J. Read, 51; 105 Montgomery
Bessie Fletcher, 36; 1103 Mount St.
Walter Roht, 40; 1909 Alsquith
F. J. Washington, 5; 1352 Calhoun
Jas. A. Reed, 37; 509 Linden Ave.
St. Mary L. Henson, 60; Muni. Hosp.
Avery Praziad, 18; 717 S. Fromont
Avery Braxton, 315 Pine St.
Roscoe J. Watkins, 1209 Upton St.
George Neal, 40; Jno. Hosp. Hosp.
Winder Brown, 50; 120 Dolphin
Albert Hicks, 56; Muni. Hosp.
Noah Falter, 51; 420 N. Gilmore
Sarah Stuart, 71; 600 N. Gilmore
Joseph Smith, 51; Joseph Hosp.
Eugenia Thompson, 39 Muni. Hosp.
Grace Green C. 218 W. Monument.
Robt L. Chandler, 1; 1906 Aisquith
Jack Lewis, 48; 1814 Maryland Ave.
Mary E. Riff, 40; 923 N. Parrish
Baby Dabney, Jno. Hosp.
John Turner, 40; Jno. Hosp. Hosp.
Mrs. Addie W. Kyler
Mrs. Addie L. K. Lyker, the beloved wife of John W. Kyler, who departed this life on January 11, 1822, at 9:15 P. M., at her late residence, 515 W. Biddle street, she was buried from Metropolitan M. E. Church on Sunday, January 11, 1822. Her funeral, the pastor in charge, was able assisted by Rev. John A. Holmes, Rev. Johns Johnson, Dr. Ernest Loven, Rev. Lovey and Brother William Mitchell, her class leader, Sister Kyler lived a Christian in all of its principles and died as she lived. To her many friends and acquaintances, I wish to omit the way in which they stood by me in my beavered hour and for the beautiful floral designs sent after her death from the following organizations: Class No. 12 of John Westley M. E. Church of which her husband was a leader; Class No. 1 of Metropolitan King David Loch, Lady Penny Club, Woman's Home Missionary Society, Ladies Aid Society of Metropolitan; the Pising Sun Commandery No. 1, Knight Templars; the Sunrise Circle, the Sunday School of Metropolitan, Personal designs, Mrs. Edward Shippen and Dr. Shippen, Washington D. C., the North Charles street, Miss Daigy Pride, of W. Biddle street.
I am mounting today the loss of
her which is her infinite rain. I shall never forget her kind words
and wholesome instructions and
sympathetic feeling toward me.
May she rest in peace.
Signed, JOHN W. KYLER.
bushland, 515 W. Biddle St.
MRS. MANOKOO DIES
The funeral of Mrs. Gertrude Manukoo, who died at her home at Anacostia, D. C., last Sunday, following a week's illness, was held at Bethel A. M. E. Church Tuesday afternoon.
The deceased was born in this city 10 years ago. She is survived by her husband, Tec W. H. Mathews, of Campbell A. M. E. Church, Anacostia, and a brother, Samuel Matthews, of Atlantic City.
MRS ANNIE ASH
Mrs. Annie Ash, aged 58, died at her home, 651 W. Lafayette avenue, Tuesday, following a ten-day illness.
She is survived by her husband, Thomas Ash, and two daughters, Mrs. J. Muncley Dorsey and Mrs. Charles R. Smith.
ESTELEL GRIFFIN DEAD
On January 10, 1922, at 945 a.m. at her late residence, 431 Summit avenue, Monessen, Pa. Estebel Griffin, the beloved wife of Wm. Lloyd Farfax, and daughter of Matthew Griffin and the late Mary Millennium Pandit from Wayne, M. E. Church last Friday, January 13th, at 2 p.m. Relatives and friends are invited to attend, interment in Grand View Cemetery, Monessen.
William F. Tydings, 2007 Pem-
ington avenue, was sworn in Satur-
day as U.S. warehouse agent in
place of Rev. Charles B. Bishop,
resigned.
Articles, Soaps, Perfumes, Etc.
of more than 20 formulas for $15.00
teaching, Camphor Menthol, Cream,
Lotion, Sachet, Tale and Face Powders,
des, Straighteners, Hair Growers,
two sets issued to a State. Formulas
in, giving the full descriptions of the
Skin and Scalp, Rootsheets, Shaft,
will be given Free to all Hairdressers
of formulas, or $100.00 worth of
order, or certified check. Write for
Chemies Chemicals, Lithograph Labels,
LABORATORY, 24 Calvert, Dept.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Mrs. John L. Hitchens
Now Heads Y.W.C.A
Many New Officers And Members
Of Committee Of Management
Elected Under The Six
Year Rule
The Drudg Hill Avenue branch
of the Y.W.C.A. elected Mrs.
John L. Hitchens 159 as pres-
ident of the Committee of Manage-
ment at its annual meeting Thursday
of last week. Miss Cora
Gaines 1409 Argyle Avenue was
made secretary.
Under the rule barring mem-
bers from re-election after they
have served six years, these new
offices succeeded Misses Edith
Copper and Eleanor Wright. Bath
the latter pledged their support to
the new officers.
MISS SUS
ADMIT
Woman W
Assaulted
She W
TESTIMON
Witness T
Story Of
In MeCu
The fact tha
Other members of the Committee elected were: Miss Mary Brown, Mrs. W. T. Coleman, Miss Anne Smith, Miss Mattie White Miss Elvira Molson, Miss Alma Kelly, Miss Eleganner Fessington Miss Anita Williams, Mrs. Real Elliott, Mrs. Sarla Lewis, Mrs. Mabel Bourne, Mrs. Miss Bessie May Mabel Bourne, Mrs. Miss Bessie May George E. Frey, Mrs. Sara Dodson Mrs. Ida Fink, Mrs. Edna Reid Mrs. J. C. Jones, Mrs. Olivia Perkins, Miss Bessie Harrison, Mrs Ellen Brown.
More than 500 persons attended a public meeting held at School 12. Laurens and Calhoun streets, for under the auspices of The Milk his Committee of the Women's Co-operative Civile League, no Tuesday Jurious of last week. Miss Anita told Williams was in charge. Miss Anita told Moving purposes showing the nutritive value of milk were shown, but after which 390 bottles were distributed.
HOLD UP MEN
GET FIVE YEARS sale
Charlene Lockman and Herman V Mandle, were found guilty last saw罪 by Judge Corter of Criminal Court and sentenced to five years in the Maryland Penitentiary for holding up and robbing Judith Gude, white, on December 14, last.
DOCTOR'S ASSAILANT
IS FOUND GUILTY
Edward Gray Lloyd, 3467 Carrley street, who was charged with assault with intent to rob Dr. Charles H. Fowler, of 1201 David Hill avenue, December 12, last, was found guilty Tuesday by Judge Garter of Criminal Court. He was suspended to give his father a chance to satisfy the doctor's claims. Dr. Fowler said that he did not know what he was going to do, "I will have to sleep over the matter. I don't blame his father for trying to save his boy, as I would probably do the same for mine. I am going to have a talk with Judge Garter before giving a decision," he told an Afro reporter.
Great January
WEAVER'S MUSIC
85c Used Victor and O
Sale Prices—5c, 10c, 15c
85c New Victor, Okeh and
Sale Price—50c
New Banner Records-All Latest S
$1 & $1.25 New Player-Piano
New and Slightly Used V
Talking Machines Sale
Talking Machines
WEAVER'S W
1434 W. Baltimore
Phone: Gillmore 3091-J
THE WILSON
FORMERLY CRAFT
Wilson Street near
Gas, Oil, An
Steam Heat—Room C
POLLACK BROTHERS
Rates: $7, $8, $9, and
UP-TO-THE-MINUTE
Great January Sale
85c Used Victor and Columbia Records Sale Prices—5c, 10c, 15c, 20c and 30c 85c New Victor, Okeh and Columbia Records Sale Price—50c Each
THE LADY OF THE ROOM
IVORA JONES, 330 N
Hagerstown, Ma
MME. M. KING M
1510 Penna. Ave., B
---
HOLD UP MEN
MISS SUSIE WYATT ADMITS DISROBING
Woman Who Says Four Assaulted Her Declares She Was Afraid TESTIMONY SENSATIONAL
Witness Tells Different Story Of What Went On In McCulloh St. House
The fact that Miss Wyatt Wyatt, 1224 McCulloh street, would not appear at the trial held at the Northwestern Police Station last Thursday, that she refuses to make any statement or be seen by AFRO reporters at her home throws air of mystery around her charges that she was hired to an apartment house on McCulloh street and criminally assaulted by for men.
Miss Wyatt's shocking story of her experience led Justice Chapman at first hold Hutze] Freeman, one of the four men implicated, without bail. She told the magistrate she was a hairdresser and had gone to the apartment house upon indication of one of the men to dress his hair. She disobbed at the command of the men, she said, fearing violence.
Attorney Roy S. Bond, counsel for Freeman, succeeded in getting his client released on $1,000 bail to await the action of the Grand Jury this week, when the latter told Justice Chapman that no force had been used.
His statement was apparently backed up by Oliver Williams, 768 George street, a State's witness, who declared he was operating a talking machine in a room adjoining the room in which the assault is said to have taken place.
Williams also testified that he saw a man come into the room, seated in the room of whiskey and renters. When the door was opened he declared he saw Miss Wyatt sitting on the side of a bed putting on her bloomers. Afterward he declared she laughed and joked with one of the men whileisurely arranging her toilet in front of the mirror.
Perjury Charge Against Girl Dismissed
Miss Ruth Lee, 19 years old, was dismissed on the charge of perjury before Judge Stein, of Criminal Court No. 2, Thursday morning. She was charged with making false statements as to her age, etc., in filing a charge against Dr. E, F. Moyle, of 225 N. Caroline street, in the Northeastern police station last week. Technical errors in the drawing of the indictment, it is said, were taken advantage of by the defense to secure freedom for Miss Lee.
January Sale
MUSIC BARGAINS
and Columbia Records
10c, 15c, 20c and 30c
Enh and Columbia Records
Price—50c Each
Latest Song Hits Sale Price 65c
Piano Rolls Sale Price 25c
Used Victor and Columbia
Sale Price, $7.00 Up
Machines Repaired
Where Service Starts
And Never Ends
Baltimore Street
Open Evenings
ON GARAGE
FAMILY CREMENS
set near Division
Amoco Gas
Room for More Cars
Others, Proprietors
9, and $10 Per Month
MINUTE SERVICE
NU-HAIR
TAR
SALVE
PRICE 50 CENTS
5 Cts. Additional Postage
FOR BALD SPOTS
AND DANDRUFF
Acts directly upon the
Scalp and Roots of the
Hair; stops the Hair from
falling out, and removes
Dandruff and gives new
life and full growth.
Is guaranteed product to
retain the straightening
and gloss of the Hair during the warmest and most
inclement weather. Has
and is daily standing the test and proving all we
claim for it.
At all Drug Stores or through local distribution
830 N. Jonathan Street
in, Maryland
NG MFG. CO.
ve., Baltimore, Md.
CREAM OF THE COUNTRY
DANISH PRIDE
EVAPORATED
MILK
Best
By
Test
Insist
On
Danish Pride
Save
United
Profit
Sharing
Coupon
On Label
And
Secure Valuable
Premiums
AT ALL GROCERS
DR. W. L. SMITH'S Branch
Office and Mfg. Drug Store
1018 Drudl Hill Ave..
Baltimore, Md.
Phone: Vernon 2879-W.
ODORLESS TAR POMADE
NATURES GIFT TO
HUMANITY FOR THE HNIR
CONTAINING 25% TAR BY VOLUME
AND OTHER NATURAL PRODUCTS
A PURE
MASTER
PREPARATION
ECONOMIC MARK
PRICE 500 Not To Be Sold For LESS
THE MINE GRACE JOHNSON MOORE MF6Ca
DISTRIBUTORS
151H RI665 AVE. BALTIMORE, MD.
RESULTS GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED
THE SUBURB
..Morg
City Gas
Sewerage
Water
Macadam
Streets
Concrete
Footways
Etc.
You can build at any time
selection NOW if
DDORLESS TAR POMADE
NATURES GIFT TO
HUMANITY FOR THE HUMR
CONTAINING 25% TAR BY VOLUME
AND OTHER NATURAL PRODUCTS
A MASTER
PREPARATION
MARK
TRADE
ECONOMIC
PRICE 50% Not To Be Sold For LESS
THE MME GRACE JOHNSON MOORE MFG.CA.
DISTRIBUTORS
1511 RIGGS AVE. BALTIMORE, MD.
RESULTS GUARANTEED OR HONEY REFUNDED
BURB IN A CLASS B
organ Pa
at any time but you will have
NOW if you want a Good L
THE SUBURB IN A CLASS BY ITSELF
..Morgan Park..
City Gas
Bewerage
Water
Macadam
Streets
Concrete
footways
Etc.
The only
Suburb
of this
class that
actually
has City
Improve-
ments
You can build at any time but you will have to make your
selection NOW if you want a Good Location.
GENTLEMEN:
Please send me partic
Homes in Morgan Park..
NAME:
Lots can be bought on the
Easy Payment Plan
Phone PLaza 7560 or GIU 397-J
Citizen's
en's Investment CHARLES AND SARATOGA STS.
Johnson On Grand Jury
Thomas Johnson, 2428 Buchanan street, stock clerk in Katz Clothing Store, Baltimore street, and well-known in Catholic circles, is the colored member serving on the January term of the Grand Jury.
Sues King Davis
Suit has been died in City Court against the King Davis Lodge No. 22, O. U. O. of Good Hope, by John K. Ross, through Attorney Otis Ball, claiming damages of $1,000. Gross charges that the organization unlawfully suspended him for non-payment of dues, which has caused him to suffer great humiliation and shame, by publishing his name when suspended. He further claims he was in good standing and had complied with all of its rules.
FIRST BOARD MEETING
The F. E. A. A. York Rite Masons held their first board meeting of the year at the Masonic Temple 211 Alsusph street, to arrange for their financial business of the Temple. The meeting was called to order by the president. Much interest was put forth to recognize greater success. The Grand Master was present also the Grand Secretary, Mr. Henry Wilson and spotted accordingly of the work stated they would leave no wheel unturned in helping to forward the good work.
President, Mr. Daniel Price; vice president, Mr. John W. Russell; treasurer, Mr. Charles Tibba.
Are You Well, Healthy, Strong?
If you are not, let us appeal to your fine sense of reason, and to your high standard of judgment. Don't be one among the few who are using quack or fake preparations. WAKE UP! FALL IN LINE! Use prepared. but be sure you use the best, but be sure you hear most highly recommended; use the kind your physician or your druggist would advise.
DR. W. L. SMITH'S Manufactured Drugs
are scientifically compounded,
nationally known, and
highly recommended.
Not one preparation for all
complaints, but an extensive
line of prepared drugs. CALL
AT THE OFFICE! STATE
YOUR COMPLAINT! TAKE
HOME A BOTTLE! BE
CONVINCED.
Carolized Armenia Save
We prepare these and many
Satisfaction or money
refunded. Write, phone or
call.
BOOKS NOW OPEN FOR
STARLIGHT
DATES For BROWN'S GROVE And STEAMER STARLIGHT AND ALL POINTS ON THE BAY
Also From Towns on the Bay to Brown's Grove
This is the only steamer and the only park in the State of Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Colored People.
In order to secure choice dates, apply at once to
CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BROWN
2103 Drudg Hill Avenue
or call WALTER R. LANGLEY
1418 Jefferson Street
Phone, Wolfe 4222-J
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sunday evenings from now until the first of May. Be sure to give your committee authority to secure dates when application is made, as positively no dates will be held in reserve. Captain Brown will wait on any committee who wish to engage dates. Make your appointments by phone or letter. Improvements and added features are continually being added to the boat and are the comfort and enjoyment of our patrons.
UNDER THE PERSONAL DIRECTION OF ED. L. SLATER
Admission :: :: 35 Cents
R. S. — Thursdays, January 19th and 26th also
PEOPLE ARE WILD
About Odorless Tar because it positively grows hair, stops falling hair, banishes bald spots, cures eczema and ringworms, eradicates dandruff, cuts hair-dressers' bills in half by keeping the hair straight and after all you can't smell the tar. Over 300 unall you can't smell the tar. Over 300 unsolicited testimonials since June. Use Voltex Medicated Peroxide Beauty Cream and LIGHTEN UP. A positive, harmless bleach. Price 35c each for a limited time. On sale at all Drug Stores. SPECIAL INDUCEMENT TO LIVE AGENTS THE MASTER PREPARATIONS COMPANY, Inc. 1511 Riggs Ave., Baltimore, Md.
A CLASS BY ITSELF
in Park.
The onl
Subur
of this
class the
actually
has Gif
Improve
ments
at you will have to make you
want a Good Location.
Cut out this coupon and mail it to us
INTLEMEN:
Please send me particulars regarding Lots
mes in Morgan Park.
NAME
STREET
CITY State
Please send me particulars regarding Lots and Homes in Morgan Park.
FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922
TEACHERS' EXAMINATIONS ON FEB. 3-4
Tests For Elementary And Grammar Grades To Be Separated For First Time
OTHER SCHOOL ACTIVITIES
Wm. Brewer, New High School Teacher, Is Harvard Graduate
City examinations to qualify candidates for positions in the public schools are to be held at the Training School, Saratoga and Mount streets, February 3rd and 4th.
Examinations for primary and grammar school work will be separated at the first time, it is unpopulated, one examination being set for those who wish to qualify for grades one to four and the second and different examination for those who want to qualify for grades from four to eight.
No examinations are offered for applicants for positions in the high school.
Miss Cook Honored
Miss Carrie Cook, teacher of school 169 was promoted to the rank of practice teacher in kindergarten work at a recent meeting of the school board. Miss Cook had developed one of the finest kindergarten in the city of Chicago, and she complimented for her work in the survey made last year, as well as by various members of the Kindergarten Teachers' Association of which she is a member. Fellow teachers of the Training School gave her a surprise luncheon at the building last Friday. The School Board ordinance now before the City Council passes, out-of-town punts attending the high school will be taxed eighty dollars instead of seventy dollars, persons attending the elementary schools, forty dollars instead of twenty dollars, persons attending the high school will be increased from four to eight dollars; Training School, will, however, remain the same.
Mr. Joseph Newton Hill was appointed teacher of English at the High School at a salary of $1,500 per year at the last meeting of the Board.
William Brewer, graduate of Harvard College, and a former teacher of Bible University has been appointed teacher of French in the High School.
Miss Laura Gilles and Miss Isabel Hall from School 112 and Miss Eather West from School 192 have resigned.
Dr. A. D. Stone, it is understood will be named to head the dental clinic soon to be established at new School 112. Laurens and Walhom streets. Dr. Stone was the building the other day taking up his new quarters and ordering equipment.
Miss Eather Pope is expected to lead the High School soon to accept a new position in the Junior High School of Washington of which Miss Lucy Slowe is principal.
FIFTY-TWO MEN
GIVEN WORK LAST WEEK
60% Of Applicants Are Still Non-registered Voters
The City Employment Bureau put fifty-two men to work, hity at Liberty Heights and twenty-two in the Water Department. Colored men are being put to work as fast as work can be found.
