The Afro-American

Friday, July 21, 1922

Baltimore, Maryland

12 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page 5
Page 6
Page 6
Page 7
Page 7
Page 8
Page 8
Page 9
Page 9
Page 10
Page 10
Page 11
Page 11
Page 12
Page 12
Page text (machine-generated)
"THE SHADOW" Now Running Based on well-known practice among wealthy Southern whites of giving away illicitate children to colored people to escape disguise. 30th YEAR, NUMBER 49 JAMES HOLDS UP DIPLOMAS OF NORMAL GRADS Refuses Certificates To Boys Who Complained of Poor Food At Bowie Normal Last Winter FIFTEEN GRADUATE List Published, But Some Of Boys Still Wait for Thei Sheepskins Bowie, Maryland, July 20—Albo a list of fifteen graduates was certified by Principal Leondin James of the Bowie State Normal School as early as March 24th, some of the boys of that class have not received their diplomas. Bowie School closed February 11th bearing an epidemic due to lack of water. Nevertheless it was decided to graduate the class and the following James were certified by Principal James to the county Supervisors on March 24th, Ethel Bailey, D. C. Alphonso Borgs, Upper Fairmount, James Couplin, Baltimore, Leslie Haywood, Princess Anne, Ethel Howard, Brenwood, Rosa Hubbard, Preston, Reba Hughes, Elkton, Cassie Joins, Preston, Alice Macleay, Cambridge, Cornellia Nuter, Nantooke, Sault Ste. Marie, Beauland, Cing Plug, Berlin, Sunley Prideau, Berlin, Louise Springs, Baltimore, Helen Ward, Baltimore. James Holds Up Diplomas Under date of June 21, one of the male graduates received the following letter from the principal: Dear Mr., In connection with my reac- cognition for my task, you for some reason for your action on Sunday February 12th, 1822, on which date you signed a letter for Dr. Cook's attention, which contained some statements of this soot. "Last year, food was high and we paid less board, and we had more to eat. This year we pay more and eat like dogs or prisoners, for instance, cornbread and molasses, or dry peanut butter and bread. We have asked for more to eat, but the principal's answer was he had nothing to do with the boarding department. These are a few of the statements that I find in that letter which your name signed. Why did you not eat together and what message to Dr. Cook Sunday? Give me the day and date I told you I had nothing to do with the boarding department why. Why did you think such an adjective method would aid the pro- gress of the school? Why did you think a statement from the boys without the same from the students student body would help the re- cultured progress of the institution? What was your main reason for aggressing this plan to you? To make a definite statement with reference to your department to the State Department of Education, I am pleased to have the definite dgld. L. S. James. Principal. Don't Hesitate If You Need MONEY TALK IT OVER TODAY For your convenience. By simply phoning us you can make arrangements to call on us or have us call on you today to discuss your loan proposition. MONEY LOANED IN 15 MINUTES IF NECESSARY Not only has a speedy service been instituted, but for your further convenience and to avoid any embarrassment whatsoever we will arrange to put the transaction through, in your own home, with no charge for this service. Loaned on first, second and third mortgages or any good security. LEGAL RATE, 2 TO 8 YEARS TO REPAY If you desire to borrow money quickly and privately, either standing or building association plan, simply phone MADISON 3707-J. 2844 PARKWOOD AVENUE All day; also Evenings and Sundays THE AFRO Entered in the Postoffice at Baltimore Alu., as Second-class matter under the act of March 3, 1879. Where Is Anti-Lynch Bill? Senators Are Mum On When Dyer Bill Will Be Reported To Senate. Shortridge Refuses To Make Statement By Telegram Washington, D. C., July 20.—Senator S. M. Shortridge (Rep. Cal.) refused to make any statement as to when he will have his report on the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill ready to present to the Senate. This report is awaited with some interest because the Senator announced his intention to make a full and complete brief favoring the enactment of the bill. Altho the Judiciary Committee headed by Senator Borah, (Rep. Utah) voted to report the bill favorably, they had expected only a brief statement from the committee. -Representative L. C. Dyer (Rep. Mo.) author of the Bill, was not in his office yesterday, but his secretary T. J. Mueller gave out the following statement: The Dyer Bill on anti-lynching is still pending in the Senate Committee on Judiciary. Senator Borah told the AFRO-AMERICAN, "Take the matter up with Senator Shortridge, who now has charge of the Bill." Senator Shortridge could not be found. Two telegrams from the AFRO-AMERICAN to his office in the Senate Office Building' have so far failed to elicit any reply. VIRGIN ISLANDERS SENATOR BORAH AND REACH WASHINGTON NEVAL THOMAS CLASH Washington, D. C., July 20—The Prohibition Amendment is interfering with the manufacture of bay rum in the Virgin Islands, and a commission of three arrived here this week to protest. The commission is composed of Conrad Cornerio, member of the Island legislative body: George Moorehead, President of the Labor Union of the island of St. Thomas and Adolph Sixix, an elected delegate. The Virgin Islanders protests against the strictness of the health regulations made by the Naval Governor of the islands. These regulations operate to bar Spanish vessels, the commission says, and consequently the trade of the island of St. Thomas has been crippled. A great bay rum industry of the island of St. Croix is being ruined because the importation of alcohol has been forbidden unless it is denatured. The Prohibition Amendment says nothing about enforcement in the Virgin Islands, the commission contends. In addition to these things, the Islanders wish to complain about the state of bankruptcy in which the islands are falling, and also about the property qualifications for voters which is so high that it disqualifies most of the colored natives. The AFRIC AMERICAN is in need of a man who can honestly sign his name to the letter below: THE LETTER "Mr. John" 625 N. Eutaw St., Baltimore, Mo. In response to your advertisement for a make-up man, I beg to inform you that I have the necessary qualifications, and will report for July Monday, July 31st, 1922. Yours, MONEY TO LOAN We will help you buy your home or Will lead you money on the house you now own Money on 1st, 2nd, or 3rd Mortgages Building Association or Straight Loans Quick Service Apply THE ADVANCE COMPANY . 505 CALVERT BLDG. St. Paul & Fayette Sts. PLaza 8331 Washington, D.C. July 26—Senator Borah addressed a large mass-meeting of colored people at the A. M. E. Zion church in South Washington on "The Unconstitutionality of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill". He expressed his surprise at being asked to address a colored audience since the entire race knows of his opposition to the measure that is so near the Negro heart. Senator Borah, congratulated the race on its judicial attitude in wanting to hear all sides of the question. He defended his position with a long array of judicial precedents, and said that he would violate his oath as a Senator if he voted for a bill which he believed to be unconstitutional. He said that one sovereignty would later pose a fine pride would resist every effort to impose such penalty by the national government, thus leaving the Negro as defenseless as he is now. Replying from the floor Neval Thomas a local school teacher said: "No man living knows whether his law is constitutional or not. The distinguished Senator is not also distinguished by a lawyer, he is against his learned opinion of Moorefield Storey, than whom there is no greater lawyer in the world, and that of the Attorney General of the United States. "The Supreme Court, in all probability, will divide on it, as it does in so many of the great questions it is called to decide. The number of this great tribunal once said, "The only reason we are right is because we get the last guess." The laws are voluminous and indefinite. "There is no fixed judicial science" as the Nation puts it. Often in a judicial question done by a five-tailed five learned judges saying the law is one thing and four equally learned judges saying it is another." The School Board will place two portable buildings for the use of the Training Secretary Rice told the AEKO AMERICAN yesterday. The Board has been debating the placing of portables at the school for some time undecided as to whether to put them in the school yard or put additional lots else on Old St. Paul Church on Saratoga street, four blocks away, was suggested as the site for the portables. Service Coal Company Offers Partial Payment Plan To People of Baltimore The Service Coal Company of this city has brought about an innovation in the Coal industry whereby poor people may purchase their coal on the partial payment pik. The Company informs the public that coming to the Coal Strike prices are likely in soar sky-high and warns them to buy their coal early in order to avoid higher prices, which seems inevitable by reason of the Coal Strike. Adr. PETROLATUM AND TIN BOXES A SPECIALTY Orders Delivered to Any Part of the City PHONE. MAD. 7015 The J. H. Bishop Co. 1825 PENNA. AVENUE Big Audience HAIRDRESSERS! WE CARRY A FILL, LINE OF HAIRDRESSERS' SUPPLIES AT LOW PRICES FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 DROWNING MARS HARRIS K. P.'S MEETING MARCUS AT CAMBRIDGE AN INT DROWNING MARS HARRIS CALLS K. P.'S MEETING MARCUS GARVEY AT CAMBRIDGE AN INTERLOPER John Johnson, 1159 Calhoun St., Taken With Cramps While Bathing In Chilly Waters MAYOR WELCOMES KNIGHTS In Response Dr. J. U. King Cites Discrimination In Teachers' Salaries Cambridge, Md., July 19th—The drowning of John Johnson aged 27, of 1159 Calhoun street, Baltimore while bathing at Long Wharf marred the annual convention of the Knights of Pythias, which held a three day session at Waugh M. E. Church, Rev. M. Thompson, pastor. Johnson was among the eight hundred knights and ladies headed by Grand Chancellor George Watty who arrived here Monday on board the Steamer Starlight. He wore his bathing suit under his clothing and was prepared to spend part of his time in the water. He was taken with cramps and died before help could reach him. Chancellor Hilder, born near received his body, which wasurned over to Underruker Vodery for shipment to Baltimore. 1,000 In Big Parade With the Merry Band, Federalsburg Band and Alpha Band of Frederick furnishing the music, over one thousand persons took part in the big parade staged on August 24th. Starlight arrived at night the fifth degree was conferred upon 24 candidates. Mayor Orem of Cambridge offered the Order the keys to the city in a welcome address on Tuesday Rev. J. U. King, of Asbury Church Washington, responded. W. C Johnson, were other speakers. Useful presents were tendered Grand Chancellor Watty, Grand Worthy Counsellor Rosa J. Richardson, Grand Matron of Juveniles Charlotte Woodward, and a purse of $50 to General Lewis E. Williams former commander of the Uniformed Address Rev. Dr. King declared that in as much as the Negro had served the country faithfully in time of war, the country now should recognize this service. The Negro, he said demanded equality of opportunity, evenhanded justice in the courts, intellectual and political freedom and the protection of life and property guaranteed by the Constitution. In his discussion of education, Dr. King emphasized the injustice in the discrimination in salaries of teachers where they are equally competent and render equal service. He also paid MIFICA for to the AFRICA for its right to offer educational facilities and equal salaries for equal services for colored teachers. "We are not discouraged however" said he, "if righteousness exalteth a nation, righteousness must of necessity exalt an individual, a nation, righteousness, a group of individuals, and a race. God will dead, and right will ultimately triumph." The following officers were elected: Grand Chancellor, George A. Watty Grand Vice Chancellor, Dr. Charles Brooks of Frederick, Grand Keech, Dr. John Master of Eveveng, Baltimore; Grum Master of Eveveng, H. Maynardier Chair of Cambridge; Grand Medical Ex aminer, Dr. Charles H. Powder, of Bult mour, and Lecturer, Rev. J. F. King; G. M. A. Allen, L. Pratt; G. J. William Ham Iron; G. O. G., John Matthews; Gene Medical K. Jr., Dr. Charles Fowler; Gene Attorney, Win. J. Keech; Dr. Harry selected; Dr. H. Bishop; Grand Prelate H. Bishop Supreme Representatives—John W. Hawkins, William H. Layton. Next session will be held in Cresfield. Number Mentions.....3,822 Amount Paid to Sick.....7,725.76 Amount Paid Funerals.....2,923.02 Amount Paid Widows.....7,900.02 Amount Paid Charity.....1,432.47 Amount Current Expenses.....11,932.41 Total Amount Paid Out.....$25,236.26 SHOULD DONATE LOUGE ASSETS Amount Invested.....14,922.57 Value Property.....14,980.03 Balance Cash on Hand and Bank.....39,842.81 Total Assets.....$27,075.13 Total Receipts.....48,911.16 Total Expenses.....1,722.19 Balance in Hand.....$2,188.97 GROOM LEFT BRIDE WAITING AT ALTAR Los Angeles, Cal., July 20—The stage was set for the marriage of Norman L. Johnson, to Miss Natalie Wyndon. Wednesday at what was to have been the biggest wedding ever seen. from the ground. Rev. A. Wayman Ward, the minister, arrived, the bridesmaids stood in line with the flower girls and ring bearer and behind them all trying to appear at ease was the beautifully gowned bride. They waited, and waited and waited. Nine o'clock, ten o'clock, eleven o'clock, eleven thirty came and then guests disappeared from the decorated lawn big dining room decorated, lawn big dining room decorated, lawn filled with presents. of every description. The next afternoon Miss Wyn- don received a telegram from Oakland, California, saying, "Sorry I'm on my way. (Signed) Norman L. Johnson." --- HARRIS CALLS MARCUS GARVEY AN INTERLOPER New York Alderman and Editor Says "Forcigner" Misrepresents Race Damnably NO UNION WITH KLAN Garvey Scored for Trying To Unite His Followers With Ku Kluxers By GEORGE W. HARRIS Aldermann 21st New York District, and Editor of New York News New York, July 20.—There has been nothing done by one of their race since their emancipation that has angered and alarmed Negro citizens more deeply than the recent effort of Marcus Garvey, an alien and a native of Jamaica, B. W. L. to form an alliance with the Ku Klux Klan. Garvey misrepresents not only the attitude of the native-born colored Americans but 75 per cent of the foreign-born when he surrenders to the Imperial Wizard of this bloody and bigoted band of outlaws. There is no objection to Garvey and his followers choosing Africa as their adopted home, but there is objection to his pandering to the prejudices of bigots and traitors opposed to the principals of the Republic. He would sell the birthright of 15,000,000 native-born loyal Americans. Garvey, being a foreigner, does not know that the Ku Klux Klan is the same organization that outraged the mothers of the present generation of colored Americans murdered its fathers, desecrated the black dead and their graves and coming into power in reconstruction days, nullified emancipation, established Jim-crew cars and riveded political disfranchisement upon the black race in the South. Resigns Garner's Sister When he retired, his sister is not the colored citizens' country. in the same sense that it is the country of every other loyal American, black or white, he knows nothing of the history of his race in this country. He does not know that black men played a vital part in the explorations and settlement of this continent men with Balihoen when he discovered the Pacific Ocean and that Balihoen found a tribe of black men then living on the shores of South America. He does not know that black men were with all the Spanish discoverers and explorers, with Corres with went into Mexico with Corres when he went to Kansas in 1541. He does not know that colored men helped establish the first settlement in Jamestown in 1507 and that Africans were with Ponce de Leon at St. Augustine in 1565; that Estavantean, the black man who became the present State of Texas, He does not know that black men were with George Washington in the French and Indian Wars; that a black man was with Daniel Boone in Kentucky in 1774 and gave up his life, as the first one on the American Civil War, was the first to shed his blood for American Independence in the Boston Massacre in 1774; that Peter Salem, a black man, was the first to die in the Battle of Bunker Hill at the hands of the British Major Pittenback, a black man by the port of York and Clark expedition to the great Northwest in 1807 and that York's dry river was named after him. He does not know that black soldiers were paid tribute by George Washington and General Jackson in their defense of New Orleans in the War of 1812 and that black sailors were with Commodore Perry in the Battle of Lake Erie in 1812; that black men were with Fromont when he discovered gold in California in 1843; that men to him in the trenches and the ships of the Rebels, in coins of blue turned the tide for the Union and destruction of slavery. Cities History Of The He does not offer that the black American who played this vital part in American history from its pre-historic beginnings down to the planting of the Stars and Stripes at the North Pole by commander Perry with his companion, Mat Henson by his side in 1809. The colonists cannot know of the 1809 Cavalry in the Indian Wars with Gen. Custer nor of their black companions at San Juan Hill in 1898 with Theodore Roosevelt, nor does he remember the theatres of the "Hell Fighters" "Buffaloes" and their 400,000 black American companions in the World War. When he says that "America is a white man's country" he does not take into account that black men to the number of unnumbered millions gave 250 years of unrequited settlement, the industry and present wealth of the South Nation. We say again that the interoper among colored Americans damnably misrepresents them. By all rules of history and of justice this is their country. By all the things that men hold dear they are going to preserve this as their common country and they are going to live, and if need to die, to preserve this as their common country. AMERICAN THE WEEKLY PRESS Miss Esther Casvestado of San Salvador, Central America, the daughter of Fernando Casvestado, well-known coffee planter there arrived in New York with her parents on board the Steamer La Savoie. They spent three months touring Europe. WASHINGTON DELILAH SHEARS SAMPSON AND TURNS HIM OVER TO PHILISTINES HARDWICK'S KLAN CRITICISM—POLITICS Georgia Preacher Says Governor Is Not Sincere In Criticism of Ku Klux Anna Gu, July 20—Governor Hardwick recent statement denouncing the Ku Klux Klan and ordering them to unmask was termed "the cheapest bid for political peel. I have ever known this little man to make" by Rev. Caleb Ridley preaching in Central Baptist Church, white, Sunday night. He added that the governor was looking for votes this fall. He told me he believed that the klansman cannot do away with their masks any more than a country can discard its flag. Continuing he said: "Personally I have heard Governor Hardwick express himself in the most enthusiastic fashion on the principles of the Ku Klux Klan, and in conversation with the imperializard who was so envious: When my term as governor expires you had better have your doors open for I'm going to join if I have to break in." "It will not be long now until governor is a private citizen so the wizard may be on the lookout for Tom's application." SHERMAN SAVED MILL Athens, Ga., July 26—Unoe Bob Turner, 110 years old, claims the honor of having saved the only mill not burned by General Sherman on his march through Georgia during the Civil War. According to Turner, the torches were already lighted and ready to set to the structure when he ran to the mill and implored tie Northern soldiers not to burn it. Northern soldiers said that if they did colored people of three counties would starve to death. It was the only mill Sherman's forces left standing in Georgia and it is standing yet. Washington, D. C., July 20—Charles William Strickland is a modern 'Sampson, and his wife Deliah. Yesterday Charles was a free man, with a wife, job and a home in the custody of the police, who will soon take him back to Walthaah, Oconee County, S. C., on the charge of murder ten years ago. The modern Deliah would never have betrayed her lord and master to the police. Today he is in his boastings and his pinnings towards other men. Her suspicious had aroused for some time, and last week became a certainty, when Charles told her that she was not his only wife. Charles declared he had another wife and child in another section of the city. He told her he was committing murder in South Carolina to prove what a had fellow he was. Even when the modern 'Sampson' parted with his "secret", he feared no evil, and stayed away from home at night as usual. Then Deliah got busy and told the police what she was. And now the Sampson is in the noose of the "Philistines," and neither wife will see him for quite a while. Johnson Named Director New York, July 20.—James W. Johnson, secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was named on a board of directors with eight white persons to handle a million dollar "American Fund for Social Service. The donor is Charles Carland, white, who inherited the money from his father. Carland at first rejected his inheritance, but accepted it in order to receive it to social service work. According to the incorporator, the fund is to be used for agencies which are new or experimental that they do command general public support. Mechanics Savings Bank, Richmond, Va. Bishop Giair Here Bishop Matthew W. Clair, head of the Methodist Episcopal Diocese of Liberia, and a co-worker of Bishop Sampson, Sampson was a royal welcome at Metropolitan M. E. Church last Sunday morning. The pastor Rev. B. T. Perkins introduced the Bishop William and the effort of the church to carry enlightenment to the natives. (Associated Negro Press) Contantinople, July 29—Constantinople have attended dances have gone on a strike for more money and shorter hours. Many of the capital's finest harems have been left unguarded and their owners are trying distractedly to find suitable substitutes for the strikers. Number of Russian refugees have justly volunteered services, but it was found they were not hired for the job. The strikers insist that their "24-hour day" and the uneasing vigil they are required to keep on the wounds of the harems have justly better during the present hard times. Many protest that their wages have not been paid for more than a year. The fact is that their matters, who in most cases are officials or employees of the government, have not drawn any salaries for months. The strikers include block enchants and other attendants. Gilbert S. Young, who on July 6th shot and killed his wife, Mrs. Alice Young, shortly before midnight in their home on Stricker street, and turned the revolver on himself, inflicting what was a mortal wound. at the time, he was mortal wound, was moved from Franklin Square Hospital Tuesday to the Northern Station and placed in a charge of murder was placed against him. Young, who was an elevator operator at Stewarts and Co. Department Store, will recover. POLICE GUARD SAVINGS BANK IN RICHMOND Thousands of Depositors Start Run on John Mitchell's Bank When It Fails $83,000 GUARANTEE NEEDED So Says Bank Examiner; Mitchell Declares It Is Solvent (By Telegraph) To Afro American—Clearlyg House Association of Richmond Places one hundred thousand dollars in Mechanies Savings Bank will reopen. JOHN MITCHELL, JR. Richmond, Virginia, July 20- The Mechanics' Savings Bank, at 214 East Clay street, was closed saturday afternoon by Chief State bank Examiner F. R. Richardson, (white) by order of the State Corp- oration Commission. The appoin- ment of a receiver was asked. The order to suspend operations was given late in the afternoon and was received with surprise by John Mitchell, Jr., president of the institution. Mr. Mitchell was gol- dst right that the savings of the depositors were secure. He also said that the bank probably will reopen for business this week. --- It was shortly after 3 o'clock that the two deputy examiners under orders from Richardson, presented their credentials to Albert V. Norrell, Jr., cashier of the bank, instructed Detective Captain Alexander S. Wright and Detective Sergeant Willshire and Organ to clear the place of its customers, and closed the doors. Rumors that the bank had "failed" spread like wildfire through old Jackson Ward, where the majority of the more than 1,000 depositors live. In a few minutes a crowd of several hundred people gathered in front of the building in an effort to withdraw their savings. A handful of police from the Second Station was called to the scene and was ordered to allow no one to block the bank entrances. Extensive investments by the bank in real estate were said by those in close touch with the affairs of the bank to be the chief reason for the order to suspend. Mitchell said the surplus and undidated profits of the bank are approximately $50,000, and that he is prepared to secure the bank's real estate. Mitchell said he was native several days ago by the bank examiners that they required a security of $33,000 to guarantee bilties. Mortgage papers were prepared to meet this demand, and said with the understanding that when the papers and notices were signed and thereby executed, the bank would be permitted to con- Mitchell said he signed the necessary papers, but stipulated he was not to pay interest, as he was simply securing the holdings of the bank. He said he ready retained Alain Harnay, Harry M. Smith, and that an offer will be to prove that the bank be robust. It was stated by Mitchell that the entire holdings of the Unique Amusement Company, of which he is president, will be put up as security for the bank. Other private holdings in real estate, estimated at $10,000, will also be placed security, he said. The Bonded Theater is among the property owned by the Unique Amusement Company, and is said to have been purchased by the company four years ago for $112,500. Special to the Afro-American Richmond, Va., July 19—Judge Monceau appointed a temporary receiver for the Bonded Realty Company for ten days. He said the examiners closed the bank because of the damage in its assets of obligations of the Bonded Realty Company amounting to $83,500, which were not secured to the examiner's satisfaction. At the end of ten days he said, he those authorities would be able to satisfy the examiners and resume business under their aid officers. The conditions of dishonesty were discovered. President John Mitchell Je- personally put up collateral be- hind notes against which compli- plaints were made. He wanted the directors resolved gs did not put in bank with a director's license. The original trouble arouse out of the fact that examiners found $33,000 notes in the bank without any assets behind them. These notes belong to the Bonded Realty Company, a holding company in the bank. The examiners took the position that the Mechanics Blank could not deal in or hold real estate. In order not to sell the property, they seize Mr. Mitchell transferred it to a holding company and accepted this company's mortgages. BALTIMORE COUNTY LICENSES Issued at Elliott City. DYSON-BONNSON-Glen 42; Lury 54; both of Baltimore City. Among The Churches Short communication for this column should be sent in to Mace J. Toward, editor Church Column Afro-American, before Tuesday of each week. How to find the Sunday School Lesson see page seven column one. PAGE TWO Among The Short communication for this J. Towend, editor Church Column of each week. How to find the S seven column one. Arlington M. E. Church, Rev. A. J. Smith, pastor will have its picnic next Tuesday at Drudl Hill Park. July 23rd, the church will observe Women's Day Rally. Belair M. E. Church, Rev. M. King pastor, will hold services July 30 to August 13. The Sunday School picnic will be held at Drudl Hill Park July 21. Asbury M. E. Church will celebrate the Emanclipation Proclamation Thursday August 17. John Wesley Church, Aberdeen, MD, Rev. C. E. Jones, pastor, closed Camp Sunday with nineteen conversions. Charlie's Chapel Camp opened Sunday July 16, and will close July 30. A series of hay rays dealing with the necessity of sending children regularly to school, patronizing racial interprises, opening an business and cultivating thrift habits has been planned by Rev. J. G. Martin in connection with the open-air religious services now running nightly on the lot adjoining Payne Memorial A. M. E. Church, Laurens and Calhoun streets. A rally to raise the remaining $10,000 due on the mortgage debt of Waters A.M. E. Church has been held. During the four years Rev. J. W. Norris has been pastor $3,000 has been paid on the mortgage debt, improvements costing $3,000 made and paid for, $3,000 spent in coal; current and other obligations met. Mothers and Daughters Day will be observed Sunday at Wayland Baptist Church, Rev. W. J. Winston pastor. Camp Meeting will start the third Sunday in August at Harmon, Md. Three deacons will be ordained. R. W. M. Brew is the pastor. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Proactive Association will hold its meetings every Wednesday at 2 P. M. at the Palmist Baptist Church, Riggs avenue and Woodeye street, Mrs. R. F. Winn is the president, Mrs. M. Tilmore is the secretary. The Executive Board of Mount bethle Baptist Association which convenes at Metropolitan Baptist Church is hoping to have the Old Folks' Home in King George's County, Virginia completed this BISHOP BROOKS IS NOW IN ARKANSAS Georgia Hot Springs, Ark., July 16— Top W. Sampion Brooks, of Columbia, is here in the interest of the Bishop of Arkansas, Thursday Bishop Brooks will be in Little Rock, Arkansas, and on Sunday will be with Rev. G. T. Sinus, 117 W. Pullen street, Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Since the last issue of the paper Bishop has received the following contributions. St. Phillips, Memorial, Rev. R. S. Han- nah, pastor, $62.00 Pastor, Paul Church, Rev. C. Cobblestone, pastor, $53.75 Caycress, Gr.—Gunless Chapel, Rev. J. Hall, pastor, $40.30 Pastor—St. Paul, Dr. D. H. Porter, $81.02 *usssville, Gn., St. Thomas, Dr. J. W.* *pastor, $100.00.* *pastor, Chapel, Dr. J. W.* *pastor, $55.70.* *auto, Gn., Lathol, Dr. R. H. Single* *pastor, $100.00.* *pastor, Dr. R. H.* *Ward pastor, $100.00. (uspspalmul.* *J. W. Williams, pastor, $55.10.* Marietta, Ga.—Turner Chimpel, Dr. L. R Parker, pastor, $42.84. Previously reported, $16,288.85. Total, $17,997.75. Committee Visits Site St. Inigoes, Md., July 26—The special committee of the Board of directors of the new Cardinal Gibbons Industrial Institute soon to be erected here on the Potomac River were here last week picking out a site. Count. Wade and Miss Carrie Smith of St. Mary's County, Geo. Ralph of Baltimore, Judge R. Ferrell and Thomas Turner are colored directors on the Board. Memphis. Tennessee. July 29—Near- ly 1,000 colored men brought here from the South by labor agents re- fused to work as scabs and strike breakers and walked out last week. The men were brought all selections of the South, were under arrest and had been promised big wages as firemen and oilers, and to run trains. Although penniless, they refused to work as soon as they learned they would be used as strike breakers. "111" cigarettes They are GOQD! 10¢ Buy this Cigarette and Save Money YOUNG MAN—Make the "Y" Your Home Today Reading Room, Big Lobby and Social Room-No Red Tape. Women's Union Evangelists will meet at Union Baptist Church No. 2, every Sunday 3 P. M. Mrs. Mary Howard, leader, Rev. C. B. Jones, pastor. The Baptist Protective Association met Tuesday afternoon at the Bethelem Baptist Church, Calhoun street. The Asbury Mission M. E. Churce, Keyser sreet, Rev. Lewis C. Nixon pastor, are planning to raise $600 for improvements. The campaign will be under the direction of the Ladies Aid. The office of the Aid is president, Mrs. Henson; secretary, Miss Jordan. Beginning July 17, there will be a Neighborhood Watermelon Peast which will last one month. Sharp Street M. E. Congregation, Re: W. H. Dean, pastor, after their sixteen sixty-day drive raised $7,017. Sunday the Trustees Aid held a pew rally in the interest of the Aged Men and Women's Home. Delegates to the National Baptist Convention which will convene in Los Angeles, Cal. are as follows: Rev. R. T. Calin, Rev. Junius Gray, Willis J. Winston, Rev. John Taylor, Rev. R. D. Johnson and Dr. D. G. Mack. A Candle Light Service was held Faith Baptist Church, Rev. Simon Williamson, pastor, for the benefit of the Flower Circle and Nightingale Musical Association. Mrs. Florence Wilkins is president of both organizations. A Law Fete at the church is now in progress. This warm weather does not prevent the young people from being in Waters Church, Rev. J. W. Norris, pastor nearly every night in the week. The Boys' Club and Twenty Century Class are well attended. Next Sunday the church will visit Mt. Sinai Baptist Church. Rev. Junius Gray, a member of the Advisory Board of the St Luke's made a flying trip to Newark, N. J., last Thursday July 13 to attend the funeral of Mrs. Geo Queen one of the trustees. The funeral was largely attended Mrs Maggio L. Walker, secretary and treasurer was also present. Believers Consecration meetings and Song Services are conducted every Tuesday night by Evangelist Mattie V. Johnson at the Church of Inheritance. Upper Marlboro Farmers' Outing Next Week Upper Marlboro, Md., July 19.—The fifth annual tournament, farmer's outing and picnic given by James F. Armstrong and co-operators, will take place on the fair grounds here on next Thursday. Just before luncheon at noon addresses will be given by D. D. T. D. T. Jeremiah Hawkins, Brentwood; Hon. Gonza Wade, Malecow. Following the luncheon will come tournament riding and baseball. Music from the opening hour until 8 P. M. will be furnished by Knights of St. John Band of this city, Prof. C. E. Ross, leader. From 8 P. M. till 1 A. M. music will be furnished by the Columbian Orchestra. Prof. Sylvester Thomas, director, might a great frolic on the place of the hall. The following baseball teams have been invited and accepted: Upper Marlboro; Bladenburg; Rockville; Laurel; La Plata; Mitchellville; Rosaryville; Huntsville and Lothian. READY FOR TEACHERS MEET Hampton, Va. July 20.—Board and lodging will be reduced, to one dollar a day at the Institute during the annual session of the National Association of Teachers, July 26 to 29. Speakers include Dr. R. R. Moton, Lucy Laney, James Weldon Johnson, Dwight Holmes, Dr. W. Turner Charles, Holly Hinske Brown, John W. Davis, Dr. J. A. Gregs. MUSIC FOR VIRGIN ISLES St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, July 20 - Bands in the graded schools and an orchestra in the high school, while all pupils in the public schools will be given vocal lessons, is the plan of Bandmaster Alton A. Adams, the only colored band leader of the United States Navy. Bandmaster Adams has returned after two months in the United States studying American methods. Recently, while in Washington, he found a marine hand playing one of his compositions. The bandmaster is undertaking his work as supervisor of music under special commission of Rea Adnualt Kittliffe, Naval Governor TEACHERS' PAY HELD UP Bowie Normal School Workers Without Salary Since Last Winter Teachers in the Colored State Normal School at Bowie, of which Leonidas James is principal, have not received any salaries since last winter, it was learned today. When teachers were offered one month's salary, they pointed to their contracts, under which they had agreed to work until the end of the term at a certain sum per month. Because of this they were responsible for the closing of the schools, and were on the grounds ready to give their services. Some of them are owed as much as $500 in back salary. To back up their demands, they have put their case in the hands of an attorney, and declare they will not accept the one month's salary offered. Introducing the New Half Crower Satisfaction Guaranteed MIS. A. E. DAVIS, Prop. 800 8. Fremont Ave., Baltimore, Md. Phone, 500th 0311-W IN MEMORIAM ANDERSON—in sad but loving remembrance of our dear son and brother, Irwin Otto Anderson, who departed this life July 19, 1819. Though deeply grieved we how in humble submission to His will—The Family. ENNIS—in sad and loving memory of my dear father, Chas. H. Ennis, who died six years ago, July 18, 1916. This life is one great sorrow. Which each one must share. Which takes believed ones from our home. But never from our hearts. By his son. JOHN L. ENNIS. TILGHAM—in soul but lecture memory of my dear husband, William W. Tilgham, who departed this life two years ago today, July 20, 1920, Gone, but not forgotten, June 15, 1921, Found, but not forgotten, his living wife and three children, wife, Mrs. Julia Tilgham; children; Mrs, Irene Tisdale, Mrs, Emma Matthews, Mr, William Tilgham; one grandson, Edward Robinson. WHITE—To the sweet memory of my dear wife, Isabelle, who left me one year ago today, July 20, 1921, of chain was broken, how pure and Holy was that life which the blessed Jesus led. When a man of sorrow he dwelt on earth, enduring trials and tribulations and temptations which he suffered, and all. We should follow in his footsteps. In all my fears, in all my strains. My soul, on His salvation wills. WILSON—one year ago today, July 22nd, recalls fresh the sad departure of the light of our family, Dorothy Bibson Wilson, of her family who are voiced in the proceeding that including its full significance. Lord, Jesus, all pitying blues. Grant her thirteenth rest. And light perpetual slime upon her. Anno. —By her Grandparents, Father, Aunt, Uncles, and a Friend. ```markdown ``` Munson Louise Frazier departed this July 18, 1922, at her residence, 514 Bloom street. She had been ill for the past six months, and she was in the northwestern section of the city, and well liked. Her death means a great loss to the community. During her two years in the infidelity she was the victim of her husband. She leaves to mourn their loss her husband. Stewart Frazier; a father, Charles Wharton, of Boston, Mass., and a host of friends. She was a niece of the late REASON FUNERAL SUNDAY Miss. Olea Reason announces the funeral of her husband, Charles Reason, who was drowned on June 20, 1922, Sunday, July 22, 1923 at 3 p.m., at St. John's A. M. E. Church, lexington street, near Pine Street, Relatives and friends invited to attend. HUGHES on July 1, 1922, Etta Hughes, age 34, years, testified in the trial. Funeral book place on Tuesday, July 4th, at the residence, 421 X. Bedford street, Internment at Asbury CARD OF THANKS Mr. Stewart Franier thanks his many friends for their kind words of condolence and floral emblems in the trying hours of his great sorrow and bereavement during the illness and death of his wife. CEE in Baltimore DIVEN BY THE MAPLE LEAF HARMONY BARK SHOP FOR THE BLIND DEN, ETTING, NEAR DOLPHIN STREET ING, JULY 27, 1922 Admission. Use At the Boot Under; R. M. Denver, Business Manager Refreshments on Sale EARLEIGH HEIGHTS 1922, Ending August 6, 1922 B. A. SHORT LINE BOOKS FROM THE STATION Classified Advertisements REAL ESTATE AND PROPERTY OWNERS Why pay an unskilled mechanic to do your repair work wrong? What Baltimore needs is colored skilled mechanics. We are employing five graduates of Hampton Industrial Institute for the summer. We have practical carpenters, brick-layers, plasters, interior decorators, paperhangers and estimators. Give us your repair work in order that we may keep these mechanics busy for the summer months, so they can go off in the fall to higher schools of industrial arts. Call or drop postal and agent will call to see you PERRY'S INK TO OPEN SATURDAY Perry's Inn, heralded as one of the finest places in this country, is to open its doos promptly at 8 p. m. on Saturday. Jaya Jain, Mr. Joe Perry, who owns the inn, former for the fastest train to the best people of the community, has spared no expense in making the inn a respectable place where one might carry his family. Perry's Inn will be the headquarters for performers for this city to entourage leading houses, hotels and increses will congregate in the Falmouth every night after they have finished their work on the stage. FOR SALE FOR SALE - 1530 W. Lexington St. Southern exposure, 3 story, rooms and bath. Lot 17x120 ft Possession in 30 days. Price $3500 Inspection by only WORKS. FOR SALE—834 Edmondson Ava. Southern exposure, 3 story, 9 rooms and bath. Lot 16x29 ft. Suitable for apartments. Possession in 30 days. Inspection by appointment, only. GEO. R. MORRIS Organization Brokerage Dept Charles and Saratoga Sts. FOR SALE—High-grade Wood Currencies and Socket. Apply, Lewis E. Jackson, 1530 Metcalf street. FOR SALE—Confectionery and Clean Store. Must be sold at once. Good reason for selling. Apply, 302 W. Preston St. THROW AWAY THOSE OCRN and BUNION PADS Get a bottle today from your druggist. Men! Men! Men! PANTS, $1.50 LOOK WHO'S HERE. BACK AGAIN Look for the Number 528 W. Franklin St. 528 COME HERE TO 628 UNION-MADE CIGARS MT. VERNON BLUNTS lin sc 7, 14 5, 4, 10 WILL BUY YOUR PROPERTY FOR CASH See you before you sell your house. Plenty of money to loan on 1st, 2nd, or 3rd Mortgages C. W. Weissenborn S. E. Corner Lexington and Mount Sts. After 8 P. M. Phone Gillmore 3520 Real Estate Bought and Sold Property Sold on Vory Liberal Terms Small Loon Negotiated City: NY 633 W. LAFAYT AVENUE Wanted Linotype Operator State Wage and Experience A. M. E. ZION PUBLISHING HOUSE No. 17 Charlotte, N. C. 419 E. Washington St. Near Sleat St. BYRACUSE, N. Y. lin sec 7 11 41 JULY CUT PRICE SALE NOW GOING ON Every Uncalled for SUIT and Pawnbroker's Must Be Sold. Regardless of Cost Suits made to order $12.00 up SHAPIDO THE UNIOR 908 N. Eustau St. $10,000 A REAL ESTATE IN A Loans Negotiated and NOTARY P Phone, MADIS A. N. ROGERS & CO. REAL ESTATE AND P Please give this your use Why pay an unskilled mechanic wrong? What Baltimore needs is color. We, are employing five grade Institute for the summer. We have layers, plasters, interior decorators Give us your repair work in our mechanics busy for the summer the fall to higher schools of industry A trial will convince you Prices arranged to suit Satisfaction guaranteed or money Estimates given cheerfully... THE HAMPTONIANS Contractors and Builders JAMES G. MARTIN, Jr. 1342 N. Culhoun Street Madison 1442 THE AFRO-AMERICAN duertisements FOR RENT FOR RENT—Modern Apartment, 1228 Drud Hill avenue. 