The Afro-American
Friday, August 4, 1922
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
Dyer Bill Favorably Reported;-M.E.Church Xcursion Train Wrecked
10 DIE, 60 HURT; SENATE GETS CHURCH PICNIC ANTI-LYNCH ENDS IN WRECK BILL AT LAST
Masons, Washington, D. C., week of Aug. 6,
Federation of Women, Richmond, week of
Aug. 6, Masons, Norfolk, week of Aug. 6,
Elks, Newark, N. J., week of August 21.
30th YEAR NUMBER 51
SEVENT
Dyer Bill
10 DIE, 60 HURT; SEE
CHURCH PICNIC A
ENDS IN WRECK
330 Members of Cniciianat Church Were En Route To Picnic Grove 30 Miles Outside City
HIT BY ANOTHER TRAIN
Wooden Coaches Crumble
Beneath Fearful Impact,
Wreckage Catches Fire
The dead:
Richard Storall, 43, minister's son
John Clingk, 12, internal injuries
Mrs. Fannie Davidson, 28, crushed
J. C. Middleton, 45, skull crushed
Secondly injured:
Walter Brown, Mary Hurris, Eimer Robertson, Cleveland Turner, Manie Bates, Robert Shirshire.
Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 2—Ten persons were killed and about sixty injured when an excursion train carrying more than 300 piles of the Park M. E. Sunday School, established in 1905, was on the Cincinnati, Columbus and Northern railway at Pleasant Ridge, fourteen miles north of here today.
The trains met at a bend in the road. The engine of the accommodation train, Cincinnati bound, ran half way through the first coach of a pierce train, which was bound for Highland Grove, thirty miles north of here.
Five Department Aids
Fire department apperatus from Cincinnati and Norwood was on the scene in a short time, litting the wreckage from the injured, the crime, and the dead. The life-saving sound of the Cincinnati department gave aid to those pinned wood and iron. The dead were laid aside until overgrown patrols and ambulances had attended to all the injured. The wreck, it is believed, was due to a misunderstanding of ship or orders. As the trains met, the two biodegraded, rebounded, and stayed on the tracks, but the cones behind them were televised. The regular train consisted of vehicles and the excursion train of
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Senator Shortridge (Rep. Cal.) Says Bill Is "Constitutional" and Should Pass
MANY SUPPORT THIS VIEW
Biefs By Attorney General And Several Entinent
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Lawyers Quoted In Full
Washington, D. C., Aug. 3.—The Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill, H. H. 13, was reported favorably to the Senate Saturday by Senator S. M. Shortridge, (Cal. Rep.).
The action comes after months of delay in the Senate Judiciary Committee of which Senator Roch (Rep., Idaho) is chairman. Only the strong arguments of Senators Lodge, (Rep. Mass.) and Shortridge, (Rep. Cal.) won over a number of wavering senators to the support of the bill and succeeded in reporting it reported out of the committee.
Efforts will be made by friends of the measure to get it to a vote in the Senate as soon as the discussion of the Tariff bill is concluded. The Judiciary Committee modified the wording of the House bill fixing the liability of State officials where bribes occur. Presbyterianism is made that the always shall forge $10,000 to the United States; it must be "called and proved that the officers of the State charged with the duty of prosecuting criminals for each offense under the laws of the State have failed, neglected or refused to proceed with the diligence to apprehend the participants in the mob or riotous assemblies."
The report of the bill prepared by Senator Shortridge takes up thirty-two pages. It includes beside the report made by Mr. Dyer to the Committee on the Judiciary of the House, briefs in support of the suit against the Commissioner of the bill prepared by U.S. Attorney General H. M. Daugherty, Moorefield Storey, of Boston, and Herbert K. Stockton, a prominent New York lawyer.
Senator Shortridge declared that the amended bill is appropriate legislation within the competency of court of record. It is not sectional, he says, for the lynching cell is not confined to any section of the States, North or South, East or West.
He adds, that the proposed legislation is not, an invasion on the States' rights nor is it designed toelleve the states from the performance of duties to secure all persons, within their several jurisdictions, equal protection of the law.
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8
Marcus Garvey snapped in his latest presidential robes leading his hosts thru Harlem.
1921
This photo taken of Mr. Garvey in New York indicates the climate of 8.818
5,000 PARADE WITH GARVEY
New York Aug. 1—Surrounded by police and private detectives to thwart threatened attacks, five thousand Garveyites headed by their chief, Marcus Garvey, president general of the U. N. J. A. paraded the streets today. The parade opens the annual convention, which lasts one month.
"White man rules American black man shall rule Africa."
"We want a black civilization and 'God and the Xeno shall triumph' we have the Xeno carried by marchers.
Mr. Garvey sat in his big limousine wearing a chapel adorned with red, green and white, plumes and a blue military cloak finished with gold lion. His bride of a few days was also in the procession.
In his annual sermon the chaplain general of the association deigned the losses of the Black Star Line declaring:
"What we have lost five million dollars? We haven't had very much experience yet. Look at the United States Government. After a hundred years' experience they have lost a billion and a half in their Shipping Board operations."
YOUR LAST CHANCE
TO GET SOMETHING
FOR NOTHING
August 6th Will Be The Day That The Sheik and The Sweet Man Of Mine Will Cry How Many
Bright predictions for a great day at Brown's Grove, Sunday afternoon 2:30 o'clock August 6th, when the A. Jack Thomas Band, Local No. 543 A. F. of N. will leave foot of Broadway for an afternoon outing. Not only the concert will be given, but there will be continuous music by a Celebrated Orchestra to and from the grove and at the grove the Famous Jazz Band will be there in the pavilion. Plenty refreshments and fun await so you can in the swell on time.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1922
RESTED I
orted;-M.E.C.
Lawless Mobs
Days In Macon,
Macon, Ga., Aug. 2—With the him from o
lynching of John Glover, accused
of killing a white deputy sheriff in
a pool room raid, this Dixie town
ends three wild days of terror.
OIN B
E.Church
Jobs Reign 3
con, Georgia
him from officers and shot him to
death. His body was partially
humped and on top the clothing was
removed with pen knives.
Members of the mob multitated the
naked limbs and face then carried
Lawless Mobs Reign 3 Days In Macon, Georgia
Macon, Ga., Aug. 2—With the him from officers and shot him to lynching of John Glover, accused of killing a white deputy sheriff in a pool room raid, this Dixie town Members of the mob multitainted the naked limbs and face then carried end three wild days of terror.
the bleeding corpse to town where 7,000 persons congregated to view it. The lynchers dropped the body in front of Harris' place and left. Officers say that Glover when arrested, begged the police: "Kill me; don't take me back to Macon." While threats have been made against the lives of servicemen, well known colored people late today, the police are trying to avert further trouble. There were two colored spotters from the sheriff's office in the same car with Glover, to get him to Athens, where Macon officers were waiting for blm. even of all ages jammed their way into Broadway during the heart of the excitement and those that reached the body of Glover fought for souvenirs. During the attack, the police were against a billboard at the entrance to a colored theater, where it remained half upright until the police rushed in and carried it away to Forsyth, Ga., for an inquest. The jury declared Glover came to his death at the hands of parties unknown. The Court has moved to investigate by the Grand Jury, it is believed that no one will be punished.
"LIQUID" SOPRANO SINGS UNDER WATER
"LIQUID" SOPRANO SINGS UNDER WATER
Washington, D. C., Aug. 15
Miss of Miss Bernese Mackney, 16, Dunbar High School student are trying to find a mate, a man she has only seen in his shirt's the first and only real "liquid soprano." Others say that as "diva" describes an operatic celebrity, "divar" might properly be coined to fit Miss Mackney's peculiar gift. But no word has been invented to label one who can sing under water. And that, Bernese is able to do.
"I first learned of my ability a month ago," she says. "I was making a bake dive, but hit the water a 'whopper' on my side. I had made such a bake dive." I laughed under water—and heard myself.
"I began practicing. Now I can sing a whole stunna under water." Bud enough for those outside to hear. I open my mouth just as in natural singing, but no water seems to go.
Bernese is a dark-skinned slender girl of distinctly creole cast.
While she does not attach any special value to her ability as a geping "liquid soprano," she says she's going to keep her specialization. Maybe, somewhere, a demand for aquatic songbirds will arise, she thinks.
TEXAS LYNCHES ANOTHER
Tesarkannah, Ark. Aug. 3—On his way out of town, following a quarrel with a white man over a drinking cup, John West was taken from a railroad train at Guernsey and shot to death by a mob of one hundred white men.
The trouble started when Wess who was working with W. Worthington, white, had the paving foreman, go to drink from the water and drink. The two men came to blows. West succeeded in traveling four miles on the train before he was seized.
St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 2—Congressman L. C. Dyer, author of the Dyes Anti-Lynching Bill, was renom
nated state-wide primaries. Tuesday
Josiah Diggs, head of the Dunbar Theatre Corporation is recovering from a major operation at Provident Hospital.
FOR RESULTS OF THE WILLS-JACKSON FIGHT
FOR RESULTS OF THE WILLS-JACKSON FIGHT
Tuesday night after 11:30 o'clock
the AFRO-AMERICAN will
have its own sporting editor at Ebbets
Field. Brooklyn. Witness the bout and write a story
in the newspaper. He will also wire this office as soon as
the bout is over, so that Balti-
moreans may know the result.
If Wills cannot beat Jackson,
what chance has he with Dempsey?
Deputy Sheriff Byrd, white and Deputy Raley, colored entered the pool room belonging to C. H. Douglass, wealthiest Macon colored man, who owns also a theatre and barber shop next door "to terrorize" the bad element. Byrd was killed in a shootout with Glover Marshall and George Marshall and Samuel Brooks spectators were killed by Raley.
Glover escaped, but every train and auto leaving the city was searched. Every colored home in the city was violated in the hunt. White men on the streets took pot shots at colored persons who ventured on the streets, and police unable to give protection, ordered people to stay off the streets.
Colored business men were ordered out of the block where the shooting occurred, and it took twenty policemen to keep mobs from firing Douglass' building. A hundred suspects were arrested, some of them as the police say "for their own safety". Every business place was closed before the scene.
When Glover was finally captured near the city line, a mob of three hundred whites quickly
CORPSE IN JAIL
PUT CORPSE IN JAIL
Hot Springs, Ark., Aug. 2-
Charged with burglary and
murder of a white man, Gilb-
bert Harris aged 28, was taken
from jail by a mob and lynch-
ed yesterday.
A mob of citizens gathered at the City jail at 8 A.M. and grew in numbers until Circuit Judge Scott Wood and Mayor Harris Jones pleaded for the law to take its course. The jail was locked and barred, through the City jail, in the basement of which the jail is located. Desending the stairway and bristling with guns, the crowd held the police back and took Harris on a truck to the triangle in front of the Como Hotel, a downtown centre. Harris was told to confess him, was chased. He was strung to a pole while the crowd cheered. The body was suspended for thirty minutes. An ambulance that appeared to take the body was chased away. A movement to drag the body through the street was stopped by the police. No shots were fired, the body was locked around the neck, with the jail and piled in a cell. No official action against the lynchers is expected.
KILLED BY LIGHTNING
Allendale, S. C., Aug. 3—Simon Patten and William Robinson were killed by lightning and their two companions sunned during a heavy electrical storm Friday.
Have the AFPO follow you when you go on your Vacation. Don't miss reading the news from home.
SERVICE COAL CO,
TO EMPLOY ONLY
HIGH-CLASS MEN
Agnews Dismissed From The Board Of Directors Of Service Coal Company Inc., Has No Effect On The Policies Of Their Business, Says Directors
The Service Coal Company Incorporated who recently dropped from their board of directors Mr. B. J. Agnew who was charged with violating the rules and regulations of the company—in an interview with an Afro reporter informed him that the dismissal of Mr. Agnew in order to avoid the possibility of the concern. The president and directors made it clear that there was no grievance against Ir. Agnew and that he was dropped from the board because he had violated the laws of the corporation.
The president and directors furthered that it was the policy if the corporation to place the very best calibre of business men on the board.
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The J. H. Bishop Co.
1425 PEINA, AVENUE
(By Associated Negro Press)
DYER RENOMINATED
JOSIAH DIGGS BETTER
Call VErnon 6016 or 6017
AUGUST 8th
6 cents in Baltimore BIG CLE Xcursio
POLICE SWEEP FAIRMOUNT AVE. EARLY SUNDAY
Northeastern Police District Scene of City's Biggest Anti-Vice
TWENTY-TWO ARE FINED
Others Held for Hearing Or Let Go After An Investigation
In a clean-up raid conducted by Captain Thomas H. Mooney early Monday morning in the neighborhood of Fairmount avenue and Spring street, 72 colored people were arrested, about 45 of whom were held for hearing and 22 fired in charges of disorderly conduct.
For some time this section has been under surveillance, complaints having come from colored and whites in the neighborhood that children from various parts of the city came here and were responsible for the large number of arrests and crimes of various kinds occurring in this section. One of the chief complaints, it seems that brought on the drastic action was that large numbers of white men including soldiers from the camps infest this section looking for col-
An investigation by the AFRO-AMERICAN brought out the fact that this raid covered about two blocks of Fairmount avenue and from Eden street to Bond and a block of Spring street at the outer section of Fairmount and Spring street. All edifice found in Fairmount and Spring were 1.39 and 2 check were arrested. In addition several homes were entered. According to Harvey Henderson, 7 N. Spring street, who has since made complaint to Commissioner Gatther, some of the doors were broken in. He claimed that the police made no effort to spure orderly and respectable people who lived in the community, that man just caught their work, were caught in the net and hated into the police station.
Mother Taken From Babe
Mrs. Sadie Burnett, 1417 Fairmount avenue, stated that on orders from the day nurses she was keeping her 12 weeks-old baby in a cradle in the open air on the sidewalk when the raid took place, and while bending over her baby was arrested and her station released later in night when friends brought her baby to the station.
Nin. Lee, 1417 Fairmount ave. was on the way to get a yeast cake when he was taken in by the police and Back Young who had just returned from work, had dressed and taken a seat out in the cool air when he was taken in. At least one good girl is said to have been arrested among those taken to the station.
While colored people in the neighborhood stated that there were some conditions confined to some houses in this section that needed police attention, that there were also a large number of hard working respectable people living here and that the police made no effort to distinguish between them. The homes here are hot and close and in the early part of the night inside sleep is impossible owing to the heat. Many people sit outside and sleep until late.
Captain Mooney told an AFRO reported that many colored people had made complaints about this section and that he was making an effort to clean it up.
Those arrested and fined were Edwin Davis. 1137 May street. $5: Clarence Denby. 28 Spring street. $5: Rudolph Snowden. 1567 Fairmount Avenue. $5: John Marshall. 1426 Fairmount Avenue. Della Stanley. 12 N. Caroline Street. $3: Alien Warner. 1531 Spring street. $10: Oscar Smith. 16 N. Dallas Street. $5: Z. Cutherson. Continued on Page 2
SAYS GARVEY STOLE PLAN
New York, Aug. 1—Dr. J. Albert Thorn, a native of Barbados, West Judges, is now at 117 W. 115t street, planning to take one hundred colored families to settle in Africa next Spring. The African Spring Enterprise is the original title of the organization. Dr. Thorn said Marcus Garvey got the "back to Africa idea" from him.
MRS. CARR OUT
Mrs. "Aggle" Carr, wife of a well-known taxi owner who was hot recently is out again after a serious operation at a copdent. E. Hughes remembers a bullet from the region at the bugge of the brain.
AN-UP n Train
A Prize Beauty
Miss Ora Johnson selected as the
tournament's "best player" in the
tournament's "best contest."
FOURTEEN
PAGES
The AFRO-AMERICAN is the biggest news newspaper East of the Mississippi river. Stunted stock of the North Carolina equipped with the latest features for getting the news, the AFRO prints the news a whole week ahead of most of the weekly newspapers of the country. Biggest in advertising and a major source of advertising.
and in name of advertising.
In this paper, pass it on to your
neighbor. If there is no agent
in your town write us.
Don't say paper, say AFRO.
U. S. MARINES JAIL HAITIAN EDITOR TWICE
Black Patriot Opposed Our Efforts to Force $40,000,000 Loan On His Country
JOHNSON MAKES STATEMENT
Says If We Loan Money, We Will Never Take Foot Out of Haiti
New York, Aug. 2, J.-J. Jolliholz of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, editor of Le Courier Haitien, a leading newspaper of Haiti, was twice arrested and confined to jail during the month of June, for protesting against certain financial powers in the United States forcing a loan of $49,000.60 on the Haitian Government, according to a letter received and made public today by James Weldon Johnson, Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. M. Jolliholz has been one of the most outspoken of Haitian leaders in denouncing the acts of the American Occupation.
In commenting on the arrest of M. Jolliholz and the causes of his having 'een imprisoned, Mr. John son said:
"It is obvious that the efforts owing being made to force this loan for forty million dollars, on the Italian Government, which the militants declare they do not need and do not want is for the purpose of future justification of profiture of the occupation of Italy the United States Government. When unpleasantly directed demands are made on the American Government to end the occupation of this republic, the obvious effort will be that such a step could be impracticable until money loaned by American banking houses is repaid.
"The arrest and imprisonment of F.M. Jolibois for during to speak cut on a matter regarding which here should be the utmost freedom of speech and press is simply another incident in what is already record of imperial despotism. In bike of the recent report by the Senate Committee headed by the Torrente Minister, which almost completely abolishes the Occupation of all blame, the case of Jolibois is indicative of just what our neighbors to the south re undergoing in the process of benevolent tutelage" by the American Government."
CITY DWELLINGS COST AVERAGE MAN TOO MUCH
Afro's Investigator Finds Roomers In Nearly Every Home To Help Pay Expenses
100 HOMES VISITED
Rents Found To Be Too High and City Backward In Cleaning Up
Next to the cost and quality of food and clothing there is no factor in the proper development of any group of people, more far reaching and vital in its effect than that of housing. A representative of the AFRO-AMERICAN has made a condensed study during the last two months of 100 hongents ented to colored people who work in some of the city's large industries with a view of ascertaining the specific effect these homes were having on the general welfare not only of these occupants but indirectly on the economic life of the race. In order that a fair average of the homes in which a large majority of the substantial working people live might be gotten the source of selection was made only among those employed in some industry and who hold membership in some church in the city. They also cover homes in every condition and section of the city and include some oft he more congested alleys. Using this as a basis the reader will be left to make his own inference as to conditions in some of the more congested and squallid quarters.
Grouping the 100 houses as to rentals it was found that the average monthly rental per room was $5.84. In ten of these homes whose recent sale records were looked up the gross weekly rental was found to be 17.5% of the purchase price based on sales made within the last twelve months. The minimum number of rooms were 11 and the minimum two. The general average number of rooms per family was six.
71 PER CENT KEEP ROOMERS
One of the noticeable features of the housing in the 100 houses is that in 71 of the house it was found necessary to keep rooms to supplement the income of the head of the family. This condition obviously lowers the standard of home control and in many case was found to lead to many deep social scams. There can be no doubt that this necessity for keeping companies in the house diminishes the cost of living (of which the rent is a large factor) and the family income on the one hand and the back of proper type of housing on the others.
Most of the houses examined were evidently built with a view to their income-bearing value and with little or no thought to their relation to the needs and pocketbook of the small family. Many medium sized families find it no easy to rent homes more luxuriously than others, or dilder income warrants. The natural result then is to take in some room competition to fill the gap and when competition become keen the effort to keep this gap filled leads in many cases to bad social conditions.
BUSINESS MEN MUST HELP
The challenge is then to colored editors, bankers and investors to help institute not only a new type of housing and a reconstruction of the oldtime tenement into small essentially rented apartments, but also to be sacrificed for the development of a more hopeful and fundamentally prosperous group of the future. It cannot be done at 9% levy on their incomes. It must be looked upon more as a measure of racial self-defense than as a cold business proposition, et as a cold business proposition othings may pay larger returns in living long. It is a strange anomaly that then we tolerate a much larger waste in human life, than with one of our animals. The laws Baltimore would prevent some of the relative cruelties to animals that we impose on some human clones. It for instance, we were told that the bioplastics we sold profitable animal species of manufacturing some useful article and art and wasted relatively as many of them as we do with human beings, we would close up the business.
CONTINUED on Page 7
Short communication for this cotmn should be sent in to Ma
Townsend, editor Church Column Afro-American, before ‘Tuesda:
si each week. Mow to find the Sunday School Lesson see pag
of en column one, a
PAGE TWO
tev. D. G. Hill, who accidentl;
acured his'teg at ls home « tev
ireks a&0, hopes to be able to at.
end eervices. at Allen A.M. ‘BS,
fghureh this Sunday,
Sunday School of Calvary. A.
a Grove 4, Druld Hill Park Wed:
pesday
Rev, Aquilla Brooks .filted the
pulpit Monday and Tuesday. even-
ngs on the open lot adjoining
Fayne Memorial M. B. Church,
‘he women of the Salisbury Dis-
rit -\. M. 1B. Zion Chureh held an
jieday’ rally at Avondale, Pa,
Rev. W. 11, Kelly, pastor of
inion Jtptist’ Tempis will leave
Friday an an eXtended evangelistic
pur in Virginia.
‘The funeral of Rev. A. A. Ander-
on Hsevtist evangelist "was held
from I'sulmist Gapuist Church last
mursday. Rev. i. W. Lane, of
ated aussisted’ by Rey. Junius
Gray. Rev. J. J. Taylor, Rev. Te.
y. Anderson, Rev. C."B.. Jones,
nev. J. W. McCoy und others,
On Sunday Rev. W, I Dean will
jerve his farewell communion at
sir Street Memorial Church, af-
jer which the pastor will take a
free Week's vitcution, Upon his re-
urn he will Taunch “his $5.000
five and if successful the centen-
sry Will sive Thim $2,000 in Novem-
fir on the debt of the Community
Mouse.
ue local branch, If 'N. Johnson,
firs, Cora Ti. Batte,” ars, Johnson
ead ot the Blick’ Gross” nurses
fis Councilman W rner. ‘P. Me
iuinn. Cave. Mudaek and J. Vint
ins ste ieinong the Baltimoreans
iis ave in attendance at. the cons
fention Gf une Universe Negro Im.
provement Leasue, which opened
mn Nev York Tuesday. Dr. Diggs
reached the introductory sermon,
Res, W. W. Colbert was given
isemy days. to ammend his “plea
in the suit against Rev, J. A. Bris
joe, individually, and “the “Balti
ure Conference, A. M. E. Church
for damaxes. Judve Dawkins sus.
fuined thw deniucver of Rev. Bris
e's counsel,
Kev. and Mrs W. W. Decner
ecangelists are conducting services
hizhily on the Jot adjoining Payne
Memorial A, Mf. . Church.
Mis. J. R. Nelson raised $50. at
fi un entertainment given for the
fenvitt of Wayman ALM,
Church. :
‘The samnal session of the Batti
nore Piistriet Conference opened
lyuaker Wotton A.-M. B, Chureh
Raltinore, Wednesday, and will
ose with « Sunday Schoo! mass:
fiwtins this Study afternoon,
fresidine: Hider U. H. Stepteu was
arharse of the District Conter-
Haes, which met Wednesday and
hurls. and George 5. Whyte,
pie Sunday: School wusiliary, which
fakes np the rest of the week.
The conference - decided to” aid
jie estediishins of st mission — at
hers Helsitts, whieh isin the
Norsan Cottexe section,
The annual drive of Brown's
enpet Mt. i Charen, near Eliott
Fis wiil be held tix Sunday. ME
tien, Vine Orchard and. Wesi
Liwiiy Churches, whigh are on the
Fivuits are expeetedt to ptrctelpate
Wist Liberty. Churelt mused $228
in its recent annual drive and At
Zion Chuvel, Isilleatt | City, S872.
ew, 1. M1. Carpenter is pastor of
Be tral,
The Women's Cnion Beangelists
seers at Union Taptist Church No,
Rev C. te donor. pastor every
Sunday at 3 o'clock, | Mrs. Mary
Howard leader.
REY, W. R. GRIGSBY DEAD
Rev, W. TR. Grigsby of Lewishurs,
rest Virginia, died July 23, 1922. *
WEDDING AT PAYNE
An Ancient Wedding was pre-
Heited before st large audience at
Payne Memorial A.M. E. Church.
Himrsday July 27, by the Putpit
hid Society of which Mes. Hilda
faves is president, L'roeveds were
30.83,
Thoww participating as brides
ere Miss Annie Hortan, Miss Mary
Rancall, Mes, Mary Brooks, | Miss
Sein tohnson, Mrs, Priscilla
Ewell Myx, Lillian Bivins, | Mrs.
fas Tariton, and Mrs. Hilda
Faves,
The costumes were appropriate
wl cond looking.
Others on the program were the
bertor. Trev, J. G. Martin, Rev.
Howard Dorsey and Rev. Fransco
Pant, Mr. James Martin, Mr. Ar-
ait Johnson, Miss Mamie Diggs
od Mixs Alina ‘Thomas, pianist.
eo
CLOSES AT SHARP ST,
the Daily Vacation Bible Schoo!
! Shary Street Memorial Church
tel has been conducted at th
ary Street Community House
sed Hast night with an appro-
riste joroscram und exhibition.
Tw ‘school had an_ enrollment
{107 and a daily attendance o|
i. Ms. Florence Owens was the
eeetor, Miss Inez Brooks, kinder:
etten and musical instructor, as-
asd by Miss Annie Hazelton
is Consuciy Durand, instructor
Sewing and handicratt for, girls
tis Edith Parker, instructor of
Bitiwork for boys, assisted by
is Elsie Mountain. .
Charlotte Bruman received | the
fit for the girls, and Wm. ‘Tur
* prize for the boys.
4 complete five-room house was
Ste und furnished by the Junior
asses, also x church was, built
fe sirnished—the miatd_ churen
ye td house signified the
‘ome and Foreign Missions.”
ttt, Kinderzarten offered a
pérdia display’ of furniture made
ji curdboard boxes. beads mad
fm clay, and yarn mats.
CHURCH USHERS
GLOSE SESSION
Delegates From Seven
States Conclude Three-
Day Diecting At Enon
Baptist Church
REV, DAVIS A SPEAKER
Tells Audience People Will
-, Speak fo’ Themselves
= Coming Elections
Anat the people will speak for
themselves in the coming clections,
jand will not allow political organi-
ations to ta tame for whew chy
atl Sule as the MeN
tev. Monroe H. Davis before the
National United Ushers Associa-
tion of America meeting at 1non
Baptist Church Thursday and Sat-
urday of last week,
Rev. Mr. Davis, Rev. Junius
Gray, Rev. C. B, Jones, Rev. R, 1,
Winn und Rev, A. B. Cailis were
on the subject “Stay On Tho Job”.
Friday night was the Susie K.
ments Were pone other than kit-
was produced. ‘The members of
the band were attired in white
coats, decorated with ice cream
spoons and trimmed with red
‘braid and wore white caps similiar
to those worn by couks.
Brown's Grove was the main fea-
ture of the day.
Stewarts Geerrode. Blehardcon, eZ0n Male
Jinx, Mary Bo Moore, Palsy Grey. Jennie)
Me geshington csr Sith Capaine Jewes.
Fe ane Se. Hineson, Meta Swale
Son eg Sea.
‘Enon Church Pastor's White Law-
yers Reply Yo Injunction On
‘ucsday
‘Thru Karr Hammell, and Dar-
nell, white, Rev. H. 1. Green re-
plied to the Civeuit Court injunc-
tion Tuesday restraining him from
acting us pastor of Enon bu plist
Church. ~
The answer states that the trus-
Green is guilty of no wrong doing:
that he has refused to accept jis
dismissal’ by an unauthorized com:
mittee; that the church meetitis
joe July 25th which dismissed him
ing”; and that the fight agains!
him hag been prompted and led
iby Rev. A. L. Buily on person
a
Pa. B. Y. P. U, Elects Officers
‘Williginsport, Pa.. Aug. 3.—The
nineteenth annual State: convention
Of the Colored Baptist Young
People’s Union, with 300 delegate
‘attending, Tuesday night, elected
the following officers: President
George P. Newman, of Pittsburgh:
vice president, B. W. Morris, Pnit
Adelphia; recording Secretary, Mrs
Surah Smith, Philadelphia; corres
ponding secretary. Theodore Moor
Philadelphia: treasurer, | Willian
Moore, Vitisbureh. On Thursday
the State Colored Baptist Sunday
Schools ‘of-the State began a two:
day session. ae:
BISHOP HURST IS
FOR CHURCH UNION
Beloved Prelate Declare:
No Man or Group of Men
Can Finally Prevent It
\ erent,
her ee
‘Ss ~ FOR
1 ile .
Ne AR
Fi ge bs os
oe ane
ge ees vas
To the Editor:
Th answer to Your inquiry as to
my’ views regarding the movement
for the. Unification of the Nexro
Mestad Churelies Of America, T
wish to” observe that. this, muve-
ent is the nuteome wf Word ean
ditions, ‘The tendeney. of the day
ix toward a spraller world, Ine
creasing capacity. far hunni tsso-
Gintion und conperation ts leading
To that end, This tendency Is Uae
strong. for apy man or group of
nen to suund fn hs way and sur
vive
AS vetiorled in your: issue of Tast
week, some of he-bishops may be,
linfavornble to. the unification of
the three ebiirches, "Their atti-
tude may reuwd its consumation,
Ine it eamnat defeat it Lam eon
Vineed that the unification of these
tives Methadist bodies “means
fore efficient service to Che race
Whom they serve and, in itself, an
cifert. to strengthen ihe Kingdom
OF God Whose value ein be
Measured only inthe. results
nchieved. in the coming Fears,
JOHN HURST
epee
City and County Workers
Plan Upbuilding of
Church Work
A general dixeussion of elurreh
work, raral and urban, tagether
With” nethods ind plans for the
upluilding of the work has acett-
pled the attention of ministers and
Inymen aitending (he 31st annnal
session wf the Annapolis District
Conference, which opened at fohn
Wesley ML, Chureh. Waterbury,
Tuesday. District Superintendent
JS, Carroll ix in charge.
Al the Epworth Teaeue anni-
versiry Tuesday night, with Dis-
friet Uresident Mattile Carter, pre-
siding, Tey. F. Tf. Butler. of ‘Thil~
AdeIphia, delivered the address,
‘A Sunday School rally was held
Weanesdas, with Rev. D.W. Hays
presiding, “Tn the eveninz, Kev. ©.
A. dohnson ant Rev. J. W. EL
Rowen, dt delivered addresses,
Tew, Dr Ta I. King, of New Or.
deans. and “Tey. J.C. Allen, of
Sparrows. Point, “were among Ue
speakers Thnrstay afternoon.
"The Women's Home and Poreign
Missiimary Society field sway in
ihe afternoon, ‘The spenkers in
chided {he president, My. Oses
Matthews, Miss M. Knight. Rew,
Kod. Mitchell, Mrs. it). Pleteher
and Mrs, Estelle Duckett.