Mr. Ross A. Miller, head of the Employment Bureau, said that sixty percent of the colored men that apply for jobs are not registered voters. Rev. Junius J. pastor of Psalmist Baptist Church spent several hours with Mr. Ross in his office taking account of the men who applied for jobs and were not registered voters. He then promised Mr. Ross to take the matter up with the ministers at the weekly conference and ask them to speak of it from their pulpits.
DIVAC
For Liver Ailments
Yellow Jaundice, Bowel and
STOMACH TROUBLE
This is an old and tried prescription of a graduate doctor of
Oxford, Eng., and has been used
successfully for a number of
years. Price $10.00. For sale by
all druggists; or direct from the
DEMOND DRUG COMPANY
Box 22, Goyans St., Balto., Md.
Madison 7580
MONTAGUE
Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat
SANITARIUM
Fitting of glasses, Removing
Cataracts, Adenoids and
Tonsils
Free Clinics Mon. & Fri.
2 to 5 P.M.
Dr. W. H. Montague
2038. McCulloh St.
Baltimore, Md.
Wholesale and Retail Cleaning and Dyeing
图
Mt. Vern 3830
4 Suits Sponged
& Pressed $1.50
C. THOMAS
Pressing Club &
dat Renovators
Ladies' & Gents' Garments
Cleaned, Dyed and Altered
Suits Pressed, Hats Cleaned and
Reblocked While You Wait.
400-2 Drudid Hill Ave., at Eutaw,
Free Call and Delivery.
Votes Not To Turn Out If Members Employ Whites
The Arch Social puts its foot down on the practice of some colored families employing white undertakers, when it adopted a constitutional amendment last Sunday prohibiting the social from turning out at the funeral of any member where the funeral director is white. By a coincidence, the president of the social, Clarence C. Wright, himself a funeral director, was presiding when the amendment was adopted.
The amendment was proposed by Raymond Cates, who took the ground that there are enough colored undertakers in Baltimore to satisfy all. Richard Morsell said colored business people should be patronized whenever and wherever possible.
E. L. W. Scott asserted all race enterprises should be supported.
Wounded Burglary
Gets 18 Months
Charged with attempting to burglarize the store of Mr. Frank Allen, David Hill avenue and Dablin street on December 23 last, Jesse Williams, 27 years, 1134 Fremont avenue, was sentenced to 18 months in the Penitentiary Wednesday by judge Amberl, of Criminal Court 2.
Mr. Allen surprised Williams at the door and as he attempted to run, shot him in the left leg.
Learning that a white man was working with a colored man holding up persons, caused a man in a house at 1522 East Pasadena street. Yesterday headmisters detectives Conny Minutins and Dunn and plainclothes men Hennick and Kolmraaided the house and arrested one white man and eight colored men. They were taken to police headquarters as suspects and later to the Central Police Station for investigation.
Four Men Held
Caught with housebreaking
compiments in their possession
Wednesday by police four men giv-
ing their names as William Davis,
893 Park avenue, Charles Jones,
2021 Oak street, John White, 129
West Twentyth street, and Sidney
Booth, 2475 Oak street, were held.
Booth was held in a $1,000 bail, while the
others were held in $100 bail each.
A. JACK
Will
TEACH YOU HOW TO
WRITE, PHONE, CALL
Aeolian Conserv
1418 Druld Hill Ave.
OLIVER J
Office 1204 Dru
HOUSE PAINTING
RENT COLLECTIN
Office Phone:—Mad. 5568
YOUR LAST
BUY
STOCK
NOW
BUY
STOCK
NOW
In This Magnificent Theatre something that will be. Paying Dividends long after the Holidays have been forgotten. No Stock will be Sold after Theatre opens in February.
Consult
I. E. JACKSON
1212 Penna. Ave.
Baltimore; Md.
Phone, Md.
GOOD MORNING JUDGE COLD WEATHER CUTS DOWN TRAFFIC FINES
John Coleman, Alexandria, Va. was captured in the rear of 1400 New street and charged with stealing an auto robe from a machine parked on Entaw street. Daniel Hurt and J. Clarence Garrison were sentenced to three years in the Penitentiary on the charge of burglary. Albert Williams, 217 Myrtle avenue is held by the police pending the outcome of Bailments of Miss Etto Miles, 119 X. Dallas street. A bullet from Williams' pistol is said to have struck Miss Miles accidentally; she was passing along the street. By an appeal of Lawyer Roy S. Bond, John Sutchell, 236 Vine street, sentenced to three months in the House of Correction for carrying a pistol, was released on bail. William Smith and Lucus Lovadele, 17 S. High street, are held under $500 bail or robbing houses of the Baltimore Jobbing House of fifty dollars worth of shirts.
Freeman Johnson, 1612 Latrobe street and Augustus Turner, 419 Heyer street, are held for the Grand Jury on the charge of robbing a white man of thirty-five cents and a check for $163. The Central avenue, was carried fifty dollars and cost for carrying a revolver. It was found that his satchel contained bodegain whiskey, and he admitted making run in his home. William Jones, 1314 South street was held for Federal jurisdiction on charge of making machine.
Beush Company
The case of false pretence which was brought before Judge Duffy of Common Plains court last Friday by the Fulcher Brush Company of Connecticut against John H. Jones of this city was dismissed on the grounds the plaintiff was a non-resident of the State and had entered suit with out first paying the State tax commission and that the defendant was a resident of the State. Jones was an agent for Brush Co. selling houses to house articles and accused of not turning over money received from goods sold. The defense was represented by attorneys K. Grant, Tyler and P. S. Bond.
45.000 Use Baths
The Argyle Avenue Earths had 45,716 patrons during 1921 of whom 2,573 were patrons during December. The patrons were divided as follows: male bathers 24,613; female 8,963 and users of laundry 12,980.
THOMAS
Piano
Any Stringed Instrument
Any Band Instrument
Oppose and Arrange Music
Library Of Music
Phone Madison 7711-J
T. CAULK
Hid Hill Avenue
REAL ESTATE
G A SPECIALTY
Residence Phone—Mad. 4858-W
CLASS THEATRE
OPEN IN
February, 1922
COST $500,000.00
MOST BEAUTIFUL
THEATRE OWNED BY
COLORED PEOPLE
SOUTH OF PHIL-
ADELPHIA
ARE YOU
A PART
OWNER
CHANCE
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Mrs. Thomas Leaves
$1,030.50 Estate
The will of the late Mrs. Josephine Thomas, of 2111 Droid Hill avenue, was filed last Thursday, and her daughter, Mrs. Eislanda Johnson, named as executrix. Under the terms of the will Mrs. Eislanda Johnson will receive her entire estate with the exception of $10, which is to go to her James, and $20, which is to be spent for legal expense. Attorney General, F. Faber, white counsel for the deceased, is to be retained counsel for the executrix for the estate and all legal matters until his death.
A handsome silk tug, a gift of
the citizens of the community, will
be presented to new school 112 at
challenge exercises to be held at
the school Tuesday night, January
21st.
Through their lawyer, Roy S. Bond, three couples were given their freedom in Great Court, No. 2 on Friday of last week. The record for each couple was the Dolphin street, who lived with his wife only three days, Mrs. Nellie Miller, 1117 Bolton street, was granted an absolute divorce from Oscar Miller, 613 Dolphin street, as was Jackson, 1250 Stockton street from Colling, Jackson, Camden, N.J.
SAFE Way
hten Hair!
sooth, straight hair—silky
without muss, trouble or
ted device, the product of
ius, makes hair straight-
absolutely SAFE. Just
is new invention and the
straight, pliable, ready for
Away with messy greases
chemicals and slow, dan-
at may burn or cut the
ods of straightening the
entirely out of data by.
SAFETY
ightener
A Quick, SAFE to Straighten
NOW you can have smooth, straight and easy to handle—without mussing danger. A newly patented device, the a Negro inventor's genius, makes hening quick, easy and absolutely safe a few strokes with this new invention most stubborn hair is straight, pliable any style of coiffure. Away with mats and pomades, harmful chemicals and gerous instruments that may burn scalp! All these methods of straight hair have been made entirely out
The Lee SAFE Hair Straight
```markdown
```
A Quick, SAFE Way to Straighten Hair!
NOW you can have smooth, straight hair—silly and easy to handle—without muss, trouble or danger. A newly patented device, the product of a Negro inventor's genius, makes hair straightening quick, easy and absolutely SAFE. Just a few strokes with this new invention and the most stubborn hair is straight, pliable, ready for any style of coiffure. Away with messy greases and pomades, harmful chemicals and slow, dangerous instruments that may burn or cut the scalp! All these methods of straightening the hair have been made entirely out of data by
The Lee SAFETY Hair Straightener
The Lee SAFETY is not only safe but rapid. It has from four to six times the combing surface of any other device for straightening the hair. It is light and easily handled—can be used by anybody without help. Needed in every home, barber shop and beauty parlor. Made in four styles, the favorite being the Lee Wizard, illustrated here. Notice the patented safety guard—an exclusive Lee feature, not obtainable in any other straightener.
Cannot Burn The Scalp
Scalp
straightener, you
up if you tried.
scalp, if they scald
blood poisoning
pity and be safe!
Money!
is guaranteed,
your money back.
our risk. If your
hand in your name
and a Lee Safety,
pay the postman
the Lee Safety,
presented unbound.
send no
address. A post-
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only $3.50 and postage. Try the Lee Safety.
If it not supply you, represent repayments
it and your money will be refunded. Send no
money—just your name and address. A post-card
will do. Mail it today.
The Lee Hair Straightener is guaranteed,
It must satisfy you or you get your money back.
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and address and we will forward Lee Safety,
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DEPT. 110, 1800 E. 12TH STREET
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---
Few Persons Stand Before Judge
Staylor These Days
The following persons were
hailed before Traffic Court last
week for the violation of motor
vehicle laws:
Failure to give right of way—
Benj. Brown, 1927 Striker street;
$5; Lee Harrison Algherbert Park;
$5. No lights—Ernest Lacey, 2624
Rhone street; $4; Henry Thomas,
Laurel, Md. $5.
Parking—Berry Jones, 2028 Mt.
Royal avenue, $1145.
No license—George S. Carroll,
1129 N. Stockton street, $15.
Speeding and reckless driving—
William Davis, 107 N. Bruce street,
$5. Bead, Gehwayway, 531 W.
Bishop Street, 531 W.
deck, 316 W. Preston street, $5.
Untended—Richard Campher,
1129 Spring street, $5.
WEEKLY REPORT OF FIRES
Jan. 12, 9.22 A. M. Box, 353, 1908
Brudel Hill Avenue, two floors
by W. Carter. Damage to building and
contents slight. Crusis, publish in
color.
Building call 516 M. B. 2966 Division
Street, two story brick dwelling owned
by H. Born occupied by B. Wilson.
Damage to building, slight. No
insurance on contents. Crusis, coat of
heater.
January 12, 448 A. M. Bog, 354,
1908
1471 Brudel street. Ford authored
by Clue. McNeal. Damage,
considerable. Crusis unknown.
To Present Flag
Divorces Granted
BLASS, DRUGGIST
NORTHWESTERN PHARMACY Cut-Rate Druggists Penna. Avenue and Dolphin Street THE Penlar STORE
SATURDAY, JANUARY 21st 3 Cakes Lifebuoy Soap For 18c SATURDAY ONLY
New Shipment of Black and White Goods JUST RECEIVED
Cars for hire. Sunday and evening occasions. Theater. Price Mod. Dance and Dance. Price Mod. Dance and Night Services. 1707 Dudley Hill Avenue.
ASTHMA
wickly reliever
65, dep. 25.
25.
ASTHMA
uickly reliever.
655. Dept. 25.
For Asthma and
Bronchitis.
Most
stubborn
cases of
A. O. MEIER, Boss
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
BLASS
408-4
These Are Not P
Price o
Throat and Lung Balsam
For Long-Standing, Stubborn,
Hacking Cough, For Catarrnal
Bronchitis, Bronchial Asthma,
Ioarseness, Loss of Volce, Loss of
A Desirable Support Treatment
In Consumption (pulmonary) and
All Wasting Diseases.
Cough & Asthma Syrup
It relieves that shortness of
breath.
It stops that tickling cough.
It makes you split up the phlegm.
It relieves the pain and tight-
ness of cough.
Those who have taken a heavy use of BLASSS SMOKE, SNIKE
Cold, Grip and Flu Capsules
W will cure a cold in one day;
break up chills and fever over
them.
They stop the palms, arches and
body, limbs or arms
over night.
They break up coughs and tightness in chest, head colds, neuralgia. They move the bowels next day. Price 50c
Sore Throat Remedy
ARGENTINA ONES
Ucerated Throat
Ucerated Tonsils
Horseshoe
Ucerated Mouth,
Mouth
Capsicum Rub-Salve
RED PEPPER SALVE
The Great Pain Remover
should be used in conjunction with
the above remedies.
Eat-A-Tab's
For Dyspnea. Acid Stomach,
Indigestion. Constipation. Poor
Blood Pressure. Nausea, Fermentation, Mast-Assimilation. Food, Gass, Mal-Assimilation. Food, Gass, Mal-Assimilation. Fainting about heart due to Gas. Belching.
Sour Stomach, Headache,
Gray and Faded Hair Restorer
Keeps you looking Young
Gradually darkens Gray and
Faded Hair.
Price 50c. $1.00
Tape-Worm Remedy
Will eliminate the worm in two or
three hours. $1.00.
P. D. Q. Capsules or
For Catarrh of the Bladder or
Running Range, Inflammation.
For Bed Bugs Only
Corrosive Sublimate mixture
50c PINT BOTTLE
NORT
Peck Miller (white). Philadelphia; Mack Feigman. New York; Rev. C. P. Dixon. Newport News, Va.; Miss J. W. Lewis. Chicago, Ill.
HELD FOR STEAMING CLOTHES
Walter Holmes was held under $500 bail for Justice Potee of the Southern Police Station Wednesday on a charge of stealing a suit of clothes from the store of Abe Gammerman, 711 South Charles street.
SS, DRU
410 North Gay Street, Baltimore
Patent Medicines, True & Tried Fee on all these Medicines, $1 each, By
Tonic Nux & Iron Liquid
The great builder and strengthener. It acts as a general tonic to the body's strength, energy, power, force, ambition. Enriches the blood and builds up the nervous system of you. Regulates the bowels.
Kidney and Bladder Tea
For weak Klinees and bladder; stop getting up at night. For backache and pain in hip and groin, for frequent desire to urinate; and frequent or scanty, burning urine; bed wetting, allays all irritation and induction of urticaria. Prevent the uric acid from the system and prevents rheumatism.
Rheumatism and Neuritis
For all kinds of rheumatism,
swelling of the knee, pain,
nervitis, neuraigia, neuritis,
lumhaco, swelling of knee, wrist
and abductor pleurys, pain in side
knee.
Recommended for Fluttering,
Nervous of Palpitating Heart,
Shortness of Breath. Irregular
Pulse, Smothering or Palmny Feeling,
Shooting Pains, Blue Lips, Toubals
and Nervous Heart. Price $11.00
Dyspepsia and Indigestion Cure
For constipation, gaseous stomach, and pain in the upper meat area, heartburn, excessive bleeding, sour stomach, pains after eating and all stomach discomfort.
Sweet Pink Powders
FOR CHILDREN
A valuable resource for children
when Feverish, Constipated,
Groopy, Vomiting, Teething, Greenish
Colored Stools, Bad Breath,
Sour Stomach. I given in time
will prevent spasms.
Price 60c
Incontinence Mixture
For Bad-Wetting in children
and aged persons.
Price 60c
Blass' Pile Ointment
For Blind, Bleeding, Fishing and
Protruding Piles. Gives instant re-
action to all you need,
so don't suffer and longer--get a
box today, $50, $1.00.
or
Eczema, tetter, barber's itch, ring-
worms, scaly eruptions and all itch-
ing diseases of the skin. Gives
instant relief.
Roach Killer
For Roaches Only
Kills them on the spot
50c PINT BOTTLE
PAGE SEVEN
CUPID DEFEATS
DIVORCE COURT
Harris Case Postponed Indefinitely
When Couple Become Reconciled
The divorce case of Mary Harris
versus William Harris which was
to have been heard before Judge
Bond of circuit court last Friday
was postponed by request of a
attorney Bond, counsel for the defense,
on the grounds that a
reconciliation has been affected
NGGIST
ore, Md.
Remedies for 30 Years
mail, $1.15
New Life Tablets
For Men Only
For lost manhood, nervousness,
general weakness, nightly chills,
sensibility and impotence. The
act as a general tonic and put her
life into your worn-out system.
Female Better Health Tablets
A vegetable compound for the treatment of female troubles, weakness and peculiar to the female gown. These wonderful tablets have now been developed by women who have been well, strong and happy. These tablets, the soothing 'painless' reliefs, suffer less endured by so many of our women which makes life so milderable. These tablets use Blau Double Dresser.
Acid Stomach Powder
For serious stomach, swelling and difficulty after meals, soothe stomach, biceps, spine, joints, skin and all stomach troubles.
Nerve and Tonic Tablets
For extreme nervousness, sleep
lessness, twisting, nervous
depression, headaches, dizziness,
stomach ache, and all nervous
stomach and all nervous disorders.
Blood Tonic and Purifier
For skin bleemles, cemptions and
scales, white patches on skin
blood disease, corneal infection,
catarach, white patches on tongue
and skin, body. It also
perfumes the collarbone.
Regulator
For bioscience habitat consti-
tion, distinctions of use of appetite, dyspe-
sia, indigestion, foul breath, jau-
ndness, liver and intestinal problems.
Sweet Breath
Tooth And Mouth Wide Tooth And Mouth Wide Tooth And Mouth Wide Tooth And Mouth Wide Cleanse, Beautify and Preserve the Tooth. It will immer to the Breath, and to the Gums and to the Gums a healthy Action, and a consequent firmness and brightness of color.
Blass' Little Pinks
For constipation and indigestion
25c. 50c.
Blass' Magic Corn Cure
It gives instant relief. You can
pick the corn out with your fingers.
It will remove warts and callous
skin from bumps and sores of
feet. 25c. 60c.
Use Blass' Rat Poison
The Kind which exterminated
the rats in our market houses.
25c and 50c a Package.
JACK JOHNSON TO MAKE NEW PICTURE
Former Heavyweight Champion Will Then Continue Theatrical Tour To Coast
WANTS TO MEET DEMPSEY
Modestly Admits Thousand
Mile Journey To Save
McVey From Potter's Field
Jack Johnson, after completing
his work as a clinical engagement
Saturday, left for New York,
who will deviate the next three
weeks to making another
picture for the Fidelity Pictures
companion, the same company
which has been shown in this city.
For his Mother's Sake,
The title of the coming production
has not been decided upon.
After completing this picture,
Johnson will continue his theatrical
career and the continued to the
had representative of the AFRO he kept long with Jack on his visit last week, and the big fighters went to be putting all his hopes on a match he had in the other half against the championship. He a good bit of hatred be admitted that he had a thousand-mile trip from cinnamont to New York two weeks in order to attend the funeral of his old pot. Sam McVey, the agent admitted, was on money to McVey's body from "Butter's Field." "Where were Kid Norfolk, Jasmin Kid, and all the other supposedly big price fighters of New York that you had to come all the way from home to see that a follow prisoner and a decent brunet Jasmin was asked, but he was not asked to answer, and it to court himself.
