The Afro-American
Friday, April 21, 1922
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
SUPERVISOR ACCUSED BY SCHOOL CHILDREN
30th YEAR No. 363
MILLION DOLLAR
CLAZE RAVAGES
NORFOLK, VA
Whole Colored Section of Berkley Went Up In Smoke Last Thursday
Central Baptist, Church, Cost,
$50,000, new $10,000 plr organ
dedicated last Sunday,
Pendleton's Undertaking Establish-
ment, dead body being prepa-
red for burial
Stray Bract shop and
Liberty Street Barber shop and shoe repair.
Liberty Street Movie Theatre.
Mt Jay Brothers, printing office and house dwelling.
Norfolk Va. April 20—Two thousand persons are homeless today as a result of the million dollar which wiped out the school section of Berkeley. Thursday afternoon, leaving a mass of dolls three quintets of a male and two city blocks. Both colored and white relief organizations are collecting funds, and tents have been erected to help the victims and soup kitchens of J. K. Davis head the Colored Citizens League and Women's Club for Relief.
School and Church Saved
The fire started at the end of the Main street waterfront, and sparked soon carried the flame to the houses occupied by colored people. Culpepper, Apatomena, Craig, Middlesex, Louis and Liberty streets were entirely swept of dwellings. Phenom checked the disaster at Berkeley and the people had snuck their furniture in First Baptist Church, and the handsome Abraham, Lincoln school, contain that the fire would not cross the avenue. Magnolia Cemetery, also on Berkeley Avenue was used by the refugees to store of household effects from fires.
Because of the wooden construction of this section, the fire spread with marvellous speed, rapidity, and force. The bulpoper street family saved only the body of a dead relative bing in a collin in the from room. A white sailor rushed into a room where a woman was dead, a woman and five children, whose mother was too frightened by the disaster to move. The family registered us homeless at the Berkley Police station were white.
BISHOP ASKEW GAINS
10 POUNDS IN 15 DAYS
THROUGH HERBS OF LIFE
BISHOP ASKEW GAINS
10 POUNDS IN 15 DAYS
THROUGH HERBS OF LIFE
Suffered for Years With Nervous, Tired, "All-In" Feelings; Now A New Man
"I have taken only one and a half battles of Herbs of Life, yet I have gained a few."
Such is the remarkable statement of Bishop L. W. Askew, 2133 Poplar Grove avenue, whose experience made him a leader of Herbs of Life superior to all. His statement continued as follows: "I have suffered for years with a neck pain, down-and-out feeling. I had indigestion so bad could hardly digest water. I tried hundreds of medicines, but never any results; my hospitalization until I began taking Herbs of Life. "The first dose made me feel better and I have only taken one and two bottles, yet I feel like a new person. "Life will always be boosted by it."
THEAFRO
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Use it regularly and your foot trouble will vanish, and you will never be troubled with body odors.
THE TURLINGTON CHEMICAL CO.
MANUFACTURERS BALTIMORE, MD.
Failure to Properly
Describe Hell Loses
Him Right to Preach
New York, April 13—Because he couldn't give a sufficient detailed description of hell. Charles G. McKenzie, graduate of Union Theological seminary, was refused the right to preach by the Jersey City presbytery.
SUIT AGAINST PASTOR DISMISSED IN COURT
Case of Mrs. Lillian Jones
Versus Rev. Frederick
Donglass Went By
Default Saturday
ASKED $200 DAMAGES
Pretty Hairdresser Tells Afro Representative She Still Wants To Prosecute
The sensational suit of pretty Mrs. Lillian Jones, hairdresser, 1306 Pennsylvania avenue against Rev. Frederick Douglass, pastor of Bethel A. M. E. Church for $200 damages alleging assault and battery was dismissed in open court by Judge Dawkins in City Court Saturday. The plaintiff failed to put in an appearance.
Both attorneys, C. C. Fitzgerald and A. M. Douglass, counsel for Mrs. Jones, were not inclined to discuss the case with a representative of the AFRO-AMERICAN. Mrs. Jones, when seen Wednesday, knew how the case was set for Saturday, and had she known of it, would have been on hand to prosecute. Rev. Douglass had not been to see her concerning the case, she knew how the case was set for Saturday, and had she known of it, would have been on hand to prosecute. Rev. Douglass had not been to see her concerning the case, she knew how the case was set for Saturday, and had she known of it, would have been on hand to prosecute. Rev. Douglass had not been designated to talk the matter over with her.
The damage caused by Mrs. Jones gave an alleged visit to Rev. Mrs. Douglass to the home of Mrs. Jones about a year ago. The young hairdresser charged the minister with making an unwarranted claim on her behalf a and weakened condition.
Rev. Mr. Doughtlass' admitted making several visits to the Jones apartment, declared that, on one occasion she "hid his hat"; and stated that he "was no man." He denied any wrong doing, and acquitted him against the Stewarts' Board of his church, and by a special committee of ministers appointed by Bishon J. Albert Johnson.
Associated Negro Press
Fayetteville, Ga., April 20.
Some weeks ago Genius Colfeed was convicted of burglary here and when sentenced to be jailed in penitentiary he asked for no hung rather than sent to the chain gang, but granted his request, but Genius thought better of his plan for leaving this mundane existence and escaped jail last week. The sheriff's office is searching diligently for him.
Two Break Easton Jail
Easton, Md., April 18—Authorities still seek James Briscoe and James Haskins who escaped the local jail while awaiting the pickings. Five other prisoners refused to escape and went to sleep with the door ajar.
LA. TEACHERS SPLIT
New Orleans, La., April 19.—Differences between city and county teachers caused a split in the State Teachers' Association at the annual meeting last week. Session adjourned before the program was completed.
1500 TEACHERS MEET
Louisville, Ky., April 29—Fifteen hundred teachers attended the Association here last week.
SECOND NORFOLK BANK GOES UP; CASHIER JAILED
Union Commercial Started
In January With $100,
000 Capital Now In
Hands of Receiver
EXAMINERS BUSY
Still Checking Up on "High Finance" of Mutual Savings Bank Officers
Norfolk, Va., April 21—Special to the Afro-American Bank examiners closed the doors of the Union Commercial Bank on upper Church Street Thursday. W. L. Gilleson, white, was appointed receiver under $20,000 bond. L. T. P. Cross, cashier, was arrested charged with the embezzlement of $1,354.05. His case was continued in court until April 25th. Attorney W. R. L. T. Taylor asked for the appointment of the receiver. The Union Commercial was sent in January of this year with S. P. Noble as president and Rev. M. Madison chairman of the Board of Trustees of an authorized capital of $100,000. It is said that the State Banking Department advised against opening a new bank at that time, but those concerned that
Examines Busy
Recorders and examiners are still busy checking up the books of the Mutual Savings Bank which went under at Christmas, being unable to pay its Christmas Savings depositors. The bank were found to have been the heaviest borrowers. Mr. Mgriff is declared to have negotiated a loan of $7,000 on office building. Some important officials of this bank, the Navy Trust Post office before the war, is declared, entered the banking business, and grew prosperous. Several erected five homes with porches and one of them occupied as many as three automobiles. Lavish entertainments were given including Virginia fish breakfasts, where Smithfield ham and Scotch whiskey were on the menu. Stock in other items was also included including Supreme Casualty Company of Columbus. Ohio. The Mutual Savings Bank Buildings, the only bank in the city with marble fixtures, it is taken over in the Southern Aid in mortgage. The Attucks Theatre, declared to have been financed by a $300,000 loan from several banks, is said to have been saved to chosen by the financial aid of large Insurance in North Carolina. Immediately following the crash, several persons connected with the bank fled from trate depositors to all sections of city, leaving "power" attorney letters in the hands of local lawyers who have since returned, whether they will be prosecuted remains to be seen.
Had Mania For
Logansport, Ind., April 18.—MRS Helen Libby is in jail here of her mania for collecting habies from charitable institutions and representing them as her own.
BERT'S EAST $150,000
New York, N.Y. April 20.—Intimate estimate of the late 'Burt Williams estimate his estate at $150,000 exclusive of the annual income from his phonograph records.
AFRICANIA BEG TEACHERS
Monrovia, BEG. April 11.—CPA Mail)
Native, kings of bishop Matthew of the M. E. Church, held conference of the M. E. church to send them teachers here preachers.
FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922
PASSING FOR WHITE
Walter F. White, Agent Of The N. A. A. C. P., Tells Of Narrow Escapes From Ku Klux And Southern Whites While Investigating Lynchings And Riots
BY WALTER F. WHITE
Assistant Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
What sort of a looking man is yet in progress are the Phillips a lyncher? How does he differ from the man you met on Broadway or Michigan Avenue or Boston Common? How do you make an
What sort of a looking man is a lyncher? How does he differ from the man you met on Broadway or Michigan Avenue or Boston Common? How do you make an investigation? Do you use a disguise? How do you get away with it? Is there danger in it if you should be discovered? These and a score or more of similar questions have been asked me during the past five years, dur ing which I have personally inve stigated some thirty-six lynchings and eight race riots. In most of the cases I reached the scene within from ten to twenty-four hours in the States of Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, Florida, and Kentucky, thirty-three of the victims being men and three women. Among the race riots investigated while they were
HENRY BLOCK, VALUEI DESTROYI
HENRY BLOCK, VALUED AT $50,000. DESTROYED IN POCOMOKE FIRE
Pocomoke, Md., April 20. (By telephone)—The Henry Block of Market street in the business section, wined at $8,000 was totally the prize given in the 1915 fire, which laid waste the area bounded by Market, Vine, Front, and Second streets this week.
Over 75 buildings were laid in rules and 40 families made homeless.
Robert Henry was the only colored person who suffered losses. He owned a row of frame houses, which he rented as stores to white.
M. E. Centenary Aids Negroes and Mexicans
Newark, N. J., April 20.—Colored people who have migrated into the North since 1915 outnumber the Jews who "went out of Egypt under Moses," it was asserted by Bishop Homer C. Stuntz of Omaha, Neb., at the Newark Conference or the Methodist Episcopal Church here.
They have overflowed all housing accommodations in the city, where it is almost impossible to prove the elementary decencies of life. By the aid of the Centenary found our church has provided them with pastors
"In the Southwest," he continued, "the same kind of work has been made possessing the land of Mexico. $200,000 Mexicans who have fled from the turmoil in their land. They have poured into Southern California, and have moved into Colorado and reached up into Colorado, Oklahoma, Missouri and Iowa.
High Masons To Meet
St. Paul, Minn., April 20—The United Supreme Council 33 A. A. S. R. Masons of the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction will assemble in its forty-first annual session in Ulysses Hall, St. Paul, Minn.
A general revision of the Scottish Rite Law comes up for approval. There will also be action taken looking to the acquiring of a permanent home for the Supreme Council in the Grand East, Philadelphia.
COLORED COP KILLS
Pittsburgh, Pa., April 20—Coming upon six white bandits attempting to rob a milk driver, Patrolman Ralph Browne ordered and landed the other four in the station house. He was wounded and will receive a medal for bravery.
MINER'S HOME DYNAMED
Beckley, W. Va., April 14—Because he refused to strike, dynamite was used to destroy the home of James Penn a miner employed by the Raleigh Coal and Coke Co.
VOTE WITH DEMOCRATS
Kansas City, Mo., April 13 — For the first time in history two colored women and four men were members of the Democratic State Convention, which met here recently.
PHILLY HOTEL CLOSED
Philadelphia, Pa., April 20 — Recievers have been able to keep the Hotel at Dale here. The sum of $6,000 was needed but less than $1,000 raised. Furniture was sold at auction Monday.
HAIRDRESSERS
You can get is for LESS in BISHOP'S. Anything from hair on to an up-to-date Beauty Parlor
Eau Surblime and Godde's
French Hair Dye -85s per
THE Hair Supply House, 1426
Pennsylvania Avenue.
COLORED COP KILLS
BY S
FOR WHITE
Cent Of The N. A. A. C.
Escapes From Ku
In Whites While In-
chings And Riots
ER F. WHITE
National Association for the Advancement
and People
yet in progress are the Phillips
County, Ark., battle between Black
peons and white moors in 1919,
the Chicago race riots of the same
year, and the Fulson, Oklan., riots of
May-June 1921
It would probably surprise many people to know how often lynchings mobs are composed to a considerable extent of men (mobsters) or women (ordinary classed as good citizens. Does this always mean that some particularly horrible crime has stirred them to deeds unthinkable in calmer and more dispassionate moments? The spirit of violence has degenerated, if such a thing can degenerate lower than the point at which it starts, to a stage where the most intricate incipient plague be the wall of sandpuff thickness which divides law from anarchy in many States of the South. As M. L. Mencken de-Continued on page 10
D AT 50,000.
ED IN POCOMOKE FIRE
persons, living in an apartment over one of them.
Efforts of the AFRO-AMERICAN to get in touch with Noah Gunby, well-known storekeeper, or Rev. M. Falker, M. E. pastor at Pocomoke, Wednesday evening, Long distance operator reported telephone wire down and no connections. Eventually a reporter was able to talk with Charles S. Coston. God-room who gave the information above.
Elaine Rioters Face Trial Second Time
Little Rock, Ark. April 20.—Twice condemned to death by Phillips county courts and granted new trials by the Supreme Court, five men charged with killing a white man in the celebrated Elaine riot will face trial again in the next session of the court.
The last trial was granted on the ground that the colored men were summoned for jury service. The alleged riot resulted from the desire of colored farmers in this region to free themselves from moage conditions.
To Investigate K. of P.'s
Little Rock, Ark. April 29—Hearings begin before the attorney general on charges made by the State Insurance Commission, alleging irregularities in the affairs of the Grand Lodge of Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa Australia and the State of Arkansas, a local organization, were postponed to a later date in order to give officials an opportunity to prosecute the investigation began some time ago when Insurance Commissioner Bullion, making his annual check-up of the affairs of the organization, book for 1921 was missing. A further search disclosed the absence of several other records which are required of orders dealing in insurance matters, and the commissioner filed charges with the attorney general.
Chaingang Sentence
For Two Lynchers
Americus, Ga., April 18—Benny Devane, Harry and Lewis Futford all white, were sentenced to one to four years in the chaining for the lynching of Will Jones several weeks ago.
The jury-recommended a fine, but the judge ignored their re-
mendation. Several other whites
dicted him, and the jury laid
the charge have fed leaving
their families and farms.
BROWNIES BOOK
IS DISCONTINUED
New York City, April 20.—The
Brownies Book, a monthly mag-
azine for young people edited by
Dale DeLeon and E. G. Dill has been
discontinued.
WINS TWO DEBATES
Atlanta, Ga., April 20—Moorhouse College defeated both Fisk and Talladega in annual debate on the subject, "Resolved, and Announcement." Establishment of the Similar to that in Force in England."
DYER ADDRESSES STUDENTS
Washington, April 20—Congressman Dyer, of Missouri, addressed the students of Howard University Wednesday, on the Dyer Amil-
IS MR. GARVEY NEGRO MOSES OR FANATIC?
Claude McKay Answers This Question In April Issue of "Liberator," White Magazine
REGALLS BEDWARD
Says Garvey Was Influenced by Fake Jamaica Prophet Recently Jailed
New York, April 12—The Liberator Magazine, a socialist magazine published here by white people contains the following article in the April number concerning Marcus Garver. The author is Claude M-Kay, only colored contributing editor on the magazine:
To those who know Jamaica, the homeland of Marcus Garver, Garverism inevitably suggests the name of Bedwardism.
Bedwardism is the name of a religious sect there, purely native in its emotional and external features and paterned after the Antifists. It is the true religion of thousands of natives, calling themselves Bedwardites. It was founded by an illiterate black giant named Bedward about 25 years ago, who claimed to be a pioneer and boat-holder for a sandy little hole beside a quiet river that flowed calmly to the sea through the Eastern part of Jamaica.
In the beginning prophet Bedward was a stock and boat-holder joke; he bore a book beginning to hear the gigantic white-robed servant of God at his table, quilted up, and the police were hard put to handle the crowds, the British Government in Jamaica was warned and threatened and even persecuted a little, but his thousands of followers stood more firmly by him and made him rich with great presents of food, clothing,
So Bedward waxed fat in body and spirit. He began *great* building of stone to the God of Bedwardism which he declared sound and sounded Coming of Christ. And in the plentitude of his powers he sat in his large yard under an orange tree, his wife and grown children, all good Bedwardians, around him, his religion and upon topical questions to the pilgrims who went daily to worship and to obtain a bottle of water from the holy hole. The most recent news of the prophet was his arrest by the government for causing hundreds of his followers to sell all their possessions and come together in some place in connection; for on a certain day at moon, he had said, he would ascend into heaven upon a crescent moon. The devout sold and gave away all their property and flocked to August for the same cause and passed with Bedward waiting in his robes, and days followed and weeks after. Then his flock of sheep, now turned into a hungry, devout dog like hyenas and fought each other until the Government interfered.
Bedward Model for Garvey
He may be that model, not the prophet, worked unconsciously upon Marcel Garvey's mind and made him work out his plans along similar speculative lines, both men there is no comparison. While Bedward was a huge inflated bag of bombast loaded with ignorance and suspicion, he would never energetic and quick-witted mind, buried by the imperial traditions of nineteenth-century England. His spirit is revolutionary, but he may have cared less about the significance of modern revolutionary developments. Maybe he chose not to understand he may have cared less about the facts that would make puerile his beautiful schemes for the redemption of the continent of Africa.
Garvey: A Kingdon?
Garvey: A Kingdon?
Garvey: The Federal authorities after five years of stupendous vaudeville is a fitting climax. He should feel now an ultimate satisfaction in the fact that he was a advertising man. He was the biggest popularizer of the Negro problem, especially among Negroes, since "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was his most famous advertising. During the last days he waxed more falsely chudent in his tall talks on the Negro Conquest of Africa, and when the chisman yelled their own chlammered yelled their own gorgeous lied his hands to the low ceiling in a weird pose, his ugly hugly cowing the crowd, and told how the mysqrte African masquerade evaded him, and how he would use them to put the white man to confusion and drive him out of Africa.
HAITIAN HEAD NAMED
HAWTHORNE
Washington, April 13—The election of Ike Borno, prominent Haitian lawyer and former member of the cabinet, as President to succeed Sudre Dartignouvae seems to be highly alleging in official U. S.
U. S. Weather Report
APRIL 17 to 22 INCLUSIVE
Northeast United States-
Unsettled mild, and showery weather
first part of the week, followed by
mild weather and normal
temperature
ILDREN
Fort Smith, Ark, April 13—Jim Eslinger, who has been asleep continuously for three years, died at his home in Fort Smith. Eslinger, for eight years a country charge, would have been 63 years old June 7. Physicians say he was not suffering from sleeping sickness, but apparently was insentient to pain, was immobile and his eyes were closed. In March of 1921 Eslinger for a few seconds showed signs of awakening and then relapsed into the comatose state. On July 1, 1921, he opened his eyes, said: "I ain't where I was," and soon back into a coma.
ies involv-
inding of
transmission
by
elevation by
action. A-
fternoon. Green
Sunday.
willing with
COLLEGE FRATERNITIES
MEET IN WASHINGTON
The local Howard University
Alumni Association may ask for
the reinstitution of Prof. W. J.
Hart, recently summarily dismissed
from the University Law
School after 47 years service as a
Professor Hart was dismissed, it is said for the time that attacks were board, and terror to the American in which he commended Luther Boddy for his work.
Washington, April 20.—Secretary of State Hughes appeared before the House Committee on Ways and Means Wednesday morning at the Lighthouse for the point of honor.
NEWSPAAPER SUSPENDED
Ommlin, April 20.—Owing to lack of support, the "Monitor" published here for seven years by Rev. John "Albert" Epstein. The court has been forced bankruptcy and has suspended publication.
Asleep Three Years,
His Sole Remark Was
"I Ain't Where I Was"
LEGAL BATTLE FOR PASTORATE OF ENON CHURCH
Rev. Joshua H. Green, Dis missed by Board, Arrested When. He Would Preach Easter Sermon
FREED BY MAGISTRATE
Pastor, Will Carry Case To Members and Maybe To Courts
It looked like half the members of Eton Baptist Church were in and around the Northwestern Police Station Wednesday afternoon, when the trial of Rev. Joshua H. Green on a charge of trespassing on the church property, was held. He was dismissed.
The trial was not without its humorous residents and justice. Chapman had to rap for order several times when some of the members voiced their approval or disapproval of bits of the testimony, or the Mickelndess, white counsel for the officials of the church, and Harry P. Karr, white attorney for Mr. Green.
Officials of the church virtually dismissed Rev. Green on Monday of week when they voted to demand his resignation. They also voted him three months' salary, which he declined to accept. The action of the trustees followed in the church, in which the pastor was the central figure. Charges involving his veracity and handling of funds were made, but he was given a two-thirds vote of confidence by a majority of the church session. Mr. Green walked into the pulpit last Sunday morning and was proceeding with the opening services, as usual, when a police officer stepped up to the front of the pulpit. It is said that James Jones, an official, had or
When he saw the policeman, the minister, carrying a Bible, left the pulpit and walked to the front of the church. The minister of the police was presiding among the women in the congregation, and many voiced their disapproval. The minister and the policeman got on a Dolphin street car and headed to Police Station, where it was finally decided that a charge of trespassing would be lodged against him. He put up $101.45 collateral for his appearance as a witness. He believed that the dismissal of the pastor may be finally decided by the courts, as it is claimed Baptist usage provides that only such may be done at a meeting of the Dr. Green came to the church as assistant to the late Rev. Jones Watkins, where the pastor feeble was supposed to the pass later, and Dr. Watkins was made master mertus.
Want Hart Reinstated
Because of his long service, including his activity in eating, he went to institute, alumni ask that he be reprimanded publicly and reinstated.
10 cents elsewhere
HEAD OF HOWARD COUNTY SCHOOLS JAILED; ESCAPES
Police Authorities at Elliott City Seek Vainly Alleged Homosexualist
FIVE YEARS SUPERVISOR
Howard County authorities are anxious to get Wilson S. Leigh county supervisor of colored schools, who has skipped ball or an indictment charging him wilt sodomy. When his case was call for trial in the Circuit Court at Elliott City on Monday of last week, Leigh was not present and his ball of $1,000 was declared forfeited. Much sympathy is being expressed by leading white and colored citizens of Howard County for his bondsman, William Arthur, who conducts a store on the Washington Boulevard, three miles from Laurel.
The indictment against Leigh is said to have been the result of an investigation made by Rev. T. P. Thomas, a methodist minister in the vicinity of Cooksville, where the supervisor resided.
The grand jury for the March term of court presented Leigh on allegations of perverted practice with George Dodge and Jesse P. Patterson, who it became known that a baron warring had been issued for the supervisor's arrest. He was brought to Elliott City jail and incarcerated there until March 25, when he out of sympathy from his bail.
Along the witnesses summoned by the Grand Jury against, Mr. Leigh were: Mr. James Johnson, Sr., James Johnson, Jr., George Dodge, Dylig Hackett, Benjamin Young, Alberd Dosey, Mosse Young, Dobson, Lorenzo Z Snowden, Dennis Parker, James T Smith, Charles Parker, John W. Dosey and Aaron Cook. Supervisors about five years, leaving an educational position on the Easter Shore. He is regarded as an educator of the Maryland State Colored Teacher's Association.
Intergraternity Gathering Result
In Permanent Organization of
College Men and Women
Washington, D. C., Apr. 20.—
Following a three-day session in
the new Philly Wheeler Y. W. C.
A. here, representatives of Sever
Intercollegiate Greeg Letter Fraternities
doth themselves into the
Greek Letter Fraternity
Council Wednesday.
Delegates, mainly college officers
of all the colored college Greek
letter fraternities in the United
States, came to the meeting upon
upon uniform regulations for the operation
of the fraternities in the various
schools. These regulations will not
be binding, however, until they are
ratified by the council. Fraternities
are a fight to have the purely
professional fraternities included in
the Conference was not successful.
Delegates here see in the conference
Convention the men and women in
the country for closer co-operation
and the end of hostilities between
Greek Letter Societies in thir
schools.
Resolutions were adopted urging
the committee to take action in the
Dyer Anti-Lynch Bill.
Delegates included:
Sororities: Alpha Kappa Alpha
Mrs. Lorraine Green, Chicago,
D. C., P. Mitchell, Chicago,
Mich. D. C., C—Delt
Sigma Theta, Dr. Sadie Tanns
Mossi, Durham, N. C.; Miss Anna
Johnson, D. C.; Miss G. Dorothy
Pelham, D. C.;—C-Zeta Phi
Diamond, Miss Pearl Neal, Faule
Joanine Houston, Myrtle Tyler all
Fraternities: Kappa Alpha. Psl. G. F. David, Witherforce. W. E. Duff, Philadelphia. D. C. Nomegus, Phi Alston Atkins. Nomegus Haven. L. G. Koger, Baltimore. M. R. Davis and J. I. Hoffman. D. C.-Phi Deta. Sigma. E. P. Davis. L. H. Books. A. L. Taylor and Richard McGhee all of D. C.-Alpha Phi Hibernation. N. Booke, Murphy, Baltimore. D. O. W. Holmes. D. C. and R. P. Alexander. Boston.
FREEMAN STILL WEEKLY
Indianapolis, Ind. April 29—The "Freeman," in its last issue, terzizes, as false information, spreads a former circulation spread to the effect that it was to be a daily instead of a weekly publication.
A. M. E CONFERENCE OPENS AT ST. JOHN'S NEXT WEDNESDAY
hurch and Pastor, Dr. M. H. Davis, Ready To Entertain Large Number of Delegates CHANGES LIKELY
Four Pastors Have Stayed Time Limit and Will Be Transferred
Ministers of the Baltimore A. M. E. Conference are on the anxious bench, their 105th annual session opening at St. John's A. M. E. Church. Leah McCarthy, the president, Wednesday morning. Candidates for ministerial orders will be examined the previous day, Bishop J. Albert Johnson will preside, assisted by Bishop John Burst, Rev. Dennis Browne, the interning pastor. The anxiety of the ministers is due to the fact that there may be some shifting around owing to the fact that the five-year terms of the Metropolitan Washington, and Rev. Dr. C. Harold Steppean at Allen, this city, have expired. As both of these, are important charges, the placing of Dr. Tanner and Steppean may have assignments. These shifts may also hit some of the less important churches, and then they may not. Rev. J. T. Molock at the Bucks and Dev. Daughters may have ministers whose five-year terms are out.
Revs. James A. Erisco, Charles E. Stewart, John S. Collins and James G. Martin, the four presidents of the residence of Dr. Martin Tuesday and canvassed the various charges, it is said, with a view to obtaining appointments for Bishop Johnson. As the bishop generally uses his own mind about making appointment to the tentative state may be Karen.
Boy Baker To Preach
Rev. W. H. Baker will preach an opening sermon next Wednesday afternoon when conference churches will occupy the churches will occupy the afternoon, and at night welcoming services will be held. The presiding elders will make their reports the missionary sermon at night. Rev. George W. Nicholson will present the educational report next Friday night. The five years Dr. Tanner has been stationed in Washington he has been active along various lines, frequently appearing before congressional committees on matters figures in the Parents' League, whose activities resulted in dismissal of Assistant Superintendent of Schools Roscoe C. Bruce. While he raised about $80,000 and paid $16,000 on the church debt. The membership has been greatly increased. During the five years Dr. Stephanus has been pastor at All Church, all old deba on the church have been paid, the mortgages on the church and parsonage liquidated and 285 members added.
Rew. M. H. Davis has made
vent of the session, and the
urchch presents an attractive ap-
partment having been completely
invoked.
BOARD TO MEET
The annual session of the Board
f. Church Extension of the A. M.
f. Church will be held at the head-
quarters. 1555 14th street, north-
west. Washington, next Wednesday
will make his annual report as Sec-
tory-Treasurer. Bishop John
Hurst will preside.
CONDUCTING REVIVAL
Rev. Dr. E. C. Hicks, pastor of Second Baptist Church. Washing-
ton, MA. Req. J.D. or equivalent, pajig at Mt. Zion Baptist Church
Druid Hill avenue and Robert Sts. The church cis packed nightly and
Rev. J. C. Swoyer is the pastor.
WOMAN'S DAY
Woman's Day services will be held at Kandy Memorial A. M. E Church Sunday, with Mrs. Corp Banks in charge, Rev. X. H Jeltz will preach in the afternoon. A reception will be tendered the pastor, presiding officer, Rev. Charles F. Stewart, Monday night.
SACRED CANTATA
A religious drama entitled "THIS
SITUATION" stars the Museum's first
situation, Monument near Eminent St.
George W. Kennerd, Pastor
M. Posichliver, $30. F. M.
Posichliver silver offering.
The players were garbed in flowing dresses and bare legs and sanded feet. The dignity and poise with which these young people acted with their refined manner of speech and movement made their efforts a brilliant success. A key to the Parasouge and Ladies Aid at the church. Carrie Ross is Supt. of the Sunday School. Rev. Charles S. Briggs is pastor of
THREE PASTORS ROUND OUT FIFTY YEARS OF SERVICE
Rev. Harvy Johnson, Rev. D. W. Hayes, and Rev. Walter H. Brooks Near Half Century of Active Church Ministry
Baltimore has two colored ministers—Rev. Dr. Harvey Johnson and Daniel W. Hays who are rounding out the ministry of active in Washington Rev. Dr. Walter H. Brooks, pastor of the 19th Street Baptist Church, is finishing nearly a half century of work. He receives the degree of bachelor of arts from Lincoln University in 1872.
Rev. Harvey Johnson
The trio of "ministers are well read, man have fine libraries and are widely known. Born a slave in Faquier County, Ya. on August 4, 1843. Students in school to enter the old Wakayama Seminary, which had been established by white Baptists for the training of colored men for the ministry. Graduating in 1872, he was called to the pastor of the Wakayama school, the fall of that year. Then began a career that made him nationally famous. The admission of colored lawyers to the Maryland bar, the inclusion of colored women in the provisions of the law, the recruitment of teachers in colored schools and the fighting against repressive measures of all kinds engaged his attention. Dr. Johnson is the author of "The Nations from a New Point of View." It is probable that his long tenure as pastor of Union Baptist Church will be the occasion for a celebration next November.
Rev. D. W. Hays
At the recent session of the Washington M. E. Conference at Clarksburg, W. Va. Dr. Hays gave the ministers a sketch of some of the accomplishments of the ville Tenn. he was educated at Central Tennessee College, which later became Walden University. He was admitted into the ministry in the Tennessee Conference in 1872, and at one time was stationed in the district of Tennessee, referred to the Washington Conference in 1883, and has filled prom-
VIRGINIA CONFERENCE MEETS IN ROANOKE
56th Annual Session of A. M. E. Denomination Began At Mt. Zion Church
Ronoke, Vn. April 20.—African Methodists have captured the city this week, the 56th Annual Session of the Virginia Conference being Mr. Zion A. M. E. Church, Culminum street, northwest, Belfast, J. Albert Johnson is presiding, while Presiding Elder Isaac Ewer and Pastor J. S. Hatcher are looking after the comfort of the visitors. The organization of the session Wednesday morning, Rev. L. B. Lerry preached the annual sermon. Reports from churches indicated healthy progress, especially among those located in the Tidewater program. Programs are the $3,000 drive and the "dollar money" collections are good. In an address to the ministers Bishop Johnson said he expected each one to show by his achievements that the Virginia Conference
At the welcoming services Wednesday night, addresses were delivered by Mayor W. Boxley, Attorneys General K. T. Boland, R. T. Traynham, Rev. Isaac Ewer, and Rev. J. W. Smith, white, Mrs. Gerrude Hatcher presided. A reception followed with Miss Lacey Pittman in charge, missionary sermon Thursday night. Among those who have delivered addresses are John R. Hawkins, financial counselor, economist Rev. E. Edwards, S. Morris, general secretary for the Allen Christian Endevore League; Dr. George F. Woodson, dean of theology, Ph.D. faculty of the Baltimore Conference; Rev. L. L. Berry, Rev. M. E. Duvis, and Rev. J. E. Roebuck.
day morning, after which deacons and older will be ordained. Rev. S. M. Morris will preside at an Allen Christian Endeavor rally at $ p. m., and adjournment will follow in the order of the appointment at night. Booms were launched for the five places as delegates to the next General Assembly, developing the fact that many assemblants are in the field.
Paul's A. M. E. Church, formerly pastored by Bishop W. Sampson Brooks, has asked Bishop H. B. Parks to remove his pastor, Rev. A. Williams. The pastor's habit of stopping his service in church in and refusing to go on until they are seated, is one of the causes assigned.
PREACHER CUTS WOOD
Moline, H. April 14—Rev. H. L. Foster, pastor of the African M. E. Church has saved his church money this winter by sawing up all the freewood used.
NOTICE
This is to certify that the Johnson Bottling Company has been authorized by Mrs. Michelle & Lewis and the Johnson Bottle no further connections with it.
RECEIVERS.
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Julius Wallace and family take the means to send relatives for their kindness during the illness of her husband and father Mr. Thomas Wallace who passed away on 19 12 1975 for the many floral designs at his death.
CARD OF THANKS
The Sisters of St. Katherine's Home and that church where the friends who contributed to Miss House Birton of 1894 McCallah St., New York, contributed on Thursday, April 20, at their home Droud Hill Avenue and Prescott St.
ment appointments therein. He has been a delegate to the two M. E. General Conference of the University of the Freedman's Aid Society of the M. E. Church for eight years, was a member of the General Conference Commission that created the University of the Freedman's Aid Society for many years a trustee of Walden University. He has one of the best collections of books in the city by Negro authors. He is now passive, Brooklyn and Holly Run charge. Dr. Hays denies that he is a "has-been, and says: My intention is to work at present. Should my health remain unimpaired and my mental faculties be kept clear from darkening mists, I hope to hold my place on the bring in list. Being keen alive to the limitation of human life and period of rendering active service, I shall not forget that each year I must keep my eye on the therefore, keep my eye upon the signal praying the meanwhile that God may krypt me discernment to know proper time to quit, and properly resign myself to the inevitable.
Bey. Walter H. Brooks
Dr. Brooks was born of slave parents in Richmond, Va. in 1851. He entered Lincoln University while in his teens, and was graduated in a class that continued until his death in the life of the race. He studied theology at the university during 1872-3, leaving to become clerk in the postoffice at Richmond. He was called to a pastorate in that city in 1876, and has been the pastorate of the Church since 1882. As an orator he is widely known and he is regarded as an authority on Negro Baptist history. An essay on "The Priority of the Silver Bluff Church and its Promoters," from his pen, appeared in the Journal of Negro History.
IN MEMORIAM
BEALE—In sad, but loving remembrance of our dear son and brother, Horace U. Beale Jr., who departed in 1921. At the bedside of my dear son
Night by night and day by day
We watched his lovely hands grow
And saw him slowly fade away
So we yielded to the parting
Though it filled our hearts with woe.
No one knows how I miss you,
But in heaven I hope to meet you.
Where no farewell word are said
By his devoted mother, MISS. MINNESON WICK and sister, EVELYN BEALE.
I can see your dear face before me,
And still feel your hand in mine.
The last sweet look you gave me
Still tender lips.
By his loving father,
HORANE BEALE, SRI.
BAS—In said, but loving remembrance of our dear mother Sarah A. Blas, who passed away one year ago today April 20, 1921.
She was a loving memory, lingers sweetly, tender, fond and true;
There is not a day dear mother
That we do not think of you
Waking children CHILDREN and GRAND GRAND CHILDREN
HENSON—In sad and loving remembrance of our son and brother I was born in April 19, 1929. This life two years ago, April 19, 1929. You are gone my son, but not forlorn. Fresh in love, love shall always be; For as long as there is memory I shall always think of thee. MOTHER AND FATHER In our heart, love lingers, Tenderly, kind and true. There is not a day, dear brother. That we go on, together. SISTER AND MOTHER
HENSON—In loving remembrance of my dear husband Charlie A. Henson, who departed this life two years ago April 19, 1929. So much I miss you. One no knows the shed I shed But in heaven I hope to meet you Some may think I forget you Though on earth you are no more. By his wife. JOSEPHINE HENSON
THOMAS—In loving remembrance of those who died April 14, 1914.
Keep our sister in my keeping.
Until we reach that shining shore.
When she whispers to us.
And love her as we did before.
Oh sister smile on us from heaven;
Ask God to lead us till we die.
Some sweet day by and by.
By her loving, PARENTS and BROTHERS.
MRS. PAULINE SCOTT
Mrs. Pauline Scott beloved wife of Moses Scott and daughter of Mrs. Pauline Scott.
Tuesday, April 11, 1922 after a short illness. She was a member of Metropolitan M. E. Church since her children, the youngest only seven weeks old. Her mother, two brothers, the sympathetic, fun-loving Mrs. Rosa Campbell also survive.
We wish to thank our many friends for their blessings during her illness, the sympathy for her death, the formal tributes at her death.
Emma Cole Fedderman, Moses Scott,
561 Laurens Street.
DEATH NOTICE
Mina, Mika Kemp departed this life Saturday at the age of 112. She taught her daughters and son-in-law Mrs. and Mrs. James Vandyke, 1511 N. Dallas Street. She was a native of Richmond, Va. I take this method of thanking my many friends of the 1600 block N. Dallas Street for their sympathy in the illness and death of our mother. May God bless all of them. Mrs. James Vandyke, 1511 N. Dallas Street. City.
CARD OF THANKS
After ten months illness, I am now convalescing and take this opportunity to thank the Church, also the visiting committee of 'Union Baptist Sunday School for flowers and fruits sent to me, the many friends for their kindness.
CHANGES
We wish to thank our friends for their kindness during the illness of my wife Ethel Johnson and many formal designs at our死礼. We also wish to thank our beautiful Church for their beautiful flowers.
Husband and family. $85 Elder
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
CLASSIFIED ADS.
FOR RENT—Three room apartment with kitchenette, suitable for man and wife. Also one furnished room built for a single lady. 1521 McCullough Street.
FOR RENT—Rooms for rent, furnished or unfurnished. Applied 1830 Drudg Hill Avenue. Call after 7:30 P.M.
FOR RENT—An apartment with floor, couzy, modern at 805 Ave. Whitney Ave. or Phone McMaddon 3091.
PLANT FOR RENT—Three rooms and bath with modern conveniences. Apply 1256 McCullough Street.