7-6-31 FOR RENT—Flats, in good condition, in the 1000 and 2200 Block of McCulloh street, also 210 N. Central avenue. Apply to 1006 McCulloh street. Phone, MADISON 5446. FOR RENT—Second-floor front, 1000 Drud Hill avenue, as office or hair dressing parlor, Basement, 1526 McCulloh street, L. Frankler, 614 St. Paul St. VERONA 2171. FOR RENT—Room on second floor, with water; moderate rent. Private family. Apply to 1512 Drud Hill avenue. FOR RENT—Furnished room. Apply to 1123 N. Mount street. FOR RENT—An apartment, clean and cozy, bright and cheerful, 805 Pirk avenue. Apply, 2222 Whittier avenue, Madison 3001. FOR BENT-Three rooms for rent, single furnished or unfurnished, 1011 N. Striker street. FOR BENT-Two-room apartment at 1102 McCallum street. LOST—First Mutton's Jewel. Pinder will please return to Mrs. C. Gross, 100 Drum 1011 avenue. Liberal reward. FOR RENT—An apartment at 1400 Mc Mcullah street, with heat and hot water. Apply at 1101 N. Premont avenue after 3 p. m. FOR RENT—An apartment with a quiet family in the 2030 block of McMcullah St. Phone, Madison 5140 J. FOR RENT—Flats, in good conditions, in the 1600 and 2200 block of McMcullah street, also 210 N. Central avenue. Apply to 1600 McMcullah street. Phone, Madison 5140. FOR RENT—Apartment for rent. Apply 1712 McMcullah street. Phone, MAD. 2002-W. FOR RENT—An apartment. Apply to 350 N. Stricker street. FOR RENT—Bloom, furnished or unfir- ished. 1756 N. Curry street. APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Three rooms, seventy square feet, year round, se- venty square feet, A1 condition. Apply, 1324 McMcullah street. FOR BENT—houses in South Battlement, good location and condition, with six rooftops, large guard, $5.50 per week. Apply to 1661 McLennan street, Phone: Madison 5440. Confectionery and Ice Cream Farlor Cigars and Cigarettes 042 DRUID HILL AVENUE Vernon 1136 JAZZ NIGHTLY At the Open Air Palm Garden of the New World Cafe 928-30 BAROTOA STREET Loud Music, Beverages and the very best of Eats. And spend your leisure hours with us. WILLIAM WILKINS, Prop. Hs. s. 7, 7.8.4 Security Life Insurance Company of Maryland A LEAGUE RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE CO. Incorporated under the Laws of Md. S. W. COR. PACA & MULBERRY STS. With Life, Endowment and Weekly Paying Sick Benefit Policies Star Life Insurance Co. STAR LIFE BLDG. BALTO., M.D. THE NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. of U. S. A. Home Office: CHICA' C. ILL. Baltimore Branch Office: 7 E. Lexington St. When thinking of insurance, do not forget we issue the most up-to-date Health, Accident and Death policies which pay 104 weeks' for Illness or Accident disability. We have over Nineteen Million Dollars of admitted Assets. Give our Agent an interview. Branch Office 7 E. Lexington St. AT 6% ALL ITS BRANCHES Adjustments Made PUBLIC Lison 9455 1430 PENNA. AVE. PROPERTY OWNERS undivided attention. manic to do your repair work red skilled mechanics. educates of Hampton Industrial have practical carpenters, brick- ers, paperhangers and estimators. order that we may keep these months, so they can go off in industrial arts. to send for us again. suit our customers. they refunded at your request. House designing. IS OF BALTIMORE. Repairing a Specialty MILTON J. CARR 2037 Division Street Order of Services in the Various Churches FIRST COLORED-BAPTIST CHURCH OF BALMITORE, MD. 11 a. m., sermon by pastor. 1:30 p. m. Bible School. 3 p. m., pastor, choral and congregation with worship at First Baptist Church, Fairfield Hills. 3 p. m., choral services, Bro. Robert Thompson. 3 p. m., sermon by pastor. Weekly Services: Monday night, First Baptist Association meets. Wednesday night, Women's Missionary Society meets Thursday night, prayer meeting, Friday night, prayer meeting, Communion, First Sunday, 3 p. m., Morris Miers, clerk. 11. n. m., preaching by the pastor. 2:30 p. m., Sunday School. 7:30 p. m., B. Y. P. C. Sister Mary E. Duggins, president; Sister E. Brown, vice-president; Brother W. E. Brown, secretary; 8:59 p. m., E. Duggins, church clock; Bro. W. E. Brown, Chr., trustee board. MOUNT HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Agrippin Turner, pastor Resident, 1996 White Street Phone. Glimmer 218-W Located in South Hampton on Warner bay by Westport street. Take any car that will transfer to Westport eat. Get off at Warner and Pine Street, walk South two quadrats. 11. n. m., serenon, subject, "The Hand That Wrote Is Writing Now" 2:30 p. m., Sunday School. S. p. m., serenon, "God's Purpose is Manifested by Man." Women's Day all day. The pastor is requested to preach on Monday afternoon or night, but the women will have their prep sessions on Monday and Friday, part with them. It will be conducted by Sister P. Harris, Sister F. Hull, Sister A. Gross, Office F. Officer, F. Foster is away attending a meeting in Atlantic City, but will be home on Sunday, Sister Eter G. Jones, clerk King's Daughters, Mrs. Mrs. L. Robertson, president. 11 n. m., Rev. Charles Coleman, 2 p. m., Sunday School. 1:30 p. m. p. h. teachers. 1:30 p. m. meeting the meeting. Monday night. Thursday night the great Million Dollar Weding. George Johnson, Sept. Rev. J. H. Johnson, Pasdon 1777 Carlisle Place The Rt. Rev. B. T. Riley will be with us all day. 11 m. m. preaching by the Bishop. At 2:30, Sunday School. At 3:30 p. m. in the Faithful Baptist Church, with his congratulation will be with us. Spire Willamson will preach. At 3:45, the Spire League. 8 p. m., the Bishop will again preach. MT. OLIVET CHRISTIAN CHURCH Division Street, at Laurels John W. Evans, Minister 725 N. Mount Street Sunday School, 3:30 p. m. Sept., Walter Dixon. At 11 m. m. morning worship service. At 12 p. m. Junior Endeavor Society. At 12 p. m. Endorah Society. Y. P. meeting. 8 p. m., evening worship, service and Communion. Mid-week prayer meeting. Wednesday. 8 p. m., Trentee Board meeting first Monday in each month. 8 p. m. THE PEOPLES CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cer. Bond and Jefferson Streets Rev. C. E. Brown, Pastor Pursuing, 422 N. Bond, p. 320 m. class meeting, 10:30 m. Junior Club, speech by the Pastor, 2:30 p. m. Sunday School, 3:30 p. m. Rev. Alfred Young will deliver a special session to the Upper Board, All boards are invited. 7 p. m., song, week of week, Sunday, week of week, Monday to Thursday, a big street carnival, Friday, preaching and prayer meeting. The People's Christian Church, Bond and Jefferson streets, has planned a festival, with music, dance, and Monday to Thursday nights, July 24 to 27 in the interest of the fall rally. WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION If you sit with FEMALE TROUCHES, such as Oversean Daisy, nurses in the lower floors, or a nurse in the headache, backache, White, Painful or irregular Periods. If you have that tired, wormt, Nervous and run-down feeling so severe that you can't sleep, kind of medicines and doctors, and even though you have been told that an operation was necessary YOU MAY BE MADE WELL, AND STRONG AGAIN. Write for a booklet of information and advice body. THE DELVO MEDICINE CO. Memphis. Tennessee. BICYCLES $5.00 Up Motorcycles, $25.00 Up Bicycles for Hire, $1 day Willard Cycle Store 2019 Penna. Ave. Sale of Talking Machines $2.98 UP We Repair Everything and Anything Cheap Special Sale: Large Records and Rolls 49c up Weisburgs 822. Pearl St., corner Penns. Ave. KEEP DRESSED BE A SPORT FOR $10.00 WILLIAMS' BARGAIN STORE Corner Linden Ave. and Preston Street CLOTHES SHOES For the Whole Darn Family We buy and sell June 30, 64 E. FINE Roofing. Tinning and Painting Stove and Furnace Work Gutters and Spouting Phone: MAdison 8371-W 11 A. M., Sermon by the Pastor, *subject*, *Tribulations- A More Excellent Glory*. 2:30 P. M., Sunday School, Prof. J. W. Woodhouse, Superintendent. 3:30 P. M., Memorial Service for Bro. Chas. Reason. 8 P. M., Sermon by the Pastor, *subject*, "Christ's Message to the Disciple." THE CHURCH NoV. Personnel: 1522 McCallum street, 6:30 p.m. Sunday school session, 11 a. m., sermon by the Pastor, 8 p.m., sermon by the Pastor. Don't fail to attend the annual excursion of the Sunday School Wednesday, July 5th, to Brown's Grove. 11 n. m., sermon by the pastor. 2:30 p. m., Sunday School. 3:30 p. m., due at Mt. St. Isaiah Church. 8 p. m., a short service of nine leaders, opened Rev. Rey, M. C. Irwin, C. I. Cainius, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Sunday, classes. Thursday 8 p. m., prayer meeting. Friday 8 p. m., Boys' Training Class, Mr. C. A. Carry, teacher. **ALLEN A. M. E. CHURCH** Cee. Lexington and Curtis St. Dec. D. G. Hill, D. D. Pastor H. n. m., sermon by Rev. M. E. Ford, presiding elder. 2:30 p. m., Sunday meeting. 3:30 p. m., in the strangers and friends to worship with us Arthur Stansbury, director, B. D. B. Brett, Supt. S. S. 11 m. sermon by the Pastor, 2 p. m. Sunday School, C. Carroll, Supt. 8 p. m. sermon t of the Women's Drill Corps, Daughters of the First Brigade, United Order of Old Fellows. BIG ZION A. M. E. ZION CHURCH Bernard near Johnston St. Rev. R. W. Wiley, D. P. Anderson 11 m. sermon by the Pastor, 1:30 p. m. Sunday School, A. J. W. Anderson Supt. 8 p. m. annual sermon to the Sheriff Union, Macy's 8 p. m. Sheriff Union, D. S. Swain, the presiding order of the Washington District. EBENEZER A. M. E. CHURCH Mortonery, near Charles Rev. C. M. Tanner, D. D. Pastor Praaching, 11 m. and 8 p. m. 2:30 p. m. Sunday School. Class meeting, Sunday, 7 a. m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights. Prayer meeting, Friday night. ALLEN A. M. E. CHURCH Lexington and Carlton Streets Special service Sunday. Rev. Frederick Douglas, D. D., of Bettel A. M. E. Church, will preach in the interest of the Ladies' Army of the Trinity Band, for the benefit of the Church, and the congregation are also to be present and worship with us. Mrs. Julian Jones, president, Mrs. Bertin Marshall, secretary. Morning Star Lodge No. 6, G. U., of Seven Wise Men, will have a special sermon preached to them at MT. CALVAN A. M. E. CHURCH Senior Hills Sunday, July 22nd, at 3 p.m., 1922. Take or transfer to the Winsor Hills, or Hillside cars, get off at Mt. Holly Bridge, where you will be conveyed to and from weel, until we close, 10 cents for the round trip, until 6 p.m. Chairman, Rev. W. T. Brown, pastor. Union Camp Meeting in the Anderson Park Township, Md., by the by the CALVAR A. M. E. CHURCH and AUXILIARY A. M. E. CHURCH commencing Sunday, July 22, 1922. Preaching at Take Townson Line, get off at Cheesapeake Avenue, Rev. P. H. Green, Pastor, Rev. Nathaniel Young, Pastor. PAYNE MEMORIAL A. M. E. CHURCH Cor. Carthage and Laurens Street Rev. J. G. Martin, Pastor C. Calhoun St. 6:30 p.m. m. prayer service 6:30 p.m. m. prayer and praise service Mr. Chas, Peters, leader. 10 a.m. m. Bible Class, Proof, J. E. Maxwell, teacher, Rev. Mr. booer, the evangelist, will preserve Sunday School. 5 p.m. Sunday School, Mr. J. E. Neuk, Sept. 5 p.m. open Air Meeting (if weather permits). Weekly services: 8 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday; class meetings. 8 p.m. Wednesday; class meetings. 8 p.m. during 200 years age for the benefit of the new building God by the Pilgrim Aid Captains, Mrs. Hilda C. Hayes, president. don't miss this wonderful entertainment. Friday. 8 p.m. prayer meeting. Mr. Jack don't miss this wonderful entertainment. Friday. 8 p.m. prayer meeting. Mr. Jack Every Sunday, preaching and Communion 11 a. m., and 8 p. m. Bible School, 3 p. m. Mid-week meeting, Wednesday at 3 p. m. 1st, 2nd 3rd, mortgage. Money same day Easy terms. KATZ, 222 St. Paul St. Plaza 1660 After Office Hours at 1619 Madison Ave.—MADISON 2781 MONEY LOANED ON FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGES On Building Association Plan Easy terms. 6% interest Apply Milburn Building & Loan Asso. 700 Equitable Bldg. Phone: PLaza 5995 MONEY TO LOAN On First and Second Mortgages and Notes Let me refinance your property and reduce your weekly payments HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD payments BOUGHS 2010 Brad Ehlers From 5 p. m. to 9 p. m. daily FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 Cious Churches M. E. CHURCH Street, near Pine Project, Trials, Tribulations—A More Excellent J. J. W. Woodhouse, Superintendent. 3:30 P. on. 8 P. M. Sermon by the Pastor, subject, RESBYTEIAN CHURCH Rev. W. W. Walker, Pastor 25 McCullah Street Maching by the Pastor Sunday School SHARP STREET MEMORIAL M. E. CHURCH Dolphin and Etting Streets Dolphin and Letting Streets Rev. William H. Dean, Pastor 3 p. m., Sunday School, 10 a. m. Multi Bible Classes, 11 a. m., Pastor's subject— "Power for Witness" 2 p. m., Class Meetings, 8:30 p. m., Pastor's subject— "Who Touched Me?" class meetings, Monday, Tuesday, wednesday, Thursday, 8:30 p. m., Dellus School, Friday, 8:30 p. m., Dolphin School, to 12 m. Remember our Our Drive K. D. Jennings, S. S. Supt. 3:30 p. m. the chair will sit at the camp 3:30 p. m. the chair will sit at the camp 3:30 p. m. the chair will doing at the camp at Lyons grave. No evening service. EASTERN M. E. CHURCH McKleider's Y, and Patterson Park Ave. 10 a.m., Junior Church, a 4 m. preaching by the Pastor, subject, "Baned in the Lions' Den" 2:30 p.m., Sunday School, 8 p.m., preaching. AMES MEMORIAL M. E. CHURCH Rev. Ernest Lynn. Pastor 6 a.m., class meeting, Thomas Lane, Edward Wewns, and Robert Forster, leaders, 3 p. 30 m., Sunda School, Rob- tie Wewns, and Robert Forster, leaders, 11 a.m., m. sermon by Pastor 7 p. 1 m., Brotherhood, 8 p. 1 m., preaching ST. MATTHEWS M. E. CHURCH East 23rd Street Rev. R. A. Green, Pastor Parsonage, 427 E. 23rd Street m. Rev. R. J. Martin, 239 p. m. Sunday, 11 a.m., m. sermon by Pastor Smith, Asst. Sipit, E. League president, E. R. England, JF. E. League president, Maud Cary, Brotherhood, Joshua Fuller, president, Ladies Aid Society, E. Fuller, president; W. England, JF. E. League president, 11 a.m., m. sermon by Rev. R. J. Martin, 5 p., the Real Units will be with us, Rev. J. Fuller will preach to the order. GILLIES MEMORIAL M. P. CHURCH Stockton St. near Baltimore Rev. Hilton A. Parker, Pastor Trustees Day, Jr. James Woods, president of the school, Brew W. Linden, leader 1 in m., sermon by Pastor, 1:30 p. m., Sunday School, 8 p., m., sermon by Pastor, on Wednesday, July 26th, an out- gift given by the School of Law at Purdue Hill School. Pastor M. E. Sunday Schools are invited to take part. Sister Eliza Rison, Sept. Bro. W. Barnes, minister's steward. Spiritual Services rendered at FIRST INDEPENDENT M. E. CHURCH 844 W. Pierce Street Between Fremont Ave., and tugton St. R. John School, Pastor Rev. 912 Boyd Street 11 m., sermon by Rev. V. H. Walton, followed by spiritual test. A weekck, Sunday Sister L. Walton, assistant, Weekly cer- ties. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, and spiritual test. Doors open at 8 a.m. clock. EMANUELICAL M. E. CHURCH McKidney and Somerset Streets. Rev. John B. Waltkins, Pastor 11 a. m., services conducted by Rev James L. Williams and Rev George E. Cooper. At 11 a. m., the pastor will baptize at Good Hope Baptist Church at Gatens, Rev. Fry is pastor of that church. Church Sunday School at 230 p. m., 7 p. m., proclaiming, followed by spiritual tests. James L. Williams, church clerk. ASBURY M. E. CHURCH ST. JOHN M. P. CHURCH Tessier and Orchard Streets. Ht. Rev. Roy B. Moir, D. D. Acting Rev. B. Huddley, R. D. Associate. Rev. B. Huddley, captain of Reuben. Mrs. T. Thomas, captain 1 1/2 m. class, Bro. Ed. Buffer, lender 1 1/2 m. Acting Paster, 2300, Sunday School, Mr. Harris Garrison, Superintendent, 3200 Acting Paster, 2300, Sunday School, 8 p. m. Rev. W. H. Huddley, bilingual October 16, with a sermon to the Twelve Tribes. Meeting every night. Daniel W. Hays, Pastor "Whatever the Triples go Up to Worship on this spot, around which sacred memorials cluster, they gather from Baltimore, Maryland, and more. Anne Arundel, Calvert, Howard, Prince Frederick, Montgomery and Frederick. Here they come mingling, renew acquaintances, pray, sing and rejoice together during the week. A church on the bay, built 60th, 1822. A cordial institution is extended to the public. The church is located within a few minutes walk of Pumpkin and Overlook Stations on the W. B. & A. Electric Railroad. Rev. D. W. Hays, Pastor. GALLILEE C. M. E. CHURCH N. Mount Street Rev. L. M. Stockbridge, Pastor Residence, 1637 N. Mount St. Phone, Madison 1257-8 11 a.m. cpm. $50 p.m. cpm. sermon by the Pastor. Tuesday night, last meeting. Prayer service. Friday meetings. CHRIST INSTITUTION CHURCH Bishop St. Mount Station, B. De. G. W. Kenward, Pastor. 11 a. m., sermon by Evangelist Johns. 2:30 p. m., Sunday School, Mr. John Rogers. Supt. 7:30 p. m., sermon by the Pastor. WM. J. B. SHANKS Bottling Works Manufactures Soda Water, Sasparilla and Ginger Ale 793 W. MULBERRY STREET Phono. Calvert 0042 11 in se 7 21-28, 8 4-11. Feet Hurt? TRI. UNE MAKES YOUR FEET HAPPY 50c AT YOUR DRUGGIST If you are bothered with BED WEDS, ROACHES, FLIES or other insects Use No. 13 Exterminator 244 Linden Ave. Vernon 2117-4 708-222-2222 In The Social Whirl Engagements, 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. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 Miss Elizabeth Lee spent the weekend in Washington. Miss Emily Johnson and Miss Helen Underhill of Philadelphia, are spending the month of July in Ridgeglen, N. J. Mrs. Genevieve Lee is spending the summer in Asbury, Park, N. J. Mr. Maurice B. Williams of 1413 Eastern avenue, is convalescing at University Hospital. Miss Ethel and Laura Thompson are in summer school at the University of New Jersey. Mrs. Mary Braxton of Etting street is spending a few days at Bertron, Md. Mrs. Susie E. Jones and Mrs. Donnie Holt, of Macon, Ga., are visiting Mrs. Calvin B. Freeman, 190 W. Mulberry street. Mrs. Oino R. Keys is spending the summer at the University of Pennsylvania. Miss Annie Casson and Miss Mamie Tappe spent a few days in Philadelphia and Jersey City. Mrs. Martha Ryan of 576 st. Mary street is home after visiting Mrs. John R. Pratt of Atlantic City. Mrs. John Nettles who has been cut off is slowly improving, much to the delight of her friends. Miss Teresa Parker, a trained nurse in Lincoln Hospital, New York City, motored to Cooksville with her mother, Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Hattie P. Parker. Miss Florence Kelly, 2108 Drud Hill Avenue, who was recently operated on at Provident Hospital is much improved. Rev. and Mrs. Jeter of Newport, R. I. are in the city after an extensive trip through the West in interest of the colored people. Mr. Clarence A. Carroll of 567 Bloom street, and Miss Elizabeth Brown of 1407 Mount street, were married Tuesday at the residence of the groom by Rev. Ernest Lyon. The wedding was largely attended and many gifts were received. Mrs. Hester R. Floyd of 921 Argyle avenue is home after attending the annual meeting of Women's Home Missionary Society of the Washington Conference which was held in Pittsburgh, Pa. and Mrs. Fred Moon, 44 E. Bondary Ave. are the proud par- ents of the bound son, born Priscilla July 14th. Mother and baby are doing nicely. Mrs. Susie R. Coleman of 921 Argyle avenue is home after visit your brother John E. Ryan of Pleasantville, N. J., and Mrs. John R. Grant of Atlantic City. Mrs. William T. Buckner, wife Attorney Wm. T. Buckner of Washington, D. C. has returned home after spending the week as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Carrington of N. Mount street. Mr. Martha Thompson of 2143 Carson street, left the city this for a visit to Middleton, Delaware. Miss Minnie Harkles of Annapolis, Md., was the guest of Prof. J. W. Alb of 429 Grand Hill Avenue, last week. Rev. W. A. C. Hughes spent Sunday with his family at their beautiful summer cottage at Emory Grove. Mountney County, Md. Rev. Hughes left Monday for North Carolina. Mr. J. N. Parker, Mrs. Rachel Burrell, Mrs. Carrie Belt, Mrs. Rhona Burrell and grand-daughter of Chester, Pa. was the week-end Mrs. Halle Parker of Oakville. Mrs. Geo. D. Gilbert is visiting her uncle and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Greenbury Howard of Montgomery County, Md., and Mrs. Hattie Howard of Brown of New York City, is spending the summer with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Greenbury Howard. Mrs. Martha Johnson, Mrs. Florence Brown, Mrs. Sadie Murphy and Mr. Morris Mitchell motored to Montgomery County on Wednesday and visited several of their relatives. Miss Irene V. Thomas, Miss Mae L. Townsend, and Mr. A. Jack Thomas spent the week-end with Mrs. A. Jack Thomas who is spending the summer at Linthein Heights. Mrs. Edith Francis and her daughter, Miss Alberta have gone to E. I. to join Mr. and Mrs. Perry for the summer. The inter formerly Miss Louisa Standard of Washington. Mr. Calvin Florence, State supervisor of the American Woodmen, is attending the district convention of the order at Atlantic City this week. Benjamin Roberts, aged 59, for many years employed by local caterers dropped dead at Hilleen Station last Saturday. Funeral services were held at his late home, 245 W. Hoffman street, Tuesday afternoon. --- The Past Worthy Counciler's Circle of Mary Magdalene Court No. 3, K of P, closed their meeting last Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Annie Boardly, 608 N. Carolina street. After a complete routine of business the hostess ushered the members into the reception room and served them with the delicacies of the season. The following members were present: Miss Ella Woolford, Mrs. Elisabeth Milburn, Mrs. Mary Ally Williams, Mrs. Emma Butler, Mrs. Lilie Williams, Mrs. Flossy Peters, Mrs. Mahalia Brown, Mrs. Charlotte Woodard, Mrs. Mary Preston, Mrs. Jennie Davage, Mrs. Nannie Sewell, Mrs. Sara Travers, Mrs. Hannah Dodd, Mrs. Annie Boardley. WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Despite being out of town, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kelson, formerly of the University, breathed his life on the anniversary day home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lay- wright, avenue, Fairmont, W. Va. MARRIED Mr. John Wesley Kyle, 515 W. Biddle street, and Mrs. Mary A. Mills, 1917 Ritting street, the daughter of the late Janeeb T. Roberts and Elizabeth Robinson, were quietly married on Monday evening, July 17, by Rev. A. L. Calines, pastor of M. E. Church. The couple will reside temporarily at the residence of the groom, 515 W. Biddle street, and groom and bride are well-known in fraternal circles and members of Wesley Kyle, E. E. Church. It will be a great surprise to their many friends and acquaintances to learn of their friendship. Let us hope and pray for them the flowers of prosperity may bloom along life's pathway. At home or with their friends on and after July 25, 1922. Misses Audrey and Eunice Berry have returned to their home in Newport, R. I. Rev. A. J. Frye is attending the Sunday School Convention at Brandy, Va. Mrs. J. G. Locks, of 1302 Jefferson street, has gone to Cambridge, Md. to attend the Pythian Convention. Dr. Richard N. Fowler, of Atlantic City, spent the week-end with Dr. and Mrs. John Robinson. Mrs. B. F. Robinson and daughter Peggy, of Germantown, Pa. returned to their home last week after visiting Dr. and Mrs. John Robinson. Miss Bessie B. Blount of Ayden, N. C. is visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Blount, 1699 Riggs Avenue. Messrs. Luther C. Mitchell and M. Leroy Davage are sailing for Boston on the S. S. Gloucester, Friday, July 21. Misses Mildred and Helen Gallen, 166 Patapsco Avenue, Pimlico, Md., are spending the summer out of the city. Mrs. J. C. Westcott accompanied by Miss Emma Westcott, Miss Edda Grooms, George Earl and Ethel Grant, have gone to Newport, R. I. for the summer. Last Sunday Mrs. J. C. Westcott motored from Newport, R. I. to Boston where she is visiting friends. Miss Ethel Scott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Scott, is using a few weeks at Hampton, Va., in company with Misses Butler and Macbeth. Mrs. L. A. Robinson who has been visiting Mrs. Dora Mack of Guilford, Howard County, has returned to her home, 1520 E. Monument street. Mrs. Florado Howard and children, of New York, are here visiting her mother, Mrs. Hughes, of Moshe street, who is very ill. Mrs. J. C. Peters and daughter of Parkersburg, W. Va., has returned home after visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mrs. G. C. Grant. Madame Lella Walker Wilson, daughter of the late Madame Walker is delivering lectures in the west on her "trip to the Holy Lands". Mrs. Mary Blackwell, 1763 Druid Hill avenue, is spending the summer in Atlantic City and Pittmore N. J. Mrs. Lydia Barnes, Rev. D. L. Fowler and Mrs. Fowler spent Sunday in Cambridge, Md. Mrs. Carrie L. Brooks and Mrs. Josephine Kier left Monday to attend the K. of P. Convention. Mrs. Nathan A. Howard of St. Louis M. is on a visit to her sister, Mrs. M. Delitz Smith of Chesterwood Md. Mr. and Mrs. William Forbes of 1739 Druid Hill avenue, wish to thank their many friends for the handsome and useful present given them at their marriage reception on June 29th, 1922. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond H. Hamilton, of Orange, N. J., formerly of Baltimore, stopped in the city Saturday and Sunday, on route to Irvine, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Daisy Fitzgerald and daughter, Gladys, who spent the past two weeks with Lawyer and Mrs. C. C. Fitzgerald at Patapsco Manor, have returned home. Mrs. Ignatius Tuilfer and children of Philadelphia are spending the summer with her sister, Mrs. Henry Anderson, of Mount street. Mr. and Mrs. John Woodhous and daughter Julia, and son D. Howard Paulson and son Mr. Eddy Fleet, and son honored to Gathersburg, and spent Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. B. Avon Chatman have returned to their apartment, 2207 Drud Hill Avenue, after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hall of Princeton, N. J. and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Berry of Newport, R. I. On Monday, July 10th Miss Marion Love of Washington, D. C., and Mr. Herbert Brice Howard were quietly married at the residence of Rev. Isaac Johnson, Rockefeller University, Mr. Howard is son of Mr. and Mrs. Greenbury Howard of Locust Montgomery County, Md. The only one present was Mrs. Hattie Brown of New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Howard will reside at the old homestead at Locust Villa. On July 4, The Lexington Peace and Pleasure Social tendered a grand reception to Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Bullock and sister and brother-in-law of Atlantic City and Philadelphia. Mrs. Gerrit Mason is president and Mrs. Collins is chairman. The Social resists from its labors until the first Thursday in September at 24 S. street. Miss Kathleen Easmon, of West Africa, a relative of Dr. E. M. Moore, was recently married in Connecticut, to C. Kamba Simango, Mr. Simango came here ten years ago to be educated and is a student at Columbia University, N. Y. The new Mrs. Simango co- to this country two years ago to interest Americans in their proposed school for girls in West Africa. The following were the guests registered at Hotel Dale, Cape May, last week. HOTEL ABRIVALS—ROYAL PALACE Mr. Walter Brown, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mr. Henry Allen, German, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Clark, Washington; Mr. George Patterson, New York City; Mr. Philip Hill, Harrisburg; Mr. and Mrs. II. Johnson, Annapolis; Mr. Robert Young, City; Mr. Clarence Hill, Atlantic City; Mr. Thomas Johnson, Atlantic City; Mr. Samuel Gray, Atlantic City; Miss Sara Braner, Cumberland; Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, Wash- Moving Picture — The Launching of a Big Hole The Singing Silly Threads Community Singing-Silver Threads Among the Gold; Alibaba on. Band-The Flatterer (Caprice). Band-Stars and Strips Forever (March). Moving Pictures-The Dedication of the Francis Scott Key Memorial. Community Singing—National Anthem The Star-Spangled Banner Band's next concert August 4th, at Cal State Los Angeles, at 10:30 a.m. and August 18th at Carrollton and Jefferson street. OVERTON HASN'T RESIGNED Washington, D.C., July 20—George W. Overton, supervisor of schools in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, announced today that he had or resigned his position. Mr. Overton had been offered a position outside the State and received many inquiries from teachers so it was that he had yet accepted it. Mr. Overton said he expected to be on the job in September as usual. Misses Helen Snyder and Alma Hollinger, both Annapolis school teachers and Mrs. George W. Overton, formerly teachers at Bowie, have been offered teaching position in Sharon Hill, Pennsylvania at an increase in salary of $500 over what they had been given. Johnson, teacher in the Annapolis High School, resigned on account of ill health. According to Mr. Overton there are few vacancies in his county and many applications. The Doctor heard the concert by the Colored Municipal Band headed by A. Jack Thomas an Hermitage Square, South Baltimore last Friday and his verdict was: "permit me to say that the concert must have been given for a bunch of school children." "instead of a class of intelligent people. Those old time melodies with reminiscence, should give give away and more modern music. One might have stayed home and played those numbers on his player piano, and not have tired himself out listening to those Old Folk Lore." MR. AND MRS. ARTHUR L. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Johnson, formerly of 1118 Myrtle avenue, have purchased a beautiful home at 712 Dolphin street, where they will make their home in the near future. Mrs. Johnson will also leave the city to work in Newark, N. J., for a week as a guest of her uncle, Rev. S. S. Henderson. She will also go to New York for a few days. While there she will be the guest of Mrs. Rose, the Mrs. Eliza Pauling on Louis A. City, where she will join a number of friends. While in Atlantic City, Mrs. Johnson will be the extreme guest of Mrs. Gertrude Roberts and Mrs. Elizabeth Coulson. Mrs. Queen is the daughter of Mr. Roberts, of this city, 1915 Bruid Hill avenue. "If the city is going to appropriate money for this kind of concert for colored people, we had better take the same money and give to the colored hospital where we all will be benefitted." SIX TEACHERS NAMED Dr. Bowley said he had no fault with the band, but only the BOWLERY. The following persons were named by the School Board as special substitutes in the Colored High School at its meeting last week. The appointments are effective September first. When the contents of Dr. Bowley's letter were made known to former Lt. A. Jack Thomas, director of the band, he answered that the program given at Hermitage Square was the same as that given by all the municipal bands, white and colored in their concerns. The program is made out for his band by the city authorities in charge of municipal bands, and it is his job to carry it out. He admitted that the community singing part of the program was not enthusiastically received, and that as a rule songs like "Dixie" and "Swane Ribber" have lost their appeal to colored audiences, but not to white ones. My Mommy" he added was the city singer sung well by myself, ditho by myself, sounded out loud in singing "The Shokl", one of the pieces, they were not especially expected to join in. Special substitutes: Latin and French, Thomas H. Nelson; $1,500 English and History; Frank H. Perkins; $1,650, English; Irene J. Patterson; $1,650; tradelle L. Bond $1,650, Mathematics; J. Beattie Breeding $1,650, Latin, Sadie E. Convers $1,730 PIGGLY WIGGLY Piggy Wiggy With More Than Nine Hundred Stores In America To Cover Baltimore And Adpiggy Wiggy Most Unique In The World. This Company Is The Original Sense Of The Famous Sense Yourself Stores In America. The Piggy Wiggy Company originated of the Famous Sense Yourself Stores, the most unique in the world will open one hundred stores in Baltimore, Baltimore, Howard and Anne Arundel Counties. By August first the company expects to have stores in every section of Baltimore and their ads with their AFRO weekly and in a detailed history of the corporation will be given our readers thrust our columns. The program last Friday night was followed: Community Singles—Smiles—Mess in the Cold, Cold Ground; My Mummy, Moving Pictures—Children's Outing in the Park. Oh-h! You Harmony! Photo April 12 The finest talent among col- Columbia ords Columbia Music Calendula Columbia Records BURTON'S JULY CLEARANCE BURTON'S JULY CLEARANCE BURTON'S JULY CLEARANCE Words will not describe our line of merchandise that we are offering in this sale. Come in and take a personal observation of the bargains. Ladies' Suits, Dresses, Skirts, Waists, Scarfs, Sweaters, Hosiery. Men & Young Men's Suits, Shirts, Collars, Ties, Sox, etc. SAM'L L. BURTON Cash, Charge or Credit Phone, MAdison 4821 12141 PENNA. AVE. NO OLD TIME MUSIC FOR DR. G. BOWLEY South Baltimore Physician A. JACK THOMAS REPLIES Band Leader Says Same Program Is Being Given By White and Colored Bands No old time music for Dr. J Guy Bowley, 908 S. Sharp street. Guy Bowley, Jos S. Snapp street. No sir. When it comes to "Swanze Ribber", "Old Black Joe" and "Dixie", Dr. Bowley is not there. If a municipal band is going to give these numbers, people might as well stay home. Dr. Bowley says in a letter to the AFRO-AMERICAN Band-a. a. Chicago Tribune (Mercer); b. William Tillman (Avery); c. Wedding of the bride. d. Municipal Society (Seattle); e. Community Singing. f. Municipal Athena. g. Baltimore, our Baltimore. Hand-a, typey louse b, The Sheik. Hand-a, typey louse b, The Little Bay Mips, Swamp River, Mickey. Sh-sh! Don't you wiggle an eyebrow! Keep those feet still! Edith Wilson is singing a plaintive, crooning song that you'll want to listen to over and over again—that you'll want to own. It is "Mammy, I'm Thinking of You." On the reverse side is one of her best knockouts, "Take It' Cause It's All Yours." Johnny Dunn's Original Jazz Hounds furnish the spice. A-3634 10-inch 75c Have your Columbia dealer play this record for you. ```markdown ``` THE AFRO-AMERICAN JOHNSON PURCHASES HOME STORES OPEN The finest talent among colored artists records for the Columbia Graphaphns Co. Clunia Gratiorola MARRIAGES DAVIS-HANSKIN-Andrew, 21, 774 Sara HARRIS-TAYLOR-Samuel, 37, 1028 Meadow Street: Fannie, 32, 11 HARRIS-Julian, 628 Vine St. Jettle, 30. WHITE--WHIDDEE--Mason, 28, 416 W. Hamburg street: Lille, 24. BARRETT--BEDFORD--Joseph, 23, 1029 W. WILLIAMS--GREENS--Thomas, 48, 1029 W. Lexington street: Tille, 28. GORDON--BROWN--Hubert, 23, Annie, 23. KYLEN--MILLS--John W., 18, 1977 Eting street: WILLIAMS--GREENS--Thomas, 48, 1029 W. SHELL--WILLIAMS--Wilhelm E., 24, 2346 Maco street: Geoilla M., 24. TRAVY--LEWIS--Joseph, 23, 565 Bloom street: Grace E., 22. WILLIAMS--HUBERT--Wm. P., 29, 643 Gourgee street: Muggle M., 24. HILL--WILLIAMS--President W., 26, 1644 Mullison street: Bora, 24. BREYON--HUBERT--Edward, 49, 1631 Or Dale--JOHNSON--Johnson, 24, 724 W. Satr street: Jennemee, 36. SHAMLEY--CROCKETT--Charles, 33, 1414 May street: Geoilla, 24. WILLIAMS--HUBERT--Milford, 29, Welshie, Md., Helen, 18. GRAMAM--HARRIS--Harry H., 28, 868 Pierce street: Marle, 27. CLARK--GREEN--Percy, 29, 645 David Bihl street: HUTTON--Harry W., 27, 672 Mul berry street: Hugh, 19. WOODVILLE--JOHNSON--Narris J., 19, 1 1235 W. Satrance street: Riley 15, NATVEN--JOHNSON--Augusta, 41, 212 DOWNS--GRANSON--James, 21, 756 Vine street: Martine, 18. ALLEN--GRANT-Taldmire, 27, 780 W. Satrance street: Nancy L., 26. THUSSEN--GRANSON, 32, 861 Lennard street: Mary E., 18. Miss Grice E. Peters formerly of Baltimore, has returned to her home in Washington, D.C., after a pleasant stay with her aunt and uncle Mr. and Mrs. Edward Richardson of 1119 Duvid Hill ave. Mrs. Mamie Skinner has changed her residence from 208 N. Central avenue to 831 Ashland avenue. MRS. VIOLET HILL WHITE National Lecturer Under the Ansips of the Alexander W. C. T. K. will appear at T. F., will appear at Allen Chapel, July 16, Vine Street Baptist Church, July 17, M. E. Church, Independence Mo., July 19, Bartholomew A. M. L. Church, July 20, at Saw P. M. Admission Free The above advertisement appeared in the Kansas City, Mo. Sun, last week. Mrs. White is a well-known Baltimore. ANY AMOUNT TO LOAN Bring your Dedal or Building Association Book and get the quickest possible service. Office open from 10 to 5 P.M. C. W. Weissenborn S. E. Corner Lexington and Mount Sinai. HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD J. STEWARD DAVIS Attorney and Counsellor At Law 215-217 Courtland Street (3rd door front) Office Phone: Plaza 2471 Residence: 1047 MYRTLE AVE. Mt. Vernon 4728-W BALTIMORE, MD. HOME HOURS: 7 to 9 P. M. PHONES: Residence: MADISON 7744-W Residence: St. Paul 4188 ROY S. BOND LAWYER 215 ST. PAUL PLACE Formerly Courtland St. Rooms 49-51 Thur Res. 1520 Druid Hill Ave. Phone. MAdison 3193-W GRAND GIVEN BY THE HOLY NAME 500 At Greenwood Electric Tuesday, Ju MUSIC BY THE WEST END JAZZ BAN ADMISSION Jas. Janifer, Chr. GRAND OUTING GIVEN BY THE HOLY NAME SOCIETY OF ST. BARNABAS CHURCH At Greenwood Electric Park, Catonsville, Md. Tuesday, July 25, 1922 MUSIC BY THE WEST END JAZZ BAND PARK OPEN AT 10 OCTOBER NOON ADMISSION 20 CENTS Igs. Janifer, Chr. Rev. C. P. Rochester, Pastor with their BIG Surburban Gardens, ON MONDAY, Music by International Slocum's Trombone Special Trains leave W. and Howard Sts., 9 and turning at 11:30 P. M. Tickets can be had at Calvert ROUND TRIP Arthur Cha Special Trains leave W. B. & A. Station, Lombard and Howard Sts., 9 and 10 A. M. and 2 P. M., returning at 11:30 P. M. ANNUAL TOURNAMENT, OUTING AND PICNIC The Prince George's County and Southern Maryland Colored Farmers WILL HOLD THEIR Annual Tournament, Outing and Picnic ON THE SPECIAL TRANSIS will leave District Line Station over the Chesapeake Beach Railroad at 9 A. M. and 4:30 P. M. and on return leave Upper Maribore, Md. at 2:30 P. M., 6:27 P. M. 10:27 P. M. JAMES, 48, 1626 B. 28, 1626 W. 27, 1312 W. 28, 1917 IWITTEN E. 22, 2540 MAY C. 23, 3556 BLAIR W. P, 24, 1626 -Win, P, 24, 1626 J. W. 28, 1674 J. W. 28, 1674 ward, 40, 1621 IWITTEN [Washington] Brown, 42, MURT George W. Perry, JR. Rachel Taylor, 40, 1414 Harris, 38, MURT Murton Brown, 2, CATALINA Fries, 30, MURT John Hall, 55, 2528 Charles Johnson, 44, 2528 Margie Jackson, 225, J Lewis Smith, 42, 1477 Jason Robinson, 21, N Baldwin, 40, 1621 IWITTEN Baldwin, 42, 1477 Counsellor Law Ottland Street (front) 'Plaza 2471 MYRTLE AVE. 4728-W RE. MD. 7 to 9 P. M. Adison 7744-W Paul 4438 BOND ER BOW Corn FOR EVERY PRIC FOLLOW THE UNIQUES their BIG EXCURSE in Gardens, Washington MONDAY, JULY 24th, International Band of Balti 's Trombone of Washington Bains leave W. B. & A. Static 1 Sts. 9 and 10 A. M. and 1:30 P. M. can be had at Club, 135 N. Calvert 0959-J An analysis of the 35 deaths reported by the Health Department for the last week shows that there were four from tuberculosis, four from pneumonia, five infants and one elderly. The complete list follows: Mary A. Hawkins, 43, Calver and 22nd St. Elkhorn Brown, 55, 153 Islaland Street. Johnson, 42, 1621 E. Madison St. Altoona, 42, Municipal Hospital. George W. Perry, Jr., 66, 2046 Bradley St. Rachel Taylor, 40, 1414 Mosher street. corne Taylor, 40, 1414 Mosher street. University Hospital. Irons Pitts, 225, 95 W. Prostreet. Maria Brown, 60, 1341 Whitehat street. John Hall, 60, 288 Conn. Street. Muggie Jackson, 225 Dolphin street. Lewis Smith, 42, 1517 Harley street. Smith Robinson, 42, 1824 Tessar Street. Jacob Johnson, 42, 1824 Tessar Street. Mabel Washington, 20, Bay View Hospital. Andrew Wilson, 55, 1085 Johns Hospital. Simmons, 23, 1322 Pennsylvanian Ave. Jackson Maxwell, 70, John Hicks Street. Jackson Maxwell, 70, John Hicks Street. Mabel Washington, 20, Bay View Hospital. James H.ennis, 101, 304 Krings St. Warren H. Archer, 1, 663 Archer street. Sarah Parker, 42, 2021 Student Hospital. Mary L. Smith, 26, 824 W. Saratoga street March Pugh, 5, 105, 212 Ottochen street Margaret Geiger, 21, 2812 Fox street. William Ford, 15 years old, 1515 Mullikin street, was sent to Obtenham, Leroy Atkins, 1518. Mullikin street, was put on probation and Joseph Branson, 13, was dismissed in Juvenile Court last week in the charge of entering Cromwell and Broadway factory and damaging several thousand dollars worth of machinery. MEATS, GROCERIES VEGETABLES See Us for Choice Meats and Groceries WE CARRY EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF GROOERIES MEATS AND VEGETABLES WE DELIVER THE GOODS SUPERIOR GROCERY COMPANY 1015 Penna. Ave. PHONE. VERNON 3461 FOR — Quick Relief USE — BOWEN'S Corn Leaf FOR SALE EVERYWHERE PRICE 10c SIMON SOLOMON SIMON SOLUMON 631 W. Lexington St. Cor. Arch OUTING -- SOCIETY OF ST. BARNABAS CHURCH Park, Catonsville, Md. July 25, 1922 PARK OPENS 12 O'CLOCK NOON 20 CENTS Rev. C. P. Rebesher, Pastor EXCURSION to Washington, D. C. JULY 24th, 1922 Band of Baltimore and of Washington, D. C. P. & A. Station, Lombard 10 A. M. and 2 P. M., re- Club, 135 N. Arch St. 0959-J $1.90 OUEER DOINGS IN JOHNSON HOME Rehun Johnson, 1960 Spring street, charged with keeping a disorderly house, was paroled in Part I of the Criminal Court Wednesday. On July 2nd officers saw a white soldier enter the home at a late hour of the night and later found him undressed in one of the rooms. John Pheifer, the soldier in the case testified in court that he on the street and accepted an invitation to accompany her to her home. She left the room shortly after their arrival to get a $20 bill changed and it was during her absence that the police came. The night was not at the home at the time but came in later and was arrested. He stated that he had not seen or heard from his wife since the incident. He shortly denied any knowledge and stated that the incident was more of a surprise to him than to anyone. WHAT THINK YE OF THIS ONE? Continuous Music From City, Concert At the Grove and Music All The Way Back The A Jack Thomas band, Locust No. 543, Baltimore City, will make Sunday, August 6th, the opening of all overrides dates, and the closing of all overrides dates, and the foot of Broadway, 230 pounds, under the strains of snuppy music, and land at Howard's on an hour and half hour, under the same. After coming back, coming back will be the same as going down. Fare for the gound trip will be 12 cents. plenty of reflections, salt air and fun awaken your hunting, don't forget the date. Another dance. Enjoy your tickets from members of the band. 726 Pennau Ave. Philomel Vernon 2686 Branch Store: 203 W 22TH STREET OMERICA'S FINE BEAUTY SHEER ORGANDIE DRESS PRIZE STYLE! Fashion emperor say her beauty is dress of the year! If you are a summer dress of distinctive charm and elegance low price, I can dress you away and look in your favorite your friend! Artistically delicate, autumnal and feminine Orchid, Rose, Harding Blue Orchid made in woven fabric, abrasive finish woven. Pointed Bertha Cole tar, decorative ROSES of artificial elbow length sleeves, pooled fabric, strapped Orchid. Pull beautiful made, lace, ornamental fabric with self material, time at Eldreden and Eldreden and Eldreden. Suits tattered at left side. Beauty is the pride of a designer—obtainable only from. MONEY Back if you are not lighted SEND NO MONEY! Dress or suit a pretty—simply order by 10:30 a.m. Bits $25 to 100. 