"The anniversiry of the Annap-
otis ‘District Development Leasne
Was hekt at night, with Rey. ALE
Mitchell presiding, | Dr. W. A.C,
Thughos, Director of Negra Work
in the M. B. Chueh, fs on the pro-
gram for an address.
rida will be given ever to i
discussion af the Centenary pro
gram, anid an outing will follow
husiness seseion Saturday morning,
Tie, 7. S| Carrell will proach
this Sinday morning, Rev, Mitehell
in the afternoon and “Kev. THe
Carpenter at night.
ROYAL PALACE HOTEL
OUT-OF-TOWN GUESTS
: ——
Sauyes Williams, New Yorks Me. nnd Mes
Te manns, Attanite Citys Mee an Mes, Wa
Harford, pittstairah! Hairey Ceokn, New
Grlenies Tacs Mee ml Mes. J We TDI
[ichnmad: de Be bentist, De Ca Mr. nd
Stra Athert Chandler, N. Yur Mee anil srs
Hares. Ge Sewaed, Chieaise: John W, Tone,
Viiiadelyhing Mes and Mew. John rw,
Htinnpton, Vane ate, and Mex Win, Jolin,
Pee Mies and. Mes. daes” Brown, WC
Be. Catnsions Cinelnati, Oa Subert Natty
Sool Sark Se asi Hanke Atlantic, Cit
Ghok Monde, Marristarz: Willie Laws
Ch nde ad Mra, Myers, Withdurs.
iil
cigareites
5
10°
They are GOOD!
Classified Advertisements
FOR SALE FOR RENT
= Saaneanintanan| it ices ae
A LEERY ace”
FOR SALE 4) cinion nterots Le
Biddle St., W., 407 bl scenvats suiatte Tor sles, store
a a {S| as pacioe, ‘SII'S. Stricker Sto 7
88 Be oe | ————
fe TORCELAIN BATH AND ToLLEr FOR RENT
: "ORCH, EMENTED CELLAR & Store
Bl lac ens occur esosna
IL. E. Houck & Co. f itahlo for Halrerener, Barbe
BL__i0t wonme euraw sxares fl Brighe fy, Matec Buty
Sen ERECT Apply to 907 McMECHEN 8
FOR SALE—1530 W. Lexington: —
St. Southern exposure, 3 story, 9|————_—_
rome aed eth Eat Gesien ce | FoR RTE weed
Hossession in 30 days. Price $3500.|rmoms and bath. Apply, J. N.
Inspection by, appointment only. |! Gull ateeet, or phinte Ome
GEORGE He MOIS astm, rani
ae ie: furuished, Aypls to 034 Linen
EE | rnin ot
HOR SALA—834 — Edmondson|iasrimit; sttable tor lfee, store
Ave. Southern exposure, 3 story, 9 fe eariee y Se eee ae OY S. Seer te 8
rooms and bath, Lot 16599 ft. Suit-|" Fo iexT—one Tange front
able for apartments, Possession inj, mrtinm sie. malate rent
[30 days, Inspection by appoint-|o— vs SM arenes
ene ong wong | (Reet ee a as
Organization TT ee
Brokerage Dept aalnite er na epamente ths
Charles and Suratogn Sts, fist, tw retined parties, Apply. 8
| sehen ne Anne
| For Sale—Houses
| A tick a: foie Sts tatry
site HC Suman nc tor
Ifa Ueki tna aotary
100 Tork No Tond St. story,
Apply to GROSS & onANT
| eal Bitte Ga at62 Droid al Avo,
: ‘Phone $d, 100. gy 4k
Se
| FOR SALE
| 505 Sanford Place
Avis on preatioes, n
For Sale
|| 2wo mazestoar xovses
|| “Zo e00 Block of Carer Stent
W. w, HUGHES! Ticonsed Broker
jit eat
| Tutcetad ot Hens
| 824 Goorse St. ‘VEmnon 2065-9
Frit RAGHU S Uali stort, Baler
Sa EA coors beeen oer a
seit ten Sct
saree, ae
“TRATSEN NEN deen jot A
aT Site Shaner en
pre
Tag ak ES
Bike. “Rpnige init deze svete
ae
SS
a oro
| Walk In and Ride Out
USED FORDS
MSGI, SSS Seve
Used Ford Company |
eins
HUDSONS FOR HIRING
Lambert Auto Co.
‘
UNION-MADE CIGARS
‘MT. VERNON BLUNTS
Be, or 2 for 15e
413: EUTAW STREET
Bin xe 7 H48, 4 At
Denvers "Teas
AL AM Calored Stures
10 Cents
egrnlratsdhdetatesstendibedsintetcol tal eaancootl etn
= NO. 13 E
2 ars am tethered with
| BUD RECS, ROACHES, FES
= ox ovunie issKnS
Use No. 13 Exterminator?
E ott Zinden ave, Emon UTS E
Lue
Fienin
ip E. FINE Z
A Roofing. Tinning and E
BE: Painting E
eStove and Furnace Work
A Gutters and Spouting =
2574 Laurens Street =
2 Baltimore, Md. E
Phone, MAdison 3371-WE
Pemmamnmmmmscimmnnenmennmeat
Se
Do Your Feet Perspire?
Wit Stop 1: and Make Your Feet Happy
vobx pnucoist xasit |
_ THE AFRO-AMERICAN
| FOR RENT—Fiveroom apartment, ied
ene, inn quit home. Apply Tai? Mex
Clon street. 1 ae8 41
FOR HEN'T Three rooms, thitd door, also
Imsement: aihiable for aie. wore, oF heat
sf pclae. “BUU'S. Stricker St. 7 288 4, 11
r FOR RENT
Store
JAt tho Corner of MeMochon and Etti
Streets
table for Mairdressor, Barbor_ Shop|
Shoo Shine Patlor or Shoomaking
‘Sonly to 507 MeMECHEN ST,
haa
POR WENT—Apartment, pewnd floor.
fanmail bath Anise ZN. Fortine,
{Ha tal stew, or ‘hte HHOnvewod O21
POR RENT —toonm, faralshed oF Un:
furulshet, “Apply to 638 Linden Ave,
FOR RENT —Thre rotin, Wied Boot, abo
seit; saleable for offen, store, or bea
fs purlags SIN. Steteker Si. 8 41T-IR
VOR WENT Tarse fewnt rout and
one motion she mvatcente feats ADDIS,
Tat Drain wveme,
Peis RENT office romans wl wake Heal
lace fos dentist. Appiy, 683 We Texte.
fea nent een
“Fok WENT—Stew Tarze roomy for rent,
sulfate Cor am aportagent, with wwter and
Fay to eter partes Aypls. S47 Marlen
nevniw, oppmite the Seventh Day Adventist
Chet
FOR RENT Fiat for rent. AVDIS 128
i smlcieg olnest, ‘
FO REN'T—A — fone-toom sathutrinn
iss on eae line: only. 20 huboates ele
fron eits, with anon. miso eetele Hgts
Anbly (‘UH Dratd Hi avenue,
FOR WENT —Puraished room for luly or
entieman, S20 per Week, Apply atter
Fp. te, MT S, Fremont avenue.
ROI KENT=—Thee room wit aecutd Noor
salable for Tight huasekectleiy oF Uy feOta
fn ded tour, fueulshed ge uafurlshed. © Ap
piv atter Play, Ang, Ath, at 1875 Nocth
Uneey street,
————
0. K. TIRE COMPANY
TURES, ACCESSOMIES, TUBES
BLL STANOAD MAKES
‘USED TIRES
EXPERT VULCANIZING
AM Work Guranteed Frve alte
Mt, VErnon 4078124 W. Preston Bt, |
‘Tohn J. Arthur, Prop.
D cies a ae alates: ipceinaae
QUALITY TIRES
Direct To Consumer
At Wholesale
$10,000-Mile [88x5. $32.00
CORDS: [saxo $33.50
Boxtig $12.25)" 6.000-Mile
Bax3i4 $16.75] FABRIC.
Bind $18.75/30x3 87.00
pout SED.TH]RON3 $7.70
Bix S21.00/3 bob SILT
B2xt% S28.50/R2N4 313.00
BAN $25.00)33x4 $13.50
B2N11G $28.50) xk $14.00
FRANK BROS.
Ait W. Mt. Royal Ave.
Au se3at
fA
| BODY BUILDING
|
| B0
Repairing Painting
}
At Half Price
| exrenr WORKMANSHIP
L. SCHOEN, Prop.
{ ae See a
fe pe ee
Will buy or 1ond on Ist, 3nd oF
3rd “‘mort-
OM ie. 8
oy sume day
—TO— — Kasy terms.
KATZ, 222
K ATZ etx
PLaza 1660
After Office Hours at
2019 Malivon Ave-~Madlaon 2797
MONEY LOANED
ON FIRST AND SECOND
MORTGAGES
On Building Association
Plan
Easy terms. 6% interest
Apply
Milburn Building &
2 Loan Asso.
700 Equitable Bldg.
Phone: PLaza 5995
WILL BUY YOUR
PROPERTY FOR
CASH
QUICK SETTLEMENTS
fee me betorn you sell your house.
Plenty of money to foun on 4st, 204,
or Sertgesee
C. W. Weissenborn
8. E. Cornor Lexington and Mount 8!
Atte 6 P.M, Phone Gltmor 3520
J
Se
S. H. SMITH
Real Estate
Bought and fold
roperty Goldvon Wery Liberal Term |
Tall Loans Nogotinted
aty Mem
| ey SRST avai |
be NAST HSCS Sie aI
BOYER—An loving remembrance of Sirs.
Marearet G. Doser, beloved wite of Edvard
Taser, of “Conowlngn, Md.," who depazted
iy tite July 41, 1923, aged C4 yenrs. ‘The
Aecemsedl vote a inembee of 3M, Zour AL Me
EL Church, Conowinss. for 53. years, an
way for many years Colthtal superintendent
Jot the Sunday Netool. Merlde tee hushaad,
tie followin ehiired survive: Mes. Mare
Ke Jones, Twvertord, Pact Ses, Hanna
Mond. tern Mawes, Wa: Miss Cluda Rover,
Lan Hovee, Rohert Woser, Gonossinzo, Md.
Chass Moser, “Antiwore, tt Geo. Boxer,
Huvertort, T',:” Moses Moser, Evanston,
TIL: Alfred Waser, Fort Deposit, Md., aud
1 ‘grandchiidrea,
Life's work eel dane,
Litera crown welt oa!
Sow comes Fest
BENNIE—Me. Tasrn ennie departed this
Hife 19 sents azo tolay, Auznst 2, 1012, at
the Jutin'x. Hopkinx Hospital. Gane, "but
int forgotten, Loved i life, In death re-
membered. A chalr fe snemnt Jn oe home
Which wecer ean be hlled.—its hie devoted
mother, B. “Casey. Hroakitne, Md.
CARPENTER—Winfeld, Gone, but wot
forgotten.
"is God that lifts one comforts igh,
Ur sinks then In the grave:
Tle tees, wnat Messed he TUe mamne,
ie takox ick what le gives.
<p his sevuted wife mud matter Inte,
Howie Catventer ant echt rook,
COLE—In loving remembeanee of me dear
taother, Annie Cale, who departed Ute Life
wens’ sear ay.
Siurrumled by frlenls, 1 nut lonesome,
Ta the takdst of plomaee fain Mes
A sulle om my faee ant un aching heart,
Ham always think of yoo.
Hy ler loving danehter,
‘Miks. EMAL WHITE,
COOPER—Aivn Cooper, twloved damchter
jot Anulia aud Fidwnrd ‘Cooper, died uly
2H, 192. One sear azo toy. Aged 13
years,
{hin fara we rhea to save hers
Veasers and tears were all in "vain:
Hays angels came aad took hee
roa ‘thie world o€-twll aad pal.
"hy we Meter and strother,
Sl fe gone, tut was x0 youn and tary
She xluimbers sweet, bat kiows no. cares
Her heart wns true, her life wax sous,
Yet ant wir will, It Gols he one.
“Hip tee anne wand uncle, Atlee od Bae
taolMomesonees
MURPHY In Tova remembennce ot my
fleur mother, Kama Mtuephy, who. departed
this Hite tn" Cull Griuuiph of fatth ‘oa July
sn, ae,
‘One stat gear, with all its loaner,
‘Siar dent sileaty Dade ts. paety
Wet. dene suthee, alt the change
Cannot take yon froin my heat
Your sit fave ie always before me,
Tean feet soige aene Duunt in sues
‘The soot Inet look sah Enve me
SUID lingers in my mind.
T nvwuen Cor soit, dewe nother,
Hae tot with mubwaed shone!
Wor the: hwiet tht owent sincerely,
Mourn silently amd fow.
Hy hee Inving son,
ERNAND SHORTER.
STSCO—In ni) Wit Incline Pemenbrance of
my lehiced Instat, dame Th neo, Who
Au Auiatist Gy HOTS, weve yeuey ago,
ali, oe the thine ows Ay
Tyger to iene aay sbi a the asset
ye and bye.
ANSIE MA'TTNEWS gIscD.
WATTS—In foving remembennee of my
tone liitoned wn oie father, Kodotphe Wales,
who diva gue sear gu, August 5, EL.
Dowth tus robhed ime of mg dear busboud,
(OF the ne 1 hued so sell:
rakew foam Hie world of sorro%e,
Safely ioane with Hin «9 dwell,
Hy tls Loving Wite,
We mise thee In our home, dear father,
{wer ise thee tn thy” pices
our. iwme ie ilark aa lonels, dear father,
Without the stating of thy deae fnew.
By Us Sons,
WHITESIn remembrance of say doar bs
tw, who departed this life J0 yenes ago
uty at, 190%.
We sew loved! you sully nls you
AS IU davis sixteen venes,
Tw ths lonely lumes of thinking,
“Vunahts of gon are ever tear.
Time wins Mat aw nobis wet.
“Tine tang: tke te sya st res
int tae will weser stops the. Fon
For Sot, loved ome, why has gone betore,
fis is loving wife,
ksi wares.
YOUNG—yo sad bt loving memory of
Jone dear imiher, Lattie Yong, who. de-
meted this Tite Coxe yenes wo, AUSIAL
iz, as.
Hose (Mite, Ja dently remembore.—
Mer daughter, Mrs. Dulss Brown: her 30,
Mr, father ibis: Wee grundaon, Master
enrt lt
CARD OF THANKS
Mes, Tanita 0, Gel whales to thank
ee nian {Howls for thele kiniuess at the
entit af ber hssiane, mb foe Une Toa tifol
oral. desigay which Cruly expressed Sour
lore,
CARD OF THANES
Mrs, das, 1. Paschal, of 130 Divisinn
stivets “take this tnvainy tne hak her
finns fries aid nokateoes for thelr arts
tit Kindness a sgtpntey ain mys
Tut's recent. Hleens iil for lal esi
ft dently, espeeiatle Mr. nna Sirs, dol
hake, af Tagesnm, Mr. a Mes, Jk Man,
nisi uf "Tansson, Clans Ni fy wf SnD St
Chet, Brn Hews Ke his der.
Tiwctor 3. Habe Wheater pastor, Rev.
Willian Hl Dean, :
LANDON GRIGG
Aoquirted this life Saturday, Subs 22, 1922
fn Muon, Conn He me tore in Linenky,
Wa dine 25 80: ene to Caltinre 3
Jae nso, wad wes married to Ela B
Meuckes. September 11. TMS. Me iv the
i nt, Mmm Margret (Geko anal the. tate
Henjiwin Grizz, of Newport, IL brother
te Mary" Howblny tirizz. We eaves a de>
soted wife wu farally to moucn Choke 10%,
TY MEMORIAM
fu sud tt foving anemone nf my dont
danzhtre ait sister, whi departed by Hite
wis: yeaen wan, July 27, 201, .
Six sok lonely. seme ane qs
Since tng iene ister lrenthed hive Insts
tik fw wr anise the vole wr foved mo Wel,
Unig m brokeu heart can tell,
By ler devoted Sister,
Mg inart fine heen ertied nil woitnded,
Sty ite hie been Ionely and snd
Bat only one look up sour fee, dear duuigh-
ters
Would 'make me cnntented -and sted,
iy her lienken-henrted Mather.
OBITUARY
Magnolia ¥. Williams departed this life
vale lg. 23, at H8s13 a mae
Hone GIN Mtn steed, iter fam
ral touk place "Tueulny. 0, pe Ms a
Gators A se He chnreh, We, Nore
Preach a touehiag ncrmoa,. Henytifl
um eee renered by aes. Clara Tat
TCataynre) and athens, Sls wax Kind and
devoted tuushter. and sinter, and u falta
erker for ive elinch. pa ahe. year of
Te poune. tite, she scas Tnzhly) esteet
Be ale tpe:tgralteShutes: wre anaiy a
nating he, Tenves ty mnen Cee, tos
efaiuntad anothers and Cater, four sisters
and ta eaters.
Stas mht hour, when the angels came,
{vnd broth free Tink in our chal:
[hrs nt tre anv, she se,
ie we will soe hee enn.
rin’ shuoe x sUill ovoel wee, mothe,
"fhe warm tears of zete€ ott fal
ours will pine, but micmory wil sty
‘Of Magnolia ieyond earth call
POSTPONED
from Aug. 6 to Aug. 13
om aeeount af unhinished. work nthe tlds
(ie of the St, Jol 3. Ea Chucel, Patepseo
Mri AA) Coy Ald. Keyenine and eam
Iiucting” service! wil beein Ansnst 13th,
Wiech’ or: aeial matice fm thie paver.
‘De. DW. Bayes, Pasote
Services in the Various Churches
————————
Sharp St. Memorial M. E. 3
Church wf)
Dolphin and Etting Streets: 1 1
Schoo, Ue eyed
TS cea 4:3
HOLY COMMUNION Saas ai he
Som er Pet in} ha eM Hs
FO Re Roe seen be Hct eas ae
"ie tie ten cope oe RLS
SE
| Pe eanererererr or
“PREELY YOU HAVE RECKIVED, FREELY GIVE”
Help ‘The
AGED MEN’S AND WOMEN’S HOME
1622 DRUID HILL AVENUE, BALTIMORE, MD.
‘the Board of Managers kindly solicit your liberal contribution
to help the support of the nredy Inmates‘
We must ralse the sum of $1,000 WITHIN THE NEXT 30 DAYS
Kindly send all contributions to
Rev, NM. Carroll, Pres., 1320 N. Calhoun St Baltimore, Ma,
‘A special committee of all the ministers of M. 2, Churches of
the city and vicinity, and Rev, 3, §, Williams, D. D.y Distriet
‘Superintendent, are all helping this urgent: cause
Rev. N. M. Carroli, President»
‘Jno. H. ‘Toadwin, 1st Vice-Pres., 1027. Druid Hill: Avenue
Mrs: Sophia Simpson, 2nd Vice-Pres,, 1284 Druid: Hill Avenue
‘Ntrs, Lilly Ellis, Secretary, 1245 Edward Street
JOUN WESLEY M. E, CHUROE
Slaten aud Montgomery” Ste,
ev. 3. Ht donking, M.D, Mlolater
Residence, 13L'W. HLL St.
Mr. RD. Jenning, 8. 8, Supt.
11 a.m, sermon by the De. N, M. Caroll.
ris will be bis Goth muversary ax a Chri
inn winister, one aad hone Ba. 2:80
Pins Sita coal.
ST. PAUL M. E. CHURCH
Saratoga ao ‘Serowder Sts,
‘Ker, Leet Miller, Pastor
21 mae Comianmion Service. | The Gos
gel ‘Teit will open Ia the ehieeh yard at
Ap. ma. roeching by Ree, Mes, Deunee.
‘Open air rerlval services exch ‘might. duciug
the week. Ker, Sirs, Dealer in ebarse,
A horus of HIEly voices will lend 4a. the
Sng.
Spititoal Services rendered ot
FIRST INDEPENDENT M. F. CHURCH
Sib W, Peres, 3.
Retween Freemont Ave, hil Oxston St.
tee, Jala E, Cooper, Pastor
1a, mi, sermon hy” the Pastor, und test
si orelack,, Sunday ‘Selool. Hey. We 1
Watton, Supt, Sister Ee Walton, avsls:
tant. Tei pe m., teneling aad commune
mit, follawet by spiritual tant, and. weekly
persis Suesdas, Weilnoadtny, hnrsstny nal
Fridus, aud spiritual test. Dyors open at
8 welocte
EVANGELICAL M. E. CHURCH
Meklderrs and Somerset Ste,
Es ee ee eee:
Henienec, HS Kitsor St.
Wiliams, “Testy Zteharlan i. 6,. followed
Tha, my preaching: tir Ree, ‘Innes be
with pieitanl test, 2290 pede Simday
Schools seme Tohnsan, Supt. 8p. the
aera hy Narcan Mewklns, fltoxeed with
Spleitunt teats Jee, John D, Watkinny tna
tors Mes, Gears I, Couper, president; Jaa,
1, Witlianis, wlrurehy clerk
EASTERN M. E, CHURCH
Melderty St, and Patterson Park Ave,
Hex, 3. a, Lewis, Pastor
Wa me Dinfor Chneeh, “TL m., seman
by. the "Pastor, sihjert,. “Tage. for Gass
overs 2380 ju tice Shang’ Shon 8 Bio
prenchins, Tuesday nnd Wednessluy "eve:
Ding. class, ‘Thursday evening, prayer
etl.
‘AMES MEMORIAL M. E, CHURCH
Cures and Tinker Sts,
iter, Ernest Ts, De Dax Pastor
G me tie, chive breeting, ‘Thoms Lane,
award Weems, and Tobert Furater, lew
rex UR ay tne, Stmday Selo, Robt, Tate
ain, Supt. 10a. mg Men's Tile Chess
Hh ae ne sernwon Dy pastor. 7 pty Broth
eid sertice, 8 Me Mee peeaehiliz.
‘ASBURY M. E. CHURCH
Rogers Aven, aud Hast St.
ey, Steward If, Brown, B. De, Pastor
Tein B, Keer St.
Me. GT. Stewart, 8.8, Supt,
$a. ie aperind sermon” hy the Pastor,
ait Holy Commute, 2:20. mt, Sanday
Genent. 26 ceratiuc. eacvick.
‘ST, MATTHEWS M, 5. CHUSCE
inst 2rd levee
Kes, Ie, Green, Pastor
Varsonnse, 437 Sed! Stenet
21m tay rerun by Pastor. 2:30 p,m
Sutning Selon A ps M., sermon iy the Be
HLM. Wastingtom, Kemeuber aur exer.
ion tw Verwsw'e Crave, Amgust Fat, Jn
Jxrtors sapeeintensont: ie Sith weal
taut siperintenent, -K, Larwzie wreskieat, 3,
K.Ktuziand; Jr, Be farague president, Maw
Cars: Brotherhiod, Joshun Yullor, president
fauties’ Aut Socieis, B. Hullee,” president
Wek M. Syetety, Mee Miunie Larver,
president,
CENTENNIAL M. £. CHURCH
Gor) Caeoline wl Hank Steves
es, Charles 8. rigs, Pastor
10 4. tty Junior Church, Msn Stanly,
Superliteniout, 1 ae ia, Hols” Constnun
June 23H fe the, Sunday Sehinole Sx
Carel Hoss, Siperlutendeut, 8p. i
Qeilizht service ant Holy Comnuunion, We
WHE lor elid to sez yu amd @ Wart wel
fone mvchite 00,
GULIS MEMORIAL M. P. CHURCH.
Stuckton Xt, near aitimors
Hers Hilton A. Parker, Pastor
King’s Imuzhters’ Day, Mrs. Mary 8,
alas pendent, TOON iy ehoay Hr
Wine itarnee, emer, TLR. tis seri0m hy
pastor, subject, "dob's Integrity." 3:30
Peis Sinilag” Sell 8pm, amc
Scents tothe baal of trstees he Pastor,
After, whivde Hele Canmuion will, be at
ministered, Sister Hilzn Brown, Supt. at
SUS lie, Wan, Eines, mintnter’s steward,
= see we eee
acting yuster, Monday, block carnival will
ane Soe ete
TEESE SOUTEER GHA
hy Kev, Sister Kennard. A p.m, special
ae
ne eters ae to
Eons PERN SNe OTN
“PRIDAY, AUCUST 4, 1922 -
Various Churches.
rh
|)
eek
46 ie eS
MN Te ae
ail Wssiae he
ef Hee ee :
‘ Plc ea pena
7 ee
ae ane
ee ae a ee
Tov, Grace A.M. Digg -Pantor
Orcanized 7 yente. “WI hold the Bert
anoiverary hig Sunday at 2p. am, Ter.
Paleticd, ond. (x peuple will be with us.
Jolin Widseons, of First Taptint Church,
Bp. tig St. Take’ Orphan ehfldren will
fe within, Revs Nistre Hllups will prencl,
ireasted by the sixgearold boy preacher,
‘The shureh hay been. yalated anit some re:
Thnveline, bax ton Woe, Norcteen. haeing
the week Wit, be given ont fron the pulpit,
Meccenminents free o8 Suny. ‘i
Se
ALLEN A. M. E, CHURCH
es ee oe See OE aaa
Ree. D. i WML, D, D., Pantor
11 a ties oer I the Pastor, os 8, Pla
anil Commivatan, 2:30 p. ni.. sunday Rebool
ews be resent at this service, 8 Ds Din.
Arceiak ing weesiee by Ge ebake, "Str
roe Stansbues, director, M.D. Brent,
ines 8 Winiuesdag,Augnst O01, Wer,
Sh. Viestt, of Me Zion MB, Chuted,
Rill preach speciai sermon ‘to the ADet
Cee Teague of Aled ALM. Be Chore,
Sind thelr felends, Mt BEAD ps nae at Ate,
Ghee ke ene thd eongreention will bo,
Irresent, Win, fT, Tutler, presidents, Bev,
D.C. IM, Pastor, ae
TRINITY A. M. E. CHURCH
TLinden Aer. and Riddle St,
er, A. Le Ganon, Pastor i
Varsonige, ise MeCullah St.
9:9 ams Sunita School. TL a. May ante,
oon hy Pastor, Holy Communlon, “8 pms
a erelec.
FIRST INDEPENDENT A, X. E. CHUROR
BESSuldle St, tear Ponnaslvanla Ase,
Weve Int Chetis, DD. Day Pawtor
Besideace: 2242 Aveste’ Ave, .
11a, m., merinon hy the pastor, "2 p,m.
Suny School, . Carroll, Supt.” 8D. Mis
memo isthe Matar at's Sinn
miner, aft are wekeme te ovr ane
| PAYNE MEMORIAL A. M. EF. CHURCH
Hey, J. 3. Martin, Pantor
6:40, ywayer wad pratse wervien, 10 a, tos
Wille clans, Me, J. He Maxwell, teacher.
M1 a. nie breaching service and Communion
Aduainintcerd to ehidrem, 2:00 Us
Sinny Schoo, ste. J. H. Neal. Supt, 6 th
ine elise theeting, 8. Me preaching were:
feo and Camniinion sdalastered to ade
chur, Weekly serslees: | Revival serviees
RUM Toe vanducted neh ight by ie Rev,
Mrs, Deaner, J. 1, Ayers, sreretary.
ANTIOCH CHRISTIAN CHURCH
SANG. aratog St near Cirey
Hors Ih, Ht, Knight, Pastor
‘gi Data SIL Ave.
Stowardesy Day. Mrs. Carrio. SeGowans,
residents, TL ty, ta, thanksgleing. xerster,
pe ne Sapiday Sehout, 8 we mM SORION
fo the Ealemannt Pleastre Chub hy the,
Postar, and Communion, Joh Vibert,
stevenri; Weare dolino, Sipt.. Chua of
SMeadny i
‘MT, OLIVET CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Distalon Strort, at Laurent
John W, Heats, Minkster
"Tab N, Mount Steoet
Silay School, W280 nmi: Supt, Walter
Dixit, 17k, they mornlax WorslNy, wermon
ant Commanion,. 6 to 7 Be th, Junine Ea
fienvor society, 7 to 8 fh, ti, Biideavor
Roclety Ye. mweting. 8p. im., acenlag
word, sermon and Communion, Mid-week
paper necting, Wednesday, 8 pm, eake
{ea onrd esting sirst Monday ia each,
month, 8 p.m
MACEDONIA CHRISTIAN CHURCH
TI27 Lexington Ntroet
Alexander Johns, Pastor
Heery Sunday, preaching ant Communion,
11 ie ang ad A pene Mile Sebo, 3 Bet
Motweck prayer meeting, Wedueudey ‘at 8
be mi
WHE PEOPLES CHRISTIAN CHURCH
pC. Mak Browne, Pavtar
es. (Bib. Beowne, Pawtar
parwina, AZhNHnd ateort
sy nme cag telings OS tm.
unio inte, AY ne tn Denver and oly
Ueto 284 fy ns Snag Sebool
Fein int eink meetings Rf ter
ection aut aly Conan, "Wee Matas
rcachisx nnd penine service cach ARN.
FIRSY COLORED BAPTIOR CHURCH OF
SALILMORE, HD.
or, Careline tod Miter St
eve Allert 3, reese hy anlar
ious HT Astin hve
11 a. nce mori hy Panton apt hapttn,
130 4, tne Me Seba Se) fs moe Ce
anton nod srenteing of mreabcen.” 0:8,
us mere, By tae werman by” Pant.
Sukie Srerclones” Standage. denen
fivetings Welnewiny igi, Snaday Rehool
finger aoetings Friday aisht, prager mneet=
Iie "Morrie Sipene eter.
82, MATTHEW BAPTIST CHUROK
Tiuront At, tear Fafagetto. Ave.
Mews fa Harvie The ve Pantor
11 atime, pening hr, the str, 2:80
pone sunday Selma ster Se ilo,
Mgt” a ws mer premching hy Kee H,
Mites Dba aston of ft. Carma Bap.
ae Church” acgraned. by ile cook
tin, fatawed ny Holy Communion. 28
Me pe yn distr, Mtaey Dos
Vina prnkdnats Siter Blain B. Born vee
sresident, Br, Ws BTinwn,. crete,
2a pe. preaching “by an able divine,
Se Oi eo ebareh clei
x Residence, Ie ee
- Phone, Gtimor 21%8-W7
| tocated In noth Baltimore, oo Warner
fend Waswe sree, (Take any car th.