LOENDI TAKES FIRST LEG
Defeat Spartan Field Five Of New York City 29 To 16
Brighton, NJ - Jan. 18 - The classes of the Locale core teams of Spartan that will take the 191-22 basketball championship, will be given more time to stand on campus, when they defeated the Spartan Field Club of New York City.
The institution of this victory benefited when it is presented that Spartan also has belonged to their belts already this season the schools of Oberlin College of New Braunfels, Tulsa, Oklahoma University, Carrollton and the Spartan Field Five.
898 Boys At "Y" Last Week
Send in an account of how you spent your vacation. Price Free With Big Afro
Miro Basketball League Soon To Start
Harsh, boys, the Aro 'Basket
bon League is soon, to start.
Around February first, Mr. Freese
of the Public Athletic League
is going to direct league,
just as he did the Aro 'Basket
bon League.
This is a secret and should not
be held in public, but Mr. Freese,
who also has the basketball
foleo for winning school
team, just as he had gold baseball
foleo for the winning baseball
team.
Gosh basketball is fun. Just as
much fun and excitement.
You know the boys came out two
hundred strong last week to the
gymnasium, which Mr. Booke-
so is so kindly opening for the
boys on Tuesday. Wednesday
Friday to Saturday. Wednesday
3:30 to 6. On Monday the practice is held at
the Sharp Street Community
House.
The Editor of the Boys and
Girls does not know which
school is going to in the basketball
championship of the city, but
he understands that the other
schools are going to fight hard to
boys 116 and 116 from walking
away with any more championship.
BANG! BANG!
Cracker Pat had been given a gun for his birthday. He was "trining it out" in the presence of his father who was reading his book. Son stat noise wid dat gun," and son his father illumina "Talent fails." answer Cracker "Ah's pulling a trigraph as an Ah!"
RLS' AFRO
13, 1922 Edit
BOYS AND GIRLS' AFRO
FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1922
Mayor Breenen did not have any streets in the colored sections rope off for sliding because you did not ask him. You want to go on some hill write to the Mayor and ask him to have your street rope off.
The word sausage is not mentioned in the Bible, but it is mentioned at the boys' Bible Class held every week at the "Y" and open both to members and non-members. The boys under Mr. Siskindy the Bible, and afterwards have a lunchon of "Hot Does" and rolls.
Johnny "Because she couldn't bake without any dough."
The "Y" basketball team Newport News will come to city tonight (Friday) to test metal of the cage-tossers of Drudu Hill. Avenue "Y" and hot game is expected
Both Teams Lose To "Y" At Gymnastism Saturday Night
Trying to spring a surprise on the Y, M. C. A. Big Five worked disaster to the St. Mary's basketball ball team, invading the "Y" Eyman with strong force led by their star Captain Cooper. St. Mary's tried and fell short. The first contest was between the "Y" Juniors and St. Mary's Juniors. There was no comparison. The kids led the shot with a captain Haven "Y" Juniors turned the game into a practice affair. To Wake, Hawkins, the Short, Shields and Madden, the Y. M. C. A. has a team that has won the team that has been on the court. In three games they have not lost a game. Their victories being St. John's High School and St. Mary's Junior. The scores for the season are 16, St. John's 9; "Y" Juniors 16, High School 13; "Y" Juniors 22, St. Mary's Junior 4.
[ The main contest turned out to be just a rough practice game between the big teams for the "Duck" Gibson and John Baker played at around St. Mary's guards' faces while Hays and Kyler had the "Otter Brothers" (St. Mary's stars) onzizy. The Bucks ran rough over St. Mary's half and in the second half, in the second half, Meet Bucks went out and put his speed boy in, "the Shields. St. Mary's guards couldn't stop the team from plunging up in. The team from plunging up in. The face of the "K" Big Five.
Lineup first game
S. Mary's F Y. M. C. A.
Conway F Shields
Wilson F Paskerville
Stanley C Wake
Turner G Madden
Williams G Hawkins
Substitutes—Ward, Shirts, Telkey
Lineup "Y" Big Five vs. S.
Mary's Big Five:
S. Mary's "Y" Five
C. Cooper F Gibson
B. Cooper F Mac Both
B. White C Baker
E. Jackson Kyley
G. Johnson Hyes
Hunt Shields
Emory Marshall
Madden
Basketball Games Scheduled Next Week
High School vs. Armstrong - Wash
State, 12th
ington, D. C., January 20th
High school vs. Athletic Arrows
"V" Gymnasium, January 29th
"V" Big Five vs. Newport News
"V" Gym, January 29th
"V" vs. Armenia, January 28th
Armenia vs. Sustakias — Akron,
Ohio, January 21st
Ohio vs. Armei — Cleveland, O.
January 23rd
Armenias' vs. Sustakias — Cleveland,
Ohio, January 24th
Armenias vs. Louisville — Pittsburgh
Abingdon or Lausdale-Pittsburgh
June 14, 2016
The January 28th.
EARL JOHNSON
GIVEN BANQUET
Loreal Club Shows Appreciation
Of Great Marathon Star By
Making Him Member
Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 18—As a
tribute of its appreciation of Earl
Johnson, former Atlantician, and
famous marathon runner, who
won three national distance
championship during the year last
week, the Loreal Club of this
city tendered a follow-up to
the athlete last week.
The club about seventy-five
members of Pittsburgh's Good Fellows
present and Earl were numbly
tendered a follow-up to the
Club. To his sons, Earl told
of the hardships and boars are
to make a success in track athletics.
SCHOOL YELLS
Flippity flipp! Flippity flipp! Ricketty rackety Ricketty rhip! Johnston High School! Hip, flip, flip!
CONVENTIENCE
I eat syrup with my peas; I have done it all my life. Not because I like it. But it keeps them on my肌皮.
IT WAS NWT THE POSTOFFICE
William Dean Howells, the great American novelist, used to tell a story on himself which illustrates the ignorance of many people about standard literature.
One time he was visiting in a small New England village. He had taught him nothing in particular to read, so he decided to buy a volume by Charles Lamb, the famous English essayist.
He walked into the Main Street Department Store and said to the clerk at the book counter, "Let me have the Letters of Charles Lamb."
"You are in the wrong place Mr. Lamb." said the clerk pleaseantly. "The poffee office to be here, but it has moved across the street."
Fred. Douglass Contest
The $6 in prizes offered for the best essay of hot more than 300 words on paper to school children to school children. A written copy of the essay together with a photo of the winner suitable for framing will be given to the school office pupil takes the prize. Get bag boys and girls.
B H
Left to right—Joe Carter, of Brown University, sprinter; our own Fari Johnson, National 5 and 1 mile champion, and Net Gourdain, Harvard, world's champion broad dumper.
Annapolis, Md., Jan. 19—Among the A. A. U. Basketball officials invited to the United States Naval Academy, the U.S. Army's Benny Washington, well known teacher of Armstrong High School, Washington, D. C.
A demonstration game and the interpreted meeting were given at the University of Washington of the committee of basketball rules, lectured.
Thompson Wins
M. & B. Trophy
New York, January 18—George Thompson, formerly of St. Christopher Club, but now running unattached has been awarded the trophy offered to the competition scoring the greatest number of points in road and bronze competitions by the Browns and Bronx Athletic League during 1921. Thompson was the only colored athlete among the league winners.
Siki Coming To America
African Fighter: Who Has Best Europe's Best Seeking More Victims
Philadelphia. Dec. Jan. 13—Battling Sidi Hamza the Senegalese pugilist is being astonishing the light fons of Europe for the past few months, by mowing down the best that, could he see himself is coming to meet him to display his muscles. Presel (Tony, evidently) of Philadelphia is to be his American manager.
Have Your Coasting Hill Roped On
BIBLE AND SAUSAGE
SAFETY
Bill: "Can you sign your name with your eyes shut?"
"Surely, son."
"Then let me see you do it on this report card."
JOHNY W RIGHT
Johnny—"Teacher, what does 'knead' mean?"
Teacher—"Your mother knaces her dough before she bakes it; read it."
Newport News vs.
D. H. "Y" Tonight
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
OF
THREE CHAMPIONS POSE TOGETHER
of Brown University, sprinter; our own Earl Burdin, Harvard, world's champion broad jumper
ATHENIANS WIN INITIAL GAMES
Ath. A
High number
Baltimore Boys Start Bas
ketball Tour Of West
With Two Victories
EIGHT MEN MAKE TRIP
Games Planned With Forty Club And Puritans On Return Next Week
Springfield, Ohio, Jan. 13. — The Athenian Blue and Gray basketball machine started its western trip in fine style last night in Springfield, Ohio, at 3 p.m. and besides sending the Springfield "Y" down to defeat by the score of 44 to 30.
Making the trip are Harris Butler, Google, the Wright, the George Newman is manager. This is undoubtedly the fastest team Baltimore has been able to put up for many years and it is holding off the George Newman with good string of victories.
The Forty Club of Chicago is dickering with the manager for a game in Baltimore. February 13th Either this date or a later date, the Forty Club of Puritan Basketball Club, which has on it such famous players as Kimbro, of the Vandals; Ricks, formerly, of Leond; Access of center, formerly of the Spartans also he brought for games.
Write about what's going on in your school for the "Boys" and Girls "Afru"
Edited by our Young Readers
WISE WILLIE
"Can you tell me the difference between a lake and an ocean, Willie?" (who had spent his summer vacation at the sea shore)—"Yessum, a lake is pleasanter to swallow when you fall in."
NOR FOR ANYTHING ELSE
Joe—"I saw you sitting in the street car this morning between two fat men. Weren't you almost squeezed into the seat?" "Oh, I hadn't much room for complaint."
AHEAD OF TIME
"Hey, Pa. why does it say, in this book that Jesus was his time?" asked Adolph. "Maybe, because he carrife his man, and his hit pocket."
HOW DO YOU SAY THEM?
Here are the correct pronunciations of three words that are often mispronounced. Accent the second syllable. Always use a long "i". Au-top-y. Accent the first syllable. All -liger-en. All the vowels are short. The "g" is soft like "i". Accent the second syllable.
HARD JOB FOR JIM
"Have you brought the number
of your house for our directory
the Jim?" asked the teacher.
"Yeem I've got it, but I had an
a awful time getting it off—it was
insigned on go tight,"
IN THE WORLD OF SPORT
By W. E. R
It is evident that in this last he must match, Wills stung by the flasco of that w their match of three days before, tion.
High School basketball squad, numbering sixteen men, under Coach Gibson, marched to the Community House gymnasium last Friday, where they met the Athenian Arrows before a crowded house. The High School team showed superior passing ability, but lost to the Arrows to shoot foul goals. Now Howard is the captain of the Arrows, and Cupid Brown is captain of the High School.
Pirates Walk Away
The "T" Pirates of the Y. M. C.
A. Boys' League have a hard time trying to play basketball. They play with a basketball given credit to an adult five the Pirates swamped the McCoys, the fastest 110 lb team of the white team. The McCoys had the Pirates by the board to a score of 13-11 in the first half. After a calling down by Capt. Jerome good, the Pirates scored 13-11 in the second half. They didn't let them score a field goal in this half. The whistle blew on the score of 38-13 in favor of the Pi
New York, N. Y., Jan. 19.—C. R. Rogers, of the R. J. R. Tobacco Company, just returned from Connaughton, N.J., to the leadership of the Turks, was a great soldier and had on his personal staff Germans, French, Italian, and two colorful Americans. The Turks are captains, one from Nashville, Tennessee, and the other from Louisville, Ky. Rogers predicts that the Turks will defeat the Greeks in the war now going on.
Tate Draws With Wills
Tate's Tale ability to withstand punishment administered to blink at the hands of Harry Wills is beginning to assume the proportions of a stumbling-block in the path of the latter in his claim as the next championship contender for the championship match with Jack Dempsey.
Out in Portland Ore, on New Year's Monday, Wills lost to Tate on a foul in the first round of a scheduled 10-round tournament, dissatisfaction with charges of crookedness and frumuage filling the air that the men were rematched on the following, Friday, night, for the same distance. This latter bout went to the road, and Tate was to put Tate away and resulted in a draw. Reports of this fight are to the effect, that Wills fought like the proverbial tiger, forcing the fighting and battering Tate all around the ring, but Tate was unable to listen for the chirp of the "little birds."
Tate Claims Championship
On the strength of these two decisions, Tate has come East claiming the colored *heavyweight championship*, and certainly one must pause for any measure of logic in his claim. And yet, it is our opinion that there are few people who more; or less familiar with boxing and the ring career of believers. Wills is Tate's master.
**The Western Circuit**
The roster of owners remains the same as that of last season, with the execution of St. Louis, Rich-
Tacoma landed a right hook to the body. Each landed a left to the body. With missed a left hook as the bell ring,
Denton, Md., Jan. 16.—Baseball between Denton Tigers and Young Recruits, Score, Tigers 3, Recruits 2. The famous Tigers are open for dates. Willard Brown, 206 N. 5th street, Denton, Md.
BASEBALL MOGULS MEET IN CHICAGO
Status Of Game In West Will Be Settled Next Week
By Dave Wyatt
Chicago, Ill., Jan. 17.—Precisely what is going to occur in this city next work, at the meeting of the National Association of Colored Professional Baseball Clubs, cannot be forecasted, but should suggest a slight increase of certainty. However, it should be a tremendously exciting session. The most gigantic conference of all baseball history is marshaling towards the Western metropolis. Every phase and angle of organized baseball is sending its representatives so that some dealing will be handled the situation brought about by the advent of colored clubs in organized baseball
A. "Rub" Foster's Western circuit of the national body has the honor of inaugurating the great pow-pow. The conference will cover three days, starting Thursday, January 26, at 10 a.m. M. Sessions will be held Saturday. The three days conference will be held at the assembly rooms of the Appomattox Club. 3632 Grand Rouleyard.
ard Kent and Samuel Sheppard, influential and progressive business men, have discharged all obligations and have been awarded the fraternity in St. Louis; he met at the meeting. Other cities and representatives are as follows: Indianapolis, A. B. Cs, C. I. Taylor; Detroit, J. T. Blount; Kansas City, J. T. Blount; Chicago, Giants, Charles J. Chicago, Giants, Desk, Howard M. Smith; American Giants, A. R. Foster; Cuban Stars, A. R. Foster (or proxy). The Hildale Club of Darby, Pa., will be represented by Edward B. Bison, and the Echeveria Giants of New York. These clubs hold associated membership. Club heads who will be on hand to file application for membership are G. J. Tate, Tate, John Kesson, Keynesons, Pittsburgh, Pa.; John Matthews, Daxton Marcos.
MEXICANS WANT
DEMPSEY-JOHNSON BOUT
Popularity. Ex-Champ Created While An Exile In That Country Still Strong
A dispatch from Nogales, Arizona last week stated that Mexican boxing promoters are trying to arrange a championship match for the heavyweight title between Jack Johnson and Jack Dempsey to take place in Mexico City in the near future, and that the public in general was manifesting great interest in the proposed match.
It will be recalled, that during his exile from this country, Johnson spent quite a little time in Mexico where he was identified by the populace, an example of which popularly was evidenced on one occasion, when a white American who conducted a confectionery in one of the cities of the neighboring Republic refused to allow Johnson to be served in his place. This incident was at once brought to the attention of two of the country's leading generals who lost no time in seeking out the offending gringo, closed up his place and would have executed him, so the writer was told by Johnson, if he had not interceded for him.
1. According to a current disatch,
2. Jack Kearns, manager of Dempsey
3. Seymour, the former head of the
4. Mexican promoters to bring about
5. such a match, said, "Jack Dempsey,
6. heavyweight champion, will
7. not meet Jack Johnson, former Nate
8. gro champion, in a match in Mexico
9. or anywhere else."
RLD OF SPORT
W. E. R.
was too anxious to 'wine out the
mark that had been charged
against him, and thus practically
contributed to his own shortcom-
tions, so he not only to limit
disassemble the work of Tate, such
as he displayed, but if all reports
are true, he showed little save a
capacity to assimilate punishment.
To make his claim punishable, he
should be charged.
The significance of these Wills Tate matches is enhanced by reason of the fact that, as has already been discussed in this issue, Jack Dempsey declared—even before the last two matches between Wills and Tate were fought,—that as the result of Wills' showing with Tate whom he prevailed in the previous occasion, Wills' claim for a championship match, had lost its validity. And it must be admitted, that the outcome of these last two hours' matches in the words disproving Dempsey's attitude in this respect.
Wills-Dempsey Match
Right now—some sports writers and promoters notwithstanding—we consciciously believe that a hout between Dempsey and Wills would prove to be one of the wagers, and its on just such a footing that this match inevitably must be made, for while there is no question, that Wills means what he says about fighting Dempsey on any terms the latter may be induced to sign articles for such a match by the size of the-purse. If Wills is to maintain his present prestige, he mustlick Tate and in a manner that will leave no room for ques-
JUST KIDS - IT depicts on the news
JANUARY
WHAT HAVE I TOLD YOU, ABOUT READING NEW PAPER? IF YOU WANT TO READ, READ THE PAPERS AND BRADEN YOUR MIND
YESSIR!
OH SARAH! WHERE IN THUNDER IS THE SPORTING SECTION OF THIS PAPER?
LEMME SEE - WAGNER GOT THREE HITS OF MARQUARD OUTA THREE TIMES, HIS AVERAGE LOWLING TO AVERAGE WHO GOT TWO HIS THE YESREAD YESTERDAY
INTERNATIONAL CARTOON CO.
From the Chicago Whip
Wills shot a right to Tate's heart.
Wills hit Wills on the side of the chin
Tate hit Wills on the left of the heart.
The two elicited Tate landed a left to Wills chin. The man stepped back to Wills chin. The two sparred, neither landing a blow.
Wills cried out Wills wide.
The cry peaked宽 wide.
Round 2
Wills missed with a right to the heart. Wills landed a couple of steps back. Wills landed two left jets to Wills' face in rapid succession. Tate landed a right job to the body. Wills landed a couple of tattoos. Tate's ribs and kidneys. Tate missed a right cross. He hit Wills with a wrist while the bell rang. Both wives while the bell rang.
Round 3.
Wills missed a left hook to Tate's jaw. Tate landed with a left jab to the chin. Tate landed with a left hook to the chin. Tate landed a right cross and a left hook to the body. The two elbowed. Tate landed the body. Tate drew in body punches at close quarrels. Wills missed a left hook to the chin and almost to the floor. Wills
Round 4.
Wills lambed a terrific right to, the kidney as they climbed, the body. Wills administered several terrific punches to the kidneys, and the body lambed again. Wills lambed a right book. Wills lambed a right book. Wills lambed a right book. Tate seemed to be woozing. Tate wanted to climb, but Wills kept on climbing. Tate lambed a right book. Wills lambed a terrific right.
Wills missed a left job to the chin. Tate missed a left job in the body and ran into a clinch. Wills landed a left book to the chin. Tate sent a right to the stomach. Tate sent a left and right to the chin. Tate landed a left job to Wills's eye, cutting it. The pen stood too to be swinging both hands. Tate landing effectively. Tate landed a right in the back of Wills's neck but as they went into a clinch. Wills eye seemed to bother him. Tate landed a right uppermost hand. Tate chin at chose quarters.