20 years. Beauty to meet size and your order above. INTERNATIONAL MAIL ORDER CO. THINK! ACC ORDER YOUR PARTIAL PAY Do you know that winter Do you know that prices sky high on account of the Come to our office and let Partial Payment Plan that ful high prices and conge from the Coal Strike. SERVICE CO Do you know that winter is fast approaching? Do you know that prices on coal are likely to soar sky high on account of the coal strike? Come to our office and let us acquaint you with our Partial Payment Plan that you may avoid the power ful high prices and congestion which is inevitable from the Coal Strike. 1515 Pennsylvania Ave. Phone MAdison 9463 Altho fined $10 and cost in the Northwestern $10 Police Station, Sunday of last week, Rev. Ezala Percetti, 558 Laurens street, still maintains his innocence. Rev. Percetti who is said to be a foreigner, was charged with enticing eleven year old Ohola Crummel, 537 Robert street, into his shop and making indecent posals. Because of the lack of witnesses, this charge was changed to disorderly conduct. Mrs. Lillie Herring of 1124 Etting street, whose husband conducts, has now gone to Louisville, Ky. to keep the summer and will return around the 15th of September. HOW TO BE FREE FROM OINTMENTS Science Has Found A Greaseless Way to Overcome Skin Troubles Every day the skin nerves tell us that something is wrong at some point on the surface of the body. It may be an itching, scaly, irritation after shaving, forms, fists, sootting, or a hundred and one other things that may happen to awaken the tiny skin nerves that are situated just under the surface. The nerves remain on the surface, the nessy and moist the clothing. Selenine has now found a "greaseless way." It gives you greaseless Nosexia. Nosexia is a healing property, which can right the skin and stop the itching and pain immediately. You can feel it then. The doctor of Nosexia Greaseless Cream from your doctor is authorized to refund your money if you are not more than pleased with it. Or send this cream to your doctor. The doctor of Nosexia chemical Co., Baltimore, Md., for a large demonstration for free. Agents wanted. YOU CAN HAVE STRAIGHT, SILKY HAIR: By using "Suaveline," the delicately perfumed lotion which straight- ens and strengthens the hair, makes it soft, silky and brilliant removes dandruff; cleanses the scalp; does not discolor the hair or injure the scalp; no ironing; nothing to wash out; contains no greases; guaranteed absolutely harmless. At your Druggist, or write to us. SUAVELINE MFG. CO. 160 Nassau Street, New York, N. Y. Deskler - Soldier - Agent Wanted Suaveline A change for the better—from posted and other lenses with ugly tears to the clear Krypton lenses "Q NOT Q" I. J. BRAUN OPTICIAN Expert Watch, Jewelry and Optical Repairing 423 N. Eutaw St. July 14-Aug BRANDENBURG EUTAW AND MULBERRY STREETS 30 DAYS SALE 1-3 to 1-2 Off on Men's Wear Free Bring this Coupon and get a pair of Garters FREE with every purchase of $1.00 and up. B. V. D. UNION SUITS, 41.01 Phone: MAD. 561-119 DR. MARK O. FAX Surgeon Chiropodist Room 3 17:00 Pennsylvania A Opposite Douglass Theatre All Alliments of the Foot treated. All Supports made from plaster rests of own foot. Corns and ingrowing hair removed. Hours: 9 a. m., to 5 p. m., and 6 p. m. to 9 p. m. Sundays, 10 a. m., to 1 p. m. 7 21-28.8-4-11 CT QUICKLY COAL ON THE DELAYMENT PLAN it is fast approaching? is on coal are likely to soar the coal strike? it us acquaint you with our it you may avoid the power gestion which is inevitable COAL CO., Inc. ```markdown ``` PAGE THREE eer EES eee eee > : ae * ee i ae we . : . “ ! ___PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 HE APRO-AMERICAN ee er : ae aan emer a a ae papi Se aa : ES sermon to the officers aod Gelegntes, Toes he Gea! Lae ON THE SILVER SCREEN |__oXTEBecn ort rarons rovowownoy | ah ese == Se ee | gaged Ghancelior’ Go BR, HuttODs (em Gray, of alla delimited: Secs SH WS a || enlets ot Porting ot ents tote) a StS tn le rl i) Preserve Your Health and Strength Clear your complexion and get rid of that Tired, Lazy, Sleepy feeling by taking GREENE'S COM- OUNE IRON TONIC, it restores vitality enriches the blood, stimulates digestion, increases the appe- _tite, makes you feel years younger. Results guaran- MK teed. A $1.00 bottle to any address for 75 cents. : mr : TRI-UNE s Makes Your Veet Happy WE RECOMMEND AND BELL IT z GREENE'S PHARMACY ORUID HILL AVE. & McMECHEN ST. | PHONE, MAD. 840-185-1954 a yy 2 " “ ” RAINBOW THEATRE 2115-2117 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE ROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING. MONDAY, JULY 24ur iMonday—"“CHEATED HEARTS” ‘HERBERY ‘RAWLINSON ss !Tuesday—"“HIGH HEELS” . GLADYS WALKER . rednesdayt—“FALSE KISSES” me a US Miss: DU! PONT i PS ne es ee Thursday—SURE FUN” q Bees HOOT GIBSUN (ne eens EEE )Friday—“ACROSS THE. DEAD. LINE” 7 hi eo FRANK MAYO i aturday—“MAN TRACKERS” Sy ees i GEO, LARMINS — . : REGENT “Desert Blossoms” ‘The opening feature of the week at the Regent was “Desert, Blow some" a fine western drama featur: ing Wiliam Russell, ‘The story tells of u young efvil enzincer whe {akes upon himself responsibilit for the faulty consteuction of great railroad bridge which col Yapyes on the day thet it is sched. uled to open as the result of the use of a chenp grade of cemen which, the son of the young en: gineer's employer is forced to pas: on penalty of having a gamblin debt made known to his father by a dive keeper. ‘This picture wa: shown for two days. On Wednesday and Thursday. “Paying the Piper” featuring George Faweett and Dorothy. Dick- gon Was the big feature. Special attention is called to the two big features which will be shown, ot Vrlday and Saturday, namely “The Safety Curtain” starring Norma Talmadge whieh will be the Friday special attraction, and "Received Payment” featuring Corinne Grit- fith which will be shown un Satur- day. Interesting additional fex- {ures on these wo days will be the eleventh chapter of “Captain Kidd” the Eddie Polo serial and a Sun- shine Comedy entitled “Hold The Line.” Next week, tus inital speeia feature willbe “The Matrimonial Web" featuring Alice Calhoun: on Tuesday, “The Ghost in the Gar- ret” with Dorothy Gish in ‘the Stellar rate will We offered: Wed- nesday and Thursduy. eversbody’s favorite: Pearl White in “A Broad- way Peacock" will be the big fea- ture. on Friday, “The Amateur Devil" featuring. Bryant, Waghburn Will be shown, and on Syturday, the big feature will be “hsiind “Wires” feuturing Corinne Griffith. , CAREY “Across the Deadline” ‘the railruad strike was re- spunsible fur the hylding up of “Playing With Fire” the” six-act western starring “Hoot” Gibson whieh was to have been the initial special feature at the Carey on Monday aud “Acruss The | Dead- line” featuring Frank Mayo and Mollie Malone was shown as a sub- sutute, ‘This pleture is a drama of reai morlt and the large wudi- ences at Voth matinee and night shows gave no evidence of dis- Appolntinent. Jimmy Aubrey in “The Villaxe Smithy” was the com- edy feature. : ‘on Tuesday the bix feature was erie Sheik’s Wife” a story, whose trend is apparently w sort of sequol to "The Sheik.” ~The ceeds un this day Was “Assault and Flat- tery” featuring — rene ‘Dalton. Speelal atteaution is called to Ue Dig program which will be offered on Saturday as follows: "The tivelfth chapter of “The Adven- Cures of Robinson Crusoe" ¢0- featuring Noble Julinson: a Wil- Hand. Flynn detective story in two ‘acts “entitled “Five | Dollar Plate” featuring Herbert Rarwlin- Soni a twonuet western entitled "Go Get ‘Ew Gates” featuring Art Ace eord: a Harold Lloyd comedy en- ted “Biy Lhizes" and an Acsep Fable. Some program. Next Monday, the initial feature will be the delayed “floot” Gtbsen Picture: “Playing, With Fire” and On Tuesday the, big feature will be “The Scrapper featuring Herbert Rawlinsun and Mollie Malene. ————— \ RAINBOW “Go Straight” he opening attraction of the ek at the Rainbow was "Go ight” featuring Frank | Mayo. ‘Tuesday, the spell feature ‘The Open Shutter’ featuring tn Roberis; on Wednesday, Whe Ruge of Taris* featuring Miss Du. Pont was tte special fea: ture, On Thursday the special offering Was “Movulight Follies” eaturing Aurie Prevost, Special Attention is called te "Fhe | Shark aster” featuring Frank Mayo ‘hich will be the Friday attraction fia “Action” featuring Hoot Gtb- nv whieh will be shown on Sut- irday’. Fe Next week the opening uttrac- ion will be “Cheated Hearts” fe- Jug Herbert Rawlinson, on day the big feature will be h Heels” featuring Glady: tun, Special attention is agaiv ted to & Dig production in whiel ‘Du Pont. is the featured er, namely “False Clues” which H be the Wednesdiy special at- ee ee On Thursday “The Show Fire’ featuring Hoot Gibson will he shown: on Friday “Across ‘The Deadline” will be the special feu- ture with Frank Mayo in the stel- lar role, and on Saturday the big feature will, be “The Man Track- ers’ featuring George Larkin. | ROOSEYELT ROOSEVELT | “Pine Days To Live’ | ‘The initial special feature at the |Itvogevelt on Monday was “Five Days To Live" starring Sessue j Hayakawa, the Japanese screen | stir supported by his wife and an all-chinese cust. The theme of this picture Cells of @ poor young Chinese man who to save the gir he loves from being given in mar- riage to a teh elderly man who has bargained to take her in pay- ment for a debt owed him by her fathor. accepts the offer uf 4 10tor- jvus vutluw condemned to death that who ever takes his place may have his fortune. ‘Only five days remain before the day of execution, but inorder to obtain the money to outbid his rival. the young lover accepty the outlaw's offer und buys Ute git For five days they live in lavish splendor and then the young bride- groom tells his bride’ of his” bur- gain, When be departs, sho secks death by inating the deadly fumes of a drug that has been elven her, The youns husband is saved from deuth when it is discovered that the outaw tn the meantime has died from cholera. Remeni- bering the prontise of his Dride to take her life at the hour set for him to die, he yushes at break- neck speed ‘back to their home to find the lust spark of life flickering out, — This picture was continued for two days and drew large and dijjireeiutive audiences. OW Wednesday and ‘Thursday, Richard Burthelmess supported by wu all-star cast in “The Seventh uy” was the special feature, Spoeeial attention is ealled by the management 10 the. big. feature which WHT be shown oa, Keiday entitled “Why Meu Forget” with @ fine Gto-reel western starring ‘Tox as Guinan as an additional feature, | and) “One Glorions Day” starring, Will Kugers ul Zivateld Follies fame supported by Dita Lee Nest Mouday, the onening spevials feature will be “Polly of the Follies” starring Constance Talmadge. This picture will be continued on Tuesday. On Wed- nesday and Thursday “Over The Hitt" will he the big feature and on, Wriday and Saturday, Dorothy Dal- tan in "tke Crison Challenge” in Se the apevtal atuaetions | LINCOLN (Vaudeville) | Se pupular did Billy Mack's Company and lis New orleans Juan Bad prove as the stage at- Uaciiun ae the Lincoln two: weeks tig that they were re-engaged 0s the stge attraction at that hous again this Week, ahd they are pror- ing Just as popular ws they did en the former veeasivn. P'Mack handles the bulk of the evinedy and tnakes « hit with the audizures: He hus & Keen sense OF comedy Values und ny Titts originality, and keeps the: house tn an uproar of hilarity all tie tine He ion the sue. Leroy Jeli: gon who is Mick's foil in the cum- cdy line in alsy w guod comeds than and in addition sings fairly Well wad dunees cleverly. Miss Mary Mack heads the fen- nine contingent, which embraces May Fung. Thelma Paris, Bobby Powell. Belle Waters, May Dixon and Viola Bell. ‘The sketch offer: fed for che frst halt is « vaudeville Ietange in which the various Hiembers of the company get wr ‘OHpOrLUMILY to show tieit ability fas sung cod dance artists, One for the bite of the offering was. i Kinging trig composed “ut Mis Muck and two girls of the com: pany. cheney uta eal June production is. the Willy Mek New Geleus Juz Band whick [plays all the niusical accompati- ents.” The members, of dhe band are Willian Paris, director anc (rombonist: Walter Harris cornet: list: Westley Wilson. pianist and [Htarols Wallace deunimer, | Thy usual pieture program complet ‘the Dill. DUNBAR | “Billy Pin” rhe big feature on Monday at the Dunbar was “BiMy Pin? sttr- Hing Bred Stone the famous sure Star: on Tuesday the big feature ie = oe ee ae eae yas A) oe hs fh at on es © VF sins eToys a ee gerne: ge ee ee . ae pee Ee Oy we ode ee ha oe o We & i ee . . OM on SRB a ee th ao "Ue ES. Bie of ee me cae VE] BN ee a bw, bo) ed hed! Auautie City X. J. Known te millivns ef pleasure seekers as the “Nativn's Playground” is one ot the Hose newithy resorts in Anterica. Exch year iU jaune grows, with the continued increase Of its summer popukiion to fimense proportions. In the inenth of August, sueiets frum tive prin- cipal cities in the East, Philadelphia, altimore, Washington, New York and Pittsburgh gather tere in large numbers to bask in the sunshine and inhale oreas breeses in addition tu indulging in Une ex- veptional surf bathing attorded. Wall's Bath Houser, known ull uver uhe East. is the only bath heuse, used by aud opernted by Colored peuple fer Colored people. 1 serves as a mivece for those whe visit: the shore; enubleing them to find their friends from other pluces on the beach. Last Sumdsy, an exceptionally warm day, provght thousands to the xea shore city for relict from the heat, The photw above, shows group of bathers who enjoyed the surf immensely. Several well-known individuals ure recognized. ‘On the extreme left, silting down in W. H. West, candidate for magistrate of the Third ward. lhamediately back of Mr. West and standing is Wilfred R. Bain, newspaper correspondent, und ico. H. Walls, Gin cap und jacket) proprictoe of Wall's Rath Houses. The young ladies in tho fure- ground are: ‘Mrs, A... Willams, Mrs. Elsie Hester, Gladys Nelson, Juliny Foreman, | Tutt | Walls, ground eae Pras Winner! Mrs, Bisie Hester, Rebeecs Pullen, Catherine Coleman and Béres- ford Gale. Quake Chy Brower and two unknowns, ‘Immediately in rear of Mr. Gale standing with (clas folded are: William Rudder, Even Allen and Ceeil De Lande, #M indentitied with the New Fite- NVA STAVE VATA UBS VEIT TBU BINA ESAS NEW LINCOLN THEATRE 4 930 PENNA, AVE. 2 LLCO g ONE, WEEK ONLY WEEK IUEY a4, 1922 e ‘ The Only Real Vaudeville House j ROY WHITE ( and his ¢ 15—STYLISH STEPPERS-——|5 _ A real show full of pep ;_ EE 4 The Best Feature Pictures Changed Daily 4 First Run. i MATINEL fou. CHILDREN Le. CENTRAL AVENUE NEAR MON UMENT STREET PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, JULY s4uh) PROGR YOR WEEK Fe Tt you want good piteures see them at the Dunbar Monday—Robertson-Cole presents “BIGAMIST” A powerful drama full of action “GO GET 'EM HUTCH” Episode 11 Rolin Comedy “NON SKID KID" cece on Ne GS Tuesday—Special Federated Film presents Holbrook Blinn in “POWER” ‘Don't fall lo see this wonderful pleture. ‘The pleture every] Jman and woman should see, The great prise tight. “LEATHER PUSHERS” No. 3 Century Comedy "SOME CLASS” News No, 48 | ADMISSION 10-15 CENTS |Wednesday—Double Feature Day Pathe Exchange Presents “GOST OF RANCHO” Goldwyn Filmy Presents “FOR THOSE WE LOVE” BON CHANEY and BETTY COMPSON ‘Pathe Comedy “HALE AND HEARTY" Thursday—Western Day Universal Film Presents . “SEEING RED” FULL UP ACTION Strand Film Presents “FINGER FATES” Featuring AL REEVES A “MYSTERIOUS PEARL” Episode 13 Star Comedy “SHAKY FAMILY TREE" eee OE ee aed Friday—Fox Film presents _ “SMILES ARE TRUMPS” a “ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE”"Ne: 14) JOE ROCK COMEDY Staurday—Strand Film presents “TRAPPED” A Western “WITH STANLEY IN-AFRICA” 5, George Walsb| Fox Sunshine Comedy “PARDON ME” J was “Mother-Love and the Law! ‘with an all-star east. On Wednes: lday two Dig features were offere] in “Japanese NighUngule™ a thre- fet Pathe Plagiet, and “aur Re- lations’ bie Goldwyn production featuring Will Rugers, | Gn. ‘Thursday awe of Sterl" a hig Universal attraction and “Way Square” feuturing — Irvicg,. Cum- mings were the Gee Dig iin tires On Friday, “Rough and Ready" a big Win, Fox production will be offered and on Saturday the special feature Will be a Chartie Chaptia comedy, entitled “Behind Che Sereen.” P Next week the initial auriction on Monday will be "The Glgauist” on Tuesday “Vaswer” with Tol- Yrook Blinn in the stellar role will be the offering. Wednesday’ will be double feature day the Uwe sperial offering being "Ghost | of Rancho” and “Kor ‘Those We Love". On ‘Thursday, "Seeing Red und "The Finger" of Bate” weil de the special features, on Friday "Smiles are ‘Tramps | will ye the main Fearuye and on Swine the big feature will be “Trapped” je drama replete with Unrills and Tia anietlon. Suffers Untold Hardships When Deserted By Pal . In Mexican Desert Latte, Texas, Inlay 29—Flecerd of hin funds, deceived and desert: al by his pal, John Rector, father of Misy Sarah Rector who owns [$19,000,900 fv Olona oil hands died at a weil hyspital fast, werk. ecenlly Me, Rector and Jin Manuel whoin be kaew when both were pont, Wallund. farmers in Dklahema, started wut Cer Tasnpi- co Mexico, where Manuel sid wil had heen discovered ant lis fron- erty and that ig was mew worth isan bug abe. SASS TIT TESST TTS TEI TEES TTT Sa 8 REGEN @ Bs ' PENNA, AVE. at PITCHER ST. § CONTINGOES EROM 1.30 PLM. FB. M. Ee PROGRAS FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAX, JULY 24h ‘The Munsoun Cooling System aakes the Regent 20 degreesie SJcuvler tian outside. ‘The vuly house in Baltimore outside the k Century using the Monsoon System, = & 3 SUMMER PRICES K Matinee: Adults 10c; Nights: Adults 17¢, Children 10c 4 5 3 ORGAN RECITALS on the Wonderful 4 Robert Morton Organ e 4 Matinees and Ev'gs. 2 to 5. Mr. Jerome Carrington 4 7 to 11 P. M., Mr. Ulysses Chambres is 3 MONDAY e 2 “THE MATRIMONIAL WEB” is 2 With An All-Star Cast of Brilliant Players 3: An answer to the many questions of married couples, and & “One Stormy Night” A Roaring Comedy TUESDAY. ———~—~—~S g DOROTHY GISH_ in 5 “THE GHOST IN THE GARRET” & Auother success by the ever popular star of @ ‘Dream Street’ and ‘Way Down East." S . Also ‘One Stormy Night’ e WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY e PEARL WHITE in the e “BROADWAY PEACOCK” e “rhe Broadway, Veacock."” e which, as its tite implies, is i = persons who are swept inte MN iS the entrancing life typitied Pras Se ae is lby New York's Great White eae. ~) ia Way. Bio ar > e Migs White's vote is that ot ARR” bp ig fu daazlingly vivacious hosters 3B GaN P Sor uw noted gubaret, luis ne She SH \ 2 (i piacesedtiag with men, Milli Geox fama \ |B gry-maiers. she falls madly pvvents "BARRA. | gin love with ‘ot aristo~ ? oa = ss feral, despite tne wurnine of PEARL fey SS) B Gher pal that such an atic WHITE, Bag BS @can end uly in heartache. > fi s J Miss White, it is said. = in The a ysweeps through her dra tie i zl decones with tigen emotion, BROADWAY ##s 5 Fund yet is able to sway her 2s @ dudicncen will touclies of the PEACOCK, is a @inust delicate pathos. + finystecemdes Vi aI WGhartes i Brabine vespon-’ eigen” A ic| sible for many Fux successes, Jap Jew + ff 6 directed “The Broudway Peu- amiss s Sean e cok.” ie y Weduesday, “GU GET EM HUTCH" and FOX NEWS ig 3} Thursday, “CAROLYN OF SHE CHORUS” a Pathe Playlet Py a Aud THE SPORTS REVLEW =| : FRIDAY 6B 4 BRYANT WASHBURN in iS 4 “AN AMATEUR DEVIL” ig {He kissed her and she hated him. His kisses werel@) {pepless! Also - ia | Oh Promise Me” A Comedy and “Captan Kidd” @ er pe SATURDAY f is CORINNE GRIFFITH in 5 ; “ISLAND WIVES” - a | A picture of the South Sea Isles “Oh Promise Me” and “Cap'n Kidd” es COMING NEXT WEEK—"THE CONQUERING.POWER” 4 ‘Featiring Rudolph Valeutiny, star of “The Shel." OTE PLAYGROUND” | Having seen um tagic of oil Irulge hig own. faiily From povests tor quarter of aulilion "dollar home in Kansas City, Mr. Rector fred! bie sigry aa signed. an Sevonaat ie tance dhe Ge bree Se ee ee ieee the (roetela fromthe ignd, Once. own to Mexieo. Me Restor found that Manued hud ao uit Mads, and Neer: if of all tho cue he had was tet dione to die tthe Stesiean dosore After untold hardships he reuch- dal Tesilen and sired’ bie Guugh- ter fur funds. Ax soon as the money arrived, We started home, tint wast unable (o-get fureher” thee fare whore ie Was tubes. uneor: 'seivus, frum the train to the hos- pital. | SUSUR UTA CAAA TARTAN ae g K, OF P, HEAD DIES | prunswick, Ga, July 20—The Gand Chancellor G. R. Hutton Knights of Pythias, of this State, died hero suddenly last Friday. He was taken. seriously iJ! dur- ing the grand lodge sessions during ‘which a part of the members bolt ed and attempted to elect a new ped ene ee i a ae: oe SAG Saas eget” fe I A LF SG ee to fe. pe ee RT ON ee es ee ‘Third. Tore, ‘he Culted Order Netun Wise Men. Joli Wo tinaverss tenad Master, eoneeued $0: it Hite Wiaumial sensing Ia rare A, Sf, B Church. "Winters avenue, Catonscilie, Mi. fon the UU wet 2th wt Sols, 1 ‘The first, dey’s se=stua opened with 1 vlexntes persent And al oMgers. of Gram Vader present Hepurls sulaitted by the Grand Master ulin We, Travnrst fy Heneh Surety. Be Ge ML Ines fy Willinns, "Gs See"? Sumios Th Wali, i Ureaniee, wind other offleera the raul Lange were eeud and showee fenarknbe ptutens A Bernt purse way presented the Grane Mister by Resstone Joidxe Nv. GU, alsa Innadsinne git was pevseuted rm dele ution represeuting excl of te other lode fil taueeholds headed “Wye Kee. Be TL Rulit After the presentation, recess wa taken wond the delojgntes reredeed a soap thos fepat to the dining hall uf the ed Hee, surele of which was handled. yer fevtis ir one of qilt_ well-known caterers Tee, C,H. Williams, pastor of Gener A. MEL Choreh, delivered an lasptelog BASEBALL BASEBALL BLACK SOX Colored Champiuns of the Seuth VERSUS THE HILLDALES + Phe Strong Professional Chul uf Barby, Pa . AT THE MARYLAND PARK Westport Cars Direct SUNDAY, JULY 23rd Box Seats Reserved In Advance COME OUT. — 000 SEATS, PLES, OOM, ee — Garey and pine aren " Dest in Puvto Pas ‘Open Dally From 2:26 till 11:16 Continuously TPRUGRAM FOR WERK BEGINNING MONDAY, JULY 24th! ‘PUESDAY—HENBERT RAWLINSON, MULLY MALUNE | and, Cast i ” | “THE SCRAPPER' Sov ¢——— Michdel Malis when very young, carried the reputation of being @ “Serapper.” Later as foreman of construction Work he bs forced ty tght many battles. He seraps fur his bess, lie Scraps for hig girl and he seraps fue himselt gr anybody eke he thinks is right, dle is the serappiest serapper you ever seth Come and see, 5 Jrene Dalton in “STANDING PAT" — Some Comedy Reginald Denny in THE LEATHER PUSHERS" Itonnd 4 Eki fs a yetur engagement for the benetit of thes sy fale . teosee it beture, $$ $$ WEDNESDAY —Charles Huteliinsou, the Dare Devit ia “ , 7 GO GET ’EM HUTCH EPISODE 8 ack Richardson in “RANGE RAWER” 2 Act Western Queenie, the circus hurse in “HORSE, TEARS” 2 Act Comedy Snub Pollard be “STRICTLY MOWERS” Chas. Hutehlosoo Some Comedy THURSDAX—Eddie Polu 7 er iid Katherine Myers in “CAPTAIN KIDD" No. 10 a ae eR Billy West ii (BE CAREFUL? 2 Act Comedy xe re Neul Hart in-TWE RUNAWAY" 2 act Western < Nell Shipman in “THE RIALS UF ‘TEXAS “a ~ HOMEAS" 2 Acts ‘Fadle Fale ET Bt PRWAY—teorge Walsh and fee Loulse Lurralne it ea oN Foe aye : i eB “With Stanley in Africa Poss ce EPISODE 16 (oe ae Bobby Dunn ia “ALL WRONG" oe es i 2 Act Comedy po Sees a Baby Marks Usborne ant Little en g Rae »-yHE WESS GFE) Somme tna vaverren oF tHE W aE a0 3 Act Western Drama zal J HEREAR S08] scor kuwandty in -nocimry HOBO! GEOG WALSH © Some Comedy RSH Some Gomes SATURDAY—Harry Myers and NOBLE JOBNSON-in j «“ ‘ “q Adventures of Robinson i ” 3 : ae Crusoe Episode 13 i Herbert Rawttnson in “TRE RAKE" Sa + % Act Detective Play | Sa fom Seuteht in “TWO SEEN" 2 ActWestern ROEM Marold Loyd tn “SOMEWRERE IN ss >, © TURKEY" some: Comedy Noble Jono Aesop's: Bables - in: “TRE - COUNTRY < pO MOUSE’AND erry MOUSE” Cartoon Comle i Sonne tn San Goo | COMING—all ‘Star Cist'it “GIPSY BLOOD” 7 int SP speci All Star Casq in “FLOWER Ov THE NORTH’ oe | Wm Dunean ‘in "NO DEEENSE! 6 act special = = = Ao ‘sermuo to the officers and delegates, Taek See uly ty Tp. mz a -callection of biog eas petontey to the ‘oficers of the or. V5. Green, of Thultimorr, dette fered. an faterestlog address Wednesdes. Buby 12th. 0 ‘The Ror. Matthew W, Travers, of Wash- ington, D. Go» brother of the Grand Master, seho. was a welcomed guest and risitor, a The conventlon, delivered an Iasteucttee lee: ture, Wedueslay. "The Finance Committee, after a thuroush fneeauxation by the official Investigator And reporter, found 42 lodges with @ cash Fataution of $32,000.00, finauelat ueuiber whip. 2.500. aud $2,250.00 In treasury’ of LZ a ise ee Tue eleclos of ofees wa ay tgp, ea SR oto tn sed terms” Debuts 6. Sh ea gee reelected: Ge. Sees 203. Witenes elected: Atal 'r, Sey, Mra, "ane Gt reclected: Gr, Treas.’ Temen tt Oh lected Gr. Prelate," nivard Fp elected; Gr Werden, Aaos' 0. ht flreted: Gr. 1,6. Wits Seren a edi Gr, O- Ga, dares Lomas, eecgee Mrs, Juanes “Wotford, deeds Sue Bearings, 1. Sf Waser Mie reat ‘The oasention adjumet. "Wess July 12h, 105 btn * feenpectalty, JAMES, WHNdaMs, © ftteie! Kepurter gue aes. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 Out-of-T BERLIN Out-of-Town Correspondence Britton, Mt. July 20—Sunday was grand all day at Tree A, M. E. Church, Rev. H. Purnell preached at 11 a.m. R. R. S. Stansbury preached at 3 p.m. and Rev. R. R. Purnell preached at The rally was a success. The four members and friends have planned $200,000 rally for October 8. * Mrs. Blanda bokies will give a musical recital at Tree A, M. E. Church, Rev. and Mrs. R. R. Stansbury, Mr. John Martin and Mr. Howard joles were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Purnell Sunday. HAVRE DE GRACE Bye de grace, Md., July 20, — St. James A. M. E. Church, Rev. Win. Chew, pastor, sold the 31,900 drive Sunday, July 16, 1822. Bote, from captains mounted to $185.69. He hope to clean the Income, September 10th, to be reached our goal. "Mrs. Susie Can't have to go to Green Spring, read a very interesting book at St. James A. M. E. Church Sunday, subject, "The Grace of Glingz." Mr. S. I. Hayward, "Christine Butty." Mr. A. Christie, "Like to the Occasion." Mr. I. Saunders, of Germantown, 4th. V. E. L. Saunders, of Life-Use What You Have." At 3 p.m., Rev. Sheppy and his association were present. Rey. Sheppy gave an interesting talk on "Racial Unity." At 8 p.m., Dr. J. H. Walters made an address. "Health, the Road to Happiness." Mrs. I. B. Mitchell has returned from Illington, Del. "Mrs. Isabelle Monk and gaddaughter have returned from New York, and Mrs. Alice Smith and niece from Richmond, Va. "Miss Mary I. Stewart as the guest of Miss Jessie Johnson." Mrs. Kathleen Stevenson, of Baltimore, was the recent guest of Miss George Jones, of Income. Easton, Md., July 20—Special services were organized at Bethel Church Sunday, the organization of Trustees Helpers had darry, Rev. E. T. Addison, the pastor, preacher, and minister of the A. M. E. Zion Church, grazed an interesting sermon to the delight of those who heard him. Testimonial services were conducted at night by Mrs. Magdalene W. McKinley, who was in town last week on business. William Thomas Jenkins, born December 1891, died July 10th, 1922, 6:15 a.m. he had been sick for the past six months, and through it he was cheerful and happy. He had two children, two sisters, and two brothers and a host of relatives and friends. *Mr. and Mrs Joseph Blackwell left Saturday morning for Mr. Clair, N. J., Miss Margaret and Mrs. John, N. J., and will live with her sister in Romney, Pa. *Mr. Laurin Bruce left for Atlantic City at week. *Mr. R. H. Gilson is spending time in Atlantic City as the guest of his mother, Mrs. Martha Spencer, and will spend time with her mother, Mrs. Julia Keys. *Mr. and Mrs Becarpa Pawn paid a short visit to Annapolis and Baltimore last week. Mrs. Mary Spencer, Mrs. Becarpa Pawn, and Mrs. Eleanor Behstown was at Cambridge, Chestertown, and Annapolis last week. Be Lyric Concert Band was at St. Michael's Sunday night, where they played for a night. Mr. Walter White, Mr. Paul Brown has received his store, carrying a nice line of drinks, ice cream, and tobacco. JERSEY CITY Mrs. O'Riley, N., J. July 20—Thickfield M. church held Women's day services on Sunday. Rev. Mrs. S. M. Taylor, of Pentecostal Church, presided. Mrs. Lowes, president of M. E. Zion Church, gave a very inspiring talk. Mrs. Minnis tempered her mistress of ceremonies. Mrs. Ramdon Johnson, of Grand street, has joined the city's city. An exhibition of flowers matches was held on the courts of the Church of the Incarnation, 68 Storrs bore, on last Saturday afternoon, and in evening a summer midnight fete. Quite enjoyable the remeasures and good music. THIS COUPON WORTH 35c Mail this coupon and 35e to BALTIMORE, MD, and get ISHING CREAM for the pr CUCUMBER VANISHING O bleach and greaseless creat Cleansing, Cooling and Refresh Your name and address must NAME ADDRESS YOUR DRUGGIST'S NAME STAR DRU BALTIMORE Mail this coupon and 35c to the STAR DRUG COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD, and get two jars of CUCUMBER VANISHING CREAM for the price of one jar. CUCUMBER VANISHING CREAM is the greatest skin bleach and greaseless cream on the market; Soothing; Cleansing; Cooling and Refreshing to the skin. Your name and address must be written plainly below: This Coupon not good after July 25th. 1922 Free—ROGERS S BUY YOUR RECORDS. MUSIC We give Rogers Silverware Coupons Coupons and got a set PENN TALKING PHONE, MA PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS Full line of All Makes of Rec WE DO 622 West 1914 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE Piggly. ALL OVER PIGGLY-WIGGL Grocery Stores. One Hundred W Baltimore. Three stores already o ened as soon as building We offer you the opp partner in these sto amounts. With each two shares value $50.00 per share dividends, we give one as a bonus. For full informa Security Sales BUY YOUR RECORDS. MUSIC ROLLS AND SHEET MUSIC HERE We give Rogers Silverware Coupons with each 25c purchase. Save these Coupons and get a set of Rogers Silverware Free PIGGLY-WIGGLY Is A Chain of Grocery Stores. One Hundred Will Be Established In Baltimore. Three stores already opened, others will be opened as soon as buildings are remodeled. We offer you the opportunity of becoming a partner in these stores by investing small amounts. With each two shares of preferred stock par value $50.00 per share, 8 per cent cumulative dividends, we give one share, common free as a bonus. 403 W. Lexington EASTON Rosville, Md. July 20—St. Stephens A. M. E. Church camp opened on Sunday with a good attendance. The weather was deferred because of a snowstorm, prescheduled by the Rev. David Bedford. Those members of St. John A. M. E. Church who were unable to attend the service, at 3 p.m., sent their contribution through Rev. Joseph Saidfield. Rev. Josh Brown, who is suffering from cancer, preached at 8 p.m. The Rev. Bedford again delighted his audience. *Mrs. Olivia Brown, the wife of Rev. B. Brown, has been ordered absolute rest by her physician. We are in a community, white and colored, miss her ministering care. *Mr. and Mrs. Queen, of Waters A. M. E. Church, Baltimore, visited Mrs. Glen on Sunday. *Mr. Duval, of Wayne Memorial, Baltimore, attended service on Sunday. *Mr. Davies, of Asbury Church, and Susie Robinson, of St. Luke's Church, visited Mrs. Sarah St. Luke's on Sunday. *Rev. Kelly, of Union Baptist Church, Baltimore, and Mrs. Elizabeth St. Luke's on Sunday. *Rev. Hattie Banks, on Sunday. *Mrs. Martha Hooper has returned home after a pleasant visit at Chase, Md. CAMBRIDGE DENTON Upton, Md., July 20.—The members of the Young People's Progressive Circle motored to Ridgeley last Wednesday night and rendered a concert in Trinity Church. *The Ushers Union of Union Bethel Church gave a successful lawn party Saturday morning. The crowd attended the camp meeting in the Industrial Park Sunday. *Mrs. Eanna Thomas, of Easton, gave a few days of last week visiting Mrs. Chargee Thomas. *Mrs. Sallie Huntert, Mr. and Mrs. Henry O'Reilly, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Jenkins, Mr. and G. Flowerer on Gay street. *Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Ross, Mrs. Corn Thomas, Phm. Prism Pritchett, Mrs. S. B. Hollowick and Mr. G. Jones, of Baltimore, motored to Denton Sunday morning and attended services in Eaton-Hettel Church. The group met at the camp meeting in Thomaston Sunday. *Mrs. John Hammond and Anita returned Monday after spending some time in Dunville, Va. *Mr. Armstead and Miss Fannie Willett are members of the Rigby Club. *Mr. Rigby and Prof. J. T. Walker were speakers at the Industrial Park Sunday afternoon. the STAR DRUG COMPANY, two jars of CUCUMBER VAN- price of one jar. CREAM is the greatest skin on the market; Soothing, freshing to the skin. ist be written plainly below; DRUG COMPANY MORE, MD. SILVERWARE —Free ROLLS AND SHEET MUSIC HERE pains with each $2c purchase. Save these of Rogers Silverware Free BIG MACHINE CO. ADIDSON 1050-J COLUMBIA GRAFANOLAS Orders, Music Rolls and Sheet Music REPAIRING Lexington St. BALTIMORE, MD. E. Wiggly IN THE WORLD LY Is A Chain of Will Be Established In opened, others will be op- ings are remodeled. opportunity of becoming a trees by investing small s of preferred stock par price, 8 per cent cumulative share, common free ation write or phone Co. of Florida --- ROOSEVELT Wednesday and Thursday— The Mother - Mary Carr - and "OVER the HILL" her children IVC WILLIAM FOX PRODUCTION LUTHERVILLE Lutherville, Md., July 20-Mrs. Alice Borsley is spending a week in Baltimore visiting her aunt, Mrs. Alice Windus. Mr. George daughter, Mrs. Ella Carroll. At John Quickey is spending a few weeks with his Wesley Zion Church on Sunday, July 16th, at 8 p.m., Rev. A. Pollock, pastor, preached. Mr. and Mrs. Turner Lee and son, Edward, spent Sunday at Fairfax visiting friends. Mr. Howard Drake, of Baltimore, is spending a few days with Mr. William Adams. Miss Corn Lee was the guest of Miss Annabelle Adams, Thursday afternoon. Miss Mabel Adams, who has been sick for a few days, is able to be out again. HAGERSTOWN CUMBERLAND Cumberland, M.L., July 29. - The Amulet Current Opinion Club observed their eleventh anniversary on Thursday evening at the auditorium at S. Upson Street, after a brief program was rendered consisting of recitations, solos, both vocal and instrumental, and adresses, a most appetizing menu was served at Hastings, where mistress of ceremonies, Banquet Committee was; Mrs. Nora Holloways, Hastings; Mrs. Walters Hastings; and Walter Hastings, other guests attending were District Superintendent, Dr. Nayor, of the M. K. Church; Rev. W. H. Baker, Metropolitan; Rep. John W. Baker, and wife, M. S. Shipman, Sparks, and Master Spargen Sparks, Rev. TREY NEVER LET ME IN THE THEATRE WHEN COUNIES THERE! Joseph M. Schenck presents CONSTANCE TALMADGE IN POLLY OF THE FOLLIES by John Emerson and Anita Loos THE AFRO-AMERICAN Robt. A. Hart, pastor of McKendre M. B. Church; Mr. and Mrs. Claude Dare, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Darr, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Halston, Mrs. Louise Hillary, Mrs. Catharine Males, Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, Mrs. Octavia Fisher, the corresponding secretary; Mrs. Mary Banks, Mrs. Mollie Jackson, Mrs. Marcellus Edwards, Mrs. Goldie Bates, Mrs. Bertha Peck, and Mrs. Irene Matthews. *Metropolitan A. M. E. Church held Old Folk's Day on Sunday last, at which time many of the aged in our city were present. At 11 a. m., a s注, s注 began to arrive with them and by regular service hour a goodly number were on hand. Meals were served free to all who would partake. Mrs. Elizabeth Jones and daughter, Miss Clara, have just returned from Aberdeen. Mr. where Mrs. Solomon Smith, brother-in-law of Mrs. Jones, was buried in the church cemetery. *Many Cumberlandites are writing to our State Senator, soliciting his support to the Dyer Anti-ynching Bill. * Rev. W. T. Kenny, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church for the past four or five years, delivered his fare-well message on Sunday night, severing his connection with the congregation. He will be greatly missed by his many friends in this city. A large number attended the farewell reception tendered the worthy prelate on the 17th at the church. LONG GREEN Long Green, Md., July 21—Rez. J. C. McCady preached at M. Zion A. M. E. Church Sunday morning. The Love and Passion of Baltimore roused a program in the afternoon, assisted by other talent, and the hard work of the teachers last week. * Mrs. Eileen Clark is very sick at the Maryland University Hospital, of Baltimore. * Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Poster and daughter spent Sunday with Mrs. Martha Poster and daughter were visitors with Mrs. Grynn and family were visitors at M. Zion Church Sunday. * Miss Essie Winder is taking a teachers training course at Morgan College. * Mrs. J. C. McCady spent week in Washington with her husband. * Miss Ewen Jenkin, Miss Vable Davance, Masters Ellsworth and Hurchell Davance have returned from a visit to their grandparents at Fullerton, Md. * Miss Pamie Pountingham, of Baltimore, was the week and guest of Mrs. Jottie Cromwell. * Mr. and Mrs. Edward Willey, of Roland Park, were visitors at M. Zion Church Sunday. * The K. of Lodge and O. of C. O. of Sammerville, of Baltimore, were the week and guest of Mrs. Jottie Cromwell. * Mr. and Mrs. Edward Willey, of Roland Park, were visitors at M. Zion Church Sunday, July 30th. * Mr. John Froctor is quite sleek at his home at Ridgwell, Md. * A law wife and tag social will be given at the house at 22th, Mrs. Francis Hawkins, Miss Mary Gregg, and Mrs. L. J. Pendleton, managers. LIBERTYTOWN Jolbertown, Md. July 20, Mrs. John Parker, of Frederick, Ct.) is visiting Miss Helen Brown, Miss Carrie Brown, Mrs. Hattie Jones. * After spending a work with his parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Hardesty, Mr. James Hardesty has returned to Washington, D. C. After spending Friday in Washington, D. C. * Miss Maruel Smith, of York, U. C. is visiting her brother, Mr. Raymond Smith, and uncle Mr. Thomas Smith, of Washington, D. C. * Howard Williams, of Harmony Grove, spent Sunday evening with Mrs. Williams, mother of Mrs. Williams, Cousins attended Woman's Day services held at Peterson's on Sunday. * Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson, of Riverton, N. J. spent Wednesday, the OOSI First presentation of the beautiful Constance Talmadge in "POLLY OF THE FOLLIES" A First National Attraction TAKE IT from Connie— THE LURE of the Footlights EXPLAINS WHY girls leave home; BUT WHEN you see her DOING SIREN-OF-THE-NILE stunts. ROBED A LA Pola Negri OR CLEOPATRA. YOU'LL ALSO understand WHY TIRED business men NEVER GO HOME! Monday, TANHE NEMS Tuesday, PATHE REVIEW Irving Cummings in "PATSY JIM" day Rockville, M., July 20.—Mr. Carl Hill of Lincoln Park, has returned from Freedman's Hospital considerably improved. On Tuesday night at Jerusalem M. E. Church, Mr. Hill will be in place, Mr. Sbilyd Davinson, of Washington, D. C., was present and made an address. Messrs. Horace Hicks, president; Isaac Rendle, president; Miss Eilish Hill, correspondent secretary; Mr. Samuel Mason, treasurer; William Mason, chapman; Win. Luckett, sergeant at arms. "A large crowd went on the field," said a splendid plea given by Mrs. Sade Green's club. Baseball and other games were indulged in during the day, and dance was a late hour. Muscle by Mr. Henry Hartman. Orchard Band. It was a great success. $ ^{M} $ASSILLON. OHIO Mussellion, Ohio, July 20—Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Myers and daughters, Helen and Dorothy, and son, Earl, and John Flood motored to Gloren, K., and spent the day with relatives. They expect to motor to the University of Wisconsin, Winchester, K., who visited Mr. and Mrs. Wan, Philpot, has returned home. *Miss Bird-Dell Fisher, of Mt. Sterling, Ky.* is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Win Philpot for a visit to the University of Wisconsin. The Toulmout were in Cleveland Thursday. *Miss Threnn Howard, of Alliance, is visiting the Gunn sisters, of Walnut street.