FOR RENT—Apartments, large and small, one furnished, also one with electric light. Apply to the Liberna Real Estate Co. 1256 Drudg Hill Ave. 3 April 22-29 May 7.
FOR RENT—Second and third floor apartments for rent, 1802 McCullough Street.
FOR RENT—Third floor front and back suitable a married couple. Apply to 570 Bank Street.
FOR RENT—Infurnished rooms at 1256 McCullough Street. Apply to 1620 Linden Avenue. Phone McMaddon 1830-W.
FOR RENT - Flint for rent, 1821 W.
Lexington Street, first second and
third floors. Good condition. Apply
1808 McCallum Street. Phone Madison
5116.
FOR RENT - Four room apartment
home furnished and painted, separate
guest motor. $6.00. Apply 927 N.
Streeter Street.
FOR RENT - Furnished room for
rent for gentlemen. Apply 2127
Druid Hill Avenue.
NOTICE—This is to notify the public
that I am not responsible to any
dollars contracted by my wife. Margaret
finished room for
Apply 2127
to notify the pub-
responsible to any
my wife, Margaret
AT ST
Signed— Stephen Cook
WANTED—Colored man of 50 years
living in Philadelphia, Pa. with no bask
account rentals a little above average.
May account rentals a little age 20 to
10 healthy, pleasant and affectionate
will help. No objection to 1 child.
Will indicate to treat both right. No
ripping. Write box JD care of
APO-MERCAN.
FOR SALE—At Fairfield, Baltimore,
Md. four and eight room frame
houses in tee tee. 2.75 per
week. Phone Curtis 6178-W.
2 12-21-8
FOR SALE—Gia figures. Dooms
cheap. Apply to 1620 Linden Avenue.
Phone Madison 7893-W.
FOR SALE
One three-story house in the
1500 block of Mosher St., cheap,
ground rent $75.00.
One three-story house in the
1500 block of W. Franklin St.,
ground rent $75.00.
New cottages, Cattonsville,
Md. $400 per square foot, will
finance.
Apply HATCHET & LEWIS
Biddle & Eutaw Sts.
FOR SALE - Valuable colored
investment of Home Property at 2215
Druid Hill, 2215 Eutaw St.
The premises, Thursday,
April 27th, at 2:28 P.M. M. Ground
Rent $60.90.
A brick building, a brick building. A deposit of $200 and a settlement in 20 days. *
900 Block Putland Ave.
900 Block N. Glimore St.
900 Block Glimore St.
900 Block Mosher St.
900 Block W. Larvale St.
1200 Block Springfield Ave.
1200 Block Moorfield St.
8-Kroom Suburban Cottage, with all modern conveniences.
600 Block of Sterling St.
GARAGE For Rent—1013 Lin-
ness Apartement.
3-Room Apartment For Rent—
St. Paul Street.
Burkett
Paul St.
Sub.: "1
The Aeolian
GENERAL
500 Men
NCE?
TO LOAN
300
GREAT
H. M. Burkett
514 St. Paul St.
DO
YOU
NEED
ASSISTANCE?
MONEY TO LOAN
ON
1st, 2nd, or 3rd
Mortgages
QUICK SERVICE
Building Asso. or Straight Loans
505. Calvert Bldg.
St. Paul and Fayette Streets
Plaza 3331
Mail card and our representative will call
d on 1st, 2nd or
3rd mortgage. Mor-
gage same day.
Easy terms.
KATZ, 222
St. Paul St.
PLaza 1650
MAdison 2797
Y. M. C. A. A.
SUND.
By Grace
Under the Pest
weekly
is far below the average income of our
salespeople. A strisly legitimate,
high-class position for those who
can stand prosperity. Let us in
from you at once. Address Box R.
Afro-American. April 7-3 t.
1922
SPRING HATS AND CAPS
NOW ON DISPLAY AT
LOUIS HACKERMANS
1731-1733 Penna. Ave.
22
5 AND CAPS
PLAY AT
KERMANS
Jenna. Ave.
All Subordina
CALVARY BAPTIST
Wm. H. Johnson, G.
REPEATED!!
By the S
PAGEANT
MONEY TO LOAN
Do you need money? It so I
have it to loan in any amounts
and at any time, on notes or
money. Easy weekly payments.
See PETTY B. GROSS
2010 Bridg Hill Ave.
Houses Boulevard and Sold
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
KOM TO KATZ
$50 Weekly
1922
MADISON STREET PRO
Madison Street
Rev. W. W. Walker, Pastor
11 A. M. Topic—"Eldom's Congregation
3 P. M. Sunday School and Bible
Communion by pastor
Cantata, "City Of God" will be a
ing April 24th.
SAINT JOHN'S
Lexington St
Rev. M. H. Davis, Pastor
11 A. M. Semion by pastor, subj
2:30 P. M. Easter program by the
house. Semion is a C. E. League. Special
8 P. M. Rev. M. H. Davis will p
tor wants to grove the members
gregation at both services.
8 P. M. Sermon by pastor
Cantata. "City of God" will be ordered in the church Monday eveni
Rev. M. H. Davis, Pastor
12 A.M. Sermon by pastor, subject "God's Help"
2:30 P.M. Easter program by the Sunday School, Prof. J. W. Woodhouse, Superintendent
8 P. M. A. C. E. League
Special program
8 P. M. E. P. M. H. Davis will preach his farewell sermon. The pastor will preach all of the membership and the many friends of the congregation at both services.
Visitors Welcome
SHARP STREET MEM. CHURCH
Dolphin and Etting Sts.
Rev. William H. Dean, Pastor
10 A. M. Adult Bible Classes
11 A. M. Pastor, subject, "Jesus Worship at the Inns"
1.50 P. M. Sunday School
2.30 P. M. Queen Esther Circle,
Girls' Day, Literacy program.
2 P. M. Epworth League
2 P. M. Pentecostal Services.
8 P. M. Special sermon, W. A. C. Hughes, other Employees.
Sunday 8 P. M. Pastor's sermon to all Classes and Leaders of Baltimore, subject "Rise Up Girls"
Friday 8 P. M. Laundry Girls in Germ, subject, "The Growth of Childhood."
Friday 8 P. M. Prayer meeting
Honor mother and friend kindly enter our drive, for $7,000 June 11th, and win the $2,000 Challenge of Contenant
TRUSTEE SHORT 6733
*Wilmington, Del.* April 20.—Bishop Bostick, secretary of the trustee board of St. Paul's U. M. E. Church is held under $1,000 bail for trial on the charge of $733 shortage in church funds.
SPEE
AT ST. JOHN A
Lexington St.
BIG PUBLIC
TRINITY BAPT
Monday, April
Under the Auspices
Judge William H.
The Greatest Orator on
Sub.: "100 PER CEN
The Aeolian Choral So
GENERAL ADMISSION
500 Men and Women
300 PE
Will Appear
GREAT SPECTACLE
"TWO
Monday Evening
At Waters A
Alquith Street
Positively Silver. C
Mamie Woolford Wright. Dir.
Rev. J. W.
SPECIAL
AT ST. JOHN A. M. E. CHURCH
Lexington Street near Pine
[Picture of a man in a suit and tie].
The Aeolian Choral Society Will Furnish Music
GENERAL ADMISSION 25 CENTS
500 Man and Women will hear the Orator.
PEOPLE Will Appear in the GREAT SPECTACULAR PAGEANT "TWO BRIDES"
Positively Silver. Offering at the Door
Munie Woolford Wright Directress. Jennie Ellis, Pianist
Woolford Wright, Pianist, Passionate.
IN
Y. M. C. A. AUDITORIUM
SUNDAY, APR
By Grace Presbyter
Under the Personal Direc
The Public
FIRST ANNU
Of The Grand Council No. 1 of the
Sunday, April 2
All Subordinates are requi
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH.
Y. M. C. A. AUDITORIUM, 1619 Druid Hill Ave.
SUNDAY, APRIL 23, at 4 P. M.
By Grace Presbyterian Church Choir
Under the Personal Direction of Madame Fortune
The Public is Invited
FIRST ANNUAL SERMON
Of The Grand Council No. 1 of the Belmont Christian-Industrial Club
Sunday, April 23, at 7:30 P. M.
All Subordinates are requested to be present at the
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH. Biddle St. near Druid Hill Ave.
Wm. H. Johnson, G. W. M.
Mary R. Page, G. C. of R.
Rev. R. T. Reed, Pastor
Centennial M. E. Church, Caroline and Bank Streets
MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 24, 1922
SPECIAL
ST. JOHN A. M. E. CHURCH
Lexington Street near Pine
BIG PUBLIC LECTURE
AT
UNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Monday, April 24; 8 P. M.
for the Auspices of the Y. M.
William Harrison of O
Greatest Orator on the American
“100 PER CENT AMERICAN”
Oriental Choral Society Will Furnish
RAL ADMISSION 25
Men and Women will hear the
PEOPLE
Will Appear in the
GREAT SPECTACULAR PAGEA
“TWO BRIDES”
Day Evening, April 24th
At Waters A. M. E. Chur
Alsquith Street near Jefferson
positively Silver. Offering at the B
Fordford Wright. Directress
Jennie
Rev. J. W. Norris, Pastor
A SACRED RECITAL
In The
A.A. AUDITORIUM, 1619 Druid
NDAY, APRIL 23, at 4 P.
Grace Presbyterian Church
Personal Direction of Madam
The Public is Invited
FIRST ANNUAL SERMON
Council No. 1 of the Belmont Christian
Sunday. April 23, at 7:30 P.M.
Rev William H. Dean. Pastor
10 A. M. Adult Bible Classes
10 A. M. Adult Bible Classes, "Jesus
Writing in the Past"
1:30 P. M. Sunday School
1:30 P. M. Sunday School, Circle
Day, Literary program
5 P. M. Eworth League
5 P. M. Eworth League
8 M. Special session Dr. W. A.
C. Hughes to Post Office Employees.
Wednesday 8 S. M. Special session
8 S. M. Special session, Leader and
Mistress, subject "The Sea of
Glattmore," Fridy S. P. M. Camp First Grade
in Gymn, subject "The Growth
Children"
Friday S. P. M. Prayer meeting
kindly enter our drive, for $7,000 11th, and
win the $2,900 Challenge of Contenury
SHOT CHURCH LIGHTS
Savannah, Ga., April 13 — W. E.
Baughman, white cap has been
fined $200, jailed for 60 days and
dismissed. The lights of the Earned
Prayer Church at five o'clock last Sunday
morning. Dozens were preaching for
early morning prayer meeting.
The Earned Prayer wanted
dark church.
SOCIAL
A. M. E. CHURCH
street near Pine
The Pastor will preach a special sermon at 11 a.m., subject—
"God's Help"
he will also preach his annual farewell sermon at 8 p.m., and read from the conference program an outline of the work for Church organization during Conference Session. April 26-30.
C LECTURE
AT——
APTIST CHURCH
April 24; 8 P. M.
of the Y. M. C. A.
Harrison of Chicago
on the American Platform
"ANT AMERICANISM"
Society Will Furnish Music
SION 25 CENTS
on will hear the Orator.
PEOPLE 300
year in the
MUCULAR PAGEANT
"BRIDES"
s. April 24th, 1922
s. M. E. Church
at near Jefferson
Offering at the Door
Erectress Jennie Ellis, Pianist
Norris, Pastor
The
UM, 1619 Druid Hill Ave.
RIL 23, at 4 P. M.
American Church Choir
Section of Madame Fortune
c is Invited
JUAL SERMON
c Belmont Christian-Industrial Club
23, at 7:30 P. M.
All members and friends are asked to help us. Let every member offer a special prayer for the spirit of the Lord at St. John Sunday morning and night.
MT. VERNON BAPTIST CHURCH
Oxford Street near Penna Avenue
MT. VERNON BAPTIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, APRIL 23rd
11 A. M. Special sermon by the pastor.
1 P. M. Sunday School.
1 P. M. B. 1.
1 P. M. B. 2.
The Women's Missionary Society will conduct Prayer meeting and will install their officers.
8 P. M. A sermon to the Women's Missionary Society in Harris Institution 'Sister Hall', president, Sister Rose, vice president.
FIRST COLORED BAPTIST
CHURCH
Caroline and McKedlar Street
Dec. 4, 1911 E. Madison Street
Residence 1511 E. Madison Street
Phone Wade 2414
Wilford 1414
11 A. M. Sermon by the pastor
1.4 P. M. Bible School
1.5 M. P. Y. P. U.
8 P. M. Leach Hally Women's
Missionary sermon by pastor
CRESSES
Monday night First Baptist Relief
Association meets
Wednesday night Women's
Missionary
Thursday night Business meeting
Friday night prayer meeting $ P.
M. Commission fact: Sunday 2:30 P. M.
M. Morris, Clerk
Etting and Dolphin Streets
Cubbert, Gubert, H.D. pastor
Fortress-Amsterdam of the
Church, Sunday.
M. H. A. m. Sermon by the Rev. J.
Brown, bishop of the Rev. J.
Charles Hedges, the first minister of
Grace, Come and hear the heir.
Sunday School at # I. M.
M. Sermon to the Emergency
Circle.
BENCH KALYAH HAY
8:20 A. M. Class meeting
10:20 A. M. Minister Church.
11 A. M. Sermon by the pastor
2:30 P. M. Sunday School
5 P. M. Preaching and Prayer meeting.
6:20 P. M. Y. P. League
6 P. M. Rev. Thomas H. Lee will preach.
The Friendly Church For Friendly
Folks.
ALLEN A. M. E. CHURCH
Corner Lexington and Carlton Sts.
Rev. C. Harold Steepleman, D. d. pastor
Music under the direction of Mrs. Sasic Stansbury.
Superintendent
Wm. H. Butler, Pres. A. C. E. L.
All are invited to attend.
WATERS A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. J. M. Barker, J. D. Pastor
257 Atlantic Street
The Easter done will remain over next Sunday.
1. M. M. A. Sermon by Bishop John Houghton.
2. M. M. Sunday School
3. M. M. Rev. Aquilina Brooks will preach
4. P. M. Allen C. E. League. Program in college of Marmosie Cox.
5. P. M. A sermon to the Coachmen Association by the pastor.
6. July 24th. S. P. M. The great sacrament I descent.
"The Two Brides"
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and
Sunday Classes.
BANDY MEM. A. M. E. CHURCH
CORNER Baker and E. E. Streets
Rev. J. Ross Barnum, Pastor.
Residence 1161 N. Calhoun St.
Phone Madison 5540J
Women's Club. A. M. E.
Preaching by Mrs. Laura Banks.
Evangelist. Solos and Chorus by a
church member.
2 P. M. Sermon by Rev. N. H. Jeltz.
Evangelist of Dakota.
4 P. M. Platform Meeting by the
Lady of the Mountain Temple.
8 P. M. Platform meeting. Addresses
and select music by splendid
musician by pastor.
Sunday day presiding to Presiding
Elder and Pastor.
TRINITY A. M. E. CHURCH
Biddle Street and Linden Avenue
Dr. A. L. Caines, Pastor
Personage 1522 McCullah Street
Washington Street
Robt. H. Henson, Pres. A. C. E. L.
11 A. M. Sermon by pastor
230 P. M. Sunday School
520 P. M. School
8 P. M. Sermon by pastor
PAXNE MEM. A. M. E. CHURCH
Laurens and Cahoon Streets
New Charles W. WOODHAM Foster
6:20 A. M. Prayer and Praise service.
1. A. M. Preaching services
2.20 P. M. Sunday School
Mr. J. E. Neal. Sup.
1. P. M. Meeting
6. P. M. Class meeting
6. P. M. A. C. E. League
Mr. Nehenish Houghton, President.
11. A. M. 4. P. M. and 5. P. services will be conducted by women. All members of our sister churches are actively invited to attend and worship with us.
WEEKLY SERVICES
5 P. F. Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday class meeting.
Rt. Rev. Roy B. Mohr, D. D.
Acting Pastor
Juster will preach both morning
and evening.
10 A. M. class Bro. Richard Jones,
Leader.
11 A. M. Subject "The Way To The
Mind" by Robert E. Barker.
2.30 P. Rosa Iving, Supt.
3 P. M. There will be many bands
present for Ketley.
4.50 M. C. F. Meeting.
7.30 P. M. Song and Praise service
8 P. M. Subject "The Ascension"
"The City of God"
A Sacred Canteen by a group of
Prominent Singers at
Madison St. Presbyterian Church
Monday, April 24, 1922
Note—Tickets issued for Mar. 31
will be accepted Monday night
Tickets. 23 Cents
Mrs. Mamile J. Rusin, Degrees
Miss Francis E. Chambers, or-
der, W. W. Walker, D.
pastor
FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922
CENTENNIAL M. E. CHURCH
Caroline and Banks Streets
Caroline and Banks Streets
Residence 234 S. Canyon
Street
11 A. M. Sermon by the pastor.
2:30 P. M. Sunday School
5 P. L. Edward League in charge
of Mrs. Bertie Selman of Ames
Memorial M. E. Church.
Men's
Maryland
You are welcome by the pastor.
Monday 8 P. M. Pansage,
The Everlasting Light, by the choir April
24, 1922.
ST. MATTHEW M. E. CHURCH
D. D.
23rd St. near Greenwood Ave.
Parsonage 427 E. Foster Street
11 A. M. Sermon by the pastor.
2:30 P. M. Sunday School
11 A. M. Sermon by Rev. J. H. Carter
P. M. Sermon by Rev. J. H. Carter
John Carter, S. S. Supp.
Annie Smith, J. Susp. Supp.
Elizabeth E. Ellis Pres.
E. League President, S. E. Hangiand
Jr. E. League President, Maud Cary
Brotherhood Joshua Fuller, Pres.
Ladies Aid Society, E. Foster.
ASBURY M. E. CHURCH
Rogers Avenue and East Street
Residence 1830 E. Eager Street
Residence 1830 E. Eager Street
SCUNDAY, April 23rd
11 A. M. Sermon to the
village council of East Baltimore
by the pastor.
EVANGELICAL M. E. CHURCH
Somerset and McEdward Streets
Kev. John B. Watkins, pastor
Residence 631 Eensor Street
7.39 F. M. Sermon to the Union
Battalion, Bench Talk and Spiritual
Social.
Jas. L. Williams, Church Clerk
CHURCH INSTITUTION CHURCH
Ernest Street near Monument
Dr. G. W. Kennard, Pastor
11 A. M. Sermon by Rev. Baker
11 A. M. M. Sunday School
School
6:30 P. M. League Services
8 P. M. Cannata, "The Way of The
Cross" will be present!
FIRST INDEPENDENT A. M. E.
CHURCH
Biddle near Pennsylvania Avenue
Rev. L. C. Curtis, D. D. Pastor
Residence 1222 Argyle Avenue
6:30 P. M. League service.
8 P. M. Annual sermon to the Unique Beneficial Association.
MOUNT PISGAR CHRISTIAN'S
CHURCH
Cor. Ordenes on Main Street
Rev. Alonzo Rodgers, Pastor
Res. 1801 Orleans Street 2nd Floor
Friday night sister Henrietta Rodgers with
SUNDAY SERVICES
10 A. M. Class meeting
11 A. M. Class meeting
13:30 P. M. Sunday School
Sunt. Josephine Tubman
13:30 P. M. Jacob H. Steward
chief and congregation of the Seventh Day Adventist Church
6 P. M. Endearder Society.
8 P. M. John Johnson.
All are welcome
Flossie Breeden, Church Clerk
GILLIS MEM. M. P. CHURCH
Stockton St. near Baltimore
Rev. Hilton A. Parker, Pastor
Residence 1210 McCulloch St.
Trustees Day, bro. Perry Stearn.
3 I. M. The Rev. Westly Almon pastor of LONG's Church will preach a special sermon also preach a special churcous church will be with us. P. M. Sermon by Rev. W. I. Brady. P. M. Sermon by Rev. W. I. Brady. On Monday night the April 27th "The Way of the Cross" will return to us, not forgetting the second Sense of Thursday night the off of Thursday night April 27th. Bro. James Woods, Minister's Steward. Sister Eliza Brown, Sept. of S. S. ANTIOCH CHRISTIAN CHURCH W. Saratoga County Toppinpier St.
11 A. M. Rev. Arthur White
2 P. M. Sunday School
3 P. M. Sunday School
4 P. M. Foster or Stranger
John Herbert, Steward
George Johnson, Supt. S. S
SPECIAL SERVICE
God is our refuge and strength.
All Calvert Countians of the city
and friends are invited to a special
special meeting 14. 1922 in Sharp Street Memorial
M. E. Church for the interest of our $0.00 Drive. We need your help.
Mrs. Elizabeth Crawford,
Rev. W. H. Dean, Pastor.
Apt. 22, 29-6-14
Trustees Chosen
I. The annual election of trustees of Allen A. M. E. Church was held Monday night. The pastor, Stamatianu McIntosh, the Doctor C. H. McIntosh, were speedily continued. J. Walter Jones, Isaac Taylor, Amos Hill, John Hill, Arthur Stanbury, Joshua Freekend, Springs, Thomas and Howe.
Vestrymen Elected
At the annual election of vestrymen of St. James Protestant Episcopal Church on Monday night the following were chosen to ensuing year: Solomon Cohen H. Pennington, William E. Young, Thos J. Smith, William G. Holland, William H. Bailey and John J. Wheeler.
Dr. Hugh Birkhoudt vector of Emmanuel P. E. Church will speak at the evening on Monday night. Dr. George F. Brang will speak on "Henry Davis Davis."
M. RS TO MEET
Methodist Protestant Conference to
convene at St. John Tissuer and Ordena
charlotte Streets, MN,
Rt. Rev. Roy B. Mohr, Presiding as
There was a resolution passed at the General Conference September 14, passed to adopt the Episcopal form of church but still remain Methodist Protestant.
NOTICE:
Woman's Day Services will be held at Allen A. M. E. Church this Sunday, Mrs. C. H. Stepthean will be in charge.
Quarterly conference will be held at Shiloh A. M. E. Church by C. E. Stewart, presiding elder of the Baltimore district, next Monday evening.
REV. BOWEN TO PREACH
Rev. BOWEN, Jr., in charge of the Sunday school work of the Washington M. E. Conference, will fill the pulpit at Great Presbyterian Church Sunday morning. He is a grandson of Rev. J. B. Hedges, the first pas
IN THE SOCIAL WHIRL
Enquiries, births, weddings, personals, receptions, club meetings, will be inserted in these columns free of charge if they are received in the office of the Society Editor before noon on Tuesday.
Charles Giles, a junior at Lincoln University, is spending the Easter holiday here. He is asking his friends to write United States Senators asking to support the Dyer Anti-Lynch bill.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Young and his Mrs. Charles Shipley will have Saturday on a motoring trip to Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
Mrs. Irma Davis and Mrs. S. B. Murray moved to Washington last Saturday in Kansas City, who is the guest of there. I have, L. Hall, of 421 E. 23rd Park has been in New York visiting this week.
Prof. A. K. Phillips, Dean of the Carleton University of Rutgers, who spent the Easter vacation with Mr. Thomas Jones, the thousands who attended the Board walk of Easter Day.
PORO HEADS HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Malone of Pore College St. Louis and their friend Mrs. James Broevelove are in the city of New York. McCulloh Street, Mr. McCulloh spoke to the school children of School 111 Thursday morning.
Miss Marion Carroll of 1134 returned home Tuesday after spending the Easter holiday in Germantown, Pa., and Atlantic City.
Mrs. Carroll Scott of 1134 Drusil Hill is spending 10 days in Atlantic City.
Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Jackson of 1224 McCulloh Street, left Saturday to spend two weeks in Philadelphia and Atlantic City to show moving pictures of the Delaware Conference.
While visiting the Delaware Conference, Mrs. Jackson took moving pictures of the conference.
simple City.
Mr. Jorge Tongue, Mrs. Charlene
Berry, mother, daughter, IGV spent
going their holidays in Philadelphia,
sitting their sisters Mrs. H, C. Cole-
mber and M. Miss Bessie Tongue.
Mr. William M. White and her
dearest M. Miss Ruth B. Whites, the
Easter celebrations in Atlanta.
Mr. Frances Carter of New Castle,
bishop M. Miss Ruth B. Whites, the
Easter celebrations in Atlanta.
Mr. M. M. J. Naylor have
boved and M. M. J. Naylor have
boved in Pittsburgh after spending
a few days here.
Mr. Solomon Bond, grand master of
Order of Moses, was in New
City and New Jersey on fran-
cial business this week.
Mr. William Lee has returned
to Philadelphia after attending the
fun of his sister, Mrs. Leatang John-
ne.
Mr. William T. Mason, of Norfolk,
in the city on a business trip this
month.
Mr. Andrew F. Hilper, Miss Sarah
Berry, Mrs. Frances Tongue, Mrs. A. M. M. J. Naylor have guests of Miss Con-
tinental last Sunday.
Mrs. Henry Brown, cartoonist, is in school.
Miss Lola Robinson of 118 W. 21st street, who has been visiting Washington, D.C., and Alexandria, Md., Mr. James Minor of 91 N. Charles Street, spent the weekend in Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Cummins Parish of Philadelphia, in the spot spent by Sugar Man, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bromeridge of South Milwaukee.
Linda Lata and Norma Howard sent their Easter holidays with their sons and brother-in-law of Philadelphia.
Francese Cooper, of Bridgton, N.J., is sending the Easter with her nieces and nephews Mr. and Mrs. Jess Baton of Ering Street.
Mr. John B. Phillips, the bachelor of City and Presbytery, N.J., as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Phillips and Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Hamnett.
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Anderson entertained the Association of their home.
Among recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. Anderson, were F. Chester
Wainwright of Cliftonstown,
Va., and his wife, Hilda Wainwright
of Washington, De.
Rachel Louise Anderson spent
Easter in Richmond to the guest
of Mrs. Gillipin and family,
Mrs. Pauline Wharton spent
Easter holiday in Philadelphia visiting
relatives.
At the annual business session of
organization of women, held at the
residence of Mrs. Daisy Fitzgerald, 1118
BILL avenue, Tuesday afternoon,
the following officers were elected for
assisting yearly with the organization:
Mrs. Elizabeth Forrams, vice president; Mrs. Nora
Anderson, secretary; T. S. Hawkins,
extended secretary, and Mrs.
Brittany treasurer; and Mrs.
Missie L. Gaines, chairman; Mrs. Halligan
Barren, Mrs. Edna Rold; Mrs. Augusta
T. Russell, and Mrs. George
T. Russell, the place of Miss Anne
who died in January.
The closing meeting for the season
will be held in May at the Royal
Library literary program presented.
The following person were baked into Traffic Court last week for violations of the Right of way: Joe Boulquin, 501 General St., postponed, North Hill, 521 Keyser St., $5 and costs. Operator with dirt marks: George Foley, 510 General St., $10. Failure to Stop Wilmington, 5 feet of Car: George Thomas, Silver Springs, Md.; dismissed: John Mitter, 1250 Shaw Street, Vehicle in car: Willem Turur, 106 Hill St., $1.00. Operating without operator's card: Walter Morris, $1.00. Operating without license: George Gendry, "Charlottsville, Va." $10.00. Operating car without red light: Millennium Morris, $10.00. Operating car without license: George St., $5.00. Operating without keeping to right: Jerry Brown, 1000 Wagon Alley, $5.00. Having car in possession without title: John Burrell, 511 Public Court, district: William Smith, 624 Mosher Street.
In The Divorce Mill
SIN DIVORCED
Through their lawyer, Roy S. Bond,
six couples were made happy for
Easter by the granting of a life in a Court.
Those divorced were Mrs. Isabelle
Bierhart, 2926 Brent Street, Win-
Gamble, 1218 Myrtle Avenue, Amie
Familley, 1603 E. Madison Street,
E. Madison Street, Wm. Parker, 412 W. Pres-
tont Street, and Mrs. Elizabeth Harn-
sanson, 1109 Myrtle Avenue.
That his wife Mrs. Elisha Ebisha
abandoned him after ten years of wed-
el life and is now living in Washington,
I. C. is the charge of Joseph
Bison who seeks a divorce in the
Court Court. The couple was married
in Washington, August 15, 1904.
Mrs. Charlotte Peterson, 1627 Drut-
Hill Avenue, has filed suit for absor-
bate divorce from her husband Charles
on the ground of cruelty and non-su-
pension. The couple has married in this
city in January 1904 together until
February of this year.
Charging his wife, Mrs. Sadie Northern, now in New York, with unfaithfulness and expressing his willingness to name several correspondents, Edgar L. Norrhede, aka an absolute divorce in Circuit Court. The couple were married in 1918 in this city and lived together until February 1921. There are no children.
YEA, BOY!
HARRY, the TAILOR
Is In Town Again
1919 Pennsylvania Ave.
(Near Robert)
Glad to see all my former Customers
PORO HEADS HEBE
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Malone of Poro college St. Louis and their friend Mrs. Marion Carroll of the city the gossess of Mrs. Nottie Gilbert of McCulloch Street. Mr. Malone spoke to the school children of School 112 Thursday morning.
Miss Marion Carroll of 1134 returned to Tuesday after spending the Easter holiday in Germantown, N. J. and Atlantic City.
Mrs. Carroll Scott of 1134 Drill Hill Avenue, is spending 10 days in Atlantic City, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Jackson of 1226 Mculloch Street, left Saturday to spend Saturday in Philadelphia and Atlantic City, to show pictures of the Delaware Conference.
While visiting the Delaware Conference Mr. Jackson took moving pictures of the Conference.
Mrs. Mabe Moore of 1629 White Street, moved to Philadelphia and James Carter of Princeton, N. J.
Mrs. Albera H. Holiday of Plessy antville, N. J. was the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Henry of N. Carey Street.
Mrs. Florence Toomey of Pressman, sightfully appointed the S. S. Embryery Club on last Wednesday morning.
Mr. Ranoholb Fisher of Howard University spent the Easter Holidays with his mother an sister at their residence 1514 McCulloh Street.
Dr. and Mrs. J. J. M. Goseau, Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Butler and Mr. and Mrs. P. Lane motored to Atlantic City City. Mr. Ine, Williams of Washington, spent the week-end in the city with relatives. Mr. George D. Gilbert spent Sunday with his brother Mr. Lawrence Gilbert of Jefferson Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mr. Gilbert has made many new pursuance, Limbaugh P. O., M. Miss Robeena Murphy enjoyed a much needed rest during the holidays at the Prairie Cottage, Montgomery County, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Maynard of large home after spending their Easter with their relatives and friends of Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shippard of large home after spending their Easter with their relatives and friends of Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shippard of large home after spending their Easter with their relatives and friends of Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shippard of large home after spending their Easter holiday in Atlantic City and Pleasantsville, N. J. Mrs. Drewery left Atlantic City on Monday for Philadelphia returning home on Wednesday.
Dr. and Mrs. Robinson Mr. and
Mrs. Pennington, and Mr. and Mrs.
James Calls motored to Washington,
to holiday and spend the day
with Friends.
Miss Emily Johnson, Mrs. Jemila
White and daughter, Miss Ruth
Wilkins, Mr. and Hitchens, Mrs.
Lizzie Fernalds were among those
notices on the Board-walk in Altham-
land X, N. of the city.
Miss Lizzie Jones, who has been
semiously ill is improving much to the
delight of her many friends.
The regular monthly meeting of
the Tufts Circle Club, Mrs.
Mrs. Dayy Flitzgerd at
which time the present officers were
replaced.
Miss Amelia M. Williams' of 1877
Broad Hill Avenue spent the Easter
holidays in Atlantic City with her
brother Ringe knie Jones, head of the
Urban League was in the city Thursday
morning.
Professor and Mrs. Charles Wesley
of Washington, D. C., are rejoicing
over the birth of daughter, Mrs.
Wesley of formerly Miss Louise
Johnson of this city.
Charles Stewart (L. C. Midnight)
well known newspaper correspondent
and author of the AFRO AMERICAN office. Bishou
John Hurst and other friends. He left
the same evening for Philadelphia.
Mrs. Aurelia M. Eggans, of 303
N. Glimor street, has returned
from a short stay in Washington.
Miss Flossie Chesley has returned from Atlantic City. Mrs. Rozena Hayes, of 873 West Franklin street, is spending the week in Norfolk. She and many friends are glad to see her at her old home again. She will return to Baltimore early next week.
DO YOU REALLY WANT YOUR HAIR IMPROVED?
If so, let me add you what to use. I have used it now five months, and I am advising all the women and men of my race to stop fooling with fake hair treatments, something that you never heard of before, but use what everybody's trying to use. It's the Old East Indian Hair Treatment. If you really wish your hair to grow and be old long and dark get an Old East Indian Hair Treatment. Don't shave you will have scoured one and you will not regret it. I did not believe in hair treatments, but since ray friend's hair has grown so wonderfully and now my hair is growing so beautifully I am compelled to tell somebody else about it. I am a Christian and a great worker in church, and I tell no one in church I used it and had it professionally fitted myself. You get it at any drug store. Dr. Stokes, Fennell's, Biddle and Druid Hill avenue: Dr. Robinson's, Penna, avenue: Dr. Livingston, 1640 Penna, avenue: Dr. Laparolle Orleans and Caroline; all the Reed's Drug Stores, drug store front of Richmond Market, Mr. Etitun and Sons, Mr. Gay St. Get the medicine for instant Pressing Oil 50c; Tonies 75c; Shamuno 25c; Pomades 25c; all drugs 1.85 by mail.
You will have to send your mail orders to 700 Sharp St. Branch Office, Baltimore, and my address is 1625 Mosher St., Mrs. Gordon. If your hair dresser doesn't have it get it and apply it yourself. Save money and hair.
"STOLERS"
Ice Cream and Confection Parlor
Ice Cream, Sodas and Sundacs
The best that can be bought
Stationery, Cigars, Cogarettes and Tobacco
First-class service at our tables
School Supplies
432 Merrymans Lane
Near Greenmount Ave.
BALTIMORE WOMEN
AID BISHOP BROOKS
Hogsheads of Food, School Equipment and Medical Supplies Forwarded to Monrovia, Liberia
Hogsheads of Food, School Equipment and Medical Supplies Forwarded to Monrovia, Liberia
(By Ruth M. Collett)
The Women's Missionary Alliance, A. M. E. Church, composed of the Ministers' wives and widows of Baltimore City and vicinity, have done some excellent work for Foreign Missions during this conference year.
At a meeting held under its musics at Bethel parsonage, Mrs. Mary F. Handy suggested that donations of foods, such as are not easily obtainable in Liberia, West Africa, and such foods as are conducive to health be secured by the Alliance through donations and Homovia to Bishop S. Simpson Presbyterian church and his dear wife in appreciation of his arduous labors in that foreign field. The response to the suggestion was large and generous; sufficient canned food to fill two
bogsheads and a large box was donated by the Alliance and members and friends of the several societies and organizations, including Rev. Frederick Doughlass, pastor of Bethel, kindly consented to pack and ship the goods to Bishop Brooks. After two months on the way they arrived at Monrovia in good condition.
A large ship meeting Mrs. Ruth M. Colletel caused the attention of the Alliance to the great need of school books in the schools started by Bishop Brooks and asked the Alliance to put forth efforts to obtain suitable new school books for this mission work. The request was met and the membership made to secure funds for this purpose, through the several mission societies.
A committee was named consisting of Mrs. Ruth M. Colletel, Mrs. Minnie L. Gaines, Mrs. Mamie Douglass and Mrs. Margaret Stewart to school and purchase the books.
Books, paper, pencils, rolling blackboards, crayon, and entire equipment for a fourth-grade school of forgy pupils was purchased from a leading firm and shipped by them to Monrovia, to Bishop Brooks.
The committee also found themselves in position to purchase some other greatly-needed household articles, towels, towels, toilet soap, gins and needles, several pounds of Mrs. Brooks's favorite tea and many other needed and useful articles for the Mission Home.
A large order of medicine such as is needed in tropical climates was kindly donated by Dr. J. H. Tompkins, one of our Baltimore physicians. These articles were packed in five-pound lots, according to foreign mail regulations and mailed to Bishop Brooks. The Alliance in the near future expects to send vegetable seeds of corn and in our foreign Mission gardens.
Contributions as follows were to accomplish the work:
Home Protective Corporation vs.
twin E. Jackson.
D. Lindsay Raynham, attorney.
118 E. Lexington street.
RUMMAGE SALE April 25th and 26th
COAT IRONERS
Can Make $15.00
Per Week
Carey & Winchester Sts.
ATLANTIC CITY
Make your reservations through me for rooms—best places, best locations. I have for rent apartments for the season. For sale, ice cream and confectionery store, pool room, resort restaurant near station, hotel, and many houses at bargain prices. Small truck farms near Atlantic City. All these will stand investigation. For particular write.
WALTER HARVEY
303 N. Indiana Ave.,
Atlantic City, N. J.
HOTEL DALE
CAPE MAX. N. J.
Open March 15
Rates reduced in keeping with the times. This magnificent catered in the most Beautiful Inns & Resorts in the world, is ment. Superlative Service and Refined Perfume. Orchestra daily. Garage, Tennis, etc. on Premises. Special tention given to kids and children.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
THE WORLD'S FINEST FLOWER MAKER
is Miss Blanche Edwards, 1128 McCutlah Street
penn.edu by Penn Studio
The Sunshine Corps with the advisor or Miss Martha Brown enjoyed a hike to Halethorne Saturday.
The Phi-Chi Club and the Busp-Bes Corps with the Advisor Miss Mable Bourne hiked to Morgan College and Dickesville respectively Easter Monday.
The high school girls are working on their song in each of the Conferenc in May. A dinner will be given to the city that has the song that best gives the characteristics of the Girl Reserve purpose and slogan and has a melody that is easily carried and learned.
Miss Green of Philadelphia and a volunteer worker in the Y. W. C., a, there called at the Association.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Pratton and Mrs. Wylie of New York City were the Easter Sunday guests of Miss Norma Mauphin of the Y. W. C. formerly of Charlallisville, Va. They attended the beautiful Easter service at Sharp Street Church and with the Misses Emma Morris and Cordelia Dorsey were dinner guests at the Royal Palace Hotel.
Miss Emma Sawyer, Executive Secretary of the Y. W. C. A, is slowly recovering from a serious attack of infection and is continued to her home 2369 Mccullough Street.