—|faill traafer to Wextpart car, Ket off at,
[rome Tink Poem. iret, walk wouth 0,
Mines, rearing, FE ato, stbtect,
Sloe’ hy the Tustor. Mundas”"Nehoo) a,
[250° a Preaching wt 8 pe m.. by the
WD Pastor, mabjects eTlere 14 Death Ym, the
ete a hailing Panet
Hiiapelst Chureh, ev. Junin Gry, pastor.
i
RECHIVED, FREELY GIVE” a
Ip ‘The :
D> WOMEN’S HOME " ‘
ENUE, BALTIMORE, MD. f
y solicit your liberal contribution -
"of the niedy inmates *
00 WITHIN THE NEXT 30 DAYS —
1 contributions to :
YN. Calhoun St., Baltimore, Md. ©
e ministers of M. 1. Churches of
v. #, §, Williams, D. D.y Disuriet
helping this urgent: cause
‘arroli, President >
Pres., 1027. Druid Hill Avenue
se-Pres., 1284 Druid’ Hill Avenue
tary, 1245 Edward Street
In The Social Whirl
Engagements, births, weddings, personalis, 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.
Master David Penn, 2021 Divi-
mence is spending the summer
Bell H. art spending their vaca-
tion at Detroit, Michigan.
Are you reaching out for greater success and happiness? Do you want to win? Wonder why others make it so difficult for them of their ambitions? Annoyed by strange scents and unnatural influences? Unusual and mysterious conditions silently and slowly working arguing you? Unwilling to work hard and associates shun you? That your affairs so backward instead of forward? Luck in business, domestic and love affairs not what it should be? Worry and trouble? Worry and trouble Unable to influence and control persons with whom you come in contact? Decided, in doubt or unhappy, we're to the original, old, reliable, Grace Gray De Long, "The Little White Mother." America's Illustrative Advisor. Ask for her advice, about what will be surprised, delighted and begged.
GRACE GRAY DE, LONG
420 West. Wayne Street.
Savannah
(this paper's
this paper)
S C July 28; Aug. 4-11.
Master David Penn, 2021 Division street is spending the summer with his nixit in New Haven, Conn. Ivv, and Mrs. W. H. Denn and family in Ypsilanti, Shirburn, Va., thirty-day trip. Mrs. Warner T. McGuinn left for Philadelphia. Major Charles E. Gladden will attend the Elks convention in Washington. Miss Barbara Barnes is spending Miss in Chicago, visiting her mother Dr. George Barnes;
Miss Martha, Johnson of 124 Mississippi avenue is spending the summer in Delmar, N. J.
Mrs. M. B. Johnson of 1872 Grand Hill avenue is visiting her later in Caroline County, Va.
Rev. B. T. Perkins is in his vation. He is the Lowery of Laurens street has charge of the metropolitan M. E. Church.
Miss Mary R. Johnson of North Bond street, returned home last Thursday after spending four weeks in Roanoke, Va.
Miss Fannie Parke, daughter of professors of Charlotte, N. C., visiting her aunt Mrs. Olivia B. Briggs. 235 S. Caroline street.
Miss Helen Comb, formerly of Baltimore now of New York, is visiting Mrs. Fannie Collins and friends.
Miss Herrieta Taylor and little Mrs. Manuelle of 518 St. Paul street, are spending the summer with relatives in Charlotte, N. C.
Rev. Junius Gray will be in Johnson Tuesday to attend the meeting of St. Lukes.
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Woolford, of 1138 N. Stricker street, are receiving congratulations over the birth of a son, George W. Woolford, Jr. Rev. W. N. Edwards, pastor of the Second People's Christian Church has returned to the city after spending ten days in Norfolk with his mother and children. Those who expect to attend the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs in Van Damme please Mrs. Jouis Ross or Malcolm Lockes and Flossie Mountain.
Mr. and Mrs. George W. P. McMechen motored to Wheeling, West Virginia, stopping at all points of interest along the way.
Miss Mary B. McKenzie was the host of Miss Irene Stricklin, at her home, Chestertown, Maryland, over the week-end.
Mrs. P. D. G. Pennington and Miss Nelle Fragg left for Harpers Ferry this week, where they will spend the month of August.
Miss Ida R. Elliott, a former teacher at attending the summer school at Dover State College, Dover, Delaware.
Th Misses Marion and Elizabeth Taylor of 624 W. Lanvale street, accompanied by Miss Louise Marshall of Severn, are visiting relatives and friends Philadelphia and Miss Lelin W. Lowe, instructor of Music and History, at the Westmoorch High School, Danville, Virginia, is attending summer school at the West Virginia College Institute, Institute, West Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. McCardwain Monday in late Tuesday afternoon they metored back to Perry, West Virginia where they have been summering, Mrs. Mary Smith and mother Mrs. Florence Green, 473 Linden house entertained the following Wm. Cook, Mr. Frank Savage (Bessie Post, and Mr. Archer) on Monday July 31. Wm. son was born to and Mrs. son (Mary) born to Cheesapeake Bottom on Thursday July 6th. The baby has since died the mother is doing fine.
Little Miss Evelyn J. Gentt, of 1905, Monument street and her friend Miss Janetette Hawkins are rounding several weeks visiting their cousin Mrs. Daisy Wade in County, MD. Mr. and Mrs. R. Van Horn Bennett have returned to Lawnside, N. after spending a few days with Mrs. Charles Blay of $25 Park Avenue. Mrs. Jean A. Younger, Kingwood, W. Va., was a visitor at the two American clubs on Thursday, in the city to attend her sister Mrs. Jas, Younger of Kinewood, who is ill at Mercy Hospital. State President, Mrs. Warner T. McGuinion of the Federation of Women's clubs outing of the Woodbury Deklass Home Saturday August 12 2 P. M. at Anaconda Women and friends are invited to accompany the Maryland Federation. Those desirie to go will please see Mrs. McGuinion, Lacy Penn or Mrs. Jonne
The Par Association hold a meeting in Room 10, Bannack Building, on Monday, July 31st, at 4 D. M. Officers of the Par Association are Fathimun Jackson, vice president, Lewis S. Flagg, Jr., secretary, and William C. McCard, treasurer.
Do You Wish To Know?
Mr. Herman Jackson and Miss Evelyn Lecidman were married on July 21, 1922.
Mrs. Mary Nutter of 1109 N. Carey street, has returned from a vacation trip to Frederick, MD.
Mrs. Oscar J. Waters of 1049 Myrtle avenue, is visiting friends at Atlantic Pa., will also go to Atlantic City.
Mrs. Nellie Johnson Daily of 1433 Arglee avenue is spending some time with Mrs. Smith wife of the late Bishop Smith.
Mrs. Clara Hall and daughter, of 1741 Drudg Hill avenue are spending their vacation visiting friends in Atlantic City and Philadelphia.
Miss Iradell Bradley and Martha Harmon are spending their vacation in Atlantic City and New York.
Miss Molly Polard of Boston is topping with Mrs. Amanda Robinson. 1234 Etting street.
The Epworth League is hosting the Delaware Conference is holding an institute at Montgomery College.
Mrs. Cipriu 1936 Brent school is spending the summer in Philadelphia.
in Mrs. Chra Hardesty has returned home after spending three weeks in Boston, visiting her is mother, Mrs. Lee Wilson and indulcins, Mrs. Jennie Holland and Mrs. Rebecca Wilson, Mrs. Elaine Mr. and Mrs. John A. Nelson Mr. and Mrs. John A. Nelson thank their relatives and friends for their kindness and sympathy during the illness of their late daughter, Charlene Linder Nelson and for the many mail tokens at her death. *
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Johnson have returned to their home in Roland at a funeral time in Philadelphia, Atlantic City and several other points of interest in the North.
Mrs. Florence Maddox, 629, W. Lanvale street, after a long illness is improving from a serious operation at the Providence hospital to sit up in. She is sitting at B. Hughes. She is sit up now.
Mrs. Martha Young and daughter, Miss Bearice Young have just returned from Atlantic City, N. J., where they attended the funeral of an annu. Mrs. W. Hopkins of Philadelphia, Pa., a delegate of the Ushers Union Convention last week was the guest of her aunt Mrs. Julia Rogers and cousins Mrs. L. S. Henry and Mrs. Ann Smith of N. Carson.
The Belmont Social Club which was organized Feb. 9, held its first outing Thursday evening July 27. They had a very pleasant time. All members were present. Mrs. B. N. Powell is president and Mrs. Jas
Among the week-enders who
motorized to the Printer Couture
sales department.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Woodhous,
and daughter Julia moorced from
Baltimore to the Prather Cottage
accompanied by Miss Clementine
Murphy and Mrs. G. Fleet and
son.
Dr. James Byrum of Orange, N.
J. was the guest of his sister-
law J. Fleet last week
spent the remainder of his vaca-
tion with Rev and Mrs. W. A.
C. Hughes at Gatheirsburg, Md.
who are spending their vaca-
tion in their summer residence.
Mrs. Mamie Jacques and Miss
Ronnie Adams are among the
boarders at the Prather Cottage.
Gatheirsburg, Md. Mr. Tess
is worth of Baltimore, Md. was seen
in the Prather Cottage last Sunday.
Mrs. Kate Archer 2237 Drudl
Hill, Mrs. Margaret Stokes, 1921
Division street, Mrs. Laura Archer
Hill, 115 Merriest Avenue, 1921
Division street, Mrs. Blanche Christian, 504 Bloom
street, Mrs. Edith Springs, 504
Bloom street, Miss Eunice Moore, 106
Annamals avenue, commemorative
course in First Aid under the American Red
Cross and were awarded certificates.
Have the AFRO follow you when
you go on your vacation. Don't
miss reading the news from home.
WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION
If you suffer with FEMALE TROUTLES, such as Ovaries Pain, Pains in the lower part of your Stomach, boiling-down Pains, or irregular periods, if you have that tired, warm, Nervous and run-down feeling so common to women, if you have faint all kinds of symptoms, if you have been told that an operation was necessary YOU MAY BE MADE WELL AND STRONG AGAIN. Write for FINE BOOKS of information and advice
THE PELVO MEDICINE CO.
Memphis.
Tenn.
BETWEEN
Miss Gertie Wells' Syncopators of Washington, D. C.
Photo by Penn Studio
Master Alfred James Ashton
Began in Carolide England, was
3 years old in June, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ashton 525 Hoffman street.
A NOTER WEDDING
The marriage of Mr. Isaac A. Gross and Mrs. Laura V. Homely took place on Monday evening July 31, 1822, at the parsonage of Waters A. M. E. Church. Rev. J. W. Norris the pastor performed the marriage. The happy couple returned to the home of the bride 717 N. Eden street, where a reception was held. They will spend their honeymoon in New York. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Harvey (white) the employee of the company will have been employed for 28 years and Mrs. Selma Johnson, and Mrs. J. W. Norris witness the ceremony.
ENTERTAINED
Mr. and Mrs. Cesar Jackson, of 1921 Druid Hill avenue, delightfully entertained on Thursday evening July 27, in honor of Mrs. Mollie Wagner of New York, who has been their guest for the past ten days. Among the assembled guests were noted: Mesdames Geo Carter, Sophia Ross, Anthony Welborn, M. Johnson A. Sylves Eliel Woodlin, Clifton Turner Bessie Brown and Rosa Tankard Misses Sadie Boone, Inez Boone Eva Alwyn and A. Stokley, Mr. and Mrs. Waymond Holland, Mr. and Mrs. C. Standard, Mr. and Mrs. M. Young and Messrs. J. C. Rich, H. Johnson, O. Brown, Bar Wagner, H. Green, W. Brown Hugh Brisee, Jas. Boone, E. G. Trust and F. G. May, Mrs. Wagner returned home Friday evening.
BADGE TESTS ON FRIDAY
Due to the fact that a large number of boys have won their movie swimming badges, the Public Athletic League will hold a contest Friday (Friday). All men and boys who swim are urged to be present. The contest will be held from 1 to 3 P. M. M. Bronze, silver and bronze, given according to the proficiency of the swimmer.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
The Board of Directors of the Black Sox Base Ball and Exhibition Club, Inc. in response to the petition of signers pertaining to George Gray becoming a member of the Black Sox Base Ball Club. We wish to state that we have no vacancy in the present club. Board of Directors
MARION WATKINS, Chair*
To the Patrons of Maryland Park:
You are aware that the Base Ball
attractions this season at this Park
has been absolutely priced
high and are regarded regardless
of cost. We are securing the Western
Colored League teams to come cast
and play in Baltimore at an advanced cost. To do this we are
forced to spend additional money to
patrons these attractions, to meet this extra cost we are forced to put our general admission back to 40 cents.
Grand Stand and Box Seats remain
the same as heretofore.
Female Agents Wanted
To solicit for a reliable firm, Must
have some business experience; reference
required. Will pay salary and commission.
Apply to the
MORGAN GRANTS
DEGREE TO FOUR
Four students, all of them teachers of the Baltimore public schools, will receive the Bachelor of Arts degree at the closing of the summer school session eleven of those班会举行 they are Miss Kate I. Sheppard, Jesse L. Nicholas, William Anderson and George Albert Owens. Announcement of the for the expansion of the college, the faculty and additional courses will be made by President J. O. Spencer.
MARRIED
Miss Mamie V. M. Ridgley of
Mt. Airy, Carroll County, Md., was
married to Mr. Lester R. Budd of
Westminster, Md., on Saturday
July 29th at 8 P. M. at the home
of her sister Mary M. M. at
St. Georges avenue, Wilson Park,
Brown, Md., by Rev. John
Holmes.
A host of friends and relatives attended the wedding.
VIENNA
Vlemm, Md., Aug. 3, N.-M. Mr. Joe, Collins is a very sick. *M.* Igs. L. Carr, of Philadelphia, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Robinson, the daughter of Bee, T. Brow, of Burlington her sister of Bee, T. Brow, of Burlington the Crestown Camp Sunday. *M.* the new school is nearly completed.
BERLIN
Berlin, Md., Aug. 2.-Sunday was Children's Day at Tyree A, M. E. Church. The pastor preached a special sermon to the children at 1 a. m. Rev. John T. Molock preached at St. like A, M. E. Church. Snow Hill at 3 p. m., to a very large congregation. Rev. Chris. Harmon is pastor, and at 8:30 p. m. the Children's Day program was rendered. Albert E. Purnell, Supr. Mrs. Mazzle Ayres was mistress of ceremonies. Rev. John T. Molock, pastor, "This Twelve Trilions of Tyree A, M. E. Church are working hard to raise 82,000 October 8th." Those on the sick list are Mrs. Caroline Purnell, Charlie L. Fitchett, Mr. Hester Fisher, and Mrs. Sallie M. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Purnell gave a lawn party Wednesday, July 9th. Learn of the progress of our people by reading the AFRI-AMERICAN each week. The agent will gladly serve you.
CATONSVILLE
Cononsville, Md., Aug. 3. — Holy Communion will be administered Sunday night at Grace Church and love feast at 10 o'clock Sunday morning, • 31. Olivet M. E. Church was largely attended all day last Sunday. The Sunshine Band from Metropolitan M. E. church was present and gave the meeting on the 1st of an old time camp meeting. • The Baby Rally held at Grace A. M. E. Sunday School last Sunday was well attended and a success. Mrs. M. E. Pry, of Baltimore, was the principal speaker for the evening. There were many little toys out, Mrs. Emma Johnson, superintendent of Candle Roll, Mr. Samuel Torell, the superintendent of crane, A. M. E. Sunday School, and Miss Annie Beverly and Miss Chadys Simpson. • The delegates to the Sunday School convention at Sparks, Md. They will leave Friday morning. • Mr. Odon Williams is delegate to the electoral college 25th. • Mrs. Lillan C. Green, president of S75.71, as a donation of a little white and colored for the orchards. • Plenary that was held at Greenwood Electric Park several weeks ago. She thanks all. • Mrs. Emma Noel has returned home from New York, where she attended the funeral of her brother, Miss Austin. • Last week, • Edith Ablextie Smith, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Smith, was christened last week by Rev. Chas. Williams. Mrs. Littie Adams, golmother for the little girl, gave her a neat little sum of money to start her with a bank account. • Rev. Charles Johnson has purchased a large Chevrolet car. • Mrs. Elizabeth A. Hall, of Taylor Avenue, is out again after suffering from bruises she received from
Look At Our Specials
for
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
AND MONDAY
Picnic Hams and Tender
Straks 15c. Ib.
Small Plonie Hans .15c
Sugar Cured Bacon .20c
Tender Steaks .15c
2 lb. Beal Chops .25c
2 lb. Hamburger .25c
2 lb. Spare Tabs .25c
Tender Boof Roast .12 c
Veal Shoulders .12 c
WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF
GROCERIES AND FRESH
FOODS FOR AWHERE
WE DELIVER ANYWHERE
Superior Meat Market
1015 PENNA, AVE.
Phone, Vernon 3461
ELECTRIC PARK
NUE, CATONSVILLE
There Is To Be There On
AN APPEAL TO MEN
Recommended and for sale by the following drug stores: NORTIWEST-
EN PRAMACY, Pennsylvania avenue and Dolphin street; NORTIWEST-
EN PRAMACY, Pennsylvania avenue and Dolphin street; Pennsylvania avenue at Wilton street; GREEN'S, Druid Hill avenue and McMechen
street; FENNELLE, Druid Hill and Biddle street; FENNELLE, Green
and Franklin; READ'S EIGHT STORES, and direct from our office.
If your druggist has it, have him order it for
you, or order direct from us
id. a window at Grace Church during the Wise Men's Convention. • Miss Leona Hall, of Taylor avenue, is spending the summer at Atlantic City, N. J. She is the guest of Mrs. Jennetta Rawling Taylor, Mrs. Minne Jackson, who was a patient at University Hospital, 15 home and much Improved. • Mr. and Mrs. Wm., Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Samuell Torsell, Mrs. Muckle Carroll, and Mrs. Jerome Bennett motored on Saturday at Boyd, Md., and returned Sunday to her. They enjoyed a delightful trip in Mr. Adams's hike Overland car. • Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Johnson, Misses Martin and Mary Bennett spent Saturday and Sunday at Boyd, Md., visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. Duffin, the mother of Mrs. Edna Johnson and Mrs. Bessie Taylor. • Mr. A. E. Hall and Mr. Louis Hall are building a State road at Silver Spring, Montgomery Conn., They camp there and return home on May 15th. • Mrs. Martha Adams, Mrs. Marble Adams, of Vilhellephua, and Misses the guests of Mrs. Bessie Taylor, were the guests of Mrs. Bessie Thompson, the sister of Mrs. George of Harris, has returned to her home. • Mr. Harris, Mrs. James Matthew has gone into business cleaning and care and f心的. • Mr. and Mrs. Fosset, of Newark, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. William Chandler of Baltimore; Mr. William Potts and Mrs. Mary Lee, of Catonsville, Wednesday, July 25, 1922. • Mr. James Fosset, of Newark, N. J., who has been spending two weeks here visiting his brother-in-law, Mr. Daniel Harris, has returned. • Mr. and Mrs. Thus, Johnson and family spent last Sunday at Waterbury, Anna Arundel County, visiting his mother.
PRINCESS ANNE
Princess Anne, Md.,—Our pastor, Dr. M. W. Henry, being away Sunday, Rev. Harry T. McHilde preached, "Quite a minute," and the community last Thursday and report having a pleasant trip, Mr. Charles Nisely, who was born a broken, a preception which his son was broken. A preception was given by the Community Association Monday evening, July 21st, on the lawn of W. M. P.
To young, middle aged, old, single or married men, who are feeling old, as a result of excesses or follies, who are troubled with nervous and physical issues such as spasm of the limbs, Impression or lost manhood, Sexual Incapacity, Seminal weakness, night losses, losses that occur at stool, Defective memory, loss of Energy, Wasting of Organs, manmade nervous affections, trouble try at once the wonder remedy.
KURA VITAL SPARKS
It will give new life and vigor to weak men. It will restore your vitality, weakness, debility, energy from 20 to 60 years ought to have. It will stop all losses (nightly emissions) whether from diseases or accidents. VITAL SPARKS works on the human system like steam works on an engine. Every man, young or old, has VITAL SPARKS once in a while to regenerate the lost vital power (that is abused). There are always old today (at the pace of life we lead) who feel so strong that a box of VITAL SPARKS would not mash the life worth living again in the future. For your own sake, get it today, tomorrow may be too late. Also work wonders on women. Price $1.00 for 8 boxes or course of 8 boxes for $5.00.
TRY IT FOR 9 DAYS
AT OUR RISK
FREE
We want every weak man to try VITAL, SPARKS at our risk. We will give nine mime courses and a course of 6 boxes for $5.00. Use it for nine days, and if you are not satisfied with the results return the book. We will return a B-S-O-L-U-T-E-L-Y without any red tape. Get it right now. If you are still skeptical, send a sample. (Enclose a 20 stamp.
CAUTION!
Don't confuse Yital Sparks or any of our Remedies with any patent medicine takes on the market. Our Remedies are used with thousands upon thousands of wonderful results in the well known Dr. Philip's Medical Inst. Specialists in chronic disease since 1995 under the clinical observation of a medical staff of 11 registered doctors. Even if you would pay a visit to a good specialist, we honestly believe he could not prescribe a better remedy. Now can you find any other remedy that gives you all of the desirable qualities Rana Remedies and Pell-Mu Teat and Tablets.
Any Man Who Had Private Disease or Has it Now ATTENTION
A powerful urinary antiseptic. Any man who has had social diseases such as discharges or has it now become ill, can determine his morning urine. If there is shreds, (cotton like) he
DR. W. E. B. Du BOIS
His declaration that Abraham Lincoln was of illegitimate birth, ugly, nawkward, a Southern poor white, a deserter of the Confederacy, a deserter of Negroes has aroused a mild sensation all over the country.
350 WOMEN SWIM
W i h Ames, Sparrows Point and
and Morning Star churches hold
picnics at the Park Thursday
350 women went in swimming at
the Park pool. Tital attendance
of all persons last week was 1940
should take Urotell at once,
until it clears. Also for the
relief of bladder, stricture
and prostrate gland and
troubles. Prices $1.00 per
box. 6 boxes for $5.00
"KURA" 6-0-6-0 Blood Specific
This wonderful remedy is specially adapted for the treatment of Blood Poison (Syphilis) and its symptoms. It is colored Sores. Mucous Patches, Aching Bones, Enlargement of the Glands, Warty Rings, Waxy Rings, Rheumatism, Etc. All these symptoms of Blood Poison are usually removed in a short time. It will not interfere with digestion is not like Mercury and may be taken for long periods when required. There is no better remedy in God's world to bring it. Price $5.00 for a month for 1st treatment. The 2nd is $4.00 by seeding or shouting it into the bottle, personal or by mail.
FOR DISCHARGES
KURA SANTOl CAPS
A wonder remedy for
nature and chronic discharges
such as Social Diseases of
men and women, Leisure
and Health. Price $1.00 per
box, 6 boxes for $5.00.
INJECTION, 50c; the Silver
KIRK, 75c.
"KURA" BLOODOLL
A Wonderful Iron Compound for the treatment of Impure. This simple symptoms such as Pumples, Dlotches, Boils, Kingworms, Scorfula, etc. It will improve the appetite, pittiness of the skin, it will make blood for amnic people, an alliment common to all especially to girls and women, readily yield to Kura Bloodol. Price $1.00 for 17 days.
Do You Know That THE STOMACH IS THE SUPPORT OF
HUMAN LIFE?
So no matter what your disease is, cure your stomach first, because most of your internal troubles are caused when you cure your stomach, why use fats, pills, candies and other preparations to treat your strong minerals which would affect your stomach, when common sense would advise you to use PEL-MA, a combination of 10 fragrant flowers and rare herbs, furnished by nature, contains no strong drug—just herbs as nature can pro-
Get it today. Use it several times. If not satisfied your money will be returned at once. Price 25c enough for one stamp for all Stamps or coins. A large trial package for 10c, or a free sample, enclose 2c stamp.
NOTICE!
For those who don't care to bother and steep PELL-MA MA LAXATIVE TABLETS, a candy coated, made of concentrated vegetable ingredients. Acts mild, without grief. On the contrary the user feels better and stronger. Its action will astonish you. Prices free sample, enclose 25 stamp
CLEARANCE SALE!
LATEST
RATINE
SLIP DRESS
$2.69
Only
DEPT. 1751, CICRUG
2 DAYS
L ABOARD
WASHINGTON, D. C.
first 9th & 10th
SONIC CONCLAVE
to Big Parades
and Knights Templar
Come and Join Us.
to run electric trains over the
W. B. & A.
in the Lombard Street Station
certain you at the Suburban
the finest Amusement
erated by colored people
in the world
us under auspices of the
BELL' ASSOCIATION
$1.75 Round Trip
ALL ABOARD FOR WASHINGTON, D. C. August 9th & 10th MASONIC CONCLAVE Two Big Parades
Shriners and Knights Templar
hourly from the Lombard Street Station
We will entertain you at the Suburban Gardens; the finest Amusement Park Operated by colored people in the world
Excursions under auspices of the LIBERTY BELL ASSOCIATION
Tickets $1.75 Round Trip
Good For 3 Days
7:00 A. M. to 1:30 P. M. Daily Also
from every section are going to be momentous occasion. Come to gardens and meet them.
at the place. Every conven-
ce at your service to take the Gardens. It will be the pair of the year.
Your friends from every section are going to be there on this momentous occasion. Come to Suburban Gardens and meet them.
Don't forget the place. Every convenience will be at your service to take you to the Gardens. It will be the greatest affair of the year.
FOR RESULTS OF THE WILLS-JACKSON FIGHT
Call Vernon 6016 Or 6017, August
8th, Tuesday Night After
11:30 O'clock
The APFO-AMERCAN will have its own sporting editor in Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, New York to witness the bout and write a full story for readers of this newspaper. He will also wire this offer as soon as the bout is over so that Calmoreans may know
If Wills cannot beat Jackson, what chance has he with Dempsey?
See Next Week's AFRO.
0
The Womann's Auxiliary of the Protective Association of Maryland held its first quarterly meeting at the Psalmist Baptist Church, Wednesday, August 2, 2013, meetings were well attended. On the program were Moshems Silson, Stowall, L. White, Pearl Johnson, Junius Gray, Warfield, Carwell, Agnes Harris, Garnet, John
THE ONLY PLACE
TO BUY FOOD
at
GUY
COSTANENES
MEAT MARKET
726 PENNA. AVE.
Branch Store
203 West 25th St.
Pure Lard ..... 12 lb
Not over two lbs to a
Customs
Smoked Meat Sauce ..... 11 lb
Hamburger Steak ..... 9 lb
Fresh Sausage ..... 12 lb
Stewing Beef ..... 5 lb
Stewing Veal ..... 5 lb
Stewing Lamb ..... 5 lb
Fresh Liver ..... 5 lb
French House Steak ..... 18 lb
Sirinha Steak ..... 15 lb
Round Steak ..... 15 lb
Pork Chops ..... 15 lb
Picnic Ham ..... 15 lb
Copper Reef Ham
Served A Nut ..... 18 lb
Potato Bake ..... 10 lb
Our Own Dressed
Spring Chickens ..... 25 lb
Country Butter ..... 33 lb
12 lb Big Good Flour 41c
Vegetables Right From the
Farm Fresh Every Day
SPECIAL
These Prices Good During
the entire week.
```markdown
```
2 DAYS
ALL A
FOR WASH
August 9
PAGE THREE
Sprigg, Green, Eliza Holland,
Eliza Ruff, Mary Scott, E. K. W.
Williams, L. Handy, Rosa Lane, Amy,
Wm. Roscee, K. Anderson, Charles
Johnson, Miss Eliza Robinson and
Prof. Harris and company.
I'm Quick! There's no way to get the money back. I'm not sure what to do.
INTERNATIONAL MAIL ORDER HOUSE
YOU CAN HAVE
STRAIGHTY, SILKY HAIR
By using "Suaveline," definitely performed when such tightly woven hair, the make it soft, silky and brilliant; removes dandruff; cleans the scalp; does not discolor the hair or injure the scalp; no ironing; to wash out; contains no greases; guaranteed absolutely harmless.
At your Duggin, or write to us.
SUAVELINE MFG. CO.
150 Massau Street, New York, N.Y.
Dealers Supplied—Agents Wanted
Suaveline
400,000 ELIGIBLE ONLY 2,500 VOTE IN SOUTH CAROLINA
Republican Party Now At Work To Increase Number of Colored Voters In That State
Say Langer Colored Vote Would Mean More Jobs For Negroes in Mills
Columbia, S. C., July 27—Altho there are 400,000 colored men and women of voting age in this state, only about 500 of them have been able to pass the rigid distranchising laws, get themselves registered and vote.
There are the same number of white people of voting age in the state and 64,000 of them voted in the last Election for Woodrow Wilson. Harding got a little over 2500 votes.
Efforts of the Republican Party in South Carolina has aroused the Columbia State, a white daily paper here, which declares that unless the Negro is kept out of bodies, he cannot be kept out of jobs in the cotton industry. This white supporter calls upon the governor to appoint the "right man of judges of election and regiment" so that even qualified Negroes may not get their names into books.
A recent editorial in the Columbia state says: "The state referred a few days ago to a rumor that the Republicans are secretly obtaining lists of Nurses in the counties of South Carolina who pay taxes on property assessed at $300 or more. Mr. Roberts hears that hearings at a congressional district in the South Carolina county to the national Republican convention uness as many as 250 Republican votes shall be cast in. In recent years, the total Republican vote in the state is approximated 2,500. Were these votes cast in each district the state would be 17,500.
of Republican boss in
Croatia would depend upon
being a decidedly better show-
his party in the elections.
He no means of knowing
the story is true,
is plausible.
The State doubts if Tolbert will be placed in an imposing demonstration at the polls this year. So long as the governor is a deputy governor he will be supervised to be a supervisor of registration and commissioners of election. There will be no loose administration of the law to swell the Negro vote. The present governor of South Carolina is no friend of Tolbert. He will not expect sympathetic reaction from him.
We have heard much about the need for a substantial Republican party in this state, but that would be something quite different from a New Tolbert Republican party. Were a Republican party to provide under the leadership of Tolbert, whose polling position the Negroes were in, acute dangers would arise from it. The Negroes in the Northern states, in some of which they have the balance of power, are increasingly demanding the real of separate coach laws. If their party could obey those laws in the South, agitation of this matter would begin and much inconvenience would follow from it.
"The second danger is of even greater import. In the South the races are separated in some of the industries. Negro labor is excluded from the Southern cotton mills and from employment on street cars. It is not employed, expect for unskilled work, on railroads. If the Republicans polls even a spectacle minority in this state, efforts would begin to break down the barriers that keep the Negroes out of the Southern mills, would be brought upon a Tobert party to work for the abolition of all racial discrimination in the industries.
"Ti Democratic party is the sole protection of the cotton mill people in this state—which they know without the State telling them. They can be relied upon to stand by the Democratic party against anything savoring of Tolbert's influence."