* *Rev. Richardson and Prof. A. P. Metall are attending the convention at Columbia. A large crowd of young folks city city enjoyed a picnic at Myers Lake Sunday. HARRISONBURG, VA. Harrisonburg, Va., July 20—Miss R. A. Morgan is spending the summer with her nunt. Mrs. Emmulline Carter, of Carefield, Pa. * Mrs. George Turner has returned from Washington, D. C., to Mr. and Mrs. Morgan, a bachelor in high school Sunday in honor of their son, Master James Quite a fow of his boy friends were present. * Mr. Luther Brown, one of of successful business men, purchased a nice residence on Johnson Street. * Mr. Albert Brown has returned after a visit to Washington, W. C., Quite a fow of business men, going to Washington, Sunday. * Have your dine ready every week for the AFO. HARRISBURG, PA. Harrisburg, Pa., July 29 — Mrs. Annie Taylor, of 1731 Fulton street, and a stroke of paralysis on just Saturday. * Master Leonard Matthys, of Dumfries, Va., is hitting a wall. Mr. B. Matthys, of Atlantic City, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Baker, of 24 N. 8th street, Mr. Baker is a pharmacist of Atlantic City. * The Bethel A. M. E. congregant of Atlantic City and son, Jackson, worship with them on Sunday morning. * Robert Scott received a warm welcome home on Saturday. * Mrs. Carolina Williams, of Frederick, Md., is visiting her daughter, the Sissie Baskin and son, Jackson, worship with them on Sunday. They will announce the amount next Sunday, which is Cleaning Day. * A large crowd attended the union picnic at Cold Spring on Thursday last. * Mrs. Baskin, of Atlantic City, is spending a vacation in Mr. Union. * Mrs. Smith is out of the city on business. * The Jenkins orphan Band was here last week. * The AFRO is on sale here every Saturday. * Mrs. Smith is out of the city on Sunday at Robert A. Chuess, 1297 Wullue street, agent and correspondent. EVER Friday and S PARAMOUNT PRESENTS DOROTHY DALTON 'THE CRIMSON CHALLENGE' Here's a big, red-blooded picture you'll revel in! A sweeping romantic melodrama that carries you out to a spot in the West where men and women live and love as they did in the golden days. See the hard-riding, two-gunned heroine avenge herself upon her father's slayer and win the man of her heart. Dorothy Dalton's greatest picture, actually filmed where the coyotes bowl. THE PICTURE EVERYBODY THE PICTURE EVERYBODY'S BEEN WAITING FOR ROCKVILLE Friday and Saturday Comedy, both days "SOME BIRDS" Pondtown, Md., July 29—Barrister were very poorly attended. Rev. J. H. Cooper preached in the morning to quite a small audience at the Middletown Campus. Rev. J. H. Cooper preached for Rev. Albert at 3 o'clock at Bedford's Church, at their camp ground. Rev. J. H. Cooper arrived upon a town after a short stay at Pondtown Sunday, July 21st, and closed Sunday, July 30th. Rev. J. H. Wells, our librarian, attended Sunday at the church Sunday at 3 o'clock. Mr. Andrew Wilson lays presided over an automobile truck WILLIAMSPORT, PA. Williamsport, Jan., July 20.—Miss Eleonora Harber, of Norfolk, Va. is visiting her sister, Miss Rebecca Barbee, of 28 East Third Lane, Miss Mia van Zeeuw, of 123 Lakeside, Miss Clare (Monday evening). The guests were Mrs. Marie Wallace, Miss Ware, secretary of Y. W. C. A., and Miss R. Andrews. * Miss Virginia Ranom, of Milwaukee, Miss J. Fairfax, Jr. on east 41st street. * The funeral of Joseph Stills, who died in the Bainbridge Hospital. Monday, was held at 10 a.m. at the Bainbridge Hospital at 2:30 o'clock. He was born on June 1, 1905, and is made to walk, was taken to the Soldiers' Home at Washington, D.C. on Saturday, Mr. James Stills of Pittsburg and his brother. * The Mother's Board of Robert A. M. E. Church is holding an arrival on the church lawn. A big crowd has gathered to see the funeral. The board will play Saturday night. * The St. John Band leaves Wednesday for Buffalo, A. Y., where they have an engagement to Mrs. Francis Kline on Thursday. * The mother will help Miss Helen Furix leaves Monday for Bellefontaine to the Sunday School Convention. * The annual concert at Eleazer Baptist School Union will be held Tuesday evening, July 25th. Everybody should attend. Mr. John Goodall has a new tour car. * The J. A. Club planned at Indian Park Friday. Bunting and roller skating in the evening. Congratulations, Fo, July 29, 2015. Alice Jones celebrated her 29th anniversary last Sunday. The A. B. C. Cloft club held a Special Guest Show on Saturday, June 1st, last Friday and Saturday. The same will be repeated this week to help them. They are working for a good cause, your charity. Sunday was the day of the celebration, something in Columbus. It was a special day. *M. Stuart-McMullen, Md., July 29, *Mr. Clarence Taylor, pastor of *Churches and Amphipolis*, attended the Nassau Lodge at St. Michaels Church, and was a member of *Amphipolis*, was the guest of *Mr. Clarence Taylor* Sunday afternoon. *Mr. Wm. H. Thomas, Jr., has returned from the hospital and as such improved. *Mr. Grace Clark, pastor of *Washington, B. C.*, is here for the summer.* Wood, Md. July 20. The pastor preached at 11 a.m. to an appreciative audience. At 3:29 p. m. Rev. E. Hayman preached. Sunday School was conducted by Rev. H. Cooper. Dorothy Dalton The Crimson Challenge THE STORY OF A MOTHER LOVE DIVINE "OVER THE HILL" One year in New York at six different Broadway Theatres He was a pillar of the church — knew the whole Bible by heart with the exception of the Commandment which reads, "Honor, Thy Father and Thy Mother." I WIVES' 'THE TRAP' PONDTOWN COLUMBIA, PA. McDANIEL OXFORD Never have we offered such amazing values—never have we done such a tremendous business. Every pair of Ladies' White Pumps, Ties and Oxfords in our stores is included in this sweeping reduction sale. The regular price of $3.50 is embossed on the soles of this footwear, so you know to the penny the exact saving you effect. Everything that is new and popular will be found in the assortments—including a big variety of sport models. Choice of white canvas, kid and nubuck, in military, baby Louis and flapper heels. No matter what you want in white footwear, you are bound to find. it in this sale at this big saving. Hundreds of Pairs of White Pumps and Oxfords in this Sale at $1^{45}$ $1^{95}$ $2^{85}$ We offer a tremendous selection at these three greatly reduced prices. All of them were formerly priced $3.50 to $5.00. Included are stunning Goodyear Welt Sport Oxfords in Black, Russia and Buck combinations. Every conceivable style in White Pumps, Ties and Oxfords is represented, in Military, Baby Louis and Flapper Heels. This sale abounds with marvelous opportunities. 'You simply cannot afford to miss it.' Newark Shoe Stores Co. New Chapel, Md., July 20—The stewards held rally day services Sunday and hold a similar event on July 14. The director prescheduled at morning service and baptized Mr. and Mrs. Hattie Slowen's baby, Messiah. Mrs. Slowen, a girl, Lizzie Snappon and bertie Cilson motored to Cambridge and Vienna, Md., to visit Mrs. Mary Wolfford, Hargis, Md., to visit Mrs. Lollette Hargis, Md., Week. CAPE CHARLES Umpa Charles, Vn., July 20 - Services at the First Baptist Church were well attended last Sunday, Rev. P. W. Cook, the pastor, delivered a wonderful service. Elise Clark is president, gave an outing last Thursday on the beach near Kiptopeke. All who went reported having spent a pleasant day, Mrs. Mary N. Smith, chairman of the Men's Committee, A. M. E. McKinney, lawn party last Thursday on the beautiful lawn of Mrs. Fanny Nottingham for the benefit of the church, Mrs. James Hatch and son, Lawrence, and mother-in-law, Mrs. Jeffrey, visiting Mrs. Elias Clark, *Mr. Jas H. Press, of New York City, who has been visiting his mother, Mrs. Ida Press, for the past two weeks, and Mrs. Huyler Moses, of New York City, are visiting their mother, Mrs. Ada Washington, *Lawyer J. Thomas Newsome, of Newport News, Vn., was the guest of Mr. Hoffman, of Hoffman Friday at Jackock Beach, *Mr. James Satchel, who has been sick 3.50 The Regular Price is embossed on the Soled! YouSave $1.35 OnEvery Pair! Never have we offered such a done such a tremendous bu White Pumps, Ties and Oxford this sweeping reduction sale. embossed on the soles of the penny the exact saving you eff popular, will be found in the variety of sport models. Choi buck, in military, baby Louis what you want in white footw this sale at this big saving. PAGE FIVE for the past two weeks, has been remored to the hospital. SYRACUSE, N. Y. Strause, N. J., July 20—Chas, Williams of 620 E. Washington street, who has been trained to bed, is able to be up and awake. Mrs. Wilkerson has returned to Buffalo after attending a delegate at the demislab Lodge no. 16. *Mr. Dr. Brun, of Quebec, Canada, delivered an address on Monday evening, July 10th, at the N. Y. house at 614 E. Washington. He demonshed the right conception of the organization. *Mr. Samuel Walker, of 723 E. Adams street, recently purchased a new Colgate Car, especially to be used among the colored people in Home, N. Y., who now visiting his daughter, Mrs. Georgia Aunna Williams, of 627 Jackson street, for several weeks. *A grand reception and farewell dinner was held in Home, N. Y., evening, in honor of Rev. J. Morris Lewis, under the auspices of the stewardess board, W. R. Ferrish, president. Rev. Lawson made his departure to Elmire, N. Y., to take charge of another church, about who years ago from Canada to enter in a larger field. *The Maranda's Minstrel was held on Thursday evening, July 13th, at St. Phillips Church under the direction of the Rev. J. Morris Lewis, who finally admired it so much that they have asked for a reporter. *Mrs. Alice Johnson has returned from Hudson, N. Y. *Mr. and Mrs. Ayer and family are spending the summer in North Syracuse, Mrs. Ayer, the closing of the conversion of the E. N. I. A. --- _ A Small Cash Payment—Brings : - é e e | Electric Light and ~ Powerto YourHome . : 3 € E Peo . ’ — Mbeya ial es DIXIE @e. se : ; 7 ; ast j as a> rural or suburban ‘Perfection Ze) oe re e \sa, r ‘é Lighting Plants Qemiaaaaiit _.1 Cent “andBatterics Se AnHour : © eats ee —— MAM THIS TODAY. Ble Opportunity for:Rive DIXIE STORAGE BATTERY COMPANY: Z aa ea Me ieee, a excuse aig marae Sao BUYERS EXPLAIN FREE LOT PLAN ‘Aféo' Reporters Interviews ‘Those Who Have Paid ‘Good Cash for Progerty They Were First Kola LEY Was Free £ FEW DEEDS RECORIED Purchasers Also Did Not Think It Necessafy To Have:Papers cece ‘When is a free -at not frge® Ask: the ‘Alladin. Realty Com- pany. é ‘This’ is the company formerly represented by Mist Nannlet Butler of Druid’ Hil avenne, a young we: paar whe wer emntoged fo © ‘teads" on possible purchasers. ol lots in Anne Arundel County, after interesting them in the proposi- tion, hy telling them the lots werr to be given away “free.” "Ming Butler folk our with the company and exposed the scherae Mise ME, Barker 2110 Druid HU avemie informs the AFRO-AMERL- GAN that she has now Miss Tutler's place as agent far the company. Thomas Anderson, son of | Mrs. Mary Anderson, 925 W. _Blddie street.cexplained how his ’* mother hough her “free lot". She was first asked to sign her name to 2 eard tind. told sho would ; possibly be the winner of a free’ lor at Colonlal Park. Some ting later. the Company's agent Informed hei that she had actually wanisuch 2 Int and her way would br paid 0 the place to pick out thesone she wanted, She was asked c10 de- posit’ $5 ag.an evidence at good falth and after picking ovitaher Lo she said she Tearned' that‘ihe re- carding of the deed, and ‘other 6x- penses of the tranfer woyld cost her $89 additional. a ‘Her lor ts ntimber 15, nie one, Colonial Park, Anne Arundel Coun- ty, Md, Her ‘deed to the. property has the following regirietive clause: “There shall not he rrected upon any portion of saidAiremises welling costing less thats’ $1,700 Fentricted to usiial nuisinee selnusr. covenants cunning with “Uie land And binding upon heirs efgoutors, Administrators, and assis of the econd part (Mes, Ariterson), until January of the year einereen hundred, when they shalf, erase and terminate.” " Sire Anderson's ownerstfp of the fot fe alsa subject 10 the / fxining rights, If any at the Eglephone company. She had not consulted her lawyer in buying the ‘pxoperty: to explain to her the mefiing of the ahave clauses, nor tpl she taken the ins to have time, deed recorded at the State Hetise at ‘Annapolis. ms "That (hesn are grave orrrs was admitted by 2 local _ real. esiate Grater, who told he AFRO“AMER- CAN: that property ts often anid two or three times by franfs, and in thig-ease belongs i che;person who firsi has It recarded... Since Colonial Park Is in. Anne. Arundel aunty. the deed mnst he crearded at Annapolis, ‘The usnal fier for this necessary operation 48 + anty about. $2.25. o Tit is possible that the “Yots at Colonial Park are worth “fhe $29 game of. the purchasers”: paid. Some Jots’at the park are.said to have paid even as much, ae $300. he roain tact Ie that agesigior the company. promised to elya: away Totsto, prize winners “free At- terwardn these prize-winnere found that free" meant $39. 0 x.5 ‘Actocal white real estate; dealer nfs int ioe Seti ia almiar scheme is being t3orked among white people for they selling of Jota’ at ‘Timonium Height. Mex Andefxon's story _suibstnn- tlated also by Agnes Bind of 12g ‘Woat Biddle | street. > Winiam Ruler 1228 Myrtle avermé);. annie Garter, 1812 Division sireey! Salle Deaver, 60, Biddle street, Mary B. Jaawson, 123 Myzile avenue, 8, A. ee 496 Druid Hill averue, H. Latch aero igi asgyte aver ee ee anna DEMPSEY SAYS WILLS ‘CAN'T TAKE HIS JOLTS ‘Champion Declares He Prefers To Fight Bigger Opponents As They Are Easier To Hit According to Prank G. Menke, writing fn the Philadelphia North American last week, ‘lack Dempsey is not losing any ‘sleep over the prospect of Harry Wills lifting the heavyweight boxing championship crown from his hraw when the oc- easion shall arrive for them to sete the question of which fs en- titled 10 reign ax king of fstiana, which event does not seem likely to transpire until nest summer. ‘Dempsey when diseussing ‘the coming fracas spoke in part us fol- lows: “‘Everyhndy keeps saying Wills is such a great one mat T wonld like 10 find out for myself. 1 guess a lot of people have the idea that | have not heen: matehed with him beeanso 1 think he Is rather tough, New that's where they have got me sized up wrong. All my life, 1 have always found my greatest fun In mixing 1 with Tellows bigger Jand tougher than myself, No one aver necused me of being afraid of Willard. Prom the first day 1 ever saw hha C thanght Tf could take his meagre, L thought the sume way about Patton, and it is the same way about Wills, tle may he harder co whip than Wil- lard, Fulton, Brennan or (he rest, bat L think 1 can polish him off. “He is bis, perhaps has {¢ ‘on me 2 pounds, three or faur inches in height and aimast as tauch in reach, Bit all thar stuff doesn't help a fellow much if he gels sorkod a good one in the body or on the chin, Wills, everybody tells me, can hil like a mule kicks and ean hox cleverly and do all those Uhings, Rut ean he take Ie? ean he stand a sorker On the chin, or ane aronnd ine ribs and come right along asking for more? “That's the ble question, Tf Witis cant cike ic any tight, with him wouldn't Jase tong. Rue if he fan take it, you can het every Hollar in the warld that when we fo get together, there's going (0 be a Hight unlike sny that's heen seen around these United States for a lang: Hine.!” ALIS FOR-GLORY. MEET PRIDAY ‘The initia’ allefor-wtors track and field ineet_ of the simmer finder the ditretion of the Public Athletic League scheduled (0 take place at Druid With Park tast Pri- day was postponed on aecount of fain. It was then decided 10 hold Toa Manda of this seek, tnt rain again interfered, It however, has heen set to cike place this err heginning at 4 P.M. moe aia Hall Wins Cycle Point Race | Last Sunday Leon Hall won the point bieyclo race af 10 Talles aver the Slade avenne course in the time of 20 minutes and 26 seconds. Rayna. Watts was second lAsinr ia'Han hy enly ane second. Hall dnd Wane were the anly esa ta auatity vor This. evant. “phe fing) forcehis event wil) take piace at Druid Hin Park on’ Mon- fay afternoon, duly 1, at 2 PM, ihe flake delve being selected as the course, The fiest. priae for this Sota wean Nena gold stick pin and the second prize a gold knife and chain. — RIOTRD BALL PARK Exmore, Md., duly 20—An_un- Known man was shot to death by Constable Irving 8. Ennis during a riot nt the baseball grounds here Tast week. fa pgs Late Baseball Results | _ Be adanciarad Negro: Frew. gt Chicago: American Giants 8: Indianapolis § (frst gamer. Amer: (can Giants 10; Indianapolis 8: (second gain, TAC St. Laitis: St. Louls Siar Ranting Athieticn 2. i “Win Black Sox Win Over Hilldale | making advantnie of the numerous Fle | ani rrre, th comple of timely. es, HateigorWinok Soe one the te kame of |nverow trum iapnger hele's lan postr fab 8 tack Rawk ren hone ih eG | bo. ‘rino.a.e| reese, if OT HH Utees, of OTRO Pord, 6m LOA 2 Mawes, Ah 1011 OF Micky dh 8088 ted mm er OT 3H Mall, of 212 O-OAilen, My LTT Mitten E437 sain. te B11 oo Milersah 09.00 O2.Prean, 0 02124 Site et UL wotimeye, 2 OO At ie hag wamints, © OOTY sykes/p GLO ACochell, pa OT OL Tmoss 00 Oxsanioy | 10H ‘toate “ARTA Tune | Tar Hea a fited tor Hiraasa te lth ae! Atainore AOS OA HAO BO Os snare CLUBS | Stands 7 : wok ne enepfell Tig mane ei kim aes et Higa aces Tis} ae Me Wine flawere oon tk Mint Haxieg nce RE tele aa recs Minion a “as es Minton ‘ings oc OL Keen Wintec |e Cateerml an So ik Bo Mander a0 Boo Re rvennay “ky Cocciimee Ya | Sox Trims Hilldale Camden, No Jie duly 20-—Special to the dtro=Wiih "Doe" Sy Ken tn, hiltinnis form, the Black Sox cook’ A hotlyecontested game from the itudnls nine here yesterday. & 10, o : GIRK, 14, HOUSE BREAKER | Migs Viol t., fohnaon, 1448 Parrish Alley, pértiaps brake the wake record’ hy entering two homes and one stare In a house- hreafkin campaign. She _ was turned aver co the Juvenile Court hy the Northwestern Distriet charged with entering (he homes fof Mise Nellie White, 4905 Rdmon- son avenuc: Mes, Josephine L.e- ferve, white, 2789 flarlent avenue: anal the New York Shar House on Paangyivanit avenue from which shy cbralned $17 In cash, CONEY GOES FREE | umes Connes, 29, 1128 SN. Vin- wont Street, wha accidently shot nit wovnded Benjamin Williams, 1h, 1120 Vinwent street, onze uly Huh, was exonerated trom ‘hlame ot shnis death which acenred at Maryland Hospicd on duly bath. Henjamin Williams, Jr, was first Maken te tis home where parents requested that his wound, whieh at the time seemed slight, he rreated, He Inter developed tock jaw and died on duly 14th. Phe. Tuer Gorsuch. hospital at- taichoe, declared that the death far the boy was eaused by blood ‘poixoning caused by" Infection af- or the acoldent and that the injury itself could not have been the icause of his death, oe QENNIS MATCH POSTPONED | The tennis match “hetween the Raltimore and. Annapolis. associa- tions which was scheduled to take hiate at_-Annapolis on Wednesday. fie held ip-on. account of rain And. scheduled. to he played an Thursday. — A BALTIMORE: BOY MAKING Goon | Ale. dohn Re Sanks of atex- anarin, Va., formerly of Baltimore, ine sen of Sr dobn nad Mes. Sarah Ennis of 214 W. Laer street, han entered the fenderson Rusiness elton of Memphis, Tena, to take hn_aavaneed vourse. in cominerckal business. = Mr. Sunks finished the grammar achool and was @ student se Morgan “College when. very young. During the war he was sent ip school in Washington and was heen a student there until July th when he was sent to Memphis 19 complete his course, Mr. Sanks has a family residing“in Alesan- Aria.” ate paid 9 fiving Visit to his parents and friends on July 4th to bid them adieu until he has finish- fd. his eourse and returas, We wish for him much Ruccoss, Me. Sanks being a brililant young ran, weil Feed assured. hie Will measiite Np In every requirement, We. can- Eratmiaie hin. parents and family. Ste Sunks will be glad an any time fo ereelva some. mall trem. his friends al home, tis akiress heing 660 MeKintey street, Memphis, ‘Tenn. ° WEAK MEN.--ATTENTION !! STITT TERNS TTT EST TI ITs ca UTD SUIT 235 | FOLLOW THE CROWD | — EVERYBODY'S GOING PERRY'S NK HS SATURDAY, JULY 22. The Place to Take Your _ Mother, Wife, Friend _ and Sweetheart | SINGING AND DANCING — | CONFECTIONERY - PALM GARDEN UP-TO-DATE HOTEL | NICE PLAGE FOR NIE PEOPLE | , MUSIC FURNISHED BY | | Douglass Theatre's | | Famous Jazz Band DANCING FROM OF sto 1AM, 7a. | PERRY’S INN |__ 199 PESTA ANENUE 150 Enroll In : Swimming Class he appointment of a swimming Incieetor at the Druld Hill pool as ind in the AFRO last week met With populns favor at once, and Mendy hoys and men to the num- aeetae 130 have joined the male Rika white the number of girls class qmen who signified a desire AM earn were sufficient to organize {ee for then the first lesan be whien was given on Thursday, Tone attentance Inst seek again Loa a jump. in romparison Witt Ifatvat the previons week: the cota being 2.128. despite the inclement pointer that prevailed most of the week, Arrangements Completed For League Institute | ‘The Rev. Albert J. Abiichell pas- ont Rahway ais, Church, AB tor ot And manager. af the Wash. anole aed Delaware. Conferencé ington eM eagate inatltule. visited Fein College, test Thars orm ptered the arrangement with Dr. doha ©. Spencer and Pith Rracng to. held second Jol0l Pete teat these two conterencrs tweens wil be held seg Galtoge August 14-20. Registration will be two dollars Rogimard xeven dollars for the wok. “five young “lif af Methodism look farwarl to, unis week a2 LO ar ad fellowship. The Meygram (nelentes. Farallon, on te Eiichi program, rercraion a Pay. texpigation of sou -and con: poy gant ag life, has heen selected seeraltnn of paraliment experted, Men if yeu still have (he ant~ bition to enjoy life's pleasures, then take FOR QUICK SERVICE FAR EAST CHINESE RESTAURANT Under New Management Open trom 2. M. to 4:00 A. M: ‘ gieaks, Pack Chops, Chop Shey, Va-Wa-Min, Fish, ERE: and style, Fried Chieken, Maryland style 933 PENNSYLVANIA AVE. CHAS. MOON, Prop. articles of incorporation for tho ast Baltimore Pleasure Club were Tat hy Attorney J, Steward Davis Meh the. State Tax Commission Wornesday. ‘The incorporators are | Ghurles Coleman, 188 Colvin street} fagar Davis, 214 Bast street: Har. Tien Wands, 292 Fast street, and Foarge Williams, 2 N. Exeter sre | “Buffalo Nelson, employed By oral penhibition agents a a chai tent when raids are being made, ag tisinigaed In Western Police Mais ‘inst Sutarday morning on charge of larceny made by a Jew- ish woman. Prohibition officers, ena had raided the woman's place, Wetted chat Nelion never left. the Wehr Roy: 8. Bona was atrorney oe the acensed. | Willem Smimh, 733 W, Mulborey street has heen ordered held wn- see ven hall for the larceny of an ditominhile valited at $800 from Mechrather Charles Smith, S12 ne ne atrect. The ante Was al Irged to have heen staten fine Ist. ad seereted hy Wiliam Smith Sine that time, He was arrested Hyvaiicers Rahe and Bales of Ihe ET ee cince aibiens a NORTHWESTERN | i vA as oe ih PH cg Cut-Rate Druggists Penna. Avenue and Dolphin St.__ THE Penslar: STORE | ——- PRESCRIPTIONS ) The most essential department in the drug store is the prescription department. We pride ourselves with the prescription department of aur store, The most modern impliments are nsed and only registered pharmacists employed. This assures you of getting that prescription | filled as your Doctor orders il, ee ! Ask Your Doctor ——— He Knows. ) i NO cee . TALCUM | We have all the hest. known brands of Talcums at prices that are right. ( _ All the highly advertised brands and many that are not advertised. Come in and Jook over our stock. Ask us the prices and we are sure | that we will convince you that. we are cheaper. —————— — 7 ‘ We deliver to any part of the city, In the event that you are unable to come to the store Phone us and we will call for that Prescription - and deliver to you at no extra cost, «sa eaoting’ machine”, the Inver ‘tion af Samuel Miller who hails from Somewhere South, not only From eo marie in a demonstration ‘nt the corner of Mi, Royal and at ibe corner sm wnat ‘week il Galton ae ng nim 10 have fame ae when ie hated Ar ne ined chat his invention erat cant the urgent city in le than an hour and a large erowa tha a eyateh “ihe perform- gatherert uarted. the. machine. 1 wee tnd muddlenly there WAS 2 grinding, hissing nolse and a cloud lof white dust emitted whieh cover- ot eae ot than. pres one en far he timely aerival of the patie tho ungered crowd wat have made short. work of him and ithe machine, When Jast seen he ee emg a Taniphin street Cat with the remains ef the machine with visions @f “dear old Sonth- rr eames tate mid. [Aa ass .. THE APRO-AMPRICAN 5. ++ Wants a.Pirs-Clasa Stone Man De ar sake Ur bother and steep PRLL-MA RA we have a PELL-MA TRA ttt tend a Mey seebie IR. wen ee ‘action will astenish you. te arige RARMLCY. re 8m ee BALTIMORE, MD. GOING ON VACATION Fie Oe ALSTON, a Gees Faraone Ae F125: 1 year. $2.00, je | AUTOS-SED GARS-AUTOS ANNAPOLIS DIST, GOMPLETES POST: CENTENARY SURVEY | Rivery charge om the Annapolls District was represented by It Miniater and a laymen at Annape- is on Weenostay July 12, at the cal of the Distriet Superintenen bee J. $ Carrol to make a ten- year past, centenary stirvery ot the needa of the District, ‘Dr, W. A, C. Hughes the repre- senurive af the hoard of Home Mission and = Chureh — Extension went over with the Distriet Super- MMtendents, Pastors and laymen ihe program of every. charge or the, tiatriet. iris snevey will go Into offen when the present. Centenary Dro: Eram enils. Eine taint asked for the District ig ware far the many nerds of th Shargen was:1V6,i00, one tenth 0 Sane te te be available each sea Hillthe program is completed. The advantage that this survey hag aver the first Centenary, sie ree Re thar the. whole district vee fas the unit inv niaking he Si Pest rate an men consenting and veting: each Tem inte the program. "Tha iginggt Dauner and Sons. 0 ashury M.&, Church served a de ASME Naeashore dinner. ‘he HEE ta! primis of Centennial M f. Chureh Baltimore was elected Fete and the. Revs albert Mflenelt pastor of Aang ME li ah eo " ONE TON KISSELL, TRUCK FOR SALE cal vor write AvTo HOSPITAL 92% MeCullolr Street Phone VErnon 27004 Sune 20, 40 a ec TIRES Automobi'e TIRES: | Pay by the Week c F nmessovie, tans : : racTony GeAnANTEED : , Te ee ae at ‘TIRE, CORPORATION E [$00 PENMAYLYANTA AVE 5 i Vernon 9914 E ‘enmmemememmmaniemmamoam i For Sale | Little Four Buiek Roadster [on om, SE uveuns | Phone, ME stison 14064" George N. Washingtin Taxi for Hire Suni) ok Rentng dovastone Fieatte, Weshifves nea” Maer Irises Moder 02 bruit Mil vs, Balehmare, Ma. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1933 WATERS, CATERERS, ” BUILD NEW PLANT IT. H. Waters & Son., ine, To Have. One of Best Equipped Places In the Country | What will he one of the larg ings establishments inthe. ent caintry, is Just: being competed f TH. Waters on his. recently ae quired property facing on Hamp ton ‘Terrace nd running througs to Linden avenue, The hulding fn this. site whieh has Just best feconstrueled covers a apace 28% 180 feet and_has heen so plane las to mest the needs of a growing MAIN hin ‘heen toy Mr. Waters has been in bus fom. three years and alrealy he volume of trade has gone as high a $1,006 monthly and ongrony his” present quarters on Lindon avenue. His future business gill he conduered sinder the name of TH. Waters sind Son, Ine, and will, cover both. commercial ant sovieiy eateriag. Tho foursory Mirueture contains a modern kit chen, large storage rooms, “aq Uipetoedate refrigerating lint, spf Shecial comfort rons fur waiter Mime Wasiness end of the sah lishment will be condicted. trom the Tint axe! roma hi the Hamilton ‘Terrace front wilt es ak & pombaenre be. ibe faite, BUIOK ROADATER, 1:20 itoiel, fea ty, newly painted, Koad mechanieal eset Fae oS te. ne ioe ins gente, sie Eten Tonete, 180 matt Ha iia ‘note, oa een eet Gio Perk Garage & Storage C jit Me aad a, ————— | USED FORDS - |} rarnises, inanstrs, cores; [OS a ent | Js tnreo stk of Pans seas ott IH [Cais uri and easiest a Lam Sines {| Used Ford Company | gue W. BIDDLE. sTaEET fl? Baer CHAS, M. DEICKE, JR. Authorized BUICK SERVICE-STATION General Auto Repairs Entrances | 2487 Druid Hill Ave. | 2458 McCULLOH ST. | Reav 2487 Druid Hill Ave, Private Garage | Phone, Madison 9271 | D. In the office of the business Manager Published every Thursday the AFRO-AMERICAN COMPANY at the AFRO-AMERICAN Building 628 N. Sutway Street, Baltimore, Md. Entered in Postoffice at Baltimore City as second-class matter under act of Mar. 3, 1870. 6 cents in Baltimore, 7 cents in Maryland 10 cents elsewhere Phone: VIRGINIA 6016-6017 Foreign Foreign Representative, W. B. Roll Company, 0858 212-6017 Chicago: 321 Victor Building, St. Louis, Mo. Morton Building, New York "Independent in all things, Neutral in nothing." This power holds a news franchise in the Associated Negro Press and uses its exclusive copyright dispatches. The Associated Negro Press will receive autistic news items or elipitics of national scope, sent at sender's risk at the office 3231 Indiana Avenue, Chicago, or at the AFRO-AMERICAN office. Sunday School Lesson Sunday, July 23, 1822 — Daniel and the Little Daniel 6:28. History Day By Day Friday, July 21 — Mississippi slots slaves, slavery, George Leake, born about this time, was one of the most noted of an early Negro preachers, 1750. Saturday, July 22 — Miss Elizabeth T. Trevethold was possibly the first of our boys to have the honor of singing before the Madison, Queen Victoria, at Blacking from Palace, 1864. Sunday, July 23 — The United American Fire Walt Wall Organized, 1861. Monday, July 24 — Edward O. Gundin books world's record for running broad jump with a heap of 25 feet, three inches, July 24 1821. Tuesday, July 25 — Texas slots slaves, slavery, 1865. First serious insurrection of slave at the thirty-fourth was in New York. The garrison saved the city from reduced to ashes, 1710. Wednesday, July 26 — Liberia becomes free and independent Republic, with a free and independent after that of the Fait of State, 1847. January, July 27, 1840 P. Anderson, brown's hair. Brown's Herry. Brown's 1840. Fifteen Years Ago A political conference called by Dr. L. Markus Carroll, on Monday at 12 noon at St. Louis Hall, 606 N. Eutaw street, Dr. Carroll provided. Speeches were made by Lawyer McMinnan, H. L. Brooke, and W. Waring to attire a time and place, and call a state convention to more fully discuss our political rights and conditions. For Sale: Thirty-seven houses for sale and cash, balance as rent. Possession of any of the thirty-seven. Three houses for sale on one income each. Three streets in Baltimore City, G. L. Popescu, 310 S. Paul street. Officers of the grand staff and Patricioli Segment of the G. C. O. of G. F. were legally entertained by members of the 1935 Ettinger street last Sunday. Members of bodies from Washington and Wilmington were present. Misses Bertinee and Alain T. Hich have returned home after a visit to Miss Bertinee Henderson, of Washington, D. C. Mrs.安娜 Waring, of Pittsburgh, inviting her son, Dr. J. H. N. Waring, at his summer home near Ellicott City. --- According to Bishop Berry of the M. E. Church, it is lack of horse sense, that makes a pastor preach longer than thirty minutes on a hot Sunday. Thanks very much Bishop, we have been wondering for some time what it was. The School Board is not seeking aid in finding a colored supervisor of colored schools, but something tells us it could get plenty. Opportunity for doing a great deal of good is lost when the doer takes the time to be sure he is going to get the credit for it. This hot weather drives many a man to seek his own cellar, and not for liquid refreshments either. If the N. A. A. C. P. keeps up its publicity campaign, Europe will know as much about United States conflicts and lynchings as we know about Ireland, Egypt and Russia, Russian and Belgian newspapers feature the American mob murders. "Southern Democratic Senators have started a public barrage against the enactment of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill."—News item. True but what has been keeping the Bill in a Senate pigeonhole ever since the House passed it last January. Most every sensible colored person would unite with Marcus Garvey in his program for an aggressive international organization of black people. They will part with him however, on the proposition to link up with the Ku Klux Klan and move all the Negroes to Africa. Mr. Garvey says "let us go over." He ought to get on the other side and say "Come over." Frederick Douglass declared a man to be a fool to pledge his support to a political candidate without first finding out what the candidate was willing to pledge himself to. Which reminds us that its about time to get a crop of pledges along with the crop of candidates. Money For Farmers "Farmers want cheaper money. They ought to have it. The Federal Farm Act aids them to get it." These are the opening sentences of a bulletin of the Treasury Department, which is now bringing prosperity to the American farmer. The farmer is having his day. In Congress the farm blog party is dictating the provisions of the new tariff, and the Farmer's Loan Act passed last year makes it possible for the farmer to borrow money under Government supervision on mortgages without going to the loan sharks and paying exhorbitant rates of interest. Mr. Charles E. Hall of the Census Department in Washington wrote the AFRO-AMERICAN this week as follows: "Inclosed herewith you will find additional data relating to the farmers of our group in the State of Marykand and elsewhere, and without doubt you will readily see the importance of informing them, through the columns of the AFRO-AMERICAN, how to organize associations through which they borrow money when needed, for a long term of years, at low interest rates. Many of them may wish to cancel the short term mortgages that are now worrying them. Others may wish to purchase additional land, put up better buildings or purchase a better grade of livestock." The additional information to which he refers is in the shape of Treasury Department Bulletins explaining how farmers in any section can form associations with a minimum membership of ten and borrow loans from $100 to $20,000 it six per cent interest, and pay it back in not less than five years nor more than 40 years. If colored farmers desire to join white associations in their neighborhood they can do so, or they can form their own associations. The main thing is that the Government has provided means for them to borrow money at a reasonable rate, and under its own supervision. Maryland has 3,548 farms owned by colored people. These farms contain 119,225 acres, 78,249 of which are improved. The total value of these farms is $7,959,597. The value would be a great deal more if the 47,000 acres of unimproved farm lands belonging to colored farm owners were improved. In Maryland there are 2,500 farms worth eleven million dollars rented and operated by colored tenants. Our rented farms are more valuable than our farms owned. A large number of those now renting can start buying the farms they operate by borrowing money from the Government under the Farm Loan Act. This is the farmer's day. He only needs to take advantage of his opportunities. Free Lots Not Free The publicity given to the "free lot scheme" of the Alladin Company, it is hoped will do at least two things: first bring to the Company the necessity of omitting the word "free" both in its advertisements and in its sales talk, and secondly impress upon the purchasers of lets the necessity of having their deals legally recorded. Nearly every purchaser of lots from the Company, who was interviewed by the AFRO admitted that he had been told that the lots were to be given away "free" as a prize, and that later he was informed that he would have to pay some such sum as $39. This price it has been said, was subsequently raised to purchasers in Washington and elsewhere. Manifestly the talk about a "free lot" and a lot given as a "prize" is merely for the purpose of gaining interest. Because the lots are not "free," and because all of the buyers of lots in the city interviewed say so, this feature of the Company's sales campaign is misleading. Whether the lots are actually worth $9 or $39, these columns are unable to say. The AFRO's investigation also brought to light the fact that only one or two of the purchasers had consulted a lawyer before purchasing the property, and just one was found who had his deed recorded at the court-house at Annapolis. amount to $5 and record the deed is $2.25 or a total of $7.25. It is far better to pay this amount and be sure of owning your property, than not paying it and being in doubt as to the ownership. "Black and White" a new book recently published tells how color- ed people of the South years ago wore fleeced out of considerable property by real estate firms who sold them land and houses but when the colored purchaser got the deed, it read: "with the agreement that no person of Negro descent shall own, build or reside upon or occupy said premises." Out Of San Domingo Due to the constant hammering upon the State Department, the Harding administration has decided to get out of Santo Domingo. Here is a crumb of comfort for those persons, black and white who have been using every influence to bring home the marines also from Hayil, and Nicaragua. The agreement of Secretary Hughes is very clear, Santo Domingo must obey whatever the United States has done in the years of its occupation, and then set up a government under its own constitution. As soon as this is done, Mr. Hughes pledges the withdrawal of all marines. What has been done here might as well be done in other cases. Maybe Mr. Hughes wants to go slow, but when you have set your foot on another man's neck, and you find out you have made a mistake about it, there might not to be any rules regarding the speed limits within which you take it off and make an apology. The United States must not only get out of the West Indies, it must also offer apologies and reparations. "Tommy" Hardwick "Tommy" Hardwick, governor of Georgia, told the Ku Klux Klan last week this; they would either unmask in the State or he would recommend a law making it criminal to wear masks. Tommy Hardwick knows what Georgia like a book. Otherwise he would not have gotten himself elected governor. He knows that Georgia is the home State of the Ku Klux Klan, that it started in Atlanta and that the go-called "Imperial Wizard" has his "palace" there. He also knows that he has the chance of a snowball in hudes of getting a law thru the legislature making it criminal to wear masks in the State. By a bare majority, the Protestant ministers of the city commanded "Tommy" Hardwick's stand on unmasking the Klan, and if he could only get a bare majority of the white Protestant ministers behind them, what must he the case when he comes before the ignorant and prejudiced legislators of his state and asks for a law to make wearing a mask criminal. "Tommy" Hardwick is wise. He knows there is under discussion a plan to stop mobs with a federal law. He knows if governors of Southern States will start a hurry and meaningless agitation against mobs, it will give the Southern Senators something upon which to hang their opposition to it. Tommy granted two colored men about to be hung a respite of thirty days last week. A mob lynched the men before sundown the same day, and with the consent and connivance of the State officials. So when "Tommy" talks about the sovereign State of Georgia submitting to no invisible law from the Ku Klux, the capitol at Washington, or no other place, he is talking for home consumption. . . The rest of us have to be shown. WE DEMAND A REVIEW (Washington Tribune) Last December, a number of the United States Legation Marines, at Managua, Nicaragua, "shot up" the city. There were three men who led the others into this affair. They were given a court martial sentence of 40, 38 and 35 years in the Federal penitentiary at Atlanta, and a number of others lesser sentences. In August 1917, the 21st Infantry was stationed at Camp Logan, near Houston, Texas. After being harrassed and misreleased by the city police of Houston, they shot up the town and 19 soldiers were hung at Port Sam Houston, and 54 were sentenced to prison at Port Leavenworth. Kansas for long time. The Monagua affair was worse than the Houston affair. The marines were of foreign soil and had no provocation for their desperado act. Yet the Administration finds time to rearrange their cases and reduce their sentences and, in cases, acquit and free the men. When they commute the sentences of the colored men of the 24th Infantry? Why can they not have a "review" of their cases? If the marines can have a review of their cases which are worse and ought to be humiliated to the Government, then the men of the 24th Infantry should have a review of their cases and a commuting of their long sentences. We demand the review! LEAVES LEAGUE $5,000 New York City, July 20.—The National Urban League for Social Service Work among colored people has received a check for $5,000 from Mrs. Ella Sack Plotz, white, who died recently. EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE AFRO-ARMERICAN Kelly Miller Opposes Separate Public Schools But Admits That Cities With Colored Schools And Colored Teachers Turn Out More And Better Pupils DON'T TALK TOO LONG WITH GIRL WHOSE LURE IS A FREE HOME SITE Investigators For Bond Dealers Find Fair Emissaries At Work With 25 Concerns Angling For $4,000,000 Hard-Earned Savings. To the Editor: I notice that the Messenger is very much excited over my alleged attitude on mixed or separate schools in the North. The last issue of this interesting magazine is their feature *MISTAKE* (RELIEF HILLER'S MISTAKE). It is announced that the discussion will be continued in the next issue. The infallible editors of the Messenger are famous for seizing upon the mistakes made by others. Their own mistakes, if they have any, so far, have not been so widely exploited. I was surprised to note that the co-editor was wanting in his usual sociology and accuracy. He derived his interest through the refracting medium of a Chicago weekly instead of from the original source, which was easily available to him. Last October I contributed to the Educational Review an article on "The Education of the Negro in the North," which it seems, has just been a belated attention of the Messenger a devious and round about route. . In this article I did not advocate separate schools but merely raised the question of the relative inspirational appeal of the two modes of tuition. I have given long study and wide observation to this question, and am still devoting my thoughts to it. But I is never at any time or place, by utterance or inference, expressed belief in the principle of separate schools, in the North or in the South. Neither Christianity nor democracy can contemplate the separation. The school is much more moral than the Church and much more democratic than the State. When our oldest University suggests discrimination against students on account of race, a hue and cry is raised from all over the nation. But Both Church and State make nice distinctions with impunity. The school is the one where the school is free from all forms of prejudice. It is useless for the learned editor of the Messenger to display his erudition. The Messenger to display his erudition in two labored essays to convict me of a sentiment which never held. ******* I do not believe in separate schools, separate churches or separate vars. I may be forced to receive them, but I never willingly accept them. I always protest in the school when I acquiesce in action. But as I have studied Negro education in the South and in the North, and have watched the workings of two types of instruction, the comparative effect upon the Negro child is only forced itself upon my attention. I might stop here to say, in passing, that so far as the Negro is concerned, public schools in the proper, sense of the term 'do not exist any where in the United States' are white schools which the Negro pupil is permitted to attend as a tolerated recipient, but the Negro is not a co-equal factor, or even a proportional factor in contributing to or deriving from the desired influence and power. In a great city like Pittsburgh where the managers and teachers are all white, and more or less associated with the hauteurs of racial New York, July 16.