C. VIVIAN CARTER
"13" Hodoo His Lucky Number
Mr. William M. White as headwaiter entered the employ of the Hotel Emerson on Sunday, July 13, 1913, with a very small crew of waiters that have grown to 35 regular waiters with a similar number of extra men to care for banquet guests. These exceeded a crew of 9 men whose short stay of 9 months in the hotel had been unsatisfactory. Assisting Mr. White in this work is Mr. John H. Howard, secretary. Mr. White feels that 13 is his lucky number.
NEW BUSINESS ENTERPRISE MEETING WITH SUCCESS
The Service Coal Co. a recently incorporated coal company is numbering among its investors many of Baltimore's leading business and professional companies. The Company has already located a rail road siding on which to unload the first car of coal, which is expected within a few days. You may soon place your order with the company for your winter's coal.
Those desiring to become financially interested in the Service Coal Company will do well to see a representative or call at the office 1515 Pennsylvania Avenue. The stock is selling at present $5.00 per share.
Archie Holloway, president; John B. Berry, secretary.
Phone: Madison S618
MME. A. FREEMAN
Hair Culture and Facial Massage
702 Tessier Street
FRED, WETZELBERGER
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DRESSED BEEF
Stall. 160
Lafayette Market
PHONE
White House Lunch Room
521 Wilson St.
Home Cooking just like Mothers
We bake our own Bread and
Pastries. Stop in and you'll
come again. Our motto: Clean-
iness and Service.
Confectionery, Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco, Etc. Satterfield and Stokes, Props.
THE GREATEST EASTER SALE AT GUY CONSTANENE'S MEAT MARKET 726 Penna. Ave. Branch Store, 203 West 25th St. Fresh Killed Chicken _____32c lb Best Swift Hams 27½c lb Picnic Hams____14½c lb Pure Lard____12½c lb Smoked
Sausage _____12½c lb
Roast Beef_____10c lb
Stewing Beef_____6½c lb
Fender Steak_____15½c lb
Hamburg Steak_10c lb
Country
Sausage _____10c lb
Country Bacon_____12½c lb
Fresh Eggs_____27c Doz
Roast Lamb_____15c lb
Roast Veal_____12½c lb
Veal Chops_____15c lb
Veal Cutlets_____25c lb
When we advertise Lamb we
do not give you Mutton
These Prices are Good Every
the Week
THE OLD EAST INDIAN HAIR POMADE
SOCIETY TO OBSERVE 75TH ANNIVERSARY
The 75th anniversary of St. James Male Beneficial Society will be celebrated with a banquet at St. Mary's Hall on Monday evening, May 1. The preceding event a sermon will be preached to the 101 members by Rev. George F. Bragg at St. James P. F. Murphy, Park and Avenue streets. At the banquet the speakers will be Bishop John Hurst, William T. Andrews, Harry T. Pratt and George B. Murphy, the President. Musical numbers will be given by Miss Lillian Matthews, Miss M. Smith, Nelson Tunstall and G. F. Hall. Solomon D. Coursey will preside. The Society, which is the oldest of its kind among the colored people, was organized by the late Rev. Harrison Webb, then pastor of St. James Church and one of the most influential men of his day. The officers include: George B. Murphy, President; James F. Fessenton, Vice-President; Walter Emerson, Secretary; William O. F. Fessenton, Secretary; George F. Bragg, Chaplain, and D. F. N. Cardona, Medical Examiner.
Mr. Austin Norris, of Philadelphia, was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Steward Davis, of 1047 Myrtle avenue.
Hilen Orange, 760 W. Mulberry street, was accidentally struck by an automobile driven by A. Stebold, white, 233 Park avenue, last Thursday.
Hilen S. Tilghman, aged 12 months, while playing in front of his home, 860 Vae street, swallowed a jack last Thursday. He was taken to the University Hospital by his brother, Louis Williams, where he received treatment.
While carrying a glass pitcher at her home, 626 Pin Alley, Genevieve Howard Felldo leaves, steps cutting her heart last, resting on the wound was dressed at the University Hospital.
James A. Marshall, aged 42, died suddenly at 20 N. Popplen street Monday. A widow, Mrs. Mildred Marshall, survives.
While crossing Mubbery street at Ogston Sunday, Alexander Yancy, 761 W. Mubbery street, was struck by an automobile driven by Joseph O. Frieman, 118 S. Eden street. He received treatment at the University Hospital for a scalp wound. While walking along McCulloh street, he or Biddle last Saturday night. James Thompson slipped and fell lacerating his scalp. He received treatment at the Maryland General Hospital. Philip Levin, white, aged 7, 2231 Pennsylvania avenue, ran in front of an automobile truck operated by Commodore Jones, 1826 Division street, last Saturday. He was treated at the Union Memorial Hospital for a laceration above the right eye. Mrs. Mary Truman, aged 86, was found dead in her home, 1707 Presbyterian Street. Susan F. Dr. F. C. Link, white, but the latter was out of town at the time of her death.
Mrs. Ellen Spears, aged 40, was found dead in an out-house at her home, 1131 N. Stockton street, by her mother, Mrs. Minerva Howard, last Sunday. Dr. George C. Page, 1720 N. Mount street, was summoned and pronounced the woman dead.
Enjoy 400 miles to celebrate her 89th birthday with her son, Rev. E. T. Perkins, pastor of Metropolitan M. E. Church, Mrs. Nancy Calender, of Lewisburg, W. Va., is now visiting at the parsonage, 1108 Druid Hill avenue.
Miss Theresa White, 1627 W. Lexington street was treated to a club to organize of girls of St. Paul M. E. Church, Tuesday evening. She was assisted in entertaining by Misses Rosa and Irma Virgil.
Robert Brown and Leander Dorsey were ordained and installed elders at Madison Street Presbyterian Church last Sunday at L. Davis, Bernard Webb and Raymond Carpenter, deacons.
UNION RESCUE HOME FOR
WOMEN AND GIRLS, INC.
Will hold their opening service at
their headquarters 1630 Drudl Hill
Avenue, commencing Thursday April
17th, commencing test day.
For the acceptance of inmates.
NOTICE
This is to give notice to the public that Herbert Cornish is an agent for the Brown Food Warmer. Will keep your food hot all day. Apply to 537 Oxford street, or Phone Vernon 5532. 11*
DON'T FAIL TO ATTEND
THE BIG MAY BALL
Given by the Wondering Society
on Tuesday evenings
at Fifth Avenue, Auditorium, 411 W.
Biddle street, music by Prof. Joe
Rochester's Band. Tickets on sale
at the door, also at 1231 Division
street and 319 W. Preston street.
Secure them early. Tickets
2-29, 5-6, 1-31
The old East Indian Treatment, the Tonic, Shampoo and Pressing Oil and Pomades. They are Treatments that can really be depended on for growing the Hair. They have stood the most rigid test of any hair treatment on the market and the longest test of any. They are the women's and men's friend. They cannot excel by any other treatment. Our Tonics will rarely grow the hair regardless of its condition. It's main hair grower. It's herbs are imported, made up of the proper ingredients for the growth of the hair. The Shampoo, Pressing Oil and Pomades are all fine for the hair. If it is broken off on the sides this will restore it. Get the full treatment at Dr. Stokes, 700 Sharp St., all the Read's stores, Dr. Fennell, Druid Hill avenue and Biddle Street; all the men's, Sonna, avenue; Livingston Drug, Gennna, avenue; Lapport Orteans and Caroline N. Gay street; drug stores, 31 and Greenmount, Madison and Biddle.
Full treatment $1.75, by mail $1.85. Send
Office, 700, Sharp St, Baltimore, Md.
A
Photo by Penn Studio
MUSICAL UNION
ELECTS OFFICERS
Harrison Watts re-elected President With great respect. Voting April 11th, April 24th. The Musical Proactive Union, Local No. 543 A. F. of M. at its regular meeting held its annual election. Her seventh annual committee, by one in the cabinet. Those elected and re-elected are as follows: President Harrison Watts, re-elected; vice-president, Financial Secretary, Thomas Chairman of Finance Committee; Recording Secretary, Alexander Stevens. re-elected; Financial Secretary, Thomas Chairman of Treasurer Charles W. Wesley, re-elected.
Finance Committee — Chairman Richard Emery, formerly secretary.
Secretary, John Kearn, James Payne.
W. Wesley, re-elected.
Executive Committee, Chairman
Chairman Brooks, Charles Riley, Howard Payne
Robert Tarter and Corias Dauherby
Delegates
Alexander Stevens, W. J. Herbert Knox, Harrison Watts: Alternates, John Brooks, Samuel Davis
Walking Representatives—Harrison
Wiley, Alexander Stevens, and Chas
Riley
In accordance with the Military Law, State of Maryland every unit in the National Guard, may receive and have as many honorary members as they have active members. Some of the benefits are in Exemption from jury duty, use of indoor rifle range in armory, also out door range, privileges in reference to use of armory, and special permits to visit the several camps. The admission fee for honorary membership is $10.00 per year, a certificate, a honorary armory number for identification. For further information apply at Howard Street Armory any Wednesday or Friday night. As this is the only colored company in the State we are anxious to have a good honorary membership. William Credleger, Capt. Inf. M. N. G. Cumpd. Co.
4 Reasons Why You Should Use
COCOA TAR HAIR
& SCALP
TREAT- MENT
MASKIN
FOR HEALTH & BEAUTY
TAR HAIR
& SCALP
TREATMENT
Maskin Cocoa-Tar Hair Grower 30c
Maskin Cocoanut Oil Shampoo 30c
Maskin Vegetable Hair Tonic 30c
1. Because it is composed of the BEST ingredients known for SCALP and HAIR troubles; guaranteed non-injurious.
2. Because, KINKEY, DRY, LIFELESS, BRITTLE Hair becomes SOFT, GLOSSY, BEAUTIFUL and STRAIGHT without a straightening comb.
3. Because, It RESTORES your SCALP and Hair to new LIFE and VIGOR
4. Because ITCHING and DANDRUFF are entirely stopped by its USE.
GRAY HAIR is a sign of OLD AGE
Remove it with the Farness and
Guaranteed MASKIN HAIR STAIN
50c a bottle.
Use MASKIN SKIN WHITENER
and have a BRIGHT, LOVELY and
BEAUTIFUL Complexion, 25c jar.
All the MASKIN preparations are
sold on a Money-back Guarantee
everywhere, or post paid by
MASKIN DRUG CO.
1539 E. Monument St., Balto, Md.
Agents wanted to make big money.
IAN HAIR POMADE
BAYTMORE, MD.
[Illustration of a Native American woman with long hair.]
Send all Mail orders to Branch Md.
Marriage Licenses
RASDEN-AUGUMES--Clinton L. 23
Vernon; SATRIFON, 19, Saluda
FARRELL-BROWN-Joseph 39, 200
BOAHEY-AONT MIGHLIT-Thos. D. 25
584 St. Mary Street;詹果, 21.
ABNEPY-MILLEEJ—John 21, 1111
RICE-NICEJ—John 42, Divorced
1138 Carrollton Avenue; Hoben 22.
HORN—Belle 22, 228 X. Poplinson Street.
GORDON—BROOKS—詹果, 21.
CUNXINGHAM—BRICE—George 35.
CUNXINGHAM—BRICE, wiley 1209.
Traks Aptos.
GROSS—PAGE—George 27, widower
Mamie, 36, widow, both of Dinkall
siblings
BENSON--DELLER--William W., 21
Philadelphia, Pa.; Mario B., 21.
CIMMINGS--GBRE--George 20,
widower; Catherine, 30, widow
and grandmother.
1209 Tark Avenue
BOWERS—COLLEMAN—Paul E. 21
Milford Street, widower;
Milford N. 22.
BOWELL—JOHNSON—Nathan 21
1217 E. Lexington Street; Lizzie 30,
widow.
HUNDEY-ROANE--Doc. 28
ower, 71 The Jerry Street; Emma,
ADAMS-MODGY--Thomas C. 21,
703 Ensor Street; Lilin 19.
CAREY-BROOKS-James, 28, 1233
POPEFT-WEBB-Elijah, 1234
MACKSON-BRANWICK-Norman 22
Rossie, 18, 618, W, Loe Street
WINDER — KEEN — Alexander, 29
widower, 223 Central Avenue
Avenue, 21
TIMES SQUARE — ROBINSON — Henry
18, High Ridge, M., Mattie L., 28
PERSONAL
Miss Glace Gates and Mr. Harry Buckman of W. Philadelphia, spout Easter with Mr. and Mrs. Chas, R. Smith of W. Lathropic Avenue, Dr. Lecomm Cook and Dr. Allen Harve, of Washington, were the guests o Dr. G. T. Mosby, Monday.
AFTER EAS
OF COATS
TER EASTER SA COATS AND SUIT
AFTER EASTER SALE OF COATS AND SUITS
Easter season is over and we
left-over garments which we are
price.
It will be a worth-while sa-
store and secure these bargains.
If your credit is good with
SAMUEL L.
season is over and we find ourselves with a
garments which we are closing out at a mu-
be a worthwhile saving to amay one to o
secure these bargains while they last.
our credit is good with others; it is better w
AMUEL L. BURTON
Madison 4821
1214½ L
MARITY DAN
by the Associated Friends of Orp
GALILEAN FISHERMAN'S HAL
Easter season is over and we find ourselves with a supply of left-over garments which we are closing out at a much reduced price. It will be a worth-while saving to any one to call at our store and secure these bargains while they last.
If your credit is good with others; it is better with us.
Phone. MAdison 4821
CHARITY
Given by the Associate
GALILEAN FISHE
CHARITY DANCE:
Given by the Associated Friends of Orphans at GALILEAN FISHERMAN'S HALL Friday Evening, April 28, 1922
R. ULYSSES G. CHAMBRES
pleasure to announce a Studio of Music for
superior musical training in Piano, Organ,
appropriate Theory.
RESIDENCE—STUDIO, 1130 ETTING STREET
Phone VErnon 4246 W.
If you are thinking of buying a Grafa,
now you our line of Columbia Machine
琴 and salesman will call.
We also carry a full stock of records,
music.
THE JAZZ SHOP
4185 1544 PEN
A. Gardner, President Wm. Lewis
ison, Treasurer Allison D. Johnson
ADMISSION, 35c.
MR. ULYSSES G.
Has the pleasure to announce
desiring superior musical train
with the appropriate Theory.
RESIDENCE—STUDIO,
Phone VEr
If you are thinking of
us show you our line of C
us a line and salesman w
We also carry a full
sheet music.
THE JAZZ
Has the pleasure to announce a Studio of Music for persons
desiring superior musical training in Piano, Organ, or Voice,
with the appropriate Theory.
RESIDENCE—STUDIO, 1120 ETTING STREET
Phone Vernon 4246 W.
If you are thinking of buying a Grafanola, let us show you our line of Columbia Machines. Drop us a line and salesman will call. We also carry a full stock of records, rolls and sheet music.
Reginald A. Gardner, President
John Gibson, Treasurer
```markdown
```
Phone MAdison 9154
AMERICAN B
801-03 WHATC
ERICAN BOTTLING 1-03 WHATCOAT STREET
AMERICAN BOTTLING CO.
BALTIMORE, MD.
Manufacturers of High Grade Soft Drinks
OUR SPECIALS
Champagne Cider
Strawberry Soda Over five hundred cases now d both white and colored stores of E You don't have to be a judge to of our Cases. Ask for it by nam Drinks.
five hundred cases now distributed site and colored stores of Baltimore don't have to be a judge to try one Cases. Ask for it by name A. B.
Over five hundred cases now distributed among both white and colored stores of Baltimore.
You don't have to be a judge to try one or more of our Cases. Ask for it by name A. B. C. Soft Drinks.
WE INVITE INSPECTION
STOP BY AND BE CONVINCED
John H. Thomas, Agent
---
---
MAdison 4185
Gingerale Sarsparilla
28 Deaths Last Week
Since the last issue of THE AFRICAN AMERICAN, the city Health Department sports, 28 death of colored persons. This is a failing of of nearly 100 blacks and whites in various week, which was 47. Themma claimed, 9 which was only two less than died from the same cause the previous week. Of last week's number, five were battles of a year less as against 7 for the former week. Joseph Sewell, 60: 125 W. Hemletta Joseph Powell, 51: 703 S. Green St. Thos. Wallace, 64: 1313 C. Caret St. Wallace, 64: 1313 W. Caret St. Cornellia Friend, 57: 429 Biddle St. Island Davis, 50: 104 Vine Street Clifford Fowkes, 25: no. Hop, Hosp. Sterling Edwards, . 630 Smith St. Snowy Moon, 11. Jno. Hop, Hosp.
Willie Garden, 32; Mumm, T. B. Hosp.
Presston Jones, 533; W. West St.
Fannie Harris, 58; 132: Alley St.
Alley Harris, 58; Hosp. Hosp.
Mary Thompson, 1; Jno. Hosp. Hosp.
William Hayes, University Hosp.
Elizabeth Mays, 5; 132: Nexter St.
Daniel Eason, 5; 123: Daniel
Daniel Eason, 5; 123: Division St.
Edward Banks, 1; 909: Eawt St.
Birdhill, 22; 513: N. Bruce St.
Kate Hale, 5; 123: Gilmore
Bradley, 45; 508: N. Bruce St.
Mimie Kemp, 58; 1511: N. Dallas St.
Josiah Sanders, 26; 209: Hunt Alley
Bessie Williams, 58; 1126: Arylee Ave
Sarah H. Pinder, 34; 524: Mace St.
WEAK
So you may be told "FOWLERINE" INE you will send you enough medicine to last 10 days. Tato as direct order more "FOWLERINE" in one vowel or two bladder or bowel desire to pass water at night, smarting irritation, aching back, swollen ankles or cycles, throbbing heart, rheumatism, INE will strengthen your kidneys so all the backache and reduces swellings, strengthens your heart, gives you
a clear eye and elastic step.
10 day free treatment of "FOWLERINFEN"
Try it. Powderline helps where all else fails.
fax: X.M. Nexham, X.M. Nexham.
STER SALE
AND SUITS
At
BURTON'S
find ourselves with a supply of
closing out at a much reduced
going to away one to call at our
while they last.
others; it is better with us.
L. BURTON
1214% Penma. Ave.
Y DANCE:
and Friends of Orphans at
HERMAN'S HALL
CHAMBRES
a Studio of Music for persons
ing in Piano, Organ, or Voice,
1130 ETTING STREET
Mon 4246 W.
of buying a Grafanola, let
Columbia Machines. Drop
will call.
stock of records, rolls and
ZZ SHOP
1544 PENNA. AVE.
Wm. Lewis, Secretary
Allison D. Johnson, Manager
dison 9154
GOTTLING CO.
COAT STREET
DRE, MD.
High Grade Soft Drinks
SPECIALS
Lemon Soda
Orange Soda
erry Soda
ies now distributed among
scores of Baltimore.
judge to try one or more
t by name A. B. C. Soft
II
NO WAR TAX
a
‘DOUGLASS
:
Finest Colored Theatre in the Country Z
] ———— u
I EVERYBODY'S ‘TALKING ABOUT THIS GREAT
]
] COMPANY AND WONDERFUL MELODRAMA z
Dn nr
I This Weck—Matinees Daily, 2:15; Evenings, va
] :
1 a
1 THE GREATEST GALAXY, OF COLORED STARS F
, IN YEARS i
1 oR
DOUGLASS PLAYERS |
| 66 E 99 «§
| BRANDED” -:
I A Play that you will never forget — Ask Anyone who bis é
sentir 2 i will phil! you.
| NEXT WEEK—Atiraction Extraordinary” i
} 4
I Everyone will want to see this great play
WH present (he Famous American Stage Success i
NIGHTS
l
i ‘
iN A BAR ROOM t
i
: (This is not 2 Motion Picture) .
Y be suve that you ender your sents carly for this attraction,
I eas itive open from tte an. Ue AM Be Te
j DHQNE: MADISON 8700 4
i MATINEES—1,000 Seats at 25e; some at 35¢°
| EVENINGS—25c and 35¢; some at 55e =
IT hese prices-inelude the war tax—Nothing higher j
wu
FEES eee ee ee a ieier
aie PUT ok © | ree oe a
a4 ie =e Bo
| 941-943 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
OPEN 1 TO 1t P. M. CONTINUOUSLY
ee mene
BROGRAM FOR WEEK -BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 24th
SRO ee
Monday—Special Big Western
3 DICK HATTON in
“FIGHTING FOOL” :
‘ One of the Best 6 Reel Westerns
ALSO 2 REEL CHRISTIE COMEDY
ee
Tuesday—Special, First showing
Beauring Ay HARE and JACK MOORE in
“COWBOY ACE” :
ALSO 2 REEL COMEDY
nie ea peter
Wednesday_—Double Feature Day
“FATAL SEX” in 5 Reels
| WITH ALL STAR CAST
‘Mso Wr. S, Hatet in
“THE MARKED DECK” in 2 Reels
ALSO GOOD 2 REEL TORCHY, COMEDY
SO 00: ES
Tharsday— FIGHTING TRAIL” Episode 6
Featuring Wm. Duncan, Joe Ryan, Carol Holloway a
‘Also Femts Guinan in “SPETETRIE* Some Westeru
AISO-2 REEL-‘TWEEDIE COMEDY
satin ee at nearer
Friday—Ben Wilson presents me
* £ ‘ JACK HOXIE in dill t
“DEAD OR ALIVE”
AUSO, 2 REEL ELECTRA COMEDY,
rc ec
Saturday—Return Engagement by Special Request
WNL EAIRBANKS in”
GO AND GET ’EM BILL”
ALSO 2 “REEL SPECIAL COMEDY
iS ee Win, Duncan fi “WHERE: MEN ARE MEN")
PAGE FOUR
re
ARGONNE
(Vaudeville)
Another good bill of stage fare
is being offered patrons of the Ar-
gonne this week, The bill consists
Bonne this week ae mst tw. giver
oe dolar motanee, uf done und
dance. participated in by “Candy”
Pennell in a single who again
Penn An nee exceptonn tal
demonstrates stgiennes. tines”
ome tS, he Ts Sul Working With
sats partner Atlee Brown, who
presents his familiar songs and
Pere baackburn and Black
Ree et remem EHO. ge A
Bee I Bee Gentry. avd Gente
Mary Mack in songs. The second
half is devoted to a sketch in
mach “Bubhers: Macks asa shee:
maker who won't pay his bills was
a scream. All the performers on
Meet wake yrure inure sketch 2
docs Lyon Daniels, house manager
Bee ee ew atts come
plete the bill.
AMERICAN
“The Struggle”
The initial attraction at | the
American on Monday was “The
Strucgle” featuring Franklyn Far
nim, On Tuesdas, “the” special
feature was “Hills of Hate" feature
ing dack Jloxie, On Wednesday,
SMaking The Grade" featuring
David Butler was offered: on
Thursday, “The Fighting Trail”
and. Tricked" a drama at une
Canadian Woods was the featured
praduetions.. The management
desires 10 call especial attention to
“The Rond of Ambition” featuring
Conway Tearl which will be shawn
aL {his house on Friday, and uhe
return engagement of “King-Fish-
er’s Roost" featuring Neal Hart
which will be the Saturday feature.
On next Monday the_ special
A aca
Fool" featuring Dick Hatton who
has been nick-nameq “Young Bill
Farnum.” On Tuesday, a new
Western will be shown entitled
“The Cowboy Ace” featuring Fil
FE ate stoke, eau on Weds
Fa a ote ee Oka Be
“The Marked Deck” starring Wm.
S/ Mart.
|
ROOSEVELT |
“Mother Eternal”
‘The holiday feature at the
Roosevelt, was “Mother Bternal”
starring Vivian Martin, | This pic-
iure was @ splendid drama, of
mother love. Showing how a
mother and her son are brought
toxether after yeurs of separation
induced by the poverty of, -the
mother when the son was born.
This picture was continued on
Tuesday.
On” Wednesday and Thursday,
the specitl feature was “Closed
Doors’ another fine produetion
featuring Alice Calhoun, ‘The
management desires to call espe-
cial attention to The Lane ‘hat
Mus No Turning” a big Paramount
production which will be shown on
Friday, with the beautiful Agnes
Ayers, who Will be remembered as
the heroine of “The Sheik" in the
stellar role: and “The Call of the
North” featuring Jack Holt, which
Will he shown on Saturday.
Next Monday and ‘Tuesday, the
special fenture will be “Moran of
te Lady Getty" the big, feature
which is being shown in the lead-
ing picitire houses aovetiirhentte
ing ‘picture houses all over the
county, with Rudolph Valentino
and Dorothy Dalton in the two
stellar roles, On Wednesday and
Thursday. “Phe Law and the Wom-
an starving Betty Compson, will
he the offering and on Friday and
Saturday, the big feature will be
“ete Ltich: Quick-Wallingtord.”
{ BRSke BD WESmrosen eee
S| JOSIAH DIGGS, President WALTER CAR
(~~ srearmiam i
( CENTRAL AVENUE NEAR MONUMENT STREET.
“4 —— MONDAY and TUESDAY —
| \THE
; ee
BES: Gre
4 VB SF:
- Yor In 8 ACTS—
< fey ga
= Gl fBwS
ei LE ix S
s sees Re i
ul Re. Jan Featuring.
es YR 4 POS:
| » Gras | AGHES AYERS
5 Neo pe co Lae
[hae | and
5 (WR gy
A SES ss RUDOLPH
= a a:
Z VMS S
4 \. CGR Ne : VALENTINE
3 NS FANE #
Moe Re Ve nl
Fa V8 ee SNe Re
: porn SRO 2 .
BSEE— — ——
a the muction of beautiful girls to (he lords of Algerian havems;
8 the burbaric gambling fete in the glittering Casino at Biskra:
F1 the heroine, disguised. invade the Bedouins’ secret slave rites:
BY Sheik Ahmed raid her caravan and curry her off to his tent:
A her stampede his Arabian horses and dash iway to freedom:
3] her cuptured by bandit tribesinen agd enslaved by their chief
={ in his stronghold;
a the fleree battle of Ahmed's clang tw rescue the girl from his
toes:
= man’s heart surrendered; &
matchless scenes of gorzemts color, and wild free life, and
‘| , Tove. In the years’ supreme sereen Chritl—
MONDAY—
y SPIGHTING TRA —Kpisody 9 HAM and BUD—Comedy
gy PERS AY —Comaney Comedy —"ONE HORSE TOWN"
4 Admission both days: 15¢ and 10c
= WEDNESDAY—
3 Pathe Mayle —In 3 Puets
A “TUE 4 9
i THE MARK OF CAIN
3 Featuring IRENE Casta:
=4{Speckil Super Drama, “SILVER SPUR"—featuring Lester Cunco
y Pathe Comedy—"HIGH TIDE”
iM t-s . .° =
yy
= “ a i
4. “HOPE DIAMOND MYSTERY’’—Last Episode
a “THE ADVENTURES OF TARZAN"—Episode 6
= Cniversal, Western —"TRICKERY” x Comedy
Y pay—
4 a ‘The Great Adventure Serial —
> “ROBINSON CRUSOE”
=
5 Ist Episode
et Robertsori-Cole Presents
=| i) 4 9
5 LIVE AND -LET LIVE
A COMEDY
acre eer eeermnrroeriin nan e
gjstrervay— . fe we :
=] “THE WHITE EAGLE”—Episode 8
x) Featuring RUSH ROLAND
= CHARLES RAY In a 2-Reet ‘Special Western |
SCREEN MAGAZINE, :
2 Vitagraph presents Larry Seamon in “THE BELL HOR*
DUNBAR
“Cold Steel”
The opening attraction at the
ounbar: on Monday was “Cold
Steel” a 6-act drama featuring
J. P, MeGowan. ‘The comedy fea-
‘ture on this day was Hant and
Bud.. On Tuesday, the special
feature was another Robertson
ang Cole special production en-
titled “Good Women.” Special at-
tention is called to “The County
Tair" the big. T-reel production
which will be shown. On next
Monday, the special feature will he
“The Sheik” the great spectacle
teaturing Rudolph. Valentino and
Agnes Ayers, On Wednesday. the
special’ features will be “The Sil-
ver Spur" featuring Lester Cunco;
and a Pathe Playlet entitled “The
‘Mark’ of Cain.”
STAR
(Vaudeville)
Three first-rate vaudeville acts
comprise the stage attraction at
the Star this week, They are
Hooky and Hooks, man ang woman
who win applause for a. singing,
dancing and talking skit. Parker
and Mack who are well known
herenbouts as one of the most
cntertaining duos that play the
local bowrds; and Pugh and Hull,
who please with songs especially
the yodle number of Miss Huft's
and finish to a riot of appliuse by
the cootie dancing of Pugh, Pic-
igpae pambieie the bill,
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
MAX YERGAN AT WORK .
Cape own, South Africa, April
10.—Max Yergan,-only colrocd “X"
Secretary in Africa, and Bishop W.
T. Vernon, were the speakers at the
memorial service for 600 African
natives who were drowned ‘in the
English Channel February, 1917,
when the steamship Mendi was tor-
pedoed
———
Recommends Daily Use of Mngnesi
‘To Overcome Trouble Caused by
Fermenting Food and Acid
Se thee
Gas and wind in the stomach nc:
compaiion by that full, bloated fecling
Sitter eating’ are almost certain evl-
dence of the. presence of excessive y-
wenghistie eld, in the stomach, ereat-
ing. govealled “acid. indigestion.”
‘eid “stomachs are dangerous _be-
_ set ome ore
AIS
YEA, BOY!
HARRY, tte TAILOR
Is In Town Again
(Near Robert)
Glad to see nll my former
Customers
cause too muehtacld' irritates, the deli-) Magnesia sti enter rigjit —
ate dining of the stomach, often Jend-[quarter glass of water rie
fag ot gastritis accompanied by seric eating. fihis will drive the. kas, win
ingot gastrtts accomnaniel (rts Sma bloat RHE OU Of ize tl
ous stomacreating the distressing xas sweeten, Uke ‘stomach, neutralize th
ain wourg: regting, the dIstreasnG £7 Skceee acid and prevent IS rat
Re eer, tute og te ae ad OE IER? a por
Hampers the nofmal functions ot ing: Binurared Magnesia CN, PONTE
the eats Bate eee igi OF MTR)
Ig NES ogat of ots to nextect harmony te {HS MOMS Pnumnen
aks eee gh NY ao OME dene aul the ek OP Meh
with ordinary digestive aids which for stomach | [urpeses, Wt is used b
FN oe ee "the thera OFM Se
ae mead et fm any meni with mo one eae tha
druggist a few ounces of Bisurated gestion, 7
Teele) ATE) 7 (ECAC AG
Le: NON PLO? DY
a Fe
sl GRAND OPENING iE
eZ, x
“Sunday, May 7th 1922 ©
i 7 7 Ne
% ALL AMUSEMENTS Hs
El 5 and 10 Cents _ &
ey To Go to Wonderland Park— %
Be) crnie Druld TiN Ave. or Pennestvanis Avr oF Carey Se NS
jo aradixon Ave. oF Orleans St ee artor Heoad Cars, and 23
Be on arate aavetem Ste Cars, marked CURTIS HAYS wnt ~
HM, get off ait first stop after crossing Bridge. 25
1 ‘UE MASON AMUSEMENT CORPORATION ~
SY 1619 Dewid Hi Avenue i
SFA a small amount of shares will be wyced ne ante shortly. EBS
Tea EG ea eAC a (eaKea
Tea eae EME LL OR OR OL y
a sae
SiAISIRIOR IRIE
ING. §
, E
Mie es SS ae
ARGONNE |
924-26-28 S. SHARP sT. ‘ :
ns es
Direct from Chicago '
COZY DUDLEY CO. =
10 PEOPLE — FIRST APPEARANCE EN BALTIMORE t
F< ena f
Paramonnt Presents WALLACE RET in é
y ‘
WHY YOU HURRY E
SSALOMES—A Mack Sennett Comedy &
ee E
Federated: Aresnntss f
Ly
“HEARTS IN MASKS E
| Pathe Serial—eWHITK EAGLE New 13 E
ee ae C
mses Tes, &
ne oe ot:
Cratos oe a cael
He ORO cl eA en
SEL fe bartartle fsunbling fete in the glittering Casino te
Biskra. ; ie
SER uneven disguised, invade the Hedouins’ secret ares
SEE shiek Abmed raid her caravan and carry her off to his tent fe
SBE her captured by bandit Wibesmen and enstaved by their
chief in his stronghold.
SEE the Aeite Mattie of Alimed’s kins to rescue the girl see a
sa, neg maar ee sel
love. In the your's supreme screen Utveill—
PATHE: COMEDY, featuring SAO :
Co aa on E
: af ‘ 5
THE SHEIK” = °
Vox Comedy-—"SMALI TOWN STUFES é
THE MYSTERIOUS PEARL’—Ist Episode
' Veuturing BEN WILSON and NEVA GERBER 6
vRIDAY— E
fi LW <
THE DESSERT BLOSSOM”
velar Sie :
Pathe Conedy—"DOG PLEA" , k
SALURDAY— ~~ . be
fg r ie
“CLOSING THE NET
“PIE MARATHAN'—A One-Reel Featare ;
“PEACEFUL ALLEY'—A ‘Two-Reel Western
Pathe Comeidy— = a
Magnesia and take r teaspoonful. 1
daatler ajnss of water | eit aftey
cating, isl @rtvo Me, fos ‘wind
calneiyat right out of the | body,
and Pee stomach. neutwalize (he
sweeten td and prevent, its formits
excess Telhere. is no soursness OF pall
tion ane yu sfasnesin (in powder OF
Bisurete rm never liquid or milk) IS
janet ge to the stomach, inexpensive
harmed the best form uf maimesit
to take Such purpnses. 1 is used, Dy
for Seis of aweople who enjoy’ tosit
aerate no more fear Of hi
FRIDAY, APRIL 91: je4
Carey and Presstman Streets, Best in Photo Playg wees
Open Daily Krom 2:1 till 11:15 ConUnuousty
J.C. Cremen, Prop: Harry Duval, Manager
g PROGRAM FOR) WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIana
———
pI
a
a
| in “CONFLICT”
ty
’ 8 Acts
SEE The Great a
F is Explosion—The Cai
ie ye »aclysmic — Achiowg
i Porch ee meni thal turns thd
: — Bee course of a hold
Be RA reson river!
ae BP ASEE Priscilla Dean i
i Ue we her Feat of Desper|
Gib ta er is . :
eM — -~. hae ale Daring—Ricing
Fe ge | te lows at Tre
: ee oe | neck Speed!
SEE Priscilla Dean i
: ss her Dash — againg
| “Death! ter il
ee CRidle through ti
: ee Forest to save the li
Cys
eS of the Man She Lor
fo ed!
SEE Herbert Rawlinson lying helpless on « whirling
i Raft at the mercy of a Raging River of [ngs!
SEE The Great Battle in the Big Woods—The ee
mental struggle of Man against Man—Brute
Force with a Bang! A Thrill thal thrills yor
through and through!
: Hank Mann in “THE JAZZ JANITOR”
Special Comedy 2 Acts .
Sa
TUESDAY—BEN WILSON and NEVA GERBER in
“THE MYSTERIOUS PEARL” No.3
DOROTHY DALTON and JACK HOLT in
: “BEHIND THE MASK” 5 Acts
An exciting story of the SEA with its anny tills at
excitement Giken from the play “Jeane gf the Marshes”
Joe Reck in “THE WHIRL WEND™ Some Comedy
pam A i a
| WEDSFSDAV ou Bolan and cane OY Cowboys © Toll:
‘ “WHITE EAGLE” Episode 8
Bob Reeves in 0. STREAK OF YELLOW" 2 Act Western
Century Comedians in “TWO OF A KIND” Some Comedy, 2 acts
LIFTLE SAMBO in “TIDE BOW BOWS" Some Comedy
| THURSDAY STi Lincgin and Loulse-Lorraine in
“THE ADVENTURES OF TARZAN’9
a PAULINE the HYPNOTIST and a harge east in
“THE MYSTERY MIND” Episode 13
Ballroom Boys in “TWO FACES WEST" 2) Act Comedy
Leo Maloney in “SANTEE FE MAC™ 2 Aer Westen
PRIDAY—George Walsh and Louise Lorraine in
“WITH STANLEY IN AFRICA” No.3
z Florence Reed and Thomas Linglim in
SAT BAY" 3 Act Mello Drama
Eddie Barry in “MALE-E-O7 Some Condy, 2 als
Star Comedians in “DHE INSECE™ Some Comedy
ee tee
| SATERDAY—WM. DUNCAN and JOR RYAN in
“THE FIGHTING TRAIL” Episode 7
" EDDIE POLO and KATHERINE MYERS in
“THE SECRET 4” — Last Part.