The men boxed cautiously. Wills missed two rights to Tate's stomach. Wills missed a left book to the chin. Tate began to outbox Wills. Wills landed two left books to the chin. Tate left jaubed to Wills's head and followed it up with a right across but missed. They elinched. The clinched again and wrested both falling to the door. Tate landed two left books to the body. Wills returned with a fuselage of mineles in the kidneys. Tate left jaubed to the body. Wills landed two punches on the back of
Round 6
Tate's neck. Wills was the blonde
girl with the left ear. They elbowed.
Wills tumbled powders to the blinns.
The fighters elbowed as the bell rang.
Round 7.
Wills shot a while left back to Tate's chin. Wills countered with a right to the stomach. Wills jubbered several times to the ribs in the elbeth. Tate shot a left jab to the chin. They elmched. Wills used his right effort to the kidneys. Tate jubbered Wills had ever and it had again. Tate missed a right upper, lobbied with a cish with his left. The motor spared for an opening. Wills missed a left hook and shot another right to the kidneys as they went into a elmbed. Tate jubbered Wills nose with his left. The referee ordered Tate to step back sooner in elmches.
Round 8
Wills sent a ledge to Tate's
ok, he they climbed Wills sent a ledge
boke was led from the blows Wills
completed to the palace. Wills handed
boke left to the body and missed a
boke boke ended a ledge and right to Tate's
but they did not seem to affect
Bill. Tate swung wildly as the ledge
Round 9
Wills led with a left to the chair, both swung and missed. Tate used an armrest to hold the chin. They fell into a clutch. The two exchanged armrests. Wills landed with right to the neck. The neck was on the neck. Wills knees just hit the floor. Tate swung with a right and left in an effort to bring the chair up. They swung with both hands. Wills pushed Tate into the ropes and as Tate bounced back Tate sent in two. Wills held the chin. The hull rang as they went into a clutch.
Round 10.
The men shook hands. Tate refused to lead and kept at a distance. They shoved him aggressively. Wills landed rights to the kidneys at close quarters. Wills continued to drive rights to the kidneys at Tate locked away. Jabbar took his bike. Wills landed a right back to the body. Tate came back with a belt hook to the chin as the bell rang.
JUST KIDS—it depends on the
IN JASSEMBLY
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PAGE EIGHT
NO BASKETBALL AT UNION UNIV.
Coach Martin Unable To Get The Boys In Shape Before Next Year CAPTAINS ELECTED
Barksdale Heads Football Team, And Branch Baseball Nine
Richmond, Va., Jan. 17—Coach Harold D. Martin, "The Idol of Norwich University," and to the little piggie wizard, who gave in to the challenge in football this season among Negro colleges, has just announced Union's athletic program for the mid-winter and spring seasons. Last month, he announced the Athletic Association to formulate plans for continual enhancement of the Red and Steel's reputation in the athletic world. The team, which plays all-American tackle of the past football season, was elected captain of next year's, football team. A. A. Branch, the fast outfielder, who was shifted to second base in the team, was the captain of this season's baseball team. Both captains are working with their coach in his effort to maintain the unique distinction that Union earned for itself in the past
Coach Martin says that with such men as Pop Gregory, Allen, Jackson, George McDouall, Clarence Jackson and Corruthers, he believes that the team could whip into shape a basketball aggregation even more formidable than the Vandals of the Grid. The mid-winter season has crept upon Union and found its footing in the game to meet the issue. Thus Coach Martin's plan for a "Quint" falls through and Union will have to wait another year until increased appropriation from students or alumnus will support such an edgeover.
Although a Union Quint is quite unlikely for 1922, sport fans will have to wait only a few more weeks before they'll see Union's baseball machine slowly perfected. Much of the equipment is back and quite a few youngsters of no mean quality from other schools are expected to try out. To the delight of the fans, Herbert Thompson is again in school and promises to show the old form on the mound again this season.
High-School Delegates Active
The Toussaint L'Overture Literary Association of the Colored High School is planning to present a special program commemorating the birth of Doug Douris, February 13th.
Troubles for representatives in the joint debate with Punjab High School. Washington was held hard by the opposition, who take place at Bethel A. M. E. Church on March 3rd. The subject will be, "Resolved, That the Supreme Court of Negro will be best conserved by the Creation of a National Party."
OFFERS $100,000 FOR
WILLS-DEMPSEY BOUT
Denver Matchmaker Says Wills Is Only Worthy Opponent For Dempsey
Denver Col. Jan. 18—Jack Kanner matchmaker of the National Athletic Club this year has offered Dempsey a decision between Jack Dempsey and Harry Wills. In speaking of the proposed deal, Kanner negotiation with the managers of both Dempsey and Wills and already have received assurances from Padre Mullins, who will meet him this fall, will meet Dempsey here on any terms that may be arranged." I have seen both Dempsey and Wills "have chosen and along with the opinion of many followers of boxing, I believe that Wills is the only man in the ring today who can choose as worthy one of the two."
the news By Ad Carter
I TOLD YOU
WK CARTER?
READ - DEAD
BROADE H
YESSIR!
THE VAMP &
THE VIRGIN
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FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922 THE VAM THE
Afro's Serial Love Story Of Negro Life
By PARKE REED (Protected by the Kelley News paper Feature Service)
The Virgin was in his room, engaged in an earnest pow-wow with his chum, Joe Grimes. He had felt that if he didn't confide in somebody he'd burst; so he was telling Joe the whole history of his love affair, omitting only the girl's name. Joe had filled his pipe but he grew so interested that he forgot to light it.
"Gee, Virgin," he told, when the story was finished, "she must be such for looks and charm. I'd like to meet her myself. And you...well, you surprise me, making such fast time; I didn't know it was in you. Yet that's the way it goes; the novice comes in and wins the money. So her old man caught you and wring your neck...ha, ha! Wouldn't I like to have seen your face? And, say, Virgin, suppose she had made good her threat to leave the house with you!...what on earth would you have done?"
The Virgin saw any joke in it," said the Virgin, "But really now, Joe would you consider yourself engaged to the girl?"
"Well, that depends on a number of things. Remember, I don't know the girl: If I did my judgment might be different. Is she a girl from you would marry or divorce?" "I don't understand."
"That is," said Joe seriously,
"does she belong to the class of girls from which finicky fellows like us would choose our wives?
You know rightly or wrongly, men judge their obligation to a girl by the girl's general standing."
"This girl's standing is one of the best in Boston by your own account," said the Virgin.
"By my account!" exclaimed Joe. "Do you mean to say I know her?"
"Yes, certainly do. Since I've convolved in you I may as well go the whole length and tell you who she is."
"Well, I'm all ears."
"It is Beatrix Marley."
"Beatrix Marley! Great jumping Jehoshaphat!"
"Joe blinked at the Virgin for a moment, then he broke forth with a "string of highly-soaked expletives, the midst of which was 'Till he banged!' " "You're surprised, eh?" laughed the Virgin. "No," said Joe sarcastically. "I thought it was the queen of Sheba. Princess Patricia, the Czarina, or satanized, the prismed, Virgin," he said more sincerely, "I'm only amazed, dum-founded, supeped, knocked cold. Beatrix Marley, of all women." I
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thought you were the one man she'd never get to."
"I don't quite understand you, Joe." said the Virgin coldly, "your tone savors of disrespect."
"No, Virgin. I only take my hat off to Miss Marley, that's all. She has seen you only twice, and already she's got you wondering whether it is your duty to marry her."
"I tell you," said the Virgin impatiently, "she's done nothing. I'm the actress who put it to妙 that way. Do you think she asked me to kiss her? I made her. I tell you."
"You really think so?"
"You...oh, well," said the Virgin, "you've seen so many impure things and people that you don't know innocence when you see it. She loves me. I tell you. She stood out against her own father for me, she was ready to leave her home for me. A fine sort of man I'd be doubtful about marrying her." said the Virgin, "do you really think Beatrix Marley loves you?"
"Oh. I know you don't like her; you as much as said so Bloody Monday Night, when I never dreamed that I was destined to meet her less than an hour later. You think she's a Carmen who gets out to trap men, rob them of their manhood, and then drop them for somebody else. I didn't believe you then and I don't believe you now. That's uneasy. Why I did not mention her name at first when I told you my story. I wanted your unbiased opinion and I knew you were prejudiced against her." "And now that I know she's the girl I suppose you don't want my advice." "I do want it, if you can give it impartially. I'm sorry I told you it was she, I didn't intend to, but when a man starts telling a thing he generally tells more than he meant to. You don't know Becky. She's the finest girl. I ever saw, all life and love, and goodness. If you could only have seen her when she rushed between me and her father!"
"Maybe she wanted to save her father from being hung for murder."
"And when she tried to take all the blame upon herself" said the virgin rapy. "ignoring Joe's remark." "Or when she told them she致死." "Very dramatic, I confess." said Joe without enthusiasm. "Even Sarah Bernhardt would relish a scene like that."
"Joe," said the Virgin, resolved to be patient with this humdum plodder of the ways of the earth, "your trouble is that you don't believe in anybody, women least of all. You can't imagine such a thing as a pure motive."
"Don't I, though? You've often called me the college cyprine. Well, who suspects the worst while secretly hoping for the best?" As for believing in people, why, I know a little girl now...
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"Fresh-cheeked country maiden," interrupted the Virgin, "innocent, cow-milking and all that." "No sir," said Joe, shortly, "Country life and innocence are not necessarily the same thing. I knew a girl once who milked cows and she also milked my pocket-book." "How?" asked the Virgin. "I won't go into details," said Joe, with a wry face. "But the little girl I started to tell you about lives right in New York City, and she's lived there ever since she was born. Cynic though I am, I'd believe anything she told me." "So you're in love, too," said the Virgin. "Love!" Joe exclaimed. "I didn't say I was in love; I only said I'd believe, whatever this little girl told me." "When you believe anything a girl tells you, you love her."
"Virgin!" said Joe, startled. "You've certainly learned a lot in these last few weeks. Sometimes I think that a good, thorough-going love affair is the best education in the world."
"You say you believe in your girl's sincerity," said the Virgin, "yet you don't believe Beatrix is sincere."
"They are different girls, Virgin, Virgin."
"That wouldn't affect my belief in the slightest," said Joe, smiling. "Well, we wandered from the point at issue. Laying aside whatever doubts you have of Miss Marley's sincerity, do you think I should consider myself engaged to her?"
"You haven't asked her to marry you and received her congratulations you're not engaged. You know that much yourself."
"Now, Joe," said the Virgin, "don't evade the question. You might have put me off with that another two weeks ago, but as I say I've learned a lot, Beatrix has opened my eyes."
"Or closed them," murmured Joe.
"No," continued the Virgin, missing the point of Joe's remark, "she opened them." You know as well as I that the mere net of love that I had accepted the least part of an engagement. A man can be under obligation to marry a girl without having said the least word about marriage. Now hasn't Beatrix a right to expect me to marry her?
"Rights and love are not the same. If you have made her love you to the exclusion of all other women," Beatrix said. But you had better bide your time and make sure of her love.
"I'm sure of it already!" cried the Virgin, springing up and walking the floor in rapture. "Not from her words, not from her kisses, but from what she is herself. Ah boy, if you could just see what her eyes tell me!--things she loves could never tell, she loves me! She loves me!
"Rave on," said Joe, "Rave on!"
(To be continued next week)
Parents' Problems
Q. How can children be trained not to interrupt.
A. In the old-fashioned way; by precept and example. Tell them that it is exceedingly rude. Above all, never do it yourself. Never interrupt anyone even the youngest child.
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IT'S NOT FAIR BUT IT'S LIFE
Whose's Love Should Be Greater,The Husband's Or The Wife's?
"Why is so much written everywhere about the way for women to keep their husband's love and so little, comparatively, about the way for a man to keep his wife's love? Should women have to do all the keeping? I don't call it fair."
The above is a quotation from a letter from a friend.
As I pondered over it there came into my mind, strangely enough, another letter. It had been apathy at the 6-year-old husband and wives, this second letter; it was just a little chaty letter in the course of which the writer told of listening, while she wrote, to her husband and her 6-year-old daughter talking in the next room.
The daughter is a very good speller for her age and her father was giving her words to spell.
"No, Molly. It ought to be that way but it isn't."
And then the mother comments: "Dear little Molly, how many things she is going to and are like that—the one you see this or that way she aren't."
I suppose you see now why I thought of this letter which said nothing about why more is written as to the wife keeping her husband's love—and yet said so much. Men ought to make just as much effort to keep their wives loving them, but the world so, too, economically that most of them don't have to. Love ought not, for the sake of justice and balance, to mean more, in a woman's life, than it does in a man's. But as the world is constituted it does (I speak, of course, of the average case).
The world is a woman's heart but a woman's life is her world. I quote from memory and under correction, but you get the idea.
It has been often said that the happiest marriages are those where the men care the most. Why? Because women are apt to care too much, and that way makes sure that there shall be a better balance. Why? that as the years go by and women's lives are enriched by freedom from the more mechanical of domestic duties and her growing shares in the activities outside the home, the balance may become more even. I hope so. But I do not think the change will come in a hurry.
In the meantime, things are as they are and the best way to get happiness out of home is to face them and make up your mind; to make your husband's love a less vital part of your life or to be willing to put yourself out to retain it.
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(Article Num
(Put these articles in a scrap book so
Baby Book
Twenty-five new babies for every
may be expected to bring to this toy
arrival is expected in your home in tha
a few weeks ago. In either case, just
duty you owe the little one—make a
recorded with the authorities. Ask the
baby. Here are some of the reasons
(Put these articles in a scrap book so that you will have a complete Baby Book)
Twenty-five new babies for every 1,000 people is what the stork may be expected to bring to this town this year. Perhaps a little arrival is expected in your home in the near future; perhaps he came a few weeks ago. In either case, just a reminder of an important duty you owe the little one—make sure that his birth is properly recorded with the authorities. Ask the doctor if he registered your baby. Here are some of the reasons why births should be recorded:
1—To establish identity.
2—To prove nationality.
3—To prove legitimacy.
4—To show when the child has the right to enter school.
5—To show when the child has the right to seek employment under the child-labor law.
4—To show when the child has the
5—To show when the child has
6—under the child-labor law.
7—To establish the right of inherit
8—To establish the right to vote.
9—To qualify to hold title to, and
10—To establish the right to hold
11—To prove the age at which t
entered into.
12—To make possible statistical st
Fill out this memorandum and
It may save him much time, mon
Baby's Name
Date of Birth: Day.....Mon
Sex.....If twin or triplet give
Birthplace.....Birth r
Father's Name.
Mother's Maiden Name.
Attending Physician
Address
8—To establish the right of inheritance to property.
7—To establish liability to military duty, as well as exemption
11-To prove the age at which the marriage contract may be entered into.
12-To make possible statistical studies of health conditions.
Fill out this memorandum and preserve it for your baby.
It may save him much time, money and inconvenience.
Baby's Name .....
Date of Birth: Day.....Month.....Year.....
Sex.....If twin or triplet give number in order of birth
Birthplace.....Birth registration Number.....
Father's Name.....Birthplace.....
Mother's Maiden Name.....Birthplace.....
Attending Physician.....
Address .....
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STEAMED HOMINY
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Every 1,000, people is what the stork is town this year. Perhaps a little in the near future; perhaps he came, just a reminder of an important take sure that his birth is properly ask the doctor if he registered your sons why births should be recorded:
has the right to enter school.
has the right to seek employment.
inheritance to property.
military duty, as well as exemption.
vote.
and to buy or sell real estate.
hold public office.
such the marriage contract may be real studies of health conditions.
and preserve it for your baby, money and inconvenience.
Month. Year.
give number in order of birth
birth registration Number.
Birthplace.
Birthplace.
END HOW TO COOK IT
top of double boiler, place in direct contact with fire, sift in the homi-mily slowly, and boil for ten minutes, stirring often, cover, and cook over hot water two hours. Hominy should be cooked the day before using.
**FRUIT ROLLS**
2. C flour
3. 2-3 C milk
4. t baking powder
1-2 C chop-1 and seeded rasins
2. T chopped citron
2. T sugar
3. T shortening
1-3 T cinnamon
Mix flour, salt, baking powder and sugar together, work in the shortening with tips of fingers; then add milk gradually and enough to add milk dough. Roll on a slightly floured board to on-fourth-inch thickness, brush over with melted butter and sprinkle with brown sugar, raisins.
Wheaton left at once for New York, Dr. A. B. Wilson has been the mother of three sons. Those on the sick list are Messys, Wm. Early, Mrs Adams, James Hawkins, Mrs Maball Aaron, Mrs Robinson, Mrs Hurford, Mrs Olivia Crew and Mrs Chase, Mrs Gage.
HONNIDES, Mt. Jan. 19—The funeral of Miss Edine Dent, 16 years old, who died at the age of 11 held at Mt. Hope Baptist Church on Tuesday. Reverend C. R. Alexander officiated. Under the direction of the funeral, the deceased had been ill for several months. She is survived by her mother, father and three
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citron and cinnamon. Roll like jelly roll, cut off pieces three-quarter-inch in thickness. Place in greased muffin tins and bake in oven fifteen minutes. MIX CHEESE CAKES
Mix and sift flour, salt and soda, add sour milk and egg, well beaten Drop by spoonfuls on a hot greased griddle; cook one one side. When puffed, full of bubbles and cooked edges, turn and cook other side. Serve with syrup immediately on hot plates.
BAKED ALASKA
Whites of 6 eggs 2 qts. ice cream
6 T. powdered sugar. Thin sheet
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Make meringue of eggs and
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Place on open grate and
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Embarrassing Moments
Curiosity To Blaine
A girl friend of mine had just arrived from a neighboring city to pay me a visit.
As we walked from the railway station in company with another girl, the visitor surveyed the different buildings in sight and remarked: "You have a lot of pretty homes here, haven't you? But whose can that barn-like dwelling over there be?"
After a moment's embarrassed hesitation on our part, my local girl friend answered cheerily.
"That is where I live." A. B.
Beg Pardon
When we began housekeeping a few years ago we were often troubled by a tramp dog in the neighborhood which was in the habit of raising the cover of the garbage pail outside the kitchen door, rummaging inside, and then tripping over the pail, scattering the contents on the neat cement walk.
CATARRH OF THE STOMACH
OU CAN'T. ENJOY LIFE with a sore, sour, bloated stomach. Food does not nourish.
Instead it is a source of misery, causing pains, belching, dizziness and headaches.
The person with a bad stomach should be satisfied with nothing less than permanent, lasting relief. The right remedy will act upon the tinnings of the stomach, enrich the blood, aid in casting out the cataractal poisons and strengthen every bodily function. The large number of people who have successfully used Dr. Hartman's famous medicine, recommended for all cataract conditions, offer the strongest possible endorsement for PE-RU-NA IN SERVICE FIFTY YEARS
Phone: Madison 4984-w
TEETH Without Plates
A.
PAGE NINE
I became tired of constantly sweeping up after the maudraur, which was always seen running off in the distance, and then I resolved to give him a big scar next time I heard the familiar disturbance.
One morning the chance came. I could hear the slow rasping blowing of the pill cover outside. Catching up a carpet heater out of the back door with a blot-curling yellow stamping and biss "the-sh-s-s". There I stopped. The astonished garbage collector was standing by the pail.
He, too, was astonished. "G", said, "I beg your pardon, thought you were the dog."