—Wear of the summer real estate swindler, says the New York World today. Many kinds are abroad and the home-seeker, too eager to escape crowded city housing conditions, falls a ready victim. AQ investigates loan mortgage bond operators, has revealed 25 companies at work to get $4,000,000 from such small investors. The bond concern issued a general warning yesterday through its magazine. "One company purchased land in New York and each tree trived divided into lots 20x100, and it hired 50 or 60 salesmen, mainly girls," wrote one of the investigators. "These young women would canvass from house to house in poorer quarters seeking as prospects ignorant foreigners, ex-soldiers and widows with small pension or Gov't funds." The saleswoman would describe in glowing THE HAT RACK MAN'S MEMORY American Magazine The chief attendant, in the clockroom outside the main restaurant of the Galt House was an old-fashioned Negro named John. Every guest of the hotel, whether local or transient, knew him and he did not forget. Once he had forgot it, More astonishing, however, was his ability to give everyone his hat, stole, or coat, without using a check. Often he had several hundred of these articles in his care. I asked how he managed to identify all these men with their owners, and he said: "Well, boss, it's like this: I spot everybody by some mark. If a man with a red necktie gives me INDIAN FLEA (Talley's Segro Folk Rhyme) Injun flee, flee my knee: Kaze I would! drink ginger tea. Flee bite hard, flee bite quick: Flee bite burn luk datt goodiek. Hit dat flee, flee not dere. I use so mad I pull my hair. I go wild an' fall in de creek. To wash 'in off, 'in stay a day. attitude, the Negro pupil cannot feel that he is receiving the full force and inspiration of public instruction with free and untrammeled spirit. Even in places to teach to teenagers, they are almost always young women in the lower grades who impress no directive influence and are confined to the narrow lines of specified instruction. The whole race was delighted to see the late Miss Maria Baldwin of the University Baldwin infuriately as an eighth grade principal in this famous college town. But she represents both a salutary and solitary exception which the most sanguine scarcely hopes to be duplicated in his day. ```markdown ``` The Negro pupil in the North has not in the past and is not now deriving from the public schools the full benefit which they should impart. There are one and a half million' Negroes in the North whose children are in touch with the best school facilities and adjoining which our civilization affords. When the Negro could say that they impart to the Negro child all that can be desired. Let us throw into comparison the schools of Washington under Negro supervision and those of Northern cities where the Negro has no directive say. Washington is surpassed in Negro population by New York and Philadelphia and yet the national capital is Chicago. And yet the national Negro pupils on the secondary level of instruction than these three cities combined. The inspirational effect of a system can be fairly gauged by the number of pupils stimulated to pursue higher courses of study. Washington schools have sent more colored students to Harvard than Boston, more to Columbia than New York City, more to University of Pennsylvania than Philadelphia, and more to the University of Texas. Washington schools are three colored female doctors of philosophy all of whom are products of the Washington public schools. When we consider that a large number of high school graduates are prepared to prepare for teaching, while scores of them enter Howard University, the significance of the system begins to dawn upon us. The Washington colored schools have been the greatest intellectual stimulus in the life of the race so public instruction is concerned. --- What I have said of Washington is true in a degree of Baltimore, St. Louis, Kansas City, and other cities where colored youth are being brought under the inspiration of Negro tuition. I do not teach in Negro youth leisure instruction of Negro youth because inducing like stimulative effect. Separate schools have their disadvantages which can be easily pointed out. But does not the Negro contingent in so-called public schools also labor under serious handicaps? In the article in question, I merely called attention to relativity of advantages and disadvantages which no educator can fail to notice. He that hath eyes to see let him see. KELLY MILLER terms sites far from city noise and dust, explaining that certain lots were to be given away free. The victim was asked to sign his name and address for a chance to win. Then the girls turned this prospect card over to a salesman who, several days later, would call on the girls to draw a free lot asking fees of $49 and inviting the winner on an excursion to see the property. Every Sunday the excursions were attended by hundreds of men and women who then were induced to buy other and more desirable property. The company withdrew all the bills by charging $49 as $50 or over would expose them to a charge of grand larceny. "Another company in several cases took $150 to $200 as part payment on the construction of dwellings, and later the victims were told that the sums must be together. Everybody has something about him different from everybody else, and I remember than." KU KLUX NEEDS NO MASK FOR NEGROES (California S. C. State) The evidence is that in the South the "Ku Klux" are not bothering with Negroes. Nearly all, if not all, the lawlessness done in the South in the last twelve months by masked men has hitherto been ignored. The maked truth is that when a band of lynchers set out to kill a Negro they do not take the trouble to mask. They do not think it necessary in these days to join a secret society, pay initiation fees and buy regalia when Negroes are the quarry. So for the Ku Klux are not persisting Negroes, they are against! The recent outrages against Negroes in Texas, Mississippi and other states have been. Saying this, we do not relieve the South of any of the guilt of mob law. A lynching is not less a crime when it is done by men not masked. Ku Klux methods are employed in the South against white men because the victims may have friends who would cause arrests or otherwise "fight back." "OLD TIMER" HAS HAY FEVER Sneezes Out In Front Of U. P. I. And Wonders Why It Doesn't Open "Who are you for Garrett or France" the reporter asked Old Timer when the two met up in front of the Union Protestant Infirmary on Division Street the other day and stepped under one of the trees to mop the periphery from "Who are you for Garrett or France" the reporter asked Old Timer when the two met up in front of the Union Protestant Infirmary on Division Street the day and stepped under one of the trees to mop the perspiration from their brows. "None of your biziness" replied the old fellow (tea chew), "and I tell you now don't ask me no more Mistub Garrut and Mistuh France must fit their own battles thou me. Possunally I'm for that anti-lynching bill and a colludion member on the skule board. Any pussin senator, mayor, democrat or public, what can git me them things kin have my vote. Otherwise i ain't interested." "Aren't you goin' to stump the State for Senator France" asked the reporter surprised. "Boy" answered O. T. patiently (tea chew) "Either you is dumb today or you is misunderstood me. If you is nevermine, whether Garrut is in office or whether Mistuh France goes back. What matters to you and what matters to me id do we git that anti-lynching bill passed. If we do, then we is ready to talk politics, if we doesn't. I am join with Jake Nielsen." The reporter was silent for a moment digesting the old man's philosophy. Old Timer bit off a good chunk of the reporter's tobacco, got it in his hands and then lit it of the reporter's five cent Snuggle before going on. "What is this I see in your paper about Truly Hatechett and them insurance folks (ca chau). Most I could git outen it was that the reporter's fees was large and handsome." "You missed the point" said the reporter, "the main feature is that the company can go on doing business and be up by the insurance commission." "is zat so" examined the Old Follow, "Well, well, well, chew ca chew), so Truly is not gwine to tun my boys onen business. Durmed if I didn't miss the main point, Well my man at my age ain't supposed to see all the pints in newspaper pints. Go been thousand and one sitting now what I want to ask you is when is this Victory Hospital going to open? Here I is with hay fever, chew ca chew, ca chew), summer complaint, and misery in my back besides my regular rheumatism, and no hospitol to go to." "What is the matter with Provident?" asked the reporter, "is it the child with any old pail shirt when you get new ones?" snorted Old Timer, as he turned on his heels and snorted off down the street, sneezing in his handkerchief. 25th Infantry Are Army's Best Shooters From Washington Eagle From Nogales, Arizona, has come the report that the colored infantrymen of the Twenty-fifth regiment have broken all rifle records of the world in their recent maneuvers, and men qualified 100 per cent perfect with the army rifle. This result was so astounding as to call for special verification by the War Department. Every company of the regiment qualified above 90 per cent, only four falling below 85 per cent. The rating for the entire regiment was 96.06. Colonel Alexander McNab, in command of the Twenty-fifth regiment, says that he believes the record made by his regiment will stand as the best in the world with the Twenty-fifth beats its own record. New French Statute Bars Colored Jazzers Paris, July 14.—The colored jazz musicians from the United States who have been the rage of Paris for the past year will be forced to leave France in October along with thousands of other foreign musicians as the result of the new law passed several months ago limiting the employment of foreigners in any establishment to 10 per cent. held that jazz has taken on the French capital as the result of the dusky invasion from the U. S. A. has sent managers scouring hither and thither in search of French jazz bands to fill the vacancy. However, there are some who believe that the elimination of the American jazz bands from Paris will arouse them to insist on the real music in restaurants, cafes and dance halls as was the case before the war. FORUM Still A Chance To Get Benefit Of Government's Summer Training Camp To the Editor: I have noticed in the "Afire" of July 14th a write-up about "No Colored Student at the Training Camp." I am an applicant who is to attend camp, this year, July 27, and it seems I am the only colored member of the Maryland quota. I have entrance blank which a fellow may attend without examination and go July 27. I have tried to get some of my friends at the "Y" and fellow-students at the High School, and none of them will take this vacation training, an oppose to an advancement to the R. O. & C. where examinations are given to receive commission. If you have a couple of good boys I will be glad to give them entrance blanks. WILLIAM C. PAUL. 1015 Gumor St. P. S. I think this write-up should be corrected because they still have a chance. Labor Federation In Membership Drive W. W. Cordell Here To Aid Unions In Biggest Campaign for Organized Colored Workers MEMBERSHIP NOW 3,250 If the tone and spirit of the labor meeting held last Sunday at Liberty Hall on Pennsylvania avenue at which half a dozen colored and white labor leaders, including R. H. Cordell, one of the foremost Colored national organizers of the American Federation of Labor, spoke, there will be a city-wide fight to clear the way for the complete organization of colored workers of the city, and Senator Joseph L. France will get the bulk of the workingmen's vote in the approaching primary. Not only this; but the record and attitude of every other candidate of the future will be carefully marked and to their stand on writers touching the interest of organized labor. The meeting was called under the auspices of the International Hod Carriers and Common Labs local No. 1644, and speakers from other colored locals as well as the National council spoke and took part in the meeting. This included numbers about 250 members There are at present four colored locals in Baltimore affiliated with the American Federation of Labor and four independent labor organizations with a combined organization of 1650. The organizations are the Railroad Men's Association which is under the jurisdiction of the Brotherhood of Railway clerks. The Longshoremen's Association. The International Hod Carriers and Commune of the United Musicians Local all of the American Federation group. The independent organizations are The Consolidated Hod Carriers No. 1 The International Building Laborers Protective Association No. 2 The International Hod Carriers No. 3 The International Building Laborers Association No. 124 and the Union Hod Carriers of America. It is the hope and aim of the organizer of the American Federation of Labor to bring about a consolidation of the last group with the former which will create an organization of 100 members under the banner of the American Federation. It is estimated that there are 30,000 colored workers in trades and crafts now open to colored members of units and Mr. Cordell, who has done extensive organization work with the Federation, will spend a number of weeks here getting this work under way. Want Taxi Men To Unionize Referring to last week's article in the AFRO in which it was pointed out that the attitude of a number of white crafts had been shortsighted in their Negro policy, Mr. C. H. Winston, President of the white union of Taxi drivers, said that he had made an effort to reach colored taxi men and would organize in the near future. It was also stated that he Baltimore Tombetheta had some time WHITE RACE MUST RULE BLACK, RED, YELLOW OR BROWN *From Ku Klux Klan, Yesterday, Today and Forever, by Colonel Win. Joe Simons, Imperial Wizard, Pamphlet sent local Colored Man Erging Him to Join one of the newly organized branches.* The Ku Klux Klan is not the enemy of the Negro. It opposes, and will continue to oppose, the efforts of certain Negro organizations and periodicals, which are sowing the seeds of discontent and racial hatred among the Negroes of this county by preaching and teaching social equality. We believe it is possible for the races to live together in peace and unity only upon condition that each race recognize the rights and privileges of the other. Yet we hold it is obligatory upon the Negro race, and upon all other colored races in American to recognize that they are living in the land of the white race and by courtesy of the white race and that the white race cannot be expected to surrender to any other race, either in whole or in part, the control of its vital and fundamental governmental affairs. "There are rights which the Negro race and all other colored races have as citizens of this country which the white race, the ruling race is bound to respect, but they must not, individually or collectively, lose sight of the fact that the white race IS the ruling race by right of inheritance and that it does not intend to surrender this right or to compromise it with any race—Black, red, yellow, or brown. "Let the Negro race, and all other races living within our borders, advance and develop and prosper all that they may, but own institutions and within their own race without encroachment upon the rights of other races. Let them understand that in the long run the white man always has far more power than the black and the safest counsellor of all other races in whatever land or clime the races have come in contact and let them not be misled by false prophets who, for their own purposes and prejudices by wild promises that they know can never be fulfilled. --- eration In Pership Drive ago made an effort to organizo colored members of their craft without results. The represen- tatives of the carpenters and the bricklayers unions have made it plain that they want the Négro groups to enter the Federation. William Carter, President of the Colored Railway Men's Association, told in an interesting way how their union had gained con- sessions and wages the even some of the white men did not, have through their organization. James L. Rodler, white. President of the One Hundred Per Cent Club spoke at length on the advantages that would come to both whites and colored people through a united organized fight for a more equitable distribution of the product of labor. 90 Cents Hour Not Too Much He said, "This is a common human right in which the working men of all races must unite, so free themselves from the slavery of wage oppression. They see us to pay men, but ask them how much they figure in their contracts for themselves? If the wealth created by working men were fairly divided through fair wages there would be enough to provide decent living for every family, with no colored." "We have not yet reached the place where human justice can be depended upon to render under Caesar that which Caesar's. White labor has had to fight for the little progress it has made and the small problems." "When you were emancipated from chastel slavery, you entered another form of slavery hardly less cruel. You go rid of the lash but in common with your brothers in toil you had placed upon you a condition that limits your possessions to the masters' conditions for the masses: a condition that destroys human life by denying it the necessities of sustenance, and a condition: that gives you in a national constitutional amendment the right to enjoy life, liberty and pursuit of happiness, which it denies by withholding, the wealth that you help to create. "I ask in the phrase of Bryan: How long will they be able to cross down upon our heads; this golden crown of thorns; how long will we let them crucify us on a cross of Gold? If you love and severe the women of your race you will see to it they are set free to perform the duties without which our race you will see to it that the women without which your race is loomed. That they will not have to sacrifice motherhood to shoulder the yoke of keeping the family going." Rev. J. R. L. Diggs, made some pointed remarks urging the men to join the union and see that others do. Mr. Cordell made the closing address, reviewing the advantages that had some in some cities the elites may have roughly organized. He contrasted the price of 10 cents per hour which all had carriers were getting in Kansas City to the "great price for this labor." "What is the matter with Baltimore?" he asked. Another feature of the meeting was the criticism aimed at Mayor Browning for lowering the price or common labor to 30 cents, which would be the lowest unemployment. This was said, they have been a big factor in bringing down the general wages of long laborers. It was also urged that men forget parties and vote for men whose labor attitude and record showed them to be fair to organized labor. Men must know if theirselves front, not背后, if theirs are to have influence it was said. RULE YELLOW OR BROWN and Forever, by Colonel Win. Joe Bin- nel Colored Man Urging Him to Join one THE FAITH OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO officer, Mordecai Wyatt Johnson, colored graduate editor at Harvard Commencement. From the Nation. Across the seas the darker peoples of the earth are rising from their long sleep and are searching this Western missionaries for light. Our Christian missionaries are among them. They are asking these missionaries: Can the Christian religion bind this multi-colored world in bonds of brotherhood. We of all nations are best prepared to animate moral inspiration and their friend. For we have the world's problem of race relationships here in crucible, and by strength of our American faith we have made some encouraging progress in its solution. If the fires of this faith are what comes out of it it is able to place these United States in the spiritual leadership of all humanity. When the Negro cries with pain from his deep hurt and lays his petition for elemental justice before the nation, he is calling upon the American people to kindle anew about the crucible of relationships the fires of American faith. Albany, N. Y. July 20—The Court of Appeals has refused to grant a new trial for Luther Boddy, convicted of the murder of two white policemen. The date of his execution will be fixed in the fall. JAWBONE (Talley's Negro Folk Rhymes) Samson, Shon! Jawbone, Samson, moan! Samson, bring on yo' Jawbone. Jawbone, walk! Jawbone, talk! Jawbone, eat wid' knife an fow' Walk! Jawbone, bear an fow' Yankee, sow Sally will be booed on. Jawbone, ring! Jawbone, sing! Jawbone, kill dat wicked thing. PAGE SEVEN BODDY MUST DIE Bitter Fight at Enon Church Is Nearing An End Bitter Fight at End Is N Injunction secured Last Week Means Court Must Uphold Or Oust Pastor Green TROUBLE BEGAN IN MARCH Struggle Said To Have Been Bitterest In History Of City Due to the injunction served on the pastor, no services were held in the Church Sunday morning or Sunday night. No compromise; no quarter; seems to be the spirit that characterises the petition filed Thursday by the officers and deacons of Eonon Baptist Church asking that a permanent injunction be granted prohibiting the Rev. Joshma Green from performing any of the duties or occupying the pulpit of the church as pastor. This will probably be the final act in one of the longest and most sensational church fights. Baltimore has seen for many a year and if neither side has lost none of its fighting blood, a hard-fought begat battle may be expected. The petition prays a permanent injunction and sets out one of the accumulated grievances since the beginning of this night which began on a long way on March 1st of this year. Long before this, however, smouldering embers of discord had been summering which burst into flames with the sensational charges of false pretenses, sharp financial practices, failure to pay just debts and the jurgling of church accounts for personal gain against the pastor. All these with additions set forth in the last petition, and officials of the church say that this is a fight to the finish. Either Rev. Green will be GOOD MORNING JUDGE Happenings In Police Court In All Parts of the City the City Fought In Saloon George Imaniwell and Charles Hasson walked quiet into a near waterfront John Civanas, 1850 E. Pratt street and purchased a glass of something "to tickle the throat." They got it. Immediately things picked up and when the fight ended both men were taken to the St. Joseph's Hospital. Charles Stainer, barrion, took a horse and all were taken to the Eastern Police Station on a charge of disturbing the peace. Colored Not "White" Bernard Owens, Phiisville, Md. is a colored man whose skin is go near white that he can easily stand on either side of the racial fence. Mrs. Owens and the two Owens children, however, are unmistakably colored. This combination of color and circumstances gn Mr. Owens into the Southern andourt Court Monday when he resides at the interference of a white man walking with a colored woman and child. Owens was dismissed by Magistrate Potter before whom he had been arranged for disturbing the peace. They Fought For Love The second episode of a love triangle took place Sunday when John Hollis, 423 S. Caroline street out Charles. Bell all across the shoulder as he was returning from a visit to our Miss Gibson at St. Joseph's Hospital. In the previous episode Miss Saple had gotten out in the fight wherein he and the of love affair her and the two men who lives in the same address, and was taken to the hospital. Now Mr. Bell will have an opportunity to visit the hospital but not to see Miss Gibson. Went Thru Closed Window Pedestrians in the neighborhood of 1113 Thompson street were surprised Sunday afternoon to see a man suddenly come through the front window without first raising it This man was Braxton Clark, $20 McDonough street, and the man behind the movement seems to have been Robert Bunbrey, $85 McDonough St. The trouble arose when the two men attempted to call on the same lady at the same time. They both were taken to Eastern Police Station for disturbing the peace. Clubs Are Trumps Irvin Clark and his wife, Mrs. Eliza Clark, 414 Elsien street, disagreed. Saturday night and proceeded to settle the matter with a club. First Mr. Clark used the club on Mrs. Clark's head and then Mrs. Clark took the same club away from him and retaliated with a more powerful blow which made him take the count. They were both taken to the Western police station where they were given a hearing. Finish for *Disorderly Conduct*—Mary Hines, 312 Leedshall street; $5, James E. Jones, 103 Leedshall street; $5, William Cower, 129 Brunt street; $5, Edward Wells, 129 W. West street; $5, Berner Dyess, Pilchesville, Md.; $5, Bernard Ford, 129 Lillen Cowell, 103 Leedshall street; $5, Emma Sturge, 18 S. Spring street; $1, John Mitchell, 109 Selbshire street; $5, Maggie Wright, 149 Bounty Lane; $1, Mary Doney, 109 Bounty street; $1, Robert Watson, 102 N. "Larensy" - Mercy, Bell, 407, Freemont street, committed; Nathaniel, Mitchell, 406, N. Bland street, committed; George, George Thomas, 406, N. Fairmount street, committed. IT'S WHERE EVERYBODY GOES Wonderland Park The finest Park of its kind for colored people anywhere in the United States Curtis Bay Cars Direct to Park Take a ride on the Shooting Star (Roller Coaster) The Whip Merry-Go-Round Aeroplanes Ferris Wheel Frolic Try your skill on the Hare and Hounds Roll-Ball Whip Barrels and Balls and numerous other AMUSEMENTS Visit the Dance Pavillion and Skating Rink (Best in the Country) The Fun House The Dining Room and Hot Dog Counter SKATING EVERY SUNDAY DANCING EVERY NIGHT EXCEPT SATURDAY MUSIC BY IKE DIXON'S JAZZ DEMONS IT'S WHERE EVERYBODY GOES paster or will step down and out as a result of the decision of the court, all other means of settlement having failed. As will be remembered those charges were first made against the pastor about March 1st., and on March 29th, the church, by a vote of 250 to 4, delegated the settlement of the charges to a committee consisting of the boards of trustees and deacons together with Rev. Mr. Green and the Rev. A. L. Bailey. For nights this committee held meetings until early morning hours without reaching a decision on April 6th, reported this fact to the church. They were again sent back with instructions to settle the matter by some decision which would be considered final by the church. On April 10th, this committee met again and by a vote of 12 to 6, Rev. Green was found, and by a vote of 10 to 8 the pulv bir was Dissenting from this decision and claiming that the action was illegal. Rev. Green continued to function as pastor of the church and then began a series of injunctions and counter injunctions and arrests which divided the church into two factions of the bitterest family where friends parted friendship and in some cases husband was against wife and father against son. Some of the meetings held to settle the matter at this time were descriptions of a place of worship where passions and hatred ran riot, and out of which came for even blackened eyes and magistrate court cases, even officials of the church figured. Thep the ministers of the Baptist faith in the city took a hand in an effort to reach a peaceful settlement. But so far had the dissension developed that they peped out here too and an entire council went on the rocks in fall- again dismissing the pastor, but Rev. Mr. Green still held court and with him there is evidently a goodly number of "last ditchers" who will no doubt stand behind him in this final struggle. Assaulting and Fighting—Lester Clark $290 S. Eataw street, 1 year in incarceration. Correction: Joseph W. N. High street, 2 months in Hodson's Correction Hodson, Hodson, 310 Sharp street, dispassed. Disorderly House of Prostitution —Thomas Braxton, 31st Plum Ave. dismissed Ethel Braxton Violating Volond Law-Lewis, Shepherd Stump Alley, delivered to U. S. Mar- shad TRINITY CHURCH FIGHTS FOR A REAR ENTRANCE But Counsel For Mrs. Fannie McQuay Declares Ground Belongs To Her According to Hugh M. Burkett, counsel for Mrs. Fannie McQuay, the suit of Trinity A. M. F. Church to recover a portion of the McQuay property will be vigorously compounded. According to the sexton of Trinity Church, sometime ago a fence dividing the small strip facing the alley leading from the rear of the church, was blown down. The fence was restored by Mrs. McQuay, Hatchett and Lewis, being agents at the time. Since that time, the church has been trying for the fence but the fence entrance as it closes up the rear entrance to the church. The matter has not been taken up personally with Mrs. McQuay, it is said. Mr. Burkett refused to move the fence and the suit was instituted. The attorney contends that the small strip belongs to Mrs. McQuay's property and the officers of the church contend that it does not. So there you are. Mt. Winans Church, Rev. John M. Barnes pastor is making plans for a $1,200 rally July 30. The village Camp will be in progress during the months of July and August. Calvary Baptist Church, Biddle street, near Pennsylvania avenue, has raised over $600 in a drive for $1,200. Rev. R. T. Reed is the pastor. The 15th anniversary of the pastorate of Rev. John W. Widgeman at First Colored Baptist Church, Sunday, Rev. Watkins will preach in the morning and Rev. Albert J. Greene in the afternoon. JAMAICA BARS IMMIGRATION OF YELLOW RACES Island With Million Black People and 2,000 Whites Wants No Added Race Problems ISLE IS BANANA CENTRE Fruit Grown There Supplies Tables of United States and England Stringent restriction of Chinese immigration to Jamaica, announced because of the rapid increase of its yellow population, draws attention to this most important of ish Empire, which may be taking ish empire, which may be taking advantage of our own experiences with orientals in Hawaii. This bit of British territory near American shores is the subject of the following bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the National Geographical Society. "Jamaica already has one race problem," says the bulletin, for this might almost be called an African island with a tini veneer of British government, so great is the preponderance of Negroes in the island. Of the approximately 838,000 inhabitants, fully 95 per cent are blacks or mulattoes, and the numbers of the dark-skinned races are still further increased by the presence of about 20,900 East Indians, larger than cent of the population displaced of whites in 1911, and at that time the Chinese were less than 1 per cent. Isle Of Fountain "Jamaica, like Hawaii, lies just in the edge of the tropics, and nature seems to have intended it to be a fairy island. Heygill wooded mountains occupy much of the interior, and among them countless streams tumble. Xayasu, the native Indian name of the island, which is European's main island of fountains." "Trains of several sorts, include cones, bamboo, bananas and a variety of other tropical trees, clothe, hillsides and valleys. Some of the views from the high central hills over rough foothills, valleys and plains, and out to the deepest of blue seas are hardly the surpassed elsewhere in the world." But there are other aspects to tourism than beautiful scenery. Much of the country is undeveloped and that in cultivation in the interior is largely in the hands of Negro peasant proprietors, who tend their few fruit trees, their yam gardens and their patches of the root that made jamaican famous" - ginger. Many gaint chimneys stand in the plains to mark the sites of sugar plantation minor houses of the islands palmer days. Along the coastal C scamps swarms of mosquitoes attack black workmen and wayfairers, who must carry smouldering branches or wave branches about their heads. Port Royal "Wickedest City" "Kingston, the capital, is almost as much a black man's town as Port-au-Prince. The two white persons to every hundred Negroes, who nominally are a part of the city's population, live in special suburbs and manage shops and the larger enterprises, and the streges are given up almost entirely to Negroes. Even the policeman and many of the judges are black. Jamaican's history has in many ways been like that of Haiti, but it has stopped short of the Haitian climax. Columbus discovered the island and called it Saina Gloria. For a century and a half it was Spanish; then it fell to a British expedition sent out by Crownwell, Port Royal, its chief port became the rendezvous of British buccaneers under the leadership of the notorious Sir Henry Morgan. The town, peopled largely by the men and women who lived on pirate gold, and glided by their easily spent hunt, gained the reputation of being the richest and wickedly city of its day. But like Sodom and Gomorrah, it was struck down. A severe earthquake occurred in 1632, and Port Royal, its very stones stopped in THE AFRO-AMERICAN iniquity, slipped into the sea. Becoming Island of Bananas "Under Spanish exploitation the Indian inhabitants of Jamaica were killed or died. The Spanishards brought in some Negro slaves to replace them, and in the eighteenth century British plantation owners imported more than 600,000 Africans, built up a large sugar and rice plant. When slavery was abolished in 1834 many of the white landlords left the islands and numerous large sugar estates and mills were condoned. In late years Jamaica has become a more and more important factor in supplying American tables. Its advantage bananas to both British and over the Central American banana countries lies chiefly in the fact that it is two days nearer the markets. "The British have given some measure of self-government to the hammocks, but have retained final control, the governor is appointed over the British king and presides over a legislative council, of which fifteen members are appointed and fourteen elected. M. E. WOMEN HOME FROM CONVENTION The Woman's Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church met in Pittsburgh last week. There were fifty-eight delegates, from Baltimore and Washington. The delegates form Sharp Street Memorial Church who attended are as follows: Mrs. Carret, Mrs. Henrietta Douglas, Mrs. C. E. Young, Mrs. Hester Floyd, Mrs. H. F. Ovelton, Mrs. Sadie Broome, Mrs. Jeannie Ross and the Musses M. Eriscoe, Louise Mussendon and Consuela Durand. The officers elected were: Mrs. Florence-Carroll of Washington, president; Mrs. Maniee Jones of Washington corresponding secretary; Miss Harriet Beason of Washington, recording secretary and Mrs. Mary Camphor of Baltimore, president; Mrs. Henrietta Dombrowski was elected delegate to the National Convention which meets in Philadelphia in 1922 and Mrs. Lula Minor was elected alternate. FRANCE FAVORS COLORED TROOPS IN WEST INDIES FRANCE FAVORS COLORED TROOPS IN WEST INDIES But War Department Doesn't Think Much Of Replacing White Marines On The Islands Washington, D. C. July 29—I believe that the suggestions with reference to replacing the marines in the West Indies with regular soldiers of the 4th and 10th Cavalry and 10th and 25th Infantry a good choice. Senator France told the EURO AMERICAN yesterday. "I have been deeply concerned about this whole situation," declared the Senator, "and I have been giving it my careful study. The suggestion is indeed most excellent and I have presented it to the Secretary of War for his consideration." R. E. Coontz acting secretary of north Navy told the AFRIO-AMERICA that the disposition of army suits is a matter over which the Navy Department has no control. Assistant Secretary Davis, of the War Department, gave it as his opinion, that it would cost too much to repulse the injuries with colored regular uniforms and besides the regiments have been 'numerically added too greatly to make available. VA LAWYER DISBARRED Richmond, Va., July 29—W. F. Denny, lawyer, was disbarred today from practice when it was brought out in court that the attorney had served alleged notice known as the felicifacies of the Raoy Theater to hold up the pay of Arthur Bruce, a player. C. H. JONES Prop. The Only Hotel featuring RADIO Concerts and Programs each night for the enjoyment of its guests. Hear the wonderful— RADIO PHONE THE HOTEL with th own home. The place equipment and service faction and complete co THE HOTEL with the quiet atmosphere of your own home. The place where refinement, superior equipment and service are combined to give satisfaction and complete comfort. Royal BIDDLE ST. SCHOOL GETS PAINTED UP Spani- Negro in the plan- e than up a sction. No Building Will Supplant Fifty-Year-Old Structure for Next Year in iddors numerous were Damai, he stood on to pavement of the more old house on Biddle street, applying near Pennsylvania avenue. and true enough, the patrons and will not have a new building this banana fall, as recommended by the Stray fact or report, but one which for the "dolled up" a little. The improvements include the installation of some electric lights, painting inside and to the outside. find it. The building is one of the oldest in the city used for school purposes, having been erected in 1370. It has been used as a colored and school for about a half century. classes' the old Biddle alley mission. In the mid-18th colored people did live on the large streets in the northwest section. This school and the one on Wausche street were the only ones for colored West of Charles street and North of Barre for years. The growth of the colored population in North-west Baltimore have come the city to erect old school No. 9, at Carrollton and Riggs avenue in 1889. Baltimore have come the school to Fremont avenue and King street, the one at Carey and Chappell streets, Schools 100, 116, 103, 118. Mt. Olivet Lane and the recently erected one at Calhoun Laurens street, even so, the school needs are only inadequately cared for, so great has been the increase in population within the past twenty years. Women's Day will be observed at Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Ware-city, Sunday, July 23. Rev. Junius Gray is the pastor. HOTEL DALE CAPE MAY, N. J. Open March 15 Rates reduced in keeping with the times. This magnificent Hotel, located in the heart of the Most Beautiful Seashore Resort in the world, replete with every Modern Improvement. Supplemental in Construction, Appointments, Service and Refined Patronage. Orchestra daily. Garage, Tennis, etc, on premises. Special attention given to kings and children. E. W. RALE. Owner THE NEW FITZGERALD'S CAFE "A Paradise in the Heart of the Nation's Playground" AN UNEXCELLED CUSINE The place to bring your friends and enjoy the atmos- phere of refined surroundings. MR. AND MRS. CECIL DE LANDE Proprietors NEWEST AND BEST HOTEL Palace Hotel MME. J. CREDITT JONES Manager Fruit Juice with the quiet atmosphere of your place where refinement, superior service are combined to give satis- tlete comfort. 10 Rooms, Sun Parlor Room Private Dining Room INNSYLVANIA AVENUE Door To Regent Theatre TELEPHONE FOR RESERVATIONS NEWS IN BRIEF The first account of the estate of Mr. William H. Adams, J. Steward Davis, executor, has been passed upon by Orphans Court. The account of this settlement was $2990.66. Mrs. Mary Allen, 640 W. Montgomery street, was found dead in her home Wednesday of this week. Examination showed that she had been overcome by the excessive heat. Members of the Maryland Federation will meet at Sharp Street Community House Wednesday, July 26, at 8 P.M. Members hoping to attend the convention at Richmond, Va. August 6th will also be present. Quite a delegation from Baltimore will leave for Middletown, Del., on Sunday morning for the Grand Court and Grand Lodge of Frydhills, E. & W. H. Miss Mary Harris, age 21, 221 Spring street and Mrs. Louise Jackson, 28 also living at 221 Spring street, were sent to jail from the Western police station Thursday to await the action of the Grand jury charged with shop- lifting. Miss Harris was said to hide three dresses in her closet in Eisenberg's Department store. They were committed in default of $250 bail. William Lee, employed for some time as presser in the Tailor shop of Max Sayder, 3505 Park avenue, died in the University Hospital Thursday where he had been following an explosion of a gasoline tank at the shop and in which he was fatally burned. More than half of his body was seriously burned before assistance could be given. Little Clyde Meek, age 4, 1201 Chidomin street, son of the Afro's chief lhomme machinist was struck by a motorcycle driven by Patrolman Holdings of the Northwestern district at the corner of North avenue and McCubbish street Thursday and slightly injured. Girls' Day will be observed at St. Paul's Baptist Church, Rox, Geo, A. Crawley pastor, on Sunday, July 30. Anniversary services will YOUNG MAN! Do You Want a Trade! Do You Want to be a Chauffeur! Do You Want a Business Education! Do You Want a High School Education! YOUNG WOMAN Do You Want to be a Milliner! Do You Want to be a Farmer! Do You Want to be a Nurse Enter Agricultural School Downingtown Industrial & Redfitted, New Equipment, New Aims, New Management, Ideal Situation, Healthy Location Opens Sept. 21, 1922 Courses in College Preparation, Business Training, Agriculture, Home Economics, Blocksmithing, Automobile Operation and Care, Building Trades Write DR. J. H. N. WARING. Principal Downtown, Pa. Success and Happiness And How To Get What You Want ARE TWO HELPFUL LITTLE BOOKS FREE to you if you send in your order for 1 box of Indian Herb Tea for health and 2 boxes of Indian Temple incense for concentration purposes. All for one dollar. Money returned if not pleased. This is a bargain. Enclose one dollar bill for the helping goods. Mark plainly and mention this paper. Send your order to LEO S. OSMAN 909 N. Premont Ave., Baltimore Hours: 2 a. m. to 6 p. m. Sat., 10-9 p. m. Sunday, closed. HEROLIN Is Wonderful Says Helena T. Sinclair of New Jersey PETER M. BURKE "After having tried a great many preparations I find Havulin the best of the fillepin group the fillepin well that I can truthfully recommend them to anyone waking a luxurious growth of hair and a nice complexion. HEROLIN POMADE Hair Dressing will make your hair grow fuzzy, influenza-free. lin goes to the roots of the hair causing a natural growth of long straight hair. It is not sticky or gummy but a delightfully perfumed hair product. ruff, stops itching of the scalp and will really make your hair beautiful. SPECIAL TRIAL OFFER In order that you may try all of our leading preparations we will offer you five Heroin Toilet preparations that are worth $1.25. This is a real beauty assortment. Send for it Herolin Pomade Hair Dressing 25c Herolin Skin and Scalp Soap. 25c Herolin Brite Skin Ointment. 