Jaurata’ Plante Sn\The ‘Treacherous Rival” 2 Ser Wester
Major Alten in “TRAPING LIONS BY ARKOPLASE”
Interesting and Funey
Aesop's Fables “L10N AND THE MOUSE” Cartan Comie
| COMING-LOlorin Swanson In The Great Moment. Speci
Wallace Reid in “The Hell Diggers 5 Act Feature
Noble Johnsen in :
| The Adventures oF Robinson Crusoe" Sel
A 3 ee 8 ee =
y @ Oe Wee Venn e oy
A Cie wy a om 2a oe ‘h
fo, tal FS a Gy ep es 6 a os A one
Go by ee oe a ae ee on ¥
ee 7 Sea ae
3 Oe entre Wane By
Dae oS
4 MOXKUEMENT STL NEAR BOND
g PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL ily
zi ~ THOMAS and SMITH
2 SINGING, DANCING AND ‘TALIING
S| FAIRCHILD and SCOTT
eh
5 SINGING, DANCING AND TAMING
LEMONS and BROWN
5 SINGING, COMEDY AND BANCINS
§ ——"
Ki Monday—“TRAPPED” A Western
8 PATHE NEWS and “THE FARE QUAKE” a Comedy
BS Tuesday—“THE OTHER WOMAN”
Bi - AS Roel Feature, Featuring Jane Nowk
iS Ami A Comedy LEAVE C1 PO ME"
De eae ee a
B) Wednesday—Wm. S.Hartin '
5) “A DESPERATE CHANCE” 4
ge Thursday—“THE RANCHER”
ist A Western in 3 Berks featuring Robert EMlot
K AND A KEYSTONE COMEDY
Friday—“THE WHITE EAGLE” No. 10
So AL Jennings in at Western
5 BUSTER KEATON in *TH1E PLAYHOUSE
E Saturday—“ADVENTURES "OF TARZAN” No. 10
2) Tay Matoney in “ELASHES IN THE DARK”
Bj PATHE NEWS and a SNUB POLLARD COMEDY)
mr
ay MATINEE Monday, and Saturday nist"
Popen 2 P.M. MONON PICEERES au vacvErl
” RIPE RAAT ASAT ATA ICO
"Branded" Cets Over Big At Douglass
The attraction at the Douglass Theatre this week which marks the initial offering of the policy of serious drama which has been instaled by Mr. Robert Levy the new lessee of the theatre is "Branded" a fouract drama which tells the story of a young girl struggles to die down the disgrace of being the daughter of a notorious woman of the underworld. A new poster of players have been chosen to present this drama and the impression they made on Monday evening marked a real 4-4-4 in the theatrical annals of Baltimore. By this is meant that the occasion found a larger and more appreciative audience, while followed the unfolding of the story with rapt attention, free from the disconcerting titters in the midst of some of the more tense moments of the drama as has often been the case in the past.
the leading role is in the hands of Miss Idia Anderson, whose ability as an emotional actress was indeed a revelation. Throughout the four acts she is on the stage almost continually, all of which time she is under the most tense emotional strain; but throughout her delineation she remains rung true; effectiveness being added to the repressive method she employed most of the time. Her trial triumph, however was the masterly conception she brought to the role of the aged poverty-ridden mother, half-crazed with bonging for her daughter. Her work in this latter role was so finely differentiated from her characterization in the earlier incidents of the play that one could scarcely believe that the two roles were played by the same actress. She is indeed an artist with few equals. Arthur Simmons who played opposite Miss Anderson, appeared to be somewhat new, and not at ease in his role. His best performance in his dramatic scene with his wife in their Paris home. In this incident he showed real dramatic power.
Other members of the cast whose work stood out were Harry Plater whose Velvet Kruft, the rilous blackmailer, was a masterly characterization no less fine in its way than the work of Miss Anderson; Miss Inez Clough whose role of the notorious mothman was the highest order, although she appeared only in the first act; A. B. DeComathere, whose role of Tony the Italian, enlisted him to complete the brilliant quartet: Louise Loveless, as Rosalinda; Tony's sweetheart; Marie Stewart, as the head of the young ladies' school; Adele Dodson, who did very well in two ingenee roles. Other members of the cast in small roles were Pete Jackson, James H. Gray, Joseph Stewart and J. T. Chapman. The settings, while not elaborate, were adequate. Quite a large audience was on hand, the house being about three-quarters filled.
Next week, starting Monday afternoon and night, the Players will present that famous melodramatic success "Ten Nights In A Bar-Room." This play is now scoring wonderful success throughout the country. Millions have read the book and next week when this play is presented at the Douglass Theatre, crowded houses will be the rule at every performance. Secure your tickets early.
LINCOLN
(Vaudeville)
Five vaudeville acts comprise the stage attraction at the Lincoln Theatre this week as follows: Thomas and Thomas, who offer the usual S. T. and D. skit in the ordinary manner, but win a fair hand as the result of the man's eccentric dance finish; a crippled contortionist, who bills himself "Cross Different From the Rest" which is no misonner for with his legs apparently useless by taking purposes, he doe all sorts of acrobatic stunts on his hands; Gus Simmons, who comprise Simmons and Masters James and Freddie Watson, two youngsters who have not reached their teens, who dance and sing well; Furby and Copeland, man and woman who also in a S. T. and D. won fair applause, and Lemons and Brown, man and woman, who proved the most popular act on the bill. They have a skit entitled "Cleaning out the Hotel" and in the roles of the maid and maid, they comprise a a lot of sofhouse with a lot of humorous dialogue. Pictures complete the bill.
REGENT
"Way Down East"
The long-down-heralded showing of "Wet Down East" the great W. D. Griffith cinema spectacle began a week's engagement with the Regent Theatre, a Monday matinee to a capacity house, and at night the theatre could not accommodate the crowd and the management was forced to stop selling tickets.
"Way Down East" lives up to the advertisements that have preceded it. While the theme is a familiar and oft repeated one, of a woman who is depicted by her social situation, the picture appeals through the masterful setting of the incidents, which culminates i the thrilling rescue of Anna from the ice-choked river by David the son of the household in which had found shelter. This incident brought attention to the big audience at the reagent on Monday afternoon. No vaudeville is being shown this week as the picture is in 13 reels. However, each showing of this picture is preceded by an extra picture of two or three dolls.
Next week, for the first three days, the principal screen feature will be that other extensively advertised photo drama, equally as familiar if not more so than *Way Down East*; namely *Why Girl Loves Home*. This picture is the screen adaptation of famous melodrama of the same title which in the palmy days of what was called "blood and thunder drama" wring copious tears from unsophisticated mothers and daughters all over the country for years. For the last three days of the week, three days from his new screen drama from the Real Production studios dealing with the every-day life of colored folk will be shown.
The RAINBOW
PROGRAM FOR WEEK, BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 24th
Saturday—Our One Best Bet
"DOLLARS AND DESTINY"
Don't fail to see the great Race Horse Scene
A Sidespitting Comedy
New Lincoln Theatre
5—ALL STAR FEATURE ACTS—5
TRIBLE AND BROWN, Save Fire Winners
HOOTON AND HOOTON
Will positively appear this time
GENTRY AND GENTRY, The Kings of Vod-ville
CYCLE RICE, Guaranteed to make you laugh
GRAY AND GRAY, Novelty Artists
FEATURE PICTURES CHANGED DAILY
Monday—“ADVENTURES OF TARZAN” No. 8
Featuring ELMO LINCOLN. Great animal serial.
“AT PAY” in 3 Reels. All Star Cast
“PENNY ANTY” Comedy. Universal News.
Tuesday—Pathe New Serial
“WHITE EAGLE” Episode No. 7
With Ruth Roland. Full of action.
WM. S. HART 2 REED WESTERN
“LOVE, WAR, FOX” Comedy
“MONKKY BELL HOP” 2 Reel Monkey Comedy
Wednesday—One Day Only
"DEVIL WITHIN" 6 Reels
Featuring Dustin Farnum
"POOR MEN. RICH MEN" SAMBO 1 Reel Comedy
Thursday—One Day Only
"ANY WIFE" in 6 Reels
Featuring Pearl White
UNIVERSAL 2 REEL COMEDY
Friday—First showing in Baltimore of the
Greatest Serial Episode 4
George Walsh—with Stanley in Africa
In the Greatest Historical Serial
"JACKIE" in 5 Reels, Featuring Shirley Mason
1 REEL COLORED COMEDY
Saturday—George Walsh with Stanley in Africa
EPISODE No. 4 in the Greatest Historical Serial
SPECIAL SATURDAY ONLY
MUTT and JEFF Comedy
Visit our famous Matinees and you surely get your money's worth—$ New Reels of Feature Pictures—Changed Daily and our usual Vaudeville Show. Open 1 P. M. Daily
RAINBOW
"Whispering Women"
The Rainbow Theatre has once more changed hands having been leased by Mrs. R. Harris (white) who will conduct the house hereafter as a strictly movie theatre, the new lease will manage the house herself. The opening picture on Monday was "Disposing Women." On Tuesday, "Man" was the special feature. On Wednesday, "The Isles of Destiny" was the main offering. On Thursday "The Mysterious Mr. Brown" was the feature and on Friday, "Trail of the Law." Special attention is called by the management, to the exceptionally fine production which will be shown on Saturday, entitled "The Rainbow." The best screen dramas that has ever been produced. The program for the coming week at this house issue. Chester Seward (colored) has been retainted as operator.
CAREY—"The Fox"
"The Fox" the big Western drama featuring Harry Carey was the attraction which the management of the Carey Theatre chose as the holiday feature at that house on Sunday and the choice proved when the night showings found the theatre crowded to capacity. The comedy feature on this day was "Do Spirits Move" featuring Hank Mann. On Tuesday the main feature was "The Mystery Road" featuring David Clark in an all-star cast. On this same day the sode of "The Mystery Pearl" the serial in which Ben Wilson and Neva Gerber are featured, was an
extra feature. Special attention is called to the new serial which is being shown at this house every Friday entitled "Stanley in Africa." The incidents of this serial are based on the expedition of Henry M. Stanley who was sent to Africa by the New York Herald to search for Dr. Livingston, a missionary. The picture is both entertaining and educative. On Tuesday the opening attraction will be the great feature "Conflict" starring the beautiful dare-deal Triscila Dean. This picture has created a sensation wherever it has been shown and no lover of worthwhile pictures can afford to miss it. On Tuesday, the special feature will be "Behind the Mask" with Dorothy Dalton and Jack Holt in the stellar roles. Big features soon to be shown at this house are "The Great Moment" Gina Glaeson, Swanson; and "Robinson Crane" in which Noble Johnson, the famous colored screen star is featured as "Friday" the second important role in the picture.
REGENT THEATRE
Special Announcement
Among the many super-features that the Hornsby Amusement Corporation will present to its patrons at the Regent during the next three weeks are: "The Connecticut Yankee"; the spectacular production, "Queen of Sheba"; "Over the Hills"; "Proud White"; "Over the Paradise"; "Because of the length of those pictures and time required to show same, it is impossible to present vadeville in conjunction with them.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
SEVELT
ROOSEVELT
JACOB FRIEDLANDER, Prop.
ARTHUR H. LEVY, Director
First presentation of a tale of stant-eyed smugglers, roving Pacific Seas. A daredevil man-girl who beat them! A soft society dandy shanghailed and made a man.
See the murderous mutiny! See the burning schooner race with death and blow into bits!
A picture that sails through thousand thrills.
George Melford's production of—
"MORAN OF THE LADY LETTY"
"MORAN OF THE LADY LETTY"
RUDOLPH
The Sheik" has the leading male role to DOROTHY DALTON is featured in it supporting cast. Good Comedy and The Patric Review on Tuesday
famous for his work in "The Sheik" has the leading male role to play in this picture. Also DOROTHY DALTON is featured in the female role, with a great supporting cast.
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
A
Persecutor
Picker
Betty Compson in "The Law and the Woman" —Here At Last—
Mack Sennet Presents
COCKEYED
BEN TURPIN
in his funniest laughing
spell
LOVES
OUTCAST
Pathe News, Thursday
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
"Get-Rich-
Quick
Wallingford"
A Cosmopolitan Production
A Paramount
Picture
ay and The Selznick News Saturday
more in "THE MASTER MIND"
in "HER OWN MONEY"
es in "BRIDES PLAY"
RT in "TRAVELING ON"
"UNDER THE LASH"
"THE JACK KNIFE MAN"
"STAR DUST"
"PEACEFUL VALLEY"
"MY BOY"
—"SHAME"
Also a Rolin Comedy on Friday and The Selznick News Saturday
NEXT WEEK—Lionel Barrymore in "THE MASTER MIND"
Ethel Clayton in "HER OWN MONEY"
Marion Davies in "BRIDES PLAY"
WM. S. HART in "TRAVELING ON"
COMING—Gloria Swanson in "UNDER THE LASH"
Florence Vidor in "THE JACK KNIFE MAN"
Hope Hampton in "STAR DUST"
Charles Ray in "PEACEFUL VALLEY"
Jackie Coogan in "MY BOY"
Big Fox Special—"SHAME"
BIDDLE STREET
a Paramount Picture
Virgin L. Ledy
directed by
George Melford
PRODUCTION
"Moran of the
Lady Letty"
DOROTHY DALTON
First presentation of a picture for those who enjoy a mystery, love and thrill in good measure, will be well pleased with this Paramount picture which will be shown here for two days only, featuring
BETTY COMPSON
and produced by Penrhyr Stanlaws.
The picture was produced with the wealth of detail handsome settings, and splendid cast that is always found in a Paramount picture. Don't miss seeing
"THE LAW AND THE WOMAN"
THE FAMILY OF THE
WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN
MACK SENNETT
presents
BEN TURPIN
in his initial starring vehicle
LOVES OUTCAST
An original twopart comedy clique
Also Secknick News Wednesday
First presentation of a Wal-
lingford story played by
George M. Cohan on the legi-
timate stage, featuring
NORMAN KENY
and an all-star supporting crew.
See how he breezed into town like a circus parade and found the folks just ripe for picking. Come and watch him ride the cobble, with the wildest, epiphobed schemes that you ever saw in this new picture called—
We have with us for these two days the famous come-
VALENTINO
REGENT
THREE CENTS
CITY COUNTY
VOL. 32YL TIMES
65.0
LURE VAST NUMBER OF WOMEN TO MYSIERY FATE
Eliery and Mr. Good Tail a to Tail a
THE MO
IN THIS
WED
Tully
5,000 C
WAST
HER OF
HEN TO
MERY
TE
THERE A
THE MOST IMPOR
IN THIS PULSE S
FROM
FIRST SH
Also "SNOO
WEDNESDAY—
Tully Marshall, I
"AN
A thrilling n
"punch" in every
65,000 GIRLS LOST IN YEAR
LURE VAST NUMBER OF WOMEN TO MYSTERY FATE
DO YOU KNOW "WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME" ?
THERE ARE THOUSANDS OF REASONS THE MOST IMPORTANT OF WHICH ARE VIVIDLY DEPICTED IN THIS PULSE STIRRING PHOTO-DRAMA ADAPTED FROM THE FAMOUS STAGE SUCCESS
Tully Marshall, Robt. Edeson, Laura Leslie and Wm. Courtney
A thrilling melo-drama of the underworld with a smashing "punch" in every reel.
TARZAN—No. 10 FOX NEWS
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, and SATURDAY—
"The Burden of Race
THURSDAY, FRI
The B
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, and SATURDAY—
"The Burden of Race"
"The Burden of Race"
A heart-gripping photodrama of a woman's love, and with a Colored Cast of reputation.
THE FILM "THE MASTER OF THE WEST" BY JOHN H. HARRIS, WITH A FILM BY JOHN H. HARRIS, AND A FILM BY JOHN H. HARRIS.
Extra Added Attraction THE WORLD'S GREATEST SINGING-DUO
PLAYBURING SONGS OLD AND NEW
NOTE—Miss Bowman and Mr. Kirkpatrick will positively appear at every performance during the week.
FIRST SHOWING IN ANY COLORED HOUSE Also "SNOOKY'S HOME RUN"—A roaring comedy Tuesday—"WHITE EAGLE"
Sydney-KIRKPATRICK & BOWMAN-Laura
May 5th and 6th—Pearl White in 'VIRGIN PARADISE'
FRIDAY, APRIL 21; 1922
NT
PITCHER ST.
TUESDAY
E HOME!
A EVER PRODUCED
KALD
SPORTS
THREE CENTS
T IN YEAR
PREASONS -
VIVIDLY DEPICTED
DRAMA ADAPTED
SUCCESS
HOUSE
turing comedy
and Wm. Courtney
HT"
orld with a smashing
FOX NEWS
of Race"
n's love, and with a
HE—
had achieved success
and reached the height
of his profession. He
had won the respect of
men and the applause
of the world.
admired him for his attachment and loved him for the greatness of his character. But one great barrier, scandalously insurmountable, stood between them.
The Remarkable Cast includes—
EDNA MORTON
LAWRENCE
CHENAULT
ELIZABETH WILSON
MABEL YOUNG
ARTHUR RAY
Thursday
Tarzan, and
Mutt & Jeff
Friday
"Fighting Trail"
Friday and Saturday
Al St. John in
"Fool Days"
action
MAN-Laura
y appear at every per-
EBA
RGIN PARADISE'
FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922
MASKED MEN CANNOT
PARADE WITHIN CITY
Wearing of Masks or Disguises on Street Regarded
As Disorderly Conduct
Says Commissioner
BAPTISTS PROTESTED
Sent Resolutions to General Gaither Urging Curh on Ku Klux Parades
In response to a letter from the AFRO-AMERICAN suggesting that a police regulation be made prohibiting masked parades, such as the Ku Klux Klan are reported as recently holding at Towson, Police Commissioner Gaither replied: "Under the ordinance in effect in Baltimore City it is unlawful for any organizations or persons to parade through the streets, out a permit, Mayor, and out a permit, regard the wearing of masks or disguises on the streets as disorderly conduct, in violation of the common and statutory law, and it is not allowed."
Washington police authorities recently promulgated a very stringent regulation prohibiting the movement of any body, group or organization armed and disguised so as to be unrecognizable. This regulation was declared not to apply to circus clowns. Action of the D. C. authorities followed the protest of the National Association of Colored People, who had learned that the Ku Klux Klan planned a demonstration through the streets of the capital.
The recent parade of the local Thomas Dixon Klan No. 1 through Towson, Cincinnati, and Baltimore County, and their appearance at Boundary M. E. Church in the city, where they presented a parse of $40 to the pastor, aroused the colored Baptist Ministerial Association to pass resolutions against public parade the Klansman and others reported to the Mayor and Police Commissioner Gaither.
So far the activities of the local Ku Kluxers have been confined to getting in new members, and appearing in masks at funerals of their own members. Circulars have been sent by mistake to colored people urging them to join the Klan, and also other which aim to produce false information on the Catholic Church and the Knights of Columbus. A similar letter, received by the United Baptist Ministers Conference, was read at Union Baptist Church. The letter points out while the Baltimore law about parades makes no reference to masked parades, such as regarded as disorderly conduct and against common and statutory
Three Left Handers
On Howard Team
Associated Negro Press
Washington, D. C., April 19.—For some time candidates for the Varsity and Freshman baseball teams have been at work and from all appearances. Howard will be able to put forth a most representative baseball team this year. Already from the battery candidates the Varsity team is sure of five good pitchers, three lefthanders and two right handers. For catchers the Varsity will have men from last year and a number of promising outfits. The infield has been excellent from last year to work around and with the acquisition of the new men who are showing promise will round out strong
Schedule of County Meets
The schedule of the Public Athletic League Children Playground Association athletic meets in the counties is as follows: April 20th, commence week of April; April 26th, commence week of April; Worcester; April 28th, Dorchester; 25th, Talbot; 26th, Queen Anne; 27th, Kent.
NEW WINDSOR BLUE
SON WANT GAMES
The New Windsor Blue Sox have organized and are ready to work on the Stockade line-up for this year is as follows: C. Dorsey, catch; S. Dorsey, and B. Drutham, pitchers; J. Jackson, 3d-base; C. Jackson, field; J. Jackson, right-field; J. Owners, short-stop; C. Thompson, 2nd-base; P. Waters, 1st-base, L. Budd, pitcher; J. Budd, J. Brown, pitcher; J. Brown, adger; Jackson, Mgr, P. O. Box 182; New Windsor, Md.
A. & T., 10; Lincoln U., 1
Greensboro, N. C., April 19.—A. & T. baseball team defeated the baseball team of Lincoln University here last Thursday, 10 to 1.
The U. B. C. will hold a special meeting at 565 Central avenue on April 24th. to organize an independent baseball team to play locally and on television. The pro-play team will tryout should meet or address Geo. D. Tyler, secretary, 20 Susquehanna avenue, Towson, Md.
Foster's Giants Win Opener
Chicago, Ill., April 19—Before 12,000 Mrs. Rube Foster's American Giants won their opening game of the season here last Sunday with the Rogers Park team, 6,005. This was the first time in four years that the latter team, who plays the opening game here each year with the Giants, has been defeated in an opener by the Foster les.
YEA, BCY!
HARRY, the TAILOR
Is In,Town Again
1919 Pennsylvania Ave.
(Near Robert)
Glad to see all my former Customers
Persons desiring to attend the Masonic Meeting in Washington may take advantage of our Special Rate. Secure your ticket now from 44414 St. Georges Ave., Govans, Md.; 1710 Mount St., also at the Bus Station. Phone, Madison 7280-R; Homewood 5028-W SHORT AND LONG DISTANCE HAULING DONE
DIVIDED INTO 10.000 SHARES, AT $10.00 PER SHARE
Big Lots For Sale $5.00 Down and $5.00 Per Month
CONVEYANCE FREE
After visiting Boundary M. E. Church, white, two weeks ago, the local Branch, of the Ku Klux Klan upon invitation of the pastor, Rev James Ford, white, visited First Baptist Church, white, in Brooklyn last Sunday.
Antos belong to Robert L. Adams, 400 Franklin street, hardware merchant, and Benj. G. King, 1102 S. Sharp street, were among these used, by the Klansmen in leaving the church still, wearing their robes.
CITYWOULD LOSE BOTH COUNCILMEN
CITYWOULD LOSE BOTH COUNCILMEN
Baltimore may lose its two colored City Councilmen should the recommendation made by Mayor Broening's Commission for a one-branch body of nineteen members ultimately prevail. The City Solicitor is preparing an ordinance covering the recommendations of the commission, and it will be introduced in the City Council on next Monday night. Should the City legislative body vote the bill down petitions will be circulated among the voters to place it on the ballot in November. Many members of the City Council are said to be opposed to a reduction as proposed, believing a one-branch body should have a representative on each ward. The First Branch recently voted down a proposal for reduction in membership. City Councilman W. Fitzgerald voted with the majority.
The commission proposes three members of each of the old four legislatures and three in each of the two new ones elected in the bill giving the city increased representation in the Legislature, along with one at-large for the city. As the colored voters have voted a majority Republican district and Republican will not vote for a colored candidate the race would lose its representation in the City Council.
William B. Holmes, an Railroad Bill, walked from the Mason Land Penitentiary week after serving on Thursday for months and 10 days for insnailment. He had been sent to prison in June, 1916, for seven years having been convicted for the murder of a man named Brown, alias Tender, in a West Baltimore saloon. Holmes, who is a man of powerful build, says the colored prisoners are given a square deal under Warden Swearne, that the food given is such as better. "No man who obeys the rules there will not be mistreated," he says.
Christopher Mitchell has the distinction of being arrested twice on faincy charges preferred by Mrs. Nettie Huff, who is said to be in love with him, and is still walking streets a free man. If testimony brought out by the defense in Part 3, Criminal Court Tuesday morning is to be believed. Christopher did not reciprocate the woman's affections, even though she is alleged to have said she would keep her clothes and from otherwise wanting. His mother testified that Mrs. Huff often had no clothes.
At the trial Attorney Roy S. Bond, who represent the accused, brought out the fact that she had had him arrested for stealing 60 cents from her "First National Ban", and then declined to prosecute. The woman testified that she had gone over to see the man she was arrested on the first charge, and then decided that some shirts he had there had been pilfered from some laundry she was doing. His arrest on the alleged shirt-stoaling charge did not follow until after she had declined to prosecute on the first charge, and is said to have presented the fact that Chris still refused to "love" her. He was acc
PETER H. BURKE
Are you a skilled worker? Have Baltimore. The store conducted you a trade or any special industry by the Carey Supply Company, an trial training that you are not now Carey and Winchester Streets, as using because (a) you are out of to be the nucleus of work? (b) you cannot get a job, venture. Charles C. Smith is president that calls for your training and ex-ident of the Carey Supply Company. presence? or (c) there is no opportunity to work at your trade in Baltimore. James G. Martin, who is to be interested in a number
Listing of All Colored Men With Special Training Is First Step of Negro Industrial Survey
Director Johnson busy
Urban League Expert Has Begun His Canvass of Plants Employing Col-勒 Windows
Give oared Workers
No
You can col- lude the Mayor one members
Are you a skilled worker? Have you a trade or any special industrial training that you are not now using because (a) you are out of work? (b) you cannot get a job that calls for your training and experience? or (c) there is no opportunity to work at your trade in the industries in Baltimore?
The Negro Industrial Survey now in progress under the direction of the National Urban League and Baltimore Interstitial Committee is attending to list all Negroes in any special industrial training at all us one of the first steps in determining the character of the Negro labor supply in the city.
The survey has already begun its canvas of all industrial plants employing Negroes to get from them the extent of employment, kinds of work on which they engaged, opportunities to advance and promotion especially from unskilled to skilled lines of
The Board of Trade and Manufacturers' Association as well as the agencies directly promoting the survey want to know among other things just what proportion of the working Negro population is skilled and unskilled, and what proportion is able to do skilled work whether they are actually doing it or not. Register your occupation in order of the following ways: Call at the headquarters of the survey.—Sharp Street Memorial Community House, 1234 Etting Street, and fill out a form, or mail in the following information to Charles S. Johnson, director of the survey.—
Name and address
Trade or special training
Length of time you worked at it (give dates)
Where?
Name of Plant
Why you left this job
Kind of work you are now doing
Present wages
Kind of work you would like to have.
To a representative of the
AFRO-AMERICAN, Mr. Johnson
under said today:
"We are trying to list as
many Negroes as possible who
have trades or special training and
are not regularly to work at
this. This may be a result of
general unemployment, or the lack
of opportunity in many of the In-
tahmore industries. At any rate
we want to know.
"You can understand what a
waste of skill and ability is entail-
ing, and fail to utilize this
still or aptitude for doing skilled
work when thru ignorance or any
other reason it is neglected."
Maryland Boy On
College Debating Team
Washington, D. C., April 20.—The Triangular Debtion League consisting of Atlanta, Howard and Union Universities, will hold its debates on the evening of April 28. The Howard team to meet Union in Washington will come Frederick Harold Cole of Hartford, Conn., Eugene Kinge of Cedar Rapids, Md., and Harold Edward Bledsoe, Marlin, Tex. The Howard team to meet Lincoln University at Lincoln will be Earl Russell Alexander of Washington, D. C.; Edward A. Simmons, of Charleston, S. C., and Zephaniah Alexander Leoby of Antigua B. W. The University pro Alberni Gilbert of New York City James Arthur Curry of Thomasville, N. C.; James Garland Wood Cotton Hat, Ark.; Arnold E stowe, and Frank Williams on Fayetteville, N. C.
GASKIN'S BUS
SERVICE
NOW READY TO SERVE YOU
ON ALL OCCASIONS
WILL Make A Trip To
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Monday, April 24, 1922
At 5 P. M.
The Auto Bus will leave the corner
of Gold and Carey Streets.
and the Masonic Meeting in Washington
for Special Rate. Secure your ticket now
Love, Govans, Md.: 1710 Mount St., also
MAdison 7280-R; HOmewood 5628-W
DISTANCE HAULING DONE
RIDGE PARK HOME
BUILDING CORP.
LIZED AT $100,000.00
SHARES, AT $10.00 PER SHARE
$5.00 Down and $5.00 Per Month
VEYANCE FREE
-$15.00 to $20.00 Per Week
Pres. Alex Robinson, Vice Pres.
Ad Mgr. Wm. E. Grant, Treas.
Pen BOLTIMOREAN ONE
gned last TIME AT WEST POINT
gal hang- lines com-
Governor Ritchie signed last week the bill that all legal hangings in the state for crimes committed after January 1923 to take place in the Maryland Penitentiary.
MAY LAUNCH CHAIN OF GROCERY STORES
MAY LAUNCH CHAIN OF GROCERY STORES
Carey Family Supply Company's Store Regarded As First of New Venture
There is a possibility that a chain of grocery stores, financed by race capital, may be staged in Baltimore. The store conducted by the Carey Supply Company, at Carey and Winchester Streets, is to be the nucleus for the proposed venture. Charles C. Smith is president of the Carey Supply Company.
Rev. James G. Martin, who is said to be interested in a number of enterprises, when seen at his home, 1341 N. Carey Street, admitted that the project is a possibility.
"Not only are whites conducting practically all of the grocery stores in our neighborhoods, but the chain store has recently invaded our districts," he said.
"We should be on the alert to seize every opportunity to enter the business world, especially when it comes to catering to the daily needs of our people. When I see the new school at Calhoun and Laurens Streets let out and realize that there are about 1,500 boys and girls to be fed, 3,000 legs and
feet to be enclosed in stockings and shoes. I wonder what the burp would be if we were prepared to handle the resultant trade.
"I know of two stores now where a man and wife with a little capital can enter and do well. The wholesaler stands ready to furnish the groceries, and hesides will be providing opportunities for them."
Mr Martin then told of a colored man who bought $150 worth of chickens which he sold to Libreves for their Easter holiday.
April 9th 2.37 P. M.—1231 Pena
Avenue. Three story brick dwelling
owned by S. Goldberg. occupied by
Thos. Parker. Damage to building
and contents. Slight cause. Cool off
April 9th 8.36 P. M.—509 N. Pine
Street. two story brick building owned
by W. S. Breechack. occupied by K. E.
Johnson as grocery store. Damage to
building and contents slight. Cause
April 13th 2.58 P. M.—1137 Parrish
Alley. two story dwelling owned by
D. Humman. occupied by I. E. Small-
wood. No damage to building or
contents of contents. Cause
April 13th 19.43 A. M.—Fire field
April 13th 19.43 A. M.—2219 Har-
grove Alley two story brick dwelling
owned by Geislerhäfer Agt. occupied
by W. Taylor. Damage to building
and contents slight. Cause. Son in
April 14th Box 457 11.53 A. M.
921. Cary Street, by A. Hoffmann,
occupied by B. H. Williams. Damage
to building and contents, slight.
Ask For
No. 1067
Charming Patent
her Walking Ox-
new bread one
attractive buckle;
or heel - decorated
west.
364
Ask For No. 1062
Ask For
No. 1067
Charming P
Leather Walking
ford, new broad
strap; attractive b
rubber heel
in newest
$3.00
Ask For
No. 1067
Charming Patent
Leather Walking Ox-
ford, new bread one
strap; attractive buckle;
rubber heel; embroidered
in newest.
$3.00
Expensively made footwear at INEXPENSIVE prices—that is the whole story of NEWARK Shoes for Spring and Summer. You never got so much style and quality before at such a low price. All sizes, all widths, all leathers, all the newest styles. See them here tomorrow.
Bark Shoe Stores Co.
chain of Shoe Stores in the United States.
IXTEEN STORES IN BALTIMORE
Men's and Women's Stores
New St. 500 S. Broadway
Market Corner Eastern Ave.
Mon St. 935 Pennsylvania Ave.
Liberty St. One Block North of Biddle St.
More St. 547 N. Gay St.
Mon St. Next to Repose's
St. 3402 Eastern Ave.
St. Next to Corner Highland Ave.
away 2124 E. Monument St.
Bank St. Next to Corner Collington Ave.
Ave. 1119 Light St.
Market Just Below Cross St. Market
Newark St
The Largest Chain of She
OPERATING SIXTEEN
Twelve Men's and
203-205 N. Entaw St.
Opposite Lexington Market
103 W. Lexington St.
Next to Corner Library St.
919 W. Baltimore St.
Near Poppelton St.
1044 S. Charles St.
Corner Cross St.
403 S. Broadway
Next to Corner Bank St.
1719 Penna. Ave.
Near Lafayette Market
All Hangings At Pen
Daily Report of Fires
$360
BOLTIMOREAN ONE CRITICS SCORE DRESS TIME AT WEST POINT CONTEST HELD EASTER
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
W. T. Andrews Tells of Underhand Methods Used To Get Colored Men Dismissed
STUDIED WITH PERSHING
Two Other Colored Students Were Also There At Same Time
Perhaps but few Baltimoreans know that William T. Andrews, editor of the Herald, spent nearly a year as a student at West Point Military Academy.
He was appointed from South Carolina by Congressman Robert Smalls, now dead, in 1885. The late Col. Charles Young, and Lieut John H. Alexander were the colored students there then. General Pershing was also there.
"I have a vivid recollection of my days at West Point," Mr. Andrews said the old time. White is true that a colored man has a hard time to get through, yet it was not in my day that the colored cadets were absolutely ostracized by their white comrades. One of the fairest cadets to me was from South Carolina, now a Major-General in the Army.
"There are ways to force a colored student out. A prejudiced instructor can give him low marks, and a mean line officer demerits enough to cause him to be dropped from the rolls. I recall that Colonel Young told me that he compelled to spend in the year at the Academy because of the pressure of one of the instructors from the South.
"John H. Alexander was one of the brightest minds at the Academy, standing high in his classes. He had studied two years at Oberlin before entering there, and consequently was well prepared. He received enough demiens to call his dismissal, but his academic standing was so high that they were taken off. He did not live long after graduation. He O. P. law holding a responsible position under the Secretary of the interior, was one of the brightest men graduated in his day.
"I hope Emile Holley, the young man appointed to the Naval Academy from New York City, should have grit enough work, but he may be qualified for entrance. I know his personal experience that it will be hard."
AGED WOMAN BURNS
Green, S. C., Apr. 20—Mrs. Mary Hawkins, aged 100, a cripple who lived alone here, fell into the fireplace while lightning her pipe and burned to death.
DEATH RATE ALARMS
FREETOWN AFRICA
Freetown, Sierra Lone, Africa.
April 20.—This girl with a population of 500,000 is alarmed by what is called a high death rate. An average of four persons die every day, chiefly from a cold attended by mains in the back, waist and hips and also with a fever.
Extremely smart and
fetching Patent Leather
Walking Oxford; new
broad one strap with buckle;
college style rubber
heels; flexible sole.
Remarkable value at
$360
YOU'D BE SURPRISED
TO KNOW HOW EASY IT IS TO OWN ONE OF THESE BEAUTIFUL HOMES
MORGAN PARK
1
A BEAUTIFUL BUNGALOW WITH SIX ROOMS AND EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE
ORGAN PARK is without any doubt the most beautiful and most modern suburban development ever projected for our people.
Overlooking the beautiful ground of Morgan College and within one car fare and 10 minutes ride to the center of Baltimore, with paved streets and walks, city sewers, gas, and electricity, it offers an opportunity to the homeseeker never before dreamed of.
You can secure your lot and we will build your home, financing the whole proposition on the easy payment plan.
Cut out Coupon below and mail to us and we will explain how you may secure one.
Charles and Saratoga Streets
Several Ask Why Cup Was Not Put Up For More Worthy Purpose
Who was the best dressed lady on Drudl Hill avenue Sunday? is the question that is agitating the minds of many. Some say Miss Naomi Hayes, of Argyle avenue, who was stunningly attired, was the lady. Anyhow, the choice is half a dozen ladies, and the lucky loving cup, awarded by American Legion. The fate of the award will be made known after the judges render final decision a week.
early next.
The cup was exhibited in the window of the lunchroom of Mr. Joseph Press, Drudid Hill avenue and aroused both curiosity and criticism. Many persons thronged the avenue anyhow on Sunday to see the Easter parade of well dressed men and women, which always follows the letting out of churches Egster Sunday. Most of them objected to the inference that because they walked up Drudid Hill Avenue, they had entered any contest to test whether they also better dressed than anyone else. Other critics pointed out that for some reason, the post of the American Legion, which offered the cup, did not publish its name, and before gave the impression that all members of the Legion up the cup. They also declared that if the Legionnaries wanted to do something constructive, they would have offered the cup in such a manner as not to come offensive to well thinking people, and at the same time contribute to some of the worthy causes in the city.
JIM CROW IN D. C. PARK
Washington, D. C., April 20.—Threats of leading citizens to take the matter to the President and if necessary picket the White House resulted in the removal of Jim Crow signs in Rock Creek Park this week. The Park Superintendent is Col. Sherrill from North Carolina.
ENDOWS INSURANCE CHAIR
Washington, D. C., April 20.—The North Carolina Mutual has appropriated $750 a year towards a insurance in Howard University.
YOU'D
TO KNOW
ONE OF THE
MORG
A BEAUTIFUL BU
ORGAN P
and most
jected fo
Overlo
and with
center of Baltimore
gas, and electrici
never before drea
You can secure
ing the whole pr
Cut out Co
you may sec
Name
Street
City
Citizens
Charle
E
DAY $ \angle P L a z a $ 7560
LET SPRINGTIME INTO YOUR SYSTEM!!
THROW OFF THAT WASTE!
RELIEVE YOURELF OF THAT TIRED, HAGGARD
FEELING — PURIFY YOUR BLOOD!
BLOOD BUTTERS WILL MAKE YOU FIT
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST
Call At—
Dr. W. L. Smith's Branch Office
1018 Druid Hill Avenue, Baltimore, Md.
VErnon 2879-W
Note: We prepare the medicine for your complaint
We Satisfy!
EXAMS FOR POST OFFICE
Clerk-Carrier Examinations for
the local post office are announced
for May 8th. Application blanks
may be obtained from H. L. Robinson' at the Custom House, or M. Denver at the Post Office.
SENATORIAL PRIMARIES
ABOUSE INTEREST
Carrington's Announcement That He Will Run Next Fall Creates Comment
Republicans are beginning to get interested in the race for the Unit-
ed States Senate. Despite that there is a imbalance on foot to persuade the voters that Senator Joseph L. France is not a Republican, he has many admirers among the Democrats. The opinion filling that whatever his stand
The breezy Col. Edward C. Carrington, who spends most of his time in New York, thrives to enter the office no one else has. Soporin France.
opposites to be a fact that Senator France will be in Japan during the summer has set many to guessing as to what attitude State organization politicians may take in the primaries. Down at the City Hall much tall thinking is being done, and some of the job holders will support France for renomination. Colored employees in the Federal service will be asked to line-up against France, it is said, and county organization men may be urged to do the same. The Senator's hold on the anti-lynching bill, which he introduced in the Senate, which he will, however, act to keep the rank and file of colored men solidly behind him.
Just before the suit of Miss Minnie Lewis, 509 Mosher street, for a $10,000 heart balm from Dr John C. Leak, chiropodist, was brought up for trial in Circuit Court Part 2 on Tuesday of last week. it was announced that a satisfactory settlement had been made and litigation was at an end. Just what the terms of the settlement were not been divulged, but it was believed that she secured a satisfactory sum. Miss Lewis, who had been employed at the downtown office of Dr. Leak, in her suit claiming $10,000 damages for alleged breach of promise, claimed that the defendant wooed her ardently until he met another and had even secured her promise to wed.
Haytian Woman Here
Mme. Charles Gube, a cultivar,
Haitian, is probably the only colored delegate attending the Pan-American Women's Congress, which opened in this city Thursday. She is stopping at 2000 Mt. Royal Terrace.
Mme. Gube is the daughter of the late Gen. Francis Mangajal Haitian cabinet officer and minister to France. She was educated in France and England.
VETERINARIAN NAMED
Cincinnati, O., April 20.—Dr. J.
Aubrey Lane, veterinarian, has been named by Governor Davis for work with State outlet herds.