ASTHMA CURED BY SIMPLE REMEDY
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generous FREE TRIAL of
fer to Readers
Thirty years ago Mr. C. Leavengood, a widely known Kansas drugstrier, discovered a simple, easy to take prescription for Asthma—he gave it to people who had suffered for years and had an amazement, they say they were easily cured—these people told their friends, and in this way thousands have, and the sure way to cure Asthma, Leavengood feels so confident that his prescription will cure in all cases that he generously offers to send a big bottle on 10 days.
Free Trial to any reader of this paper write for it. If it pays $1.25 you owe nothing. Seek no more advice write to C. LEAVENGOD, Kansas.
S. W. Bivel, Rossewood, Kansas and the big bottle will be mailed immediately. Adv. e-o-w
Send for our weekly trade letter
containing many bargains
ALEXANDER GROCERY
COMPANY
Dept. 91, 211 E. 38th St., Chicago
The CIRCLET
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FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922
National Amusement News
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
WITH
J.A. JACKSON
OF
The Billboard
Foremost Weekly Theatrical Digest
and Review of the Show World.
All Rights Reserved.
"A Modern Cocktail" is a real headline and the first act of the Hymn "Compared" Variety that truly gets over! Thus speaks the Daily Cardinal of Madison, Wis.
"I've been Rockers, trombone and harp instrumentalist, who was with the Symphony Orchestra in England and Europe, is moving about Harlem having resigned his position as an artist manager of the Shuffle Inn.
"P. P. G. Lowery and that wonderful band of sixteen have contracted to return to the Ringing Bells, Barnum and Bailey shows."
Aka Booker and her Jazz Studies writes from Mt. Holly, N.C. advice that the town is the center for an artistic construction and that the population of the town is being greatly augmented on that account. For the next three years it will be a book. A million is being a book and dam.
Chet Paterson Orchestra was a picture of the weeks bazaar held in springfield, Mass., under the names of the Nutmeg Lodge Builders Association of the Elks Fraternity, beginning Jan. 16th.
Cotton Smith formerly pianist T. A. Blankenship is now acting in Florida. He says write him care Billboard.
Willie A. Walls has returned to his former post as stage manager of the Lafayette Theater, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Cal狄曼曼, Frank (Skinny) Roberts and Chas Thompson have joined the "Gille Roberts Jazz Hounds in Buffalo for the winter.
Harrison Blackburn played the bands Norfolk while Gilpin was in St. Louis house there. Brown shows these old pals were pretty busy.
Boddy Harris is still confined to jail in Covington, Ga. He is in need of assistance to meet the re-reduced bail required. Sam Rhodes of Roy White Stylish steppers recompensated the reduction. He is a decorator, Elds, Masons or K of K. members to write co-sheriff, P. C. Box 215.
The International Beneficial Association of Colored Railroad Employees hold a convention in Birch, N.
Varnell A. a colored artist of Kansas City is presenting the much disused illusion "Sawing A woman in two."
Lovey Sanders of Saunders Price and Sanders writes to advise that he is not yet dead. He is the victim of a much hit and was playing Birmingham when he wrote the page, Jan. 6th.
Amanza Richardson, skirtwear
artists are populate dancer played
the Sued Jacksonville week
of Jan. 16th.
Christopher Wood, music
publisher of 55 Naburn Ave, Atlanta is
preparing to launch some new
numbers. He asks the folks to
look them over, when playing that
city.
HOME HOURS: 7 to 9 P. M.
PHONES:
Residence: Madison 7744-W
Office: St. Paul 4488
ROY S. BOND
LAWYER
215 ST. PAUL PLACE
Formerly Courtland St.
Rooms 49-51 Third Floor
Res. 1520 Druid Hill Ave.
ROOTS AND HERBS?
What is what the Bible says,
she made the grass to grow for
the cattle and herbs (and roots)
of the service of Man." Psalm
Cry. 14.
INDIAN HERB TEA is a most
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It is good for the young and for the old. Everybody likes it as it tastes good and does good. Many sit right along and keep away it. It is highly recommended for the treatment of constipation, kidney or stomach disorder, torporal fever, darkumph, blindness, indigestion and interfered appetite, sick headache, bad breath and bad taste in the mouth, nervousness, general weakness, nausea, chills and fevers, colds, malaism and many other ailments that can be taken to treat around the body. Now is the right time to take it and enjoy better health. Tell your friends about this wonderful Indian Herb Tea. It also clears the complexion and clears out the impurities of all the accumulated impurities and acid and helps you to live almost at once. Every day you use it. 500 capsules. Your drugurgery will fit for you. You may be extra. Or call on the manufacturer, Leo S. Osman, 300 Fremont avenue. Hours 8 a. to 5 p. m.
Delicious! Appetizing KRAFT CHEESE IN TINS IN LOAVES
Clears the complexion, tones up the digestive organs and relieves Constipation pernunculously
Is one of the greatest and most energetic blood makers and vital restoratives, and is the most certain means of invigoration in exhaustive diseases, loss of blood or debility. In all cases of weakness or sudden exhaustion, accompanied with nervous disturbances or during convalescence from wasting fevers, or general debility. It is a boon to delicate and sensitive women and children. Just the tonic for the weak and run down system. Just the tonic for the over worked man or woman. It gives renewed strength and vigor.
Phone and mail orders promptly delivered anywhere.
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ARE MANAGERS DEMANDING SMUT
Performer Says They Do And Players Who Refuse Can't Get Steady Work
REMEDY SUGGESTED
Audiences Should Show Disapproval and Complain to Managment
BY WILLIAM E. READY
Are some of the white managers and owners who operate theatres which cater exclusively to colored patronage, demanding that colored performers indulge in smut instead of clean legitimate vaudeville entertainment?
In discussing this degenerate practice—which has grown to such alarming extent among colored performers—the last few years with actresses in long ago, who has been on the stage for many years, the writer was told that such is the case.
This player said that she had gone to some of these managers seeking engagements for herself and company, and had been told by them that she would be given an engagement if she "pulled the staff stuff" and "if it on anyone". If what this performer says is true- and the writer, of his own personal knowledge, knows of one or two instances that will bear her out—then who is to blame? Are the managers responsible or are the patrons? These managers say that their own demands on this thing, and this thing running their houses for money and not for moral uplift, it is up to them to see that their patrons get what they want. And this performer went on to say, that whenever she refused to accept engagements under such stipulations come along and go to work while she and her company walked the streets.
Patrons And Performer To Blame
To the writer, it appears that the blame for this sort of thing rests solely between the colored theatregoers and the colored performer, with the theatregoers bearing the greater part of the responsibility.
When the owner builds a theatre for the specific patronage of colored people, his one and only idea is to realize substantial returns on his investment. To realize such profits he must secure the sort of attractions which will draw the greater number of patrons to his house. In such a circumstance, it is the patron's shape, the house's color, the man is going to jeopardize his investment by giving patrons something they do not want.
J. STEWARD DAVIS
Attorney and Counsellor.
At Law
14 E. Pleasant Street
Basement Near St. Paul Street
Office Phone: Mt. Vernon 1124
Residence: 1047 MYRTLE AVE.
Mt. Vernon 4728-W.
Baltimore. Md.
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In a previous article on this subject, the writer pointed out that in every audience there are a few of what are commonly known as "rough necks" who fairly "eat up" this stuff when shot over the footlights. With shrieks of delight, loud hand-clapping, stamping of feet and shrill whistles, a half dozen such auditors in an audience of a thousand persons, the other 994 of whom are not uttering a sound both the offending performer and the manager standing at the back of the theater, to believe that the demonstration is one of unanimous approval by the greater part of that audience.
Patrons Should Tell Management
If the 1944 would get up and walk out of the theatre, of course both the manager and the player would realize the error of their judgment. Why don't the 1944 manager and player. In the previous article we mentioned a moment ago as having written on this subject, we likewise pointed out that in many sections of the country and particularly in the South, the opportunities for theatrical entertainment people are so limited, that they are forced to take what they can get or nothing at all.
What is the result? In course of time, many people who have no other choice of amusement but to attend such houses, become culloused to it and cannot regard it as the natural sort of entertainment to expect.
Taking advantage of this condition there is a certain class of would-be performers who possesses or actress, plunges into this disgusting sewerage and flounders about with apparent relish and a complete loss of all regard for even the most elemental forms of decency. If this latter class of performers do not appear in the situation would not appear nearly so deplorable, but just as the player quoted by the writer has said, other players who are said to be deficient in attention are forced to this degrading practice or else many times, be kept out of work.
Reform Up To Performer And Patrol
The time has come when this sort of thing as it is now practiced, must be driven out of the strictly family theatre, and it is up to the patrons to begin the process of "cleaning up" added by those members of the profession who anxiates to advance and make a name for themselves on their merit. Co-operation on the part of these two factors, will soon cleanse and purify the Negro stage and make it fit for every member of the family, thus proving to these white managers that they demands for entertainment, and have no less respect for the women and children of his race than the white man.
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AT DRUG STORES ON BY 25c
AGENTS WANTED. Write for special deals.
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THE
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REVIEWS
Acts Playing On The T. O. A. B.
Acts playing the T. O. B. A. circuit will be reviewed as the recently opened Star theater in Shreveport is played. This house has been selected as being the one that is typical of the entire circuit, being situated in the far south and at a point where acts are going good neither brand-new or as yet stable. The house opened Jan. 2nd, playing to 2000 paid admissions on the opening day. Leroy Gresham began the festivities with a wrench impersonation. This is a singing, dancing and talking act. His principal song being "If you don't believe I love you, what a fool I've been". He took two bows and a round of applause marked the close of the act. The act has the merit of being clean, a singing and dancing act that took an encore with a violin solo, took a pair of bows.
Miss, Edwards, of Edwards and O'Brien, who because of one of those occasional separations usual to that team, went big as a single taking three encores and six bows. The inability she will continue a single. Dustball and Cook closed the bill. The program was clean.
STANDARD VAUDEVILLE
AT LAWAXETTE
On Jan. 9th the Laffayette Theater, New York, began a policy of standard eight-eight vaudeville, simple dance and a first dancing single; Low and Van Yoke a pair of boys with different dancing notions that ought to make them a name; and the Exposition Four in the star spot, which they were in, and seven bows were the colored institution to the festivities.
On Jan. 9th, Edward Palmer assumed the management of the newly renovated Empire theater of Bluedell. W. Va. The house will cater to colored audiences with Vaudeville, 'Tabs' and stock.
A SWANOLA and BLACK SWAN Records will bring joy on Xmas and every day throughout the New Year
Title BLACK SWAN RECORDS Reg.
SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS
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2028 { O Come All Ye
10 in.
850 } Faithful
I Need Thee Ev-
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2029 { Silent Night, Holy
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Christmas Chimes
2030 { Flee as a Bird
10 in.
850 } Lead Kindly Light
2031 { Jesus I Come
10 in.
850 } The Holy City
2033 { Christians Awake
10 in.
850 } My Task
Oh Promise Me
Sunrise and You
Some Day, Sweet
heart
He's a Darn Good
Man
2032
10 In.
850
Arkansas Blues
Jazz Me Blues
All Black Swan Records
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Ask your dealer for
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NEW YORK
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It is a clean, white ointment, made
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in jars and tubes; hospital size, $3.00.
BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER
MUSTEROLE
WILL NOT BELISTER.
PHONE: MADison 1037-J
PAUL J. HARRIS
Violin Instruction
Studio: 1519 N. Carey Street
Leader: Regent Theatre Orchestra
MARION ANDERSON A
SUPERB SONGSTRESS
Young Contralto Creates Enthusiasm In Recital At Sharp Street Church
UNUSUAL TRIBUTE AT CLOSE
Nannie M. Strayhorn, Assisting Artist, And Wm. King Also Please
Miss Marian Anderson, the well-known young contralto, appeared in a song recital at Sharp Street Memorial Church on last Thursday evening before an audience of several hundred of the City's most representative citizens and music-lovers.
The first arresting feature of Miss Marian Anderson's vocal equipment is the tremendous power of her voice; with almost disconcerting case, and no apparent effort, there springs from her throat a crashing volume of song that seems to struggle to burst the confines of the auditorium that hems it in.
The next notable feature is her remarkable range; from the exceedingly low organ-like ones of her low register to the monstrousness of a lyric soprano. Her program was sufficiently varied to fully complete this impression; opening with Donizetti's "O Mio Fernando" song in Italian a number of ballads followed; then the spiritual group from Fur-
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Munc. Jones' Never Fail Shampoo, price
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Co., 441 W. Bidell St., Baltimore, Md.
125 Four and a Half St., Wash. D. C.
Phone Vernon 0757-W
PRESSER'S FRIEND!
of hairdressers necessities and are selling
is for less than they can buy them elsewhere
is a few things as follows:
1. Cream white for $1.00.
2. Cream white for $1.00.
3. Light amber petroleum per lb.
4. Pure Coconut oil per lb 45c.
5. 2 oz. Gold
doz. 25c. hair gross and a barrer
6. 2 oz. brown 35c. and 45c. per
lb.
7. Eau Sudblime and Godefroy's French
bach.
8. Tar Prowax, Brilliantine, Bay Rum
things for hairdressers at moderate prices.
9. How to scientifically Manufacture your
pope and Face Cream.
10. For a few days we
as for the hairdressers at the VERNON
the three for $6.00. The regular prices
to learn to Manufacture your own hair and
to be independent. DO NOT MISS THIS WON-
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touch any hairdresser how to make a hair
it will keep ten years without a drop of
50c per box. Mme. Jones' Never
Madam Jones Co., 441
Branch Office, 425 Four
and all Drug Stores
THE HAIRDRES
We carry a full line of hairy them in small quantities for less in large quantities; Namely a few petroleum per 21c, 5 lbs. for $1.00. Lilly white petroleum per 18c, 5 lbs. for $1.00. Lecqued tin boxes per dose, 235 French wavy cut 29 in. long oz., $4.50 and $5.50 hairy 20 in. long oz., $4.50 and $5.50 each. Tax and many other useful things for Out of town orders promptly after. We teach through mail how our hair Grower, Shampoo and are offering these formulas to the price of $2.00 each, or the three are $10.00 to $25.00 each.
Now if you wish to learn skin preparations and be independent, O'PRINTON, W. or Registered letter.
For $5.00 we will teach any tonic from herbs that will ke
THE HAIRDRESSER'S FRIEND!
THE HAIRDRESSER'S FRIEND!
We carry a full line of hairdressers necessities and are selling them in small quantities. We also sell them elsewhere in a variety of other a few things as follows:
Lilie white petroleum per lb. 28c. 6 lbs. for $1.25. Cream white petroleum per 22c. 5 lbs. for $1.00. Light amber petroleum per lb. 28c. 5 lbs. for $1.00. Light brown petroleum per lb. 28c. 5 lbs. for $1.00. Lacquered tin boxes per doz. 25c. half gross $1.25. per gross $2.36. French wavy cut hair 20 in. long, black or brown 15c. and 45c. per $2.50. and $5.50 per lb. Tau Sudiblime and Godetroys' French hair dye per box 50 cans. Brittianine, French and Indian dye per box 50 cans. things for hairdressers at moderate prices. On or town orders promptly attended to.
We teach through mail how to scientifically Manufacture your own Hair Grower, Shampoo and Face Cream. For a day away, preforming these formulas to the tailor at VERTY-LOW HIGH of the three for the three. The regular prices are $10.00 to $25.00 each.
Now if you wish to learn to Manufacture your own hair and skin preparations and be independent DO NOT MISS THE WORK-DERIVED FUNITY. Write to day! Send Money Order or Registered letter.
For $5.00 we will teach any hairdresser how to make a hair tonic from herbs that will keep ten years without a drop of alcohol.
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leigh and Dett, next an Indian group opening with Cadman's "From the Land of the Sky Blue Water" "Adieu Forests" by Trevor Dawson, which was sung in French and a half dozen or more encores. Her voice is warm round and of true pitch, and there were times when the beauty of its melody seemed incomparable, especially was this so in the spirituals, of which she sang several, and in Dieuurance's "Love Song" "A Love Song" after number that the audience became so enthusiastic that she was forced to respond to two encores before she was allowed to retract, the first of which "Comin' Thro The Rye" was so beautifully sung, that the second successive one was demanded. In fact, after her first number, she responded with an encore number after nearly every one of her programmed numbers.
This rising enthusiasm reached its height after the close of her program when after singing an encore number and the audience having donned its wraps and coats and some of whom were standing in the lobby, a few already the lobby, another ovation was set up and she graciously obliged once more; and those who had left the auditorium lost no time in retracing their steps; a most worthy tribute to one of the most gifted singers the race has yet produced (yes, we've got to use the term.)
Miss Nannie Mae Sturayhorn pianist and supervisor of music at Montgomery was the most artist, and once more demonstrated her supreme artistry as a pianist.
Mr. William King was the accompanist, and proved to be one of the most accomplished pianist
ful Hair Grower. Help!
Notable among those present were Dr. J. O. Spencer, president of Morgan College and a number of his faculty.
Hotel Brings $145,000
Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 18—The Hotel Dalc, which has been in the hands of receivers for some time past, was sold today at Sheriff sale for $145,000. After some spirited bidding on the part of many who wished to obtain control of the property, the hotel was bought in by receivers, Bishop Heard, Edward W. Henry, Mr. Netter. The hotel will be run by the receivers in the interest of stock holders, to whom it will be turned over in 60 days.
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS
DON'T THE "OLD MAN" HA
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I am the cole propilot of the and an MRS. ROBER Funeral Directtie Phone Wolfe' 6590. Ium 1725 Ashland Avenue MRS. CHARLES B. BRANCH OFFICES: 504. EARL LIMOUSINE FUNERAL
GEORGE T FUNERAL DIRECTTie Limousine and Carriages to C. & P Phone
may live long and contentedly in the land and employ and die by weight of years. Those who had given up all hope of ever again lead have been restored to heth and strength after REMEDIES viz.—Old Man' Walsh' Walsh' Liver Cleanser, Bowel Regulator & Tonic. For 9 days) This is an absolute, sure and certain BULES arising from a disordered state of the excess of bile; it is firmly persuasive and yet a child can take it with absolute safety, after leses and blotches disappear and the skin become a Purifier and Beautifier of the skin it has Allains and powders "SKINNED TO DEATH." Walsh' FAMOUS LIVE LONG, BLOOD-PURIFIED. Price $1.56 (40 doses) This is a still BLOOD-PURIFIER AND is suitable for eliminum IMPURITY OF THE BLOOD, IT PURIFIES, BUILDS UP THE WHOLE BODY. This is a merit and REMARKABLE EFFICACY of HOPPLESS CASES. They are the TWO FAIRS have restored thousands of Physical, Woolb had become OLD and WORN OUT BEFORE and strength.) DON'T LET ANYTHING TIME TWO FAMOUS REMEDIES. COME OR two will be sent post free to you. Many other to mention here, come or write and see if you.
BALSH'S FAMOUS OLD HERB S
OPEN EVERY DAY.
Pennsylvanula Ave. Near Biddle St. Baltimore
Funeral Directress and Embalmer
Wolfe 6590. Immediate Service Day and Ashland Avenue Corner McDonogh MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT OFFICES: 504. East Street, 3109 Drudh LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY.