25c Herolin Hair Gloss and Temple Oil. 25c Don't wait a minute, send in 540 today and start on the road to beauty, admiration and happiness. Agents Wanted—Write Today HEROLIN MED. CO. Atlanta, Ga. The Revival Meetings' are in progress at Evangelical Baptist Church, Rev. R. B. R. Brown pastor. Mrs. Rosie Evans and the Pastor's Aid Society presented him a purse and birthday cake. Israelites Meet The Independent Israelites, at their recent annual session, brought out the fact that $900 had been given to poor people during the existence of the association. Rev. R. Whitley, pastor of Little Zion Baptist Church, where the session was held; Rev. A. B. Calls, Mrs. Robinette Gresham, the president; Mrs. Rachel Sepio, of Washington and Mrs. Viola Coleman were among the many speakers. The officers include: Mrs. Hester Harris, vice president; Mrs. Ida Fisher, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Iola Juda, secretary; Mary; Mrs. Kelly, recording secretary; Mrs. India Croxton, treasurer; and Mrs. Virginia Law- PHONE: MADISON 7869 THE BALTIMORE SCHOOL 1627 Druid Baltimore, Our Three-Months Course is a Proven and Yours ALL INSTRUMEN WANT 25 Brickyard APPLY BURNS & RU Dundalk BISON 7869 THE BALTIMORE SCHOOL OF MUSE 1627 Druid Hill Ave. Baltimore, Maryland this Course is a Proven Success. Start your B and Yourself Now. ALL INSTRUMENTS TAUGHT WANTED !! Trickyyard Laborer APPLY INS & RUSSELL Dundalk Junction Our Three-Months Course is a proven Success. Start your Bag, your Girl ALL INSTRUMENTS TAUGHT BURNS & RUSSELL CO. Dundalk Junction Take Sparrows Point Car Those Grand Old-Time Home-Made Root and He Remedies STAND THE TEST OF TIME AND THE TEST OF W thousands of new fancy, highly advo- ly come with a loud flourish. one would which was about to be completely eliminated of dollars, in advertising, agents, co- mmercials, imaginable is commandercee, fa- ron the crystal sphere till one goes silly, up upon the simple and hopeless who are with their last dollar in the hope of regain makes for a limited time, then probably GRAND, GOOD-OLD-TIME GENEEN- AND THE TEST OF TIME—theYEH hundreds & thousands of years and will con- ceive, because they do the work when other 'old folks' speak of them, how good they learn & would diably love to try them. time to bother with them. There is HIGH FAMILY OF HERBALISTS who have who devote the whole of their time to from the choices & mockery of poo- ry & they sell them under IRON-CLAIR UP HOPE even after they tried a BORDER THERE is STILL HOPE. Come & a straight if he has a remedy for your tru- answer & if he says YES you can bet the best friend is your to keep them. BEAUTY AIR Dark Complexion not to be respected, admired and love- that you have a beautiful complexion and splotches, and that your hair is in dressed. Your best friend is your to keep them. EN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your con- mute matter if you will only use Dr. Fred Palmer's quicker blushes, is perfectly safe and or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c. INY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS soon give your skin after using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin with his delicately perfumed Face Powder. Try At your dugout or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c. AST HAVE SMOOTH, LUXURIANT H best way to get it is by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin straight, promotes its growth and changes postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c. Write for Agents' Honey selling Propriet "Old Man" Walsh's Tonic reduced from $1.30 to 75 cents enough 9 days. For the STOMACH, LIVER & BLOOD. Walsh's Live Long Blood purifying Kidney Remedy. For purifying Beauty Aids for Dark Complexions If you want to be respected, admired and loved by every body, see that you have a beautiful complexion, free of bumps and splotthes, and that your hair is smooth and properly dressed. Your best friend is your "looks"—here's how to keep them. TO WHITEN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your complexion, it is easy and simple matter if you will only use Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment—it quickly bleaches, is perfectly safe and delightful to use. As your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c. OILY, SHINY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS soon give way to a smooth, smooth skin after using De. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Seed followed with his delicately perfumed Face Powder. Try this and wear your skin in beauty. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each. YOU MUST HAVE SMOOTH, LUXURIANT HAIR and the best and easiest way to get it is by using De. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Seed that the hair straight, promotes its growth and changes the skin. As your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each. be celebrated July 24 to 31. in baptist pas- the him Annapolis, Md., July 20—Mrs. William Brown, of Charles street, and two children have returned home and visiting her pat- tress for two weeks. Mrs. Billy Valley has returned home after visiting her sister in Boston for three weeks. Mrs. Julia John son is visiting her friends in P. B. Litt- son for a week. They funeral of Mrs. Alice Kerrister was held at Mr. Modak Church Thursday. She was a member of the Woman's Auxiliary of the church, Mrs. J. Jordan officiated. Bell Phone HOTEL COMFORT Cor. Second St., and Bay Ave. Ocean City, N. J. NOW OPEN Write Mrs. Comfort, 4513 King- nessing Avenue, or Hotel Com- fort, Ocean City, N. J. Mrs. M. P. Comfort, Prop. THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC Druid Hill Ave. Hilmore, Maryland Proven Success. Start your Job. Your Girl Yourself Now. INSTRUMENTS TAUGHT N T E D ??? Hard Laborers 25 APPLY RUSSELL CO. Talk Junction Home-Made Root and Herb Remedies TEST OF TIME of new fancy, highly advertised remedies of flourish, one would almost think that he be completely eliminated from the world in advertising, agents, commissions, fancy & mockery, all in one, crocodile enamble is commanded, faith-healing, lore sphere till one goes silly, all manner triple and hopeless who are willing to take a dollar in the hope of regaining their head & work & hopefully disappear & good-OLD-TIME GENEINE, HOME-MAST OF TIME—theY STILL LIVE as the bands of years and will continue to do so do the work when others fail. We think of them how good they were & we only love to try them but either have with them. There is one family—OF HERBALISTS who have the knowledge of the whole of their time to make the them under IRON-CLAD GUARANTEE even after you have tried all the new fashions STILL HOPE, Come & See 'Old Man' has a remedy for your trouble, he will give YES you can bet the last dollar purifying Kidney Kemedy. For purifying city Aids complexions elected, admired and loved by everyone a beautiful complexion, free of and that your hair is smooth and your best friend is your "looks"—from. No matter how dark your complexion, it will only use Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitening product perfectly safe and delightful to use. A month receipt of price, 25c. COMPLEXIONS soon give way to a softening Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitening product perfectly safe and delightful to use. A month receipt of price, 25c. SOOTH, LUXURIANT HAIR and the by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitening product perfectly safe and delightful to use. A month receipt of price, 25c. Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories Dep. DR. ATLANTA, GA. Dr. Fred Palmers KIN WHITENER PREPARATION A. CHAIN CO. BLACK SON Ab. H.L. Pearl, 3b 2 0 01 Ranges, 1f 3 0 0 Pearl, 3b 2 0 04 Pearl, ss 2 0 0 Borry, cf 3 0 0 01 Ribely, 2b 3 0 0 Elliott, cf 3 0 0 01 Ribely, 2b 3 0 0 Elliott, cf 3 0 0 01 Ribely, 2b 3 0 0 Frank, cf 2 0 0 11 Wibson, 1b 0 1 0 Bope, cf 1 0 0 01 Wibson, 1b 0 1 0 Leroy, cf 1 0 0 01 Wibson, 1b 0 1 0 Mattin, cf 1 0 0 01 Wibson, 1b 0 1 0 York, p 1 0 0 01 Sykes, 1b 0 1 0 Totals 18 0 4] Totals 16 2 0 American Chain Co. 0 0 0 10 Black Sox 0 0 0 20 Two-house blues-Frank, 51. Martin. Base on halls-sykes, 2. York, 4. Stolen hues-Strike ones-sykes, 4. York, 2. Double plays-Ford to Wilson, Umpires-Lyons and Cromwell. Attendance, 5,000. A. CHAIN CO. BLACK SOX A. B. RH. Rages, lf 4 2 Poor, 2b 3 0 0 Ford, ss 3 1 Tonner, 2b 4 1 0 Hidley, 2b 4 1 Rarty, 2b 4 1 0 Hidley, 2b 4 1 Bilott, 2b 3 2 0 Lewis, rf 2 1 Bilott, cf 1 0 0 Wilson, 1b 2 0 Pope, 1b 4 1 0 Miller, 3b 2 0 Lerain, 1b 4 1 0 Thomas, 3b 2 0 St. Martin, 1b 4 1 0 Thomas, 3b 2 0 Xork, xp 1 0 0 Loom, p 2 0 Stone, p 1 0 0 W.Smith, 1b 2 0 Fetters, p 0 0 0 Totals 28 4 1 Toatls 30 6 0 American Chain Co... 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 4- 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 x-5 Mud. Three Homers, and Three Double Plays Feature Defeat of Old Rivals, 2-0 and 5-4 Errors By Visitors Give Locals Winning Runs In Five-Inning Initial Tilt In two of the prettiest games of baseball witnessed at Maryland Park this year, the Black Sox and their ancient rivals, the American Chain Company nine of York, Pa., crossed bats for their third twin bill of the present season last Sunday and after the smoke of the battles had cleared away victory good perched on the home team's banner 2 to 0, and 5 to 4. Errors by the visitors, and old Jupiter Pluvus were responsible for the final result of the initial set in which the Sox failed to make a single hit. The Sox gave the 500 fans as resembled a thrill right from the start of the first innning: Sykes began it by whiffing Foori the first visitor up. He then failed to locate the plate, and Toner* got a life. Barty came next and bit a groundrule second and hit a up to top second cutting off and shot it to first nabbing Barty for a double play. Ridgley the first Sox up in the fourth innning was robbed of a long drive to the right fence by Barty the speared the globule right up against the boards. York soaring beautifully in the air at this time snapped four wide ones to Hall and then used Wilson for a large barge with a hot tip into third base which Feo grabbed but tailed to hold, and Hall ignored as the ball sped into left-field. Wilson who was doing a Morgan or rather a Whiskaway from St. kept right on around the ages and was safe at the plate. Feorii threw wild to nab him, math walked but Miller was an easy out retiring the side. Neither side, the fifth and with a first man up at the beginning of the sixth, rain began to fall and the game was called. In few minutes the home plate and the pitching box were a sea of mad. Finally after an hour or more had passed, the rain ceased. Men were then put to work on the diamond and when it had been put in shape it was announced that the first game was over as five tunnels had been played and the second game would be staged. serious game. Thus the Sox won the first game without making a single hit. Nightcap In Sensational Whatever thrills the fans may have lost by the curtailing of the opener, were simply made up for in the nightcap. "Darknight Smith and Thomas were chosen as the Sox battery and York and Levin agreed to accomplish in this game what they failed to do in the The Sox as they had done in the first game, drew a thrill into the fans in the very first inning. Smith was in one of his wild moods and walked Fecor, of the man, a moment later. Thomas hipped him precisely into first base. Toner the next man up also drew four wide ones, and took a notion to try Thomas' arm also and found it O. K. When the latter pgged accurately, the Worcester nipping him as he stood second. In the third, Smith again got into hot water when two walks and a single filled the bags with only one out. However, he pulled through without being scored one of the outs being a pit on the plate by Wilson outting Lo rain. In their half of this session, the Sox put out three markers the first one of which was a circuit clout to hugs the first man up York was then lifted and Stone to the mount. sent to the court. The visitors blanked the locals in the fourth and fifth in both of which innings they themselves made two, which put the score at four all, at the end of the fifth. Having issued seven seals to this time and then his Levin the first man up in the Smith, Smith was derried by Logan sent in who held the visitors at his mercy the hold of the way, while Ford the tie in the seventh with a circuit smash over the right way, while Ford broke the tie in seventh with a circuit smash over the right wall, another Seath paw was rushed in in the eighth but found to stum the tide, of these two games The winning of those gave the Sox four out of six from the Chain Company this season. PIRST GAME. SECOND GAME HOLDERS OF CITY ATHLETIC CHAMPIONSHIPS Following are the names of the holders of schoolboy P. A. L. championships in race and field events. In the various weight classes, their records and schools which they were pupils of at the time they made their record. These records are official and the holders are recognized until their marks are bettered in competition. 56-Yard Dash - N. Tailley, Colored High School; time, 6 sets. Standing Broad Jump - L. Smith, W. Washington P. S.; distance, 7 ft 6 ins. Standing Throw - L. Tucker, P. S. 110; distance, 83 ft 8 ins. 440-750 Jump - S. Smith, W. Washington P. S.; time, 1 minute 3:35 seconds; team, G. Gross, E. Watkins, W. Robinson, E. White. 690-Yard Rebuy- P. S. 110; time: 1 min. 21 3:5 secs; team: C. Anderson, W. Roell, M. Giles, W. Carroll. UNLIMITED CLASS 106-Yard Dash- A. W. Lewis, P. S. 110; time: 10 1:5 secs. 880-Yard Run- D. Pendleton, C. H. 110; time: 10 22 3 secs. Running Bump Jump- R. Taylor, C. H. S. 110; time: 11 1:2 ins. 12:0 Shot Put- R. Type, C. H. S. distance: 33.1 ft. THE SPORTING MIRROR Two issues back, on this piece, we reminded our readers that now that the Dempsey-Wills championship bout had practically been arranged, the country was in for a protracted battle of pros and both lay and professional as to the abilities of the men, especially the writers. ly among that class of experts known As is well known, there are a number of prominent members of the latter craft whose opinions on all athletic matters where white and black participants are concerned, is noticeably influenced by an unmistakable antipathy for the athlete of the latter race. The deanship of this class of biased sports writers seemingly belongs to Mr. Robert Edgren of New York whose sport articles are published in THE BALTIMORE NEWS. Mr. Edgren is an able writer of many years' experience, but, as we have had occasion to point out before in this place, he never says a good word for a colored athlete if it is possible to say a bad one, and lacking the latter is the original human claim. alternative he is the original author of Mr. Edgren to say his little say in reference to the winner of the Dempsey-Wills match; now that the bout is practically assured. Of course what we were waiting for was his statement as to just how many rounds Wills would last before Dempsey hung a K, O, on his jaw. Our patience has at last been rewarded but our guess was wrong. No, sirree, Mr. Edgren is not now concerned with this phase of the match; his interest goes far deeper than that; the matching of 'ack Dempsey a white man with Harry Wills a Negro, has stirred his soul to the depths causing him to set up a wall against this crime against humanity while copious tears trickle down his checks as he contemplates the carnage of bloodshed that will take place between the races on the day that these two sturdy Americans put their physical stamina and pugilistic skill against each other. Said Mr. Edgren a few days ago in an article in the above named paper, among other things, the following: 'Dempsey said, long before the New York Boxing Commissioners decided to BOOST WILLS STOCK BY PLACING HIM FIRST AMONG THE CHALLENGEERS FOR THE HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP (get that? The emphasis is ours), that he would be entirely willing to fight Wills any time he was assured that the public wanted the match, and that a mixed match would not be against public pressure. "Dempsey has encountered enough criticism without getting into a position where he will be well accountable in the public mind for causing race troubles in different parts of the country. The New York State Boxing Commission, because of its activity in feeding a Dempsey-Wills much will have to assume all blame if the affair ends, in such riotous follow the fight between Jeffries and Johnson at Rene's 1940s age, clotting in which about 30 men were killed. Boxing has been going along very well. It seems injudicious at least risk destroying the sport." Where is Mr. Edgrom's proof that 30 persons were killed as a result of that fight? result of that fight? If rips between black and white people break out on account matching Jack Dempsey and Harry Wills, the cause will not lie at the door of the New York boxing commission, but at the door of that class of sports writer who instead of standing for a square deal and "let the best man win" whatever his color maybe, are always harping on the inferiority of colored athletes, and the loss of caste on the part of white men in competing against black men. Of course when you preach this vicious doctrine into the ears of the ignorant and unthinking of both races, naturally when the black man proceeds for "knock the white man's block of you are going to have rioting. It was just this sort of thing that was responsible for the "rioting", Mr. Edgren speaks of as following the Jeffries-Johnson fight. Let Mr. Edgren and his ilk take a day off and instead of being the fact that a white man has been forced into a match with a Nero, let them write that two young American citizens, specimens of nature's finest handwork physically, one white, the other black are fitted against each other 10 see which at the present time possesses the greater skill in the art of fixing; and that no matter which wins, the verdict belongs to the American people; and it is our opinion that there will be considerably less losing and murders on the day that Jack Dempsey and Harry Wilts climbs between the ropes. THE BLACK SOX BATTING AVERAGES The following table shows the batting averages of the Black Sox in at home games. (No record is kept by the club of their sights work on the road.) This table shows Ford still leading the sticks with the sticks and also having crossed the plate the greatest number of time, which it shows Ridgely leading with 16 circuit smashes and Miller for pitcher bags. of time, while it is supposed died with Miller for pitchered bags. 46 41 48 AH 18 18 26 26 38 38 28 52 P.C. Ford 29 13 103 13 11 11 4 4 2 8 7 42 Wilson 13 47 13 13 13 14 14 1 4 1 51 .418 Hall 34 129 14 19 15 15 2 1 2 2 .42 Ruggs 15 49 8 28 26 6 2 10 14 .48 Ribbedy 31 101 18 18 28 8 1 1 11 .38 Wo. Smith 29 100 16 18 28 8 1 1 11 .33 Lewis 30 92 10 13 7 2 0 0 0 .28 Thomas 14 42 10 12 11 0 0 0 0 .28 C. Smith 14 44 10 11 0 0 0 0 0 .28 Sykes 14 43 14 8 0 1 0 2 1 .28 Miller 32 110 22 24 4 0 0 14 .28 Logan 32 30 2 5 0 0 0 0 .16 Lester 7 18 2 5 0 0 1 0 .16 Sykes Leading of the 37 games played on the local diamond five were pitched by Busby, Punch and Thompson, three recruits neither of whom know with the team. Of the other 32 excepting the tie with the Cubans in the opening attraction of the season, the record of the pitching staff is as follows: W. L. P. C. School 110's flashiest runner. He is Jas. Bernar d Washington. In the last school meet he broke the state record by running 70 yards in 7 3-5 seconds. Photo by Penn Studio. Bingham, P. S. 110; time: 7 3.5 secs. W. Stanford, C. H. S.; distance: 17 ft. Res. P. S. 115; distance: 275 ft. S. 110; time: 1 min. 21 3.5 secs.; ter. UNLIMITED CLASS Lewis, P. S. 110; time: 10 1.5 secs. Hton, C. H. S.; time: 2 min. 22 2.5 secs. R. Taylor, C. H. S.; distance: 17 ft. 11 secs. C. H. S.; distance: 31 ft. 1 in. SPORTING MIR 1 BY AFRO SPORTS EDITOR k, on this page, we reminded our Wills championship bout that history was in for a protracted baut professional as to the abilities of the experts known as sports ww wn, there are a number of pro pose opinions on all athletic nw nrs are concerned, is nottec early for the athlete of the latl reminded our readers that now hippo had practically been attracted battle of pros and cons of the two men, especials sports writers. Number of prominent members of athletic matters where white is notically influenced by an age of the latter race. Based sports writers seemingly New York whose sport articles are AWS. Mr. Eddrey is an ally, as we have had occasion to say a good word for a colored one, and lacking the latter claim. Mr. Eddrey to say his little sayup-Wills match; now that the what we were waiting for was grounds Wills would last before Our patience has at last been now concerned with this phase super than that: the matching of Wills a Nazi, has stirred his up a trickle down his checks as he did that will take place between surely americans put their phys-ces each other. In an article in the above named being: "Dempsey said, long before we decided to BOOST WILLS' AMONG THE CHALLENGEERS COMPETITION (get that?) we entirely willing to fight Wills any that a public interest, with criticism without getting into countable in the public mind for parts of the country. The New name of its activity in forcing a full blame if the affair ends between Jeffries and Johnson at about 30 men were killed. Box-It seems injudicious at least to that 30 persons were killed as a people break out on account of Wills, the cause will not lie at the mission, but at the door of that standing for a square deal and color maybe, are always harping and the loss of caste on the part black men. Violent doctrine into the ears of races, naturally when the black man's block off" you are going to of that thing was responsible for us following the Jeffries-Johnson a day off and instead of bewailing American citizens, specimen which at the present time possesses and that no matter which wins, people; and it is our opinion that murder on the day that ties between the ropes. BATTING AVERAGES Batting averages of the Black Sox kept by the club of their sticks shows Ford still leading the team and the plate the greatest numbering with 10 circuit smashes and BATTING PITCHER At the 37 games played on the Busty, Punch and Thompson, now with the team. Of the other, as in the opening attraction of the staff is as follows: L. P. C. 2. .833 3. .687 1. .667 3. .571 ..... of this class of biased sports Robert Edgern of New York who BALTIMORE NEWS. Mr. Edgern's experience, but, as we this place, he never says a good possibility to a bad one, and the originally human claim, the originally awaiting Mr. Edgern winner of the Dempsey-Wills assured. Of course what we we to just how many rounds Wills K. O. on his jaw. Our patient gness was wrong. Mr. Edgern is not now concern interest goes far deeper than the white man with Harry Wills a N causing him to set up a N whilie oppious tears trickle down day that these two sturdy Ameri pugilistic skill a challenge each of when a few days ago in an article of things, the following: "Demp boxing Commissioners decided HEIGHT HIM FIRST AMONG THE HEAVYWIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP that he would be entirely unpled id not be against public interest the encountered enough criticisms in different parts of the Commission, because of its watch will have to assume all bla followed the fight between Jef closing in which about 30 men gong along very well. It seems in sport." Mr. Edgern's proof that 30 perc is? been black and white people be empsies and Harry Wills, the ca Young boxing commission, but who instead of standing a win' whatever his color was just this sort of thing the Edgern speaks of as following and his ilk take a day off a a white man has been forced to write that two young Ameri handwork physically, one whil each other to see which at the ings to the American people, and considerably less rioting and mu and Harry Wills climbs between BLACK SOX BATTING Table shows the batting averages. (No record is kept by the table.) This table shows Ford and also have crossed the plate shows Ridgely leading with 1 for pitcher bags. G. 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 20 102 25 26 8 Sykes Leading Pitcher record shows that of the 37 five were pitched by Busy, either of whom is now with the tie with the Cubans in the ond of the pitching staff is as a W L P. 0 KES 10 2 .83 MAN 6 2 .68 MITH 2 1 .68 CHER 4 1 .57 WELDONS BLASBURG The Sluggers B. B. C. journeyed to Annapolis last week and applied the kills to the crack Welden nine, 3 to O. B. Brown, who was on the rubber Sluggers, held the Annapolis nine, three hits and turned 15 back by the strickout ROUTE On last Sunday, the Sluggers were to play the Penns. Eagles, but got cold feet and played a tough game, boosted by 120-POUND-CLASS --- SPORTINNG PAGE OF THE AFROX 1 John Wesley Lewis, 1357 Fremont Ave. has equalled the State Record in running 100 yd. dash in 10 seconds flat. School 110. Photo by Penn Studio. --- JACKSON AIMS TO MEET WILLS Dave Driscoll To Stage Contest Between Bronzed Panther and Ohio Sensation August 8th New York, July 15—Although it looks at present as if Harry Wills and Jack Dempsey will not get together before the snow flies and disappears again, fight fans of the East will get an opportunity to see Misiub Harry in action shortly against an opponent who will make him step "right smart". This fact became known here Tuesday when Hursy Wills signed to box Tui Jackson, the young Ohio sensation, a 15-round bout at Ebbets field on Aug. 8. The latter fighter according to reporting is in his twenty-second year, has been boxing a little over a year during which the he claims a record of 36 knockouts in 38 fights. He was matched to box Jake Johnson at Washington Court House (Jackson's home town) on July Fourth, but the match was held up by one of the State Judges after the mayor of renamed refused to interfere. Jackson: WILLS 6 ft. 2 in. Height 6 ft. 25 in. Weight 190 Bouch 80% Neck 171 Pararmur 163% Wrist 83% Hips 83% Hips 37 Chest (Nor) 42 Chest (Exp) 40% Walst 31 Thigh 23 Galf 12 Ankle 10% Age 21 MT. WINANS, 7: LAKELAND A. 6., 1 Last Monday, the Mt. Winans A. 7 trimmed the Lakeland All-Stars (white) and Mt. Winans (oval, 7 to 1). LAKELAND A. B. R. H. MT WINANS A. B. R. H. Wychelster, c 4 0 1 D. Breen, b 1 0 1 B. Ware, b 1 0 1 H. Singer, p 4 0 1 P. Breen, f 3 0 1 A. Spencer, f 3 0 1 T. Breen, f 2 0 1 B. Trees, f 2 0 1 J. East, b 3 0 1 Pope, f 2 0 1 Prazer, f 1 0 1 Totals 32 1 4 Totals 41 7 14 CUBS, 14; HORN & HORN, 5 With Ware in great form, the Baltimore Cubs and Little Troop brought the Born and born age up to 5. A great run during the catch in leftfield by Johnso- also featured. Next Sunday the Cubs will cross bats with the strong East Born infield Red Sox for a game, followed by Born Bradley street, city. Line-up: BALTO. CURS. HORN & HORN A.B.H. A.B.H. Roy, 2b 5 2 3 Berry, e 4 0 1 Roberts, ss 5 1 2 Carroll, f 4 1 0 Johnson, 3b 4 2 3 Sanders, b 4 1 0 Funny, 1b 5 2 4 Gold, s 4 1 0 Bickens, fr 4 1 1 2 b 4 1 1 Johnson, ff 4 1 1 2 Kelly, e 3 1 1 Gorger, ff 4 1 2 Thomas, f 2 0 1 Brannock, cf 3 1 2 Johnson, 3b 2 2 Ware, p 3 2 2 Turner, p 3 1 0 Frank, p 2 1 0 Tarvey, x 1 0 0 Gray, x 1 0 0 Totals 25 14 18 Totals 33 5 6 Score by innings: Alan, ss ..... 3 8 0 1 1 8 0 1 1 4 1 Horn & Horn ..... 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 Two-base hit bit--Hew, enfwty tan Two-base hits--Roy, Hebron, 2; Base on -Ware, 4; Turner, 6; Frank, 2 -base-base, Ware, Ware, Strike outs -Ware, 11; Turner, Wild pitch-Ware, 1; Turner, 2; Frank, 1; Upfires-Berry ,Mendicane, 400. NEW WINDSOR GRAB8 BOTH P.G. New Windsor, Md., July 10.—The New Windsor Blue Sox put the Walkville nine to digit in a two-ply diamond tilt here last Saturday, 6 to 4, in the first game, and 10 to 0, in the night-up. The Blue Sox would like to book games with all strong teams in the State. Address, Edward Jack- son, Box 102, New Windsor, Md. "NED" GOURDIN IS FETED "DOWN HOME" The Associated Negro Press Jacksonville, Fla., July 19, 1943. Gourdin, the world champion broad jumper featured in a spectacular trace of which was given in Barre's Field in this city on the Fourth, where over two thousands had gathered. and people. Gourdin did not compete * * * * but gave an exhibition of standing broad jump and the running jump, making a mark of 24 feet, 4 inches in this latter exhibition. Every time he appeared he met an ovation, Jacksonville was his birthplace. That was preciated by home fans was loudly preclaimed by the great applause that was given him, and the dinner parties and a reception given at V.C. Freeman. 1.075 USED "Y" POOL 1.075 USED "Y" POOL "Learn To Swim" Campaign Put On In Big Tank For Summer Months The management of the local "Y" has put on a real community program for the summer. On July 3, the big swimming pool, the only sanitary and tiled pool with filtered water in the city, was opened to the public. The schedule was arranged to suit every group and the pool was put in charge of C. L. Pindornhesten, an expert swimmer. On a thousand seventy-five people used the pool during the first twelve days and indications are very height for a record breaking crowd during the next few weeks. "LEARN TO SWIM" is the slogan adopted by all and man, women and children are waiting a chance to take their first plunge. The pool will be operated in this manner until September first, at which time the annual fall program will schedule. Two reasons for putting on this city-wide program. First, it is the wish of the committee of management that it's larger number of people used the pool and learn to swim; and secondly, it is the desire of the committee to give all peoples in all walks of life the opportunity to use the pool during the very days. The swimming fee for all, both men and women who are not members with physical privileges is ten cents. Biloxi City, Md., July 19, -before 700 excited fans the Lincoln A. C., and Catonsville A. 8, divided a twin bill here has Sunday, Catonsville will also open the oppo- nent, and the Lincoln taking the dive inning nightcap, 6 to 4. Smith pitched good ball for Lincoln in this game, but got poor support, whereas Brooks for Catonsville was hit hard but gave gift opportu- ness by innings: FIRST GAME Catonsville lincoln 2 00 0 3 0 2 0-7 SECOND GAME Catonsville lincoln 0 03 0 1-1 2 02 1 1-6 80X DROPPED THREE ON ROAD Last week the Sox dropped three out of five games on the road as follows: Montebello, host to North Philadelphia, at Philadelphia, 4 to 2. Smith and South, host to Baltimore, best to 3. To Wildwood, host to Wildwood, 4. After trying to on midy hold, Archer, Lewis and Thomas, Wednesday, won from 5. Harris, 10 to 2. Logan, and Foley, won from 6. Tannen, N. J., Saturday, host to South Philadelphia, at Philadelphia, 10 to 8. Logan, and Thomas. The Sox have played 17 games at home, winning 15 and 10, and have played 25 on the road, winning 14 and losing 11, for an average of HIGHLAND A. C. AND HIGHLAND & SIXTH WARD SPLIT Mt. Washington, Md., July 19, "The Highb A, C. and the Sixth Ward nine twelfth fided a twin bill he had, 10 to 3, and highballs the seven-limbing eight, 6 to 3 the feature of the first game was the pitch of C. Scott for Highballs who held be white sluggers to 5 hits and fanned 14. 3. B. RED SOX. 15: GREENWAY A. C. 4 The East Baltimore Red Sox swamped the greenway A, C. Last Sunday in the second game of a scheduled twin bbl, 15 to 4. The game was called by agreement on all of three and one on each of the two stands, standing 6 to 2, with the greenways on the long end. After the rain cured, it was decided to play the second game. On Sunday, July 30th, the East Baltimore Red Sox will play a doubleheader with the Annapolis All-Stars. Lines: | RED SOX | GREENWAY | | :--- | :--- | | Ab. B.R. | Ab. B.R. | | Brown, 1b 6 3 3 | Hopps, 1f 5 0 1 | | Dennis, 2b 6 3 3 | Hopps, 1f 5 0 1 | | Jones, 2b 6 3 3 | Jawney, 1b 5 0 1 | | Brown, 3b 6 1 3 | Brown, ss 5 1 2 | | M.Nash, 3b 6 1 3 | Flero, r 4 0 1 | | W. Nash, p 5 1 3 | McKinne, r 4 0 1 | | Michel, rf 4 1 3 | Bonds, rb 3 1 2 | | Hazzard, rf 4 1 3 | Bonds, rb 3 1 2 | | Hudson, rf 5 1 3 | Parker, r 2 1 1 | | Harris, rb 1 0 1 | B. E. Red Sox - 1 0 0 0 0 5 2 1 1 1 5- Greenway A. C. 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 4 Three-innings hit - S. Brown, S. Jones, Michael - B. Brown, B. Jones, bombs - bombs, 1; James, 2; Mickens, 1; M. Nush, 2; W. Nush, 3; strike out - W. Nush, 10; Parkes, 3; batters hit by - W. Nush, 3; batters hit by - W. Nush, Perry Hanning, Attendance, 560 BACHARACH, 1: SPRING CITY. 0 Spring City, Pa., July 18. In a pitcher's barrel between Clinton and Wheeler, the widest member of the pitching staff of the Fallout Black Sox last year, the original Hutchison glances whitewashed Spring City here last Thursday, 1 to 0. UNIVERSAL'A. S.WANT GAMES The Universal All-Stars have a few open dates during the month of July, and would like to hear from some semi-pro pilots. The Universals also play two pilots, glimming at 6 p. m. The especially designed team, with some of the Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Address, George D. Tyler, 10 N. Spring street, Baltimore, Md. BLACK SOX SCHEDULE The schedule for the Black Sox this week was as follows: Wednesday, Billyale, at Camden, N. J.; Thursday and Saturday, at Wilmington at Wilmington, Del.; Saturday, Billy MIDDLE-AGED OLD IN MEN MEN And Certain Treatment for Every Man Suit should suffer the loss of health, which rend become less than nature intended, when Debility. Most of the PAINS, most of MEN from which men suffer are due lower. You need not suffer from this. GET HEALTH? The very element which you may be as happy as any man. YOU GET A REASONABLE COST. WHAT? MY MAN ASK? HONORABLE SCIENT ILL GET HERE. A VISIT WILL TEN This does not obligate you to begin treat FOR FOR MEN, Every Ailing Man For Free Exam Suffering with a Nervous, Blood or Skin once for a thorough examination. My words can describe the wonderful ben- given to hundreds of ailing men. I Acne, Eczema, Bad Color, Boils, Itch forms of Blood Disorders, Skin Diseases once and let me explain to you—prove endering every day in all such condition ated elsewhere without benefits should dredges of patients are being restored had tried numerous doctors and other reasonable and no more than you can affi- Call today. FREE FOR 10 DAYS, WHEN IT POSIT NO MAN should suffer the loss of health, which renders life worth 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 FAIRER PROPOSITION COULD ANY MAN ASK? HONORABLE SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT IS WHAT YOU WILL GET HERE. A VISIT WILL TELL. Call today and talk things over. This does not oblige you to begin treatment. DOCTOR FOR MEN, ONLY Invites Every Ailing Man For Free Examination If you are suffering with a Nervous, Blood or Skin Disease you should call at my office at once for a thorough examination. My treatment will help you. No power of words can describe the wonderful benefits my Direct Method Treatment has given to hundreds of ailing men. If you have Pimples, Eruptions, Blotches, Acne, Eczema, Bad Color, Boils, Itching or Burning of the Skin, or any symptoms of Blood Disorders, Skin Diseases or Nervous Ailments you should call at once and let me explain to you—prove to you—the wonderful benefits I am rendering every day in all such conditions. The fact that you may have been treated elsewhere without benefits should not discourage you in the least. Hundreds of patients are being restored to a sound basis of health after they had tried numerous doctors and other treatments in vain. My charges are reasonable and no more than you can afford to pay. A visit will convince you. Call today. 1/2 USUAL FEE FOR 10 DAYS, WHEN IT POSITIVELY ENDS No Pain, No Loss of Time From Work, by "Direct Methods" But Hardly Able Quickly Relieved In your memory and easily exhausted? Are you feeling emotion? Do you feel that you mankind were? Do you have hot dusts up and down suit you once? Have you pulp heart? Pull headache, pain at the base of the brain, such fright from no apparent cause? Are you very restless or fright? Are you nervous and irritable, with a feeling that you have some gloom, with a sense of some great op pound? Are you very fearful of you? If you need my treatment, a visit will tell. Call today Certain and Safe Methods for a Reason BY MY ADVANCED METHODS OF TREATMENT WEAK, DISEASED BODY TAKES ON DAY NEW POWER, UNTIL IN TIME IT IS Men not Sick But Hardly Able to Wo Quickly Relieved by D Do you feel tired in the morning and easily exhausted, in life's week? Is your memory failing? Do you have difficulty in life's thoughts? Are you losing ambition? Do you feel that you have not once were? Do you have not lost passion and down your sudden work skills, especially after a break? Have you palpitated heart? Dull headache, pain at the base of the brain, sudden fright from no apparent pain? Are you very restless or sleepy? Are you gloomy and irritable, with a feeling that you are not feeling well, with a sense of some great pain? If you need my treatment, a visit will tell. Call today. Certain and Safe Methods for a Reason BY MY ADVANCED METHODS OF TREATMENT WEAK. DISEASEED BODY TAKES ON DAYS. NEW POWER, UNTIL IN TIME THIS IS Now, Reader. If You Are An Unfortunate, Don't Trifle. As Further—You'll Do It One Day Too Long and Get So Come To Me At Once! Advice Medication by SERUMS, ANTITOXINS, BAYLEY THERAPY are among the latest discoveries in use of medicine is given in very small doses and not the patient receives powerful medication by absorption of dissection is not affected in the least. MY KNOWLEDGE of your Disease and Complete ME to treat your case as it should be treated. A trip of what I can do for you. DOCTOR See Electric Signs Over the Entrance—Rest in Private Rooms for Secrecy. No Names Used. BALTO. TENNIS ASSO. MAKES CLEAN SWEEP The Baltimore Tennis Association defeated the Harrisonburg Association on the Druid Hill Park courts last Saturday not allowing the visitors to win a match. On Wednesday, the Baltimoreans go on Annapolis to play the association of that city, on the campus to play the Saturday they club on the Druid Hill Park courts and on the 29th, they will go to Harrisonburg to play the Harrisonburg association. SOURCES: Singles—Rhythm vs. J. Warrick, 6:2, 6:1; Walker vs. Marshall, 6:1, 6:3; McCardle vs. Taylor, 6:1, 7:5; Rocking vs. W. Warrick, Doubles—McRae and Perkins vs. 3, and W. Warrick, 4:4, 4:4; Cordova and Breston 1:1. cs. Marshall and Llydryn. The American Tennis Association national tournament will take place at Germantown, Pa. to the Y, M, C, A, courts, August 15th to 30th. YOUNG MIDDLE MEN MEN I Have a Safe and Certi NO MAN should suf or allow himself to become certain relief for his Debiliti the DISEASES OF MEN Nature's reserve power. ed and enjoy perfect HEA can get back, and you may ATED BY ME AT A TION COULD ANY MAN IS WHAT YOU WILL GET talk things over. This do DOCTOR Invites Every A If you are suffering call at my office at once for you. No power of words od Treatment has given to Eruptions, Blotches, Acne, Skin, or any symptoms of you should call at once a ful benefits I am rendering may have been treated el in the least. Hundreds of health after they had tri My charges are reasonable will convince you. Call t 1/2 USUAL FEE FOR AFFLICTED MEN, This MEN MEN With Impure Blood Not Visible Yet Liable to Break Out Any Day, Be Warned in Time. If you need the services of a SPEC LASTIST, call on me during my regular office hours and let me go over you with you. This will not require ME to cheerfulness, and I will not obligate you to choose you in my hands, but should you decide to place yourself in my charge, I will give you my test attention and truss you in my hands. I will treated you mildly and I will start the start of my work in that I am a real SPEC LASTIST and why you hear of my super- others knowledge as compared with many around me. The people of Fulton are knowing wonderful results that I have had in my practice. Other doctors have sent CHRONIC CAMES to me, so if you need to break out any day, get one who is aware of time. WILL NOT CHARGE YOU A FEE BEYOND YOUR MEANS, AND I WILL NOT HOLD GFUTE FALSE HOPES, BUT WILL FRANKLY TELL YOU HOW TO FEEL SATISFY WITH YOUR CASE, AND WILL TREAT YOUR CASE IN SECURITY AND OVERCOME EVERY SYMPTOM IN A QUICK, SCIENTIFIC WAY WITHOUT LOSS OF TIME, LITTLE OR NO PAIN. Out-of-town patients can be treated and return home the same day. Blowing Greater System of Nerves. You Can See How Necessary It Is To Keep Them Strong. Now. Reader. If You Are An Further—You'll Do It O Com Consultation Examination Free Medic THEAP Free Every ailing man is urged to call at my office for a free consultation a nd a careful examination. The experience of many years is at your service. 