WE INTO YOUR SYSTEM!!
NOW OFF THAT WASTE!
SELF OF THAT TIRED, HAGGARD
PURIFY YOUR BLOOD!
BUTTERS WILL MAKE YOU FIT
YOUR DRUGGIST
Smith's Branch Office
Al Avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Ernon 2879-W
Use the medicine for your complaint
We Satisfy!
URPRISED
IS TO OWN
FUL HOMES
PARK
ROOMS AND EVERY
ENCE
doubt the most beautiful
development ever pro-
ound of Morgan College
10 minutes ride to the
and walks, city sewers,
unity to the homeseeker
build your home, finance-
payment plan.
and we will explain how
at Company
NG
ga Streets
NIGHT—G1lmor 0397-J
f 5 DOES THE SENATE MEAN TO PASS THE DYER ANTI-LYNCHING BILL? 4
EDITORIALS 1 NTLAN TG SP EB ERR Sonny CROWDS ON EASTER EDITOR
FRIDAY, APRIL’21, 1922
1M MtRPnY
sae aint publisher, 1836 to 2922
Cant Murpsty, salltor
a artt Sons, Basivess: Sana
aanabed evers ‘Thursday by the
aROLAMERICAN. Company
gp ae AFROAMERICAN. Building
2% daw Street, Baltisnore, Md,
mee Yost GO16-6O1®
a
SCRSPIMPTION RATES
reek creensoneisestes $EDD
Beate I Ba
Tae Mie in weance
ceate it faa
Gees" eewchete
Faen,Aivertis, Reqresentatts,
ie Utyapanns, 608 Routh Dear:
Cem Nai AEN er
Filet, Me ert
—Tiateendent it wl ings,
Sete in tothine"
Fees hie wows franehae
ar ilccaad” Seaton “Phen son
Mec voctasine, emnrinnt sahatehs
G5 qngurintent Newco Pree will ro=
iat ie ew enna
Fae et Saas Hadi aati,
ea eet the. APIA MET:
ovens
Fridge April 21-4. Kagainand tela
orth ittuie nt seat Mle
see Te iets
Bien FF Tianmierstetts Opera, Hose
sans Ds
Searing April 22—Flrst _fururree
eae Neate "othe
Eada arti 132,
Sle, April 22—fohn, Ttatcester.
siti Nata oie Presbyterian
Behan Mvstea TS1D.
Sinn, April St—Nesoee | were
eg Ate aion tian attempt
resis a eeitiement om the cea
eee tad: Sonth Cacatina. Ps
AOS fee ncradurtian at savers
EE Eo eitaet ot the Tnited States
“Toretas, April, S5—It, fs eatimmaten
reat d Ha taal Same
BA ct tne reeaean com
BE AaT wins stn Gh Mesa
28 a Mtoe ae etal call fed
24 Et os Tad, Gas per eat,
Tedmeadns, grit 26-—Bapiiad Ase
sda Soa eg a Suita
scat farang the Santer
SOE Lenton 1845.
Turslav, April 27—Death of Tove
oR aates Me det ha! dan
SESE the Juss Steataine
Shame. ted,
swimen fever Is nothing weve
gagehrunie eon recurrent Bazine,
Eeemles may Dark ae one’s heels
tot ie right finally: sHamphe,
Int eaileetons meet many men
of rai
nis not what we say Uhat comnts
omuch as what We A. yy
Cemmencement tines s0eh
bie.
Amistuke, when ditcovered. et
vase Iookee, stupid,
Heyat do anything with the Sen
of rcceivingetamueds, do nor he sur-
ised if someune throws at belet,
Arman tag wo wait a long thee
uni his shi» comes in, Very often.
Whe dows nothing to bring his #hip
Don't try t4 he clover—comiti-
tion is toy Keen— hestdes there is
nore mumey in just plain everyday
hard work.
You cannot waste time, you
vraste sour orn life: you eannot 101
time, you are killing your awn 6
wortunities: you cannot cheat Uni
sou ane cheating yoursell
A fortune awaits a man who enn
intent an unbrella with tndestruc-
table cover and ribs, and guarantec
rot tw turn wrongside outin @ Suse
of wind.
The Delaware and Washington
MB, Conferences having met, Now
the ininistors in the Baltimore *
M. B, Conference’ are awaiting
‘ele “doom.”
Harry C, Smith, punlisher of te
Cleveland Gazettes Is again on The
warpath, thyentening to run for
overnorsniy of Ohie, Now, Hacrs
F from Taeing’s home State and
ought to knew something, of Uy
‘htm,
Some white nations are come
ining that Japan is genbbing the
tlk of Abyssinia's trade, Perhaps
hey may now et Great Britain to
sare with ¢hean in the newly-Abs
cover oft fields on the= Wee
Coast of Africa,
Thomas Dixon
Klan No. |
Thomas Dison Kian Numbes
One. ix the name of the Jecat
ranch of the Ka Kiux Klan.
Thomas Dixon ia the name’ of
the Southern authde of the “Clans-
tan." the bopk, upon whieh D. W.
Grinith based his moving picture
the “Bieth of a Nation.”
Asked the other day in New
York, If he knew of the Baltimore
Ku Ktux who namieg their braneb
for him, Me. Dixoy siid: “f know
"thing about it, have nothing té
4 with it, for Tam opposed to fl
00 and branch."
And so we have another example
sta Southern aristocrat denn
‘Ma own enila. :
Uncle Sam's
Mailed Fist
J} ne Eee Ginnie heat: energy: the
Information that Luis Borno, pro:
ninent Haithn lawyer and mem:
hor of the cabinet, dns been elected
hy unanimous vore to succeed
[snare Dertiguenove x Preston
ithe litte republic. Marine officers
fin Washington ave said to have de-
seribed the Presidentelect a8. not
F-siolently hestite* te the Vuttea
IStates, which means, in other
wards, thirt he wilt ull én ine wit
‘his countess win for dominating
[autem there.
Veer Uaived states ecenation,
he alsin constitution han heen
rewritten and the people forced to
lneeept its ywovisiens, — Indevat
Prenklin D. Roosevelt. Assistant
Secretary of the Navy durin, the
[Wilson rexime, asserted on the
stump that be td writtelt the
yresent Constitution aid ennai
ered “it a pretty ont one
Porky, President-elect Rarns
ay he used te anettity Haitian
fteclings shout the tlowtions of x
$14,000,000 toan ia this ewuntey,
irigaeCon, don JH, Aeussell ix ae
Jaca thw vinversiattne™ sai
Kins for the Gavermiaent st Wash
Hington, Vetta, at a loam ay te
ieee O00 Naw been AmNberlye,
the whole sui mas he Hessted, sid
[ihe Hit industries will taredy
jin: inthe hnends of fovelnens, wh
jwall prot immensely by the jnter-
nal improvements mide.
‘That Ue Haitian peuple ave not
wwithont hops i indicated ia the
momériat the Vatriotic Unlow of
Malth recently sent to the Seere-
tury af State,
“the Haisan people are filled
jertets peacerul sentiments, but there
fs mo abe an ey Intend 2
lcover definitely the sudiinistretion
lof thelr own affairs and te rest
lamer thelr own respensibility the
[vie life uf ve eunotry, with fui
Isovercigmny and independence ae
Heilt never vest untit they have be
sained thew."
[Writing in the Maret “Curren
HHistory,” under the cuption of
fringe.” Arnest Greening: made the
fronnwing: indiotinent “uyninse the
finteed States:
[rem Halti the United States wins
able to fore throuh a treaty, and
teday this treaty &8 ele up as the
Jeanctton for all America’s acts in
fdiat repulije sence, In San Do-
minge the wouly could net b
Htorced through and a putts d=
struction of all forms of Bianinteat
selt-govermment follower, — "These
facts ave indisputably proved by the
record. ‘They comprise the geaveat
preach of fundamental Amerlean
traditions in ot history. ‘They Vi0-
late internationsl In. ‘Thes vio-
ute the Constinution of the Cuited
sintes. They violate every treaty
involved. ‘They’ constitute ese
tially the same Kind of aggression
las that which Germany practiced
oagalist Betyiinns ft YAL4—and w=
font even the invalid eseuse of “tl
ikary necessity.” While we wore
preparing to enter, ie steunsle
niainst Germany to phase 1ygtt-
eon military’ conquest We Were se-
| ccoeic: GrwetleTnie Its
Does The;Senate
Mean Business?
teen Tenchi tn ths cm
try whieh continues to he 7
Fovlowine vp the wae of th
sage to Congress:—
congress onan wine the
Sgn ak barbie tnehing
from the banners of a free and
‘orderly representative demnc-
Che ewe mote ao he Ho
‘of Representatives took the irs
step towards carrying out th
party's pledge and the President’
request by passing the .Dyer-Ant
{the Senate for action.
nina nh a incon
ne Senne. fieary comme
pan scone an mm
ore the Senate can take re
Seon, esntme the ca
26a te une adjournment of Co
jeress _fraws closer and closer.
Doe senate men usin
emo ny aun it not one
Doe Bi croc ro
Pats is no time Cor day ant
lpate. I is tlme to redeem
| pledge which it is m honor boun«
Se ee a al ODN,
Book Of American
Necro Poetrv
In “the Book of American Ne
sourt Braco ant Company publish
fers, n New York, we have the fs
collected ison of ceins by eo)
fennel
At is the fea “of James Weldor
hat the wari dau not recoxniae
euple to be great gat that yee
ite prdncen reat Merannre a
rt. AR an eldence tht th
Varet faserabiy with te wore 0
the Amierlean whiten ale. in
fussed the bat noen In
Judgment by thirty-one colored
Gite so Anteroiag m/e ot
Weta af penn Ia, Johan
inteatatin I whe oe i
that the Nix hw ven Atneeen
Ie ony celal smote, dane
Cah tube, Sheva outline
Junt-cnea turkey test ae
nek, tani mn inrm--Uo
ei, hi alk, ART Unty
things, whist have yor ping
Mes Jolieen’s elas whlet arg
Ureetitale, will very Mey atrne
ihian bis edieslon wf porn whl
the colored reader will rejoice
oer thi fel ah he eam at a
panded digeie Ie UWI poiM ol
Brazil's Negro s
President
OA few years age the bite Col.
Pheudose Kemet, writing a
Lovie of imprcitivan fe tlhe Ont
oe ANCL Lin-ay Gace
Ameria, sald thre tx w1 culo ne
down there as we Know it in the
Unto tates
| Men of Nexro deseent, he point-
el entcare prion tthe MBE
ve proto me, pulihsal ed hn
eo he pte tr
ruretive emmitries, There bk no
tempt, a in this country. (0 push
the colored prople inte aysenrexate
Jed gon, 4 man aay: Ko Hx igh
as Tike eaymbiiatiis perma reed
lest of ree.
Aneatlew OF the propaganda tn
this eonntey “te Koen he Negro in
hin pace” amuse Maver reg) with
wey faces Ua Senor Nita eeanbo
f Newey, hus lwen re-elected ve!
tent of Brat. raail fs che tar.
ext and! probably the mest tmpar-
tint South American country, and
eta the United States may
have 10 deal with Senor Silo
rovernment on terme of abyolute
“Giiuallis, (Suelile tees
Ohio Colored Editor Will
Make Fight, He Says, If
People Want fim
focrland, “Ohio, Apt 20,—
oer Novagen ana Si
rae Ae bawade, be fast
A aft omit to. be, but, wa
tee OR iti olor the
HRMS oa Aventis “Cavette.
seed tiinyniens ton fOr
een Moret. eanaate.
Teter ans cm, te @
re ee ae g: seit
minh oF are of State Hal er
Fan to eer ean votes, There
ai roy colgeed voters in Ola,
are) Ae aotdn th lteves he own hal
A ee io ceim he law
nem ete andi wg wit
Eine raon votes
He 1.000 es are ainzetntted
ong sates Bresigent Hard
ree tani ealored. people. t
He nelny or Cameress Ie
ote ee ee anticline
Poe ;
ttome Calton Frm The Pies OF The
, Culted Krom ‘The Tiles 0
| mootger ‘t. Waxhinston and Holt
2 eetaret” cringe) tear “end he
Beaker onthe milion otter fed to
Srastegsumaney vetneatton of colored
Be centage: Someta te Mas
Simca aged "nt Polat
| Ralph ‘ler of Cofnybus, Ohi, sas
nana auditor wt the Nav.
I aye YW, CoA; wiped off the re:
Ldiiion ar ies’ ‘marcauxes ede “At
F500 ;
| at the Taltimore Anaual A. Af,
‘cat te er taoneing tilmister
Contere nee gts Ante Caines. Geel
Rare Naren waters J. We Norrie
“Jame ang ulers berger. CH
Lresidins en. J albert” Johann:
Serta iT, Cooper! Annapolis
Pee Woven.
tank nunden” Rie accomonnied by
ie did” ya a fraternal VERE C
[Neen
Mrs, Mary Thomas, saben as
or tScai Mines beeanse, of her mani
seumeteA nie every fomeral siie cou
fer Meera knew the agecdsed ot
{SaS'hiot rom sheer Steet Chore
| protherieod Teaded, by. chard
pret) SH. Murphy, Jr. organts
BE MSfadioon Street Church.
[ st, anceows, Male, Benefit So
|, St. Andrews, Mele un anniversary.
ee Bishop Brooks’ New School In Monrovia Liberia |
[SE RR Os guetta 1 ee
ee ee |
ba ie fs yw e ae rigs .., sy att S|
eee ER EES Oe Eee ea uae Rees
ey. [eae s eaten pre aS ae By
le td: ieee ieee (ise! ao
ie ah: Figg He ne
Pos |S aie: hae cate Bea ees ee Ge ae Waa |
eae 2 we ae ‘ier hac ea ny Bee dae SEL Ze
ee aes ae eee ea he
Photorraiih brought to Anieriea sweentty fram fdheria hy Ret, Charter W Alanaton of Salt
xan, Rhone Induweria Seek nearly womatsids. Fhe. sehout ts” edn bulk with funds raise
EDITORIALS FROM
| THE COLORED PRESS
Be ern
FOLDS HIS TENT
4 asauetated, Nozio Beene)
Leprrent NCI OLDS HIS BT
[eda 311 Mey of sultore,
otis ote Atruehmeriean hi ae
jn ine fg nrnes Vie “tae
His tent iether ami ent
ste ayy, ait haw wel he
seit
[aH "atuepiee sae wt ho ede
sist ubsieg Wttortun a Sey deme
‘hoon Blea nha coeelln ve
in Feasts, att the st
erect ‘hi rae, tits heros wt te
(rn teach seta tandted or
Jeune igh totale Se Sturn
ever owt Sin oppertunits ta, he
section a he i eae the oh
Shanes trendy Hes gave. oprah
ite ig sous but Uses" adway leased
IMs at reaped he exper
ice wiatony “hs ain fine
(Rie Reanclatet! Nngtun Free
antes seared fens wena
tacos in tie haseing of Me Strut
ci nr! ge Ait a
Fite fe whe wf fefanbal nce
{ue Sa 'ays soins
ro
(Re the real monument af Boner
Iwashlnsion fs funk waite
Me aie Aft Amerieane nt ite pe
Hic eatatsinnent tie ‘mnient
an Storey: s
NEWSPAPER WOLRD MOURNS
APE Mueping wax ome at the fet
nigh to mR ane The
nahn neatepanwe weal redeeté “the
‘inte ne af is. mat bella met
ese as criti Heeorder
Pec eng ca acaecac
She Te ee ee eee an a amnaln:
Jour rare a strong stalwart fan
Mn cat cic to tea the stperstenee
ire nf tie pees wtevattinh Stet
chu’ dives, Were beard ay in thete
ims, their, community, Abele FACE,
Helmets curv be i "rettatha of
the. charge nes novi} instability,
(ager i better for ns awe
lige he race: is further ailvaneetl for
his splendid forte: the gemini
iMuched for he tezgey Ive gave 1
Huh se nt ibe escorts Wi
Irfugtint anid Vhakudetpiiy Advent.
| spROKE” AT PIETY
de, Marple was an extraantinary
bnage, Meiied at aq and. wae wetter
UNA win a ewe wast of ie death,
Mie wae a betiecer fame) work ht
nfse in oFight ftehng ad was Nive
sprain hae. wurk in ise eee Wa
ee Renfree was trode,” AC Bt.
Trvatis temiparativeds eat i.
ie oniotk Surat am Guble,
| 11D" MERDITY,
| $0 soniat was Wis lure and warm
"gonna ie Yetenmaht, tute thes: seh
teaete hat wetted lhe eat
‘kane, aiid afrniy. wee wie
cane tarce aul ower AN TR Net
Aa: ant ae bubble flows of Youth:
Futarie despite bis three seare S0ars
ten
“it whe Romi to have known him. Ie
ite Raioatg pioneer, and the teal
Meader in building, “he | APRO-
ROMRRTCA Spe clean cut ‘and unin
Aare ge came ne yeinger fuenal
TREY carey ome—Chevelanst Adwoente,
WAS ONE OF THEM
| cre chase eomnnetion than esters, hee
ton hee Raltimare ABEO-AMERE
JERS" ghd rhe sWashingten "Colored
meric, mae fe to
Arete aliaher, a tha. eens
te Aree Pieastitan Dally Colored
SGhetean.
|ARADED VETS 1X
TN prANAPOTAS
| Mr, Murphy was in Tien. to
fina. altar’ elegant
si a at ea ea
ihe 4. anna nda
it 9h aR peo
yetint ae ethare anl
ge at, Stange lMtarng
fe Sati ean Si
Phe citar ation
a 1 aturpie wae the rognaninnd
at ee eR a A a
OP aR Se eo as
reat orale
Paarl tue at tid ete
race ae ty Mae te
ja eauial justice are-“answerlng | the
a pgs baat tet
Galo ieee eto ie
fares teeta toss iimron
SEEN ht
A tender Whe Never Sond Moot
Soett tess *
pony
Rete aor: ga ga
EU ie is07. to 1281
seth smntor te, Pane
pegs ath a eet
wath ie URN eves ane in
ra ee era mark
tn Yor are age
Pe ahem ares
nied thera id th
uae a he sun
foundation yaninea whieh
iene af Pe cenendi
fer tn nate after Peach
ccna chen mae me are
[reaay to die.
7a 18 Ou tat 9 a who
Inever stood aloof from his nennie.
as toons
bcp Cree en Brn
iit eee,
‘To the Baitor:
Te thave one adinention forthe
am in nde Aten Ameria
TRS” eines Whey newenaner 0
the eountry.t nme. excenting Ke
Piaafeattone of the whites.
Heaton Cae atarttand can ol
acctaion Sahn H afurnhy anothe
eee arelander along with 1h
erat anenctors. whom he | a
saint eyectRanneler Daur
Selie” Penninaionn Carnet 8
eat my odet friends Tmt
one ot ry anrreet of Aner
conti he me: seme Ut on
eke gninisters well te his fellow:
Tine jmatew to live at the point: w
dail Death
SEVEL H. FOOES
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
And Race Prejudice
Ta the Editor:
Tt tas seemed to mie very une
fortunate Chit yet published sn
ArUcle some time azo in reference
to Mr, Benjamin He Lorke and the
situation in whieh he fend him
self in our xcheols here, Aw a
Christi tninixter and one who be:
Hiewex in justice sand fair teday Tine
vestigated tie entire weiter very
Hhornnghs and was present at the
heneine before the Hoard of Kil
cation, A large xroup of ininis-
ors ai professional mien felt that
Mr. Laeke was the vietin of a
conspiracy an.) stood by hint ju bis
jnisfortune.
AC the hearing before the Board
of Education Iwo members” of
which are amoug the most yromt-
hent kowyers of Detroit. it was
unanimously decided “that My
Locke wax not suilty. ‘The writ:
ow niin oF the Vavetiatrist ot
thw City of Detroit was that he wits
the vietin of # conspiracy. “There
was snxpicion on the part af a
group of our own race that he
was Weis used ax an instrament
to Maura veqrare | schouls
here, On the other hand the
superintendent Real been urged to
rernunize the superior ability and
worth of Mr. Locks by marking hitn
+ principal of ene at die inixed
yehools. ‘These charges hy the
suspicious amembers of his awn
ree gave excellent opportunity to
tite superintendent sind tee pres
iudiced tnerilers of wie Beard of
Education ta be relieved af the
feohten af giving hin, prayer
recognition, OAL the meeting ut
the owed. the president sold in
very emphatic tones. as reported
by The Detroit Frew Peas, “T woull
dive fustion ti any nian regardtess
‘of his color.” ae
wnat anak thin, Beatement
hecrnse 1 feel Unt a Keqse injus-
Tie has hrs dune ate. abe one
whieh shold he vighted in’ the
minds of the rentine public,
JOSEPH GOMEZ,
Vastor Bethel AWM. B, Ciniveh
Detroit, Michigan
f vs
Arak Roniter Beaises Later OF
Mies. Smith Concerning Rack
| ee mae Malt ERieiatet
‘To the Fatitor:
Patter reauline the accomnt af the
death vf the Eaitor, the letters and
eutogine and feeling despaired and
Sid at the Loe nf sie erent at leaden
be wae Me, doh Murphy, f
torneg to the editorial jae sind
there in the Porunt aver the sig
tune of Mrs, Maseitia 2. Sintth 1
Pend protest against’ ile action
prea Jew, who moving into a xtriet
Jy colored lowality, with the avow-
ed intention of inaking his fiving
hit the colored people, he tntro-
duces himgelt unaware of the ab
observing exe of Mrs. Smith by
What ix fastly hecominss a keneral
thing—"Tadiznities and disrespect
pf the Jews for thelr olor pa-
trons."
“bir, SmI Aled with pride and
rack self-rexpect, gould nat for
the lite of her resist rexentinie suct
jy iow deeciving action and found
herself protesting in Uhe most plain
shoken and foreible, manner.
‘Here is, “Hat off to. Mex. Smith
and Me, Murphy suit lives “among
Mi,
‘T have maintained ever since the
paseate of the Nineteenth Ament-
front that it ie the Mes. Smith
type aC wainsnhoad mong Une
Face who will in a very few Seays
sre to. Je thar, that clase of “hills
Shae Repsaiint wha have
heen xo avtive aut prominent. in
sceuring the colored brother's vote
then slamming the door af hape i
his face ntl he ts ready: (0 use
im agin, will naw, have {0 sit up
and take notice of our cHlored
sister.
Mr. Faitor, Mfrs, Smith has made
‘a moifon for another step forwird
in'racinl pride and racial sett-re-
shect and) hone T have the oppor:
Unity to second Usat motion,
T. ALONZO, DORSEY,
1620 Presatman St.
The Negro Newspaper
(ay Wry, Plokons for Asbo,
nm. Pickens fo
lwas the indixpensuble ally of the
tee
te eet i ane a
i Ven eS ali
irs Fe gre, Sia apy Se
seit nk let ee Sc
Has 3 iu ter eae
Dior dina Saami a a
a Nest a aa a au
ee ined itt
2 dieger eh ae ae
de a ate Wt Sle ea
sires Haein, Sr ang
A Neatly Rt ic te
Mei aa a te
a a ae Re
SP wel Ms ioe Mie a
gua ats fate er Si
ret tue Tne ait hat
Cee suc tment et a Oe
siete tinct nang freuen
ars as Lala Ma ee Me
Mate WA ewes teem: Me
“hu tiga YMOWE ASSEMBLY
_ ne rayne ase the
garden, having as a special tecture. a
facta arnt thee
emda Bea 1th ate
faecal ae BF Sentra Eyer
a a te aie eh Ne
eee esi te tect
Merete A Cue nro
Ment: lamis Cooke, vice-president
er arte The Bin emmy at
onto ytte (ee ae, th
Be rar ag BC aie
Fie Gieaet Gt Chane et
weeoit od hate, are oi
rehantamnes TAG8 Arete ae
recites ttn wotae ric ft
ea ortent ale Sie a
iret nae Sin us
Mrvang sires Hanus, Ste and Ses
AP atta Gie amie, Win i
Ra tla Santee at Ba
Stale ein "hike asimeye
ae ee, ie, ane
ice SB Srey, ee aa ae
SM Meta, tee SE Os
TR, RCE SE "ao
igs. cae a, Gace,
seen AR ie gehen, Fra
At Memos Rea Si
Sa hedee an ten a
Wet Arai ait Gielen ou Si
Meads fe Ne Stead ine Stel
ihe fe ag Maan ae
tom Se a eta Sai 3h
Te a eRe NG Se
ee Rett: UR Sp St
Mee call ee anton Gen
pert a ein not ‘Seh
Tacos
EIR, HESERVER: YW. Ca.
stag ets rom vi the ie gece
EE tea ti at Sn
Nitra Hee inca Hewitt
earn keane aya Char
erie tte tre
eta tenet ers nea
oii are me i wasaah te
fea ale athe ahs ind
Bante A nts eh
RE lt As dette oe
tte Ske atta of cman
athe oer ar Wash gt
Le eee
Se Ce eS Fanaa
gant, soln Bets tia
Se gr einer vowe, o¢ Winton,
ic.) student at Cheyney Tnstitute, wa
ia 'visiter over Raster, the guest of Mes
Menon sturvic, New York avenue,
er pmagarmias REUSION
aut etn evenings the Pilea
ita Eeay teat moose
nyse aan Ce
pte Gf Seana ha area
seit aa" Mave. Marwan a
A a te ase oh te aren
ue, ote ut dae ana thor frm
ene apent Jn gare ary ate Boe
Throughout
COUNTY SCHOOLS —
IN DORCHESTER
ILLY SUPPORTED
Colored Citizens to Be
meee es,
Cambridge, Md. April 2n—Ved-
erat reports og 11k shoeing cha
Gich eulured child i Dareheste
county, was being educated at 3
post of $24 per year snd | euct
Which whit ava oust of 1288 “pe
Your wore revaliod This: Week wher
ihe county seliaul bddget was pul
lished.
Borer $144,000 fs appropeiaced
far white elementary. seal sich:
brs tint only. $1020 for cotored
Slementary school techers. Soni
Matuved trackers ave Iweing poh a
Tittle as F230 a) year, but no white
teneher weil)" reeeive Test than
$i0n, In orver ty. make a om:
Pacison ditticalt .the schoo! author-
Thee tmeked by J. WW. Huflingten,
White supervises of volured school
In tie state, phue the: salaries, 0
volaped stoners an aunty
hase andthe white tess hers una
early. Tiss
Considering the proportion of
cofreel children iy the county the
thuropriation Cur culored. 3 hooks
should Ine $30,000, Haye eotore
nuvente and tearhert “are Deine
‘obinad af theif own tinds whteh
they pays Ha sos taxes ea te seen
from ‘the fuet tht the eolured
Wunervisor Will seceive Unis Seat
FE50 wad the white county. super:
visor $2140, nestrly qhree Thnes at
“Mth.
The sum wf $30,500 is set side
fag ssitaries wf wehite xelioal tte
Ses, na but $2,500) for the salaries
AC eubired high school teachers,
fhe peinedpab of the white Mt
‘chal with et st sakiry warying be-
seen Sissi and 23a and the eol-
Shed high schont prineipeal het ween
Sy sinh 960 38 Year,
“teachers here point aut that
hey Have ty juss thee same oxsim-
fuativns a the white veachers hers
polit oat cat they have to pits
the same essuninaitions 8% the
white tenehury to recelve aupoint
eats inthe wsehooks, BIL tha
Qiey are paid only one lulf and
generally one thie ss much as the
Sounty. pays the whites,
CLAIBORNE
Uhm, Mile Abril 20.0000 a
tor foretell fine Kasten sertien
Stings * Sle “wWiilamLyontex, tan
Batuiiore, sisiter Me ainl Mrs, fon
Shite # Aft, Satnue! Waters will nave
far Sumesteeny, © Ate.ecturence. asta
is inprwviny hig yard by ziving Ie tiv
Sate i graoeg ee cu nt ston fee
avail sara :
, HAGERSTOWN
} tlaKerstewn, Ma. Apri 20—'The 1.
lien Nie Society of the Ashury, Mb. Fe
ire ve rand reception Thr
at Ht Me at
Jhon, “Ht wate well wttemied. Ne
Wa Tiatunn ‘was aster wf ceremonies
Ailes were thas be Mes, Tellza-
Iheth Farge wf Mtnetisbur. Ws, Nat
fd Tew. 0. F, Wells, mastor of ih
Firse Gacpiist Churehy tig ety. Tv
Tinsthr repnded tn a few well-chosen
‘words, "ite. P. Ye Myers preachiel at
Astusie ‘Thora wight.» Tlie father,
How B, Rayer, a metabor anol tra.
tee of “Ashuirss Crom wisieh elit he
Seas regommended. for members,
Ue Washinston Conrerenes. > Mrs
He" wa Stennett, wife ot ews Sti
ett ind er teen ehlldven age Chit
Ing ex. and. Mes. Me A, dulinson,
tee, ‘Stenntt way foriner paste
Witliamspart, tis ccuny. tbs Te
Princ S Kes woe taken lek Stn
Gas aersioun. Agia wae horn tn
Sina mori te abr Mos ae
ined duane at thedt nn, 44 Ww, North
strat, #" Mrs, Zour Rainn it teach
The ei lat Gonters Mills, tn Ue pls
Gf ees tttbanhe Me Get Hae
Who was ealted ty Piaintd, ,
dis ecamt uf tie Heath ut bis nes
Bee Cuber. ® Breseverace tate
af Gnd, Samatianns hes datrehatsed. a
property afte estate wt the late
Unacph at reimane my Xe dma
Ntrede *" Mies, Alhort ‘Held ‘ix conte
to her honte” on We, Anfietsnn ater
fish the, geip. “Koweit anise
Hite tnitiatedsivelve randidates Tuc
das: nist. = Stsexrs, Robt, Stevens
Samal. ects amd Eranle Keex motored
fio Washingtm, D. Ca Tuestiay to Wit
ese the eeing same betwee Uh
Neve York Yorkers! and, the Washin
ton ening. * Mee Ten. Huentny hos
Felurne Crain Piainfield, Xo. where
he was ealted of -neemunt vf the seth
be hiv netheae, ki ba Cobeeth, * Mr
AeND Witeon” was cated home, fem
WMeKeespurts Pas on aeesamt ef the
Serta Hie: so hie wife Mra, ASK
Witinn. ars, Fannie “Aah.
Washiiston, De (it spending te
Easter Wolliays with hor rather, Mr
Kzabert Painters at the Painter Hate,
Rows A. We Rabertaon, pastor of Elie:
proved singe Iie return front the ten
faower Mk Je Chueh, te greatly. i
ital, ite ting teen nble to, Ws
ithurely ‘eters Sunday "and plan his
eoeke tor the, wins ui uf Mis on
Ifernee sear * Haster Snnday. way aly
served, Hex, uberis preadel
The easly rhaening never, elo
‘hen “again a abled ermien | at
Selo spake Gr tive sunday. ache
‘he afternoon. “The Sanday sell het’
Theie, Huster oxerelses it night tw 1
Crowe house Hxerciets ennvisted 0
ssvlos, gets, choruiy saul recitations, a
Bt echieh were well renioren, felloisr
weit um address by the pastor. Tet, a
Wi robertson." The | comunittee’
charge of the: ComieVitla, which 9
fle eo es a Bhengzer AM.
Church fur the. bbnefit- af nasa sat
Rev and conference claime, renurted
fice Sundiy mbit havin Eleared $155
‘hig aifieers of Une committen are: Mea
Mar Wiliam, peesinent: Sirx. Moll
‘Thomas vicecorestdnt: Mew” A.” 8
Sohnwon, Secretary; Miss Raith “Mas
ane iremsairer. ‘The entertaineen
Fenresenten the coming together of al
frations. Each member af the commit
ee. ie to he enmmentied for iim tb
Wennk done to obtain tie results; men
toa
Aclishtful collation wax sorved tut
fener enfoxed by alle ‘Chose availing
themenives of the apportinity. of bein
fat this ceaninn ware Saves Lenora
Coxe STarle. Watkins, Catherine, Brn~
Rett Catherine Jackson. emily Smith.
Finga. Wilean.. Ruth patched. Tenet
Jackeon, Pauling. Matthews, “Anna
Tama Nareatine Taveis, fttlie lackeon.
Ella. Davin. Mabel Gambel, Fatih Tana.
Carrie Reliey. Grace Hamilton, Mavle
Brown, Falna Greene, Sarah Hci, Vir.
tin. aulknar, Messrs. Taxmond Harris,
Miavsing, Brawn Wo, aMecuire, Oncat
Everett, Iaage Nicholxon, Cermil Carin
all, Rov: Wilson. Nathaniel Spencer,
Taroy Deleman, Afonrse Devan, Dou-
ad Sears vn, “Grin Bbicone
Thomas, Pred. Murrav, Norrit Mant-
iow. Jor Howard, Alva Peacock, Sohn,
Holcombe and Jos. B, Ghines,
The State
Ftcon, M3, Apel 20—uur, pablle
geht cid eit Mt see Beh
iiay ston eget avons
ant rh, Siieeiaten Eawee cnet
inert yr aa hgh an
emanates.
BAR sat uaa
iter snag, Shi” Port 3 Ste,
ein Superviane » ae, Ds
ee seit ye Naa
hn" roa tet a Wah
atone be Meg See teh,
gM cache, mth
ets! cet neve
file ei cis rar mee,
dt ime gat 2 Re
mente, ra aah
inert atria, "Satur Oeste
Ge ina eta fn alr
Sites Wein nn te tes
selene okt ce in Ca un
ee de aa ae
Heli, Bivoua ap Wat uate.
Migictrete Mle apni at
dhe talon Hsia sia ah Wels
ld ean. Alek thal
Pan Ya leit. Me
a nF three en, Ror
HOURS tet is und the
thcktne a9 Cavemen see
Been heat St ie
Riera dcr are he ts
ate oSainena the tana naw
Hinde abth, 24 vnc tet
I ech ef
Witty” die? Wie Mie! “eRaatngs
Fina, ite, AH thinner,
SR gnc ym a
tent ae Hilt ve ast Me
Het he Etim, Sle ne
aaa Sie aes nea
trai Ma Hfartet urn Wg tee
itn nc Hegde nec hie ace
lie! gat "S heater norte ota
Wen Broa ate ac tp Pre
ele aneh "an set
tna amne ar te stern 8
ies i He sci tnd rare =
Wet sa tu Cie
jad aueeian a That He
Hci Mae Bit oe
west” ans well cowie Mek
ERT Shorea rate
serie: In iu ase
fe rt we na Be
mi es hake Tae pve my
Meets treads it ints, DE
mgr iene met fee ry
if ime iy ny ate ae. ale Cra
re a ais orton hy Bae
rats etm isa Se
isthe Tame ate + Mg
Fath, anne Rae a Neo
Ue inate tS Tew See
eMac tie ga ne ol
Wits than Ni tar
Mage coat Fes am
Ai Uta ad Se et
Tha gas By ai Mee
Ua Piha dat Me nee
Mita inant” clara Sis. Spt
Heart fy yas ap wade
Wee chur ere thie
ie a pan 5 16 A
rere Sau luda
Tale es anor eevee THe
In tirbalt of thw, Haste
| DELTA NOTES
ne a
eae, Mea RIM Oat
seri a Tt at ee
PIE, ol aan it hate
Seems ir A eee
edn he cae ote
ried ge aie Aa
E EASTON:
| Bastion, Mi. April 1é.—sipectal ane
ler wenehien Were obarred ar Rethel
EES Eaneeh "turer comteese
iin Sartre thee ptsten whey seemed
thee bis teat, | Swvekad Ratatat
tiny was Pemited he the chin, ene
fited, “tie Ieicen tanto" Aes, Mary
Chie, arama AY the morning se
ieee tite Cheval Corie tie aul
tee af ates, Marereten Miller: Cornish,
hi Carmbeidlces turmvcrle af stan, as
inaneian be ite, Ra Addie, AP
eee, thes Koster program be the
Sunita! xchwd wae retmberesd, The fl
irnvine paorsone ele wart inthe Sere,
Jee atte Pais tito, ini oe
Scromumiee! reetiations, eanels Webby
Jains Mtns, Lcwen Wiss au Meg
Ruin DAN sehie reader Ow Coe
annsron Cf Davie, rs ta
Mee pit “savham folsom instramen
iat soln Mee Robert Glin’, de, Quite
se naeting oF futentsraach isiters feo
Faniuiedodia, Baltimore and Wastin.
fen quieted tive eercice ARTINE. th
fae Mien irs Joo WWalor Be
wohaktee, eecsuneerviscr a Salone
Mer Snmiten at Haltinnee, ana, Row,
Tae aint, Str at Ae
aise aaitertinn anit Molly mince 3:
Certain’ de dg, te aE
Simtteed “Skinners at Reklwevitie, Del
Al ate sand ahs. Newman Dele
fini Shes arr wee He teats
Mine amd Meee Charite Marris, Pastat
Minany, © Aibee Teattle, Haale of Pith
Foie spe the finda here wR
friends + Mr. and Mfrs, Norman Dus~
Fst at Chenier, fe Manis for tite sum-
fuses = Sires flags vfohite ectivrd
Qeinenm fen Phlizteiphia. Sunda
Ineenine tat bar brater, J Waxman
agnor, on Stig taste Friel, were
antanie mand Savurdae nicht it #218
Meine’, te hie mele Hee fe TT FL
ner od Hanbridess nivel. Wnitniatnh,
Phage funeral af Stee fiewand Patter
fond ntare at the: Rantist Choreh, Wane
how tawen. Tae Frida, ® Soe Netenn
Rog Betuiel fun ttimnre. form. 8
hiwhise, frig, safes, Adin Penson
Meee eatted te rapes an aceannt ob
Tis iiews af her sister, Mea. Patt
Sieg it ihe etme njeht, ae wad
Tuiriod. Sfonday, Artes Aa” fnennel
fas returned from Philladetyiia, where
StS See teeter: Sundae, A Sean
ProcigaT ani ierare nreraim ders tae
Toren at Apiaity Ml. R, Chureh Sundae
sicenines damon tive auznicen ot Mrs Re
He Weuare and 31s Prem Commer,
a ape Faecons event etm betta wth
fetonig (Patines apt washiaton,
eee Yee Stawaeot enmntat nt
Fheniridee Sp. sweat the holidays
Seni relatives and friends,
| CATONSVILLE
Catonsville, M4,, .wor, 20.—Pov, J. A.,
‘youn wet necact he tareseett nian
‘Suing bane art wll sista fe
nnle ushers ward inte rire. MES
sats “Foincen in onaddent. =, Mz.
ait’ waters of Capello. a fra
Speen Patter, of Preweriek, grime
Minato. Went Seonti street “high
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FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922
STATE NEWS
CAMBRIDGE
I don't want a boss. We've tried to take it pleasant for our pastor, day and night; cause we've made him a present of a Bible and a light. Our beloved pastor's been with us since we've enjoyed his stay. He's done his bit for old and young with pleasure and delight. He's tilted us with the spirit' cause he knew just that right. Our best pastor, the right pastor, of all yet; and, whether you come,ack or not, yet, never you forget. These greetings from the 'Ushers' round are sincere, you'll deserit; I voice the scene that shows just what we think of him, and if we don't return, another minister will come and him we'll have to learn Mrs. Thompson, you and the thema worker, you and the thema worker, you may not allow it, but we think a lot of you." The members of the Lyric Concert Band of Easton, Md., gave a dinner Tuesday evening at the school building in honor of Dr. Hugh, the pastor. A delightful time was spent with a few friends invited. The members of the organization remamed a short musical program in the auditorium after many good things awarded these present, Walter M. Raigem, was tausamuster.