32 Maryland Teachers Study At Hampton
Hampton, Va., Aug. 1.—The following teachers of Maryland are attending summer school here: Julia T. Allen, Halzestown; Mrs. Bessie S. Bower, Adelina Mrs. Annie B. Brown, Benveny Creek; Majorie Brown, Promoke City; Alice A. Chambers, Baltimore; Julia T. Clarke, Albany; Florence E. Cannon, Thames Cornish, Weldseyin; Mrs. Joannine P. C. Dorsey, Chestertown; Mrs. Marc L. Ryson, Wayside; Mrs. Elsie G. Eric, Jeston; W. J. Barbe, Easlin; M. E. Eaton, Ridgway; Edith R. Fisher, Stuckin; Phinass E. Gordy, Sandsome; Mrs. Lamar B. Hall-Stark, Baydes; Barber S. Haynes, Berlin; E. J. Henry, Snow Hill; Laura K. Henry, Bella; Francis M. Jackson, Chestertown; George M. Jones, Preston; Mrs. Bann, Jones, Chestertown; Mrs. Emma L. Miller, Chestertown; Caroline A. Paber, Raton; Lail B. Peckins, Cofonville; Kenon M. Presberry, Marlinson; Maurice E. Red, Frederick; Mrs. Celia W. Ricketts, Chestertown; Mrs. Anna B. Tucker, Chestertown; Martin A. Tucker, Chestertown; Mrs. II. C. Ward, Marbury; Mrs. Herbert S. Wilson, Paimount.
Have the AFRO follow you when you go on your vacation. Don't hide reading the news from home.
A
Women's Club of the nation will gather here Saturday August 12 to dedicate "Cedar Hill" as a memorial to Maryland. Colored people everywhere will stop for a minute of prayer at noon or at that date.
BASEBALL BASEBALL
BLACK SOX
Colored Champions of the South
VERSUS
TATE'S STARS
CLEVELAND, OHIO
AT THE MARYLAND PARK
Westport Cars Direct
SUNDAY, August 6
Box Seats Reserved in Advance
COME OUT. 1000 SEATS. PLENTY ROOM.
NEW LINCOLN THEATRE
936 PENNA. AVE.
ONE WEEK ONLY WEEK OF AUGUST 7th
Arthur Bruce Stock Co.
15——PEOPLE——15
The Wonder Show of the Season
The Best Feature Pictures Changed Daily
First Run.
MATINEE 15c. CHILDREN 10c.
A big storm broke over Harriburg preventing the match between the association of that city and the Baltimore association which was scheduled to be played there last Saturday, a wire being sent to the local club appricing them of the fact in time to prevent them making the trip. The open tournament on the local courts will begin this Friday open to all corners.
TO HOLD OLYMPIAD
The Public Athletic League is arranging to hold a three-day athletic carnival for the colored school-boys and other colored athletes of the city the latter part of this month of the order of the Olympic Games, the participants to be divided into an eastern and western section. The athletes which constitute an olympic team are scheduled to be given and the winners to receive prizes if some of the business meet of the city can be found, interested enough to donate such prizes.
WELDONS ON WARPATH
The following letter is received by the Sports Editor of the MLB this week. An article of the nature that was posted between the Baltimore Strippers and the Webb A. C. on July 11, 1994, a false statement made by the manager of the Baltimore Strippers, the Webb A. C. defended the Baltimore Strippers to the score of 81, and all the Webb A. C. players as follows: Boys team wood A. C. 503, Greeray A. C. 628, Black team A. C. 628, Canonelle A. C. 522, Spencer A. C. 522. The team unidentified itself from Armando M. M., would like to engage games with the stranded sculpture in Washington, D. C. Baltimore, Virginia, D.C. and Maryland, Baltimore, Boston.
BLACK SOX WIN BOTH
Harrisburg, Pa. Aug. 3.—The Baltimore Black Sox came here yesterday and repeated their performance of last Sunday in Baltimore by taking a twin set from the Harrisburg Giants. The score was 12-3 in the opening and 5-5 in the nightcap. The feature of the games were the batting of Wabon Reppond, Epstein and Jordan for Harrisburg; Slyes and Lewis for the Baltimore Orioles; Second game, Dixon and Jordan; Kyle and Lewis.
N. Norfolkown, N. J. Baltimore Black
Sex, 10 Newtown Press, 7.
A. Philadelphia-Hilbride, 13; Terminal,
5.
A. Philadelphia Philadelphia Giants, 4;
M. K. Smith, 8.
BEAUTY TALK
(Generated Energy Present)
My Object
They are so long my thunder rich and left and just when I was getting ready to give you a lot of talk now the truth and their aid as a Bapse of beauty. Mr. Colgate & Co. comes on with a full page article, entitled "Good Tech and Womily Beauty" and say what chance has a desert rose got against Mr. Colgate? None, so we'll say by his editor that put out that page really knows old man Dornist. I will be rather didactic for me not to quote from the article so deep in impression it made me feel it from me to say myself in the charge of phagism, so I'll try to avoid direct and long
Somewhere I point that women buy a lot of their leisure trouble on the fact that they were born like that, but they certainly don't say that they were born with tooth pain, for most tooth problems caused by lameness or indifference combined with neglect. Have ever seen a person who was blinded and then beware? Those grims and cynical and disobedient! And so truly guilty possession can have bad teeth.
There was a time when a tooth tooth was a very heavy and to possess one before one was old enough to buy it. For yourself was just as good, but now in most cities it is required that school children, even kindergarten pupils, are required to own and to USE a tooth brush in German. Germany is one of the countries and it is probably hardies, and in thirty-five German cities there are municipal dental hospitals and nurseries.
The proper sense of the tooth so
and movement work by dentists
go, has been so thoroughly drilled
in us, that I think every child
have four years of age, not to
location us so easily after beauty,
do not neglect our teeth. But
many of us try to bite hard candy
to cheek it up with hard candy
and advantages incessantly
greatening hot food, or drink
sending colic? And I've seen
these thoughtless happens oabs
big bites, nips, and mothers
use their teeth to extract
weeks from bottles, to untie knots
to seve cords, to sharpen pencils
and all sorts of permeable me-
chanical work. Ah, but the
bitter days ahead, when
there will be big jaws and
heavy sources with the dentist.
Have the AF10 follow you when
you go on your vacation. Don't
mis-read the news from home.
WHITE BANKERS ADVISE WITH COLORED
Something unique in banking history has come to pass in Philadelphia. Three white bankers of the Bank of Pennsylvania president of the Bank of North America, the oldest bank in the United States; Asa S. Wing, president of the Provident Trust Company, and E. G. Parsley, of Parsley Brothers & Co., investment banker and a co-founder of a small Negro bank, the Citizens and Southerners founded by R. B. Wright and his son.
history has come to pass in Philadelphia—wholly deserved. delphia. Three white bankers of Thrift is an excellent basis for distinction—E. Pussey Passmore, good citizenship and better living. president of the Bank of North Carolina of the things Mr. Wright and America, the oldest bank in the his son have been encowarding to United States; Asa S. Wing, presi- do is to get better housing for the dent of the Provident Trust Com- ne-Gro. Environment has a de- pity, and E. G. Parsley, of Parsly cided effect on character.
All thing considered, the Citizens and Southern Bank has done pretty well. It has more than 4000 depositors, with aggregate deposits of $118,000. It has a substantial balance in the Bank of North America, and it made an excellent investment in Liberty Banking $20,000 of that at prices ranging from 85 to 94. It has done a good deal to promote thrift and better understanding among the colored people. The Negro has had a hard row to hoe. He never has had a square deal. Before enamulation he was wholly dependent on his owner. Freedom has problems for him that few among the whites appreciate. It is difficult to overcome in a generation or two race habits and customs of countries. The cane is hectic. He is elevated in citizenship if guided well and intelligently. He has the reputation of being thrifless. The deposits of the Citizens and Southern Bank
RAINBOW
2115-2117 Pe
TWO DAYS
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
Admission 10c and 15c.
"THE RE
or A PAC
8
The First Time
An Innocent
The cold gray walls of Prison torture and brutality ball and chain. Breadiment. Broken homes and York horse race. The law go wrong. The exposure to Chinatown. The dope of Knives and gun fights.
This picture was made "BORNE" former Ward commanding Officer of U. S. The Story is about two boys a millionaire's son and comes from the New York
This is your first WONDER
PROGRAM FOR WEEK
BOW THE
17 Pennsylvania
TWO DAYS ONLY
THURSDAY, AUGU
d 15c.
RIGHT W
PAGE FROM N
8 ACTS
First Time and Last Time
Recent Man Elec
Day walls of Sing-Sing. The
and brutal guards. The
Bread and water and
homes and broken hearts.
The lack of food almost
exposure of the New Y
the dope fiends and New
fights.
It was made by "THOM
er Warden of Sing-Sing
of U. S. Naval Prison F
but two boys and two sw
son and the other boy
New York slums.
Your first and last chance
WONDERFUL PICTURE
FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY,
---
RAINBOW THEATRE
THE
The cold gray walls of Sing-Sing. The zebra uniforms Prison torture and brutal guards. The lock step and the ball and chain. Bread and water and solitary confinement. Broken homes and broken hearts. The great New York horse race. The lack of food almost makes a woman go wrong. The exposure of the New York underground Chinatown. The dope fiends and New York underworld Knives and gun fights.
This picture was made by "THOMAS MOTT OSBORNE" former Warden of Sing-Sing and also Commanding Officer of U. S. Naval Prison Portsmouth, N. H. The Story is about two boys and two sweethearts, one boy is a millionaire's son and the other boy is very poor and comes from the New York slums.
This is your first and last chance to see this WONDERFUL PICTURE
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, AUGUST 7th
Monday—"SHEPHARD OF KINGDOM COME"
JACK PICKFORD
Friday—"LOVES OF LETTYY"
PAULINE FREDERICK
Saturday
ORMAND
Tuesday—"JINX"
MABEL NORMAND
(Richard Spillane in Phila. Public Ledger)
NEW THEATRE
Pennsylvania Avenue
SYS ONLY
SATDAY, AUGUST 9th & 10th
Don't Miss It.
RIGHT WAY"
FROM LIFE
CTS
and Last Time
Man Electrocuted
Sing-Sing. The zebra uniforms guards. The lock step and the hand water and solitary confined broken hearts. The great New of food almost makes a woman of the New York underground lands and New York underworld.
by "THOMAS MOTT OSSEN"
of Sing-Sing and also CommerCIAL Prison Portsmouth, N. H.
and two sweethearts, one boy
the other boy is very poor and slums.
And last chance to see this FUL PICTURE
WINNING MONDAY, AUGUST 7th
Friday—"LOVES OF LETTYY"
PAULINE FREDERICK
Saturday—"DANGEROUS DAY
MABEL NORMAND
and other Negro bank would seem to show that this reputation is not wholly deserved. Of thrift is an excellent basis for good citizenship and better living. Of the things in life that the son of an endearingly deserving sisdo is to get better housing for the Negro. Environment has a deeply cided effect on character. Like the Negro is highly sentimental. Those who ought to know believe that interest in their well-being, ded such us is displayed by the white bankers on the advisory board of the Citizens and Southern Bank, will greatly save, saving many ill-advised people. Banking is comparatively new to the Negro. It is to save such men of us as the Messrs. Wright from error an that Mr. Passmore, Mr. Wing and Mr. Parsley are giving their service, at if they set the foundation well, had they will do an excellent task. The full apportion task, the him inadvertent and expect to have quite a draft on their own time and attitude.
Philadelphia ims approximately 125,000 Negroes in its population. The number is likely to increase year by year. Thrift and good citizen more and more of an asset. Through safe, sound banking much can be done to that end. The Philadelphia plan of dealing with the Negro, as illustrated by the service of Wing and Mr. Parsly have volunteered, deserves the earnest consideration of the Nation.
THEATRE
via Avenue
AUGUST 9th & 10th
Don't Miss It.
WAY"
LIFE
Time
electrocuted
The zebra uniforms
the lock step and the
and solitary confine-
arts. The great New
host makes a woman
in York underground
New York underworld
THOMAS MOTT OS-
ing and also Com-
Portsmouth, N. H.
sweethearts, one boy
boy is very poor and
ce to see this
URE
X, AUGUST 7th
—"DANGEROUS DAYS"
MABEL NORMAND
CAREY
Carey and Presstown Streets. Best in Photo Plays
Open Daily From 2:16 till 11:15 Continuously
J. C. Cremen, Prop. Harry Deval, Manager
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, AUGUST 7th
A
Trying single-handed to protest his great heals fromattle thieves. Vic Collins came to close quarters withtwo of them, a man and a woman. He thought thewoman was somebody he knew—but when she crackedaim over the head with theout of a gun he was sureabout it.
If you want action, come and see HOOT 'STEP ON IT Bud Hamilton in "ROLLING ROCKS" Special 2 Act Comedy
If you want action, come and see BOOT STEP ON IT Bud Hamilton in "ROLLING ROCKS" Special 2 Act Comedy
TUESDAY—GEORGE CHESEBRO, better known as "Hands Up" in "BLIND CIRCUMSTANCES" 5 Acts
A thrilling and exciting story of the sea and the great North-west showing the many hardships endured by these sturdy men in their search for Gold.
A thrilling and exciting story of the sea and the great North-west showing the many hardships endured by these sturdy men in their search for Gold.
Lewis Stone and Ethel Grey Terry in "THE NORTHERN TRAIL."
A thrilling story of the West by James Oliver Curwood IRENE DALTON in "WILD AND WILLIE" Some Comedy.
WEDNESDAY—Charles Hutchinson, the Dare Devil in "GO GET 'EM HUTCH". EPISODE 10
A thrilling story of the West by James Oliver Curwood
IRENE DALTON in "WILD AND WILLIE" Some Comedy
WEDNESDAY—Charles Hutchinson, the
Dare Devil in
"GO GET 'EM HUTCH".
EPISODE 10
Ann Little in "THE FATAL RETURN"
2 Act Western
Lee Moran in "APARTMENT WANTED"
2 Act Comedy
Aun Little in "THE FATAL RETURN"
2 Act Western
Lee Moran in "APARTMENT WANTED"
2 Act Comedy
Snub Pollard in "SOME BABY" Some Comedy
DOUBLE PROGRAM DAY
THURSDAY—Faddie Polo
and Katherine Myers in
"CAPTAIN KIDD" No. 12
P. A. M.
A Bollocking Comedy Drama in which Bill says he is off of women for life, but others have said the same thing. Does Bill keep his promise? Come and see.
Snookie the Humanzie in "SNOOKIES HOME RUN" 2 Act Comedy
FRIDAY—George Walsh
Louie Lorralt
"With Stanley in EPISODE 18, LA"
Bessie Love, James Giln
"CAROLYN OF THE 3 Act Melo D"
Neely Edward
"UNFERMENTED BRICK"
Hallroom Boys in "BOARD"
2 Act Comedy
"With Stanley in Africa"
EPISODE 18. LAST PART
Bessie Love, James Gilmore and Cast in
"CAROLYN OF THE CORNERS"
3 Act Melo Drama
Neddy Edwards in
"UNFERMENTED BRICKS" Some Comedy
Hallroom Boys in "BOARDING TROUBLE"
2 Act Comedy
SATURDAY—Harry Myers and NOBLE JOHNSON is
T
T
"Adventures of Robinson Crusoe" Episode 15
Herbert Rawling in in "KALDA RUBY"
2 Ack Detective Play
Tom Santchi in in "THE HOUR OF DOOM"
2 Art Western
Harold Lloyd in in "OFF HIS TROLLEY"
Some Comedy
Aesopi's Tables in in "THE COW AND THE GOAT" Cartoon Comic
COMING—Wm. Duncan in in "NO DEFENSE" 6 act Special
Frank Mayo in in "TRACKED TO EARTH" 5 act Special
All Star Cast in in "THEODORA" 2 act Special.
Wm. Diamond in in "PERILS OF THE YUKON" Serial
WANTED !!!
COMING—Wm. Duncan in "NO DEPENSE" 6 act Special
Frank Mayo in "TRACKED TO EARTH" 5 act Special
All Star Cast in "THEOIDORA" 2 act Special.
Wm. Diamond in "PERILS OF THE YUKON" Serial.
APPLY BURNS & RUSSELL CO. Dundalk Junction
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That the player and not the player "is the thing" Hamlet not withstanding, was amply testified at the Roosevelt the first three days of the week when Benjamin Swanson and Rudolph Valentine appeared as co-stars in "Beyond the Rocks" to crush that overfellow the death of the house over to the curbstone. The ether was the usual triangle opus, but was sumptuously produced.
An additional feature which proved a pleasure to the crowds on these three days, was a three-selel Harold Lloyd comedy entitled "Among Those Present" which afford this fine comedy many opportunities as an English lion in society, a reality, a bellhop in his fine comedy work.
For the last three days of the week "Petrod" the famous boy story from the pen of Booth Tarkington featuring Westley Barry supported by little Sunshine Sammy the colored screen star and another colored lard in the will of "Merman" and "Veronica" will be the special offering. Barry are agreeing that the real stars of the story are the two colored chaps. "N't week the initial special will be "The Rosary" which will be shown for the first three days. This picture is a screen version of the famous stage play of the same title. The story briefly outlined, tells of Vera Mather who having been given a Bruce Wilson token of their Bruce Wilson to save Wilson's young sister from disgrace at the hands of Wright.
"She aids the girl to escape and takes the shame upon herself letting Wilton believe that she is the woman who has come to Wright's house. Wilton in his rage takes the rosary from her refusing to believe that she is innocent. Later he discovers that she was trying to shield his sister and all ends happily.
"A brilliant cast of screen stars are featured in this picture among whom are Jane Novak, Louis Stone, who has the role of priest, Wallace Peacock who will be remembered as the Four German general and Four Horsemen" Robert Gordon and Mildred June.
"Thursday, Poha Negri in "The Red Peacock" will be the special feature and on Friday and Saturday the stupendous production of "Theodora" featuring Tina Dollyaff and all an star Italian cast will be shown.
DUNBAR
"The First Woman"
The special offering at the Dunbar on Monday was "The First Woman" featuring Mildred Harris on Tuesday, the special offering billed was "Grand Larceny" but owing to the railroad strike this picture was lost in transportation, and a substitute feature was offered. Wednesday was double feature day "The Little Diplomat" featuring Baby Marie Osborne and "Ald's Fair in Love" featuring May Collins being the special offerings. On Thursday two other big features were offered in "Train Girl" featuring Jegan Deenny and "Weave Me East" featuring Al Reeves being the attractions. Special attention is called to the two fine dramas which will be shown at this house on Friday and Saturday, mainly: "To A Funish" featuring Charles (Jack) Jones which will be in the special offering and "The River" featuring Cummings which will be the big feature on Saturday.
Next week the initial offering will feature "Gay and Devilish" featuring Doris May, on Tuesday, the delayed "Grand Larceny" which was scheduled to have been shown on last Tuesday. The bill will be presented Wednesday, a double feature bill will be offered in "Tail of the Times" featuring Fanny Ward and "From the Ground Up" featuring Tom Moore. "Thursday" "Daring Dangers" feature an all-star cast will be the big feature, on Tuesday. "Apr Groove" featuring Bobby Farnum will be shown and on Saturday the special offering will be "Fatty Joins."
"THE RIGHT
WAY"
or
"A PAGE FROM
LIFE"
in
8 ACTS
NATIONAL
THEATRE
EDEN AND MONUMENT STS.
MONDAY
and
TUESDAY
August 7th and 8th
ADMISSION 17c
Dustin Farahun.
Next week the special feature
on Monday will be "Burglar Proof"
featuring Bryant Washburn; Tuesday
"A Trip To Paradise" feature
bert Lyttle; Wednesday and
Thursday "Midnight Madness"
a big Cecil DeMille production,
c. C. Johnson has returned home after
featuring and all-star cast will be
the special feature. The big com-
plyed feature on the two latter days
will be "The Dayhouse" a Buster
pompey, Md. Aug. 3.—Regular services
were held at Metropolitan M. E. Church
Sunday, at 11 a.m. also Epsonworth Lounge
at 1:30 p.m. "The Home Relief Association
of Indian Head, Md. held its annual
meeting at Waldoft, Md. joined
a food people in minded them." Mrs.
a big Cecil DeMille production,
c. C. Johnson has returned home after
spending six weeks at the summer normal
for teachers in Manassas, Va. "The stock-
edly features on the two latter days
will be "The Dayhouse" a Buster
DUNBAR
The special feature as the opening attraction at the Carey or Monday was "Gypsy Passion" a foreign production dealing with the elemental passions murder and revenge that is familiarly associated with gypsy life in the Old World. The special comedy feature on this day was "Red Hot Rivals" featuring Lee Moran.
On Tuesday, the special features were "The Flower of The North" a six-reel screen version of one of James Oliver Curwood's story of the Northland and "Round Two" of the Leather Pushers series featuring Reginald Denny. Special attention is called to the book which will be shown on Saturday which will comprise chapter 14 of the "Robinson Crusoe" serial: a two-act detective drama featuring Herbert Rawlinson entitled "The Poppy Trail"; a two act western featuring Regi-
nald Denny entitled "Ridin' Turp"
a Harold Lloyd comedy entitled
"In Trouble and an Awakening,
waxing, initial offering of
social attention will be "Step
On It" featuring the smiling devil-
mary-cure "Foot" Gibson. The
special comedy feature on this
day will be "Rolling Stones" featuring "Torchy" and an added feature on the same day will be "The Manly Art of Self-Defense, which deals with the art of boxing,"
"the art of running" will be "Gorcusianantal Trails" featuring George Chebros who is better known as "Hands Up" his subjug-
ment of a former thriller.
REGENT
"Price of Possession"
The special feature which began the week's program at the Regent was "The Price of Possession" a splendid drama intelligently produced and directly directed by Rockefeller Fellows. On Tuesday Elaine Hammersstein in "Why Announce Your Marriage" was the special feature. The special comedy feature on these two days was Step
Forward" starring "Wednesday and "Thursday, the big feature of "The Conquering Power" featuring Rodolph Valentine. Special attention is called by the management to the big feature which will be offered this hour on Friday or Saturday "Iron Gold" starring Justin Farrell.
On Friday "Chickens" featuring Douglas McLean will be the big feature and on Saturday the special feature will be the fine western drama "Tracks" a picture film produced by Pauley products colored screen star, and in which he is the featured player supported by an all-white cast.
LINCOLN
"Nobody's Fool"
The special offering at the Rainbow on Monday was "Nobody's Food" featuring Marie Prevost; on Tuesday "Bond of Love" featuring Pauline Frederick was the big attraction, on Wednesday, the special feature was the Flame of Love featuring Geraldine Paran and Thursday, the big Rex Beach drama of the Alaska fishing industry entitled "The Silver Horde" was the main offering. Special attention is called to the two big features which will be shown at this house on Friday and Saturday. On Friday, the vacation will be the focal of an all-star feature in an all-star cast and on Saturday the offering will be "The Gilded Cage" starring Alice Brady. Next week, the initial offering will be "The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come" with Jack Pickford, brother of the famous Marvel and who became the husband of Lyman on the star of the stage musical play "Sally" last week in the steller role.
On Tuesday "Jinks" starring Mabel Norman the well-known screen star whose name was connected with the murder of Wm. D. Taylor the famous screen director several months ago, will be the special offering. On Wednesday and Thursday, "The Right Wing" a drama dealing with the invasion of the United States reform by Thomas Mot Osborne former warlord of Sing Sing prison New York, will be the special attraction. This picture is of educational value and a pretty love story runs through the screen at the same time.
On Friday the big feature will be "The Loves of Letty" starring Pauline Frederick will be the special attraction and on Saturday the dangerous Days" a big adown special and an additional three-reel drama entitled "The Mothering Heart" will be the big features.
RAINBOW
(Vaudeville)
Four vaudeville acts of merit comprise the stage attract on at the Lincoln this week as fellow: Ferguson and Rice, man and woman; Williams and Williams better known as 'The Birds' and Sokes as old Baltimore favorite; Tucker and Grusham. Nothing novel is offered by any of these acts the skits consisting of patter, songs and dancing, but each duo is composed of talented and experienced players who put their stuff over in style and no little punch, which wins for each several good hands. Sakes and jazz violin playing to his act that made a big hit with the Monday audiences; while his partner showed skill as stumper; Tucker sing a number in which he won a big hand by interpolating a prophecy of what Harry Wills is going to do to Jack Dempsey when they meet, while Miss Grusham won applause for admiration from the wome nig her pretty costumes.
Williams and Williams especially the feminine member of the team showed a real gift for comedy, and the male half of the Ferguson duo demonstrated some aerobatic dancing steps that "brought down the house", a program of first class screen offering complete the bill.
STATE NEWS
POMONKEY
Domenkey, Mt., Aug. 3.—Regular services were held at Metropolitan M. E. Church Sunday, at 11 a.m., also Epworth League at 7:30 p.m. * The Home Relief Association of Indian Head, Mt., at the amicable a few local people met there. * Mrs. F. C. Johnson has returned home after spending six weeks at the summer normal for teachers in Minnesota, Va. * The stock lifted Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas and left in boating baby log.
ANNAPOLIS
Amphipolis, Md., Aug. 3.—Mr. John Hall has moved into his new home on Washington ten street, Mr. Hall, one of our barbers, has been quite sick. *Rep. Pierre has returned home from Atlantic City after a week's visit, and Mr. Thomas Smith, of West River, are ill at the hospital. *Mr. Emmy T. Mason, of Prince Frederick, is attending summer school at Hampton, Va. *Mr. Annie Erick, of Cathedral Street, is very sick. *Mrs. Lillian Gurring, of New York, is visiting Eastport. *Camp at Wayman closed last night. Adbury Land, of Baltimore, and Mt. Zion Band attended.
PORT DEPOSIT
Port Deposit, Md. Aug. 3—Mrs. Hattie Stewart is completing a course in beauty culture in New York City. Mrs. Hattie Learns to be a makeup artist. Mr. Learns to improve. * Mr. Isaac W. Hopkins and Mr. Daniel Taylor, and Mr. J. Jenifly who is in Havre de France to serve her family. * Mrs. Caroline Learns to convince visitors. * Mrs. Carrie Learns of Carmel, visited friends in Philadelphia. * Mrs. Rachel Smith and son are visiting friends in New York. * Mrs. Jennifer White have gone to visit friends and relatives in Culpepper, Va. * Rev. and Mrs. R. S. Brown, Miss Carry Matthews, Messrs. I. Matthews, Mackenzie Matthews, Miss Matthews spent Sunday at the museums, Md.
CUMBERLAND
Cumberland, Md., Aug. 2, St. Phillips
P. E. Church, Rev. C. E. Hawson, rector,
reports excellent services on Sunday. * Rev.
W. T. Kenney has returned home after an
absence of several days in Dupontie, Pa.,
where he attended the Baptist Church con-
vention. * McKendris M. E. Church held
NBAR
EAR MONUMENT STREET
WINNING MONDAY, AUGUST 7th
s see them at the Dunbar
e presents
MAYS in
DEVILISH"
Hutch" Episode 13
a reception on Tuesday evening, August 3rd, at which time, a mortgage was burned. Rev. Robt. A. Hart and his congregation deserve much credit for the recent rainy one thousand and one hundredized. The mortgage burning program was as follows: Mrs. Macmillan Edward, master of economies; L. T. Kenney, Wm. H. Baker, L. W. Dr. Sprague Spencer, L. Louise Harris, Mrs. Sprague Spencer, Mrs. Peoples, Aesopian resents by Mr. Cloud Jairt, chairman of the trustees: Miss Florence Massey, Ethel Meikins, Dorothy Washington, Virginia Harris, Nellie Bamery, Patricia Lathrop, Washington, Masters William Harris, Colbert Gales, Harold Traitt, Cecil Bromery, Washington, Myers, and Bromery. The chairmans of reception committee, Mrs. Hall, assists by Janet Banks. *Fifteen in the mock conference at Metropolitan Church were expected to report, and to resume their efforts immediately, going forth as bishop with pastors and their several members of the college to tolerate the 14th of the month with a general conference. The aim is to pay at least $1,200 on the debited debt. *Mountain City Temple and quite a Thursday in their usual period. Thursday is gradually improving after a serious illness during the past two weeks. *Mrs. Helen Gales remains among those of our indisposed citizens who is missed from the church. Miss A. M. E. Benson is spending the summer in the State of New York, also Kate Burey in Saratoga, N.
HAVRE DE GRACE
Have de Grace, Md., Aug. 2, Rev. Winch, pastor of St. James's, M.E., Church, talked at 51 m., Sunday, July 29th, on the subject of the Sunday School. He explained fully the Return of the Exile. The services were then turned into a spiritual class meeting. At 3 p.m., the pastor, chair and congregation attended the eamp of Rev. Coates's Swan Creek, Md., The Junior Chair rendered music. Rev. Crew is attending the district conference.
H. W. Wafter instructed Sunday School class Friday evening, July 25th. Mrs. Sarah Whyte has returned from Germantown. Mr. where she was the guest of her daughter, Mrs. John Blackstone and Miss Rhodella Whyte. Mrs. Elly James spent a few days in Atlantic City, N.J., and Philadelphia. Mrs. Idella Wilmore and Miss Henley Webster have returned from Atlantic City, N.J., where they attend the convention of the American Woodmen. Mrs. Ella Moore, of Lewis Street, has returned from Philadelphia. Where she attended the funeral of her mother, Mrs. Susan Cox, Mrs. Jackson, of Philadelphia, is the guest of Mrs. Martha Bauer, of Lewis Street. Miss Melvin and Elly Lilly and Master Veron Lisy, of Philadelphia, are the guests of their grandmother, Mrs. Ella Burbin, of Revolution Street.
THE
PENNSYLVAN
DAILY ORGAN RECITALS, 2 TO
MONDAY
BRYANT WASHBURN
in
'BURGLAR PROOF'
A roaring comedy and a screaming farce rolled into a side-splitting story that will make you holler "more!" and
Buster Keaton in
"The Play House"
TUESDAY
"A TRIP TO
PARADISE"
featuring
BERT LYTEL
Would you steal for the
girl, you love? This fellow
answered this question in a
way that is startling.
Buster Keaton in
"The Play House"
COMING NEXT WEEK Wednesday and Thursday "To Please One Woman"
EASTON
MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY—
Sek and Rok
BOSARY
That appeal is mirrored in the drama by *ewis Stone*, Jane Novak, Wallace Beery, Robert Gordon, Englewoodzerrer, DorexDarden, Bert Woolruff, Pomeroy Cannon, and Milden Jane—all of *Folk* Felk.
The origin of the Christian history is grounded in ancient legend, but it is known that in the fourth century, Ptolemy the Poterhit used pobbles to help concentrate his thought, cased them aside by one until his prayers were
From this crude pigeon rock came that which is used today, the string of beads ending with the cross—symbol of kerfiose.
Because she has been idolated with roles of similar character, Jane Novak has been an adaptation of the samiraya and song, produced by Sigz and Bork, and to be shown as a First National激素 at the Rosevelt Theatre.