GEORGE T. A. GIBSON
Funeral Director and EMBALMER
Busine and Carriages to Hire. Open Day and C. & P Phone Madison 1417-J
That you may live long and contentedly in the land and all your varied powers employ and die by weight of years. Thousands of men and women who had given up all hope of ever again leading a healthy useful life have been restored, to heath and strength after taking THE TWO FAMOUS REMEDIES viz.: — Old Man' Walsh' Famous Blood-Purifier, Liver Cleaner, Bowl) Regulator & Tonic. Price $7.78 (enough for 9 days). This is an absolute, sure and certain remedy for ALL TROUBLES arising from a disordered state of the digestive organs and excess of bile; it is firmly persuasive and yet so gentle that the smallest child can take it with absolute safety, after a few days boils, pimples and blotches disappear—and the skin becomes clear and healthy; as a Purifier and Beautifier, of the skin it has ALL cosmetics, face creams and powders "SKINNED TO DEATH." The other remedy is Walsh' FAMOUS LIVE LONG, BLOOD-PURIFYING KIDNEY REMEDIES. Price $1.56 (40 doses). This is a still MORE POWERFUL BLOOD-PURIFYER and IS suitable for illuminating, VERY SERIOUS IMPURITY OF THE BLOOD, IT PURIFIES, STRENGTHENS AND BUILDS UP THE WHOLE BODY. This is a remedy of SUPREME MERIT AND REMARKABLE EFFICACY even in OLD CHRONIC HOPELESS CASES. THEY are the TWO FAMOUS REMEDIES which have restored thousands of 'Physical Wreck' (men and women) to old and WORN OUT BEFORE THEIR TIME to health and strength.) DON'T LET ANYTHING TEMPE YOU TO MISS THESE TWO FAMOUS REMEDIES. COME OR SEND $2.40 and the TWO will be sent post, free to you. Many other remedies too numerous to mention here, come or write and see if we have one suitable for you.
WALSH' FAMOUS OLD HERB SHOP
910 Pennsylvania Ave. Near Biddle St. Baltimore, Md.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone Wolfe 6590. Immediate Service Day and Night
1725 Ashland Avenue Corner McDonogh Street
MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT
BRANCH OFFICES: 504. East Street, 3109 Drudg Hill Avenue
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A'S SPECIALITY
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
513 LAURENS STREET
PHONE: Wolf 5967 J.
MRS. JOSEPH
Funeral Directre
Carriages and Limou
1302 JEFFERSON ST.
Long Distance Phone Madison
CLARENCE
MRS. JOSEPH G. LOCKS
Funeral Directress and Embalmer
Carriages and Limousines for All Occasions
JEFFERSON ST. BALTIMORE
Instance Phone Madison 4464. Carriages for all
CLARENCE C. WRIGHT
MRS. JOSEPH G. LOCKS
Funeral Directress and Embalmer.
Carriages and Limousines for All Occasions
1302 JEFFERSON ST. BALTIMORE, MD.
Funeral Director and Embalmer
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
"WRIGHT QUALITY"
1364 N. Carey Street Baltimore, Md.
BALTIMORE'S LEADING COLORED UNDERTAKER
IN PRICES. FUNERALS $75 AND UP
JOHN H. OWENS
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
Including handsome hearse and carriages, also beautiful casket, outside case, embalming the body, advertising funerals, opening the grave, gloves and door crepe. Shipping Funerals. $50 and up. Chapel, Morgue. Never Closed. Automobiles Funerals.
538 Dolphin St. Bet. Division St. & Penna. Ave.
PHONES MADISON 4067 & 4921-J—Carriages for all occasions
MORE'S LEADING COLORED UNDERTAKER
IN PRICES. FUNERALS $7
JOHN H. OWENS
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
ing handsome hearses and carriages, also beauti-
case, embalming the body, advertising funer-
ave, gloves and door crepe. Shipping Funerals
Chapel, Morgue. Never Closed. Automobiles
Dolphin St. Bet. Division St. & Peni-
ES MADISON 4067 & 4921-J—Carrilages for a
BALTIMORE'S LEADING COLORED UNDERTAKER
IN PRICES. FUNERALS $75 AND UP
Including handsome hearse and carriages, also beautiful casket, outside case, embalming the body, advertising funerals, opening the grave, gloves and door crepe. Shipping Funerals. 650 and up. Chapel. Morgue. Never Closed. Automobile Funerals. 538 Dolphin St. Bet. Division St. & Penna. Ave. PHONES MADISON 4067 & 4021- J-Carriages for all occasions
GEORGE H. HOLLAND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
(Formerly manager for the late Alex Hemley)
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Will furnish Funerals at a price that will suit you,
Pollite, Courteous and Expert Attention Guaranteed
1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE
C. & P. PHONE, MADISON 692
Carrages and Limousenes to hire for all occasion
1463 North Carey Street, near Gold
Phone Madison 8561 Never Ubend
Hose' Russels "Dancing Bugs" presenting some 'new numbers staged' by Bob Russell did well in Anguista, Ga. at the Lenox Theater, week 1 Jan. 9th.
The Clarence T. Potter Musical Association of 470 Lenox Avenue, New York City reports a membership of one hundred and seventy. Fine growth for one year.
Jack Mahara. well known in Minstrels is purported to cut a musical comedy company under the title of Africannum. Rehearsals are now on in Chicago. George Taylor is director.
Roy Whites "Stylish Steppers" are at the Liberty Theater Chattannoga, week of Jan. 9th, with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey show again next season.
Bell and Bell are on the Interstate time playing thro Indiana, Illinois and Michigan.
GIVE UP
S GOT THE GOODS
contentedly in the land and all your
weight of years. Thousands of men
hope of ever again leading a healthy
health and strength after taking THE
"Old Man" Walsh's Famous Blood-
Regulator & Tonic. Price $0.78
absolute, sure and certain remedy for
disordered state of the digestive er-
ly persuasive and yet so gentle that
thus absolute safety, after a few days
wear and the skin becomes clear and
der, of the skin it has ALL cosmetics,
NANNED TO DEATH." The other
LONG, BLOOD-PURIFYING KID-
doses). This is a still MORE POW-
DO IS suitable for eliminating VERY
BLOOD, IT PURIFIES, STRONGER-
BODY. This is a remedy of SU-
KABLE EFFICACY even in OLD
HEY are the TWO-FAMOUS REM-
mands of "Physical Wreck" (men and
WORN OUT BEFORE THEIR TIME
LET ANY TEMPT YOU TO
MEDIES. COME OR SEND $2.40
see to you. Many other remedies
to write and see if we have one
OLD HERB SHOP
VERY DAY.
Bear Biddle St. Baltimore, Md.
DIRECTORS
business
not in partnership with anyone
BET A. ELLIOTT
Press and Embalmer
Mediate Service Day and Night
Corner McDonogh Street
JONES, ASSISTANT
Street, 2103 Drudg Hill Avenue
ALS A SPECIALTY
T. A. GIBSON
OR AND EMBALMER
Hire. Open Day and Night
Madison 1417-J
BALTIMORE, MD
PH G. LOCKS
less and Embalmer.
sines for All Occasions
BALTIMORE, MD.
4464. Carriages for all Occasions
C. WRIGHT
Y. others look at PRICES, I can
it expensive to go elsewhere
and an undertaker
IT QUALITY"
Baltimore, Md.
OLORED UNDERTAKER
PRICES. FUNERALS $75 AND UP
H. OWENS
AND EMBALMER
and carriages, also beautiful casket,
books advertising, funerals opening
7 WHEN IN PHILADELPHIA Visit tik
Broad and Catherine Streets
\ George W. Smith, Manager
\Bell Phone Oregon 0981 Keystone Race 359¢
> “uw, Ltred Feet
SHEEN Massage gently with soothing
ae
inno oxeaaP
be Merithotatam
. Coole, reits and refreshes
4 cement
THE BISHOP MANUFACTURING CO., Inc. |
‘The rollowing named articles can be ob- aaa
+ tained at most any Drug Store in Baltimore. foe
* including’ The Cend Drug and Chenvieat Pee
Company's eight Stores: Eee
W-BisHoe's Sint Muir Grower—The Eee.
Great Hair Promuter und Dandrutt \ Bay
Remyee esc epee fees tadavecsss 006 PRE
BISHOP'S Hert hair Foule—For Dand= Cea
My Siang Batting Hae le Ee
BISHOP'S Medicutedl Tr Shanipeo—Vor eet
Cleansing and Purifying the Sculp.. .25¢ Ree
BISHOP'S Medicated {Tar Salve—For aN ee
Growing Hair on the Temples, Bald ne
Spows. Dandruff and Falling Mair... .25¢ >
BISHOP'S Paeuwonta Salve—For Colds in cre Head, Chest.
Neuralgia Aches and Aine so. veccscesceeeecnesc ce BC
SpLIVE! Prench Bouts. Grown —For Temoving Blackheude |}
ang Pimples, and Benuliying the Skin in General......50e |
“R eengTE” Beauty Olutment—For Clearing the Skin, Removing ;}
3 Tan, Sunvicn-and Freckles: .ssceceeecessssecsties 298
ogLIVE*French Kuve Pewiles-rin 7 shades to Svit any Coun
7 plesion, namely: White, Brunette, Flesh, Mink, High
Woo oBrown, aludian Brown and Seal SkinsBrows00.. ++. -S0C
AM LITE™ Suze, Sulphur & ‘Tar Compouyd—Por Exiveine
A, (gives of Pailing Hutt. Mange and Eesema «Man or
EWG Beast, ics ay suphonbipiweiconaawi ise: U4
eBeces SHOP MAN UPAGDURING ‘COMPANY, INC!
ue Pennsylvanlu Avenue. Baltiuiage. MtacaTend
FRIDAY, JAN. 20, 1922
LESS MUSCLE MORE
MIND IN FARMING
Farmers Are Urged To Use
Modern Machinery
* For Best Results
That farming with tractors i
profitable bas heen demonstrated
on the farm of the [ennsyivanis
Masonic Home. at Elizabethtown
Pa. Bive hundred eres of thi
farm ave wider cultivation cum ats
planted every yenr to field crops
Two two-plow Uaerors do 897% of
the work in the fields, dust how
Profitable the tuctors are is show
by a statement recently mule by
So He Iinvoden, anager of the
farm.
“We have found since we have
deen using the tractors.” Mr In
Boden sid, that we aie “able to
prepare the seed hed inuch more
thoroughly than before, Tam a
great believer in having as Kood
A xeed bed 28 can possibly be pee-
pared. A zund seed bed xives the
heat joseiile chincr for germina.
tion and getting # xood start. We
have found then wan present
prices» gua seed hed increases
the production we the value of five
daikns an sere. Just think what
this amounts 16 S250 for every
Bu actin, flew can fou pussibly
nivest your tunes se Ghat it will
earn a higher rate than tit
Mrotinbaden cise finds that
invest. your inmusy so that it will
eithlisis hin te get his Earmt work
done sit the Unie ft should be. Aw
an iustistion of whit ix punsible
With tractors. Me. Tunhunden derided
that in Tasere Behl of earn shea
be plasted 10 wheat “withia 0
days ile Saried With bis tne.’
tors wn Asunis 13 and. by Septem
ber Ui he had cut atl the cova,
Mle his sites with silage, plowed
the, Held disked und milverized it
and planted it te witeat Horses;
Were used only tu hagl ie fodder;
to the silage cutter. und My. Tm
boden says lee wonht have used i:
motor “Wick Tor that work it he
had hud ove.
One of Mie beauty spate on this
Masonic tari isan Silsucre orehe
ard in witich a stall Wactar of
the cruwler type ix In canstant
use except in the Winker anonths
The ground is kept stirred con
tantly and the traciur uperutes a
sprayer besides doing Uuve work.
‘The enire farm contains more
than 1Zow ueres and another Irae
tor of larger size is being used
for building new reads and dvives.:
Mr. Imboden ‘keeps hwoks oi his
farming costs and knows where"
of he Speake, “BUYS a WetOr
from your Iweal dealer where sou:
can et sorvier if You need it and!
Keep sour ivartur well Tehricated 3
and you wil find it the cheapest,
source of firm puawer.” as bis ial!
vice ty farmers. i
HARRISONBURG, VA.
HARKISUNRURE, VA dan, 1
This city was, Buanced by A vial OF
Reve do We tie daeen Ji whe Bate
fan inhires ay ihe Me. Uinireh and
organized Yeucher’s Freining Chas
AA splendids gncetinz was hell recent
Is at the Egenzer Schon Metisn, when
a Wellate gswciation was srt
With Mrs, Gerablie Hadas, president
dul Mre, Vera Weiss secretin
Al, GB Givin, grand” master a
Malsong will cameperaie Ouran Lanse
VU. De tan, at © Rew, WK, Clan
pastor at wie AL AEE Chute here
Js provins huinsels au all-arauna, ma
An ae Joys “ning ati ety
rest ub wis peuple. 7 Messrs. fo
Brown “gant dM Sowitnen twke
fising visit ts Washingtun, Pt. this
weeks on bisiness 7 MP de La” AK
Ward Ue cmtracter “tut faiiider ts
how Rt howe fom Chision Forse, Ya.
Bere he hae bem enscoea ty hni
ig a church, Mr tA, Newey
and “Ganily ot Staunton, Vas, visited
Wis father here yeeeatls ji his splenti
touring eat. ¢ Mr uml Mrs, Lerew
Haver sent several days in alth
snore, fast week on aeceisnt we illness
Of their sister Viviad Crowner,
ROCKVILLE
ROCKVILLE. MU. dan, 19-—Mis
Mumig Grit or New York, is at he
Home in Rockville. visiting ‘her sister
Mrs. Agnes Broadneck, wiio has beer
quite ‘sick, * Mrs, Julia Snowden one
‘Of Roekville's oldest citizens | wat
Duried Friday’ ac the age oc 90 vears
Miss Louisa’ “Jackson formaily ol
Roekvlite ied euite suddenty at the
home of fier nice Mrs. Else Lyles
Washingion Friday lan, Tih, * Me
James Crockett, who hut been ‘iil in 4
Wasimeion huspial is at heme muel
improved.
/ MADAM
Emma Perry Wallace
Poro Beauty Parlor
. AGENT FOR PORO
‘Hair Culture and Facial Massage.
“We specialize on short aud atub-
borm heir. We are also prepared te
Boras bale We act ge Pa
636 RCBERT STRERT
WILLIAMSPORT
aa NIBEAMSPORT PA, Jan, bx
arbs ute Kyran returner ie
Jspenling two weeks in Louisville, Ky
Sera oie oye emertuined the. adi
Seal City Nindge seeing ae He
iia, © Mrs ne Sort san Re
furneal tor Saguburge Mavin ae, Ue
Weck here, guest of hee amour, Me
John Allen was found dead in bis
dlaie ac in nome Sony Widiampatt
Rested muti hye hie wifes Ste
Sly wae aa pear old and tig beet
ia he Sino? ef une We rane
Ratiniat Hanke tne two Sars
STAUNTON, VA.
t STAUNTON, VAn dun, toe T te
Hyacpies bane Savings Bunk an “rus
iASuckauon iil cher AURUET | Stuck
Hahters Neetu at the Mu Zig Be
[ust Chosen Meestus’ evening. A, vor
bine “prune sens penuderead ter
‘succeed with spowehen by tite stuck
jutiers, alter te Febort of tthe edabiet
ine Siinigters mest toad brie re
ark feevs. (orion, Hately et
fain, ‘oliver and tole, Phe reper
Sethe Giosver A hana chon
Showei “that. tne total restates te
oye iifegeckaht thutaanddoliars. Fh
dinsaunt ccqesiiel uri tie Yea
as ier honmdeest thirteen hued
Milfane “ver fourtyceisin thousand
Mllute worth af stuices were. Hol
Marin ce mvctingy “All oicers. ety
Fe-vlocted, & The revival imecting ut
Nastia Strmt ah be Chnueeh Bas
cag widlh gieat eazeesee td. WW
Tr iowenapett Thursiay, Frida
fia Slay at Questa street Me Es
Starcl deine Madey Schon Wark,
trie Teeuitenauvd meninon save, 2r¢aL
fnmpusation we the Worle Sie rewistered
renee “Training Glass uf 20 wet.
Sine Sheps ahs, sdenby it Jones
iarge sulfone alight. sernice haat
eck Ane dunes He the meni
eet Wtew, Jodie Fe Ucartat. dor
nclt Ss inipravinss epics aiid Has
reat’ hoje or ae specs! crmpler te
Sion ste Pheraus Paasme ts, th
ihe sie * Ms Ritsan Littl ha heen
Ws in bal fora text diys. *, br
two bane beets Une guest wf Ties. an
Mix, WN. Holt, i |
JERSEY CVCY, Xd. dan, 1a,
wittinin Camiord, Vresiding iter i
Sree raiersek Lslaeret of tee.
SE Aion Chtegh “preted an ai
Beatie “bet saat Stag niet at xt
Sear Zion Charatan Cane
munipait” Avenues this clits fly gud
Jet hie Sbruee Phe pastor tet
fey Toesand haus been galled South
diy Recut oF the Hines wis dah
tes rps eangresation of Gethel
$s Miuten tho stn" witient “a
Jaci seC under the leatershiy 9
Se td paar ewe ed
eat imatdie excellent, wnieres
Aan iogee an be sea TRA We
Ahitalug” “few, a. WeeNot! ut Patter
cnt Neg Kant evs Wt Mtahews
Sine Steed thay Aaveniia cured
Or Ee Sits were presene at hirkteld
St YE tuned un tusk, Sunday muoenin
fat assisted ia the service, Quite
ate arte I uenitore ene MuAc
murs ot ae ta Mester Ke
He fl nitecae aes Rivet Strert Di
isin hus" hen onthe se tit
Hee ate a bee aut "The Missee
Fee ogc Le La tone. ety
Satine ectie anne Unk, Casale. De
AEN arin the bias ae Be
arnt “hon
FLOR forty years-Stoan's Liniment
Pi has been ‘the: quickest “relief for
neuralgia, sciatica: and . rheuma-
tism, tired muscles, lame backs, sprains
and dtrains, aches and pains.
"Keep Stoan’s handy and apply freely,
without rubbing, at the first twinge.
Tt eases and brings comfort surely
and readily, You'll find it’clean and
pon-skin-staining.
Sloan's Liniment-is pain's. enemy.
Aakyournegivon
At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40. .
Sloan.
Liniment
‘ emy
bene
HAIRDRESSERS
: BUT ONLY ONE
-POINDEXTER..
833 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Phone Mt. Vernon 682-3.
SXPER1. MANICURING.
_. AND MASSAGING -..
- Mme. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
Hairdressing
1828 PENNA. AVE.
Manicuring, etc. ,
Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
Madison 8756
Lien.
‘a ff EO:
« % eee
iN Zé ho
Admiring xe
: ‘ GREE /
Lil Yi f ,
Eye “%. |
4 : OTS
e
'@
a.
° a zy
gp ___ They say that the choicest mirror of a beau-
peel tiful woman is an admiring eye.
S Gamer cent IA\ Look around you. Are not the most popu-
De ers iis lar of your friends and acquaintances, men and
VS A women who possess a-bright, smooth, soft skin?