PONDTOWN
Class meeting was not largely at-
present. Sunday morning, Rev. J. M.
Cooper, our pastor, is on the sick list.
*These who spent the Easter holidays in
I am: Mr. William Chase, Mrs. Bessie
Cilton, Mr. and Mrs. Medford, Dr.
Elliott, Mrs. Lizzie Hensley, Mr. Edward
Wagner. Cramer. *The Easter program was
renumbered very nicely. Mrs. Annie
M. Baratcher, wireless. And at night the
srogram was rendered at Bordley's
Church. Rev. Albert, pastor. *Mr.
Chase H. Hutchins was in our town
last week representing Harry O. Wilson
Banker. *Little Joseph Hensley,
the baby of Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Hensley, has been quite sick, but is
conscientious under the case of Mr.
McMill, Sudhersville, Bd.: Rev. Price,
of Barchley, Md., motored over Sunday
and spoke some interesting talk concerning
the Risen Saviour. The church was
filled to capacity. *We have in
our town a new store. Mr. Bryant,
proprietor. *Some of our wolf went
over to Church Hill, attending the
funeral services of Timothy Johnson,
whomet with a fatal accident, being
kicked to death by a horse.
McDANIEL
McDaniel, Md., April 20.—The Ladies Aid met at the Good Hope Hall Tuesday night. A good number was present. One new member was welcomed by Mrs. Chattrois, who gave by Mrs. Watters was very successful. *Mrs. Chattrois is visiting friends in Baltimore.* *Mr. Gee, K. Newman attended the District Stewart's meeting.* *The district brought good news to us.* *We were blessed with a glorious session from our pastor, Rev. W. E. Stanley.* *We were blessed with a convert.* *The district brought good news.* *Mrs. Sarah Sukhyn, of 764 West Franklin street, Baltimore, has opened a beauty shop at St. Michaels at Mrs. Amelia Turners.* *The Easter service was held by the Superintendent, Mrs. Samuel Waters.* Collection, $1137.
WHITE PLAIN
White Hain, Md., April 20,—Miss Louise Miles, of Washington, D.C., is spelling the Easter holidays with her parents. $^a$ Mr. Albert Hines left for his home in Brookland, Md., to spar with his brother. $^b$ Mrs. Charles Cox was in Washington, D.C., Saturday. $^c$ Mrs. Charles Hawkins is on the stick list.
NEW CHAPEL
New Chapel, Md., April 20—Early class Easter Sunday morning was a happy meeting. In the afternoon the Sister services commenced. The teachers was a good success. The collection was 024.50. after the excercises the pastor gave an address for the benefit of the Sunday school, school home and home after a two-week stay in Wilmington visiting her and her brother in Chester. *M. Lorie Christian, Wilmington, is grandmother with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gibson.
YORK, PA.
Wyh, Pa., April 29—Mr. and Mrs. Wili, E. Derser of York, visited Westminster Sunday, April 5th, and Mrs. Joe, Joe, daughter, and Mrs. Jasmine, daughter, enjoyed their trip and the country scenes were beautiful. * The Smallwood School of Art and 5 grades gave a program in spring, April 6th, and address by Mrs. D. Bowles, and three prizes were given to the best essays and passages. The prizes were: * Gounter and pencils, gold and * Miss Magha for received a gold pen; * Mrs. Wright received a silver pencil; Mr. George Galloway received a gold pencil; * Mrs. Mary Galloway granddaughter, Mrs. Hagerstown, Md., for Easter with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson and family.
WINCHESTER, VA.
Winchester, Va., April 29—The baseball team of the Douglass School dressed up in their new uniforms, and made a fine appearance on the school diamond on last Monday in their game. J. H. Hawkins, pastor of St. Paul A.M. E. Church, preached his farewell sermon on last Monday night. He left Tuesday morning for the Virginia Roanoke, Va. The Combination Buds were entertained on last Friday by their president, Miss Willie Ann Bunister at her residence on North Market street. A very delightful time was had by the musical numbers and Miss Nauclea Gasking rendered the musical selections of the evening.
Beautiful of T
Beautiful Women of The Race
Are Distinguished For Clear Bright Complexions and Velvety Skin Produced by
GOLDE
OINT
(A Beauty Skin B
THIS is the
Madam
(A Beauty Skin Bleach—Not a "Whitener")
THIS is the treatment used by Madam Mamie Hightower, famous beauty specialist and hair dresser.
Notice the beautiful women wherever you go—those whose beauty seems so natural. Mark the fact that they have clear bright skin which looks and is as smooth as velvet. Their complexions are not spoiled by blotches, pimples, bumps and blemishes, they have the bloom of youth. None of our beauties are white, none care to be white. Mamie. Hightower simply restores the complexion given by nature, a clear, rosy skin that attracts and delights the eye. She, herself, uses and recommends Golden Brown Ointment (Beauty Bleach) and other Golden Brown preparations.
Golden Brown Beauty Bleach (not a "whitener") contains wonderful qualities. It clears a muddy complexion; it removes unsightly blenches; it is fine for facial eruptions such as cezema, ringworm, tatto, etc. Used in the privacy of your home, it will in a few days cause your friends to admire your improved appearance.
Send 25 Cents For A Full Size Package
Send 25 cents (stamps or money order) for full size box of Golden Brown Ointment on money-back guarantee. Use all of it and if not highly pleased tell us and we will refund your money quickly. Or send $1.00 and 5 boxes of Golden Brown Ointment and one cake Golden Brown Soup (value $1.50) sent you at once.
1000 Agents Wanted At Once
We are now increasing our agency force to 1,000 men and women in *Gold Cell*. We are now hiring 100 new agents and 100 new managers making $29 to $109 per week and travel extensively. You can do as well under our instruction. We will be pleased to hear from you at once. Write for our agency, and we will send you a copy of our general agents list, with many sub-agents. *Mary* in it. We will told.
GOLDEN BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
FBEDERICK
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
WILLIAMSPORT, PA., April 15—Mr. Berkley Blue is visiting his daughter Mrs. Louise Augusta in Philadelphia for some time. * Miss Clementine Allen of Cheyenne is with her parents Mr. Eastern, with her parents Mr. Edward Allen in South Williamport. * Mrs. Elizabeth Canye of Orange, N. L., and Mrs. Pearl Matthews of Jersey City, N. J., are visiting at the home of her mother Mrs. Washington Street. * Mr. John Gibson died at the home of his mother Thursday.
IERSEY CITY, N. J.
JERSEY CITY, N. J., April 21—Marks A. M. E. Zion Church will hold a spring bazaar beginning Easter Monday night last night five night last Sunday and will host Q. O. Osborne the pastor of Thirthland M. E. Church preached at St. Marks A. M. E. Zion Church at 11 A. M. the pastor Rev. J. M. Hoggard being called to attend the funeral of the pastor who was delivered by Rev. Mrs. Spotwood of Maine. The Lodge of Elks of Jersey City had a sermon preached to them at Bayonne on last Sunday night. The pastor Margaret Whitehead and Miss Elizabeth Cooper of New York visited Jersey City to call on Mrs. Julia A. Osborne of Churchville, Md. who is visiting on Storms Avenue of Vossoin street has gone for a trip South to her home. Mr. Raymond Johnson of Grand St. spent Easter Sunday in Atlantic City, Mr. Levy Smith in New York, and Mr. John F. Emmett Avenue started last Thursday night on an auto trip to Catonsville, Baltimore County, Md. *Dr. W. R. Laingford, Presiding Elder of the New Jersey conference, tried to obtain the conference conferrer at St. Marks A. M. E. Zion Church, Community Avenue.
MASSILLON, O.
MASSILION, OHIO, April 21—Miss Helen Myers of 711 High Avenue, entertained at the Chicago Ice Center, Chicago, IL, who was guest of her mother Mrs. Timer Tuesday April 11th. Duncan and caring residents were served by hostess. Those present were Mrs. Timer, Adeline Timer, Helena and Adelaide Smith, Mrs. Nicole Johnson, Earl and Harold Myers, Gordon and my Myers.
POMONKEY
Donomcky, Mk., April 02 — Easter services were observed at Metropolitan M. E. Church Sunday, Key, C. H. Matthews, the new pastor, presides over the morning service. He also fitted the public at night. The collection was $25.00. *The Macsound annual shade hake May 29th. *Missons here are planning to have their Mrs. Ethel Jackson the Easter holidays Supervisor of Colored Schools, spent in Philadelphia. *P. O. J. C. Parks, the week-end at premises as the guest Supervisor of Colored Schools. *The stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Thompson and left a fine little girl. *Mrs. Marilida Marbury, who has been quite ill, *Mr. and Mrs. Joan Clarke have returned to their home near Bryant's board.
WILMINGTON, DEL.
WHIMSTON, DELL, April 21—Mr. Bishop Bostic, a member of the U. M. K. Church is out on summer break, breaking money under false pretence which sum was $733. Mr. Bostic is a lover protector of the above named church and have been a member of the Ecumenical Rev. K. Jay. A peterson shook Mr. Ecumenical Baptist Church Sunday April 5th with the subject "Ecboll Thee." Scott assisted the pool followed by 7 converses which he immersed. *Dr. Mobick, the great orator of Baltimore was in Washington last week. *Mr. Hannah Garden is still on the sleek
ul Women ne Race
BROWN TREATMENT
(bleach—Not a "Whitener")
The treatment used by
Mamie Hightower,
beauty specialist and
forever you go—those whose beauty sees
they have clear bright skin which has
their complexions are not spoiled by
dilutes, they have the bloom of your
date, none care to be white. Mme. Hig-
ley exulsion given by nature, a clear, rosy skin
eye. She, herself, uses and recommends
beauty Bleach) and other Golden Brown
les, Liver Spots, Bumps,
nishes; Fine for Eczema,
wingworm and Sores.
(not a "whitener") contains wonder-
complexion; it removes unsightly blemishes
such as eczema, ringworm, tetter, or
home, it will in a few days cause you
d appearance.
For A Full Size Package
money order) for full size box of Gold
stick guarantee. Use all of it and if you
will refund your money quickly, or se
own Ointment and one cake Golden Brown
once.
Wanted At Once
For force to 1,000 men and women to sell Golden
country of the globe. Some of our agents are
travel extensively. You can do as well under
need to bear from you at once. Write for our
own implied first will probably become general
bills. Big money in it. Write today.
All Communications to
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Memphis, Tenn.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
ROSSVILLE
ROSSVILLE M.D., April 21—One fully realizes the holiday season while here. Churches are here for those inclined and shores and the occasion is the *Mock Conference* held last Monday at the St. Stephen A. M. E. Church was an entire success. The ladies representing preachers of the church held their parts gail. The reception at the gose was enjoyed by all. Service* were well attended at all churches on Easter Sunday and the Sunday generous. The Sunday program assisted their usual Easter program assisted by Mr. James Bond of Baltimore who delivered an excellent address on "Preparedness" Bond is current speaker. Baltimore gained three travel and held the attention of his audience out. Out. the visitors were Rev. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. Wesley Brown of Baltimore, Mrs. Elizabeth Couplin, Mr. and Mrs. Jennifer of Baltimore, and Mr. and Mrs. Presce of Judy
ANXAPOLIS, MD. April 21—Mrs. Hannah A. Harris, formerly of Annapolis, 36 Second Street spent a very joyful time visiting her friends at home for two weeks. She has now returned to her home 157 Cemetery Street, Hinton, West, Va. * Mrs. Ethel Rucker of 2822 Fine Avenue, Albany, Pa. Mrs. Miss Ida Collier of 25 Fleet Street, Mrs. Rucker is a very brilliant girl and will leave Annapolis on the 24th of this month for California, where she will visit her aunt for one month.
Do You Suffer T
of Achin
Then You Should
You Suffer The Misery of Aching Bones? In You Should Take This Wonderful Blood
Plough's
Prescription
C-2223
FOR USE ONLY ADMINISTERED
BY ALCOHOL
RHEUMATISM
Cases, Infections, Earthen-
Laboratory, and Lactic
Acid Conditions
BLOOD DISORDERS
Earring, Chronic Sore and
general inflammation tracing
from bad blood.
Prescription C-2223 for internal
and external earrings in the head and
neck. Contains an antiseptic
agent. Contains an antiseptic
agent in the ear.
DECAYTURE
The manufacturers will inform
the customer of any signs of
death, and, if ever, will
recommend an emergency
disciple on every bottle
Price $1.00
THE C-2223
Laboratory
MERCHANT, FOX
NEW YORK
Plugged
2220
LINZR PILLS
MME: MAMIE HIGHTOWER MEMPHIS TENN
Be Attractive—
Mme. Hightower says: "Be herself, friends and her love make character, but it makes men. The beautiful woman her friends and relatives give duty to restore the bright co-ord and thereby to help the race deserves. No woman, regard ignore this call.
The Attractive—It Is Your Duty
Rightower says: "Beauty is woman's first friends and her loved ones. Beauty character, but it makes for popularity and the beautiful woman is welcomed by girls and relatives glory in her success." Store the bright complexion bestowed by help the race achieve the record. No woman, regardless of her age, can call.
MME:
MAMIE
HIGHTOWER
MEMPHIS
TENN
Be Attractive—It Is Your Duty
Mme. Highower says: "Beauty is woman's first duty to herself, friends and her loved ones. Beauty does not make character, but it makes for popularity and contentment. The beautiful woman is welcomed by society and her friends and relatives given the respect they deserve. The complexion bestowed by nature and thereby to help the race achieve the recognition it deserves. No woman, regardless of her age, can afford to ignore this call.
Mme. Hightower's Advice
By special arrangement Mr. advise our patrons (three of personal attention) if our special offer as per coupon write you a personal letter you wish to ask. Her advice acknowledged authority on the ing of the hair.
SPECIAL
$1.50 W
Write us a letter give your friends, attach stamps to amount of POST PAID, at once
1 Box Golden Brow
1 Box Golden Brow
1 Box Golden Brow
1 Cake Golden Brow
Total Value ...
All the above for $1
This offer is good f
Special arrangement Madam Mamie High
ear patrons (three of charges) will take
a complimentary. If you will take
offer as per coupon below, we will
u a personal letter and answer any
to ask. Her advice is valuable for
added authority on skin treatment and
hair.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING OF
$1.50 Worth For
use in a letter giving names and adre
ur friends, attach this coupon and
amps to amount of one dollar and w
W T PAID, at once
1 Box Golden Brown Ointment Bleach
1 Box Golden Brown Hair Dressing
1 Box Golden Brown Rouge
1 Cake Golden Brown Complexion S
Total Value
all the above for $1.00 and this coupon
this offer is good for a short time-on
By special arrangement Madam Mamie Hightower will advise our patrons (free of charge) upon the subject of your special offer or our special offer as per coupon below, we will have her write you a personal letter and answer any questions she is curious for she is an acknowledged authority on skin treatment and the dressing of the hair.
$1.50 Worth For $1.00
Write us a letter giving names and addresses of three of
your friends, attach this coupon and money order or
same of one dollar and we will send you
POST PAID, at once
1 Box Golden Brown Ointment Bleach.....$0.25
1 Box Golden Brown Hair Dressing.....$0.50
1 Box Golden Brown Rouge.....$0.50
1 Cake Golden Brown Complexion Soap.....$25
Total Value.....$1.50
All the above for $1.00 and this coupon.
This offer is good for a short time only.
ANNAPOLIS
DENTON
Dinton, Md, April 20—The services in the churches were well attended Sunday. Easter program was rendered by Mrs. Lillie Tucker and Mrs. Mille Tucker conducted the service at John Wesley Church. The local decorations were exceedingly fine. At Union Bethel Church Mrs. Lauren Lab conducted the service and Mrs. William directed the orchestra. Mrs. Annie Thomas and Miss Theresa Wayman trained the primary department of the Sunday School. Mrs. William directed the trained nurses in Dinton, has been called to Easton on professional business. * Mrs. Jennie Haines and Miss Lillie Courtesy of L120 Urmid Hill avenue, Dinton, is named by Mr. Collect Bailey and Mr. Horace Pittipal school teachers of Philadelphia, teachers of Prince George County, teachers of Dinton, and teachers of Easter here as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Bailey.
HABRISONBURG, VA
HARNINSONBURG, VA., April 21—Mrs. Howard Mossley has beautiful her home by having electric lights installed. Mr. Thomas Mossley has a 6' P. M. in his 20th year, being ill only a few days. The A. and C. Restaurant opened its doors to the public Saturday April 15th with and up-to-date dining room and a full kitchen. The D. Marshall is at her home. * key, and Mrs. S. D. Walker were greatly surprise Friday night April 14th with a quantity of good things to eat, by the members of the First Baptist Church. Don't fail to
For The Misery
thing Bones?
ould Take This
Wonderful Blood Remedy
Prescription
C-2223
This Prescription was once the treatment used by a prominent doctor. Many discouraged men and women were made happy—some were helpless and hopeless, because they never expected to get well.
If you are suffering with acting bones, rheumatics, scrofuls, ulcerous sores, eczema, or any conditions caused by bad blood, Prescription C-2223 will make you a happy man or woman.
Plough's Prescription C-2223 contains no dangerous or habit forming drugs, such as mercury, chloral, opium, cocaine or strychnine. It can be taken with safety by a child.
When taking Plough's Prescription C-2223, it is best to keep the bowels open. There is nothing better than Plough's C-2223 Liver Pills. They do not sicken or gripe—one or two pills—a dose. Plough's 2223 Liver Pills are also time for biliousness, sick headache, and all ills caused by constipation. A box should always be kept handy.
Plough's Prescription C-2223 has been reduced in price. You can buy large bottles for $1.00—the trial size for 50c; 2223 Liver Pills—in the blue tin box—for 25c. If your druggist won't supply you at the above prices, both Pills and the Prescription will be sent direct on receipt of price.
If you want to know more about Plough's Prescription C-2223, or try 2223 Liver Pills, write for almanac, leaflet and free samples of the pills.
The C2223
LABORATORY
Memphis, Tenn.
ve—It Is Your Duty
"Beauty is woman's first duty to her loved ones. Beauty does not makes for popularity and content- woman is welcomed by society and its glory in her success." It is your right complexion bestowed by nature the race achieve the recognition it regardless of her age, can afford to
Madam Mamie Hightower will
receive of charge) upon the subject of
a visit. If you will take advantage of
our coupon below, we will have her
letter and answer any questions
or advice is valuable for she is an
on skin treatment and the dress-
SIMAL ADVERTISING OFFER
Worth For $1.00
giving names and addresses of three of
each this coupon and money order or
one dollar and we will send you
once
Brown Ointment Blocch... $0.25
Brown Hair Dressing... .50
Brown Ronge... .50
Brown Complexion Soap... .25
no... $1.50
for $1.00 and this coupon.
BLASS, DRUGGIST
These Are Not Patent Medicines, True & Tried Medicines for
Prices on all these Medicines, $1 each. By mail, $1.15
---
Poro College
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
Syruece, N. Y., Apr. 20.—Mr. Vanderpool has recently established lithographic work at the U. N. S. A. headquarters, 611 E. 11th St., New York, N.Y. He holds its monthly moon on Sunday evening at St. Philips Church. Mr. Thomas Center's suspect, "Beginning of Man," Mr. Mark Lawson renders some of his special solicitations, including a lunar center at Rudolphine Hall on Thursday evening and Orange streets. As usual the attendance was large. *Rey Smith, of Colgate, spoke at the lunar Sunday. Bethany Hall at the lunar Sunday. April 16 the Eks hold their annual seminar on Sunday evening, April 4th at St. Philips Church. The lupake Eks were attractively attired in white dress with Turkish caps to match, and plea cards in black suits, purple ties and white gloves. Mr. McKay read from
BLASS
408-4
These Are Not P
Price or
New Life Tablets For Men Only
For lost manhood, nervousness
general weakness, nightly commi-
sions debility and impotence,
as a grown woman, but now
life into your worn-out system.
Female Better Health Tablets
A vegetable compound for the
treatment of all female troubles,
diseases and weakness in the
woman's body system.
These wonderful tablets have proven
a blessing to thousands of men,
women, and children, made
strong and happy. These
tablets prevent the extreme pain
and needles suffering regularly
endured in men and women,
who makes life so miserable.
With these tablets use Blass
With these tablets use Brass
Douche Powder.
Acid Stomach Powder
For gagous stomach, swelling and puffy feeling after meals, heartburn, or severe bloching, the nurse catches and all stomach troubles.
Nerve and Tonic Tablets
For extreme nervousness, sleeplessness, twitching, nervous dyspepsia, headaches, quitting, restlessness, quitting. In stomach and all nervous disorders.
Blood Tonic and Purifier
For skin blisters, eruptions and itching, apply a thick, moist cream, disease, reevaluation, sores, cataract, white patches on tongue, skin, and body. It also resists the hovels.
Stomach and Liver
Regulator
For biliouness habitual constipation, headache, loss of appetite, dyspepsia, indigestion, foul breath, jaundice, constipation, liver and intestinal troubles.
Sweet Breath
Tooth And Mouth Stain
Thinning, and occasionally
Cleanse, Beautify and Preserve the
Teeth. It will impress to
important to grind the teeth
frasgrance and to the Gums a healthy
Action, and a consequent firm,
tissue and brightness of color. $1.00
$1.00
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 finger,
skin from bounces and sakes of
feet.
25c, 50c.
Tonic Nux & Iron Liquid
The great builder and strengthener. It gets as a general tonic strength, energy, power, force, amplification. Enriches the blood and builds up the nervous system you. Also regulates the bowels.
Use Blass' Rat Poison
The Kind which exterminated at the rats in our market houses. 25c and 50c a Package
the 26th chapter according to St. Mattews, *Mr. and Mrs. Wim. Taylor, of 154 Walton street, made their departure to Louisville, Ky., to visit their relatives and Tanner, *Mr. and Mrs. Messrs. E. Robinson, S. Rlyne, V. Douglas, K. Robinson, S. Williams, D. Davis and H. Hushnock motored to Rochester on Wednesday evening, April 5th, and paid a visit to the Gibson house and had a delightful meal with a Black Cross nurses, the U. X. I. A, division house, the social at their new headquarters, 611 E. Washington street, on Wednesday evening. We were very much pleased to have with us Solomon, secretary of the Detroit division, members enjoyed by all, President, Mrs. Evans; organist, Miss Brown, *Mrs. Hilda Basey* departed this life April 15th, 1521. Sleep, dear sister. We mourn your loss and we trust to meet you to visit Sister, Mrs. Georgia E. Harby; marys, George S. Hardy and Henry L.
S, DRUc
410 North Gay Street, Baltimore
Patent Medicines, True & Tried Re
on all these Medicines, $1 each. By
Eat-A-Tab's
For Oxypsenia, Acid Stomach Indication, Constipation, Bloating, Brachial Nausea, Fermentation, Mal-Assimilation of Poison, Gassy, Mastication, Nausea, Fungal infection, Fungus about diarrhea due to Cases, Belching Sour Stomach, Headache,
P. D. Q. Capsules or Liquid
For Cararth of the Bladder or Running Range, Inflammation.
Kidney and Bladder Tea
For weak Klimns and bladder; stop getting up at night. For backache and pain in loins and groins, bristlequin, colostrum, or urinate; suppressed or scanty, burning urine; bed wetting, always all irritation and inflammation; urinary acid from the system and prevents rheumatism.
Rheumatism and Neuritis
Remedy
For all kinds of rheumatism,
swelling the joints is the
most common nausea, neuritis,
lumbago swelling of knee, wrist
injury, pleurisy, pain in side
hip pain
Recommended for Fluttering
Nervous of Palpitating Heart
Shortness of Breath, Irregular
Pulse, Smothering or Fainty Feeling,
Shooting Pain, Blue Lips, Tobacco
Heart, Nervous Heart.
Dyspepsia and Indigestion Cure
For constipation, gaseous stomach, swelling and puffy foel-ness, constipation, sour stomach, pain after eating and all stomach troubles.
Sweet Pink Powders
FOR CHILDREN
A valuable remedy for children when Poverish. Constipated, yellowish Colored Stools. Bad Breath, Sour Stomach. If given in time will prevent spasms.
Price 50c
Incontinence Mixture
For Bod-Wetting in children and aged persons.
Blass' Pile Ointment
For Blind, Bleeding, Iching and
Flotting Piles. Gives instant re-
action to all you need,
so don't suffer any longer—get a
box today, 50c, $1.00.
Eczema-Itch Lotion
Eezona, tetter, harbor's rich, ring-
worms, scaly crustignis and all itching
diseases of the skin. Gives
instant relief.
Roach Killer
Two Roaches Only
Kills them on the spot
$50c PINT BOTTLE
oro College
and all Branches of Beauty Culture
Write Today for Further Information
PORO COLLEGE
PAGE EIGHT
ROCKVILLE
Rockville, Md., April 14—Wednesday, the funeral of Mrs. Virginia Garrison, the wife of Vivian Varyap, Inst Church, Lincoln Park, Napoleon Davis preached the sermon, assisted by Rev. Ashton, of Clinton A. M. K. Zion Church, Sunday night Easter Church, and the Jewish Church with the training of the Rogers and Mr. Alphonzo Lee, Mrs. Isaac Riddick, organist. A beautiful 3,000 persons were in "Isis" Over 3,000 persons were to witness one of the largest field day held in Montgomery County. In Skow Grove won the championship for 1922 and 1923. Springs, third place at night in Fermer's Hall. The oratory conducted was held between the girls. Miss Helen Baker, of Rockville, won the first prize. Baker, of Rockville, unchided, or Rockville, second prize.
GGIST
ore, Md.
medics for 30 Years
small, $1.15
Gray and Faded Hair Restorer
Keeps you looking Young
Gradually darkens Gray and
Faded Hair.
Price 50c, $1.00
Tape-Worm Remedy
Will expel the worm in two or
three hours. $1.00.
NO ODOR
Removing the Offensive
Odor of Perspiration
(EVERY SWEET)
Will keep Sweets, Summer and Winter
PRICE $0c and $1.00
It has a sweet flavor and spice freely especially, in hot weather, but the odor is sometimes very objectionable; it also destroys the odor caused by dried sweets, and keeps you sweet times.
FLORAL INCENSE
This fragrant Deodorizer will give the home a sweet, Aromatic Flowery Odor, pleasing to all who enter, eliminates all the odor, musty, ill smelling odors eliminating from sickroom or kitchen.
COCOANUT OIL
HAIR DRESSING
For Making Harsh, Stubborn, Kinky Hair Soft
Glossy and Fluffy
Softens and Invigorates the Hair,
relieves Dandruff and Irritation of
Scab, makes the Hair rich and
beautiful and promotes the growth.
Recommended for falling out of
Hair and keeping the Hair in a
smooth and glossy condition.
PRICE 50c a Jar
HAIR GROWER
Mange and Dandruff
Remedy
Recommended for falling out of
hair, Dandruff and Rubbing. This
remedy will assist and promote
a healthy growth of hair
that gives it a rich and gloss
appearance.
PRICE 50c and $1.00
SHAMPOO
Scalp
Makes Hair Soft and Fluffy.
For Harsh, Stubborn Hair.
BLANDS SHAMPOO and WORK
Dressing three
times a week. Apply well into
the roots of the Hair and use comb
and brush vigorously.
PRICE $6e a Jar
For Bed Bugs Only
Corrosive Splintmate, mixture
50c PINT BOTTLE
TS WANTED
for Teaching the
Hair Cultu
ulture
Diplomas Oiver
St. Louis
FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922
WHEELER LED SOX PITCHERS
Turned in 11 Wins and One Defeats in 12 Games for Average of .916, and Half of Shutouts
Last week the batting average of the Black Sox battlers in at-home games was published. That just showed that Harriet the pipe, the peanut butter stick. It was also shown that Lanny Smith led with stolen bases, Ragged Hall and "Scrapy" Brown being tied in this department with 10 each, while Ford was one behind this number. We are publishing the record of the pitching department in at-home games, and the number of games won and lost by the club. This table shows that the club played 75 games at home between April 24th and November 6th. Of this number the team won 57, lost 32. The club was shut-out three times; once each by Rex A. C. American Chain Company, and harrisonburg Giants. On the other hand the club shut-out opponents eight times; applications were addressed by Wheeler; two by Sykes, and one each by "Dark Night" Smith and Logan.
Pitched
Wheeler 15 11 1 0 .916
Shelter 17 13 1 0 .812
Logan 26 18 7 1 .720
C. Smith 15 10 4 1 .715
Ford 1 1 1 0 0 .100
Macy 1 1 0 0 1.000
Mortis 2 2 0 0 1.000
Tampkins 2 1 1 0 .500
Gardner 1 0 1 0 0.000
Dowell 1 0 1 0 0.000
Terry 1 0 0 0 0.000
Total games 75 57 19 3.750
H. S. BASE BALL TEAM OPENS SEASON
Drops Initial Diamond Tilt To Dunbar H. S. Of Washington At Maryland Park 7 to 4
Before a crowd composed of about twenty neutral rosters and all of the eleven hundred teachers and students of the High School, the team gathered the hundred and eighty, the local High School baseball team lost their initial tilt of the High school to the Junior High school of the team of Worcester, the Westport, last Friday afternoon, 7 to 4. The locals got off to a good start, holding the visitors sourced in the first frame and chalking up two for the team, so they could do little with Mitchell's shirts, gathering only one more marker off him up until the sixth when he was relieved by Toussay, who proved equally successful in the rubber for Baltimore, when the full route, but was touched up for a dozen safeties by the Capitalists. His ineffectiveness however was influenced by several misuses by the coaches.
f. %
5 1 1
5 1 0
5 1 1
5 1 0
5 0 1
5 0 0
5 0 1
4 1 0
4 1 0
4 1 0
4 4 4
Brewef 5 1 00Brooks 5 1 00
Nedons 5 1 01Meyne 5 0 00
Slaughter 5 2 40Watkins 5 1 00
Coffey 5 0 00Monroe 5 1 00
Henry 2 0 00Green 2 0 00
Jacktooth 5 2 00Rozler 5 0 00
Davis 4 0 00McEwan 4 0 00
Timms 4 0 00Shirley 4 1 11
McClell 2 0 00Griminger 4 0 00
Cobley 2 0 00Todals 4 4 4
Tours 4 27 121
SCORE BY INNINGS
Pumbar 0 1 01 00 00 2 00
Baltimore 0 2 00 00 1 00 00 4 00
Two base hits—Sharpy, Jackson,
Goldley, Base on balls—Mitchell, 2 00
Goldsey, 2 00 Strikouts—Mitchell, 5 00
Watkins, 6 00 Golds, 7 00 Impires—
Hairstone and Wright, Attendance 1 000.
PHILLY TEAM WANTS
GAMES WITH SOX
Philadelphia, Pa., April 19.—The
West Philadelphia Giants, have
placed a strong team on the field
again this season. They are desir-
ous of arranging a schedule with
teams in Delaware, Maryland,
Washington, D. C. and Virginia,
during their trip southward which
will start on May 15. Especially
would the Giants like to arrange
games with the Baltimore Black
Sex, Address Albert Ringgold, 458
W. York St., Philadelphia, Pa.
OPEN MEAS
Rockville, Md., April 11—The
Rockville Giants beat the last
baseball season last Sunday
by defending the Helpine Stars
in a well played game 5 to 1. Ricks
played for the Giants allowed
only two hits. For games address
Captain Mead, Box 47.
Morehouse,5; Fisk,4
Atlanta, Ga. April 18—Fish
dropped a brilliant baseball game
to Morgantown, W.Va.
4. Clark吭犁ing for
Morgantown, struck out ten men.
P. A. L. Track and Field Meet
The Public Athletic League track and field meets among the boys of the colored public schools, will begin on Friday, May 12th. The meets will be divided into the two districts: The district will be held on the above date. The schools in this district are: Numbers 101, 102, 105, 113, 115, Louisville, Roland Park, and M. Washington. The meet of the second district will be held on May 12th. The schools in this district are: Numbers 116, 109, Fairfield, Brooklyn, and Morrell Park.
The third district will be held on May 20th. The schools in this district are: Numbers 100, 103, 107, 110, 112, 115, All these meets will be held at Drum Hill Park. Each contestant may enter two events, only one track and one field.
There will also be held dodge-OSM contests for girls on district Balinees. Winners of district meets will be held at City championships which will be held on June 12th.
P. P. A. L. BASEBALL SCHEDULE
Public School Baseball Tournament Under Auspices Of Public Athletic League Begin Thursday
The Baseball Tournament among boys of the colored public schools of the city under the auspices of the Public Athletic League, will start Thursday afternoon at Drain Tennis at the Tennis Tentants being school 109 vs. Ireland Park. The tournament is divided into two sections Eastern and Western, with seven teams in each section. The teams as arranged calls for each team to play every other team in the league, and the winner of each section to meet in the final, best two of three games. In addition to this schedule, a double elimination series of playground games been arranged between the 84-ish boys. Following is the schedule:
April 20, Roland Park school vs. School 109; School 101 vs. 113.
April 21, School 112 vs. 116; 105 vs. 115; 24, 116 vs. 102; 108 vs. 102, 25th, 118 vs. Roland Park; 101 vs. Fairfield, 26th, 109 vs. 112; 105 vs. 113; 27th, 110 vs. 116; 115 vs. 105, 28th, 104 vs. 115; 102 vs. Fairfield, May 1st, Roland Park vs. 112; 101 vs. 105; May 2nd, 109 vs. 110; 113 vs. 115; May 3rd, 112 vs. 116; 105 vs. 105; May 4th, 110 vs. 102; 115 vs. 102; May 5th, 116 vs. 115; 105 vs. Fairfield, May 8th, Roland Park vs. 110; 115 vs. 101; May 9th, 109 vs. 116; 105 vs. 113; May 10th, 112 vs. 102; 105 vs. 102, May 11th, 110 vs. 118; 115 vs Fairfield, May 12th, 116 vs. Roland Park; 108 vs. 101; May 15th, 102 vs. 109; 113 vs. 102; May 16th, 115 vs. 112; 105 vs Fairfield, May 17th, Roland Park vs. 105; 101 vs. 102; May 18th, 109 vs. 115; 112 vs Fairfield.
Black Sox Divide
In Holiday Bill
Before a fair-sized holiday crowd, the Black Sox divided a twin bill last Monday at Maryland Park. The first game was staged in the stadium, and the second downed the "Spodennies" 2 to 1, and the second clash, was staged with the Colored All-Stars which the Sox won 6 to 5.
Line-up:
Black Sox APR R. Piedmont Tigers C.South 18 3 0 Banks. APR R. C.South 18 3 0 Banks. APR R. Brownss. 3 0 0 Monroe. f 5 2 0 Ridgey.2b 3 0 0 Sumfeld. f 5 0 0 Ridgey.2b 3 0 0 Sumfeld. f 5 0 0 Ridgey.2b 2 0 1. Smith. f 5 0 0 W.South. f 3 1 2 Huston.ss. f 5 0 0 W.South. f 3 1 2 Huston.ss. f 5 0 0 W.South. f 3 1 2 Whitley. f 4 0 0 Rawlin.sf 4 0 A.Smith. f 4 0 1 Powell. p 2 0 0 Greenp. f 4 0 1 Logan. 1 0 0
Score by innings:
Piedmont T. 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Black Sox 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lincoln A. C. vs. Home-
WOOD A. A. (white)
The Lincoln A. C. of Elliott City, will stage a concert on Sunday with Elliott City on Sunday with the Homewood A. A. (white) Game called at 3:30 P. M. The Lincoln have a few open dates for a game same as Homewood Elliott City, Mt., or other; Elliott City 251.
Results Of Last Week's P. A. L. County Meets
Results Of Last Week's P. A. L. County Meets
The annual state-wide athletic meets under the auspices of the Public Athletic League which began Monday, March 14, in entries and spectators. At Ponmokey on Easter Monday, more than three thousand people being in attendance. The results of the first week were as follows: Ponmokey, April 10; winner, Ponmokey, 41 points; second, Ponmokey, 25 points; third, Malcolm, 14 points; Walderf, 8; Marbury, 5; McChionkown, 5; Middletonown, 3; Benedict, 2; Mason St. Mary's County meet, held at La Plata, April 11th; Entries, 27; Winner, Central Industrial, 28; Morgane, 3; St. Indi, 1; Orville, 14; White Marsh, 10; Uney Point, 10; Oakville, 5; Leonardown, 3; Dintridge, 6; Fenwick, 3; Mechanicsville, 1; Charles Hall, 1; Compton, 5; Calvert County, 14; April, 1; Frederick, 12; Bairns, 2; Prince Frederick, 14; Halls Creek, 14; Island Creek, 12; Sanderland, 13; St. Edwards, 14; Mt. Hope, 9; Adelim, 5; Peters, 5; Pairs, 1; Huntington, 7; Losoy, 9.