Also Harold Lloyd his latest comedy—"I DO"
THURSDAY—
Pola Negri
The Red Peacock
a
Daphne du Maurier
Doubleday
Next Week—Lon Gancy in the "Trap"; Sessue Havakawa in "The Vernillion Pencil"; "I Am The Law."
Next Week—Lon Gand
Hayakawa in "Th V
The Law."
DON'T MISS
THIS
THE MARRIAGE
PICTURE
To her husband Margaret said, when accused of spending the night in the hunting Lodge with his best friend: "We went there with sin in our hearts, but did not sin."
Wednesday----
FOX NEWS
and
'GO GET'EM HUTCH
Thursday----
SPORTS REVIEW
and
Fanny Ward in.
"THE JAPANESE
NIGHTINGALE"
PATRE PLAYLET
The enormous rest of "Mids
charge 15c MATINEE, NIGHT
ACCB FRIEDLANDER, Proprietor
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
Also a Good Comedy
Yesterday—A ragged walt, selling flowers on the streets.
Today—The darling of a great city's spenders! Laughing and dancing through life!
Tomorrow—Ruin! Her luxury sacrificed! The love of a great-souled woman triumphant!
A romance of fine feathers that covered a heart of gold.
Money in the "Trap"; Sessue
Vernillion Pencil"; "I Am
REC
AVENUE Near
BY JEROME CARRINGTON
Jesse Lusky presents
WILLIAM
DEMILLE'S
PRODUCTION
"Midsummer Madness"
with Lois Wilson, Lila Lee,
Jack Holt & Conrad Nagel
An alluringly beautiful picturization of Cosmo Hamilton's novel, "His Friend and His Wife." Set in a flood of magic moonlight and charged with a crushing conflict of love and marriage.
Paramount Picture
Summer Madness" compels us to
WT 25c. Wednesday and Thursday
FRIDAY and SATURDAY We will present what we know is by far the greatest picture of the year. The "Queen of Sheba" was great, but this is even better.
Goldwyn's
sensation
THEODORA
Sardous immortal
love story
The history of the world has been written in its love stories and this is its greatest one. With it Sarah Bernhardt thrilled auditor of two continents in screen form it adds an astounding reaccent to its gripping power. Is a woman's story — of an empress who gave rich and imperial rule — who loved a house of hungry lions on her helpless people in a vain effort to save for herself him the loved.
Theodore" so far surpasses any previous effort of screen productions that comparison is impossible.
It required two years to produce, and cost $3,600,000.
There are $3,600 people in the cast, headed by Rita Jolivet and the greatest screen producer.
Such a staircase, and such a tremendous production has characterized the cities of the cities where it has been given an advance name. "Married of Marvel" says the New York World. "Marvelous" describes it. "Decorates the Telegraph: A new film sensation" says the evening Mail. "Unimaginery and splendor appenant," the Reveling magazine with both intrigue and surprising beauty" declares the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Norgons to work a word" says the Pittsburgh Chronicle. "Norgons anything that has ever been shown" Boston Times. "A spectacular" the Chicago Times wrote. "THEODOORAS' PALACES AND HIPPODROMES WOULD ATONE BEAMS" the New York Times. "A PAST MASS MOTION BUILT" PORTS SEEM WEAK, its COST STAGGERS, its DRAMATIC POWER CRIPE THE HEART WHILE its SPENDLING AMAZE THE EYE.
Ij you miss-"Theodora" you may as well stop going to see motion pictures
COMING—The Two Big Specials— "FOOLISH WIVES" and "SMILIN' THROUGH"
Eddie Polo in "CAPY KBDD" 14, and a Special Comedy
SATURDAY
In Western pictures Noble Johnson is right at home for his first experience in the business was in running, stock raising and horse training in Colorado. He is also an amateur athlete, concentrating on boxing and endurance running. Some of his best screen work was in *Bacall Walsh's "Serenade"* in "the Bronze Bolt" and as *Prince of the Robinson Canoe*. In the forthcoming *Playmates feature "Tracks"* which is a Noble Johnson production, he plays a role around which revolves much mystery.
RUGN BURKETT
SENDS LETTER
NO BUFFINGTON
arks State Supervisor of schools Did He Have Hand in Mrs. Wigginton's Dismissal
WILDORO SPEECH WAS HIS
opes Woman Supervisor Would Not Be Dropped For Speech He Made
Elijah M. Burkett sent the follo-
ling letter to Supervisor J. W.
Boston, white, yesterday:
J. W. Huffington
My attention has just been called to a news article in the AFLRICAN captioned "Huffing's Hand Seen In The School Guide. The article further states that our life was raised by an adress made by me at a meeting in George's County, and that a diplomat of Mrs. Mary E. Wagon is a probable result. I believe that the news article is easy that the dismissal of Mrs. Wagon is not the result of my thesis and has not the required conclusion to with.
I write this open letter to you to
congratulate Mrs. Wrigginton in the
first place for my achievement I
made. For much and every reason
made by me in this fight for
Education I conditions in
state law require GP and also
require GLP in every way
specially, physically and
safely.
Sir, Mr. Wrigginton were not
used in the meeting and my
party came to recognize second-
hand, in order there is that you
I the public might get fast
alarm that I did say by me re-
Reprint His Speech
I charged the State of New York the State School District of New York. Admitted State students daily, myself with a Bible, reading and to take policy in education for Colored children. If the dispassion of Washington is the result of this measure, we not right! What the proof is needed of uninformed people? To practise reprisoning a widow, woman and take care of a source of livelihood for something a man loses said, what proof is needed of littleness? Why not challenge the man account? Third: I paid to offer a bill in Louisiana to pay white teachers, salaries, and black teachers, both holding the same certificate is discrimination; the request, not only is it discrimination, it is little, mean, and unfair discrimination. Am I wrong? Why discharge Mrs. Wig
Ms. About Teacher's Salaries
The pretext is that the work is heavy for a wogon. Has Mes, winston combined? Did she for a release? Or is it the way of State superintendents to close all body superintendents, white well as black.
or is it the county school: composing the same blind policy Baltimore City schools, of losing of its wealth in indulged because of its poverty in pay.
or is it maybe that this admirable supervisor has lost much of the State's time in order to solve the siphon of the war? Why an incapable white should receive higher salaries than a capable black teacher holding the same grade certificate but black teacher with a white certificate.
the way white superintendents
survey colored teachers to be
effected while at the very
hours the same superintendents
are urging poorly paid colored
teachers to prepare themselves for
the job while the miserly sal-
aid colored teachers will not
notice their paying expenses on
the State in prepare while with-
the State there is neither means
else for preparation.
let me hope Mr. Huffington, that we receive evidence in the AFROMERICAN is wrong, that worthy Wigginton has not been discussed but that she has been refused to accept a bigger and high-position, probably at the Bowneval School when it re-opens, there work, brains and backbone to be evident in need.
Very respectfully yours.
M. M. BURKETT
The Arch Social Club, beaded by President Horace Carner, Raymond Coates and E. L. W. Scott, honored to Lutherville last Sunday to listen to a special sermon Day, C. G. Cummings of Edgewood M. E. Church.
Chicago, Ill. Aug. 3—This city is preparing to entertain the International Christian Endeavor Congress August 16 to 20.
Have the AFRO follow you when you go on your vacation. Don't miss reading the news from home.
1930
THREW AWAY $800 BROGSH
Chicago. 19th. Aug. 7—While having a gown fitted in Stewart's
Mrs. Mary Johnson Booker took off an F800 camo surround with
diamonds and placed it on the
table nearly. A tassel-decors
seven-year-old white child
of another customer placed it up and
threw it out of the seventh story
window into a crowd of shoppers.
It was not received.
D. C. HAS NEW WEEKLY
Washington, D. C., Aug. 3—The
Washington Sentiment is the name of
a new weekly paper published at
0:55 p.m. street, N. W., which
makes its appearance on the stand
last week.
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Hagerstown, M.
MME. M. KING
1510 Penna. Ave., B
Piggly ... V
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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.
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403 W. Lexington
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WEEKLY PAPER IN IDAHO
Pocatello, Idaho, Aug. 2—All this State had only 920 colored people in 1920, the colored population has since increased sufficiently to warrant the establishment of the Pocatello Appeal, weekly paper with Capt. T. F. State editor.
KELLY MILLER ON TOUR
Washington, D. C. Kelly Miller is touring the Western States by during on "The next step in the race problem."
CAR CLEANERS STRIKE.
Chicago, Ill., Aug. 21—(Associated Negro Press) Many colored members of the Car Cleaners and Trackmaster's Union earning $105 a month went on a symphony strike with other railroad workers last week. Colored strikebreakers are being employed.
COUNTRYMAN MIXED UP
Pittsburgh, S. C., Aug. 2—Ernest
Berry, aged 15, is just from
the country. He wrote a letter
back to his sister, and was told
to oot it at the box on the
carpet. The first box he came
to was 14, five box and when
he got it in fire, enveloped
upon it from all directions,
lawfully and dignum prece-
cing the letter, put it in
the proper box.
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SALVE
BOOHT SLAVE FOR $5
New York, August 2—Lincoln's jurisdiction means nothough George Carr, who until recently owned one seven year of slave.
The have was Mortimer Fox, above youth, whose father did him to Carr for $5 and gave him a bill of sale in addition. The boy was more bother than he was worth the father did, so he might as well sell him.
Neighbors bought the Fox boy be from Carr and put him in Hebrew Orphan, Anglina.
LIE DIRECTOR IN COURT
Washington, D. C., Aug. 3—Although the McCoy ruled the life
detective of court or the case
of James Frye on trial charged
with motive of De W. Robert
Brown, del of the National Hous-
tion Associes, Counsel for Frye
have applied the case.
This puts that the higher
court wide believe whether or not
to admissible evidence of the life
detective.
PASOR A CANDIDATE
Bark, Amy L., Reey, K. M.
Murden pastor and former
r has been enlisted for
service in the 19th Assoc-
tion, and his name will ap-
pear official beritot at the
in September.
John W.
CANDIDATE FOR
NOMINEE
UNITED STATES
asking the support
the coming primary
candidate, Mr. John W. O.
will adhere strictly to
ones.
Garrett stands for
fortunity for all, w
Mr. Garrett is
without fear, fair
equal and exact
Garrett further pl
b law and oppo
distinctions.
chance for all
JOHN W.
Authorized by Thomas
State Insurance Co.
Approves Bus
and Strong Fin
Standard B
JOHN W. GARRETT
CORRELATE FOR REPUBLICAN
NOMINATION
FOR
UNITED STATES SENATE
The support of the Republican
going primary election for United
States John W. Garrett announces
the scrietly to true Republics
It stands for a fair and untrad
try for all, without regard to
err. Garrett is for the enforced
fear, favor or discriminat
and exact justice.
It further pledges that he is
and opposed to measures
reactions.
For all is the platform of
JOHN W. GARRETT
Read by Thomas Dawson, Politični
Insurance Commissioner
proves Business Manager
strong Financial Condition
Hard Benefit So
John W. Garrett
CANDIDATE FOR REPUBLICAN NOMINATION
UNITED STATES SENATE
asking the support of the Republican voters the coming primary election for United States Senator. Mr. John W. Garrett announces that he adhere strictly to true Republican principles.
Garrett stands for a fair and untrammeled opportunity for all, without regard to race or Mr. Garrett is for the enforcement of without fear, favor or discrimination and equal and exact justice.
Garrett further pledges that he is opposed to law and opposed to measures based on distinctions.
a chance for all is the platform of
State Insurance Commissioner High Approves Business Management and Strong Financial Condition of
All Litigation Ended
HE State Insurance
cared the Standard
lately solvent. Note
state authorities wee
commission by Judge
to investigate the
the report of said
under the direct sup
Armstrong and th
ng. State Insurance
State Insurance Commissioners for the Standard Benefit Society event. Noted insurance officials were appointed as on by Judge Stein of Circuit. Investigate the affairs of the Sort of said commission was the direct supervision of Attorney Strong and the Honorable John the Insurance Commissioner of the State. The State
1. HE State Insurance Commissioners have deared the Standard Benefit Society absolutely solvent. Noted insurance experts and state authorities were appointed as a special commission by Judge Stein of Circuit Court No. to investigate the affairs of the Society, and the report of said commission was prepared under the direct supervision of Attorney General Armstrong and the Honorable John H. Keating, State Insurance Commissioner and Chief Auditor of the State. The State Insurance Commissioners, having gone thoroughly over the files, records and accounts of the Standard Benefit, and making a careful analysis of their business generally, declared that the Society had built up an excellent business and was in every respect capable of proceeding successfully with their work.
The charter of the Standard Benefit Society, a $100,000 corporation, shows that they started business July 21, 1921, and that they have deposited with the State Treasurer of Maryland $50,250.00, for the absolute protection of policy holders. The records of the Society show that they issued their first policy July 21, 1921, and that to date they have written 16,211 policies and have paid sick and death claims amounting to $14,732.48, and that they have a cash balance in bank of $16,621.07.
DIRECTORS:
DON S. S. GOODLOE, President
ISAIAH SMITH, Vice Pres. and Gen. Mgr.
DR. O. D. JONES, Sec. & Treas.
DR. HARRY F. BROWN, Medical Director
WM. BEVANS, Chairman Board of Directors
W. ASHBIE HAWKINS, Legal Advisor
JEREMIAH HILL, Inspector
JOSEPH P. EVANS
RAYMOND COATES
CLARENCE WRIGHT
WALTER WILEY
EDWARD MYERS
W. R. JONES
WM. LEWIS
TRULY HATCHETT
New
bolden
maryland
the leg
die
bear
of
primaria
An African Mason
6
Major Gabriel Johnson of Monroe, Virginia, who is also Grand Patronate of the Garvey Hosts the role behind Mr. Garvey in the Life parade in New York Tuesday.
50 P. G. CLERKS LET GO
Washington, D.C. August 3. Fifty cheeks in the local postal offices have been furloghed by inspectors as the result of the shack in summer business reducing the force of 1400 mg. These dropped were taken from the bottom of the sensory list by inspectors who are checking up the local office with a detailed survey.
M. Garrett
FOR REPUBLICAN
NATION
STATES SENATE
of the Republican voters
election for United States
Garrett announces that he
to true Republican prin-
a fair and untrammeled
without regard to race or
for the enforcement of
or discrimination and
justice.
edges that he is opposed
need to measures based on
is the platform of
M. GARRETT
Dawson, Political Agent
Commissioner High-
iness Management
Financial Condition of
Benefit Society
The Commissioners have deed Benefit Society absod insurance experts and are appointed as a special Stein of Circuit Court No. affairs of the Society, and commission was prepared provision of Attorney Generle Honorable John H. Keat Commissioner and Chiefe. The State Insurance
In a big buyers' exchange in this city, with which buyers from one hundred and forty department stores are associated, Alfred Fanti, who conducts it, recently posted these epigrams for the benefit of his employees. They are headed "Advice From the Boss."
Mind your own business and in time you will have a business of your own to mind.
Dishonesty is never an accident. Good men, like good women, can see temptation when they meet it.
Don't lie—it wastes my time and yours. I'm sure to catch you in the end and that's the wrong end.
Watch your work, not the clock. A long day's work makes a long day short, and a short day's work makes my face long.
You owe so much to yourself that you can't afford to owe anybody else. Keep out of debt or keep out of my place of business.
Give me more than I expect and I'll pay you more than you expect. I can afford to increase your pay if you increase my profits.
Don't kick—if you're worth while correcting you're worth while keeping. I don't waste time cutting specks from decayed apples.
Don't tell me what I'd like to hear, but what I ought to hear. don't want a valet to my vanity, but I need one for my money.
Don't do anything that hurts your self-respect. The employee who is willing to steal for me is capable of stealing from me.
It's none of my business what you do at night after work hours. But if dissipation affects what you do the next day, and you do half as much as I demand, you'll last half as long as you hoped.
Make a good impression from the very start by neatness, promptness, politeness and positiveness.
Confidence will follow and then the battle is three-quarters won. Approach a customer in a dignified but pleasant manner. Show the best grade of goods first, elaborating on their merits.
LEADING TAILORS
935 1 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
NORTHWESTERN PHARMACY
Penna. Avenue and Dolphin St. THE Penslar STORE
A new and complete stock at your disposal. Something new and different and of the best quality. It will pay you to come in and look this stock over. Every article NEW and FRESH and at prices that are RIGHT.
HAS IT EVER OCCURED TO YOU
That your Doctor has the privilege of inspecting our Prescription Department?
This feature assures you that we are filling that prescription as he orders it and at the same time assures him that we are operating our department as he would want it operated.
Only the best and purest drugs obtainable are used and only registered and competent Pharmacists are employed.
registered and competent Pharmacists With this knowledge in mind and under supervision of your Doctor it is a known fact that we should fill that Prescription of yours.
Ask Your Doctor —— He Knows.
The quality of the drug store is denoted by the service he renders to the community. We are prepared to give you service that isn't excelled in Baltimore. We will call for and deliver that prescription of yours to any part of town. Not only your prescriptions but any item that we have will be gladly delivered to you at no extra charge.
Remember there is no extra charge for this service Phone your wants. We deliver anything, anywhere, anytime.
The Perfect Fit
A MAN IS CLOTH DRESS U
A
THE
REAL
BOX
TAILOR
THE
LEADING
TAILORS
935½
PENNA.
AVE.
LEADING
Tailoring since 1885
935 1/2 PENNSY
Wash Rags 10c, 15c, 20c, 25c.
Towels 35c, 60c, 90c, $1.20.
Hair Brushes 25c to $5.00.
The Best of Workmanship
IS JUDGED BY THE
OTHES 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 en-
ables us to sell our
goods at a smaller pro-
it.
Come and look over our large assortment of the very latest patterns. THE NG TAILORS
THE
Tailors of High Merit
PATHWEST PHARMA
t-Rate Drug
Avenue and D
Pensla
SUMMER NEEDS
HAIR BRUSHES
and complete stock at your disposal
of the best quality. It will pay you
Every article NEW and FRR.
Wash Rags ____10c, 15c,
Towels ____35c, 60c, 9
Hair Brushes ____25c
IS IT EVER OCCURED
your Doctor has the privilege of
Prescription Department
fure assures you that we are filling
at the same time assures him that
he would want it operated.
I best and purest drugs obtain
competent Pharmacists are emp
is knowledge in mind and unde
known fact that we should fill tha
Ask Your Doctor —— H
SERVICE
city of the drug store is denoted by
anonym. We are prepared to give
alttimore. We will call for and o
ny part of town. Not only your pr
will be gladly delivered to you
number there is no extra charge to
wants. We deliver anything
CHURCH MEMBERS RETAIN
ALLEGED IMMORAL PASTOR
OF PHILADELPHIA CHURCH
Philia, Pa., Aug. 3—Monumental Baptist Church, 41st and Ludlow streets is split from top to bottom as a result of charges of immorality inside against its pastor, Rev. M. Moses.
J. M. MASSEY
Mrs. Massey fainted when one of the doctors arose in a church meeting Tuesday night of last week and recited an account of an alleged visit of the pastor to a 19th street house in company with a young woman of the flock. A motion to sustain the pastor without further investigation of the charges was voted by a narrow margin.
passer. In the riot that followed, police interfered and escorted the pastor through lines of his hostile mem-
K, OF P, FUND $90,851
K, OF P, FUND $90,851
Scranton, Pa., August 1—At the session here of the Grand Lodge of Nights of Pythia: last week, George H. Wilson, secretary of enquiry, reported that $26,847 had been paid out in death claims last year and that $80, 851 remained in the treasury.
DR JAS A WHITE
SURGEON DENTIST
Crown and Bridgework
a specialty
Gas Administered
All work. Guaranteed
VERNON 1773 W
1038 PENNSYLVANIA AVE
Wholesale and Retail Cleaning and Dyeing
```markdown
```
VErnon 3830
4 Suits Sponged
& Pressed $1.50
C. THOMAS
Pressing Club
& Hat Renovators
Ladies' & Gents' Garments
Cleaned, Dyed and Altered
Suits Pressed, Hats Cleaned and
Reblocked While You Walt
400-2 Drudl Hill Ave., at Eutaw
Free Call and Delivery
ANY AMOUNT TO LOAN
Bring your Need 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 Sts.
HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
FRIDAY,AUGUST 4,1922
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
D. Arbette Murphy, Business Manager
B. Arbette Murphy, Chairman of the
AFRO-AMERICAN COMPANY
@ the AFRO-AMERICAN Building
625 N. Sutawai Street, Baltimore, Md.
Entered in Postoffice at Baltimore City as
post-class matter under act of Mar. 3, 1983.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year: $20.00
Six Months: $12.25
Three Months: $7.60
(Parasite in package)
Fortune Advertising Representative, W. R.
Brown Company, 608 South Dornhorn Street,
Chicago; 321 Victor Building, St. Louis, Mo.
610 Morton Building, New York.
"Independent in all things. Neutral in nothing."
This power holds a news franchise in the
world. It has its exclusive
copyrighted dispenses.
The Associated Negro Press will receive patentee news items or clippings of national leaders' render risk at the office of the Indiana American Association, or at the APB AMERICAN office.
Sunday School Lesson
Sunday, August 6th: "The Temple Rebuild
and Indicated." Era 3:16; 2:22.
Fifteen Years Ago
Doctors, lawyers, ministers, teachers, and people of almost all professions and trades will attend this session as well as the twenty annual North Conference, Mr. W. Ashleave Hawkins and the president of the session, other staff members present were Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Atkins, Dr. and Mrs. J. H. W. Nairing, Dr. and Mrs. J. W. McCord, Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Beckett, and A. T. Lacey.
B. None of the choices
The Colored Empty Stocking Club and First Air Circle of Baltimore has purchased a tract of ten and one-half acres of land, with a convenient water, near Delight on the route of the Emory Grove car line. This property will be used as a home for whom the club calls in the country every summer.
The AFG AMERICAN Leder will celebrate its 15th anniversary by giving the children a reward for their work. Five couples clipped the Leder after the 10th of August will entitle the holder to a ticket to Brown's store on the Steamer Starlight, free.
James Reed, of North Carolina, who has been living in stockade for the past eight months, and killed his brother, died last week. Storm Sunday he was captured and brought back to stockade and sent to death by a telegraph pole, the starred string illuminated through the colored section, took colored net from their cabins, and after nursing them severely, made them leave town.
Miss Carline Jennings, 628 George Street, Sunday in Washington, D. C.
History Day By Day
Friday, August 1. Robert Puris, adjunct
born, 1810.
Saturday, August 5. Conspiracy of shives
to gain freedom by massacre of the
Albany, about 1870. No Negroes apprehended, two hanged, some
and ears out of off, others whipped.
Sunday, August 6. John Merrick, founder
of the North Carolina Mutual and President
Association, which is one of the most
companies. He was a worker by trade. Died, 1819.
Monday, August 7. Samuel Milk, Noyo
writer of popular ballads, was born
this date, 1848. He wrote, among others,
"Grandfather," Clock was Toni Tail for
this day. August 8. Shorn Loom was
interred into the hands of the crown
and was made an English cemetery in
1807.
Thursday, August 9. P.-B. 3, D. 1816
book nominated for Governor of Louisiana.
270. Frederick Douglas served until
silvery convention of Sumner, 1841.
Thursday, August 9.—Robert B. Elliot
was a representative from South
Garden in the 22nd congress, serving from
March, 1781 to 1783, when he bequeathed.
Born, 1842.
Politicians will take their vaca-
tion after the primaries.
Marcos Garvey did the next best thing to marrying a Baltimore girl. He came to Baltimore to get married.
A ten-year-old girl of Cleveland Ohio, became the mother of a seven-pound baby last week. Must be a new American record.
Physicians led all other professional men in numbers of suicides committed in 1921 according to records recently made public. The figures are: physicians 36, judges 57, bankers 37, ministers 21, editors 10, mayors 7, and legislators 7.
These figures indicate that the strain involved in the saving of men's lives and their money is greater than the strain of saving their souls.
A descendant of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba sits on the Abyssinian throne today, which proves that the Queen had Cleopatra skinned in the ancient art of vamping.
The Criminal Court of Washington sent Joseph Dawson to the insane asylum for criminal assault upon a young white child. Too frequently such men are sent to the gallows.
Insanity is mental derangement or mental deficiency. An investigation of many such assault cases, we believe, would show that the perpetrators are not criminals but mentally deranged, and mentally deficient.
The South's still opposed to the North recruiting colored laborers there. In Birmingham, Alabama, it costs just $3,750 to 'nike out a labor agent's license.
Dyer Bill Reported
Senator Shortridge has kept his word in reporting the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill favorably to the Senate.
It is not a brief report as opponents of the bill washed, but a comprehensive document taking up ten closely printed pages of the Congressional Record, and supporting the argument of the constitutionality of the bill with opinions by Attorney General Daugherty and other eminent lawyers.
The Republican party is pledged to legislation against Lynching. The measure in hand has passed the House by a two to one vote, received the approval of the Attorney General of the United States and the President has indicated his willingness to sign it as soon as the Senate has passed it.
If there were some way to muzzle the Southern opposition, debate on the Tariff bill could be interrupted a half hour to put the Dyer Bill thru. Unfortunately the South will insist on full debate, and a repetition of the mud slinging that characterized the speeches of the Southern Congressmen, when the measure was before the House.
If the Senate, the most dignified assembly in the world, must wade thru this slime to pass a bill against mob law, let it get the Tariff Bill off and set to work. Certainly the Senators are not in a position to go before their constituents for reelection until the party has fulfilled its pledges and got the Anti-Lynch Bill on the statute books.
DuBois And Lincoln
Dr. W. E. P. DuBois created quite a little furore among the admirers of Abraham Lincoln with his editorial in the July Crisis wherein he referred to the great emancipator as a Southern poor white, of illegitimate birth, poorly educated, unusually ugly, awkward, ill dressed, a protector of slavery and an emancipator of the slaves.
Abraham Lincoln because of his emancipation proclamation and because of his assassination, has grown then the years to be something of a demi-god. Yet everything that Dr. DuBois said of him in his editorial except one thing is absolutely true.
Abraham Lincoln himself was not of illegitimate birth, but his mother Nancy Hanks was the illegitimate daughter of a Virginia family by the name of Hanks. She took her mother's name and not her father's. The latter to this day is unknown.
Dr. DuBols editorial may have been inspired by the reading of the new three volume edition of The Life of Abraham Lincoln, written by William H. Herndon, for twenty years Lincoln's friend and law partner. In the writing of this book, Mr. Herndon was assisted by a Mr. Jesse W. Weik, and their account of Lincoln's life is full, vintineing, enlightening without flat-Herndon's Abraham Lincoln isering and all in all a great interesting human document.
published by the Herndon Lincoln
Publishing Company of Springfield,
Hinois. No one who wants to
know the real Lincoln as he was
can afford to do without these
volumes. Respect for and veneration
of the great Lincoln will not
be diminished thereby, but rather
to the contrary, readers will com-
prehend the real greatness of Lin-
coln, who went ahead despite all
natural obstacles until he carved
out a niche of fame for himself
second only to Washington.
Incidently Mr. Herndon's chap-
ters on Lincoln's religious belief
and his unhappy married life will
also prove a shock to those who
hold to the Lincoln demi-god
theory. Mr. Lincoln was not a
churfe-goor, did not believe in the
Bible, the divinity of Christ, the
virgin birth, the miracles nor a
number of the other orthodox
views of his day and of our day.
He, believed in God, the creator of
the world, and let it go at that.
So far as Mr. Lincoln's love for
telling smutty stories or any stories
at all, had his home life been more
congenial, or had he any home life
at all, he might not have grown
into the village Rip Van Wrinkle,
spending his nights away from
home in Springfield, and regaling
the hangers-on with his fund of
stories.
Smiths For Governor
What's in a name? Ask Harry
Clay Smith of Cleveland, Ohio.
Mr. Smith ran against Harvey
C. Smith, white, for secretary of
the State of Ohio, and polled
60,000 votes. The white Smith
claimed the colored Smith got
some of the votes intended for him.
Now the colored and white
Smiths are candidates for Govern-
or in the Republican primaries held August 8th. Incidentally seven other white Republicans are on the same ticket. If the eight white Republicans divide the white vote and the solid colored vote goes for Harry Clay Smith, we may wake up August ninth, to find a colored man as the regular Republican candidate for Governor of Ohio.
Bible, Broom, Bath
Cleanliness is next to Godliness to Miss Nannie Burroughs, principal of the National Training School for Girls just outside Washington, who has taken for her school motto to BIBLE, BROOM and BATH.
The world according to Miss Burroughs is divided into three classes of people, those who clean up as a habit, those who clean up now and then, and those who never clean up.
By for too large a number of women, she contends, are in the second class. These people clean up for company on Sundays or when a Convention comes to town. Then there is such throwing out, chucking away, covering over, puttige under, burning up, mopping up and smearing up that takes place at no other time.
In those homes there are little personal pride, little home pride and much pure laziness. Being clean is not a necessity but a luxury in spite of the cheapness of soap, water and brooms.
Thousands of American homes are models of cleanliness and order. Miss Burroughs finds, but the biggest job is to introduce the Bible, broom and bath into the homes of the second class who clean up for "company."
Mr. Wilson's Letter
Ex-president Wilson's letter to Thomas H. Lyon, commonwealth attorney of Manassas, Virginia, thanking him for his efforts in saving Allan Harris from a mob of would-be lynchers, calls attention in another manner to lynch-law and the need of Federal aid to suppress it..
Records kept by Tuskegee Institute and by the Crisis last year show that the number of legal executions was equal to the number of actual lynchings, or in other words the mobs of Southern States
were 100 per cent as efficient as the courts in their toll of human life.
So it happens that when a state official outwits a mob, and carries off his prisoner in safety to a trial by jury, he is the recipient of a letter from an ex-president of the United States commending him for his unusual zeal, bravery and idel-
U. S. Department Of Labor Finds 1,000 Colored And 61 White Workers In Colored Newspaper Offices
Approximately one thousand one hundred and ninety-eight Negroes, in virtually every trade and occupation, and sixty-one white workers, form the working personnel of 113 newspapers and 14 magazines owned and directed by Negro proprietors in 30 States and the District of Columbia. The grand total of 1,259, which also includes approximately 185 Negro female workers, is made up of the following trade increments: Propietors or managers 204, editorial and clerical workers 303, foreman 69, compositors 103, linotype operators 70, machinists 21, ad men 22, make-up men 38, floormen 16, proofreaders 47, stereotypers 2, electrocutionists 2, pressmen 84, hookers 26, mailers 104, and all other tradesmen 38. The 61 white workers, aside from 4 of their employer who exclusively occupies the electrocutionists' occupations of the 127 publications studied, are sparsely distributed from linotype operators to mailers, and other skilled-to-
The 127 papers and periodicals are further classified as 96 secular, 23 religious and 8 fritual publications, of which 18, 22 are published weekly, monthly, and daily, respectively. Two are bi-monthly issues and of the remaining two, one is a weekly and one is a quarterly publication. All three of the above publications maintain and operate their presses, and are seven conduct their printing and printing business for con- work of a book or job nature. The composing work of seventy of the publications is done at plants by skilled, even compositional, associates.
tors and all statistics are taken from a summary of the newspaper and publishing industry preened by Phil H. Brown of the U. S. department of Labor, who collected artifical inquiry among the 350 publications listed with the Departments of War. Of this number, 42 suspended nudification since that year, and 181 of the smaller papers failed to respond.