\ Ra / Sy Your skin should -be shades‘lighter: You
Loup ex 234 "| can make it of'a baby-like softness by the use
5 Ga 4 of this famous home beauty treatinent. It is
pe l easy to use and has never failed. .
[ANd co i | At bedtime you wash the face, hands, neck
: ona ENT f and arms with the fragrant lather of Black and
: EBe 2 Serine) :| Soap. Then lightly apply Black and White Oint-
: ee ment. Allow to remain on overnight. Next
ene morning again cleanse the skin with Black and
vents 7 White Soap.
‘You should then rub the skin gently with QS
little bits of Black and White Cleansing Cream. Sy"), osc a
This fragrant, soothing cream helps the Oint- * | oy -| an
ment lighten your complexion, and makes your le fol
face powder cling to your skin. > TAN eeerNnTEN:| |
Just try this beauty treatment for two. or ‘SOF
‘three days, and you will be delightfully sur- st ay 4
prised—the proud possessor of a beautiful com- “eS Sage
plexion. Ff oe i
Begin this treatment tonight. Go to yaur Ee
druggist today and get you a package of Black MAE a
and White Ointment 25c (the 50c size contains p< ASN
three timesas much); a.cake of Black and White (\ ZeOS cu a)
Soap 25c, and a 25c package of Black and White [PC@s LE SO ge
* @leansing Cream. All are guaranteed to please eS Af ges
vou. All three will be sent postpaid on receipt Ye pies
Qa FREE—Send your narhe and address for a
J Ai essa EN copy of the new Black and White Birthday and
faRCRNSING Dream Book. It tells you all about the many
& SCREAM 4 3) Biack arid White’Toilet Preparations—the best
IN Sere and the cheapest sold today.
UC cree) .*
= Plouth Cheni
ec ie
Se) Ploudh Chemical Co.
aa) MEMBHIS, TENN. U.S.A. "
NY j
wee el a
> CHARLOTTE HALL
CHARLQTTE WALL, MD. Jau. 19
_CeABLOTED HAULS Jes,
agi taecaiaests thie ea een
‘around. © Hes, Cecil, the pastor ut
arose ee Ne ea bone
teat ie week autre hem
ne ea a ee ern
leachér, & owns xentleman — from
Fe ee ee See die
‘or the A, Me OB. Chureh by but of
NEW CHANEL, Mb. cfm 1
in hare GaNReT aa tere
SYRACUSE.
Pic i Aig Lae ge etme 1 Bee
Ae. fe Heid x mnnmibly met i
ai thie! Bethwny, aptly Chireh Sim
Jans’ aceernuan wt, dolar ota 8
the Community Censer betel its. aa
At the eabingiein Hall caret Urange
nd Graper Streets ‘Chuirsdy es rnits
fecusta* The b, Node A. held it
Reekiy mortite at ‘thw 0M Ziet
Chureh one Tharslay exo dine 9 ost
Business ne hinportaney. wae disenssed
he funeral ul Mrs, Sac Phoeais. 88
seared why dived ah TAN, be, Wah
Ineton ‘Strent. born ‘ih | Witkeshut¥e.
Pao and for yawns: Secure ay faunal
Keagher thw siniiaye Sebo in Ut
chy war hel ay ihe Gethiay Kaptist
Ghure Wedneslas afteranan at 2.20
PMs shoei survived bye i sliuniiied
and granddanshier and.” “intimate
friends uf the falls. Merit rade
ne hs ew, Pearson, prayer by ev,
Hdiden of Geile amd: Revd. W. Pers
sen nant rie. Hollaway uficlated. | Te
Torment war in Waodiawen Cemeters:
1206 PENNSYLVANIA AVE,
Phone, Madison 3193-1
SCALP TREATED with the won
aerful PORO BAIR GROWER,
which ts guaranteed to grow the
hale tu six months, [nstruction
in Porn Renton given.
GRAY’S MEAT MARKET
820 S. Sharp Stree
Only Colored Meat Market In City
CROICE MEATS
Orders prompuls delivered
AT LOWEST PRICES
Phone South 1980
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Se
Mra. Harry 3. Groves hag returned}
from her extensive. trip, to Newrosheil,
New York city sand Rocnester. She
expecta to remain In Syracund for thet
‘einter, "alts. annie. Bell Mason of 3
Emporia, Vay is now, “visiting her \
aunt Mes, Ford 7251. Washingion t
Street, and will rematn in the cts” for 2
Several Weeks, * Marie Bennett at one #
time a resident in this city. recently |
Died. sn Springhetd. Mass. * Sir. James ?
Re sanford 820 Harrison Street, wan J
Teeently “abpoiniad by the Hepubltean \
party for @ poaition at the Stave Cap-
Kat"in ibang, Xe Ss He will take @
This position this Week. f
lar h
LONG GREEN a
. §
LONG GREEN, MD. Jan, Ui—Rev
3. S0Dennix “preached “at” Mt Zier
chureh Sunday” morning. fn the at
teriuun Kev. Watkins preached to the
Sunday Scligol, * The Juntor Mission:
ure’ Soeirty. held. its resular_ monthly
Meeting un" Wednesday aftemooy
The: Pixwons Coverie held its ‘monthls
meeting wt the home of Ms. Md
Gwynn. ot Thursday. .* Miss Lenora
Quickly Was ihe guest of Mrs. “Susie
Co ou Hida * Atte a wenn
and Mex, 1. 4, Pennlogion ‘eniertained
Mra Later Bote, Mrs. Goritia Wells
and Mes, Mary Anderson on Monday
evening. * Me. kijah Gwynn and Mr.
Tce Boil visited Mr and Mrs
HE "Forrester und family on Cuosday
evening, ® Mrs,” Amanda- Forrester
and family “were entertained on Fri.
Hay night by Mr Pullin Hell and
Hanily sand Mr. aud ste David
Gwent and family. © Master, William
Urexk hax buen, indisposed the past
Werk, T Me. Nellie Cromwell las
Peiuried hime “alter x visit to. Mr.
und Mrs. award Surke af Washing.
tent, D.C, ® Miss Onelia ‘erarnwelt is
vere HI at the heme of her uncle Mr,
Suniel Gwens, + Mise Blaneh Hughes
ig sttterings with, ‘x sprained | anicte,
Mew. Hikaabeth Turves. is confined
iwr home with sickness, © Mrs. A. A.
Dennis is suffering with bil cai
Mr. dames Fields taut Mr. Amox
elds uf Towson visited ML Zion
Churel Sanday, Mist tary“ Coaper
Of Raltiinore was also a visiter at
Ai. Zann Charen? At. and Mn
Mesos (Quickly entertained "Mr, “ana
Mis oti Quickie" Suandtay. > Ars,
Ades itetersone, visited Mes.” Amanda
Porroster Sumlay, = Mes. Tanisa Brive
upd dausiier were plats ut Mr.
Baraberer a tridacs
hee Reamer Errore
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‘CAMBRIDGE, MD. Jan. is ars
Riten Macer Me, Dennis Waters an
firs, Winifred M, Lee of this city: ar
ery ick, at dele” home, there, o
the sick list are Mr. Raleigh Jobley
Mire. Lizate Jones and) Mr. slob
Henry. * My, dX. Waters of ‘Wash
ington, D. spent a few days wit
bie fami on liye Sireet. * 32)
Frank Farrow and Mrs. Mary’ Keen
Were quietly married Jast week. * Mts
Bila’ Cornish. travelling messmiger fo
God in company with Mrs. | Hebeced
Pomish visited jail Sanday week, anc
held services witlr xreat, cesults. * Mr
and Mry. Cephns of Clester spent 3
few dugs here last ‘week visiting
Felatives:.« grand gnock, eonterenc
Wraw inal at Rt, Tatke, Church last week
and was a finanela) success. * Mr
Ajex, Bosley Tas wld to Me, ober
Ruslor hiv motureycle who, will use it
mm ivips to school. * Last Sunday was
ude day. at Beihel “Chureh, Kev.
Lewls preached a stand sermon In the
morning. At 8 P.M. a sneredt cam
ver Wax Fendered be Hie Junion cholt
and way Well enjoved by the lance
mrowd present, 7 Mrs, Maud Sueur
whens several days at Easton reventls,
Me suet oF Mrs. Chas, Webb. * Mr.
Ton Bitek and “Mrs. Jannie Heusen
Heth oh Cambridge were united in
Hols ‘matrimony inst week bs tev,
Lewis, * Mra, Tharry A. Vouers has
nen conte) to hei by a slight. cold
ror several days. * fev. dM. Waters
preached. a very apprapriate and
moutestineine sermon ut Wath
Shape at the morning service xul~
eet itis, ad Corner after swhtch
Nr, Jobe Houxlas and Mrs. Seren
acksem were admitted ty the eurch,
(Tory elahiorate mitsleal and literary
beeann was rendered 31, Wangh Church
Inder the auspices of ‘The Ladies Aid
toes. Mrs. Ethel. dews and
Tea cdona Key Waters were in cherie,
Mis Tage sliver effering at tie door
can assuration af the Tigh extern
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oe, Toews Matthiowrse Last week a wits
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| ANNAPOLIS
ANNAPOLIS, MD, Jan, 19-—Ae,
land Sime Benjamin. Ufardesty. of Putt
iileiphias gpene afew days with, Mr,
and airs. Walter: Hardesty. Me, ‘Ben:
Jamie tardesty: Is a brather of Algssrs.
Walter and James Hardesty, ° Mr.
and Sirs Louis B Gordon ut. Lewlen-
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Mitac (grows: ami ME, Heros tiross
sal Sins. Louie dohnsan. of Hoffman
Bireet were the xutests of Mr, und Atty
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Stan Siew Soliman of at Cathedral
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Toronto Residents
Fight Extradition.
Torunty. Canada, Jan: *6.0°Al a
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prevent. the extradition of Alat-
thews Bullock, a United states eol-
ored citizen wanted in North Car-
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THE AFRO-AMERIGAN
Published every Thursday
By THE AFRO-AMERICAN CO.,
H. Murphy, Manager
J. H. Murphy, Attendant
825 N. Fentw St., Baltimore, Md.
Phone: Vernon 6016-6017
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year. $2.00
Six Months. $1.25
Three Months. 75c
Payable in advance
6 cents in Baltimore
10 cents elsewhere.
Foreign Advertising Representative,
W. B. Ziff Company, 608 South
Dearborn street, Chicago, 321 Victor
Building, St. Louis, Mo.; 404
Morton Building, New York.
"Independent in all things,
Neutral in nothing."
PODAY, JAN. 20, 1922
This paper holds a news
franchise in the Associated
Negro Press and uses its exclu-
sive copyright disputes.
The Associated Negro Press will receive authentic news hears or clippings of national news from the office, 3423 Indiana Ave. Chicago, or at the AFROAMERICAN office.
History Day By Day
Friday, January 29th: The House approved the 15th amendment to secure impartial suffrage prospective of race or color, 1869. Saturday, January 21st: Benjamin Bamcker, Negro astronomer and philosopher, with imperfect tools constructed the first clock in America which told the time and stuck the hour, this about the year 1871. Sunday, January 22nd: The military paintings connected with the campaigns of the Egyptians during the 18th dynasty, represent Negro soldiers a numerous in 1971 B.C. Monday, January 23rd: W. T. Scott, the only Negro ever nominated for President by a regularly constituted delegate convention in which Negro were represented. Candidate for Liberty Party, 1896. Died 1917.
Tuesday, January 24th: Fifty-five Y. M. C. A. centers were conducted in entrenchments among troops in America which were predeed over by 282 colored secretaries: 49 served overseas, a total of 331 "Y" men during the world war.
Wednesday, January 25th: Alexander Sergiev-vitch Pushkin, the greatest poet of Russia. He came from a noble family, and inherited African blood from a paternal ancestor. Born 1799
Thursday, January 26: The first Negro troops commanded by Nero V. S. L. L. 1735. They were received near Mobile while making preparations for an Indian War.
---
It pays to be good to yourself.
Businesses like plants go to seed when they stop growing.
It is not easy to apologize, but it sometimes pays.
Nothing attracts attention like success.
Good luck can only help a man if he works hard.
The city divorce mill ran Cupid a close race last year.
By the time the Liberian tour was started, Bishop W. Sampson Brooks will be back in America.
The five year $10,000 contract probably explains the perpetual stipe of "Sunshine" Sammy.
The want ads tell just as interesting a story as any other feature of the weekly news.
New principal parts of the verb "to slide;"-Slippery—slide—bumped.
Southern Democrats are finding the layer anti-lynching PILL a bitter dose to swallow.
Maybe the post master soon to be elected will take a leaf from Calen L. Tait's new book on distributing patronage.
Massachusetts imposed a twenty year sentence upon three Portuguese colored men convicted of raping a white woman in the presence of her escort. No hanging up there, and for rape.
First Baptist (white) not to move until colored people settle on all four sides.
Here is your hat, what is your hurry.
Our knowledge of Waco, Texas, is becoming extended. It has added a knowledge of emtaling to its already expert information and practice of lynching.
The Superior California News advertises for Skilled Mechanics to complete a $15,000,000 building program. Young man go West.
Unfinished business:
In a sewing circle, the absen-
member;
For the husband, getting in the
last word;
For the wife, menu for tomorrow's dinner;
If the School Board will adopt the recommendations of Principal Hawkins and the Alumni Execu-
tive Committee for a new colored High School, equipped with gymnasium, assembly hall, pipe organ, swimming pool, etc., the school population of the city will show a fifty-per cent increase in five years.
Since scientists now admit that the Queen of Sheba was black and comely, we can expect white Southerners to reject the Bible because King Solomon believed in social equality.
This is about the time of year that the ordinary man finds the making and keeping of good resolutions two entirely different things.
Four millions for Southern colored schools in the past two years. Somebody page Kelly Miller who is credited with the statement that Northern philanthropy has about done all that it is going to do for education in the South.
Next to paying the creditors of the two local banks which failed recently, depositors are interested chiefly in finding out why these institutions became bankrupt.
The statement of Harry O. Wilson, receiver, printed in last week's issue goes a long way towards clearing this matter up, and may be regarded as the foundation for the belief that both institutions were insolvent long before their condition became a matter of public knowledge. This is undoubtedly true of Taylor and Jenkins, when the amount spent in salaries for the two years (some $15,000) is considered in relation to the income from the resources of the firm, amounting to less than $6,000 at six per cent.
The number and character of the investments of the same firm also show a commendable degree of racial pride, but not a large amount of business judgment and wisdom.
Above everything else depositors in a bank have a right to expect greater security for their money than if they themselves took care of it. Despite the fact that loans and investments of private bankers are not regulated by state laws, nevertheless such bankers should throw around the funds chirtrusted to their keeping every safeguard which experience has proved essential to the conduct of this type of business.
Mr. Taylor's announcement to pay the firm's creditors dollar for dollar, if given time, is praiseworthy. Pending this procedure depositors will welcome the full investigation of the referee in bankruptcy, and the firm's full explanation of its method of conducting business.
Colonel Charles Young
The death of Col. Charles Young brings to mind the fact that but few colored soldiers have been given commissions in the regular army. That he attained the rank is proof of the fact that he possessed an equipment of a soldier far beyond the ordinary.
He was graduated from West Point in 1889, and among those at the Academy with him was Gen. John J. Pershing, who commanded the American Expeditionary Forces during the World War. He and General Pershing were fast friends, and he rendered valuable aid to the latter when the American troops made their dash into Mexico five years ago.
A born soldier, Colonel Young rendered gallant service in the Philippines and served with each of the four colored regiments. He had served as military instructor at Wilberforce University and as military attache at the American legations at Port au Prince and Monrovia.
A most popular and capable soldier, Colonel Young may have been advanced to higher rank had he not been colored. During the Wilson administration an examining board decreed he suffered from high blood pressure, thus removing him from the line of active duty. He rendered valuable service, however, in helping train colored officers for colored units during the World War. One of his keenest regrets was that he was not allowed to accompany the colored soldiers to France. His promotion from the rank of major to that of colonel came as tardy recognition of his capabilities as a soldier.
Colonel Young was one of three colored men to be graduated from West Point. The first was Henry O. Filipper, now holding an important position in the Department of the Interior, and the third, the late Lieut. John Alexander, for whom one of the camps was named during the World War.
The Smith Case
"In the United States as a whole, the average length of sentence for Negroes is more, than three times that for whites ********* In every division except the Mountain Division the sentence for Negro offenders is considerably longer than that for white offenders"—U. S. Census Report on Negro Population, 1915.
The Census Report in the above confirms what every colored person in Maryland already knows—namely that if he commits a crime and a white person commits the same crime, the latter will get the shorter sentence.
The records of the courts in the state for the past few years show four or five colored men convicted of murder of white persons and executed upon circumstantial evidence. The same records show in the Pilchard case, a white criminal sentenced to a few years in the House of Correction for the murder of Stephen Long, and in the celebrated Couthron case, a white man and woman, convicted on the former's confession that they killed two colored chauffeurs, sentenced to the penitentiary for a term.
What the estimable city judges hope to gain in sentencing Samuel Smith, also a chauffeur, to death for an attempted assault upon a white girl, is difficult for impartial critics to understand.
Many persons who heard the evidence in the case will agree with the judges that Smith is guilty of attempted criminal assault and attempted murder. Many will agree also that the prisoner had a fair trial, that his crime was brutal to the extreme, and that to use Judge Dobler's words, no "good white or colored person can have anything but horror at the crime."
Judge Dobler's dictum that the condemned man was guilty of the "MOST SERIOUS OF ALL CRIMES ****** THE OFFENSE AGAINST WOMANHOOD AND THE CRIME AGAINST HUMAN NATURE," could not but draw smile from the prisoner about to be sentenced. Doubtless he recalled how he, a Negro, happened to have a strain of white blood in his own veins.
The part of Judge Dobler's declaration that rape is, "the most serious of all crimes" cannot be substantiated by the facts. The state laws except in the South follow the Federal law which punishes assault with intent to kill or rape with a maximum of 20 years imprisonment. The most serious crime in the United States is TREASON, and next to that is MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE.
The Maryland law up to 1914 penalized an assault with intent to kill or attempt to rape at the maximum of 10 years imprisonment. The legislature that year changed the maximum penalty for attempted rape to hanging and left the penalty for attempted murder at 10 years. The result is the illogical law making the penalty for rape, attempted rape and murder exactly the same. No one is deceived by the intent of this enactment, nor will common sense ever fail to point out its general legal incongruity.
Admitting Smith's guilt, his faintrial, and the right of the court to impose the maximum sentence under the state law, it is difficult to see why the ends of justice could not just as well have been served by a penalty of twenty or forty years imprisonment. Under the circumstances, the ordinary person is shocked more by the enormity of the sentence imposed than by the brutality of the crime.
Experts In Embalming
—Also Lynching
NIGGER IN WOOD-PILE
The Cleveland Call prints these entertaining paragraphs from the TEXAS CRACKER —otherwise known as the Waco, Texas, Press:
By H. (Jlnx) Tucker
Waco, Texas.—The East Tech High football team of Cleveland, Ohio, after at first agreeing to play in Texas during the holidays has now refused to play Bryan High.
The reason is that John Trice, the big all-scholastic tackle, could not make the trip owing to the fact that he is a Negro.
Why not let John Trice, the Negro East Tech star, play against Waco or Bryan? He would hardly last a trice anyway.