Montgomery County meet, held April 13 at Rockville, Entries, 338. Winner, Brooks Grove, 66; Rockville, Sincericey, 18; Kensington, 10; Emory Grove, 10; Purdue, 9; Wheaton, 9; Linden, 7; Germantown, 9; Damascus, 4; Quincy County, 1; Griston, 2; Mt. Zion, 1; Hopper, 1. Frederick County meet, held at Frederick, April 17. Entries, 193. Winner, Frederick High School, 66; Dauphin County High School, 44; Brunswick, 34; Brunswick, 18; Doubles, 17; Middleboro, 15; Hopchad, 15; Summisde, 4; Libertytown, 3; New Market, 3; Mt. Olivet, 2; Oldfield, 2; Point Rock,
Morgan College To Enter Penn Relay
The authorities of the Penn Relay Carnival which will be held at the University of Pennsylvania and 28-29 have classed Morgan College in a more two rating which the universities of Brown, New Hampshire State, Maine, New York; and Colgate, Holy Cross and Fordham College. Out of 15 men who reported for practice, 6 have been selected to make the trip to Philadelphia. 10 have been members of the college relay. One member of the team are Brown, manager; Offutt, Fletcher and brompson, (capt.) Booker and Walwyn, Subs. Neil Thompson and "Speedy" Brown will be entered in the 100-year dash championships. The first time in the history of Morgan College that a team has been entered in the Penn Relay Games.
THE BEST MUSIC
OF THE YEAR
WITH A TITLE
AND A COVER
BY JOHN M. MCKINNEY
AND JOHN M. MCKINNEY
AND JOHN M. MCKINNEY
AND JOHN M. MCKINNEY
AND JOHN M. MCKINNEY
Girl Basketball Champions Of Maryland
Standing—Left to right: G. Gaines, paired: B. Thompson, center; H.E.Wharton, sub: D. Halley, coach. Sitting—left: M. Spriggs, forward; center, T. White, captain and forward; right, T. Camper, forward; center, D. games played by the champions during the post season with minor league Wilmington, Del. 9; Orioles, 26; Washington, D. C., Y. W. C., A. 13; Orioles, 19; Crescent Girls, Wilmington, Del. 4; Orioles, 4; local Y. W. C., A. 11; Orioles, 15; Morgan College, 11; Orioles, 16. Total points scored by Orioles, 80; by opponents, 59.
The Orioles will play at Newport, News, Va., this Saturday afternoon, and in the Hampton Institute gymnasium at night.
SPORT TID-BITS
Pahanna Joe Gans and Jamaican Kid fought a ten-round draw at Bethel Mich. in week 7, Gans weighted 150 lbs. and his team won. In its initial baseball game of the season Virginia Union University of Richmond, Va. lost to Lincoln University in the latter city last week, 2 to 2.
In addition to the track teams in the Penn Relay games at the University of Pennsylvania which will be held on the field, will also be expected positions in the hammer, discus, and javelin throws.
In his bout with Carlin Repress at Elgin, IL, in which he essayed a catching cricket heavyweight buster won the decision at the end of ten rounds of batting. There is talk of re
There is some agitation being carried on in sport circles over the fact some of the leading coloured race are the ones playing athletic games, especially basketball games. Among instances cited is the fact that both Lincoln and Clyde played basketball during the past season with certain professional clubs that is clubs with pain players in their unpop. Let the clubs and the players get busy and look into the matter.
Bill Tate is still nursing his broken hand, which injury was sustained in his bout with Sum Langford, and will not be able to accept challenges for several weeks.
"Rafle" Foster's American Giants have ended their spring training season in the South where they won four games. The Cincinnati and the Columbus Stars. In the final games which was played with the latter team at New York, the aggregation only able to mose the Islanders out 11 to 10 after using three pitchers.
The new owners of the St. Louis Giants who took over the club when the former is building a new park cost $27,000. The name of the club has also been changed to the St. Louis Stars. Mr. Shipard, a business man of St. Louis, has elected business manager of the club, which still retains its birth in the National Negro League.
There is some talk in college colleges of a Howean Chicago next fall. A proposal of this prospect, the sports writer of the leading Negro journal the Windy City, follows: "The public would not support the game financially. The gate would be too small. He hurts when he is on the field, when we that the Razor Williams Vulcan football teams hit the ball. The game last year is still unpaid. The second, and biggest objection to such a game is simply, that Williams will man that will pay with Howard."
A new baseball club has been organized in Milwaukee which will play in the International League. Robertson and Harvey Hinesen, owners, and C. I. Ready, secretary, Games at home will be held in Park City the Milwaukee team of the inter-league is away.
BASEBALL GAMES SUNDAY
Black Sox vs.
Sparrows Point A. C.
The Black Sox will play their last Sunday exhibition doubleheader of the coming Sunday.
Their opponent will be the Sparrows Point A. C. a fast team, and a hot twin bill is anticipated.
RAINBOW PLAYS SUNDAY
The Rainbow A. C. will have to be at its best when it meets the Holtins A. C. the Holtins A. C. would like to hear from two rebel 17-year pitchers playing Sunday ball. They also want games with fast 18 and unified pitchers. Address Manac-
Tempson Saunders, 834 W. Ostend St.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
AGUE STA
OL' JONES
WELL, IT'LL
GOOD BE NIGHT
AND I GUESS I
HAD BETTER MUGEL
ON
THERE'S
WITH A M
WONDER IF
SELL WHAT TO
DINE.
WELL, ITLL
COME BE NIGHT
AND I GUESS I
HAD BETTER MYGEY
ON
THERE'S A PAINTING
WITH A PASS
WINNER IF HE WILL
SELL HIM FOR A
UIME
YOU ARE GETTIN'
A BADGAIN HUMBER?
WHAT ELSE YA GOT
FOR THE CHANGE
IVE GOT
COMIN'?
SOMEBODY LIED—NO3
FAIR CROWD SEES BLACK SOX WIN
Washington Giants Prove Easy Pickings for "Speddenites" in Exhibition Double Header
Before a crowd of some thousand or so baseball fans the Black Sox took both ends of a doubleheader from the Washington Giants of Washington, D.C. at Maryland, 3 to 1 in the ninth inning. The locals proved too strong for the visitors in the opener, and this session was called at the end of the sixth inning. The nightcap, however proved to be a better game than the opening pitching of M. Harris of D.C. a diminutive hurler whose shoots and slants were dished up with considerable skill. Had his teammates given him better support he would have won. The feature of the nightcap, was a boner over right-field by Greenfield, the only run his team made during this game.
Logan pitched four innings of the opener and then gave way to Hendricks a recruit who during his two innings on the mound made a fine impression. Another recruit who is giving evidence of possessing brilliant qualities as a player, is Allen who is doing guard duty at third during the exhibition games. He is fast, "on his toes" at all times, and so far, has shown himself a fair sticker. Next Sunday another exhibition til is scheduled with the Wise A, B, C, aggregation of Sparrows Point.
Line-up and summaries:
J-BLACK SOX WASH, GTS.
P,A,B,R,
(Hairstone,rf 3 1 Andrew,lb 2 0
Ford, ss 3 0 Scott,2b 3 0
(Williams,2b 3 0 1J, Harris,p 3 0
Smith, lf 2 0 6 Frenfelle, 3 1
Thomas, c 2 0 1c, Harris, ss 2 0
(Grey, 1b 2 0 Lewis, rf 2 0
Allen, 3b 2 0 White, cf 2 0
(C, Smith, cf 2 0 0 Bone, 3b 2 0
(Sykes, p 2 0 1 Jefferson, lf 2 0
Totals 21 3 5 Totals 21 1
Washington Gts. 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
Black Sox 0 0 2 2 2 1 1
YOUNG
MEN
FOR MILES AROUND
I HAVE A SALE
Out-off
NO MAN should suffer
less than nature intended, or
of the DEBILITIES of the
reserve power. You need
very element which you have
ALLEVIATED BY ME AT
MAN ASK? HONORA
WILL TELL. Call today a
BLOOD
Don't Take Any Char
MISTAKES INVOLVE
MY EXPERIENCE
I specialize in Diseases of Men-
gital by skilled, experienced
made himself a success by hard
concentrating of every thought
plugging in to overcome the
failure in the treatment of disease
and successful master of diseases
of work in the treatment of certa-
tious and significant XINDA
displays your true physical condition
are groping in the dark. If you
success, I will endeavor to show you
My Success. As a Special
Diagnosis of Your Trou
NO MAN should suffer the loss of health which renders life worth living, or allow himself to become less than nature intended, when there is at hand a certain relief for his Debility. Most of the PAINS, most of the DEBILITIES of the DISEASES OF MEN from which men suffer are due to an early loss of Nature's reserve power. You need not suffer from this. Why not be alleviated and enjoy perfect HEALTH? The very element which you have lost you can get back and you may be as happy as any man. YOU CAN BE ALLEVIATED BY ME AT A REASONABLE COST. WHAT FAIER PROPOSITION COULD ANY MAN ASK? HONORABLE, SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT IS WHAT YOU WILL GET HERE. A VISIT WILL TELL. Call today and talk things over. Don't delay and grow worse.
Don't Take Any Chances—Consult Me First
MISTAKES INVOLVE AN AWFUL PENALTY!
MY EXPERIENCE VALUABLE TO MEN
I specialize in Discases of Men—Men only. Success can only be attained by skillful, experienced and successful physician, who has made himself a success by hard study of his chosen specialty, by the concentrating and thought upon the unswerving pursuit of the problem. This success is the treatment of success and failure in the treatment of disease of men. The skillful, experienced and successful master of disease is not made in a day. It is years of work in the treatment of certain diseases only. We make the patient feel that we are the best element that will disclose your true physical condition, without a knowledge of which you are grazing in the dark. If you have taken treatment without success, I will endeavor to show you why it failed.
A
Don't Let Money Matters
KEEP YOUR BLOOD P
TAINT OF D
Get the Right Doctor a
Call Today
AS IS C
MEN
612 N. HOWARD ST.
Baltimore, Md.
We occu
Photo By Penn Studio
ANOTHER "FIGHTING MARVEL" DISCOVERED
Dyton, C. April 13—The fist fans of this city are still talking about the masterly performance of the 1960s band who forced the defense to stop his bout with Sam Launford in the fifth round of a scheduled 12-round to save the latter from further punishment, here last month.
floored Langford with a blow to the body. This blow took all the steam out of the latter Langford was floored again in the fourth. In the fifth he was floored on the ropes, and the reference stopped the light. He is a native of Washington Court house, otho, who not yet advanced far beyond his Majority year. He stands 6 feet 4 inch in height and weighs 15 pounds. He has been in the ring but a short time, but his ability may be estimated by the fact that he has won 15 of his last abilities, 23 being by the knockout route.
Basketball Rules Changed
New York, April 19—Alteration of the foul rule of basketball including the extension of the foul lane across the playing court and allowing the extension of backs of personal fouls in designated foul zone, was adopted last Saturday by the National Board of Approved Basketball officials. This was the first rule change in the governing basketball organization for the last twenty years. The board also ruled, that personal fouls should be disallowed, even when a player is charging, tripping, delaying the game, coaching from the side lines and unsportsmanlike conduct. In connection with dribbling, the board ruled that a player may take one step and must get the ball before the back foot leaves the floor.
Jack Dempsey, Take Notice 1
Jack Dempsey, Take Notice 1
The following communication reached the desk of the sports editor of the Aflac the morning of Deer Sir: "I have been flowering the details of boxing concerning Harry Wills and Dempsey; the two are true and have their weight is 125 lbs; with 26, height, 5 feet, 3 ins and about 50-60 lighter than Carpenter. Yours respectably. I am Dempsey can pass up his self-respect, do you?
NOTICE TO BALL CLUBS
All baseball clubs are hereby notified that in order to get your scores, line-ups and features of your Saturday and Sunday game in the edition of the league, follow-ons, frames, your reports MUST be in the office by Monday morning or not later than Monday afternoon. It is also desired that when sending in reports, state whether the game was played on Saturday or Sunday, send in reports of games on both days, it is otherwise impossible to tell which is which.
All managers of clubs are likewise requested to call at the office (third floor) for score sheets or if it is not convenient to write and they will be forwarded to you. (Sporting Editor)
BOUND MIDDLE-AGED
MEN MEN
FOR MILES AROUND BALTIMORE, COME HAVE A SAFE TREATMENT FI
Out-of-Town Men Promptly, So CAN should suffer the loss of health which feature intended, when there is at hand a capabilities of the DISEASES OF MEN from over. You need not suffer from this. What which you have lost you can get back BY ME AT A REASONABLE COST.?
HONORABLE, SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT Call today and talk things over. Don't
BLOOD DISEASES SCIENCE
It Take Any Chances—Consult Me First
MES INVOLVE AN AWFUL PENALTY
EXPERIENCE VALUABLE TO MEN
In diseases of Men—Men only. Success can only be at a skillful experience and successful patient, but a success by lurd study of his chosen specialty, by the of every thought upon the unswerving pursuit of a specific EXPERIENCE. The treatment of disease of men. The skilled, experienced master of diseases is not made in a day. It is years the treatment of certain diseases only, which make a specific EXPERIENCE of your affinity that should be physical condition, without a knowledge of which you in the dark. If you have taken treatment without success to show you it failed.
As a Specialist Is Due First to Correct this of Your Trouble—I Find Out What
FOR MILES AROUND BALTIMORE, COME TO THE DOCTOR FOR MEN ONLY I HAVE A SAFE TREATMENT FOR EVERY WEAK, DESEASED MAN
BLOOD DISEASES SCIENTIFICALLY TREATED
Ails You and Treat the Cause
Let Money Matters Keep You Away—Satis
UR BLOOD PURE, FREE FROM
TAINT OF DISEASE
Right Doctor at the Start. Be a Man A
NO CHARGE WHATEVE
today
TERMS REASONABLE
AS IS CONSISTENT WITH GOOD TREAT-
MENT YOU MAY PAY AS ABLE
We occupy the entire building, 3 stories, we
We occupy the entire building, 3 stories, well equipped. Dr. G. H. Wilson and Associates.
Do you realize that you have only one life to live—do you realize that you are missing most of that life by life ill health? You realize that you have many of that life by life ill health? You have put many a man in his grave. Some men would rather be dead than alive—if you are one of that kind you need not be dead. Some men would rather will appreciate the services of a real specialist—men who know the good from the bad—men who realize the benefits of good care. Some men who realize the benefits of good care come to us we will make you have confidence in others. We will make you cheerful and optimistic and healthy. Our God will make you happy. Others Our God will make you happy. Others Walks—Don't Suffice Count in Today NO CHARGE WHATYEVER FOR CONSULTATION Daily House, 9-8 Sundays and Holidays 10 A. M. to 2 P. M. Reasonable and Made to Suit the Convenience of the Patient
Three base hits: G, Harris. Base on
balls—Hugan, i.; Jefferson, 2; H
hendricks, 1. Stolen bases—and Andrews, Hail.
Hendricks, 2. Stolen bases—and Hokan, i.; Hokan, 6; Jefferson, 2; H
hendricks, 2. Umpires—Tarrett and Mathews.
Attendance, 1,009.
Union, 9; V. N. & I. I. 4
Union, 9; V. N. & I. I. 4
Richmond, Va., April 19—Before a record-breaking crowd, on April 19, Virginia Union University, baseload nine defeated Virginia Normal and industrial Institute 9 to 4. Nergerite who pitched for Union had control and fanned 12 men.
Line-up:
V. N. & I. L. (4) Union (9)
APRIL Epps, 2b 5 13 Adams, ss 5 11
Hraxton, p 5 0 1 Branch, cf 5 14
Ross, 2b 5 0 Gregory, b 5 15
Joppe, 2b 5 0 Jeff, b 5 14
Walker, f 5 0 0 Jeff, b 3 14
Walker, f 4 1 2 CJack, f 3 10
Ingram, f 4 0 0 AJack, n 3 23
Allen, f 4 0 0 Hues, b 2 23
A. Blaxton, f 4 0 0 AJack, n 3 23
Braxton and Armstead inter-changed in the 7th inning.
Reisterstown Club
The Senior baseball club of Reisterstown has organized for the season under the management of A. L. Fax, better known as "film star" as the manager of the Reisterstown Royal Grays. The team is anxious to book games with all fast uniformed clubs, A. L. Fax, Reistertown, Maryland.
Consultation Examination
Children's Column
IVY BOGNE
PRIZES
Each week three tickets for a movie-picture theater will be given away. You will be awarded the one question that the highest number of students answers of the puzzle and questions, and one ticket to the one answering of the puzzle and questions. Those who send in answers to either the puzzle or questions will receive an award. Write all communications plainly, giving your name, age, address, name of the school you attend and your name of the winners will be published the next week.
PUZZLES FOR THIS WEEK
Add a prefix to the letters k so as to form a word. Example: turn the greatest number of words will receive the first prize. History questions must be answered also. Have letters in by Monday of each week.
Questions on Negro History
L. Where is the home of Prodeciks Dongkess located?
2. Who was Alicia Geoffrey Walker?
3. Where is Isabel Geoffrey?
4. Who is Glennia?
ANSWERS TO LAST WEEKS
Puzzle: 1. India, 2. Germany, 3.
Puzzle: 1. India, 2. Germany, 3.
ANSWER TO LAST WEEKS HISTORY QUESTIONS: 1. Mahlary Medieval College in the UK, 2. G. W. Hubbard, 3. Phillis Wheeler Negro postmaster of Revolutionary times, Born in Arden, Nebraska, Negro Greek speaking, in "sunshine."
A Short Story
One warm summer night in August everyone was gasping for a breath of air. Mr. Lewis and his stepsmen were some folks in the block trying every method to keep cool. Some had bought ice cream and all such things. Mr. Lewis soul one of these people was some water fountain. In the midnight a polite man on the beat stopped to talk of the different robberies that had occurred during the day. The officers had told him he had better be careful with his house and
Are the Many Satisfied Men Daily Sending Others and That You Can Arrange My Fee to Be Paid as Able
A SAFE, SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR EVERY WEAK, DISEASED, DISCOURAGED MAN
The Dangers of Bad Blood Overcome By Scientific Methods SKIN EQUIPMENTS—BECZMA, ACNE, PIMPLES, ETC.—
No man can afford to take chances with a broken-out skin. You may consider the skin reaction with which you are trouble merely a temporary annoyance, but it may be the danger signal of deep-rooted blood disease, which you may consider your skin section disagreeable and repulsive. Don't take chances to come up and take advantages of my free diagnosis in time.
PRIZES
A SCARE
PAGE NINE
the officer went his way.
In a few seconds George came rushing out breathless exclaiming exertion. "Daddy a marry" in the kitchen.
Mr. Lewis quickly jumped up and ran to the kitchen. He was follow by another man, who remained near the front door. He then George ran past them up to stairs to the telephone extension. He then Mr. Lewis was then heard to say, "I've got you this time you scourne this sort cold chills through the meatline we meant to call the police." Soon Mr. Lewis emerges from the kitchen with hands up in apprehension. He provided to hear the consequences, "Oh its nothing" exclaimed Mr. Lewis as he continued to wipe
"To the go call that boy before he is the whole force up here" said a child who had got in the kitchen. The family had a 41-year length of hair they told their neighbors who also loved the fun. Peace and quiet reclaimed man and the unifier of the evening quietly. FANNE PENDLETT
Colored High School 1-B Gr.
THE SLAVES VISION
I looked from the door of the cabin.
To the great horizon beyond I did not know, but it seemed
That someone was beckoning on.
My eyes were transfixed on a flag
Arrayed in spotless white, com-
on.
Steamed on on, to the cot on whithe
lay;
I opened my arms to receive it.
But the figure vanished and fled.
And it took with it my anxie
soul;
To the portals of shining gold.
MARION C. SMITH
Teacher T. B. Col. School
Herbert Weissinger, former St. Chip-
opher and his 190-yard-die
pitcher. He turned to baseball ag-
piter. Last week at Brooklyn,
Y. he pitched the game over damnation 13.
School pile, allowing only three life
Do What I SERUMS
at I Do BACTERINS
ess of Time VACCINES
When Required
N. HOWARD ST.
Baltimore, Md.
FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922
Home Making
Motherhood
Woman's Work
Passing For
Walter F. White, Agent
P., Tells Of Narrow E
Klux And Southern
vestigating Lynch
Passing For White
Walter F. White, Agent Of The N. A. A. C. P., Tells Of Narrow Escapes From Ku Klux And Southern Whites While Investigating Lynchings And Riots
(Continued from Page One)
clared in one of his essays, lynching takes the place of merry-go-round, and does a prelude to the tension of drab existence in Southern towns.
I well remember an investigation that I made in the extreme southern town of Bakersfield. A farmer was getting wealthy through the operation of a large plantation on which his labor cost him practically nothing, as he practiced. He made it impossible for him to hire Negro hands, with the result that they formed the habit of paying the fines of Negro acres and making them work out their fines on his place. One of the Negroes, after working two years to pay off a fine of $30, demanded a settlement. The farmer beat
That night the farmer was shot. A mob formed to avenge his death, although he was exceedingly unhappy at the picture of the community, but the mob members told me later that they had to let Negroes know that a man must not be touched by a Negro. The Negro got away. The mob, determined not to be cheated of its fun, lynched in three days of search for the man suspected of killing Negroes who knew or were thought to be friendly with the escaped one. Among the victims was an eight-months pregnant woman with the shooting other than that her husband was known to be a friend of the supposed murderer—for which crime was most brutal, the most revived ever known in the long record.
Taken for a Federal Agent
I reached the scene soon after the event and while excitement yet run high. The scene was in the heart of a prosperous community with broad, fertile farms surrounding the small towns clustered to the north, where the farming of the section. The main streets were well paved. The stores were well stocked. Most of the inhabitants could properly be clasSED as Georgia "cricketers". long, hanky, slow of movement and of space, skin tanned in a reishy-yellow eyes small and set close together. My own accent is sufficiently Southern to enable me to ask ques-
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things without being thought an outsider. I could thus freely ask any I chose, so long as I did not incur the suspicion of being a "Federal agent," that most feared and hateful of all circumstances. The morning of my arrival in town I casually dropped into the store of one of these general merchants. I had been informed was one of the few stores in town the store was free of customers. After making some small purchase I engaged him in conversation, gradually winning his confidence by telling him how much I admired the nearly identical store we own or teaching these niggers a lesson. Memorizing the newspaper accounts of the lynching I had read and confess, somewhat shamafaceted, that I had never been in a store or teaching these niggers a lesson. Believing the recent affair in his own town. He opened up almost immediately, offered me a box to sit on, and a bottle of soft drink, and then gave me a painstakingly minute a account of the trouble from
To my inquiries how the colored woman had met her death, he shaped his thigh and declared it "the best show I ever did see." Mistress-younger ophthalm seen that nigger wrench tight and held me up. "When I expressed a desire to meet personally and congratulate some of the other brave and fearless men who had conquered this fiercely fighting woman, he offered to have them on hand, but if I didn't want that done he would tell me who they were.
After two days of this, they began to get suspicious in the town. I had let it become known that I was impersonating a government man, Alibaba, but when pressed for details I had been vague. One morning I dropped in again to see the merchant I first talked with. His air was not so friendly this time, and the moment I entered the store he fired at me:
"Government man, man, man!"
"Who said so? I countered. 'Never mind who told me: I knew up when I see you.' I then responded to strategy, as I did not know what had happened since last I had talked with him, and I knew my own life was worth little if they found out who and what I was. Leaning over close to him, I whispered:
(To be Continued)
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WEEKLY WOMAN'S PAGE
When To Wed
"Marry when the year is new, Always loving kind and true. Always happy. You may wed nor dread your fate. If you wed when March winds blow Joy and sorrow both you'll know. You will love her. You for joy for maiden and for man. Marry in the month of May, You will surely rue the day. You will love her. Over land and sea you'll go. They who in July do wed, Must always labour the bread. Must August be sure. Mimy a chance are sure to see. Marry in September shine. Your living will be fair and fine. Mimy a chance are sure to see. Love will come but riches tarry. If you wed in bleak November, Only joy will come remember. You will come first. Mimy and true love will last."
Lucky Wedding Days
Monday for wealth,
Tuesday for health, and
Wednesday the best day of all.
Thursday for crosses,
Friday for prizes,
Saturday the luck at all.
A One-Day Menu
BREAKAST
Cereal of choice Cream
Baked eggs with bacon curls
One egg muffin Jam
Postum coffee Cocoa
DINNER
Half Grapefruit
Baked Ham
Mashed potatoes String beans
Pickles Celery
Asparagus Salad
Ice cream Sponge cake
SUPPER
Tomato studded with
Celery, chopped ham and mayonnaise
Hot biscuits Cream cheese
Canned peaches
Tea Cocoa Milk
FASHION NOTES
*Face veils have taken the place of the embroidered draped veils.
*The beaded bag is a smart necessary to the afternoon costume byely Canton crepes, with satin strips are used for sports wear.
*Bandeaux of gold and silver leaves are worn with evening dress.
*The French women are carrying shining ebony canes with ivory handles.
*A slip of emerald silk shows through the cut-work of a tan jacket.
**A child's frock of orchid chanbray has on it a chicken family in black cross stitch.
**Small, close-fitting hats of baskin-suit have their rolled brims.
**A new corseuse consists of two squares of fabric sloped off on the shoulders.
**Civre satin or velvet is being used in combination with straw for the spring hats.
*If the street costume is of plain material, the matching cape is lined with gray silk.
*The dresses and the full-skirted frock with straight corsage remains favorites.
**Firills of black ink** edge the
stainless steel surface of a
sufficient dancers' rack of rose, plum
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HOTEL COMFORT
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Mrs. M. B. Comfort, Prop.
WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION
If you suffer with FEMALE
DIDU you suffer with FEMALE
Battered in the lower part of your
Stomach. Battered down. Fatting. Headache.
Periods. If you have that tired,
wornout. Nervous and run-down feel.
have tried all kinds of medicines and
hacked the doctor, and even though you have
sary YOU MAY BE MADE WELL
sary YOU MAY BE MADE WELL
Write for FREE booklet of information and advice today.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN THE AFRO LY WOMAN
AFRO'S
DOMAN'S
GOLDEN RULES FOR L
The rules that apply to love letters are, in most instances, exceptions to the rules of general correspondence.
But assuming that the course of true love runs smoothly, there are still a number of things to avoid in both friendly letters and love notes.
First: Never write affectionate messages on postal cards.
Second: Don't use the firm's paper or that of hotels in writing
Third: Typewritten letters are taboo unless the handwriting is so impossible that it is tedious to decipher.
Fourth: Don't begin a letter by apologizing for not having written before.
Fifth: Don't overdo shang. Shang is piquant occasionally in conversing, through the intentions of the voice, but written in black and white. It is likely to sound like Gordon Maackey's account of a baseball
Sixth: Don't underline words and sentences for emphasis. Only perimental or hysterical women feel the need of crescendo in cor-
DISHES YOU WILL LIKE
DISHES YOU WILL LIKE
Boil one peek of spinach until tender, then drain off the water and chop the spinach into thin pieces. Boil two bacon eggs, salt and pepper to taste and one-half cup of butter. Bake in a hot oven and serve hot with grated cooked eggs.
**Corn Salad**
To one can of corn add one can of pimentos and one cup of chopped celery. Beat in enough stiff boiled dressing to give the desired flavor and put it on lettuce leaves, with radishes and serve very cold.
Apples Baked With Citron
Pare some fine large apples scoop out the cores without going through, place the fruit in an earthnware dish with the core from which the core was removed upward, with a citron peel and one table-spoon of sugar, then bake in a hot oven. When the apples are nearly done pour around them a merely made custard. When the custard is well set it is ready and an account must be made to both the top should be a brown color. Dust with sugar and send to the table in the dish in which it was cooked.
**String Beans**
Wash beans carefully and soak in cold salt water one hour. Then cook in some of water in which bam was cooked. Cook beans in hot ham water without a cover.
Virginia "Biled" Ham
The people of Virginia are not all over the world for the delicious hams they seem always to have in readiness to serve. Virginia household is never cooked until it has been curdled and allowed to age properly. This is often a matter of moats. The ham is then soaked in cold water to cover it. A little vinegar or cider is sometimes added to the
after reorganizing, at which time Rev. W. T. Kenney, pastor of Ebenhacken; Rev. Cornelius Dawson, rector of St. Philips P. E. Church, secretary; Rev. W. H. — pastor of Metropolitan AM. M. G. Gladwell; pastor of St. Philip's P. E. Church, secretary; After the meeting, Mrs. Baker served luncheon. * Miss Goldie Peake entertained friend, pastor Sunday, more than two months. * Miss Rebecca McNeal, of Martin'sburg, a veteran of the war, visiting her mother and other relatives at home. * Mrs. B. Kenney and Miss Jackson, are among the many APRO readers who enjoyed a very happy Easter. * The public school in Ridgley, N. W. is now a holiday school, 19th, very large number assembled. Rev. W. H. Baker and Rev. C. Dawson participated in the program, and Mrs. Jackson is among the many APRO readers and members of McKeniel M. E. Church, tendered their pastor. Rev. Hart, a reception host, established pastor was present and a very pleasant evening was spent, including many kind words of welcome to the incoming pastor. * Mr. Harry Smiley, is seriously ill and confined in the Allegheny County Hospital, is so much impaired and many friend pamphlets are being all the week. * Mr. William Ross, aged 70 years, resided with the late laryn Jones, passed away on April 10, 1900. National services were held Monday afternoon. Rev. W. T. Kenney officiated. * The Pastor of E. E. Goulden, the APRO readers in our vicinity that nowstanding he will be out of the city attending the annual conference, will be made for the regular distribution of the paper. * An elaborate breakfast was served. Mrs. Beecher * Bates on Monday morning, the 17th. Covers were laid for six. Those present were H. H. Baker, Cornelius Dawson, Mr. and Mrs. Beecher Bates. The praises of the host and hostess were being loudly exclaimed as the party separated early in the afternoon.
Mime. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
Hairdressing
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VARIOUS METHODS OF FIXING EGGS
Without doubt, eggs are far less expensive than they used to be, but they have been on the rise since it is a decidedly good time to make use of them rather lazily. Moreover, as spring advances means spring eggs are less desirable it does in the winter, and we like eggs substituted for it once a week—perhaps even for dinner. And for dinner, we admit to eating a week.
Here are some good ways of pre
parting them, ways that add in
loving flavor, and sometimes
birthday value to the egg
themselves.
Rice Omelet
Mix one cup of cold boiled rice with one of warm milk, one tablespoon melted butter, and egg whites to taste to taste. A hot greased skillet will taste an onetle.
Omelet
Remove the crust from a slice of stale bread and put it to soak. Then cut the bread into six equal pieces. Separate the whites and yolks of six eggs; add the soaked bread to the popper and salt; add the whites; stir well together and pour into a saucepan on the range. Cover the pan with the melted butter; cook rather slowly, carefully lifting the edges of the omelet. Set the yolks on half over the other and serve.
Baked Eggs
Butter a shallow baking dish
break the eggs into it, season with
pepper and salt, but still warm.
In a warm platter and serve. Remove
in a warm platter and serve.
Household Notes
—A good brush for plush and velvety fabrics and velvet pad locally filled with sawdust. It will be easy to sweep the floor under if you use a handheld drawer.
—When serving a beef heart add
½ cup steak or beef broth
½ cup
—Never rinse gingham in water which has become soapy. This will insure a good clear color.
—Dry pieces of bread will quickly be converted into crumbs if put through the meat grinder.
CUMBERLAND
Cumberland, Md., April 20—Mrs. Nellie Wilson and grandchildren, Jersey City, for Wednesday for Wheeling, W. Va., to spend Easter with relatives. *Mr. and Mrs. ames, daughter of Mrs. Florence of Washu-
pion, D. C. during the past week
Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
Madison 8766
We will send a gift card to
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FOR DETAILS.
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---
Baked Spinach
Corn Salad
String Beans
respondence. Besides, it ruins the appearance of a letter.
Seventh: Don't use too many exclamation points. The reader has all the sensations of a full celebration and kicks up the heat of celebration and kicks up the heat in a state of exhaustion.
Eighth: Don't abbreviate unless it is absolutely necessary for lack of space. Abbreviations create the impression that the reader is in a four-fold hurry and begrudges the reader he or she is giving to the letter.
Ninth: Don't try to cultivate an "individual" hand. Members of the footlight profession, and more recently, insured that your long ago. Teeth: Don't address personal letters to the office unless absolutely necessary. In the first place, they are likely to be the second, real reason, a worker has no time for personal affairs during office hours.
Eleventh: Don't cross out words and write above them. It is distinctly untidy and also piques the curiosity of the reader as to what you changed your mind about saying
Two-fifths. Don't write at all on
less you have something to say.
with white ham soaks.
The ham is scrubbed thoroughly with a small brush, then placed in a large kettle over fire and covered with plenty of cold water. When water boils the ham is lowered and the ham only allowed to be removed. When ham is cooked until perfectly cold. Then it is removed, skinned and carefully trimmed. Now it is brushed over with two boasted eggs and covered thickly with the breadcrumbs and brown sugar. When the surface is ready for oven it is placed in a dripping pan, sweet eater poured over it and baked for one hour, being frequently basted with liquid in the pan. The ham is served hot or cold and is a most delicate dish garnished with parsley and sliced lemon.
REISTERSTOWN
Reisterstown, Md., April 20 — The Young Man's Improvement Club gave a reception at H. H. Johnson, Thursday night, April 16 in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Johnson who were largely arrested, *Miss Mary Louise Summons of Westminster* visited her friends, *Miss Emily Johnson* and *Patricia Johnson* of Reisterstown, Md. Sunday evening, April 16, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Burton, guest of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Button, the faithless quartet of Morgan Johnson, April 16 for the benefit of the Junior Ability Club which was a great success.
The juniors at the end of April. *Rev. Matthias Williams, the pastor of St. Lakes had early services Sunday and early morning. The Sunday School had their excercised Sunday night and it was attended by all the wold widows of the son has been quite ill for the post week, but is improving. Miss Elia Parker, the pastor of Phoenix two brothers, Mr. Jacob Parker, of Phoenix, Mr. and Mr. Eugene Parker, of Camden, N. J. *Miss Vivie Holmes friendships in the city, *Mrs. Florine Clark, of Battimore, visited her near relative, daytime evening, *Mr. and Mrs. James Curtis and their little daughter made a delicious call to one of their friends of Glynnum Sunday evening, which was greatly appreciated.
Baltimore, Md.
HOUSEKEEPING MERELY PUTTING THINGS IN PLACE
HOUSEKEEPING MERELY PUTTING THINGS IN PLACE
When you come to think of it that way a very large share of the housewife's task consists of cleaning and putting things in their proper place. Washing dishes and clearing up after a meal is nothing in the world but this. We rehearse the meal must be thrown in the refrigerator or food emplaced for future use. They must be put in their proper place. The traces of the meal washed from the sink and sent to hot water and soap, and the dishes when dry must be put on the shelf in their proper place when not used. The kitchen is nothing but putting consists of putting things in their proper place. The proper place for bed things in the day time is laid smoothly in the bed. The spilled soiled clothes must be put in laundry baskets, shoes must be replaced in show boxes or closets, waste paper baskets must be emptied—all part of the same gen-
Decidedly the housewife's task is simplified if she has proper places for everything and if these places are easy to get at. Having things out of place can be hard, housekeeping is easier when there are not suitable places to put them means very difficult housekeeping. For this reason it is important in your kitchen to have a convenient and accessible place for garages, for soap, soiled dishes and other items. Your shelves must be extensive enough so that all your dishes can be put away without having to fit them in like the shelves of a Chinese puzzle. There should be room on your linen shelves so that different sorts of linen, paper, cans, cases, and spreads, etc., can all be in separate piles. These things
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EDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia. TO SKIN BEAUTIFICATION,安慰剂 for dark, calorie stins, used in treatment of skin troubles.
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CONSTANT CARE----NOT LUCK
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A.
PAGE TEN
save time and mental strain.
Stop and think it over. Have
you the right places to keep
things. Often a very little money
is needed to provide better
places. Often it is needed to
shave up here and there that will
repay you. Canfield for the amount
of money extended on them.
LONG GREEN
Long Green, Md., April 29—Feb. 19, Dennis provided the Easter session in Stubby morning at Glen Burrow School, and the Easter program in Glen Burrow School rendered a fine program. "Mr. James Barnes was able to be old again, and Glen Burrow School holidays with friends here." Mrs. M. J. Gaynyn, Dennis Dorothy Gregg and Mrs. J. Gaynyn attended the chicken supper in the home of Mrs. W. Barguey for Wendover preschool, and by the Rose for Wendover school. At Zion Church on Friday was a nice success. "Mrs. Hennings was a nice success," Mrs. Hennings attended the Easter holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Fred, Favreau. "Miss Férenne Florence School, spent the Easter at Barnes School, spent the Easter with Mrs. Jane Ayers and family, Mrs. Ella Henderson and Mr. William Mrs. Ella Henderson and Mr. William of children here on Sunday. Mrs. Nettle Winder is able to be down staircase, and Mrs. Elizabeth Cornwell resent Easter Monday with Mrs. Winn, Mr. Gillaway, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. Gillaway, Mr. and Mrs. James Hurry on Sunday. Lee F. Dennis visited the home and Mrs. Wilson Stokes, Gillaway, and also at the same time christened the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howell, Mrs. Kizish Wells visited Mrs. Elizabeth Cromwell on Sunday. "Mr. Waldo Quickly was able to be gone," Mrs. Waldo Quickly was able to be gone, and Mrs. Matthia Greens and Mrs. Matthia Greens are quite visited at the page of Mr. James Quickside at sweet Mr. Mr. and Mrs. James Quickside at sweet Mr. Mr. and Mrs. James Quickside at sweet Mr. Mr. James Colen at Fairfell, Md. "Mr. Caleb Gaynyn and Mr. Johanna Gaynyn and Mr. Aron Gaynyn are very much
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MUSIC
MOVIES
VAUDEV
National Amusement News
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
WITH
J.A. JACKSON
OF
The
Billboard
For最周 Weekly Theatrical Digest
and Review of the Show World.
All Rights Reserved
Here and There
Artille Brumisom wrote a two column comment to a Toronto paper filled with praise of the "Shuffle Along Fame" Fame will travel.
The Watkins and Purrey music publishing house have twenty numbers and for publication during the commummer.
The P.G. Leavery band assembles at Southern Hotel, 259 W. 37th Street, New York City, on April 27th for the season with the Barrum and Bailey-Ringing Bros. show. Up-grade the P.G. is at his home 10510 Cedar Grove, Cleveland, Ohio.