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE AFRO-ARMERICAN
Sixty Years A Minister
Three of the best known ministers in and around Baltimore will have amassedaries within the next few years. New York Carroll, nester of colorful ministers in Maryland, who will preach a historical sermon at John Wesley E. Church, Sharp and Montgomery in celebration of the sixteenth anniversary of his having been licensed as an exhorter. Another is Dr. Harvey Johnson, pastor of Union Baptist Church 50 years earlier. He will be 79 years of age this Friday. There then is the ever-pleasant smile that is the hallmark of Waters A. M. E. Church. Rev John W. Norris. He will be 50 years of age next Tuesday, and says, according to his present feel, the ought to live to be a hundred.
Dr. Carroll is a native of Calvert County, but he came to Baltimore in 1857, which is before Sampson Brooks, another district member, was born. Three years before he had joined church in Calvert County, and when he came here connected himself with John Wesley M. E. congregations, Sharp Street, Wesley M. E. Churches were pasted by a white minister from the Baltimore Conference. It was at the joint quarterly conference that Dr. Carroll was licensed in 1862. Washington Conference, of which he the oldest member, was organized.
Determined to qualify as a minister, he began studying and in 1866 he was ordained a deacon. He attended a school maintained by the Freedmen's Bureau while attending the pastoring at Mt. Zion, Washington. He was ordained in 1868, and one year later became pastor of old Orehard Street Church, now known as Metropolitan. He was one of the first pupils to enter the old Centenary Biblical Institute, now known as Morgan College. The school was then located on Saratoga street near Calvert. In the latter part of the seventies he was sent to John Wesley Church. During his administration there the present front of the church was built. He has pastored at Sharp Street, Centennial and other important assignments. Though retired from active work in 1917, but few Sundays find him not occupying a pulpit. Dr. Carroll is said to be hovering around 85 years of age, but only smiles and waves a deprecating hand when the age question is brought up.
Dr. Norris is also a native of Virginia. He was ordained in the Philadelphia Conference 44 years ago and has traveled since continuously. While pastoring at Oxon Hill, he was the late Bishop Daniel A. Payne and took the theological course at Lincoln University. Dr. Norris came to this city as pastor of Trinity Church in Philadelphia, except during the four years he was stationed at St. Paul Church, Washington. It is said that the police of Washington gave an order that he was pastor at St. Paul Church, the church living together must get married or go to jail, and that Dr. Norris cornered a speedy marriage market as the result. He has pastored at Ebenezer Church (two terms of five years each). Allen, which he moved from Stockton street to its present location at Lexington and Carlton street, and is winding up five years divided seven years between the Potomac and Hangstown Districts.
RACE PREJUDICE IN GERMANY FOR FIRST TIME IN HISTORY
White Observer Finds That Quartering Of Black Troops On The Rhine Has Caused Stir (Oswald Garrierson, Villard, in the Nation)
This of course leads up to the so-called "black horror of the Rhine." It is far from easy to write about this subject. There has been an enormous amount of propaganda in the discussion of it, both in Germany and abroad; that sincere Germans admit freely, and the crime of this propaganda is that it has been almost wholly an appeal to race prejudice in America. For the first time, however, race prejudice has been injected into Germany at the expense of the colored troops who are certainly not there of their own volition but because, poor military slaves that they are, they go where their French military masters order without the slightest understanding of what it is all about. Our own General Henry T. Allen, commander at Coblenz, has recently joined those who have protested against the presence of troops of "lower civilization" in the Rhineland and hopes for the early removal of the 15,000 colored troops who were the Rhine. This is a marked change of position for him, for just before Mr. Wilson retired as President and was Harding came in (February, 1921), he filed a report with the U.S. Department in which he minimized the charges against the black troops, his report giving the impression that all the charges were chiefly pro-German or anti-French propaganda. Rather our General has reversed his stand because another President rules in Washington or whether it is for other reasons is not quite clear.
I think, however, he was right in his 1921 report when he stated that the conduct of the colored troops is on the whole as good as could be expected of any troops on duty under similar conditions. Personally, I do not think that the burden of enduring the presence of a garrisoning army is much intensified by the light color of the French African troops. Crimes these Senegalese and Madagascans commit. The dead body of a girl who had been raped was found in an orchard while I was in Germany and two colored soldiers were arrested for this atrocity.
On the 8th of April a Reichstag Deputy, Herr Kowell, declared in Parliament that "blind rage is arising among the German people when innocent Germans are murdered." Later a number of assaults upon German women by colored soldiers have again occurred." But such horrible crimes take place wherever there are single men in barracks among a foreign population, whether those troops "be white or black and whatever the flag that flies over their barracks.
Properly to judge whether there is undue criminality or not among the colored troops one would have to have reliable statistics as to how a similar force of white men would behave under similar circumstances. There are French officers in Germany who frankly tell the German women with whom they are quartered that Germany is better off with colored troops than with white since the former can be and are being held at stricter discipline than is possible to put in
force with white women. In several towns I visited there were no complaints of sexual crimes, but the fact is, of course, that the troops are going about with white women precisely as our own colored troops did in France, supervised by an epidemic. There is a single branch of white men in one hospital I saw three black babies whose mothers were German girls—one of the mothers is in prison for theft. Economic necessity drives many girls into relationships with French soldiers, white or black, and no dures whatever is needed to obtain young girls for the brothels which the French have established. The breakdown of morale throughout Europe and the enormous growth of prostitution was just, and because they had a decent sense of honor."
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
as presiding elder. Dr. Norris estimates that he has raised over $250,000 during his ministry. Two General Conferences and says "I want everybody to know that I am in the race to be a delegate to the coming one." His clock brings the news that he is 80 next Tuesday the popular pastor will be on his way to Denon to attend the Eastern District Conference.
Rev. Harvey Johnson
A. B.
In 1872 when Dr. Harvey Johnson, a young man just fresh out of Wayland Seminary, came to Baltimore to attend a Baptist in this city. Now the Baptists outnumber any single denomination. In the intervening time the Dr. Johnson written the large volume in the eye of the crowd of Maryland fighting many battles, including the successful ones for the admission of African Americans.
colored lawyers to practice before the State bar and the inclusion of a barrister in the Bastardy Law. Born in Fauquier county, Va., August 4, 1843, of slave parents, he has been one who always has hit out against the law. He suffered a great loss in the death of his wife, Mrs. Amelia Johnson.
Equal Salaries for All Teachers Without Regard to Race Or Sex Is The System in Philadelphia
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Maryland
Dear Sir:
Replying for the Superintendent of Schools to your inquiry
There are no distinctions in the salary schedule as between men and women throughout the system.
2. The salary schedule constitutes one of the rules of the Board of Education. It provides a base salary with increase depending on years of experience and fitness.
Trusting this answers your inquiry,
very truly yours.
OLIVER P. CORMAN
Associate Superintendent
Philadelphia, Pa.
NATION MUST SPEND MORE ON SCHOOLS
GREGG ELECTED PRESIDEN
Meeting Votes To Convene Next Year At Tuskegee, Alabama
By William Anthony Aery
Hampton, Va., August 3—Dr James Hardy Dillard of Charlestonville, Va., in his address on "Cooperation" delivered in Ogden Hall Hampton Institute, before the closing session of the eighteenth annual meeting of the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, expressed the profound conviction that America ought right away to spend five times as much money for education as it is now expending.
"America could afford to spend this money for education," he said, "if the people should quit paying $40,000,000 for every new battleship."
Doctor Dillard, who is a member of the General Education Board and president of the Jeanes and Shater Funds, sated that the tax funds $3402 in 1912 and in 1921-22 received $115,000. The county training schools for colored students, which increased from $1,000 in 1912 to $1,200 for salaries, from public funds $4444 in 1912 and in 1922 received, from the same source, $416,000.
"This last amount was more than double by appropriation for other support," he said to the $1,407,000 spent in building "Rosewallen schools" which are modern rural schools for Negroes, Jullus rosewallen of Chicago gave to the public colored people, $404,000; public tax fund, $600,000. Doctor Dillard declared that the masses cannot be educated by philanthropy. "The only right to educate public bricks public taxes."
The Association elected Dr. John A. Gregg, president of Wilberforce University and president and R. S. Grosley, Assistant State Supervisor of Negro Schools Jackson, Miss., executive secretary Sixteen other officers, including seven women, were instituted. The Association, Sr. R. W. Wright, Sr. Philadelphia. The 1923 meeting will be held at Tuskegee Institute, July 16. Outlined The Association adopted the policy of securing a paid executive secretary; urged schools, municipalities, colleges and universities to make provisions for pensioning them; expressed its commendation of the work which departments of the Association are doing to improve colored teachers through summer schools and teacher-training departments;
urged all Southern States to provide as speedily as possible adequate elementary school facilities for the Negro youth, approved the work of the State agents for colored schools; commended the John F. Slater Fund, the Jeanes Fund, the Rosenwald Fund, the Phelps-Stokes Fund and the General Board for their material assistance, but also for their constructive suggestion and leadership in Negro education; endorsed the
aims and methods of the Commission on Inter-racial Co-operation called upon college students to provide efficient service to Negro youth; and commended the movement in the Negro land-grant colleges to eliminate high-school programs, as rapidly as possible, and develop efficient college delivery.
The resolutions committee included N. B. Young, Florida; W. B. Williams, Alabama; T. B.kins, North Carolina; J. H. Hope, M. G. Gandy, Virginia; Mury M. Bethune, Florida; and R. E. Brown, Louisiana.
(Bruce Grit, in Negro World)
"There is a difference between political giants, and political pygmies. Statesmanship in the Na
New Torkers Say Marcus Gorror
Must Go. Garvey A Menace to
"Negro Freedom"
To the Editor:
Can Negroes afford to tolerate
SUPPORTer of the Ku Klux Klan?
Will Negroes follow a leader
who urges them to surrender all
manhood in America?
Can a citizen, advise Negroes in the United
State to surrender their citizenship
rights?
Jackets, Randolph, Bagnall,
Owens, DuBois, Johnson, all have
in the South and spoken with
the same fearlessness and courage
as they do in the North. To be
specific, these Negroes Virginia, North Carolina,
Georgia, Florida, Alabama,
Texas, Mississippi, Arkansas,
Louisiana, Tennessee, and Oklahoma,
within the South they have GARRY
have to sell out THE NEGROES when in the South?
Moreover, is it not better for a Negro to stay out of the South if
he goes there?
Did Garvey reverse his policy for the same reason the Ku Klux Klan was revived for personal profit?
Garvey trying to turn the Negroes' attention to the Ku Klux Klan issue in order to make them forget about $600,000.00 which they have invested in the Black Star Line, Money that Garvey in open court admits to having invested in the Black Star Line?
Is it wise for Negroes longer to entrust their money in the hands
Is Garvey to be considered big mercy because he is sharp enough for hard working men, and for working large sums, japan talk, collecting large sums of money—or should not his bigness he judged by the way he uses the money collected from these people. Has Garvey milked the Black Cow dry and now turned to the White Cow, or has Garvey, having reached the end of his rope in preying upon the Foreign and Northern Negroes now appealed to the Ku Klux Klan, now million Negroes in the Southern States, promising in return to keep them submissive to the White Cow. Should not Garvey at this time be accounting for his Stewardship explaining to the people the truth about his two criminal judgments for defrauding the poor hard working Negroes of their money and for using the United States money which he must ver stand trial.
Why did Garvey fail to publish the interview with Ku Klux K�eagle Clarke after promising to publish it in the Negro World of July 22nd? Was he afraid of Negro public sentiment?
Has Garvey the Eagle turned to Maraeu the Hawk?
"The Friends of Negro Freedom"
Sunday August 13, 13:30 in
Palmer's Place
(Northeast corner 131st street and
Seventh avenue, New York City).
Mrs. Butler's Attorney Thanks
Newspapers Which Gave Public
To Free-Lot Scheme
To the Editor:
I ask permission to acknowledge my part of the debt under which The Tribune, The Washington Post, the Buffalo News, the American have paid our people for publishing Mrs. Nannie Butler's letter of June 27th, tearing the mask off the Aladin kings whose free loss-to-colored-people scheme is about the fairest rival of the ancient game that has recently come to light. Yours was an act of courage and genuine public
In the corporation's denial published in its issue of July 14th, it is said that "Mrs. Nannie Butler was discharged from our hospital due to the fact that she did not be cared for for such service she was paid for." As attorney for Mrs. Butler, I say to your readers that Mrs. Butler was not discharged for any such reason, and that she is in her letter of June 27th. Mrs. Butler told exactly why she was discharged, and that was the truth; and what is more she says the corporation still owes her in part for her services. Also to the issue raised by Mrs. Butler's letter is the notable conduct to two newspapers, one, the New York World, published by white men, and Eagle, published by men of our own group.
Of the newspapers to which Mrs. Butler's letter was sent, all carried either the letter itself of a new item based on it. except The Washington Eagle, the newspaper on Mrs. Butler's side of the mutter, but a week later was out in force carrying a denial of Mrs. Butler's statements by th. Aladdin Realty people and in the same issue, something had not carried on in divergence with the very company whose scheme Mrs. Butler has denounced. Comment on this type of Negro journalism is manifestly useless. The people will seek judge for the matter, however, that in giving out the facts contained in her letter Mrs. Butler] has performed a service for which the race as a whole should be grateful to her.
J. C. WATERS, Jr.
1605 Vermont avenue,
Washington, D. C.
CANNON GAVE "JIM"
THE HEAVY WORK
Senator Watson, of Indiana, then told the Senate of an alleged plan proposed by Herman Ridder to uncle "Uncle Joe" Cannon President, but which the latter turned down.
But let the New York Times continue the narrative.
When Mr. Cannon declined to accept the Senate Senator Watson, Mr. Ridder not only threatened to destroy "Uncle Joe," but the entire Republican Party.
Thereupon Mr. Cannon, declared the Senate, sent him, Neel his wife, and told him, Mr. Ridder ever came to his, Mr. Cannon's office, he, Neel, was to throw Mr. Ridder into the corridor, whereupon Mr. Cannon, Mr. Ridder, and gold "get out of bed" and don't ever enter my room again."
PAGE SEVEN
CITY DWELLINGS COST AVERAGE MAN TOO MUCH
An example of social condition prevailing as a result of the practice of the rooming evil, which has its effect upon it through the lax moral responsibility of working men without family connections. About $2% of the men halled into magistrates' chambers where were found to be roomers. Both the unattached man and the unattached woman constitute a grave social problem that directly or indirectly affects men or women in community. In the criminal courts of Baltimore the act of men and women living together out of wedlock as common husbands or punishable offense, so common has it come be regarded. The relation of housing to the condition is obvious. When community means the working man of small means can rent for reasonable sums can maintain small homes it lessons the number of ordy family units and increase in proportion the conditions of abnormality and
Recent death statistics and especially infant and child mortality show a close relationship to the location in which they occur. In looking up the record of ten cases of hastardy passing recently through the streets, we find that all of them occurred in those squall sections where economic pressure had driven the victims into hardship and not be forgotten that children are born and come from these conditions and mingle with the city life in the schools, churches, places of amusement and in the city streets.
LABOR IS THE BACKBONE
When it is considered that at least 90% of the money in our large cities upon which it invests in business and financial development comes into the race through wages of working people, the financial burden it imposes on businesses with its effect upon their health and happiness, becomes of vital interest. In many respects they are the greatest risk to racial progress. The economic consequences of any conditions that limit the margin if money they can save reaches every business and industry, and the moral paragon.
With the overgrowing economic oppression it will not be the pure, wisdom of the business, professional and moral life, but to fail to not only see the vital importance of this problem to racial development, but fails to institute some practical means of proper adjustment. The small business, in present local housing conditions, frequently lose the burden and
how large a tribute our presiding
how attend the courts; those who
see it reflected in hospital reports
and death statutes realize the
HOUSING CODE INADEQUATE
While the rules and regulations guards the tenants so far as fire of the City Housing Code safe hazards, unsafe structures, and plumbing, there are no requirements for screening and no laws attempting to regulate the rental costs. The lack of these provisions has allowed many cilios to come in. As a result, the code provides that there shall be a yearly inspection to maintain proper repair in certain classes of rental properties. So far as many of the homes examined are, the property has often non-effective. Some of the conditions found in the two and three story building in some of the alleys and some of the streets as well are not only poorly lighted but also worn halls and worn stairs, but afforded no possibility of establishing home conditions necessary for the proper rearing of the children of the families that rented them. Many alleys are unpaved and flushed with water, and their larger streets are paved and clean.
In most standard housing codes the burden of keeping the rental property safe safeguards the health of tenants is placed upon the owner of the property. Only two of the 100 rooms in the property were screened and only 43 had any screening at all. In all cases the tenant was left to make this improvement and 43 had no homes there were no screens at all.
A PRACTICAL SUGGESTION
Since the evils out of the housing situation cannot be eradicated overnight and since it is a matter that concerns everybody in common and cannot be properly addressed by agency, we venture the bringing into existence of a city-wide housing association composed of representatives of the various welfare bodies, professional groups and business organizations that consist not only in financing but in instituting protective legislation and above all the establishment of public sentiment that will, prevent any men or groups, who are under a medium through which usurious taxes are levied; upon the already poorly worked groups.
PAGEBIGHE
VOTERS LINING.
UP FOR FRANCE
AND GARRETT
14th, 16th, 17th Wards,
Organizations Pass Reso-
Jutions Endorsing
Senator France |
HAWKINS FOR FRANCE. |
Dr. B. Mi. Rhetta, =
Richardson and William
Gibson Out for Garrett!
‘Tioy- are beginning. to fall, unit
is: the; politicians, landing either in
the France or Gureett camp. Sit-
ting!on- the fenco tong was two tire-
some, hence the failing into the
Hands, of those who. are glad to
receive them.
Both the Franco and Garrett
camps. report. important accessions
to their ranks. of supporters among
colared people. Down inthe Mary-
land: Casualty Building, whore Sen-
ator France opened. his headquart-
ers this weok, all is bustle, te
Senator Is staying for a quarter
primary. fight that may he haeder
than the one that he Tad with
Phillips Lee Goldsborough six
years ago.
‘The Senator pluns x vigorous
campaign, and ite will mect alt at-
tacks ‘with vigorous rejoinders,
France workers say.
Tho 14th, 16th and: 17th Ward
Republican ‘organizitions have. en-
dorsed tho sonutor’s candiduey.
France sentiment is said to he ran-
ning high In South and Bast Balti-
more,’and has friends in other sew
tions. -
From Talhot and ane or two
other counties comes the tidings
that ‘Senator France will have
strong support from. colored. voters.
“Nothing to it but France for
me." i says Robert £.“Runy")
Price: for yours a worker in the
18th ‘ward.
“Prance has not dene half of
what he should have done for ¢ol-
ored “people. Garrett will. beat
hhimy- declared Daniel wy, Tiehard-
son, Garrett iender in 17th ward,
"T do not sev ax between the two
candidates now T could he other-
wise than for France.” said W.
Ashbie Hawkins, who fan ax an in-
dependent Republican candidate
two years io.
Tely Hatchet. who was a ean-
Aidate for one of the legisiative
nowirations in the ‘Third District
a seat ago, is another who favors
Franc.
‘Charles W. Main. white, is_put=
ting in many ours at the Mury-
land, Trust. Building trying to per-
fect an organization for Garrett.
He asserts that He focls gratified’
at: thesway things aro going so far,’
His ward, the Lith, has nearly all
the workers enrolled in the Garrett
columh hut the East Cultimore
wards of the First Legisiature Dis
trict, deems to be w France strong-
hold.
In the sth ward. Jeremiah Ches-
ter, William Gihson and “Mrs.
Sgamie Smith will he found: among
oxe working for Gunreti, Chester
aXe Re ix supporting Garrett out,
a Moyalty to Consressman John
Sash Hill, who gave him his job
ga,g tyatchian at a bonded ware,
nese. i
SIN. who was ane of tho mst 10"
S8me gut against France when the
ater made his speech jy the: Sen-|
ate against the Four Power Pact.
finds himself in rather a peculiar
predicament now. ;
France svens to have many on--
usiastie Supporters among the
foreign porn, Teepublfeans and |
Democrats in East Baltimore, and
Hill, who will need some of this,
vote in November in order to bo}
re-elected, now siys he is neutral;
inthe. Senatorial Right. j
‘up in the Tith ward, they are}
aying.that Dr. B. M: fetta will!
pe found in. the Garrett camp, that
Mires mma. J. Truxon will try tol
ineup-Women voters for the eandi~.
dato and that Charles W. Owens
vill Ao Missionary. work. mone the’
voters... Warner 'T. MeGuinn, Wale
fer S. Emerson and other France ,
jeaders in the ward are on the.
Hert, however, Y
How "Jerry" Chester and. “Bilt”.
Gibson are hoth cone ts sleep to-!
gether in the same political bed
fhia time down In the Ath wird’ ix
2 puzzle to many. ax the two men
have fought cach other in elections
gor years and there is little love be-
pween them. t
‘Harry Queon, of the 6th ward, 8;
headed or the Garrett camp. iis)
friends. say. and ix going to stir up
¥. We Gi Ai NOTES:
YX. Vivian Carter, Girls Work, See's)
Stat nnd imei wil We sve at the
saved im Auznoe Titi, AUS fm Retest
Praste wilt-be cers the cunt, Ps
Borie’ Beak Je manager of the norte
moet
OR revular nwonthle nycetioe of the Com
rnfttee o€ Stmumzement. will take glnee Ana
Teesdomns Mees Atm ‘Titles. hain
“Phe eamonthls ancettne of the et Ie:
verves: will We tela Tineeday, -Atenst Se
BEDrad" nM Park,
‘aeven adele Inve reelstered for vamp for
thera sree Aerts iow why Inte
for aoctnint ve tie Secretar hae Fe
erations,
P s
PRITGHETT'S BAKERY
AND ICE CREAM
4 PARLOR
F We Tenate
|. tlie Creane of Creams. -
i Brivks
9 + (a, Pavorsy
|; 45e-qh, 25e pt
P Phooe Calls Glven-,Prowmpt: Atteation:
, “4 WB, DELIVER. 3
Bpecial Prices to Chutes and? Tad’
|. . Pritchett’s. Bakery:
SRO. BIDDLE SEREET +
Erno 6888 ou
Ia Mar totaly fetal
Certain Republicans. downtown
are trying, it Is: claimed, to: trot out
another candidate for the nomina-
tion for associate judge. Mean-
while, Willam H. Lawrence, who
hus. fled already is. busy: receiving
offers of support from voters of all
shades: of opinion,
‘Tnterogt. is being manifested as to
whether’ tie Garrett and France
forees are going to recognize color-
a, vators in. the: counties. by giving
Liem proper recognition! among
the delegates to the State! Conven-
tion. In the city, the: stb, 1th,
TTth. and 22nd. wards are sure to
have colored: delegates. Colored
aspirants are at Liberty to fle in
any lepislative district in the State,
however, not needing the consent
of the politicians.
James Jf. Carmody, former as-
sistant judge of the Juvenile Court,
Soems to have the inside track for
the Republican nomination for
Congress in the Fourth District.
—— .
City Ne
} Congressman Blakeney | seeths
not worried by the “fuct that he
came over to Balthmore the day
the House took the: final vote ot
the Dyor Anti-bynching 11) and 5:
going to ask tho colored: voters of
the Second District to Support him
again.
Congressman Mudd may have
some explining to do: with thé
yours in te Fifth Disteict ay to
Wise he was paired with: amin
opposed: to the bill on the day the
nal vor was taken.
Papers of Tncorporadon have
Iyer granted; tho Koval: Queen
iPleasure Social: Club, 313. X. Vin-
conv strect. ‘The, instrument, sets
bub that tho clubfis: organized tor
social: and welfare purposes and
hus no: capital stock. ‘The incor-
Hporators: are: Jonnio Hardy, Pearl
grown, Getesto Kolfineon,.” Mabel
Cure, Mary Hardy, Lillian Cure
ind: Florence Hopkins,
A tare delezation, oft Masons
vom Baltimore is: expected: to at-
end tho annual scasion of | the
jGrand: Lodge of the Order, whieh
wilt he: held in Annapolis, “August
Horan 21.
lard is Busy ketting, together his re-
ports for the annual session . of
the Grand: Tabernucle of the Order.
which will: be held:in Brooklyn. N.
¥., in. October. instend of Boston.
as’ dre plannod.
Graduates of the oll Colored
Polytechnic Institute sare planning
to hold a reunion some time in the
fall.
‘phe Colored: Business Men's Fx-
change, at its monthly meetings on
Thursday evening, of last » week.
lected the followings deleicatos to
the session of the National Negro
Business League, which holds its
amaual session in Norfollt wack: at-
ter next: Siumnuel [, Burton, Wm. L.
Hivaseratd:and William. Andrews.
The Tatapaco Business Leake
has elected the following delegates
to the sexsion: Sponcer PacLerxon.
iN. Patterson and Joseph Wil-
liam.
Amone. dhe educational Institet-
tions that Will henelit. by the will
of the tate Dr. John 1K. Goucher
wil be Morgan College of, which
he war a trustee and: which | wil
share equally ina fond set aside!
be the will for i number of insti~
tutions in this country, Tore,
China ang Japan.
William: Bell, aged 49, a former
resident of this eity. died at his
ome in Boston hist week, Bee!
sides at widow, @ brother, iuxcne|
Bell, and. sister Mise Mildred et:
moth teachers in the city srhoolk,
ire amoug the surviving relntives:|
Phe reniains were brought to this
sty and inverred in’ Mt, Auburn}
Semetery. |
Boxee Hemphill and Samuet|
Ramey, through their Attorneys}
Jawkine and’ MeMechon, have in-
titted sults by the Court at Com=
non Pleas for $1000 and 82500 r¢-
ectively against the Vnited Rail
vay’ Company for personal dam
sie
Camp ire Girls of Sharp Street
covimuntty Hon wont mt a Hike
Saturday morning. They. cvoked
themselves breakfast in Druid, Hill
Parke and then. praceeted 10, Mor-|
ree collect erountss whey They
Fated usa ha hunch," hey ro"
Turned hy way of Astington Avent
it tne.“arontehelin reserve
nso In thy arts weres anaes
Allesra Mussenden, — Gatherine|
Jones, Ruth Penn. Edith Parker,
Aiding Johnson Stadeline ”Gar!=
can, Troi Grand, and Inen Brake
Sins ‘Else: Manan, wipereiser
Miss Flossie White, assistant.
Vacation, Bible
| School Teachers
san sit cn oe
stati a an a
ht aS rt ine,
et hag rhe.
nner attr Se nea at, Mo
Erste Sie. na iH es
et ehh aie Ire em
| director: Mowe Anite Themes, Gladys Ray,
ise: di acca
ren emt, mi
sneer: ese ic
(Gigi eae
“ete ha ett ert
‘TREATMENT. It gives
qo elle, Swelling
, tra hort bent snot
ee ones: Ail. itrossin
sFmptom-rapidls dbseqwear. Tver wid kid
mess art: tettresGieneenl” iuprovemeat
recilicde Tevet Wait ria treatment
pentntely PIER, Teg Itz Never: hens of
Shythlngs tees caunt ere denier. Write to
‘pak THONAE E, OREEN,
Banks lake dom te Ohatsworthc Os
r “ta =
{ Security Life Insurance
Company
‘ ef Muerte:
Va oncat RORDNUE: GEE:
2, ANSUTANGE: CO:
[}}- teeprnravess under: te: Law of: 3,
8. OOR, BAGH & MULBHRRY. ors.
Hl fpoun pee
|! WeWilt Please Yow
||; ¥ett Tafe. Endowment: and: Weokly.
Hl Paying Bioky BeueSt:Policon
}\\:, Stan Life: Insurance Co;
| star'ure supe, wanro:; um:
Ne
BALTIMORES NEWEST AND BEST HOTEL
.¢. Hi JONES: MME. J. CREDITT JONES
Yrop. ai Manne .
; | ee somes Ved ee
‘The Only Hotel |; (a) eee Eee es
| feuturing —|\ ieee eee Ries Haan
% Concerts aud en ter ce ee
“Programs. each |} Bagg. & ie bara teed |
GPros h eee
nicht for the} me i ee
enjoyment of its per eee Le om
| mesls. eat fae es ar a
1G reas tse won| ee
derful— Se ene ee
S RADIO ee
i a ese ise bean
BE lt fi ae sien
Wi THE HOTEL with the quict atmospliere of your
'@.own home... Tho: place where. refinement,. superior.
| Mequipment and service are combined to give satis-
i ffaction aud complete comfort.
f 20 Rooms, Suc Parlor
[Cateteria, end Lunchroom Private Dining Room
1631 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
e ‘Next Door To Itegent Theatre -
a ‘OALL, WRITE OR TELEPHONE FOR. RESERVATIONS
400 WALKER
"AGENTS COMING
Annual Session of ‘Agents
of Manufacturing Com
pany To Be Held in
Bethel Church
MRS, WILSON TO SPEAK
Mme, Walker’s Daughter
To Lecture and Distri-
bute $1,500 In Prizes
Mrs. Alice C, Burnett, Nationit!
Igraveling Representative, and
area D, vans, Advertising Man-
lager of the Madan C.J. Walker
‘Manufacturing Company are in
Baltimore to assist the lows!
lvatker Union in providing for
delegates and perfecting plans for
the Nationa? Convention whieh wil
‘be held here August 10-17-18.
VB. Ransom, General Manager.
. Robert L. Brokenburr, Assistant
General Manager, Mrs, Lelia Walk
Jer Wilson, President inl owner of
the company, Miss May Robinson,
her daughter Vice-president will
We amotie Gose present at the
convention.
There will be three wublic sex
sions. On the night of Austot 16,
there will be a yithtic program to
welcome the delegates 10 the cun-
yontion at Methel Ae M.S
Churad, at whieh time Mrs Wilson
peill Teetitre on her recent tour of
Spain. Prane, Waly. and: the xev-
eral points uf interest in the ely
Land.
P“On the 17th of August a publle
session wilh he Ighl at Bethel.
S38 chureh, Stra. Mary 1, tal
het president uf the poids
Momorial Assoekttion and former
president of the National Wedera-
tion of Colored Wenten’s Clay witl
be present, Mrs. Alice C. furnett.