As the Cleveland scribe writes, "John Trice might be embarrassed in Texas before the game." But he would not be embarrassed after being carried off the field at Cotton Palace Park. More than likely he would be embalmed.
Full Explanation Wanted The capture of "Sure Death" Lirther Boddy by Philadelphia's only colored police magistrate Amos Scott—indicates that colored people will aid in delivering criminals to the police, when they have
OLD TIMER NOT BOTHERED BY AGE
Aged Scribe Says Wife Is Just A Young As He Is And Has Bobbed Her Hair
"Hey you Re porter, commerely yelled Old Time as the reporter was about to pass him at the corner, Nyrick Avenue and Dolphin Street, the other night.
"I seed in the Afro las' week said Old Time grabbing the reporter confident tally by the
"Hey you Reporter, commere" yelled Old Timer as the reporter was also to pass him at the corner of Myrtle Avenue and Dolphin Street, the other night, which was in the Afro las' week" said Old, Timer grabbing the reporter confidently by the arm. "where Uncle Jimmie Thimbley, sexton to Union Baptist, says he is seventy-eight years old and isn't never cussed, drunk nor fit."
"I wan you to put in yore paper, that I think he has missed everything. What in the tarnation is the use of livin' like a dead one. Take me fer instance. Here I is nigh ninety years old, out there sled ridin' wid my kids, an' my ole woman, jus' to show her youngness has bobbed her hair.
"In my time" continued O. T. I has fit, cussed, on the theatres, danced my fule head off, played whis' and five up, tasted my egg oog at Christmas and bawn in the woods, and I'm still livin' yet. I tell you boy, if Uncle Jimmie nint' careful, they won't 'Low him in heaven 'cause he nint' had experience enough."
Just then a young fellow guiding a bob sled with seven or eight youngsters on behind, yelled out for Old Timer, who hobbled over to the sled and bobbed all the others. Everybody hunched up so there would be room for the pusher to hop on. Old Timer waved the Reporter a farewell with his name, as the pusher started off with a run, then himself on the sled for a long ride down Myrtle Avenue Hilt.
The reporter followed down hill walking on the pavement, and saw the big sled bump a pedestrian at Hoffman Street and send him and his packages sprawling on the ice street. A few feet further on at Harlem Avenue a driver drew up his bony, horse just in time, for the sleek tableau of the elding animal and careened to the curb where it brought up against the bumper of an automobile parked there.
The reporter rushed down in order to see if Old Timer was hurt and to pull him out of the crowd of youngsters thrown in a heap by the collision.
"Dern him, dern him, dern him," Old Timer was saying over and over again using his favorite cues words.
"Dern whom," asked the reporter.
"Mayer Broening, that's who.
If he had ropped off some of the streets, in the colored section for coastin', we wouldn't be buttin' into folks and wagons and buzz wagons, dern him.
Just them, of owner of the autumn out of the house hearing of the excitement nt, and wanted to know who was going to pay for the damage to his car. O. T. and the owner must have belonged to the same lodge, for the reporter saw the old fellow give the owner the high-sign, and the next minute they were entering the stranger'sarm in arm. The reporter looked longingly after them and aught a remark of the stranger which sounded something like "I have something in here that will warm you up on the inside."
The dumb article in question was written by W. E. R., the Afro music critic, who does not attend or belong to any of the churches concerned.
Who wrote that dumb article in the AFRO about the choir recital? I believe in fairness, and giving honor where it is due. The recital was fine, all doing well, but every one who knows anything about music and is not biased or prejudiced against a certain church or its pastor knows that John Wesley Church choir is hard to beat in this city. Evidently some member of Sharp Street wrote that dumb article. It shows their ignorance. The singing John Wesley choir did was used when by music lovers all last week. What makes the Methodists so jealous of each other? The same recital should be repeated at Sharp Street Church next Sunday night, and a fair-minded person make the report for the paper: "A Baptist Music Lover."
A POEM A WEEK
Poems by colored authors for your scrap book. If your favorite bit of poetry has not been printed here, send it to the editor and tell him why you like it. "Why Send Me Flowers?" BY JOSHUA HENRY JONES Jr. From his volume entitled "The Heart of the World and other Poems"
O'er weakly clinging dust and clay
That's soon, dissolved and no
more's seen?
Love me a little while I'm here.
While lips may smile and heart
can speak.
Tar better 'twere if you could feel When at my head you place a stone
That wed-known friendship rich and real
And keep on smiling though I'm gone.
BOOK CHAT
BY MARY WHITE OVINGTON "A Social History of the American Negro"
By BENJAMIN BRAWLEY
Published by The MacMillan
Company, 400 pages, New York
City. Price $4.00 including postage.
This new history will be felt by many to be the most important book upon the Negro that has been printed for years. We have had a deluge of opinion on the question, digged out us by black and white alike to Mr. Bradley's history, compiled with conscientious care and covering the long period from 1609-1918. Indeed one criticism of the book would be the division of space, 70 per cent of the volume concerning it, 30 per cent before the Civil War. This hurries back to part and perhaps paints an even more gloomy picture of today than history demands.
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There is nothing passionate or emotional in Mr. Brawley's writing. He practices great calm and strives to be if possible strictly impartial. Nevertheless, one would soon know that the book was either by a Negro or by one who thought black* not because of the prejudice of facts but because of the facts themselves. We view the Indian wars, especially the wars of the Seminole through the Negroes' eyes and learn that the Indian and the Negro raised among the Indians fought shoulder to shoulder against the efforts to make them migrate. Mr. Brawley concludes his chapter on the Indian Wars with the state's involvement in the course of the Seminole wars in the Seminole and Negro alike were ruthlessly guarded. There was redress for neither before the courts, and at the end in dealing with them every honorable principle of men and nations was violated." The desire to get back runaway slaves who were received by the Indians and treated by them with far more humane than they were treated by the white men as a trotting motive in the desire of the people of Florida and Alabama to force the Indians to migrate.
Mr. Brawley gives great, and deservedly great, importance to the slave insurrections of Denmark Vesey and Nat Turner. The terror that these men, especially Nat Turner, implanted in the heart of the Southern slaveholder led to harsh legislation especially against the free Negro. For long run the Negro gained. Every time he made his hideous status known he helped the cause of anti-slavery.
.....
Another matter, new in the recital of the anti-slavery agitation as we have read it in white histories, is the story of the convention of Negroes held in Philadelphia September 15, 1830, three years before the founding of the American Anti-Slavery Society. These pages here of great interest of Bishop Allen, of Pennington Shadd, and others. And at these first conferences were the white champions of freedom, Garrison, Tappan, Jocelyn. The book brings out with great cleanliness the rebellious Negro both slave and freeman. The characteristics that we applaud when we see them in the Negro youth today, their revolt against slavery, Mr. Brauley shows very clearly were not missing in the much more dangerous and difficult days of slavery.
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I have said that Mr. Brawley is unemotional, but one chapter, that on organization and agitation, ends with the wonderful story of Sojourner Truth speaking at the Woman's Suffrage Convention. "Dat little man in black dar," and Sojourner Truth points her long finger at him. "he say women can't have as much rights as man, cause Christ weren't a woman. But what did Christ come from, taking what God gave him, what did Christ come from? From God and a woman. Man had nothing to do with him." How much we have missed who have never seen Sojourner Truth! It is a book that I wish might be in every white American's library, and that I should think no colored American could afford to have missing from his shelves.
Fifteen Years Ago
Items From The Afro-American
10f January 19, 1907
Rev. Dr. Harvey Johnson, pastor of
Union Baptist Church, through
his attorney W. Ashleie Hawkins,
has entered into a contract with
Court claiming $1,000 from the B.
& O. Railroad for alleged unlawful ejection from a car on
August 15th last. Dr. Johnson
took the car at Camden Station
for Harpers Ferry and was ordered
to go into the Jim Crow car. When
he refused to do so, he was ejected.
Bishop James A. Handy, of the
A. M. B. Church, is quite ill at his
home, 1341 N. Carey street. The
Bishop is a native f this city and
is 80 years of age.
Messrs. Harry F. Brown, George Bayton, and William Mann were among those who passed the recent examination of the State Board of Medical Examiners and have been licensed to practise medicine in the State. Messrs. Brown and Bayton are graduates of Howard University.
Mayor Timanus replied to a committee of the Baptist Union Ministerial meeting who drew up a protest against the proposed delivery of an address here on the race question by Senator Tillman of North Carolina, saying that he agreed with the sentiment expressed by the ministers. He requested the committee consisting of Revs. A. B. Cullis, G. R. Waller, and W. I. Alexander to call on him in order to discuss the matter more fully.
Miss Emma Booze, of this city and Mr. Major Tillery, of North Carolina, were recently married in West Bridge, Penna. They are now residing in Pittsburg, Pa.
THE FORUM
Letters for this column should be kept within reasonable length (Usually 200 words)
Afro Helps In Farming And Politics
Dear Sir:—
I cannot do without your paper. It helps work in my farming in politics and many other things.
RICHARD T. SMALLWOOD (Signed)
Maboel, Md.
Why Marylanders Do Not Celebrate January First. Emancipation Day.
Mr. Maboel:—
If you will permit me, I want to give forth a few thoughts, suggested from your editorial query of this week, which reads: "Why is it that Marylanders have no large celebration of the day upon which Lincoln issued his Emancipation Proclamation, January 1, (1863)?"
Mr. Lincoln did not issue the Emancipation on the date above given. He issued the same during September 1862, the year previous. This proclamation concerned only the states in rebellion against the Union and was to become effective only, on the first day of Jan
1863, in such states as did not return to their allegiance to the Union before that date. It was Mr. Lincoln's earnest hope that the states affected would return to the Union before the date set for it. The Emancipation Proclamation did no more affect the colored people of Maryland than it did the colored people of Massachusetts. Maryland was a loyal state, and never left the Union. Mr. Lincoln's proclamation did not affect the colored people of this state. Those who were free, remained free, while slaves remained slaves.
But, with respect to the present matter, there is a character of greater significance to the colored people of Maryland than Abraham Lincoln, and that man is Henry Winter Davis, that man was the Liberator of the slave shacked in his own native state, Maryland, and that strictly according to law, and not as a "war measure". Henry Winter Davis, more than any one individual, preserved Maryland to the Union, and had elected a Maryland Legislature, which, in 1845, legally purged slavery from this Commonwealth. For this reason honors is due. What the Colored People of Maryland should annually commemorate is this act of the State of Maryland in removing the fetters from her own sons and daughters, and magnify the memory of Henry Winter Davis who wrought for the black people of this Commonwealth as no other man, black or white.
GEORGE F. BRAGG Jr.
This Writer Wants To Know Why Our Tax Money Is Used To Support The Maryland Institute To the Editor:
Sir—Permit me to have a few lines in your esteemed publication by inquiring why there is no place worthy colored youths in artistic work such as drawing, painting sculpturing and costume designing. I have asked this question a number of times and have never received a satisfactory reply. I have inquired of several colored men in public life, whose names I will not mention, why I could not study at the Maryland Institute when he said he was a private school and the others could not give any answer to my question.
Now if the Maryland Institute is a private school why is it supported by appropriations made by the City Council and State Legislature? Every student who goes there has a scholarship to which he is appointed by a City Councilman. The City examination is required and the public pays the expenses. Our City Councilman appoints a white person that the colored people help pay for. Colored students would stand competitive examination. This is not equitable or right and the colored people ought to do something to get their life. If the Maryland Institute will not let them colored students study there like they used to do, the colored people and their friends should stop the Maryland Institute from getting money from colored people by having the Legislature refrain from appropriating any more money. Baltimore, Jan. 14, 1922 MICHAEL ANGELO BROWN
If Republicans have done more than Democrats somebody please show it to this writer
To the Editor:—
The failure on the part of the Republicans to put the "Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill" through brings to the writer's mind the subject.
"Theory versus Practice." It has been a habit of the Republican party ever since Emancipation (1865) to fill or swell the heads of members of the black race, with theories, telling them that they are these things is to stick by the O. P. "That has been the cry ever since the above-mentioned time. But the talk of the "G. O. P." is all the rhetoric and is done to fool the black man."
The Republican party has ever done any more for the black man than the Democratic party, somebody please show it to the writer.
(Seeing is believing.)
The writer does not believe that, if ever was the intention of the Republican party to pass the "Dyer Ant-Lynchning Bill," and make it effective than it is the intention of a man to walk across the ocean. (?) How can it be when their own men are their bitter opponents? To us (black people) they say "yes"; at heart they say "no."
On the other hand, the Democrats are radical. You are not at a loss as to what they are going to do. They don't tell you that they are going to give you high offices and pass every bill you present to them.
Why should they? Do we support the Democrats? No, but we line up for the Republicans the same as a bunch of hungry men lining up in the Bowery. York for the soup and and in "hot air." We get a lot of theoretical "hot air." "The Dyer Bill" could have gone through a dozen times have the Republican administratives about it.
The writer thinks (though he may be mistaken) it a big joke. Look how they voted on reseating Senator Newberry. They lined up,
NO POP!
I DON'T WANT
TO GO TO THE
MOVIES BECAUSE
THE PICTURES
WIGGLE AND
HURT MY
EYES
MOVIES
5¢
excepting nine. Anyway he (Newberry) was seated. That was something the Republicans wanted done, and it was done. And with the present administration two-thirds Republicans and can't rule, then we might as well have a solid Democratic administration. But, Oh! Where are our Maryland Senators, Messrs. Waller and France? Hereafter we should vote for men who are practical and theoretical, no matter what party they belong to.
FELIX F. EADDY.
Pickens Says Buddy Case Proves Necessity Of Colored Police Officers.
To the Editor:
Sir—All of those who are discussing Luther Buddy and his experience in the profitable lesson: We should have more Negro officers, especially in Negro sections. To one who knows colored folk this is perfectly clear in the crimes and the apprehension of Buddy. In the first place, the boy hardly would have been a man to their guns, for they would have been better acquainted with him and his kind.
But the plainest evidence of all is seen in Boddy's capture: Those colored citizens would have been much less likely to report on Boddy if they had found it necessary to report it. If they had, Magistrate Scott, the colored justice, was effecting the arrest Boddy made hostile movements as if to take up a weapon. We all know what would have happened if some other people had been on the job then. And the most urgent reason, from American psychology, is that the arrest was by a Negro criminal, there is no "race question," but a pure question of crime.
WILLIAM PICKENS,
New York City.
Headlines And Crime
By Wn. Pickens
(For Association Negro Press)
Crime has no more to do with
skin and skin-color than it has to
do with height and weight. In
technology we are constantly
identifying crime and race.
Why? Because of newspaper
headlines and emphasis.
"PAROLED NEGRO KILLS
DETECTIVES"
DEPT. 1
This was a newspaper-headline in the New York World, page wide, and the very first thing on the front page, even superseding the name and date of the paper itself. Every human mind that read it, associated "Negro" and "Crime," two ideas that have no more need to be associated than "red hair" and "crime" of "Fifth Avenue" and "crime"—or any other two causally unconnected ideas.
That is exactly the damage that Southern newspapers have done to Southern psychology, caused it to conceive and crime as a connected effect. Northern newspapers can easily do the same thing. Well, what should the world have said in its scare-head? This:
PAROLED MAN (or prisoner or criminal) KILLS 2 DETECTIVES. Then in the detailed account, among the other irrelevant items and ideas, the reader could have found out that this particular criminal HAPPENED to be colored, just as, perhaps, he happened to have a wart on his nose, or even his feet. There would have followed no impression that the color or the war or the shoes and any causal connection with the crime, but that they only designate and describe the individual criminal. But we cannot play up race with the same display with which we play up crime, without causing the race of the criminal to be equally culpable with his crime.—in the psychology of the average man. This is what innocent New Yorkers in innocent Jews to be molested when a crime is committed by a member of their race with whom they do not even have personal acquaintance. It is because the race itself has been mixed into the idea of the blameworthy.
The same thing happens in the mind of children (and older folks) when they see certain types races detected on the cinema exclusively and often as villains. Only last night when the screen was showing a Chinaman of the underworld wielding a great knife (to help one white man rob another white man) we heard a ten year old colored child of the audience remark: "Those old Chinese and things are always trying to kill everybody." The accumulation of headlines like that in the world can produce a riot like that of Atlanta, or Chicago, or Tulsa.
Smiles and Chuckles
By W. F. R.
---
What Has That Got To Do With It?
Soph. 1—"Do you still go to see
that little brunette you went with
last winter?"
Soph. 2—"She's married now."
Soph. 1—"Answer me!"
—Fun Magazine.
Mendacious
Little Jack Horner
Sat in a corner
On the couch there was a jam.
He rose to his feet,
Gave a lady his seat!
(I'm a liar? I know it! I am!)
—La Touche Hancock.
Tls Advice
A portly woman had inadvertently taken a seat in a railway compartment reserved for smokers. With unconcealed indication she saw a man beside her fill his pipe. "Sir," she said, in frilled tones, "smoking always makes me ill." The man lit his pipe and puffed contentedly, and at the same time replied, "Does it, really, mutam? Well, take my advice and give it up."
---
Mother (reprovingly)—When I was young, girls never thought of doing the things they do today. Well, that's why they didn't do them.
Matter For Thought :
He was to take her for a trip in his new yacht the next day, and she was questioning him about it.
"How awful nice of you to name the boat after me?" she giggled.
"What is she like?"
"Well—er," he answered, "she's not much to look at, you know, but she's very fast."
The Doctor And His Patient
The doctor was known of suffer invariably put his patients on a invariably put his patients on a rigid and limited diet.
Do you expect me to follow your directions when you yourself don't? one rehealed.
"Hum!" said the doctor. "Is the direction on a signpost less valuable because the post never goes the way it points out for others?"
—N. Y. American.
She Knew A Hog
A New Orleans lady was waiting to buy a ticket at the picture show, when a stranger bumped her shoulder. She glared at him, feeling it was done intentionally. "Well," he growled, "don't eat me up." "You are in no danger, sir" she said, "I am a Jewess."—The Lawyer and Banker.
Real Consideration
"Yassub, mah Sambo am a perfect gemmum even if we all do it," he said. "And again, Yassub, he nevah hits where it shows."—The Owl Gwu.
What She Liked
He—"Why, I never use one."
She—"Don't be so dense."—Williams Purple Cow.
"CALVARY'S CROSS"
Tune—Annie Laurie
On Calvary's rugged mountain,
On the cross Thou died for me.
Thou hast cleansed my sins that
mailed Thee
To the cross of Calvary's tree.
With the cruel cross upon Thee,
On the way to Calvary;
Thou didst fall beneath the burden
Bearing all for such as me.
Oh, Thy pierced wounds, I see
them.
As Thou hung on Calvary's tree,
Oh, the agony Thou suffered.
That sinners might come to Thee.
Oh, may thy loving kindness,
Subdue my worldly pride,
That I may ever serve Thee,
Jesus the crucified.
No more thorns will pierce thy
brow, Lord.
No more death on Calvary's tree.
Oh, glory Thou hast risen,
Thou dost reign eternally.
CHORUS
Hosanna to the King!
Hosanna to the King!
Oh, His blood has holy cleansed
me.
Glory, glory to the King.
Copyright
By CORA M. RAY
811½ N. 5th Street, St. Joseph, Mo.
BYRNES
WANT
THE
BECAUSE
ANGES