Creamer and Layton are about to play a southern song with the distinctive characterism with the will combine with "Mother" 'Mother' or 'Mule' or a ghost straw, but this pair of clever producers have trained us to expect movements from them.
Allen Bryant and Roland C. Irving are collaborated on a jazz number and "sweetheart, you've got it all."
Stanford Williams, House manager of the Recent theater, Baltimore has a elected Pictures Corporation of production, D. C. Eddie Green, burger, is the President and promoter.
Bell and Bell, now billing them as Bell and Wright, have been in Chicago for a long time. Compaction on the T. O. A. according to a recent letter from the act. They are reported to be beheaded over the Gus Sun Time now.
The "Shuffle Along" road show has been scheduled. The authorities that it is about to break them. Week stands in Newark and Atlantic City scheduled for the last two weeks to establish the company as full fledge big city show. The class do which it property belongs.
Besides being the beneficiary of highly favorable comment from all of the Boston papers; and getting his basal banner, Gilpin and the Emperor among the Salvin Theater in that city is reported to have taken Topomaye during the two last weeks of Least. Some stuff when one notes the strong attractions billed for the other houses during those weeks.
T. J. Gibson, of the Standard and Doubleday Theaters, of Philadelphia, the president of the new Stammerers and Performers circuit according to an announcement from Mr. Cummings, the President of the new Circuit.
Raz Time Dilly Tucker, Producing performer, musician and Pacchino Director, has become the Theatrical Editor of the Western Escape of Los Angeles, another paper with amusements in charge of a man that knows the show business.
Dick Abrams, Dramatic and movie actor writes from Chicago to that he will soon be back on Broadway.
The Philharmonic Orchestra, W. C. Johnson soloist and the Elks Quartet were the musical features at the Lodge of Sorrow in Norfolk, VA, recently.
*Thump! Pump!* the health clown, feature of *asco Health Week*, a campaign conducted by the Urban League of New York was held Tuesday by the Coleman Brothers Migs, on Friday April 7th. 2000 children were entertained.
H. S. Payne, for years as feature of the *Tower Seat* and other shows is now doing his magic and a lecture on Spiritualism at churches in and around New York.
On Sunday April 9th Dewayman was the unexpected feature of musical good conduct with the Lodge of Sorrow in closings and appointments, he was switched out, a big act and given a spot for a role. The chance showed why he is best known for *Burlesque* shows, is a real centrionist.
The Alams, Sanders and Robinson
gripped rosting houses on the
long enough to take a little trip
Mexico at Tia Junna, and imbibe
the spritz of libery. Whether
had hadds a clutch with the
new press clippings from San Diego
dare not say. Well the act is
model East we shall all see what
makes it go so big.
Ben Strasser, Movie producer of
Boston-Salem, N. C., brought two
colored feature pictures to New
York to serve for distributors on
cell tent. He was a Billboard
eller.
Scots Troutlenders is the name of
the colored show on the Veal Brother
Brutal Company.
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THE LADY OF THE MIDDLE EAST
ROLAND HAYES
STARS IN PARIS
America's Great Colored Tenor Lionized by Both French Men and Women Last Week
Artist so Swamped With Engagements He is Unable To Carry Out Program Paris, France, April 17.—Musical France has simply gone wild about Roland Hayes. Following in the wake of London, the French capital had itself at the feet of the great American colored tenor without a struggle.
A.
Mr. Hayes came here after a year and a half of continuous recitals and concerts in England. He left America in May, 1920 with the idea of spending a few weeks in London and Paris, and then touring West Africa to study the folk songs of the natives. Instead of a few weeks in London, Mr. Hayes was there for eighty-three months, and returned to Paris to access the Channel April to Sth to keep engagements in England.
His first engagements here was an artistic triumph. Neglected in his own country, French artists besieged him with offers to sing, private musicals brought him fame and social cognition. Gabriel Fiorentino, conductor, has the next season of Colonne Concerts, Joseph Salmo, distinguished violi-cellist, showed Mr. Hayes marked attention. Mrs. Alexandre Dumas, descendant of the great French novelist, who boasted to him can blood in his veins invited Mr. Hayes to dine and afterwards pressed him with a photograph of great-great-grandfather.
Mr. Hayes has found his European stay so profitable that he has postponed his African trip indefinitely.
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J. A. JACKSON'S PAGE
Morgan College Students
WHO WILL APPEAR
In The
Shakespearean Play
"MID SUMMER
NIGHT DREAM"
AT
The Douglass Theatre
Friday, April 28,
AT 9:30 P. M.
Tickets are being rapidly
disposed of, for this entertainment, and, reservations
should be made now by
writing or telephone to Morgan College, or tickets may
be secured from any of the students.
TICKETS ON SALE at—Femel's
Pharmacy, The Douglass Theatre
and Harris' Pharmacy.
CHAS C KEY
Ethel Waters, the Black Swan Jazz queen, and her troupe has just finished a tour of Texas under the guidance of the band. The band's booking and publicity methods in Arkansas and Texas was highly profitable to the Walton-Pace producing Co., who own the attraction. The band's show went into the T. O. B. A. house in New Orleans The Lyric, owned by Mr. Bennett, president of the circuit. The band, who is handling the business end of matters with the company, it will be June first before the southern engagements will permit a return to New York. The band will also show that the Boston office has handled Mame Smith having been as successfully routed by them.
The New White Stylist Steppers, with Shim Jin Austin as business manager is in the Texas-Louisiana territory. The week of the tenth was spent at the Liberty Theater, Galveston, between Houston, Texas, and Lake Charles, La.
The Colonial Theater in Wheeling employed Parkers Orchestra of Columbus, the band of the late 1920s. They are still there and have acquired a reputation as "the boys that make the picture talk" Jack Holmes, Leroy Hurry, Harry Lester and Clyde Richman constitute the bunch, and they are a fineoking bunch of hads.
Last season Verberi H. Ewing and his band impress audiences with his shows. So showcased that this season he is back with an stunner with a new album on Sunday. Starred Concert,
Matt Starks, Archie Crows, Frank Davis, Cissie Goss, Jason Aspen, Michael Brown, Todd Wells, W. E. Cranahan, Dave Meadows, Karl Johnson, and David E. Kendall the latter used by the artists who compiled the outfit this year.
Still Moving
"Shuttle Along" the sensational musical comedy written by Messrs. Miller and Lissie and Sissie and Blake completed its 47th week in New York last week to a business of about $8,000 for the week; and is expected to run all summer. It is said that when the authors wrote this show it helped to two theatrical productions of Washington, D. C. who turned it down cold.
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Washington, D. C. Activities
The "Smarter Set" is reported to have a great draw at the big Lincoln Theater. Migr. Byars regrets that there are not more companies of the sort available. At the Attacks in Norfolk this company did $2500 more than the previous weeks attraction did in the same house.
The S. Cotidge Taylor Choral society has been revived. The "Atonement" will be the initial offering. Roy W. Tibbs, of Howard University has been elected director. James A. Cobb is the president.
Fletcher Jordan is now managing the Broadway Theater on Seventh Street. The house, which was opened in 1914, plays in the country was opened by Rufus G. Byars. The owner (white) recovered possession from Mr. Byars, threo litigation that grew out of misunderstandings as to the terms of the lease; and placed the property in the hands of the new manager. On Saturday . . . april 14th the Dudley-Murray corporation completed the installation of a mammoth organ in the Howard Theater, which recently opened a musical col. 'Pictures is the prevailing policy.'
The Rousseau, a new picture house built by the Southwest Picture Corp. on F. Street, S. W. between second and third floors, completion will be operated as part of the Dutley-Murray chain. Occasional vaudeville may be offered.
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JOHN H. HARRIS
Genuine "Western" Photo-Drama
Featuring All-Colored Cast
Beaded By Anita Bush,
Coming
"The Crimson Skull" the latest
screen release of the Norman Film
Company, and said to be the first
genuine "western" photo-drama
ever produced with an all-colored
cast, will shortly be exhibited in
this city at one of the larger movie
houses catering to colored patron-
The Maryland rights for the showing of this picture have been bought by Mr. M. Rosen owner of American Theatre, but the first run will be shown at one of the bigger houses negotiations for which are now under way. The stars of this production are Anita Bush, well remembered by theatregoers of this city as a stage performer, and Laurence Cheauhain. Another character of the cast, almost full of pinheads in Steve Jobs' own legged player who will be remembered also, by those who saw the "Green-eyed Monster" Cheauhain has appeared in almost every "colored" film that was ever produced.
The story tells of the terrorizing of Boley Oklahoma, a town inhabited by an all-colored population, by a band of outlaws lead by a desperado known as the "Crimson Skull." Besides the players already mentioned, the balance of the cast is strong among which is Bill Pickett a gourmet Negro cowboy with world's champion wild west records to his credit. Watch for the first showing.
EMPEROR JONES IN BOSTON.
Charles Gilpin in the "Emperor Jones" is said to have hit a bad slump in the business of that drama last week, the third of the current engagement when the gross receipts for the week amounted to only about $6,000.
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Next Door To Regent Theatre
CALL: WRITE OR TELEPHONE FOR RESERVATIONS
Lexington, Ky., April 19—Despite the chinor that is still being made in some quarters to "lay the axe to the root" of the jazz tree, this popular form of music still reigns as king, the issuance of its tenacious "life" may be the success of an organization of musicians composed of young men of Lexington who have been playing the past winter at dances of the leading Northern colleges; admittedly the cradle of the country's culture. The band was engaged to go to Yale College to play a dance. Harvard, not to be outdone by her rival, sent for the band to come to Boston. From there, it was called to Hanover New Hampshire, and then to Columbia University. New York. The personal W. L. Smith, leader; Hayes; Ernest Barnett and Shaulter Campbell.
Ernest Efleibstein, an agent in London has sent a list of acts who have disappointed him to the U. S. Among those named are Lula Coutes and the now dissolved team of Howard and Craddock.
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MOVIE REVIEWS
BY
WM. E. READY
Elks Band In Fredericksburg
On April fourth, the Elks band of Fredericksburg, Va., their first public appearance at the Opera house in that city. The band is equipped with a $9000 set of instruments and has been under the tutelage of Prof. James E. Miller of Washington, D. C.
How Bert Williams
Made Last Record
According to Variety, a leading weekly theatrical publication, Bert
According to Variety, a leading weekly theatrical publication, Bert Williams the famous colored comedian who died about a month ago got up from his bed to make his last record: entitled, "Not Lately" which will shortly be released.
C. V. B; A. To Give Benefit
On Saturday April 22, the Colored Vaudeville Beneficial Association, an organization of big time vaudeville performers in New York will give a show at the Vaudeville Club to secure funds to continue the relief department of the organization.
Says Variety: "Williams was in his last mortal illness when he got up from bed to record the number at the earnest solicitation of the maker. He was advised by his physicians not to undertake the exertion, but put their counsel aside.
The association numbers more than a hundred vandeville act having a total of nearly three hundred per formers.
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MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT
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MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT
BRANCH OFFICES: 504 East Street, 2109 Drulph Hill Avenue
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY
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Funeral Directress and Embalmer.
Images and Limousines for All Occasions
FFERSON ST. BALTIMORE, MD.
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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.
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GEORGE H. HOLLAND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
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M.
PAGE ELEVEN
CORNER BIDDLE ST
DRUID HILL AVENUE
BALTIMORE, MD
Baltimore, Md.
THOUSANDS AT
CHURCH SUNDAY
Many Unable To Hear
Bishop Johnson; Lin-
- coln’s President at
7 Grace
Musie and flowers were the out-
standing features of tie Easter fes-
tival. last Sunday. and the clear
either brought out thousands to
listen to sermons on the Risen
Christ. all of the churehes were
crowded. !
St. John's A. M. F. Church was
yoo. small co” xecommmodate the
crowd which wished to listen to
Bishop J. Albert Johnson. « former
pastor there. The audience in-
Clided people in every walk of
fife, many Gf theta coming from
churches of ther denominations,
Bishop. and Mrs. John Hurst and
Re ennrles Ee Stewart, presid|
ing elder of the Baltimore divtriet,
Were iinong thoxe present.
Taking for his theme. Mary
weeping at the tomb of Christ for
her supposed lost Lord, he said,
Weeping: persons cannot see clearly.
“The Bishop suid that the term
“conversion Js not much used now=
aedays and asserted that there is
an absence of the old-time sire
When a penitent sw a vision on tne|
eve of conversion, Many people,
he suid, hiane their shortcomings
from. things without, when the
cause lies within, He declared one
eannot shape his religivts hfe by
the experiences of his next-door,
one person Is different from those
of another, Passion and feeting
murs give Way te thoughtfual suidy
of what ix God's wil along with the
AbIny tw do Une will |
Lincolnites AC Grace
With 4 beantifut interior, having
just been renuvated and decorated
With Howers, the main anastorium|
of Grace Presbyterian Church was
crowded with Worshipers to hear|
Dr, dubn Rendall. President of Lins
coin University, last Sunday inora-
ing. A fine musies? program was!
Presented under the direction of
Mrs. Bula Fortune.
Overtiowing rongrexations greet-|
ed Rev, M. 8. Willis three thnes at
Fulton Baptist Charen, | He preweh-
ed in the morning wn "The Resur-
rection of Christ™ und in the after~
huon on “Christ Heclares: Himself
the Resurrection.” |
émn high masses at St. Parnahos
Large congresations heard
Solemn High Misses at St, Baran
bas, St. Peter Claver, St. Francis,
and Sr, Manie’s Catholle Church
last Sunday morning. Father J.
Henry Dorsey said high mass at
the List-mamed chureh. |
‘The early morning servicers at
Ames Memori:d, John Wesley,
Sharp Street. Memorial, Metrapeti-
tan, Me Zion, Whatcoat, and other}
churches were nrgely attended, |
Bishop Joshust Jones was unable
te come. to the city te prench at
Trinty A. Mb. Chureh, and the!
pastor, iter. A. J, Gaines, preached
on the meaning of Uhe Resurrection.
Cantatas were held at Lenden-
hall Street Baptist, Hethel, Perkins
Square and other churches.
Hey, Joseph 1p Butler preached
on “He Is Kisen’ ‘at Calvary A.M,
J. Zion Chureh and in the evening
the Sunday School had charge of
the services.
‘A tomb. laden with flowers,
erected by Hoy Scouts, added real-
fem to the services at Waters A.
M. E. Chureh last Sunday. ‘The
fomb will remain intaet until after
Uhis, Sunday. Bishop John durst
will fll the pulpit Sunday morning,
“Metropolitan, Morning Star Bap-
tist, Sharon. Baptist, First Colored
Baptist, Bhenezer, John Wesley,
Asbury), Centennial, Macedonia,
Psalmist Bapulst, ‘Trinity Baptist,
Whatcout M. E.. St. Paul M. E.
First Peopie’s’ Church, Vayne Me-
morial and) Wayman had large
congregations all day.
Dr. Ernest Lyon filled the pulpit
uwice at Amex Memorial A. M. E.
Church and in ihe evening receiv=
€d over, 100 persons into Tull mem-
bership:
Rev. Br, George F. Bragg con-
ueted three services at St, James
Protestant Episcopal Church. A
special musieal program was, ren-
@ered under. the direction of Mr.
‘Saha Carcinaten:
¥alls Five Feet;
Breaks Two Ribs
When George Clatterbuck, 28
yenrs old. 712 Vincent Allen,
stepped from the kitchen door last
Friday about 1p. m., onto a board
which covered an area way fn the
back yard. the board gave way
dropping him a distance of five
fect, He was thken to the Frank-
din Square Hoxpiuu, where physi-
ehuns stated Unit the injured man
was suffering from a fracture of the
eleventh and twelfth rib on the left
site and contusion of the abdomen.
He remained in the hospital.
~ §TEPPED BEFORE TRUCK
Attempting to cross the street at
West and Race streets last Priday
afternoon, Florence Haines, white,
West street. stepped in front of a
truck driven by George S. Wright,
113 West street, amd was knocked
to the ground. She was cut slight-
ly about the arms and head.
7 HOME HOURS: 7 to? P.M.
PHONES:
Kealdence: Madison 7744-W
Ottice: St. Paul 4488
ROY S. BOND
LAWYER
215 ST. PAUL PLACE
‘formerly Courtland St.
Hooms 49-51 Third Floor
Res. 1620 Druid Hill Ave.
The Knickerbocker Building
and Loan Asso,
)* $137 -N. FREMONT AVE.
,... (hear Latayette Ave.) :
<Pienty-of Money to Loan on
First and Second.Mortgages .
I. ‘on Easy:Terms
- B HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
So Phone, MAA. 3277
BOW. WALDEN, Pres.
2 CRRea.: 101% N.Carey:8t. +
CBS SUT MAG: BETIS
“sl Nota §-Poblic "Drop card or calli
seocsosesesensscoavecooscescsecunssooomm™
_WHY NOT TRY OUR ‘
SEMI-FINISH FAMILY WASH _ |
} All body clothes returned washed but damp ready §
: for ironing, ‘
} All Flat work returned neatly ironed and folded. ¢
6 cents per pound. ‘
25 Ibs. or less $1.50 ‘
Call Madison 1664 ‘
DRUID LAUNDRY : !
917-1634 DRUID HILL AVE.
} Our drivers or clerks will explain this service to you. |
on on ae te te tte te tn Hn th tate ttn OOh22200068020060000000006
WANTED! |
25 Brickyard Laborers 25
APPLY ,
BURNS & RUSSELL CO.
. Dundalk Junction
Take Sparrows Point Car - |
i, : . 3
AVEO BV EBV BEALE LGA as RADI a
4 —AT— i
4 , CATONSVILLE - &
4 Winters Ave., and Old Frederick Road 3
4 Where: our people are BUYING LOTS. <
3} Aro YOU going to be ONE of thom? - &
4 ‘We will build you a home just as you want tt, é
J it will cost you only a SMALL down payment and therentter
J _ easy weekly payments: E
4 We «will take you to sce these lots FREE of charge, whenever §
‘you aro ready to go, just call our offices and we wil! make
3} _an-appointment to take you any time.
4 This is beyond any doubt. the best colored development tn
3 Maryland. 3 E
Sf Ack us to prove it? We can. FE
4 ‘Three Automobiles At Your Service FRER.
Zi Come Go To Sco These Lots Today * - &
SJARCHIN-M. GRAY, Gen. Agt. and . ACORN BUILDING ASS'N §
S|" “813:N. Mount Strect Cor. Gilmor & Mulberry Sts,
S Phone:-Gilmor 0696 <i. ‘Phone: Gilmor 0047
RRR SS IESE Ea
:
|. RB. MeRary Here
PR. Raster MeRary. past grand
masier of. the Masonic Grand
Lodge of North Carolina and one
of the best known graduates of
Lincoln University, has been in the
City for several weeks under £Oing
treatment ata local hospital. Mr.
MeRary was the defendant in 2
sensational suit filed by H. B. Var-
ner, a white publisher of Lexing-
ton, N. G., two years ago, in which
the latter alleged that Meary had
stolen the directions of his wife
The suit was subsequently settled.
Mr MeRary was a guest at the
aster Sunday morning festivities
ee jocal lodges of Masons,
BOWIE NOR, SCHOOL
Principal and State Super-
intendent “Pass Buck”
About Teachers’ Salary
Bowie, Md. Apr. 20—Bawie Nor-
mal Sebrool hase closed For this year
This Ix not the vilielal notiee at
tne Prineipal sur Supervisor Tt
Bagton sin change of Colored
Schools, but is the plan evidence
of facts: Horne in on the observer
here.
‘Phe Schoot was closed mere thn
Ja month seco because of crowded
Gormitury steciiities aid Taek of
fitter supply, both, of which, on-
Tangered the pupils health. Since
that time no one has speared on
Nie ‘scene to drill the new artesian
Well ur to mtloe say arrangements
For a new dormitory. :
‘Those nround the sehaol when
Interviewed ectated i wow elt
hetief that the school was closed
ih went fall de tho the Pine
eiyat anit State. authusicies wore
eacatinig this fact Teor tie Yb
fier Teachers have not received
any salary for two months,
Reporters from the APRO-
JAMEIICAN were unable “to et
fay slatiement about Bowie. from
Superintendent. Cook or Supervisor
Huington, Vrineipal Juries was
iva seen in Batiiniore ‘Thuesay.
Piette referred the AKG. reporter
to Saerinendent Cook. A velar
a Superintendent. Cook's fie re
forred the reporter buck to, bvinct-
Par James, Mae admitted that the
Whol was closed for is sek
| The sult Of SIGN) Tae hee
reach of promise fnstituted by
Mine Lillia, i. West, manivurist,
Jaainst Dr, Johny C. Leak, se ehirop=
DHIne twas settled before it reached
Thuge Stamp. in Part Two of the
Ghiy Court. ‘The tering of settle-
nent were nee announced.
a=
opRATERNITY EAD MERE
| Samupl G. Atkins, a senior lave
students ae Yule” University andl
Hvaid bastions of the Omexa 1st
Pi Fraternity, was fn the eily Lest
Saturday evening. to aneet with
Tmenibers of the iueal euapter it
the weidence of Dr, E/N. Care
Uox0,"3524 Druid Hill avenue.
MRS. BAKER ASKS DIVORCE
Suit for an absolute divorce has
deen filed hy Mes, Chirke Baker hy
hor attorney JS) Davis from her
Rushing obrank Eaker on the
grounds of desertion:
‘The. Bakers were married June
ia, 1d in. Wheeling, W. Vite anid
jlived together until Maren 24,
TH when ie is suid he left her,
in. Pier was tase heard of
wees te Athehiead
WOUNDED MEN STILL
__ AT FORT MSHENRY
elena
There are 150 colored oversens
veterans at the Fort MeHenry
Hospital, ‘some maimed, others
With toberentosis, a_numher suf-
ering from the deadly poison
gases of the Germans and stil
Gthers suffering trom various kind
Of diseases contracted in the
work! war, Many of these veterans
Are lonely, coming from out of
iown aad wish that colored men
fund women living in the city would
come down frequently sthd give
them An entertzinment of some
kind.
It is said that no colored organ-
jaation has appeared at Uy Nox:
pital to give the soldiers ansehter-
Grinment. since Decemner. The
fasion for this js not explained,
whether the colored people of Fal-
tihore being negligent in regard to
their duty or else tind it hard to
Ket periaisaion for such.”
‘There i a. ble reereation and
reading. room at the hospital,
which is used mainiy by whites, it
Isak. ‘The colored ave said to De
avlawed to nse it sit the Heme the
whites ave eating dinner:
tthe 149. colored suldiers are
lonely and witnl the people of Bal-
Uimore ta provide aecasional enter-
tainment for them,
Accused of Robbing Poor Boxes of
‘Two Catonsville Chivehes
Charged with robbing the poor
hoses of St. ‘Timothy's. Protestant
Hpisenpal Chureh snd Satene Tava
Kelieal Lutheran Churen, | both
White, of Catonsville, Walter An-
Yerson, 43 yeurs old, of Catonsville,
wus held for the action of the
Grand Jury by Magistrate Knonde
last. Friday:
When searched ar.the-police sta-
tion, Anderson hia $3) fn smal
change ia his poelers.
~-GOUPLE FOR $10,000
Thru Father Charges White
Storekeeper With False
Arrest
Suit aggregating $10,000 was fled
last Sauurday in City court by Ver-
hon Suxga, 1a yeurs ull, 1728, Or-
leans sirest, thru his father Chibts
Suges. far malicious felse arrest
fn Relruary 2, bist asninst Ven-
jamin Spiro white whe conducts a
Gothing store at 01g ON, Gay
Street and his fiancee, Rosa Freed-
land, 2419 5. North street, who fs
employed by Spire in his store,
VAccarding to the suit filed, the
woman chimed that the hoy ¢n-
tered the store to make w purchase
and upon leaving the store stole
het meshbug valued at $20 and
$160 whieh it contained. She
Claimed that the money was what
Sie had saved for their wedding.
"he ease was dismissed against
the hoy by Judge Willinms in Ju
venile Court om the lick at evi-
dence, ‘he boy's parents immedi-
ately filed suit for damages wlesing
fakes meres
— =
A. JACK THOMAS
1 { sing
Will | Play Plano :
mence: vou How 704) Sy ny tind Toseument
: é | Compose aud Arrange Muslo 7
WRITE, PHONE, CALL . i :
Aéolian Conservatory Of Music _
41418 Drofd HI Are. Phone Madison 1741-3
» igs eine J
BR MAYER.
| Registered ‘Optometrist :
532 NORTH GAY STREET
EYES EXAMINED ‘ Glasses if needed
FREE made at Lowest Prices
is m
Macbeth Photo Studio
1330 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., near Lafayette
OPPOSITE DOUGLASS THEATRE
I beg to announce to my patrons and the -
public that from and after February 15, I
will be located at my new and improved
studio as above, where I ask a continuance
of patronage and can render my best service
ARTHUR L. MACBETH, Photo Artist
MAd. 8961-V *
epee NU-HAIR TAR
eS er ere ee :
PL tte agsesio am Oa Ee
nee
aces Ber et ee
PA a|_PRICE So CENTS
aie © _{A\FOR BALD SPOTS
eee AND DANDRUFF
Sees ps Me OAs cts, saat vosiaze ¢
oho Agi 2 gal? stations vosiage |
i ee Acts directly upon the
daertees. > fd|Scalp and Roots of the
; © i 6) Ja| Halr; stops the Hair from
Rey ame Aa falling out and removes |
Lesa eee eeeaeeen| Dandruft and gives new
eee ee ea| life and fyll growth.
— ~~ Is guaranteed product
Bee ieee | to retain the straightening
I and gloss of the Hair dur-
Be Se Pera! ing the warmest and most
a | irctement weather. ‘iias
ee Fee} and Is dally standing the |
Fadl test una proving ali we
ai claim for it.
‘At ull Drug Stores or
thru local distribution,
IVORA JONES, 330 N. Jonathan Street
. Hagerstown, Maryland. :
MME. M. KING MFG, CO. :
. 1510 Penna, Ave., Baltimore, Md... |
Dr. Rendall Preaches
Rev. Dr. John’ Rendall, presi-
dent of Lincoln University, prench-
oe a the Power of the Resur-
fection” at Grace Presbyterian
Church tase Sunday morning. He
feserted that every Sunday is 2
fecurreetion morn.
Spuring the day he met many of
tne local alumnl of the university,
And discussed with them plans for
freater work at the institution,
br, FN. Cardozo, an aluninus of
the university. took “him for a
Unive bane tie city in the after.
hen While In the city he was
the euewt, of Rev. J.P Colbert
faster of Grace Church and a
braduate of Lincoln.
Speaks On Opportunity
In an address on “Seif Improve-
ment and Seif Made Men" at the
Third “Seventh, Day Adventist
Chureb " jast_ Sunday afternoon,
Attorney Kay §. Bund paid tribate
io mang. lialtimoreans why hitd
byereume the ubsiseles of early
He and gane tothe top. He
asserted That success comes Dy
hard. Work, study. and handicaps
Should not be regarded ax insti
mountable.
The kate Jobn IE Morphy, pob-
lisher at the APRO-AMERICAN.
was eulogized aS a mau who had
Climbed over the hill of difficulty
in inany places and who Nad lett
2 mommnent in his newspaper.
coop HOPES To MEET
The Grand Council of the Grang
United Order af Good Hope will
hold. tx semi-aimital session at
Good Hope Hall the second week
in May.
DR. ROYLE GETS JUDGMENT
Tndgment for $97 was rendered
in ‘the People’s Conrt est Saturday
for Dr, E. Mayfield Hoyle aginst
Wiltian H.W. Gray aml his wite
Mrs, Estelle Gray. for professional
serviers he claimed to have ren
dered Mrs. Gray,
ALLEGED PICKPOCKRTS
NABBED BY DETECTIVES
eo eee
Three alleged pickpockets who
gave their nates as felt Carter,
William sinith of Philztetphio, ad
Melvin Walker of 1307. Argyle
Avent were picked wp last Sarit
tay by detectives Cooney, Donn
ind Harborne of detective Mend:
inisrters sind lodged dn thie Contre
Voller station. Tt is acid they
Were Working tains enroute to
Havre De Grace,
‘The home of Kev. Reyant Jf, Wil-
Tinns, 921 N. Carey. street, wits
slightly damaged last Friday about
Tas am. When aw vil stove in
the kitchen’on the second floor ex-
ploded.. There was no damage done
to the furniture of no one injured,
‘she house was covered by In
ae tee
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
—_——_ $$
For tho first tine in its history
the Alumni Aésociativa of the Col-
ored High School will hold memor-
{al services for the dead among Its
members from the classes of 1884
down until 1921. ‘The services wil
probably. be held at Sharp Street
Memorial M. E. Church some time
in May.
Among the dead are: James FP,
Johnson, Mrs. Frances Gray Mur.
ray, Henry Harris, Heber B, Whar-
ton, Mrs, Lillie Murphy ‘Thomp-
son, Arthur E, Bowen, Mrs, Cor-
helia Mason Cook, Walter Harris,
Charles Lester, Joseph. Mat-
thews, Miss Ada ‘Thompson, ‘Miss
Frances Waring, Miss Anne Smith
Mise Rexendia” Waring and Mery
Mamie Neal Syfer,
Fyery man wants a better home.
‘The one he has, or Uhe one in which
he lives, be IU ever so good, Js never
catirely. satisfactory. Does your
Home fultil your ideal of the plrce
In Which thase who are dearest to
you have to spend the greater part
Of their lives’ Remember that the
Test. Home on earth is none to
goad for them.
SNTE you knew it were within your
power to provide this Home today,
you Would probably de so. 10 is
Within your power at least to Secure
the most imporcint Hen That enters
Inte the realization of that Ideal.
rind that is-the Site upon whieh
that Hone should stand
This Site should be in a good
suite with il the conveniences
Evailable for modern Tone.
where the Kiddies ean romp std
play free Troma thee daungers of Ure
tity streets, sad where, after a hard
day's til ainung, the Drain-racking
hoises wf ait aver-erowded, htisy
Gls, one gets that refreshing rext—
the result of an unbroken steey
Which only thos: who live in the
Subttebs ate privileged to enjos’-
organ Park Talis all the re-
quirements tor stich a Home in that
He has spacious Its, jmaved streets,
Concrete Wales, Se Werke, was, Wie
ter, cleetrieity, and Une proper re-
Strigtions whieh call geod suburbs
Should have, You eau secure one
Be these Sites an Une sbeferred Wty
ment plans When sou are ready to
huild we will furnish your plans,
Jjuihl anu finance the Heme for you.
‘The number of luis available for
ale ts being reduced daily, sad this
Thay be yout Kast apportunity ty Se-
dure an dea Some Site in this
suburb,
Clip the coupon fram the adver:
tiscnent in another part of the
paper, mail it ta us, ant we shall
Hladiy firnigh further Jaformation
Nhont the Sites, Homes, or building
thereof.
+) CHIZEN'S INVESTMENT CO.
“Advt
ar pavry. mcaba ears erin Ni
' CutRate Druggists
5 in Street
Penna. Avenue and Dolphin Stree
YOUR DRUG STORE — — YOUR DRUG STORE
‘We want you to think of us as your Druggist. We want you to know that here aut
can feel at home. Everyone of our clerks is interested in your personal needs and is
eager to put that personal feeling into work which makes buying here an e:sy oa 7
pation. You will find that we have everything for your need’ and that we cheerfully
give you the proper personal attention.
al
Tone up that system with special spring tonics. Purify the blond and clean the
eystem out of all impurities that have accumulated there. /
DYNAMIC TONIC, 70c and $1.50 :
Proesler Sarsapariiia Compound.....6...002c0eeeesee eee eee sence s+ BG and ey
A. D. S. Sarsaparilia Compound. .....- 2.66.66 e eee heer eee ne
Syrup of Hypophosphites Compound. 00... e ee ccc eee ceeeeaseengs SEE
Ellsir of Iron Quinine and Strychinlue. ..0.0.00 2222S on, Bie #4 He; Pint 7
§PECIAT—Sarsaparilia- with Iodide—Regular. $1.20) Bottle, 79¢
-—— TOILET ARTICLES
Gf all brands and kinds. ‘The-celebrated DAY DRBAM line, ‘along with your fevorklt
* brand. Soaps, Creams, Face Powders, and Talcum. Look ser our stock.
\
—— HOUSECLEANING HELPS |
Get After Those Pesky Things
aN ey sons, Ete
Everything to help ‘you with the job. Germincides, finsectides, Polsons, &I
and at prices that are right, ‘.
. Poterman’s Discovery, 15¢ and 25¢ Sulphape Candles, 5¢ UP
Rat Paste, 25¢ ‘Sponjges, 10¢ UP <n
—— armas te. Ream wi
i ss
The “AFRO”: Has Room §
For A FIRST CLASS
READ— |
Tt is absolutely useless for any fl
person to write, call or phone; :
who ia not a competent stone-
hand, and afraid of work... ff
‘The RIGHT Salary
to the RIGHT Man. |
Newspaper make-up Essenilal |
"address
MR. “JOHN” |
628 N. EUTAW STREET )
PALTIMone, MD.
4ll correspondence confidential
Sai cA ENA
SSeS
GET THE DeWITT HABIT
Let Us Do Your Baking
DeWitt Daylight Home Baking
COMPANY
1527 Pemnsylvania Ave.
Bread, Rolls, Pies, Cakes
+ HOT ROLLS TWICE DAILY
Mornings 8-9 Evenings 5-6
‘Hot cross burns all through Lent
a Phone: MAdison 8213-3
Wholesale and Retail
Cleaning and Dyeing
Mt. Vern 3830 ot.
4 Suits Sponge = Sa
i Pressed $1.50 ek
cms ee
ressing Club & Gana
fat Kenovators | FP ®
Ludles' & Gents’ Garments
Cleaned, Dyed and Altered
[Suits Pressed, Huta Cleaned and
Reblocked While You Wait
400-2. Druid THD Ave,, at Eutaw
Free Call and Delivery
Leeper apneic
NN a MUL
aD e aod
SEIN 1.0114 ea
Bane c/s ones
AU work; Gaaranteed
eee Ce Rade
eC Ba Ab/ ANA
| Madison 7580 E
| MONTAGUE |
| aye, Lar,, Nose, Throat,
: \SANITARIUM |
(Fitting of glasses, Removings
Cataracts, Adenoids and {
Tonsils:
iFree Clinics Mon. & Fri!
| 205 P.M.
| De. W. H. Montague |
2038 McCulloh St. , |
| "Baltimore, Md. - ‘|
PAGE TWEijy
‘ ctiateaichanpdumiie ase
a 3 pf
4g K 2 7 a’
mG aN Uf f X . TT
i ba \ ted > t
S/H eS /f
ACSA ey LL) C)
Te Nair an eerie mee Yip rhireee Lanne tee,
(CESAR Gd a e3 HES a> ON peer oy
eS Perea Ort ELE
Lee 88 8 OM Bo ee StARLHTs a PUMMNONEANTAL,
Eee 2 3 erate
Se LAER RIEL TITEL TI
SSeS ee eS
Se
_ = =
f
DATES for BROWN'S GROVE and STEAMER STARLIGHT
AND ALL POINTS ON THE BAY
Also From Towns on the Bay to Brown’s Grovsfl
epnis js the only steamer and the only park in the State of{}
Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Colores |
People. 7
fn order to secure choice dates, apply at énce to
CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BROWN |
2103 Drold-Hilll Avenue Phone, Madison s23g|
or call WALTER R. LANGLEW
1418 Jefferson Street Phone: WOlfe 4222
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sund:
evengae trom now unul the first of May. Be sure to give your
eyeriittee authority to secure dates when application is made
commitively no dates will be held In reserve, Captain Brown
a4 Pyait on any committee who wishes to engage dates. “Mate!
Mele “appointments by. phone or letter. Improvements and
your Ventures are conunually being added to the bout and grove
for the comfort and enjoyment of our patrons,
The following -dates have beenbooked: iia}
26e-Trinkty A. M. E, SS,
May 27—8t. Paul's M. ELS. S,
27—Morgan Collewe « -- 4 28 Arue “Reformers,”
g0-¥, MCA. x 0—Doctor's Coachman Jr, Aun
JUNE (Soonlights)
(Day Excursions) : JUNE
“2—Minervas, : tate Hour Sociat,
4A. Jack ‘thomas’ Band. 5—Ushers, St, John a. M. B. Chu
3—Nonperiels 8—Ualon Bridge Measure ant Bee
8." Glee Chun _filay Arseciayon
§—Morgan Bene! F—international—-Beutherheon
SHERI AMUN, 2, Metopoitn 3t. "rion ant ciern Si Eid
, Church, g—Leapyear Sewing Circl
yg—Priuiienee Benefclat Soclety. 8 —Leelngon Peace “aid” Play
Fcindependent A. M. FE, Church. aint
po—Kowntain Baptist Church. L—Progressice Pleawure Asem
Hoerom Annapolis: to York. 18—Trouress
31—From Annapols Laquay School. TETSU are churen
33—fale ‘Hour, Seclal, chnren & 5, $20 —Peraimid Advance Club,
26—Peopie's Chien wurch & S. S:32_Noctors Coackmans Jr.
Poel zeanel pata Gomen's Con- 3g—poctors oachmans tr Ai
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28 om 4, 31, F, Sunday School. 997 BNE Se
38—voung: alen’s. Willing Workers
RocMadioon Street Presbyterian a
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sweetest Heed STE, ONC. Social Y
St. Tewes Social No. 7—Shriners.
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FOWitatcoat, Mb, Church, eae
Business Men's Exchanee. 1 Que iceabouy Past Comet
SCBhtion Baptist, CRUTCH. ueen sete
T—Churehinen's Club of St James 12—Ushers of Trinity A. M. E, Chul
TG hmtiginisy Peonles C- CDUFCE Ya Weohalo, club
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11—Asbury M. FE. Sunday School. — 99__willine Workers of West Bai
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. HAYES PHARMACY
1057 WEST. LEXINGTON STREET
Opposite Arlington Avenue
- Carefully; Compounded, Prescriptions
Delicious Sddu3, and Sundaes
Also a full line of
Toilet Articles, Candies, Cigars and Cigarettes
Phone Your Wants Gilmor 1086
FAIR PRICES FREE DELIVERY ,.
BS cp ae NR mel