National Hepresentative will give a
stereopticnd lecture of oie 250
slides showing the proxres uf the
Negro in business xince 1864 sued
the sixth annual award ef prizes
amounting te $1500.00 will be inde
LO atROL,
Friday at St. Mary's Mall a pnhe
lie dance and reeeption will be
held tar delegates and their
friends, Bob Youns’s | Orehestyt
will furnish the muse, A sperial
prize Will be awarded to the yer=
son holding a lucky coupon, ‘The
auicen of the ball will he erewned
for wearhng the most beautiful
hair dress.
On Saturday the th, the eb
gates and friends Will x to Washe
ington ax special guest wf the
Washington Union of Walkers
Agents. A program, colonial teat
and sightseeing will be the fea
cures of enterttimment on the trie)
Between 380 tid 40). delesates
ve expested from every State in!
ihe: Chiba. ‘
Rev. Junius Gray will motor to
Culpepper, Va. Saturday’ to speaks
at the dedicition. af the | New
Mount Olove Hapust Church, Rev.
1. Winn, pastor.
i
JAZ NIGHTLY
‘At tho Open Air Palm Gardon of the
New World Cafe
928-30 SARATOGA STREET
faa) Masie, Meverazes and the veer best
HO Bats. tne nied spent SouR letnaee
hes with ts.
WHAM WHINE, Pop.
eed
Tin oo FEL ONAL TY
YOU:WILL REVER HAVE
‘QLD MAN’ WALSH'S
WALSH'S. EVE-LONG
BLOOD-PURIFYING
KUDNEY REMEDY
MARVELOUS REMEDY
These: are: the: {wo famous
Remedies: which: have: re:
stored tiousands:of “pty
'sibal’ wrecks” fo: liealtt
WALSH'S FAMOUS
OLD HERB SHOF
70! Pamsylvania: Ve.
Baltimore, Mi,
oe jf TBE AFRO: AMERICAN se!
Good Morning J udge
Domestie Troubles Enliven Frials InSeveral ”
Police Courts of City
Nine Ukippy mien and | women
suns themselves into the Seuthern
Pollee Surtion varly Monday morn
five and then sung themselves right
UNC agin, Jt, happened in Peach
sites Wittiant Hille #18 Peach a
Hews ywam having. ‘biruhday ert
hich. started early: Sunday’ Mill
{nd from all indications” woukd
Fiave heen in prokrest st bad 10
tie patice come upon ihe scene a
eee Monday morning. Banjos,
Hiandating. suid sentcure were Hel
Inge ake the alfa Just. wena i
sMoula "he cand together wilh the
Aionmint volves at the happy try
Tiere wits musi in the sit in Peach
alley.
‘At $:30 the police interfered and
took to the station the entire bivth-
fy partys those sanrented were
‘Geo. Taylor, 1118 China street; Geo,
Calihan, S28 8 foul street:
fire, Brogan, 226 Peteh “alley;
Nie Keatie: Butinr, 20 Peach alley
Miss Hattic While, 935 each al
ey: and Benjamin Smith, 920
Peach alley.
hen cairanged at the potic
suition the ngistrate taking in the
Situation told then to piaye ple
tr aemoustrave how they wore ds
Tirta the peas of the neighor-
howd then’ bik thine fuappeneed
‘Myey st ie with ans, My Men
ing transformed that patie sta
Tan inte a jaan parlor, “When the
/Magistrate opened his eyes ind
Aish front the spell “the only
ting he cunld say was “dismiss-
Mec cant Mew. Alfred! denier
Tie ine street, “Couke 2c trip “ts
er eons Siinday. deniter” tet
vi wie st proud 0 seta fn
ere gt mmntering Gt Nero
Atitit the tights andthe earbureter
Suh not wrk, so he tid, at
Te ddid mot make: the rennrn’ trp.
This expansions faited to- espa,
Khe fetenea silently sud expressea
ihe Helle in is versetty wile ler
Met tte pti er tid ths
prash sitged fe to apie far el
Fit toss ened Sern distant Uae
race in ardhnvestertt potion st
tion Monday.
Mess fol Hurkett, 1515S. Mont
etree, aad her husigind Leon Dut
iRelte hated inte the. Nacthiwestarn
praliee station Monday: tee Barve ia
aN hee aitonees Awoorling. Ut
Mr. Burkett. “there was 2t retsen.”
This reason he stated ta de anathier
Yontngs math, several af bee friends
testified that he struck ter sand he
War aiven atte of S100 and costs
Wah the aamoenition to leave her
avane. |
James Hrwetay, 31, 1608 W Miue
honey streets caiin't Knows weit he
Wioue wahuses” ie stated to oMfies att
the plies stttons awhiets fe sterted
Mie tiewe doveaiy sind at aye sane
DER SAMS CHINESE RESPAURANT
ee frais we tak OA
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1805 Pennsylvania Avenue .
Vantaa aed P20 h
ee
a IRSA SED DOLD AO TL OT
THE NEW CHINA RESTAURANT
‘the Vines snd test Chinexe Restaurant in Northwest Baltimore
1637 PENNSYLVANEA AVE. next doar (to Regent ‘Theatre
ee eee aloe BUR, EA-RAAUS, FISH, GS,
SenGuin Cluck ies, MARYLAND SEY, ETC. §
Open from Ya. m., to 2 im First-Olass Service. f
SSI ETH LES ND PTE DOT EE NDR
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FAR EAST CHINESE RESTAURANT |
Liter, New Management
Oven tein SP Me ty 3200 A,
uate, Pork cee EE Arey excatin Fal, Eaes and Hf
en al eaeken, Marsan xtsto
933° PENNSYLVANIA AVE. |
CHAS. MOON, ror. tea
MOON, Vrope Tah et YP
r
Hime had another wife, | the wike
eharged with bigamy and held for
the Grand Jury on a-warrant sworn
out by Miss Jordan to whon he
va recently meeted. .
1 Charged with -assaulting and
Frobhing Larry Harper, 1104 Tae
tapseo sireet, Bmnanuiel « ‘Thomas,
ay Weber street: aund Joseph Kow-
Her, 20 Webor street; were held for
the Grand Jury ‘this week at South-
crn potice station, Harper Was ae
Conte in front of his ane, stack
with a lick jack and cabbed oF
pocketbook containins $30.
iat for anal or eutting:
‘nce Seatt, 107 AK, West street, $10;
Mice Halen, a Mecutioh street,
Sek: Howard Mason, G15 Hradtey
trent, $251 Jolin Gidden, 8128.
Green street, $25: Hunry Drew,
18nd Little Wash street, $25; Holen
Misor StL dfitiman ‘street, $55
Many Deuby, 26 Hedmtres Ch.
ined for alisnrderly conduct:
Chas. Adams, 480 China street, $4:
Henry atenkins, 205 N. Toward
Areal, $1.00; George Young. $38
Ituhorg. street, $100; George,
Queen, 1G08 No Vincent street, $105
Rita dames, 1616" tung. sterer,
S15) Walter Diggs, ast Droit 1H
avenite, $10; Kanet Jelson, ACS
Dad Tint avenne, S10; William
Alten, 827 We Mulberry street, $34
Ritted Dorsey, LS X.Vinieent
Sweet, $32, Lennard Baraes, 145
NI Fremont avemne, $25.
charged with, kereeny, chet or
pohory: Clirence Tee, 77 We Maile
ferry street, ceommnitied; ‘Chomrs
Thai, A144 AW. Monisamery street.
SSu0 tails Herman. “Wilson, 15
Sara Ann street, ennumitted: Mabel
Hirawa, ad Sirfeker street, £300
a
Disorderly house: Kdward
feinkley, | M25 Kast Loubard
street, committed.
Jolin Moore, 43% Crate street,
went in Sinith's Restaurant, 43!
Droid Hil avenue, early Monday
mnorning to get at! sandwich, got
trad with Lewis Smith, who is
Ue white, proprivtor, and threw a
huntule at hin,
Wher asked by: Miycistrate Vent
of Une Northwestern police statin
why he interfered with) “Sinith,
Moore said that Siaith was lovin
his. “little colored” waitress sud
uae he Hguret he tal no right to
“iff shoutd have anything te
dy with someone net my colar,”
Mure said.” Sinith would try.
iyneh mie." |
Mise inatgistrate saviel to allow the
pofier terezie things in, the
future stad fined Wine ven otis
aud cust,
Inquiring Reporter’ _
Aske five persons picked at ran-
dom a Question
QUESTION +
Winet Is your quititude tow:rds
the xinging of ““Dixie, “Swanee
7 ANSWER © |
Rev, A. L, Batley; 2079 -Deuld iit
aventie, UC is fifly years , lite
nothing elevating or enlightening
tothe, community or . civilize
Work, Their -signittesunes les
Townward, and itshould be de
hounecd hig at Christian ice lov
recat humanity upligters iy Uy
elty or elsewhere.
Miss Kmina Willams, 410 Mol
sureet. [think itt splendid ides
fo sing thy old-tnne somes, | She
nee tere help (ix now and hel
to show he galvancement vf th
race,
Mrs. Math ‘Tat, G43 stirtiig
streets ‘the singing of the: sol
Songs is indged apprapriate,, sine
they show ts haw far we have ad
weaned ty ab mee :
| Mn Mervin Hrown, 45 St, fethe
Mtreet. U like | "Swinee” Rubber
mid “OR Bltek Joe but “Dixiy
ets ny suit,
‘ os *
Mv. Callie West, 1508 8. Dalle:
puree C diuks ft all) right fo
a hand to pkty musts tht please
the est, “TAM there dire other ou
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4 1627 Druid: Mill Ave, - '
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SN . , NAY
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Gp cat: Bite ee ee esided to
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extra work, the cottagers. decided
to tet the lawns: Der.attended to “by
iy peace ainong the butlers,
i
Enc To Pigely Wiggly’s
| Unique Stores Explained
low ‘The Entyons Enters The Gates
: Of Serve-Youwrsellf-Piggly
q Wierly Stores
‘The stores of the Viggly- Wiggly
being a, new ide to the nuyority
fof Baltimere people, the conipany
wishes to give a clear idea to their
patrong of how to enter the GunoUs
Hserve Yourseli. Grocery”.
‘On approaching the entrance,
you walle through the TURNSTILE
on the lef and take one of the
haskets or “You ean bring one
long with you, ‘There is my wal
ing on a clerk, ‘You serve, sour-
seit and chen retina to Cie origlit
sidesol thy TURNSTHLE and pay
the eashier, Ag the company bes
been informed that there are i Lew
whe aly not understand the work-
Tug ot the gate, i’has deemed it
necessary to xive a clear exphuna.
tion dirough the column of the
AERO.
‘rhe compiny, is planning to
pice at sure i every community
Wwhereby one in the city will be
convenientiy served, Every niin sind
woman in the city is being urged
te become 2c partner in this great
community enterprise,
i,
SS
WM, J. B. SHANKS
Bottling Works
Stunafneturos Soin Water, Sassparliia
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705 W. MULBERRY STREET
Phono, Calvert, 0042
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ES eee a aR
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1922. :
in ees
a Charles Gieew 053 George. street,’
© was found dead at-hh home Mon:
day afternoon. An Insurance polley
“tof the National Life Insurance Co.
fiot Chicago was found on his: per-
| son.
: i
1] John © Reynolds, 1703 Ditman
y}sireet, was, thrown from a ioving
van Saturday on Homeland avenue
and tvendered uneonsciows, He was
_Jtaken- to St. Joseph's" Hospital
Where he was given “teatmente
sate wiite men seed “With tee
nglds on the tail board from which
i col ward killed:
WF ei lipes
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1922
GANS KNOCKS OUT LEONARD IN 5TH ROUND
Afro Sports Editor Stages Mythical Battle for Lightweight Championship
FIVE ROUNDS ENOUGH
Knockout Blow of Great Master Only Travels Two Inches
(By Afro Sports Editor)
Many boxing fans haven't yet gotten thru laughing at the local writer on a daily paper who called the Leonard Tendler bout, the "night of the century".
O dear, O dear and neither man was knocked down.
But how do they compare with fighters of the old days? Let us turn back the scroll of time for a moment as imagine Gans as champion at 65 years of age and Leonard occupying position of The Invasion War.
IMAGINARY BATTLE
GD NP ONE! The first shot to bat, Gates blocked the blow and counted with a light job to Benny's mouth as the latter backed away. They feinted and skidbed about in the center of the ring feet each other out. They exchanged light and round even GD NP TWO! Leonard landed up and got GD NP TWO! Leonard landed up and drove his right to Gate in Gates pointed and Leonard landed a right going to Gate's hand. Gates was easily looking for an opening to put an eye on the ropes with right and left to the ends, Gates landed right and left to Rob's head. Gates round.
ROUND THREE. Gans shook Leonard on wrist rests and led to the head as Benny cut off. Benny handed a light left to Leonard with right and left drives to stairs, shaking, reining him to the ropes. Gans grabbed the reference broke them. Gans grabbed a left jib to Benny's mouth and grabbed his nose and the chin spotted. Gans grabbed a right cross to the jaw and Benny dropped to the truth. The bell rang as the reference broke Gans' sound.
ROUND FOUR. They exchanged right hands to the hold and went into a clench. Benny shoved to shine in and out gilding and affixed with a spud that shucked the new worker. Leonard began to swing wrist and cinnamon was taking advantage of the shuck of a paper covering Benny, grabbing the head and face numerically, posed wrist to his corner with blood spout and held his body bleeding at the nose and mouth and his left ear nearly closed.
ROAD FIVE-LONDON surprised the crowd to meeting gains in the center of the run with solid lefts and rights that have the boiled zigzag to the ropes, and dared to add away justing contin in all without a return. Leonard drove by to catch a stomach as they clinched, but brought the crowd to its feet as they had in the center of the ring and ex-clanged blows to the head and body. Leon did, repeated to be getting stronger. The box was bow in a tumult, gans broken at his seconds and smiled.
LONDON was attempted to mix it and Gans did him the ropes with pile driving. Gans did left, Benny laid back over the box, and then stopped back. Benny straighted up and like a flash Gans' right shoofed. Leonard sank to his knees, and looked the count of nine. His eyes were clear and he seemed dared as he got back to his feet, cans fointed with his back and Leonard started in to clinch, but Gans refted his body slightly and his left hand moved against six inches with a down and hop to the point of the clink and toward pitched forward and rolled over it, in a bit dead to the world. His second a� was brought to
LAST WEEK'S ALL-
-FOR-CLORY WINNERS
The winners in last week's all-for-city
tour and field meet were as follows: (Note
time was kept in the track event):
N. BAL CLASS
19 Yard Dash - 19:17 - A. Robin.
20 Yard Dash - 19:17 - B. Robin.
21 Yard Dash - W. Wagner.
22 Standing Broad Jump - N. Tailley - B. Robin.
23 Standing Broad Jump - N. Tailley - B. Robin.
24 Hop Step and Jump - N. Tailley - B. Robin.
25 Corridor - N. Tailley - 19 ft. 1 in.
26 Corridor - N. Tailley - 19 ft. 1 in.
27 Guard dash - H. Martin. A. Jewett.
28 Standing Broad Jump - H. Martin. A. Jewett.
29 Standing Broad Jump - H. Martin. A. Jewett.
Hop Step and Jump—H. Martin, A. Jew-
lin, J. Inchie—H. ft. 11 ins.
125th CLASS
10-Yard Dash—W. Jackson, W. Rosel, W.
Wilford.
Running Bump Jump—W. Jackson, W. Broadw. W. Broadw., Distance, 15 ft. 11 in.
Running Hop Step and Jump—Standard
12b Shot Put—Rosevelt, Stanford, Jackson
Jamboree, 33 ft.
UNLIMITED CLASS
100-Yard Dash—K. Lamb, E. Troy, D. Dartett.
Running Bump Jump—Lamb, Troy, Wat-
Distance, 10 ft. 10 in.
Running Hop Step and Jump—Troy, Wat-
Distance, 12b Shot Put—Murray, Lamb
Jamboree, 28 ft. 11 in.
MONTGOMERY CO. LEAGUE
Last week we presented all games in
Montgomery County League. Games this
week are: *Shockville Grizzle*, vs. *Swarrowdow*
*Sandy Spring*, *Halpine at Sandy Springs*
*Monroe vs. Gaitherburg at Gaitherburg*
*All games at 4 p.m.*
Tate Stars Here
Tate Stars Here
What promises to be the most important hill bill seen here this season will be urged at Maryland Park on the comings today when the Tate Stars of Cleveland join members of the National League in the Black Sox. This is the first time that one of the big bored Western teams has played here since the formation of the National League, and seeks the initial effort of the management the Sox club to bring the big colored team they promised at the beginning of the season. The next club to follow the Clevelanders will be the Indianapolis A. B. C.'s. The former club is in last place in the national league for standing, and the fourth to Foster's Chicago Giants who are on top.
Following t he Tate Star lice-op: Leon
Jd. f: Hederson, r: Johnson, M: John-
son. b: Musty, c: Bouter, 1b: McLain, ss:
Taylor. b: 2b.
ADDITIONA P. A. L. STATION AT P. S.
RBP TIME
GAM LANGFORD
GANS
DINON
JOHNSON
JEANNEITE
MVEY
(The Associated New Press)
N. St. Louis, La. Louis, Udan Sirai, N.
St. Louis, La. Louis, Udan Sirai, N.
W. L.
American Giants 29 15
Indianaapolis A. B. C. 32 17
Nana's City 31 21
Stars 31 21
Cubans 16 10
Tampa Bay 16 10
St. Louis 11 16
Louisville 11 16
Greenway Wins
The Greenway A. C. named out the Mennonite
All-Star test Sunday at Vendetta
ark, 15 to 15. Next Sunday, the Greenway
A. C. named out the tain test at tain tank, Huntington
venue and 51st street. Manager Price will
end Hall, who has five straight games,
o the hill in the opening tilt with Leiter
his giftery mate.
DONMENTAL A. S. GREENWAY A. C. A.
AB. R. H.
P. Cocham, 2b 5 3 2 Hopp, 1f 5 2 2
Knight, cf 5 1 1 Hinges, rf 5 2 2
G. Gibley, c 5 1 0 Conway, rf 5 2 2
Vepopals, b 5 1 0 Conway, rf 5 2 2
Morris, 1b 4 1 Brown, s 4 2 2
Jews, rf 4 2 0 Conway, 2b 2 2
Herbert, 3b 4 1 Boad, 2b 2 1
J. Woods, if 4 1 0 Stewart, e 2 1 0
Knight, p 3 1 0 Hinges, p 2 1 0
Hester, e 2 1 0
Hester, t 1 0 1
Totals 22 13 8 Totals 28 15 15
Jommelman I. A. 8. 0 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 8 - 1
Greenway A. 1. ... 1 1 4 2 0 0 0 5 0 - 2 1
Two-base hit - Hops. 1; J. Conway
- J. Conway. 1; J. Conway. 1 - J. Conway.
- J. Conway. 1 - J. Conway. 1 - J. Knight. 4; off Parker. 2, Stolen lasso
- Brown, Herbert, Hawkins. Strike out -
- Logan. 2; by Knight. 3; by Parker. 2,
- Double play. 3, Conway to Brown,
- Goals. 4, Batter hit by - Parker. 1, Unpicked.
T. Williams and Smith. Attendance 10.
Busters Divide
The Mt. Winns Busters and the Battl-
more Snuggers divided a double-header a
Mt. Winns just Sunday, the Busters and
taxing the exponent, 15 to 11, and the Shug-
ers and the Ginning Busters, 15 to 14
Line-up:
SLUGGERS
Ab. H.!
J. Green, s 2 2 Dawnie, 2b 5 2
T. HIll, 2h 6 2 2 Kyrler, rf 5 1
G. Holey, if 5 2 2 Mouce, ss 5 3
T. Wattkins, e 5 0 2 Blake, 2b 5 3
R. Sanders, b 5 1 2 Blake, 2f 5 3
C. Wattks, f 5 2 2 Hays, f 5 0 5
S. Smith, 2b 5 2 Burley, e 5 2
H. Johnson, rf 5 2 2 Collie, p 5 1
Sox Trims Tigers
After defeating the Piedmont Tigers and the Hampden clubs on the home lot, the Black Sox went to Washington and annexed the seap of the LeDroit Tigers to their threes and Piedmont 10, 15, and 18. This week Sox were scheduled to play through Pennsylvania and New Jersey opening with the Patterson Silk Sox at Norristown, N. J., Monday, and the Wildwood club on Tuesday.
AMATEUR CLUBS
STANDING
Forsetown A. C. 6 0 1,000
Chesterwood Tigers 2 1 1,000
Blas A. C. 6 1 1,857
Cedar Hill 10 2 1,829
C. A. A. A. 14 4 8,803
Cedar Hills 14 6 8,803
Baltimore Cubs 16 4 8,803
New Windor 7 2 7,794
Mt. Winnings A. C. 12 4 7,794
Piedmont Tigers 16 3 7,794
Mt. Winnings Rusters 21 11 7,794
Rainbow A. C. 23 11 7,794
Rainbow S. S. 19 8 6,625
Greenway A. C. 15 8 6,625
E. B. Red Sox 5 4 5,556
CATCHER THOMAS INJURED
Charlie, Thomas, second string catcher on the Black Sox club, was hit on the head by a pitched ball in Washington in a game with the LeDroit Thers and cones. He was revived and brought above his condition is still causing concern.
TIGERS PLAY SATURDAY
The Piedmont Tigers will cross hats with the Washington Athletic Club of Washington, D. C., at Maryland. Park: Saturday afternoon. Game called at 4 p. m.
THE SPORTING MIRROR
THE SPORTING MIRROR
By Afro Sports Editor
Last Thursday night Ronny Lay boxer of the world, defended him in a 12-round bout before a couple of Royles Thirty Acres, papers in describing the tight cage. Tender opened an old cut out and Leonard split Tender's tip. Tender slipped down in the seat that either went to the canvas test," one local writer describing. Turning from the morning part of the National Police Gazette as titled: "Famous Ring Battles C described was the memorable fight Nelson at Jim Coffroth's Mission July 4th, 1968.
Gins W
Gans was lightweight champion holds) and the battle was scheduled. Here follows in part, a description of his title, a condition made possible himself to meet the lightweight Tender fought at 133 pounds).
"Gans after cutting Nelson into a beating that would have made of steel or iron was forced back and batter down his old grip like a shade about the rims arms swaying from his shoulder of the little demon with straight head to toe.
"In and out leap the Baltimore snaps, slashing and rearing at the spots like raw beef. * * * * rage of bull moose. They knew sate mechanisms. Gans continue segment, but the little Dane took came back for more occasional crunch and mangled when it "In the twelfth, the Battler that sent him to the ropes and appercept that sent the Negro to come in the seventeenth. Three. Gans to the floor twice for the full drone of the delicate decoration.
In the days when George Dixon and McVey were in their scrap, with men competing who above-named colored boxes were the standard of boxing high. The because the colored boxes were. Today they are trying to cling game and the white boxes are great tea party. The current daily is Willard, former heavyweight champion in three rounds in a fight on Dempsey, has begun limbering latter in September.
Harry
And some of the loading sport cating the latter match, and fighting Harry Wills. This is his win. The champion in the class once changes a few blows with a chak to knock the other down, and it. A former cheese champion of the fighter when at his best, now she ring the same six or seven years championship again.
A colored man a splendid trio and clean-living aspires to protesting on the claim that to give game" and in New York State the try, black men who practice the participating in a match with what has it: "Its enough to make a daring baseball."
BASEBALL SIDELIGHTS
KYLE MADE A GREAT HIT WITH THE fans by his coolness under fire. In the eighth inning of the nightcap, with two pinch hitters facing him, and the baseroad, Kyle was apparently the coolest person in the park and came up the best he could get of Kyle was a slow roller to Ridgely for an easy out, retiring the slide as two were already down.
right Benny Leonard "white" life, defended his title against L. before a crowd estimated a thirty Acres, Jersey City. On the light called it a great beast, an old cut on Leonard's eyebrow. Hendler's lip, otherwise there was in the second round. This is the canvas. It was called for describing it as "the battle morning papers, we picked a Gazette and presently turn ing Battles Of Other Days." Memorable fight between Joe Roth's Mission Street Arena is
Last Thursday night Tony Leonard "white" lightweight champion boxer of the world, defended his title against Lew Tendler "white" in a 12-round bout before a crowd estimated at more than 50,000 persons at Hollys Thirty Acres, Jersey City. On Friday morning the papers in describing the fight called it a great battle. Tendler opened an old cut on Leonard's eyebrow which bled freely and Leonard split Tendler's lip, otherwise there was little blood shed. Tendler slipped down in the second round. This was the only time that either went to the canvas. It was called a "sensational contest," one local writer describing it as "the battle of the country." Turning from the morning papers, we picked up the current issue of The National Police Gazette and presently turned to an article entitled: "Famous Ring Battles Of Other Days." The first battle described was the memorable fight between Joe Gauss and Battling Nelson at Jim Coffroth's Mission Street Arena in San Francisco on July 4th, 1908.
Gaps Versus Nelson
fight champion of the world (the title was scheduled for 45 rounds), a description of that fight, an made possible when he was lightweight limit of 133 pounds (135 pounds). Using Nelson into ribbons in the would have broken down and an was forced to see the man his old forcifications. The about the ring in the first for his shoulders like whalebone with straight-arm blows that the Baltimore Negro striking a gear at the faxen-brained Dief. * * * * * They fought. They knew no pain. Their dane continued to jab with the dane Dane took them all with are occasionally getting in a fight when it landed. The Battler caught Gans who reps and followed it to the Negro to his knees. * * * month. Three times did the "price for the count of eight, one doleful decimal."
Gans was lightweight champion of the world (the title Leonard now holds) and the battle was scheduled for 45 rounds. (Instead of 12). Here follows in part, a description of that fight, in which Gans lost his title, a condition made possible when he was forced to weaken himself to meet the lightweight limit of 133 pounds. (Leonard and Tenderl fought at 135 pounds).
"Gans after cutting Nelson into ribbons in the early rounds, giving him a beating that would have broken down anything that was not made of steel or iron was forced to see the marvelous youth come back and batter down his old fortifications. The great Negro, slipping like a shade about the ring in the first five rounds, with his arms swaying from his shoulders like whalebone, met the onstungh of the little demon with straight-arm blows that shook him from head to toe.
"In and out leap the Baltimore Negro surking as bitterly as a wolf snaps, slashing and tearing at the flaxen-haired Dane until he looked in spots like raw beef. ***** They fought with the maddened rage of bull muck. They knew no pain. Their bodies were insensate mechanisms. Gans continued to jab with the speed of a surking segment, but the little Dane took them all without a whimper and came back for more occasionally getting in a blow himself that crunched and mangled when it fended.
"In the twelfth, the Batter caught Gans with a serrific right that sent him to the ropes and followed it a moment later with an appercut that sent the Negro to his knees. * * * * * * * * * The end came in the seventeenth. Three times did the "Durable Dane" drive Gans to the floor twice for the count of eight, and the last time, for the full drone of the doleful decimal."
Colored Boxers Manly
George Dixon; Gans; Walcott;
their prime the light game
muppeting who had stamina big
boxes were all a credit to
high. The white boxes h
boxes were good men.
trying to eliminate the color
boxes are gradually reducing
rent daily papers carry the
yweight champion who was
unds in a fight in which he so
sgun limbering up for another
In the days when George Dixon; Gans; Walcott; Langford; Jennette and McVey were in their prime the fight game meant a good manly scrap, with men competing who had stamina brown and skill. The above-named colored boxes were all a credit to the game and kept the standard of boxing high. The white boxers had to be good men because the colored boxes were good men.
Today they are trying to eliminate the colored boxer from the game and the white boxes are gradually reducing it to a five o'clock tea party. The current daily papers carry the despatch that Jess Willard, former heavyweight champion who was defeated by Jack Dempsey in three rounds in a fight in which he scarcely laid a glove on Dempsey, has begun limbering up for another match with the latter in September.
Harry Wills
And some of the leading sports writers of the country are advocating the latter match, and yet protecting against Dempsey fighting Harry Wills. This is what the fighting game has come to. The champion in the class once adorned by the great Joe Gans exchanges a few blows with a challenger neither hitting hard enough to knock the other down, and it is called the battle of the century. A former cheese champion of the heavyweight class who never was a tighter when at his best, now somewhere in his forties and out of the ring some six or seven years, is being groomed to fight for the championship again.
leading sports writers of the match, and yet the protesters. This is what the fighting class once adorned by the players with a challenger neither beaten, and it is called the bad champion of the heavyweight class best, now somewhere in his sevent years, is being groomed than a splendid athlete, a giant og aspires to demonstrate his ability to give him a chance York State the greatest boxing practice the art professionally match with white men. As the coach make a dog laugh."
A young colored man a splendid athlete, a giant in physique, industrious and clean-living aspiries to demonstrate his skill, and some are protesting on the claim that to give him a chance will "hurt the fight game" and in New York State the greatest boxing center in the country, black men who practice the art professionally are barred from participating in a match with white men. As the familiar expression has it: "It's enough to make a dog laugh."
THE HARBISBURGE TEAM WAS FLANKED by about a hundred and a quarter rooters from their home town, who motored down to, send their team through to, victory. There were many pretenders, though. Highlights were that they began to drive the atmosphere at the very outset, but they soon settled into the most reserved quietude with only a flatter now and then when some one of the home boys made a good play.
"SOLARPY" BROWN and "CHICK" Meek both former Sox piggers, didn't get a chance to bounce with the stick. Chick gathered only two safeties with the willow
Leonard "white" lightweight champion this title against Lew Tendler "white" crowd estimated at more than 50,000 Jersey City. On Friday morning he called it a great battle. Leonard's eyebrow which bled freely otherwise there was little blood she could round. This was the only time it. It was called a "sensational coming it as "the battle of the country." papers, we picked up the current issue and presently turned to an article of Other Days." The first battle between Joe Guns and Battlin on Street Arena in San Francisco on
anion of the world (the title Lionen non-
nounced for 45 rounds. (instead of 12
rounds of that fight, in which Gans los-
tle when he was forced to weaken
limit of 123 pounds. (Leonard and
Ribbons in the early rounds, giving
broken down anything that was not
to see the marvelous youth com-
fortifications. The great Negro, slipping
in the first five rounds, with his
likes like whalebone, met the onslaught
light-arm blows that shook him from
the Negro surking as bitterly as a wolf
the flaxen-haired Dane until he looked
* * * They fought with the madden-
ry no pain. Their bodies were insen-
ded to jab with the speed of a striking
kick them all without a whimper and
fully getting in a blow himself that
landed. caught Gans with a terrific right
followed it a moment later with
his knees. * * * * * * The end
times did the "Durable Dane" drive
count of eight, and the last time, for
animal."