812 N. HOWARD STREET NEAR CORN-MONU- MENT STREET, Baltimore, Md. Private Cuban RAINBOWS GO ON RAMPAGE The Rainbow A. C. went on a rampage last Sunday with the White Oaks, taking both long ends of a two-ply tilt, 6 to 0, in the opener, and 10-8 in the dewfall. The Rainbows would like to see two pitches, 17 or 18 Years of age, and a third baseman South Baltimore presen- t address, Nathan Johnson, 817 W. Oxford street, City. HILLDALE, G: GLOUCESTER, 2 Glencore, N. J., July 17.—Before some three thousand fans, the Hilldale nine of Darley. Pat contended the Glencore nine here. 5. 10. 2. SOME CASES AS LOW AS $10.00 FEE I Give Scientific Up-to- Date Treatment. Only Curable Cases Accepted Quick Results, Scientific Treatment is what you will get from me. DO AGAIN THE WORK THAT FASHIONED IT TO, PERF KEEP YOUR BLOOD PURE, FREE DISEASE. KEEP YOUR NERVES O CAN DEEF DISEASE. A thorough examination of the patient accepting a man for treatment, a cardiologist is the only way to detect diagnosis which includes Mechanical Blood Pressure, Critical Analysis and a complete consideration of the alliments. This proper diagnosis, and this ability is due to proper assurance of prompt and perfect result. Let Fuse Price or Money Matters I Trust Each Upcid Slightly Ahead BACTERINS, SERUMS, V Don't Wait—Don't Suffer—Come Daily Hours 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday and Holidays. NO CHARAER WHATEVER FOR CONZUEL See Electric Signs Over the Entrance-See Private Rooms for Securty. No Names Used. (The following communication has been received by the Sports Editor.) Dear Sir: I—challenged the Hale Asset through the sporting event of your paper and the two Sundays, and they disappointed me on two Sundays, the 9th and 16th of July. Therefore, according to sporting law, I am due to two forfeit prizes from them (Signed) Mr. Maloney, Mgr. M. Winans A. C. IN FACT ALL MEN MEN Can Suited to His Case which renders life worth living, when there is at hand a most of the DEBILITIES of life due to an early loss of this. Why not be alleviated, but which you have lost you YOU CAN BE ALLEVIAT HAT FAIRER PROPOSI- CENTIFIC TREATMENT TELL. Call today and on treatment. N, ONLY Examination For Skin Disease you should My treatment will help ful benefits my Direct Meth- n. If you have Pimples, Itching or Burning of the Diseases or Nervous Ailments prove to you—the wonder- ditions. The fact that you should not discourage you ordered to a sound basis of other treatments in vain. can afford to pay. A visit POSITIVELY ENDS O FEE For You to Save Money. MEN With Failing Nerves. Not Sick, Yet Hardly Able to Work. Ger Well! I WANT TO TALK TO EVERY SUPER- PERSON FROM BLOOD, NERVOUS AND CHRONIC DISEASES. THE FACT THAT YOU ARE SKEPTICAL DOES NOT DISCOURAGE ME IN THE NEARLY ALL OF MY EXPERIENCE. I AM OF THIS SAME AND SUCH CASES EVERY DAY. AND FEEL SURE I CAN D NAME FOR YOU. I SPECIAL LUTT ALL STUBBORN, ( ED AND LONG-STAND MEN WHO HEALTHY BEAUTY OF DUTTON. WILL APPRE BENEFITS CONFERRED LASTING BENEFITS I. C TO ME FOR FIRE CONS WILL EXPLAIN MY METHODS OF TRE SPECIAL TRAINING ENCE IN TREATING NERVOUS, BLOOD CASES GIVE ME M SAGES. MY MOST ASSISTANT IN CUR Examining CONSU FOR O able to W reved by D Examina CONSU FOR The Shadow' In this driving storm of circums- stances that a week since had hurled a human being out of the world and last night had brought to do, a second to take its place, he found himself helpless. His long career, a career in which he had decided to quiet assurance the guild, remember she is very weak. I should fear a shock. of no assistance. This was not "But what are we going to do?" another man's problem but his down. He poured himself a drink spoken with a note of command, from the old, ruby-glass decanter upon the sideboard and found his hard trembling so that the cloth, he was spilt upon with the twining hand to his friend. "Till be back soon," he said more gently. "Till leaves that the rain tore from their sockets. All that he had been believed and preached was taken the howling wind and rain and from him by his own world's PROLOGUE When George Ogilvie, distinguished Judge of Palmetto County Florida, read of the death in the papers, the quick death after the surgeon's knife—he felt glad and inexpressibly relieved. To play the part of avenger she was sadly out of keeping with his gentle wife. His wife would have done it without a quail but since this was not permitted her she role upon him. Fate, however, had taken her revenge without using him as her instrument, and the man who had brought disgrace into his home had slipped from the world honored by his associates, with visible taint upon his career. Remembering this, the Judge's sense of relief changed to a desire to play the familiar role, justice and pronounce sentence upon the fresh-faced, laughing persuasive criminal. Would he at the Most High Tribunal be given his full penalty? upon the sodden ground, he almost wished the lad was alive again. He would then find some way to tie the loose, careless life that it had maintained, to the life it had brought into existence. In this driving storm of circumstances that a week since had been helped out of the world and last night had brought a second to take its place, he found himself helpless. His long career, a career in which he had decided with quiet assurance the guilt of inocence of men and women standing earlier than him, was another man's problem but his own. He poured himself a drink from the old, ruby-glass decanter upon the sideboard and found his hawd trembling so that the liquor was spilled upon the cloth. His head swirled with the swirling water from their sockets. All that he had be-lied and preached was taken from him by his own world's tragic storm. In the south room, however, it was peaceful and quiet. The wind spent tig strength in the north, and one one couch to the back, the arm was the old arm rocked slowly back and forth. Near her, on the bed, union her back, was a young girl. Her curled brown hair lay a braid on either side of her delicate face. Her eyes were closed, but not in sleep, every now and then that she thought to draw something toward her. At length, opening her eyes and looking to the far corner of the room, she said: "Mammy, I want it." The old colored woman left her seat and walked to where a cradle stood right now, ill lamb." "Why not?" "It done sleep now." The girl turned upon her side and crooking her arm, rested her head within it. She listened, her brow slightly wrinkled, to the as it beat upon the roof of gallery. Similarly: "Why doesn't it cry, Ice Cream:- GREAM, Per Gal., $1.10 QUIN, Per Gal., $1.40 HICKS High Rent District McCullob St. "Ain't I tole yer, chile, it done sleep. Ain't I tole yer?" Downstairs the man of the house had stepped across the hall and joined a little thin old gentleman who sat close to a blazing fire. "Doctor?" "Yes, George." "Remember Lillias when you gave her to me, eighteen years ago?" "What of it?" "Nothing. How helpless she was. I reckon all baby things are lowered to the lowest voice." "That baby appears now, it seems worse being a girl." The doctor made no reply, but crouched by the fire. "It's up to us what their lives shall be, eh? Queen or beggar maid." The man of the house looked formally at the silent visitor. "Have a drink?" He askedudenly. "I'll get you one. Just fix it tightly well getting the servants out of the hotel, but it don't make for hospital." What was he going to do? He. Judge Ogilvie, did not know what he was going to do. He looked helplessly into his friend's eyes. Rising wearily the doctor went toward the door. "You aren't going?" the man of the house tried in alarm. "For a little. I saw other work for you." So here don't leave us like this. Supposing anything happens. "Nothing should happen; only remember she is very weak. I should fear a shock." "But what are we going to do?" Talk with your wife. The doctor spoke with a note of command. "I'm not the one ♥ say what you should do. He pulled on his coat and, running, held out his boot, his friend "I'll be more gently." "I'll be with you through the night." Then he opened the door upon the howling wind and rain and was gone. Judge Ogilvie walked back into the living-room to see his wife. She was a small woman, with a small hard mouth. Usually it was firmly set, but to night it trembled with her trembling chin. The judge noted that the old dress she wore long discarded, was wet; that the hair by her hand stained her forehead. Her hands, too, were wet, as she held them out to the flames. "Where's the doctor?" she asked. "Gone, for a little." "And Lilias?" she was busy quiet for some time. She had been with her, you should know." "No," the woman answered, "I have been acting for Lilias while you have gaped and talked and risked her future with every hour. Something has been done." "Yes?" The man of the house found his heart beating fast, but his question is hardly defensible. "You have had many plans. Which have you used?" "I've hidden it; hidden her shame. It can never cross her KNOXIT PROPHYLACTIC Affords protection against infectious diseases. All prudent persons should avail themselves of this dependable germicide. AT DRUG STORES EVERYWHERE The only positive HAIR GROWER and DANDRUFF REMOVER Glover's ampoule Mange Medicine Sold for 35 years. Pamphlet on the scalp malled free on application to H. CLAY MONKEY 120 W. 241th St. New York City KINKY HAIR Becomes (like picture) Soft, Silky, Long, Wavy By Using CROLIN POMADE HAIR DRESSING CROLIN POMADE HAIR DRESSING. sticky or gummy. Highly perfumed. shents out the kinkiest, smallest or hair causing it to good long, soft, fluffy, out from necessity. Removes dandruff, is itching scalp and falling hair. Stamps or Coin BY MAIL 100 Agents Wanted-Write for Terms. HEROLIN MED. CO. ATLANTA, GA. You--Try Dr. Varden Examination Free Plates, $5 up. Fillings, 50c up Crowns, $5 up Edge Work, $5 a tooth up Extractions, 50c up Work Guaranteed Open All Day Sunday of leading Southern white fami- children to colored families. e does not find it out until she has "Oh. I've not committed murder," she clenched her trembling hands together. "Not that it mightn't be the best thing. But it's buried, buried. You will need it again." "Buried?" "Buried from the world into which it was born. Hidden in the sure way that one in the South can hide. I did it myself," she went on in a whisper. "I put some money in its dress and that one might know. I went through the milleys over the slippery road. The blacks' cabin was empty, and I hid it on the bed." "God! A white child! And you did this thing!" The man of the house for a moment faced his wife as judge, full into his steen face, "I left it there. And I was right. I was right! You wanted to do something to hide the disgrace. You Well, "Lilies," her father was at her We've side where she sat erect staring at sarce, the cradle, "Lilies, starling, your utest, mother thought it best." Let the baby begin an outcast. It's better than becoming one at eighteen." Then of a sudden her strength left her, and she fell, sobbing, into a chair. "You'll tell her, George?" she asked after a few moments. "She will know it's the time. But she must have quite and gentle, and she must have no shock." "Yes," he answered slowly, "she must have no shock, but she will mind very much. If she哭s bitterly, may I bring it back." "No, no." His wife faced him in arms again. And then, more quietly, he sank into her sake. "For her sake," he repeated to himself, and left the room. As he walked up the stairs, a great dog rose from where it lay. How Old Are You By Your Hair? Girl Reserves Notes The sound given by the Girls Work Committee July 18th was a humorous success in spite of the inclement weather. Timmy a few friends were cut and enjoyed the All the members of the committee and any others who have tickets please report to the Girls Work Secretary at their contact number. The grade-school girls will have their meeting at Brad Hill Park Thursday afternoon, July 20th, at 2 p.m. Any girl who is not a registered Girl Reserve is admitted to attend the meeting. The girls will be held at About 3:30. Several of the girls have registered for camp at Arpeggio on the Bay. Any one who anticipates going should register as soon as possible and we will not be able to care for all who wish to go so first comp. girl served. An inventory of the assets of the late R. Dolley Washington shows a personality of $323,190. The deceased, who was one of the proprietors of the Goldfield Hotel died suddenly over a year ago. PRITCHETT'S BAKERY AND ICE CREAM PARLOK We Handle the Cream of Cream's Bricks (All Flavors) 45¢ qt., 25¢ pt. Phone Calls Given Prompt Attention WE DELIVER Special Prices to Churches and Lodges Pritchett's Bakery 260 W. BIBLE STREET Vernon 6088 MADAM IDA B. JEFFER EVANGELIST 10th EPIS CHURCH, NO. EFFERSON, A WIDOW LADY h EPISCOPAL DIST. A. M. E. H, NORTH TEXAS MADAM IDA B. JEFFERSON, A WIDOW LADY EVANGELIST 10th EPISCOPAL DIST. A. M. E. CHURCH, NORTH TEXAS A HEALER OF GREAT POWER Every man and woman ought to see this wonderful lady, for she can tell you many things that will put you to wondering. Medame Jefferson can bring tangled brains to the light of helpful. cure any disease that you not born with, in fact, she can locate any disease in the human body, and tell your complaint by your writing to the doctors have fallen, then write her and she will give you full details of your disease. Madame Jofferson possesses a natural birth gift from being one of the first licensed prescribers of the age. She has a supernatural gift. God has given her power to heal and lead her people. Her advice on business will be more than you will ever be able to pay. Only business matters will be answered. Send ten cents in stamps for reply. Madame Jofferson will be wonderful hair restorative. It grows hair on bald heads, Agents wanted. She teaches the art. For consultation, other than sickness, she $2.00) and if you take treatment, this A B. JEFFERSON LONGVIEW, TEX. MME. IDA B BOX 648 + in the hallway and, following, rubbed his nose in his master's hand. "Go back!" he commanded as he reached the door of the south bedroom. "Come out to her later, but go back now." He went to the side of the bed and found his daughter lying, her eye wide open, looking on the and: "The baby has slept a long one time," she whispered. "Bring it the to me please." The baby and kissed her. The baby, "It is a little girl, and it looks like you. It does truly." You: He stroked her forehead again, but did not speak. A: She roused herself and turned her head toward the dark corner and smiled at it to me. "unmutually," she called. I was. The old woman walked to the same cradle and made as though to lift You a child from the blankets, but her doctor arms were empty. The old woman drew inside the night blankets and showed an empty in-bed, "Chile," she moaned, "this isn't my week." she There was a long silence, then She the girl sank back in the window, But and turned toward the window, and "You might never be me kiss it, you might never be me kiss it," she Her back was to them both and will again she had held her head in the bit-crook of her arm. Her breath came softly, so very softly that him what time it died away neither of more the watchers knew. I to touched her forehead it was quite cold, and he felt as though another baby had been sent away to be hidden out in the rain. You may be young in years but your Hair as GRAY or FADED, people will surely take you to be many years older. A few applications of MASKIN HAIR STAIN will Positively restore Gray hair of Streaked hair to exactly the Natural Color you desire, in a few days. Imports beauty to your Hair and YOUTH to your appearance. Harmless-Easy to apply—No after washing. Use a Bottle. Depends on the condition of your scalp. The Healthy it is the quicker the Hair grows. If you want to have your hair Grown One inch a month and to have a mass of Soft, Glossy, Thick, Beautiful Hair, Healthy and no more Jelly Scalp, begin at once to use. MASKIN COCOA-TAR Hair & SCALP TREATMENT Maskin Cocoa-Tar Hair Grower 30c Maskin Coconut Oil Shampoo 30c Maskin Vegetable: Hair Tonic 30c All the MASKIN preparations are sold on a money back guarantee and are used by MASKIN, DRUG CO 1539 Monument St., Balbo, Md. USE MASKIN Skin Whitener and have a Bright and Lovely Complexion 25c. ```markdown ``` [Picture of a woman with a floral headpiece and a necklace. She is wearing a white dress with a high collar and a pearl necklace. The background is a plain black surface.]] THE AFRO-AMERICAN COCOA TAR HAIR & SCALP TREATMENT Children's Children's Column Each week three tickets for a morning picture show will be given away. Two will be awarded the one sending in all correct answers, one to the person next highest number of correct answers, and one to the person next highest will receive an honor button. All letters must reach this office Monday before noon. Names of the winners will be published the following Thursday. Last teaching officer will receive a Write communications plaque, giving name, age, address, name of school you attend and your class. PUZZLE FOR THIS WEEK Rearrange the letters in the following sentences and pronounce names of some of the United States. For example, in "If you will find out winter Puradise, Florida, a regina, if Floridana, N. S. Virginia, at tea, I would goach, vanity, spare, Sin in cows, A dear law, Sorrow in him, Mood is taffled, Larch, I and him, The Church, Good wood, Waves will in 1. Frances J., Walter, C. Carl E. Edward 5. Alex, G. Tom, T. Sam, H. Howard. ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK'S QUESTIONS 1. Primer Hall established the first loge of free Mascars in North America, 1755. 2. Richard T. Greener, teacher, pre- stahan, bestumer and writer, born at Philadelphia, 1817. First collected becom- ing a writer, editor, printer, librarian, Emerson, and Lawell, died May 9, 1841. citation of Martain was amended, dubbling sliver in 1841. DO YOU KNOW THAT: The area of Mexico is equal to the com- munities of Europe, Gulf United Stated and China. Ago, the state of Ajo is celebrated Educational City of Mexico. Fellows: was 62 years There were 72 senior trainees in the fellowship. They were all about 62 years old and they are an annual number of about 250 trainees. A SHORT STORY Hunting An Easy Place A neat dressed, young man, fifteen of twenty years old, who had just finished his course in the high school, stepped into the office of the president of the Snellville Shoot Lake, Florida. He said the president, looking from a mess of correspondence, "What can I do for you, sir?" He just finished his course in the school. "The young man must be made to secure a desirable position with your company," he came in to talk with you, don't it. "The president asked the young man to train me," he said, "and the president, 'You want a desirable place, sir?'" A CANVASS OF THE STORES SHOWS THE UNSCRUPULOUS MEN A CANVASS OF THE DRUG STORES SHOWS THAT 29 UNSCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS ARE IMITATING DR. DELANO'S COCO-TAR HAIR GROWER REFUSE SUBSTITUTES DR. DELANO'S COCO-TAR HAIR GROWER CONTAINS PURE COCOA-NUT OIL AND CALIFORNIA PINE TAR THE WORLD'S BEST SELLER ASK YOUR DRUGGIST THE WORLD'S FINEST HAIRDRESSER send $1.00 and we will send you a full supply that you can begin work, with at once; also agent's terms. Send all money by money order to THE STAR HAIR GROWER MF'R., P. O. Box 812, Greensboro, N. G. --- The saying "the old spell will kindle" Watch the big issue on the L. F. F. everybody tries to keep up with them, and the A. G. G., but you'll be surprised to "I do, sir," said the young man, his ear bending high with hope. heart beating high with hope. "A place," continued the president, "that would pay you something like a hundred dollars a month." "And that," said the young "Something like that," said the young man quietly. "I guess you would like it very week year, if I could arrange it so that you could report for work at 9 o'clock in the morning and report for work at 10 o'clock in the other words, you want something easy I can see by looking at you that you are not accustomed to hard work, and you could not fill a place in the office for morning and work until 9 o'clock every afternoon. I do I give you up correctly?" "I think so, sir," was the reply, and the man was looking for soft place with the Short Line? "I am sir." "Well, sir," and the president, smiling for him, said. "I regret to inform you that there is only one place on our road. I occupy that place myself, and am not thinking of resigning." The president continued: "I hope you will not think that is going beyond what is right and proper for me to say, but I must tell you, young man, that you have a elder brother and strong young man is going about looking for an easy place. The brave and true man asks only for work. And the men who are accompanying you in the men who have climbed into them by hard work. You are very much mistaken if you think that they have stepped into them from the high school in fact, and you'll find it really no soft or easy places in this world, and the man who goes about working such places shamelessly at once as a failure, and such a boy would be no good if he were employed. Let me, as a friend, advise you, young man, that the most place you go to apply for a job, you ask for a chance to be a railroad worker, ask to be a chance to do anything in the engine, or cleaning ears, or laboring in the round-house. Be willing to begin business in the right stuff, you will tell your way to the front. I started in with the Short Line as a day laborer myself, and if I had not done so I would have only told you when you go and ask an enoble business man to put you at the start at the head of something. You must begin at the bottom and work up to the top. That is the rule everywhere, and you will not. I am sure prove an exception." Let us hope, boys and girls, that this coming month left the president's office a wise young man. He care not to follow his example. Don't go around knowing that he is "staying" by Sides N. Fyft, combined with "The Nutritional Code of Elbowtie." "THE WATCHERS" M. P. will be singing the Lonesome Elves since Miss Eunia A. has gone to Atlantic Ct. Some people think they can get away with anything. Now, Percy C. don't go on Metallic street blinding to Miss G., you did enough blinding to the Miss G., on know how old coals are kidding in that bunch. Bay, James R., what are you doing with your instrument now? You'll be lovely up here, you are drawing near for camp. Practice up a little to amuse yourself. Miss C. won't care. Happy is he who presses pleasure to keep up with Anna D. and Fister F. It's some job that we are drawing in to everyone. Every day we hold up to everyone. Teddie Mel. stays with Midlud J. She sings wonderfully and he is taking lessons from her. Hope he'll have much success. Harry W., watch your step, somebody has been looking you over since Matteo F. used the coals. That "somebody" is Maggie J. Now what's become of Graeme H. and Harold? It seems that Harold is looking around for Thelma, and truce for Harold. Can you heat it? You've seen Gingles recently? You looked very sad the other day. Go get Pricy C. of Division School, although he is not lonely, and yet he may be. Ed. S., what are you trying to do with the coals? You're going to get Gerttie W. is everywhere you go. Geo. S., stop back-biting. You understand what I mean. You were seen coming home from the third reception with an I. F. don't back-bite too deep. P. C. EVANGELINE IT seems so and since League closed. You say it's because she doesn't LIGHT MADAM MAMIE HIGHTOWE HIGHLY PLEASED WITH SKIN BLEACH Encourages its general use Engleman P. seems so sad since League and Vashi Murphy and the head- closed. You say it's because the doesn't quarters is at 436 W. Biddle street. HTEN YOUR SKIN RIGHTOWER, MEMPHIS, TENNESSE D WITH GOLDEN BROWN BEAUTY BLEACH AND BEAUTIFIER general use by men and women everywhere LIGHTEN YOUR SKIN MADAM MAMIE HIGHTOWER, MEMPHIS, TENNES HIGHLY PLEASED WITH GOLDEN BROWN BEAUT SKIN BLEACH AND BEAUTIFIER Encourages its general use by men and women everywhere Madam Mamie Hightower Says: MADAME MAMIE HIGHTOWER. or send $1 and we will send you 4 be cake of Golden Brown Soap, prepail Wonderful opportunity offered ge- nations to their friends and nequain GOLDEN BROWN CHEMICAL C Send the coin or stamps. A box and you 4 boxes of Golden Brown Outline and 1 prepaid. Offered agents introducing Golden Brown prep and acquaintances. Ask for deal. EMICAL CO. MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE or send $1 and we will send you 4 boxes of Golden Brown Quilt and 1 Wonderful opportunity offered agents introducing Golden Brown Prep- . Sicily Greer Praises EXELENTO QUININE POMADE silky hair that can be easily dressed. Made happy thousands of women who had it will do the same for you. If your less or if you have dandruff and itching XELENTO QUININE POMADE. Price by mail 25c on recent of stamps or coin. WANTED—Write for Particulars. CINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia. Beautifier, anointment for dark, sallow skins. In treatment of skin troubles. CARE—NOT LUCK and experience have taught us that believe that a head of naturally long hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely onion come from luck, but they do care, and the frequent use of proven merit are the secrets. Adam C. J. Walker's YOU can have soft, silky hair EXELENTO has made happy coarse, nappy hair. It will d hair is brittle and lifeless or if scalp, try a box of EXELENT For sale at all drugstores. Price by m AGENTS WANTED EXELENTO MEDICINE CO We make EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFI used in treatment YOU can have soft, silky hair that can be easily dressed EXELENTO has made happy thousands of women who had coarse, nappy hair. It will do the same for you. If your hair is brittle and lifeless or if you have dandruff and itching scalp, try a box of EXELENTO QUININE POMADE. For sale at all drugstores. Price by mail by recent of stamp or coin. AGENTS WANTED—Write for Particulars. EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia We make EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIER, anointment for dark, sallow skins, used in treatment of skin troubles. [Picture of a woman with a headband, wearing a white dress with a bow. She is looking slightly to the right.] Human history and experience have taught us that many persons believe that a head of naturally long and beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely smooth complexion come from luck, but they do not. Constant care, and the frequent use of preparations of proven merit are the secrets. Pierful Hair Grower dates the growth of stubborn, lifeless hair. Tetter Salve Eczema and Itching Scalps. Specially recommended for short, thin and feeling hair, scalp. Sent as trial treatment for $1.50. Perfine Face Powder Cleansing Cream Compact Rouge Vernishing Cream to aid you have a lovely, smooth complexion. Bug Stores, of Agents and by Mail. Booklet—Write To-day J. J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. St. Indianapolis, Ind. For Tetter, Eczema and Itching Scalp. Four preparations especially recommended for short, thin and falling hair, tetter and eczema of the scalp. Sent as trial treatment for $1.50. Complexion Soap Superfine Face Powder Cleansing Cream Witch Hazel Jelly Compact Rouge Vanishing Cream World renowned and made to aid you have a lovely, smooth complexion. For Sale at Drug Stores, of Agents and by Mail. The Madam C. J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. 640 N. West St., Indianapolis, Ind. see Raymond so often lw? Even the country does not appear as aching heart. Raymond does not appear as aching heart this summer as she did last year. Evangeline, fall will sooth be bree, and with it will come the Blue tate a tate Saddle P. and Marie G. zero having a pleasant auto ride in Richard H's auto. Be careful, Richard, that Dd or Ms does not see you. And strange that Judegette S. and another young lady are always seen on Eden and Caroline streets, especially on Sunday afternoons. Aurice M. should be complimented because her loud learned voice like a man. He is very often seen on the avenue, especially in the 1200 stock. INCORPORATED SOFORTY The Beta Epsilon Graduate University of the Delta Sigma Sorority of Baltimore City, Md., has been granted a certificate of incorporation by the State Tax Commission for social athletic, and educational purposes and has no capital stock. The incorporators are Louise Cook, Mr. Reddin, Vasilsh Maxwell, Irme Trigg, Aisley Lindsley and Vasilsh Murphy and the head quarters is at 143 W. Biddle street. "Don't be fooled any longer called skin whiteners, but you easily enhance your beauty, and brighten your dark or saddened skin. Don't be fooled called GOLDEN BROWN ONT to your neck, face, arms, hand-proud of your race. You can't be and don't want to be, but Golden Ointment will lighten and be your skin better than any other. See her beautiful, clean skin. You can have the same soft, light, soft complexion by using Brown Ointment. GREAT HELP Madison Hightower says it beats the competition. She offers a soft, light, bright, smooth texture, and her experience with Brown Ointment assures you that you do the same for you easily and quickly. She also offers burn, liver spots, bumps, wounds, skin blushes, pitted skin, spots and rinsings of all kinds, making your skin smooth, pretty and attractive. You be proud of your race and look your best. Golden Brown Ointment is the latest scientific beauty and skin bleach. Beautifier on the market and is a great preparation. Heals eczema, itching skin, humors, sores and ring wounds. Try it now—today, and don't as any other skin ointment. SPECIAL OFFER-MAIL CODERS! Says her hair was short, coarse and nappy before using this wonderful hair grower. so can inter skill MEN B bih own nature fig fup idea Glossine To soften dry, curly hair. FORT COLLEGE MUSIC MOVIES AUDEVILLE JUMP STEADY' BILLED NOW FOR BROADWAY Manager Has Option on Three theatres, Begin- ning on July 23rd NEW STARS SECURED Ethel Waters, Ethel Williams and Daisy Martin Feature Long Bill THE J. A. JACKSON After jumping from one management to another; from oneacker to several; Tutt and Whitney opened at the Lafayette Theater in Harlem with a show of Broadway calibre and dimensions that immediately jumped into favor with the packed house that greeted the opening of the revised production. "The re-named 'Up and Down' justified its new name of the steady manner in which the well trained chorus jumped thro no less than 28 numbers scattered thro the 2 acts and 12 degrees into which the production has been divided. Lew Rogers, the motion picture man who has hately associated himself with Jack Goldberg and Mr. Savini is said to be responsible for options on his choice of three Broadway theaters for the show after a week is split between Assury Park and Rushough Mr. Savini definitely declares that the show will be downtown in New York on July 23rd. If this be so the show will have to undergo a lot of cutting, for at present it runs too long by a whole hour: Jack Mason has with the assistance of Nat Cash worried so effectively as one in the audience just what must out. Yet even Broadway would not stand for a musical comedy that ran from $4.55 until 12:15 with no delays due to slow handling of scenery. It would seem that in their anxiety to make good the producers' grubbing all of a valuable talent as it was offered. No less than 22 principals were presented. There were no less than three Friars' singer, all with reputations. First there was Sarah Martin, the big girl find from Louisville about whom Atlantic Cities papers hately rave. Then Daisy's paper scattered broadcast by the Okay people; and then Eibel Waters, the Black Swan Co. queen who just closed her own show on Saturday night at Philadelphia after a tremendously successful tour of the South. Eibel Williams the madcap dancer; Brown and Brown; the sooty dancers; Nip and Tuck, a runaway dancer from vanderbilt; and Natasha of Oklahoma, every touch for two shows. Beside Tutt and Whitney, there was Amon Davis, Emmett Anthony, and Andrew Tribble in a of new costumes, contributing comedy. All but Homer Tutt working under cork. Paul Moore-folding a tramp. Alonzo Henderson, in a character bit and Costo-lolo doing and oriental dances. Bessie Sims excel. An excellent Oriental dance Margaret Simms, Chappelle and Stinette, Margaret Lee, Walter Richardson Leroy Broomfield, Elvia Davis and J. Francis Mores were the featured vocalists. The chorus includes eight male voices and 24 girls. - A half dozen Essence dance in a cotton field set of each sex do the old Virginia ing in a manner that would evoke the praise of George Primrose himself. P "JUMP STEADY" BILLED NOW AMERIC OR BROADWAY PARKS AND FAIRS PARKS AND FAIRS (By J. A. JACKSON) The Lexington, Ky., Fair Association officials certainly know how to get paragon. We have already seen them by big eight-inch double column advertisements in papers published in Indianapolis, Chicago, Cleveland, Louisville and Pittsburgh. This a whole month before the date of the fair. Three months since they advertised in the BILLBOARD for attractions, its sort of business acumen is what produced those sixteen thousand daily gates at the fair Writer visited last year. Percy Howell writes from Philadelphia to say that he has bought a complete set of costumes, a six weeks supply of minstrel paper, and negotiating ten a fifty-foot round top for the purpose of playing the colored fairs with an A-1 show. --- Dr. George McChellan, Sam Sheppard and Richard Kemp, a group of business men who own the St. Louis Stars, and the St. Louis franchise in the National Negro Baseball League, have purchased the St. Louis Giants of ball grounds at Campton and Market streets. The grounds have a capacity of 16,000 seats; and may easily be use for some purposes other than baseball. The ownership is entirely Negro. Bessie Coleman, the aviatrix is about due back in the United States after a three-months tour of Europe. She has flying licenses for France, Germany and Holland, and has named her book in all those countries a number of Fairs have asked the Page about securing her services. We make every effort to place those interested in touch with the lady when she arrives in New York. Despite the handicap of bad weather, both Happyland and the Mid-City park in New York are reporting a fair business. The Wayside Inn is the name of a new resort opened at Marthoee, Md. by Mrs. Catherine Sedgewick. It is a convenient ride from Washington, D. C. It is reported that Suburban Gardens, Washington, D. C. drew an enormous crowd in spite of the rain on the Fourth. People waded through mud the second, P. M. laid out a cooler and the seagull holding umbrellas over themselves. More than 300 people entered the gate after 10 P. M. in all fifteen hundred people bought dance hall tickets. Oscar Jenkins, at present located at Seat Pleasant, Md. with concessions in Suburban Gardens, is preparing to send a show over the colored fairs. He is assembling rides, concession, a ten-in-one, and a mined organization for the purpose. B. W. Winfield and his Jazz Hounds are with the Royal Exposition shows. Besides Mr. Winfield who is the pianist; there is Bab Johnson, Nelson Green, N. W. Drew, Henry Martin and Jack Ovid. The show is now in the State of Kentucky. DCDLEY BOOKING FAIR (BE J. A. JACKS(N) S. H. Dudley, of Washington is advertising for a carnival company to play the first of a series of fair dates he is booking in Virginia. He wants a complete outfit already organized. Thirty members of Lions Michigan's Fifteenth Regiment Band of the 50th Board are playing the first of a series of supervised of Sergeant John Burroughs, at the Park Avenue Hotel, New York City. An assorted concert and dance program is rendered at 4 o'clock every afternoon. "Fatton Messioss." Alexander Rogers latest show, will in all probability be produced this season. Will Marion Cook is the writer of the music. He is in Vienna at present. MANAGERS PLEDGE AID TO ASSOCIATION Many Promise To Be On Hand for Session of National Business League BY J. A. JACKSON Already this week, we have had another letter from President J. G. Saunders of the Lexington. Ky. Fair who because of its early date is already busy with the details of his career yet a glance at the comprehensive book he sends assures one that the head of our biggest fair appreciates the value of the proposed association to be formed at Norfolk during the National Business League session. J. H. Love of Taleigh, the greatest fair in the East wishes to reiterate the assurance that he will be on deck to greet the fellows. St. Thomas, a own St.IONAL pur- panians and have have and have the old fair for probably has a group in sight. The fair concessioner and operator, now at Suburban Gardens in Washington is going to have some practical ideas presented in Norfolk for you to think over. Mr. J. L. Johnson of the Salisbury Fair Circuit of Maryland has sent in a lot of valuable information about Tasley, Va., Pocomoke, Md. and Cambridge, Md. Since the Virginia Horse shows have already reported, it begins to look as the the officials really mean business. Any how the big- land Wirth Rumpenfeld and Lowenstein of New York, have become interested in the possibilities and are watching developments close by. We are proud of our public and catering to it with novelties and thrills. ROSAMOND JOHNSON IS PLAYING KEITH'S city J. A. Jackson A. Roshmand Johnson and Company are playing the Hamilton and the Fifth Avenue Theaters on the Keith Circuit in New York City, the week of July 17th, after a season's work to the city and took on another season that were simply immense. The Los Angeles Times, of January 3rd, denoted the greater part of the space allocated to their review of the triplets with the statement that "Nobody in the world ought to play or sing jazzy except the Negrus—that's what you think after you hear J. Roshmand Johnson and the imminent death of about four hundred words in the same strain. Rich recommendation, that" Alvin L. J. cambell, former violinist of the Rayo Theatre, Richmond, and with the "Grande Revue Company" has organized a fivepiece orchestra in Washington, to C. The band, called the Pearson Melders, includes W. W. Miller, W. Pearson, W. Pearson, A. Campbell, and Kid Rastus, a well-known drummer with original stuff. The music will death entertainment and dance repertoire of the members speak well for Compton Smith, pianist, is with Bill Munn's greater show, along with Henry Banks, of Banks & planks. The latter is staging the show for the company. The Open City Jazz Co. has returned to Cincinnati, its home town, and the orchestra has been engaged at the Lincoln Theatre for the summer. Bond Master R. N. Jackson has added three pieces to the show band with the Walter L. Main Theater. On July 3rd, all of the members of the orchestra at the Theatre, Shreveport, La., have their cards as members of the Musicales. BEAUTY TALKS By a Nile Queen. (By the Associated Negro Press) New York City, N. Y., July 4. Dr. Frank Crane has worked closely attached to the work of May Creamer, white, the noted sculptress and her comment on why she chose a Negro female figure for heroic statue symbolizing the New World. Dr. Crane reports Miss Creamer as saying: "I believe that the most beautiful woman in the world, spiritually, and physically, are to be found among the colored women in the southern states of America. That is why I chose the figure of one to symbolize the new world. "It was the deep mystic beauty in the eyes of the southern amunies that first attracted me in Virginia. There is more spirituality stirring out of the eyes of those staring women than can be found in any race of white women on the earth. "The marvel to me is how the beauty of the colored gis has for me the same beauty as the sculptors. She is more beautiful in face and form than the white ABOUT MOVIE FILMS E. L. Communes has returned to Sidney P. Dames, the two pictures, "Loyal hearts" and "The Ten Thousand Dollar Trail," along with the advertising materials recorded, according to details. This closing of relations between the producer and the distributor of these pictures may be due to Mr. Communes enforced activities the vandible field, or there may be other persons. Of this, we are not advised. J. Frost is in charge of the motion picture theatre at Present City Park in New toronto. W. E. H. Crouse, who played the heyday in the Mickeys production, "The Tompons," is making personal appearances with the picture billed as "The Mormon Man." The stunt is said to be drawing well. The Real Company has a group of artists at Tinkercove doing some肩部 still for a picture based on the life of booker T. Washington, that will be ready for release. Edna Martin Perry Cervantes and Edna Martin Perry are being found in the advertising of the release of that company now being made. While her husband is "on Location," Mrs. Milton Buss is spending her vacation at Albury Park. The Commodities Film Inc., M. W. Hibbard, president, is attending at the University of Los Angeles a film for general distribution that was written and is being directed by Extonze-son-Millford W. Howard of Alabama. Gorefield, a Fox and Griffith colored part, part, part, Simpson and auto-shift type-drive to the white mother-type-drive. Prince Arkansas writes to edible that he is in the Leeward Islands and having spikes, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, Antigua and Gandahops. He says he is the whole show, including the parade, and send newspapers to bring it. He also claims to have found a satire movie. Roots Hope and Fields and Moore, take note. Harry flounder is preparing to put a two-car minibus show out next season. Rob-burgers will be conducted at Albury Park. Courteous Service Our Motto THE GOODWILL STORES 220-224 S. Broadway 1022-1024 Fawn Street 1628 Pennsylvania Ave. Dresden, 10c, 15c, 20c, 60c, $1.00 Children's Garments, 5c Up Books, 75c, $1.00, to $1.50 Men's Suits, $3.00, $4.00, $3.00 Stockings, 5c per pair GET THE GOODWILL HABIT PICTURES! PICTURES! COL. CHAS. A. YOUNG, U. S. A. Highest ranking Colored Officer in the U. S. Army, and BERT WILLIAMS World's Greatest Comedian Also 13 other subjects of world-wide fame as follows: Booker T. Washington, Freed etrick Douglas, Duncan Dunlop, B. Dubois, Toune- l Overture, Henry O. Tannen, Crisper Attucks, Solowner Truth, Phyllia Wheatley, Col- eridge Taylor, Lennon, John B. Lugton, B. K. Brown, R. T. Greenner, M. John R. Lynch, Aida Overton-Walker, Dr Robert R. Moton, Dr Em- ril J. Scott, Wilim Blythe, Heavy-mounted, high grade work- Price: Size 11x14, 500 each; for $1.75; $5 per doz. Size 627 (unmounted) 250 each; $2.50 per doz. Size 160 (unmounted) to order. Every HOME, OFFICE and SCHOOL should have some of these hanging on their Every Solid Wood & I-Service Shows. Have one of Col. Young. Show your ACE PRIDE. Show your ACE PRIDE. Show your ACE PRIDE. Show your ACE PRIDE. MADE BY THESE MEN THAT YOURS MIGHT BE RECOGNIZED AS A ACE AMONG RACES! Send In Your Order At Once Send In Your Order WANTED—Write for Social Testing. (Dept. A) 3548 Vernon Avenue Chicago, Illinois, TIMORE BEAUTY PARLOR J. Northern, Proprietress Leroy at 1403 McEherry Street HAS MOVED TO JEFFERSON STREET Shment has been improved to a large extent Wonderful Hair Grower. Help! I Wanted Everywhere EAST BALTIMORE Mme. E. J. North Formerly at 1403 HAS MPH 1401 JEFFER Business establishment bus boo Magic Never Fail Wonderful Help! Help! Wanted Must be EAST BALTIMORE BEAUTY PARLOR Mme. E. J. Northern, Proprietress Formerly at 1403 McElerry Street HAS MOVED TO 1401 JEFFERSON STREET Business establishment has been improved to a large extent Must have 600 more agents at once to share equal profit as my partners and distributors. We never fall orders and they are increasing by the dozen daily. What is the reason? Because it grows hair three inches in three months. You have tried others now try this, for we guarantee to grow hair three inches in three months or money refunded. See Madam M. J. Jones' Wonderful Hair Grower because it never fails. The price of a box of this wonderful hair preparation is 60 per box. By melt, 600. Mme. Jones' Never Fall Shampoo. prices' Never Fall Gloss, price, 350. O. 441 W. Biddle St., Baltimore, Md. 225 Four and a Half St., Wash, D. O. Phone Vernon 2757 W. ST INDIAN HAIR POMADE FET BAILTME, MD. 50c per box. Mms. Jones' Never F. Madam Jones Co., 441 W. Branch Office, 425 Four and Drug Stores THE OLD EAST IND 700 SHARE STREET 50c per box. Mime. Jones' Never Fall Gloss, price, $36. Madam Jones Co., 441 W. Biddle St., Baltimore, Md. Branch Office, 425 Four and a Half St., Wash. D. C. Phone Vernon, 8757 W. THE OLD EAST INDIAN HAIR POMADE 500 SHEER STREET BAJTMORE, MD. The old Egypt Indian Treatment, the Tonle, Shampoo and Pressing Oil and Pomades. They are Treatments that can really be depended on for growing Hair. They are the women’s most rigid of any hair treatment on the market and the longest test of any. They are the women’s and more friend. They cannot be excelled by any other treatment. Our Tonles will surely grow the hair regardless of its condition. It is her bare hand made up of the proper ingredients for the growth of the hair. It is broken off on the Oil and Pomades are all fine for the hair. The Shampoo, Pressing sides this will restore full treatment. Stokes, 700 Dr. Pennell’s, the Read’s stores. Dr. Pennell’s, Dr Dulph Hill avenue and Biddle Street; all the Robinson’s, Penna. avenue; Dr. Livingston Drug Co. Penna. avenue; Lapporall, Orleans and Carolle streets; Mrs. Biltmur and Carolle Gay; Gay stores, 31 and Madison, Madison and Biddle. Full treatment $1.75. by mail $1.85. Office 7009 Sharp St., Baltimore. William William your If o Dan Trouble w INDLA H tains me roots of th If you are bothered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching Scalp, or any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a jar of EAST INDAA HAIR GROWER. The remedy contains medical proprieties that go to the roots of the Hair, stimulates the skin, in the nature do its work. Leaves the hair soft and silky. Performed in the palm of flowers. The best known remedy for Heavy Fulful Black EyE-Brown also restores Gray Hair that has been used with Hot Iron for --- National Amusement News BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH J.A. JACKSON OF The Billboard The Foremost, Weekly Theatrical Digest and Review of the Show World, All Rights Reserved. HERE AND THERE Smith Booby, of the team of Booby and Booby, writes that he is under a two-year lease from the University of the California, 5. C. St. Pirson. His wife may be adjunct at 455 Gist street, that city. He is a memorial scholar. Colored uniform. Union flag. Your son's Lodge. Hiring information from the profession. He and his wife are keeping of your prompt consideration. The Inland Theater Philadelphia, closed on July 5th for the summer. Manager Gibson will have it reopen late in August. The Standard, playing vaudeville, will stay open through the summer. The Refocused Music Publishing Co., of New York is marketing "Sing 'Em' a blues number by Ray Frysh, of Yonkers, Ohio. The late Bert Williams promoted the ground record and Thurere Willson, Miles Miss and Edith Hope all experts in "Blues" are said to approve the number. The Gaines Brothers have been working prince of hearts, and being a single each, and a comedy aerobatic net. They are coming last to play a series of fair dates contrasted by Witchhunt and Lawsuits of New York. Stake and Walker and their "Humbug Girls" played Forest Lake Park, Palmer, Mass, and Rever Rench, near Boston, the city where they are certainly getting the choice work in New England. J. Wesley Holmes, composer and comedian, is in Marion, Ind., seeking a location for a music publishing house he proposes to establish there. The Page is in receipt of an invitation to the wedding of Miss Ella Louise Vick, daughter of a theatre owner at Wilson, N.C., to Miss Elizabeth N. C. Mr. Vick is general manager of a cigar manufacturing company that does extensive fair grounds advertising with an exhibition that is in reality a miniature factory. Miss Susie Sutton has since the closing of the Avenue Associated Players, founded the Clarence Moss Company in Chicago. MARY E. Barry W. Miller, magician, closed this season on June 24th, at Houston, Tex. He is conducting a school of image art for the September will take the road with a two-hour performance that he promises to invest with about $4,000 worth of security, costumes and effects. 391 Brody Street is his address. Hands Hope, after playing Atlanta, Ga. for the T. It. B. A., held off a week in that city at close up some details connected with a looking office he formerly operated there. He does not advise whether it is possible to do this during July 17th. He goes into Memphis, with Shreveport and New Orleans to follow. Buck Williams, stage manager of the ministers with theilly Clark Broadway Shows, says the lady is doing a big business operation to put a show in the theatres at the close of the under-canvas season. After the closing of the colony Mistles, Long Jim Troisi went into Mistles. He brought the girls to the theatre to about the time Lakes taken on July 16th, began a week's engagement at the Koppi Theatre, in Detroit, Mich., with Theologo Indianaphils and Cleveland in follow. M. C. Maxwell, while at his home town, Greenville, S. C., put on a performance his magic for the colored soldiers at the base hospital there. After a bit of rest, he and some church and society alike there, and around Nashville, N. C. H. D. Mitchell is booking a little one night veneerville circuit that includes Goldsburg, Redbells, Saluberg and Highland North Park, and around Nashville in the headquarters at the Dibie Theatre in the latter town. Mr. Joseph Herbert declines to announce plans for next season, wouldn't be surprised to see him, and title of the Herbert Minstrels with is time of paper. It ought to bring a good price, if such is the case. Low Patton, the comedian, has written a new blue number, which he is publishing himself. The M. C. Gang of young lovemaking have declared it a good number. Wes Sohle, owner of the Lafayette Theatre in Winston Salem, N. C., has teamed over the M. C. Gang of picture house adopting his other property. Mes. Lelain Goldman, of the Goldman & Goldman act, is committed to obsession's orders at 2291 East 38th street, Cleveland, Ohio. The act will be off for two months. He is mountaining. Goldman is obtaining new equipment for the clever music net. Johnnie Hodgkins, from barbage, and Gertrude Saunders are the big draws at Raleigh-Westover Columbus Circle Cabaret in New York. They are supported by a Miller & Lyle-Susie & Hinkle Revue. Jones and Grey, who were referred to an error as a pair of boys in a recent case, are man and wife. The team has written a book to describe their time in churchmil to decode their time to the publication of a number of songs. 100 THE EAST INDIAN HAIR GROWER Will Promote a Full Growth of Hair. Will also Restore the Strength. Vitality and the Beauty of the Hair. If your Hair is Dry and Wiry Try. 316 N. Central, Dept. E Oklahoma City, Okla. TO ACCOMPANY HAYES London, England, July 14—Wm. L. King, well-known Philadelphia pianist, is here to accompany Ro- land Hayes on his European tour this summer. Professor Wesley Howard, of the Howard University faculty, where he is an in- strument in music, has joined the orchestra at the Colonial-Theatre, Wheeling, W. Va. This is the only white theatre in the country using a colored orchestra presenting a symphonic program. BEST EVER MADE We will send a gift-Mac bag Free MONEY made sailing and singing Pictures. Soap, Talcum, Etc. WRITE FOR DETAILS. AGENTS WANTED TYSON & CO PARK TERRE THE FRISBY SE 1405-07 LA Modern Steam Heated Automobile Repairing Gasoline Oil Storage Space for Re MADISON 7722 W E FRISBY SERVICE GARDEN 1405-07 LAURENS ST. Steam Heated Capacity Mobile Repairing Battery S Gasoline Oils Accessor Storage Space for Rent 24 Hr. Serv N 7722 W J. ARNETT FRIS THE FRISBY SERVICE GARAGE 1405-07 LAURENS ST. Modern Steam Heated Capacity 50 Cars Automobile Repairing Battery Service Gasoline Oils Accessories Storage Space for Rent 24 Hr. Service MADISON 7722 W J. ARNETT FRISBY, Mgr. THE WILSON GARAGE FORMERLY CREMENS Wilson Street near Division Gas, Oil, Amoco Gas. Steam Heat—Room for More Cars POLLACK BROTHERS, Proprietors Rates: $7, $8, $9, and $10 Per Month UP-TO-THE-MINUTE SERVICE FORMERLY Wilson Street Gas, Oil, Steam Heat—Roof POLLACK BROTH Rates: $7, $8, $9, UP-TO-THE-ME ROBERT ED "The People FUNERAL, DIRECTOR A Reason Motor or Horse-drawn equip Phone, WOife 5419-W NOV FORMERLY CREMENS Wilson Street near Division Gas, Oil, Amoco Gas. Steam Heat—Room for More Cars POLLACK BROTHERS, Proprietors Lines: $7, $8, $9, and $10 Per M UP-TO-THE-MINUTE SERVICE ROBERT EDW. WILLIAMS "The People's Undertaker" GENERAL DIRECTOR AND PRACTICAL EMPIRE Reasonable Prices for Horse-drawn equipment. Pro Wolfe 5410-W 1106 ASHLAND A ROBERT EDW. WILLIAMS "The People's Undertaker" FUNERAL, DIRECTOR AND PRACTICAL EMBALMER Reasonable Prices Motor or Horse-drawn equipment. Prompt Service. Phone, WOife 5410-W 1106 ASHLAND AVENUE NOTICE! MRS. IDA BAILEY Wishes to announce the ness of her late husband Funeral Direct ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMI LIMOUSINE AND CARRIER 1421 JEFFERSON STREET, Cor. SP Am the sole proprietor of —and am MRS. ROBER Funeral Directro SEVEN WOLFE 0590. IMM 1725 Ashland Avenue MRS. CHARLES I BRANCH OFFICES: 504 ELE LIMOUSINE FUN to announce that she will continue of her late husband, CHARLES G. B. Funeral Directress and Embalm ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION — DAY AND LIMOUSINE AND CARRIAGE TO HIRE FOR ALL OUR PFERSON STREET, Cor. SPRING ST. PHONE the sole proprietor of this business —and are not in partnership with MRS. ROBERT A. ELLIOT Funeral Directress and Embalm WOLFE 0590. IMMEDIATE SERVICE DAY A Ashland Avenue Corner McDo MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT H OFFICES: 504 East Street 2109 Drum LIMOUSINE FUNERAI'S A SPECIALTY Wishes to announce that she will continue the business of her late husband, CHARLES G. BAILEY as ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION - DAY AND NIGHT, LIMOUSINE AND CARRIAGE TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS 1421 PEPPERSON STREET, COR. SPRING ST. PHONE, WOLFE 1170 1725 Ashland Avenue Corner McDonogh St. MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT BRANCH OFFICES: 504 East Street 2100 Druld Hill Ave. LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY GEORGE T. A. GIBSON FUNERAL DIRECTOR Limousine and Carriages to C. & P. FRONT 513 LAURENS ST. Long Distance Phone Madison CLARENCE Funeral Director Some people prefer QUALITY suit you. My prices make when you need "WRIGHT 1364 N. Carey Street GEORGE B FUNERAL DIRECTOR (Formerly manager for CARRIAGES FOR OPEN DAY Will furnish Funerals at Polite, Courteous and B 1631 DRUID C. & P. PHON GENERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAL clue and Carriages to Hire. Open Day at C. & P. PHONE MADISON 1417-7 AURENS ST. BALTIMORE Distance Phone Madison 4464. Carriages for all CLARENCE C. WRIGHT Funeral Director and Embalmer people prefer QUALITY, others look at PRICE. My prices make it expensive to go when you need an undertaker "WRIGHT QUALITY" N. Carey Street Baltime GEORGE H. HOLLAND GENERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALM (Formerly manager for the late Alza. Hannley) CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS OPEN DAY AND NIGHT will furnish Funerals at a price that will suit olite, Courteous and Expert Attention Guards 1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE C. & P. PHONE MADISON 697 Immousine and Carriages to Hire. Open Day and Night C. & P. PHONE MADISON 1417-7 --- Funeral Director and Embassador Some people prefer QUALITY, others look at PRICES. I can suit you. My prices make it expensive to go elswhere when you need an undertaker ```markdown ``` FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER (formerly manager for the late Alex. Hemley) CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Will furnish Funerals at a price that will suit you. Polite, Courteous and Expert Attention Guaranteed 1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE C. & P. PHONE MADISON 697 EDWARD RINGGOLD FUNERAL DIRECTOR Will give to all the very best Carriages and Limousins 1463 North Care PHONE MADISON 522 JAMES N. Funeral Director Temporary Office: 2008 McCu GENERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER to all the very best and courteous service marriages and Limousines to hire for all occa- cions 1463 North Carey Street, near Go PEONE MADIGON 5281. NEVER CLOSED. JAMES N. DEAVER, JR. Funeral Director and Embalmer Secretary Office: 2009 McCulloh St. Phone, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Will give to all the very best and courteous service possible Carriages and Limousines to hire for all occasions 1463 North Carey Street, near Gold PRONE MADISON 5281. NEVER CLOSED. JAMES N. DEAVER, JR. Funeral Director and Embalmer Temporary Office: 2009 McCulloh St. Phone, MAd. 9334 BOUQUET HAIR POMADE PARISIAN GARDEN BOUQUET HAIR POMADE FOR THE HAIR STRAIGHTENERS STUBBONHAM DALTIREMORE BARBER SERVICE CO. 157 NORTH GAY ST. BALTIREMORE, WI. See a hux. For sale at all barber shops, hair dressers and drug stores, or 135 N. Gay St. SERVICE GARAGE SURENS ST. Capacity 50 Cars Battery Service Accessories 24 Hr. Service J. ARNETT FRISBY, Mgr. CREMENS Linear Division Amoco Gas For More Cars MERS, Proprietors and $10 Per Month MINUTE SERVICE W. WILLIAMS "It's Undertaker" PRACTICAL EMBALMER Table Prices ment. Prompt Service. 1016 ASHLAND AVENUE at she will continue the business B. CHARLES G. BAILEY and Business and Embalmer ATTENTION - DAY AND NIGHT, TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS WING ST. PHONE, WOLFE 1170 male business not in partnership with anyone T A. ELLIOTT and Embalmer SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT Corner McDonogh St. JONES, ASSISTANT Street 2109 Druld Hill Ave. BRAILS A SPECIALTY R AND EMBALMER Midre. Open Day and Night MADISON 1417-7 BALTIMORE, MD. 1464. Carriages for all Occasions I. C. WRIGHT R and Embalmer others look at PRICES. I can it expensive to go elsewhere and an undertaker QUALITY" Baltimore, Md. I. HOLLAND R AND EMBALMER the late Alex. Hemley R ALL OCCASIONS AND NIGHT a price that will suit you. Report Attention Guaranteed HILL AVENUE E MADISON 607 OR AND EMBALMER and courteous service possible to hire for all occasions Street, near Gold NEVER CLOSED. EAVER, JR. er and Embalmer Oh St. Phone, MAd. 9334 27 October 10 and 11. Macbeth Photo Studio 1330 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., near Lafayette OPPOSITE DOUGLASS THEATRE MAd. 8916-W B. MAYER Registered Optometrist 532 NORTH GAY STREET EYES EXAMINED FREE Glasses if needed made at Lowest Prices izations Vote Of City State Will Probably Go For Senator Garrett To Be Asked Where He Stands On Race Question The entrance of John W. Garrett (white) into the race to oppose Senator Joseph I. France for renomination has excited profound interest among the voters of the State: To the colored voters the question is, How does Mr. Garrett stand on the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill and other matters in which the race is vitally concerned? The N. A. A. C. P. local branch, it is said, will ask Mr. Garrett where he stands. The sponsors for Mr. Garrett can be he can depend on to go along with the Hurding administration in carrying out its various policies. One of these policies seem to be to treat the Negro differently from the other class of citizens and to curtail his political activities. Another is to continue American dominance over Haitian affairs. Senator France has told the collegiate people of this State that he is ready to vote for the Dyer Bill. Some of his critics claim that during his Senatorial career he has not shown any especial concern for the race, while only several weeks ago he rushed over Baltimore to try to keep two Russian girls from being deported. Claim is also made that he recently voted for an Administration measure aimed at Haiti. Sar Garrett Represents Interest One of the strongest supporters of Senator France six years ago and who will support him with equal ardor this time told the Afro-American the other day: "I see in Mr. Garrett's candidacy the desire for a man who can be depended on to go along with the big interests. Mr. Frank A. Munsey, publisher of the two Republican organs here, wants a doctor who sides with the big interests. Senator France has always supported the cause of the people, and that is why I believe he will be renominated by a decisive majority." Tildings from various sections of the State indicate that the great majority of colored bees have not taken a position either candidate as yet. Talks with delegates attending the Pythian convention will provide this week indicate a decided preference for France however. Both sides are expected to make strong bids for support from colored-voters, and the Garrett forces are. It is said, already planning to organize them in the city and counties. Mrs. White For Garrett Down in the Fifth ward Mr. France is supported, but Mrs. Mamie White, president of the Fifth Ward Republican Club, says she is for Garrett. John W. Jones, who he says is going to run for the Republican nomination for City Council next spring, is whoooping-up things for France. W. L. Gibson says he will have to know more about the candidates before expressing a preference. In the Fourth ward, where Charles W. Main (white) reigns, a goodly number of the workers will be for Garrett. "Fitz" and "Mac" For Franco Up in the 17th City Councilman W. L. Fitzgerald and the Republican organization, along with many others, are expected to line-up with France. City.Councilman Warner T. McQuinn will be one of the strongest supporters of France in the 14th ward. Neither he nor Walter Emerson, ward executive knew anything about the meeting of colored voters in the ward, which endorsed Garrett. Down in the 15th much France reported. Garrett supporters plan to do missionary work in all wards where the colored, vote is strong, and Dr. France's friends plan to match them. William H. Lawrence (white) will be the Republican candidate for additional judge on the Supreme Bench in November. Opposed To One Branch Council Colored voters are beginning to manifest opposition to the one branch city council plan of the 19th ward, sponsored by the City-wide Congress, not only because it deprives each ward of the representation but would entirely shut out the race. After the primaries on September 11, will come the registration days. They are September 26 and 27. October 10 and 11. NEW YORK AMERICAN who after rendering eight hours service on his regular job, finds sufficient spare time to sell more than soo APROS weekly. But he doesn't and the money he earns ought to be an excellent example for that "unemployed boy or girl" who claims "I can't find anything to do." He instead plan the APROS can use that unemployed boy or girl, in every city. WHITE AUTOIST ESCAPES MANSLAUGHTER CHARGE --- Milton Robert, a white lawyer, whose automobile ran into another containing five colored person on July 8, killing Mrs. Mattie Hawkins, 1004 E. Madison street, was exonerated by a coroner's jury at the Northern police station on Wednesday of last week. Two students in the vicinity of 222d and Calvert streets, where the accident occurred, testified that the car containing the colored people, was only going about twelve miles an hour, while the Roberts machine was going very fast. That did not happen, however, J. Stewart Davis represented the family of the dead woman at the ingest. STATE'S ATTORNEY IS NOT GROUPING CASES Arrangement of cases in the Court must last week so that only colored cases were heard on one day and on several other days only white cases were heard, led an AFRO reporter to call the State's Attorney's attention to this forum. Mr. Leach said. "There has been no thought of grouping cases as to color," said both the attorney and clerk. Often the cases are arranged as to convenience and as to whether they are bail or jail case, and sometimes cases of the same nature are grouped so as to make the work of our office less cumbersome." WIFE, 19, DRINKS POISON WHEN HUSBAND LEAVES Stating that life meant nothing to her now that her husband, Frank Hollow, had deserted and left her, Mrs. Elizabeth Hollow, age 12, her W. Saratoga street, Frank chloreform at her home and was carried to Franklint Square Hospital in an unconscious condition Saturday night about 10:20. She was revived after being given emergency treatment by Dr. Glenn Grosse of the Hospital staff and was sent back to her home. DIYORCES INSTITUTED Florence E. Rollin vs John E. Rollins. William A. C. Maddox vs Jonny Maddox. 宫 VERNON 3830 4 Suits Sponged & Pressed $1.50 C. THOMAS Pressing Club & Hat Renovators Ladles' & Gents' Garments Cleaned, Dyed and Altered Suits Pressed, Hats Cleaned and Reblocked While You Walt 400-2 Druid Hill Ave. at Eutaw Free Call and Delivery FORMER BOXER TURNS PREACHER "Kid" Henry Former Welterweight Champion Deserted The Prize Ring For The Pulpit PREDICTS WILLS' SUCCESS The figure of speech so often heard in religious circles of administering a knockout blow to the devil has found something of a practical application in the case of Rev. W. L. Henry a former welterweight boxer known in the days of his ring career as "Kid" Henry, who has now deserted the roped arena for the pulpit. Rev. Henry assisted by his cousin John L. Henry a boy preacher 16 years of age, has been conducting revivals in this city for the past two weeks. Last week they were at St. Lukes U. A. L. Church. Spring street Jefferson, they are at Ashbury M. E. Church. Rogers avenue and Forest street. Rev. Henry when interviewed by an Afro reporter this week, stated that he was in the prizering for a number of years where he was known as the Original Kid Henry. During his ring career the boxer-preacher engaged in 200 battles suffering but one defeat he says, "I was in the ring in 1914 after which he was shortly converted and gave up the light game altogether. Rev. Henry claims that he won the welterweight championship of the world in 1912 when he knocked our Mike (Twin) Sullivan at Albury in two rounds. Among other good scrappers with whom he chased were Dixie Kid and Kid Norfolk. He also claims a victory over Sammy Harris the colored Baltimore scraper. In reply to an inquiry to who in his opinion would emerge victorious when Jack Dempsey and Henry Wills said that picking the winner is not an easy job for both are good men, but in his judgment, Wills would win. Rev. Henry seems to be having a fair amount of secular success in his latest career also, for he has his big career, and his big Storms-Knight seven-passenger touring car, stating that his wife has a roadster for her private use in Wilmington Delaware where they reside. Between public engagements Rev. Henry has an automobile repair business. Gang of Fifty Fight Mosquitoes If the mosquitoes worry you too much blame it on the negligence on the part of Street Cleaning Commissioner Schuch's Mosquito Squad. There are about fifty colored men now employed in trying to exterminate the pests and their work carries them to all parts of the city. DR JAS A WHITE SURGEON DENTIST Crown and Bridgework a specialty Gas Administered All work Guaranteed VERNON 1773 W 1038. PENNSYLVANIA AVE. BARKERS HAIR DRESSING HIGHLY PERFUMED MANUFACTURED PARKER DRUG CO. BALTIMORE, M.D. PRICE 25 CENTS It is a Combination Best Petroleum, Pure nut Oil, Boo's Wax, Wax, with Quinine an plur, and is blended FRENCH PERFUME, different from all other Dressings, as it is not Dressing, but a wo Hair Grower, and it you to comb your hair desired style. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS OR SENT DIRECT A. IVORA JONES, 380 N. Jonathan Street Hagerstown, Maryland. MME. M. KING MFG. CC. 1510 Penna Ave. Baltimore Md. THE AFRO-AMERICAN From down in East Baltimore, close to Caroline street, comes the rumor that an independent colored Republican candidate will be trotied out in September to oppose John Philip Hill, seeking re-election to Congress. Those responsible for the rumor refuse to state what is the main reason for being against the Hill, but they claim men may have an East Baltimore man already in waiting to make the contest. No colored independent candidate has run in the Third District since the late Samuel Q. Sanks ran nearly forty years ago, around Caroline street, comes the SCHOOL BOARD STILL SEEKS A SUPERVISOR Five Female Substitutes Made Regular Teachers At High School Five Female Substitutes Made Regular Teachers At High School No action was taken by the Board of School Commissioners in the matter of appointing a colored man to head the colored schools of the city in their mad-summer business meeting held at the home of Frederick J. Singleton last week. To an AFRG reporter, President Issue S. Fields declared that the appointment was a certainty and every man was being made to fill the eight positions. "The Board is giving colored schools much careful study." President Fields asserted, and "hopes to do everything possible with the facilities and means at hand to make them a credit to the system." Give substitutes in High School given regular positions. The following special substitutes in the High School were appointed: Miss Lena S. Holcombe, who has been acting as a special substitute since last January, drawing at $1,500; Miss Vashti Maxwell, English, $1,500. She is an alumnus of the school and Brown University and has been substituting there for several months. Her father, Joshua Maxwell, is a member of the faculty. Miss Irene Trigg, English and Mathematics, $1,500. She has February, been substituting there since Miss Aisley L. Lindsey, French, $1,500, substituting since February. Miss Louise H. Cook, French, $1,500, substituting since February. If the plan of separating the first year pupils from the rest of the class is to move them to the new site on Baker street, is carried out, several additional teachers will be needed. URBAN TRIAL NOT UNTIL SEPTEMBER The trial of Charles E. Urban, (twite) patrolman, on the charge of killing Charles E. Williams, 829 E. Chapel street, may not come up until the September term of the Baltimore County court at Tow- Urban had the case transferred to the County saying he could not get a fair trial here. Both State's Attorney Leo and Henry Wolfe counsel for Urban, are of the opinion that the case will not come up till Fall. The Knickerbocker Building and Loan Asso. 1137 N. FREMONT AVE. (near Lafayette Ave.) Plenty of Money to Loan on First and Second Mortgages on Easy Terms HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD Phone, MAd. 3277 W. W. ALLEN, Pres. Res.: 1117 N. Carey St. MAd. 1856-J Notary Public Drop card or call It is a Combination of the Best Petroleum, Pure Coconut Oil, Boo's Wax, White Wax, with quinine and Sulphur, and is blended with a FRENCH PERFUME. It is different from all other Hair Pressings, as it is not only a Dressing, but a wonderful Hair Grower, and it enables you to combine your Hair in any desired style. NU-HAIR TAR SALVE PRICE 50 CENTS FOR BALD SPOTS AND DANDRUFF 5 Cts. Additional Postage Acts directly upon the Scalp and Roots of the Hair; stops the Hair from falling out and removes Dandruff and gives new life and full growth. Is guaranteed product to retain the straightening and gloss of the Hair during the warmest and most inclement weather. Has and is daily standing the test and proving all we claim for it. At all Drug Stores or thru local distribution, O. N. Jonathan Street , Maryland. NG MFG. CC. e., Baltimore, Md. Henry W. Nash Permanently Blinded and Disfigured By Angry Wife MRS. NASH CONFESSES Refuses To Tell Police Why She Committed This Horrible Act Henry W. Nash, 48, 518 Addison street, will probably go blind and have the upper part of his body and face disfigured forever as a result of his wife, Mrs. Rosetta Nash, throwing a large quantity of lye on him while he was asleep in bed Sunday night. He is in a serious condition at Franklin Square Hospital and attends there state that they are sure that he will survive. Mrs. Nash, who maintains a dearthful silence as to the motive of the act has been committed to jail to await the outcome and a hearing has been postponed until August 10. She not only whittled that she threw tyre hat that she had waited for the opportunity for several days to it. It came Sunday when she crept from beside her sleeping husband, secured the mixture she had previously prepared and saturated the upper part of his body and his face with the strong liquid. It is practically certain that he will go blind, from the stole silence and refused to give a motion to arrest at the Northwestern office station four, that she is mentally deranged. This is the second recent case where tyre has been used to settle domestic difficulties. William Grayson having been made tough by having tyre thrown into his face as he was making his home one tide, Grayson accused his home one tide, Grayson accused the deed but she is acquitted. The similarity of these cases is striking. THE NEW CHINA The Finest and Best Chinese restaurant 1637 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., no. STEAKS, CHOPS, CHOP SUEY, FRIED CHICKEN, MARY Open from 9 a. m., to 2 a. m. WHITE MODERN CUT RA THE NEW CHINA RESTAURANT The Finest and Best Chinese Restaurant in Northwest Baltimore 1637 PENNSYLVANIA AVE, next door to Regent Theatre STEAKS, CHOPS, CHOP SUEY, YA-KA-MIN, FISH, EGGS, MARYLAND STYLE, ETC. WHITE'S MODERN CUT RATE DENTISTS 214 W. LEXINGTON STREET 214 W. LEXINGTON STREET EVERSTOCK SUCTION perfection Plates, Gu for 20 GOLD CROWN AND BRIDGE WO 22K Gold Crowns. White Crowns. 22K Bridge Work. Gold and Silver Filling, 50c up EXAMINATION FREE Hours: 9 a.m., to 8 p.m. WHITES MODERN CUT RATE D 214 W. Lexington Street UNION DENTAL PA 327 W. Lexington St LADY ATTENDANT TELEPHONE WHITES MODERN CUT RATE DENTISTS 214 W. Lexington Street UNION DENTAL PARLORS UNION DENTAL PARLORS Consultation Free Examination and Big Reductions on Crown and Bridge'Work Don't neglect having your teeth treated because you haven't sufficient money on hand to pay for the work. Our prices are very give you easy terms—pay while the at a time. Our work is the best, our erous. UNION DENTAL Hours: 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. FENNELL'S PR BALTIRORE'S BUSIEST CO MAILORDERS SO PRESCRIPTIONS The Busy Corner or the work. Our prices are very low, and, moreover, we will give you easy terms—pay while the work is being done, a little at a time. Our work is the best, our prices and terms most generous. UNION DENTAL PARLORS Hours: 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. Sunday, 10 to 1 FENNELL'S PHARMACY BALTIRORE'S BUSIEST COLORED DRUG STORE MAILORDERS SOLICITED PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY The Busy Corner CORNER BIDDLE ST. DRUID HILL AVENUE HE PAID $150 FINE Emmanuel Matthews Drove Car After License Was Revoked. Other Tra. e Court News Colored people contributed slightly more than $390 in fines during the past week in Traffic Court. The record line for $130 was assessed against Emmanuel Matthews, 1323 N. Calhoun street, for operating a car after license had been revoked. Other violations Failure to give right of way: S. Richardson, M. Washington, $5; G. Denish Philadelphia, Pa., $10; Frames Harris, $62; N. Center, without license or registration card—Harry Scott, M. Winns, Md., $15; Emmanuel Matthews, M. Winns, Md., $150; $160; 414 Amity Street, $60; Edward Powell, Roslyn, Md., $145. Speeding and rockless driving—Wm. H. Carrall, 55; Nade Thomas, 65; Towne, 70; Hoffman, street, $10; Edgar Thomas, 75; Hoffman, street, continue, $10; 165 Jefferson, street, $14.5; William Allen, 1306 street, street, dismissed. No lights and other violations. - H. Venew, 326 N. Gilmer street, $4.45; Hewand Gasswave, 326 N. Gilmer street, $4.45; Lambert Lumber, Burley Washington, W. Biddle street, dismissed; Burley Adams, 1411 North Street, dismissed; Wm. A. Johnson, 738 George street, $14.5; H. E. Smith, 314 E. 25rd street, dismissed; Thomas T. Taylor, 368 E. Monument street, $3; Norman Monster street, $3; A. H. Monster street, 508 Rinceville, dismissed; Robert Smith, 1260 Rinceville, $4; Frank Richardson, 1260 Rinceville, $4; Frank Richardson, 1260 Rinceville, $4; George Waters, 1623 South Howard street, dismissed. PERSONAL MENTION Mr. and Mrs. M. Hawkins, of Washington, D. C., spent two days in the city last week enrols home from Atlantic City and New York. Miss Evelyn Henderson spent several days in Washington, last week, the guest of Mrs. Gertrude Wells-Showen n. Messum Bernice A. Ruckner and Bertha E. Hall are the guests of Rev. and Mrs. L. Carrington and Prof. and Mrs. M. T. Stafford. Mr. and Mrs. James Howard, of 2338 Webster Ave., Pittsburg, Pa., entertained at luncheon the following Baltimoreans: Mrs. L. V. Gorrett, Mrs. J. H. Ross, Mrs. Viona Branch, Lula Scott, Mrs. Robinson L. Forester, Margaret Brown, Sarah Milton, Mr. Elijah Brown, Alfred Brown, and the Messrs. Serugus. Prof. A. S. Philips has returned from Virginia and is on his way to Atlantic City. CHINA RESTAURANT Restaurant in Northwest Baltimore E., next door to Regent Theatre QUEY, YA-KA-MIN, FISH, EGGS, MARYLAND STYLE, ETC. nt. First-Class Service. ITE'S RATE DENTISTS INGTON STREET perfection Rubber Plates, Guaranteed for 20 Years AND BRIDGE WORK $ 4.00 UP er Filling, 50c up CUT RATE DENTISTS Lexington Street TAL PARLORS Lexington St. TELEPHONE CALVERT 2990 Have Your Dental Work Done At Cut Prices By Expert Dentists BEST PLATES Reasonable Prices Very low, and, moreover, we will make the wars is being done, a little best, our prices and terms most gen- MENTAL PARLORS P. M. Sunday, 10 to 1 PHARMACY ST COLORED DRUG STORE ERS SOLICITED IONS A SPECIALTY CORNER BIDDLE ST. DRUID HILL AVENUE BROWN'S GROVE and STEAMER STREET AND ALL POINTS ON THE BAY in Towns on the Bay to Brown' the only steamer and the only park in the in exclusively for Colored People and be to secure choice dates, apply at once to CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BROWN Hill Avenue Phone, MA or call WALTER R. LANGLEW On Street Phone: WO Brown will be at home on Saturday at am now until the first of May. Be sure to authority to secure dates when application to any committee who wishes to engage dements by phone or letter. Improver des are continually being added to the boat fort and enjoyment of our patrons. The following dates have been booked: JULY STARLIGHT DATES for BROWN'S GROVE and STEAMER STARLIGHT AND ALL POINTS ON THE BAY Also From Towns on the Bay to Brown's Grove Also this is the only steamer and the only park in the State of Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Colored People. In order to secure choice dates, apply at once to Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sunday evenings from now until the first of May. Be sure to give your committee authority to secure dates when application is made as positively may dates will be held in reserve. Captain Brown will wait on any committee who wishes to engage dates. Make your appointments by phone or letter. Improvements and added features are continually being added to the boat and grove for the comfort and enjoyment of our patrons. The following dates have been hooked: JULY - From Annapolis to Grove -Hidden Gate State School -St. James Court No. 28, G. U. O. of Nagaras -Petenthal M. E. M. E. School School -Trinity M. E. M. E. School School -Trinity Reformers -National Cubs Association of America -Asbury M. E. Church -St. Luke's M. E. Church (Heisterstown) Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sunday evenings from now until the first of May. Be sure to give your committee authority to secure dates when application is made as positively may dates will be held in reserve. Captain Brown will wait on any committee who wishes to engage dates. Make your appointments by phone or letter. Improvements and added features are continually being added to the boat and grove for the comfort and enjoyment of our patrons. JULY (Moonlight) -Willing Workers of West Baltimore -Union Bridge Pleasure and Redevelopment Association -Golden Roof Pleasure Association No. -Huggers-town District Sunday Schools -Young Men Workers moonlight: 2- First Baptist Sunday School 3- Charleston Baptist Sunday School 4- Gavin and Lutherville M. E. Churches 5- Jack Thomas Band 7- Winters M. E. Sunday School 8- Leander Sunday School 9- A. M. E. Zhao Church 10- Independent M. E. Church 11- Spirrows Point M. E. Church 12- Great Southern Temple No. 30, Elks 13- Male and Female Usheres of St. John A. 15- Stowgrass Auditorium Board of Waters, And The Maple Leaf Musical and Literary Society to Cambridge, Md. 16- Clair and Ladies And Auditorium of Anne M. E. Church. 17- St. Matthews M. E. Church. 18- Y. M. M. A. 19- 20- 21- 22- 23- 24- 25- SPECIAL ERNEST L. Saturday Twilight SATURDAY, JULY 22 BROWN'S ELE Sunday Twilight SUNDAY, JULY 30 Boat leaves Rochester's Orchestra. IN ORDER TO FOR OUR FIN WINTER which is coming in daily, a beginning August 1st. We balance of goods on hand. SUMMER DRESSE ERNEST PURVANCE Saturday Twilight Society Excursion T. JULY 22 Boat Leaves 6 BROWN'S ELECTRIC GROVE Sunday Twilight Society Excursion T. JULY 30 SUNDAY, AUGUST Boat leaves 7:30 o'clock Ever's Orchestra. Concert La Ch ORDER TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR FINE STOCK OF WINTER GOODS coming in daily, and which we place August 1st. We are sacrificing t of goods on hand at the present time ER DRESSES $3.95 & SPECIAL ERNEST PURVANCE SPECIAL Saturday Twilight Society Excursion SATURDAY, JULY 22 Boat Leaves 6:30 o'clock BROWN'S ELECTRIC GROVE Sunday Twilight Society Excursion SUNDAY, JULY 30 SUNDAY, AUGUST 6.13 Boat Leaves 7:30 o'clock Rochester's Orchestra Concert La Classique IN ORDER TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR FINE STOCK OF WINTER GOODS which is coming in daily, and which we place on sale beginning August 1st. We are sacrificing the entire balance of goods on hand at the present time. SILK DRESSES $15.00 Everything else in proportion COH ..SAMPLE 659 W. LEX Open Monday & Saturday The Perfect Fit A MAN IN CLOTH DRESS U COHN'S AMPLE STOR 659 W. LEXINGTON ST Sunday & Saturday Evenings. Cash perfect Fit The Best of Work A MAN IS JUDGED BY CLOTHES HE WEARS DRESS UP MAN BE A SP THE REAL BOX TAILOR THE LEADING TAILORS 935½ PENNA. AVE. LEADING Tailoring since 1885 935 1/2 PENNSYL READING TAILOR since 1885 Tailors of High 5 1/2 PENNSYLVANIA AVE 935 $ \frac{1}{2} $ PENNSYLVANIA AVE. ```markdown ``` FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922 WE and STEAMER STARLIGHT PITS ON THE BAY The Bay to Brown's Grove and the only park in the State of Colored People and by Colored States, apply at once to GREGE W. BROWN Phone, MAdison 8288 ER R. LANGLEW Phone: WOife 4222-J at home on Saturday and Sunday first of May. Be sure to give your dates when application is made held in reserve. Captain Brown who wishes to engage dates. Make me or letter. Improvements and being added to the boat and grove of our patrons. dates have been hooked: Pasture, / 27—Koslyn Sewing Circle 30—St. Monica Catholic Church JULY (Moonlight) 20—Writing Workers of West Baltimore 21—Union Bridge Pleasure and Beautiful Association 25—Golden Roof Pleasure Association No. 1 28—Huger House District Sunday Schools 215—Tamu Men Willing Workers 28—Conference Aid, Sharp St Cources 23—Elk's Choir And ANJOUST (Moonlight) 2—St. Louis Social No. 1 3—McCormick Lodge No. 8, Good Hope es 4—Gibble Clan 5—Junior and Walters Dept. N. O. E. 6—John Wesley E. N. S. 7—Communbury No. 264, Knights of St. Johns of St. Barnabas 8—Ushers of St. Paul M. E. Church 11—N. M. Carroll Chapter, Epworth League, sharp M. E. Church Agn. Nunnelley Assembly 10—Grand Council, Mt. Olive Benedict as s. 17—Female Ushers of Waters A. M. E. C. 18—Ladies' Aid No. 1, Metropolitan M. E. of 21—Doctors Conchants' Auxilier 22—Independent A. M. E. Church 23—Epworth League of Ames Church 24—Sharp Street Church 25—Doctors' orchestra 26—Auxilier No. 210, Knights of St. John s. 27—St. Barnabas 28—Ushers Association and Epworth League of Metropolitan M. E. Church 29—School PURVIANCE SPECIAL Hat Society Excursion Boat Leaves 6:30 o'clock ELECTRIC GROVE Hat Society Excursion SUNDAY, AUGUST 6.13 7:30 o'clock Concert La Classique TO MAKE ROOM ONE STOCK OF OR GOODS and which we place on sale We are sacrificing the entire at the present time. ES $3.95 & 6.95 HN'S E STORE.. EXINGTON ST. Day Evenings. Cash or Credit The Best of Workmanship IS JUDGED BY THE THES HE WEARS UP MAN BE A SPORT Let us make your clothes to your measure Our Prices are Right They are in keeping with the times We are out of the high rent district and this enables us to sell our goods at a smaller profit. Come and look over our large assortment of the very latest patterns. THE G TAILORS Tailors of High Merit LVANIA AVE. THE ```markdown ```