Gans; Waleout; Lancet; Jeanneette the fight game meant a good manly had samina brown and skill. The all a credit to the game and kept the white boxers had to be good men good men. Indicate the colored boxer from the gradually reducing it to a five o'clock papers carry the despatch that Jess Champion who was defeated by Jack Wright in which he scarcely laid a glove up for another match with theerry Wills his writers of the country are advoy yet protesting against Dempsey that the fighting game has come to adorn by the great Joe Gans challenger neither hitting hard enough is called the battle of the century, the heavyweight class who never was somewhere in his forties and out of it, is being groomed to fight for the and athlete, a giant in physique, indus demonstrate his skill, and some are give him a chance will "hurt the fight the greatest boxing center in the countr art professionally are barred from ite men. As the familiar expression dog laugh."
Harry Wills
out of nine trips to the plate, and Scrapy gathered two out of seven. Brown named by Sykra to the achievement the crowd, and the humiliation the crowd, and by Kyle in the nighgramp.
He played a brilliant game at short, however, cutting off a number of hits that looked like safeties. Meade has taken on some weight since leaving the Soc.
THE SOX CHANGED THEIR OUTFIELD line-up, sending Lefty to rightfield, Rays to center and "Leffy" Smith back to center and the "Chameleon" chameleon two seasional coaches hang up against the force that brought the fans up-standing.
DOC. SYKES BROUGHT A BURST OF merciment to the fans when he plittered and base on Borton in the first game in his familiar still-like spinning style.
THE LARGEST NUMBER OF WHITE spectators ever seen at Maryland Park witnessed the games, and seemed greatly impressed with the work of the locals.
WILLS AND JACKSON SOX HUMBLE BATTLE TUESDAY HARRISBURG
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Coming Bout Stirs Gotham Fight Fans Nearly As Deeply As Title Bout
New York, Aug. 2—Boxing and other sport circles here are all a flutter and battling against a fevered expectancy over the 15-round boxing match between Harry and the weighty champion of colored heaviestweights a pair who was signed to battle Jack Dempsey for the world title next summer, and Tur Jackson, the young dusky giant of Washington Court House Ohio, who has been the shocking sensation of the West for years, will take place at Ebbets Field next Tuesday.
It is doubtful if the match between Dempsey and Wills, were it the battle next Tuesday, would much more interest than the Wills, who is a known quantity of the battle fans of the East, while their knowledge of Jackson's skill rests chiefly on reports which have come from the West where he has done the bulk of his battling. Arrogance to these reports; Jackson has record of 26 Kays in 32ights.
Jackson not long since underwent a physical test at the hands of a reputable physical expert who pronounced him a physical marvel and possessing the most powerful hands and forearm of any man he ever saw. His reach too is unusual his arm from finger tip to longer tip being eighty and one quarter inches. Wills has accepted 325, per cent of the gate. Jackson wants 25 per cent, more than Iave. Dressel thinks he is worth. The matter is dangling in the air at the present time. Tut says he has never worked for less than 20 per cent in all his life, and that his per cent has run as high as Jackson Wills.
62 Height 625,
210 Weight 169
140 Rench 560,
17 Neck 174,
141 Portioned 169
30 Wrist 87
161 3 Breeds 17
15 Chest (Nur) 42
19 Chest (Exp) 465,
22 Waist 21
25 Thigh 22
16 Call 152,
16 Ackle 102,
30 Age 22
Red Sox Win and Lose
Last week the East Baltimore Rod Sox devolved the Compton All-Stars and the Blue Bell A. U., in twilight tails, 12 to 10 and 7 to 4, respectively, and led to the Ann's�palis All-Stars by a whitewash, 3 to 6 and 12 to 5. The Red Sox would like to be best-winners with teams out of town who have their own grounds. Address, J. H. Taylor, 504 Moore Street,
Lineup:
1. Red Sox
2. Compton A. U.
3. T. Dinnies, 1b 4 1 2 Bash, 1b 2 0 3
4. G. Brown, ss 4 1 0 Herman, 2b 4 0 1
5. B. Sunners, rf 2 2 1 Shad, ss 4 1 1
6. H. Sinners, lf 2 1 2 Bell, cf 4 2 2
7. J. Ghaser, cf 2 1 2 Hending, rf 5 1 1
8. T. Chester, cf 2 2 3 Sticks, lf 5 2 2
9. J. Mash, p 2 1 2 Rob, cf 5 1 1
10. Mckenzie, 3b 4 2 Stair, p 5 2 2
Total: 29 12 15. Total: 28 10 1
Score by innings:
E. E. R. Sonners, 1. 2.0 0 4 2 1 0 1.
C. C. Cottrell, 3. 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 1
Two-base hits: G. Brown, 2. 1.
Sunners, 2. Three-base hits: M. Mckenzie, 3. J. Ghaser, 3. S. Brown, 2. Sterifee, J. Mash, 2. 1.
Sunners, 2. Home runs: G. Brown, 1. H. Sunners, 1. Mckenzie, 1. Base on ball: M. Mish, 4. Hming, 7. Stolen bases: G. Brown, 2. Ghaser, 2. Mckenzie, 2. Strike ones: J. Mash, 8. Hming, 4. Empire: P. Gunners,
Tigers Beat Winans
The Piedmont Tigers triumphed over the
Mt. Winnam. A 11 at Wednesday, 10 to 6.
Score by imbuzz:
Lineup:
P. TIGERS Mt. WINNAM
Ab. B. H. Ab. B. H.
Monroe, M 5 5 1 1 Harris, 20 4 2 2
Soundif, of 4 1 1 1 C. Barley, rf, p 5 0 1
Payne, of 4 1 1 1 D. Ware, rf, p 4 1 1
P. Smith, of 4 1 1 1 Ware, rf, p 4 1 1
J. Smith, 5 5 1 1 Camel, 20 4 1 2
D. Houston, ss 3 2 1 Cooper, 4 1 0 4
D. Banks, 20 4 1 2 Brown, of 4 0 1
Whitney, 1b 4 1 1 D. Dawney, rf, 3 1 1
A. Spiitt, 2 1 1 1 Johnson, rf, 0 0 1
A. Houston, p 1 1 1 Collins, p 2 0 1
Green, p 2 2 2 1
Total 66 10 15 Totals 26 6 10
Mt. Winnam 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 6
Piedmont Tigers 0 0 1 0 2 2 2 10
Two-base hits - Summer-field. Dane Banks,
Three-base hits - Monroe, D. Houston,
Raves on balls - off Houston, 2 off
Wave, Ware, Camel, 2. Whitney, Strike
outs by Houston, 4 by Green, 1 by
Burley, 2 by Collins, 1 Umpire - Matthes.
Cubs, 16; Fearville A. C., 6
The Baltimore Cubs defeated the Fear
wild A. C. white, last Sunday, 16 to 5.
BALTO, CUBS
Ab. B. I. F.
FEARVILLE A. C.
Ab. B. I. F.
Ware, p
Tramack, c
Bay, 2h
"Hoggie", ss
Stonewall, wf
Peele, 2h
Sullivan, ih
Grey, c
Totals
Ware, p
Tramack, c
Bay, 2h
"Hoggie", ss
Stonewall, wf
Peele, 2h
Sullivan, ih
Grey, c
Totals
27 10 22
Totals
28 10 13
Score by insigns:
F. A. C.
B. C.
HALL WINS RACE
The ten-mile final in the point bicycle races of the Clifton Bicycle club for the month of October, the Park Heights avenue course instead of the Lake drive at Drudg Hill Park as had been intended due to the failure
Leon Hall Raymond Watts Mt. Brunell and Sherlock Grinnance were the contestants finishing in the order named. Hall's time was 27 min. 50 sec.; Watts 28 min.; Brunell 30 min. 30 sec.; Grinnance 30 min. 39 sec. Grinnance who is only thirteen years old, and has been riding only one year made a great impression establishing his claim as the thirteen-year-old champion of the city. The prizes were: 1st, gold stickpin; 2nd, gold knife and chain; 3rd pair of pedals; 4th bicycle bell. The first point race for the month will be held on Sunday 13th, over the Park Heights course and the above named riders challenge all the cycle speed merchants in the city.
The points won by the above
riders for water: Waters
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
By Brilliant Fielding and Timely Stick Work Locals Annex-Twin Combat, 11-3 and 5-3
KYLE MAKES DEBUT
Opposes Ryan In Nightcap and Makes Fine Impression Hurling and Batting
Displaying once again that snapping brand of baseball they are capable of when they feel so disposed, the black Sox "come back" last Sunday after their indifferent work of the Sunday previous and took a brace of interesting diamond tits from the Harrison Giants 11 to 2 in the opener and 5 to 2 in the downfall.
Doe, Sykes as usual occupied the dishguest in the initial set-to-switch at the plate and the rangy tanker waker with the situation of one inning, had the visitors "outing out of his hand" all the way. The sixth inning was the session in which the Pensies got fresh with the Doe, and got away with three markers before he could
Thus, did it happen: After Britton who led off in this frame had died out to Hall, Doc, lost Barber of the plate on four wide ones; while he covered a slow groomer in Ribbon as a seashell whose fingers all became thumbs for a moment and the batter was safe. Lewis a giant six-footer then came up after Meade had been an casp out, and beamed his mightyug against a slow one that Doc pushed against the plate the globe far and high over the right enclosure and Barber and Wicks crossed the plate in front of Lewis. Jordan went out retiring the sida. The balance of the far the visitors were helped against the foothor. Seven safe bangles were all they could collect off sykes who walked one and fanned three; while the locals touched Britton up for eleven safe ones while he issued one pass and fanned 6. Lewis was the latter's receiving mate.
The Sox scored 3 in the second inning, 3 in the fourth; one each in the fifth and sixth and 3 in the seventh. The features of the opener were Wilson's batting he getting three hits out of 5 trips; the grabbing of a hot line of Ridley's three outs; the barge hand and a double play between Sykes, Ford and Wilson, in the order named.
Kyle Star Of Nightcap
Interest in the nightcap centered in the selection of Kyle a young recruit pitcher whom the Sox management recently purchased from the Barchach Gimus, to oppose "Red" Ryan veteran hurrier who also was a former member of the Red Sox. Dan and Louis were again designated to do the receiving.
Kyle not only held his own with his more experienced rival but stirred the local powers to enthusiasm by his stick work. He had four chances at the top but the first bolt mitched safety, the first two swats being doubles to the right field and the third a single to the same territory. On his fourth trip Ryan got blood in his eye and shot three fast ones over that he failed to connect with.
BLACK SON HARRISBURG GIANTS
ADELH. ADELH.
Margs, cf. 5 1 2 Barker, cf. 4 1 1
Ford, s. 5 1 1 Bickles, cf. 4 1 1
Ridgely, 2b 5 1 1 Powell, cf. 4 1 1
Willow, th. 5 2 2 The, th. 4 0 1
Smith, th. 5 2 2 Perry, th. 4 0 1
Lewis, s. 2 2 2 Dixon, th. 4 0 1
Miller, th. 2 2 2 Rif, th. 4 0 1
Sikes, p. 2 0 1 Britton, p. 4 0 1
[Ray mold]
Trayster 1 0 1
Rage, ef 5 5 1 2 2 2 2 2
Ford, ss 5 5 1 1 1 1 1 1
Hiberty, 20 5 0 0 0 0 0 0
Wilson, 10 5 2 2 2 2 2 2
Wilson, 10 5 2 2 2 2 2 2
Smith, 11 4 3 2 2 2 2 2
Lewis, 11 4 3 2 2 2 2 2
Lewis, 11 4 3 2 2 2 2 2
Miller, 20 5 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sykes, 20 5 0 0 0 0 0 0
Taylor 20 5 0 0 0 0 0 0
Table 25 11 10 Totals
Attended for Rerry in month,
Attended for Jord in month.
Black Sox 6:0 3:1 1:2 0:x-11
Harrisburg Giants 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0-2
Two-base hit-Lewis, Three-base hit-Smith, Home run-M. Lewis, Stolen bases—Wicks, Wilson, Miller, Ford, Sykes, Rags, Sherif deles-Sykes, Miller, Ridgely, Sacri-the flies-Lewis, Sykes, Double play-Sykes to Ford to Wilson. Left on bases-War-ris-or, Giants 4; Black Sox, 6: First base on errors-Harrisburg Giants 2; Black Sox, 1. Hit-off: Reiton, 18 in 8; Janines: off Sykes, 7 in 9; Jönings, Struck out-by Brit-ton, 1; by Sykes, 2. Attendance-5,000.
BLACK SOX: HARRIBARG GIANTS
AB, R.H.
Rags, cf. 3:0 0:0 Barber, cf. 5:0 2
Ford, ss. 1:1 1:Wicks, 1:3 1:1
Ridgely, 2b. 4:2 Mode, 3:h 5:0 1
Hall, rf. 4:1 1:Lewis, 2:0 5:0 2
Wilson, 1b. 1:2 Jordan, c. 5:0 1
Smith, lf. 4:1 1:Taylor, rf. 1:1 1:0
Lewis, c. 4:0 0:Perry, cf. 2:0 2
Miller, 2b. 4:0 Brown, ss. 1:1
Kyle, p. 4:0 Ryan, p. 2:0 1
Reiton, 1b. 1:0 0:0
Bixon, cf. 0:0 0:0
Illasfund. 0:0 0:0
Totals: 33:5 1:1 Totals: 28:3 1:1
Related for: Perry in this
Back Sox. 2 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0-5
Harrisburg Giants. 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0-5
two-base hit-wilson, 2; Barber, Kyle,
2; Ryan, Ford. Three-base hit-
Jordan, Perry. Left on bases-Harrisburg Gls.
3; Black Sox. 1, First on errors-Harrisburg Giants. 2; Black Sox. 1, Base on
off-ball, Ryan. 1; Hit-off-ball, Kyle. 11 in 9 innings
off-ball, Ryan. 11 in 8 innings. Hit by
pitcher, Kyle. Hit by Kyle. Kyle. 11 in 9 innings
pitcher, Kyle. Losing pitcher, Ryan. 11 in
pitchers, Ryan and Cromwell.
Frogs Win and Tie
Frederickburg, Mn. Aug. 2.—The Frogs
announced two more baseball scraps in their
boks last week when they defeated the
American Woodmen, of Richmond, Va.
by a shutout 7 to 1 on Thursday, and
with the Maryland White Sox on Friday in
seven innings, the game being called on
account of darkness.
MD. WHITE SOX [
A, B, R, L]
C. Gray, cf 1
R. Robinson, c 3
C. Wilson, c 4
A. Conway, 2b 1
Woods, 2b 3
Burley, 1f 2
C. Holeman, 1f 4
Burley, 1f 4
C. White, 2b 1
A. Thomas, ss 2 1
C. Gereg, 1f 4 1
Hill, ss 1
Lonax, r 3 1
D. Harris, 3b 4
P. Johnson, p 3 0
D. Ferguson, p 0 0
P. Johnson, c 1 0
C. Coleman, p 0 0
Totals 29 6 5 Totals 55 6 12
Score by innings:
M. W. S 0 0 0 0 3-0
Frogs 4 0 1 1 0 0-
PAGE NINE
C. A. A. A., 10; Canton, 5
Pitches No-Hit Game
The C. A. A. A. defended the Canton Knockers in a seven-litre sitt, 10 to 5. The Knockers were with strong teams that have their own grounds. Address: Edward Jett, 219 S. Broadway
Annapolis, Md., M.J. 2.—The Annapolis
All-Stars swamped the Baltimore Red Sox
in a twin hill last Sunday, 3-0 in
and, and 1-1 in, the second game of the pitching of Wilson, who held the Baltimore hitless and
fanned 23.
RAINBOW A. C. TAKES TRIPLE-HEADER
Line-up:
FIRST GAME
ANNAPOLIS A. S. BALTO, RED SOX
B. Borm, 2b 4 0 1 McIsso, 1b 0 0 0
B. Sima, ss 4 0 1 Brownle, 1b 0 0 0
C. Pickles, 2b 4 0 1 MBies, 1b 0 0 0
C. Pickles, 2b 4 0 1 MBies, 1b 0 0 0
A. Brown, 1f 4 1 A. Somini, 1f 3 0 0
A. Brown, 1f 4 1 A. Somini, 1f 3 0 0
B. Brown, cf 2 0 0 Boss, cf 3 0 0
B. Johnson, cf 2 0 0 Boss, cf 3 0 0
B. Johnson, cf 2 0 0 Boss, cf 3 0 0
M. Wilson, e 4 0 2 Distance, p 3 0 0
M. Wilson, p 4 0 0
L. Sima, cf 0 1 0
Totals 30 21 1 Totals 29 0 0
The Rainbow A. C. received themselves with clays last Sunday by winning the long end of a triple-header, the declining both ends of a doubleheader, and the two twin battles, S to 2 and S to 3, and then declaring the olympic win, a victory for the playing of elements, who struck 12 men and was deprived of a halftime application of successive errors on the part of captors.
Mt. Winans Tie Lincoln
Scores by imprints:
Amphipods All Stars 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 -3
Amphipods All Stars 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 -3
Ellenton City, Md., Aug. 2. - The best game of baseball here this season, the Mountaineers at A. C. Utebler in Ellenton, 2-2, here last Sunday. The game was a pitcher's battle between Smith and Burley, the latter yielded only three runs. The Mountaineers their 2 in the frame, and the Mountaineers put their two access in the ninth. Next Sunday, the Lincoln A. C. and the Annapolis All-Stars in a two-way 11 on the local grounds.
TWENTY QUALIFY IN TEST
Twenty boys qualified in the bronze and silver badges tests as follows:
Bronze-N.
Murray, V. Williams, W. Bell, R. Johnson, E. Massey, R. Robinson, A. Wright, B. Corbin, W. Brown, H. Griffin, W. Matthews, W. Burroughs, G. Bennett, W. Hill, Silver, J. Brown, J. Monroe, W. Russell, W. Stanford. There were no gold badges tests.
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Mt. Windsor 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
Lincoln 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2
Two-half hire: Smith, Smith. Base on
balls off: Smith, 2; of Barley, 2. Strike
outs by: Smith, 7; by Burley, 4. Unfires
Robin and Collins. Attendance, 200
FREETOWN. G: FAIRFIELD. 3
The Frotten A. C. defeated the Fairfield
A. C. at Frotten last Sunday, to 6-3.
Score by innings:
Frotten A. C. 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 1 6
Frotten A. C. 0 0 0 2 1 6 0 0 2
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Why Suffer Delay and Grow Worse? Enjoy Life—Health—Happiness
To Have No Bach Pain. No Nervousness. No Kidney Diseases. With Plenty of Life, Energy, and No Blood Disease. In the Wish of Every Young Old or Middle-Aged Man
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I Will Not Treat You at All Unless
I Equal Satisfied I Can Alleviate You
Now, Heather, If You Are Unfortunate, Don't Tailow Your Time, Money at
Health. You Will Do 13 One Day Too Long and Get So Bad Nothing.
Can You Believe You's Come to Me at Once and Get My Opinion
Near and week, months, indifferent person who lacks ambition, confidence, and the necessary energy to accomplish important things, can without effort, quietly increase his strength and double his ill power and industrious.
"BLOOD WILL TELL"
KEEP YOUR BLOOD PURE AND YOUR NERVES STRONG AND YOU CAN DEFY DISEASE.
I give Scientific Up-to-Date
Do You Suffer From Pain in Stomach?
I Give Scientific Up-to-Date Treatment. Only Curable Cases Accepted
Weak Nerves, Lame Back, Forgotfulness, Palpitation of Heart, Weak Lungs, Dull, Heavy Feeling, Headache, Dizziness, Dimness of Vision, Weakness of Limbs, Suggering Sensation, Rheumatic Pains, Pimples, Enlarged Glands, Sugar or Albumen in Consumption, and may need medication to often be the first warping of one losing his health and vigor. If suffering from any of them, YOU SHOULD GO TO A SPECIALIST WHO TREATS MEN ONLY AT GNC, when only a little proper treatment would quickly relieve you and secretly keep you from undergoing a more expensive course of medication and perhaps become incurable.
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As to my charges, they are reasonable, and payments to the patient are the patient's convenience. Therefore, if you need my aid do not delay, but come to me and talk to me directly.
FREE Examination Call if in trouble
Treated, Here You Get THE RIGHT TREATMENT
A Safe, Scientific Treatment for Every Weak, Diseased, Discouraged Man The Dangers of Bad Blood Overcome By
Scientific Methods
SKIN ERUPTIONS—ECZEMA, ACNE, PIMOLES, ETC.—ARE NATURES WARNINGS
No man can afford to take chances with a broken skin. You may consider the skin eruption with which you are troubled as a temporary assurance, but it may be the danger of serious blood diseases. Then, too, nest family and friends may consider you skin infliction disagreeable and repulsive. Don't go near it and take advantage of any free diagnoses.
A thorough examination of the patient is the most important part of accepting a man for treatment. A careful examination by an expert specialist is the only way a perfect diagnosis can be made. Patients calling at my office are much pleased with the care and ease the examination provides. A clinical blood pressure (blood pressure) clinical analysis and a complete consultation of all symptoms and bodily effects to the ailment. I attribute my success to the fact I made proper diagnosis, and this ability is due to experience, and this experience is an assurance of prompt and perfect results in the treatment of your ailment.
A Sure and Safe Method for a Reusable Fee Finest Office For Men in Baltimore
The most satisfactory services can be obtained at my office. Special treatment administered privately. Practice limited to men. Nothing to embarrass you. Individual treatment rooms. Experience, system and method are offered you.
IF MEN ONLY KNEW
-Off My Successful Methods and Treatments-
-Off the Great Many Patients I Rescue to Health-
-Off My Reasonable Charges I Rescue to Health-
-Short Time My Patients Have to Take Treatment-
Sick work, alling and discouraged men would come to my office begining treatment. I have been telling men these things for many years, but still there are thousands of victims who, for various reasons, have not had the good sense to come and get well. I have been telling them these things daily, giving them every care and attention, as my offices are well equipped and my experience is at your service.
Patients Coming From a Distance
I have patients in my office who have traveled many miles for Consultation, Examination and Treatment. Patients living a distance from Baltimore can obtain treatment just as well as those residing near the office, only two or three miles to my office. I will attempt to explain after a thorough examination at my office.
CROWDED OFFICES
Yet Everything Private—Having Many Private Rooms. Occupying the Entire 3 Floors of the Building. Private Entrance—No Danger Running Into Someone You do not Care to Meet. So any Man can Come and Go with the Utmost Becrecy, as there are no Other Office in the Building.
MY SUCCESS AS A SPECIALIST IS DUE FIRST TO CORRECT DIAGNOSIS OF YOUR TROUBLE—I FIND OUT WHAT AILS YOU
MY EXAMINATION IS SEARCHING, SCIENTIFIC AND ACCURATE DON'T LET MONEY MATTERS KEEP YOU AWAY. CHARGES REASONABLE TO BE PAID AS ABLE. IS THAT FAIR?
Consultation and Advice Is Free. Call Today
Office hours daily 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. Holidays and Sundays, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
DR. GEO. H. WILSON
COUNCIL OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
612 North Howard St., Baltimore, Md.
(Near W. Monument 8t.)
*No Cases Accepted by Mall.
"The Shadow"
A story by Mary White Ovington, based on the well-known practice of leading Southern white families, who to save their daughters from disgrace, give away illigitimate children to colored families. The heroine is a girl, granddaughter of a leading white Judge. But she does not find it out until she has grown up to young womanhood as a member of a colored family.
ALL IN ONE!
Cream of Malt & Hops
The only successful blend, combining 120% diastatic malt and 80% malt. Made with unbleached hops. No bobbling of hops, no odor.
2% lb. Can Cream of Malt & Hops (all in one). Price $1.00.
2% lb. Can Cream of Malt (plain), with 4 oz. Carton Hops. Price for both $1.00.
CREAM OF ALL
If not locally for sale and being sold in the United States and we will forward from us. Please bring in plain box by parcel post. Should you order to bill it, separate it from Cream of Malt (plant).
CANADIAN MALT EXTRACT CO. LTD. Dept. 1A, 44-48 Pearl St., TORONTO, Canada
PAGE TEN
"T
A story by Mary W
ilies, who to save their da
The heroine is a girl
grown up to young woma
TIEMS LEADS YOU INTO
THE STORY
Rather than suffer the public disrespect of having their daughter stand before the world as the daughter of an illegitimate child, Judge and Mrs. George Ogilvie agree to give it away to a colored family as their own, with the loss of their mother. Nineteen years later Hertha grown to young womanhood is a metaphor of a colored family named Williams. The death of the foster father makes it necessary for Mrs. Williams to care for her living by washing and ironing. Ellen her oldest girl teaches the public school in the little town, and Hertha must stay with the white family of Merrvails, consisting of father, young son just out of college and a spinster aunt.
The First Kiss
CHAPTER TWO
There were two paths to the great house. The well-braveled one led past a number of cabins, ended near the kitchen door. It was the shorter but therma chose a more attractive way among the pines to where a express marked the beginning of the orange grove. She had taken this route long before Lee. Alverna's relapse and closed it generally to dwellers among the pines. Miss Patty assured her colored maid she could use it as much as she wished.
· She had only walked a little way when she saw young Merryvale son of her white employer, himself examining his cherished possessions.
· "Come over here, won't you?" she called out. "There's no one up at the house yet."
Hertha went stylish toward him. He was a handsome man with reddish gold hair, clear eyes, and glowing skin. His hat was off, he wore a soft shirt with collar thrown open, and altogether looked an attractive combination of the farmer and the gentleman. As she came up he said sympathetic, "What a nice feeling pretty badly to day as saying goodbye to Tom. I hear he is going North to school." "Yes," said Hertha, and added almost confidentially, "you see, Tom's the baby. I took care of him when he wasn't any longer than that," indicating the length with her hands. "You couldn't have been much longer yourself." She shook her head smiling and then turned to go away. "Can't we live like it?" she talked. "Don't run into the house such a wonderful morning as this. I say, what a day it is. A day for the gods—Zeus, Apollo, Diana—we ought to worship the sun!"
It was a wonderful morning. The newly risen sun sent its golden gilt through the grove.
MADAM
EMMA PERRY WALLAGE
Poro Beauty Parlor
AGENT FOR PORO
Hair Culture and Facial Massage
We specialize on short and stubbon hair. We also prepared to teach the system at our Parlor.
536 ROBERT STREET
Madison 5543J
HAIRDRESSERS
BUT ONLY ONE
..POINDEXTER..
833 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Phono VErnon 582-J.
EXPERT MANICURING
AND MASSAGING
Mme. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
Hairdressing
1828 PENNA. AVE.
Manicuring, etc.
Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
MAdison 8756
ALL IN O
Cream
Malt & Hops
CREAM OF
MALT & HOPS
Canadian Malt Extract Co.
London
The only special
excipient, 120° diuretic
Syrup, with the lo-
hop. Nobling of o-
25 lb. in Cars Cream of
Malt & Hops (all in
once). Price $1.00.
If not locally for sale send price with your nearest branch in plain box by parcel
ly designed. Cream of Malt &
Canadian MALT EXTRACT CO. LTD.
brightening the deep green leaves, showing the pale yellow in the ripening fruit; and then danced on to the river where it lay, a limitless mass of golden mist, upon the shining stream.
As Hertha stopped and looked out over the river, Merryville stepped aside, said, "You're as beautiful as a goddess," he said. "Don't go, please," he cried as she moved away from him. "Stop and play! let's play ball. The goddesses, you know, did that. Here, catch!" and he throw an orange into her hands.
He was so near that she could scarcely fail to catch it, yet it slipped from her grasp and fell to the ground where she picked it up, awkwardly enough, and threw it back again.
He had moved away from her hand, was quick to catch her wavering throw. "Better next time," he said.
She grew more expert, lost her shyness, and the ball flew back and forth until, squeezed too hard in the man's strong hand, it collapsed into a sticky mass of skin. "It was extravagant of you," it said. "It was extravagant of you." Mortha laughed, as she watched him wipe his fingers. "You wouldn't let any one else waste good fruit." It wasn't wasted, he declared, "it gave us a good time. isn't that a worthy way to end life?"
She did not answer. The play over, she was self-conscious again. "Try once more," he cried, picking another orange. "No, no," she answered. "I must be going." "You aren't needed you." "You aren't truly. Miss Patty is wondering why I'm not there with the hot water." He tossed the orange, but she dodged it and ran through the trees. Pursuing her, in a few seconds he was at her side. "Please don't go," he pleaded. "I must." "Well, promise you'll come and play again." "Perhaps." "Promiss!"
"Perhaps," and she left him. The blood was throbbing in his temples as he went back to his trees. He had admired her beauty front the time he had first noticed her, three months before, moving about his home. What mother father had to give her such delicate throat, such a pure white skin. And her churn did not end with her face or her carriage. Her speech was that of the white girl, not of the Negro—careful speech, learned, as it happened, of her Northern teachers. He had not encountered her often these summer months, for she was Miss Patty's personal servant and spent her days in his aunt's upper rooms or on the gallery; but he never saw her that he did not want to speak with her, to see the life come to her questioning face. She seemed to him a way a lady. What was she doing living in a "home"
That day Hertha did her work as in a dream and toward evening started home. She suddenly found herself hungry and tired and very much ashamed. The excitement that had brought the tears to her cheeks was gone, being a deep depression. She turned on and as her mother' cabin came in sight, with a light in the window, for it was late, she felt relieved and safe. After all, nothing had happened, nothing. She was the same girl she had always been and needed only to forget the happenings of the morning. Her supper tasted good, and when it was over she thought that she was ready to write a letter to Tom. The table cleared, however, and her pen in hand, she could
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129 W. 24th St., New York City
KINKY
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HEROLIN: FOMADE HAIR DRESSING.
for sticky or gummy hair.
for hair that is not neatly or
nappy hair causing it to grow long, soft, fluffy,
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for dandruff.
for hair that is falling off.
not find a word to say. So she biter her pen, and at length, at her mother's suggestion, postponed the letter to another day.
Turning over the pages of a book idly, looking at a picture here, reading a paragraph there, Heather occupied a few minutes and then went to the bedroom to comfortable chair. Leanning over, she put her arms around the old woman's neck. "Um, um," the mother crooned, putting the girl's hands. "Sing for me, Mummy." You must git inter my lap don. Reckon it'll hold a lil flower like you. "This is better." The girl knelt so that her head came on her mother's breast. "Now sing." "What'll I sing for yer?" "Oh, anything. Sing." "Nobody knows de trouble I'm seen." "Laws, chile, does yer feel as bad as all dad. Poor you." "You can't be a subod his mornin'. Dey cery'en don't know much 'bout carin' for my flower up dar." Then, smoothing the girl's hair with her strong hand, she sang; Nobody knows de trouble I'm seen. Nobody knows but Jesus.
Nobody knows de trouht 'I's seen,
Glory Hallelujah."
The people at the great house
were nervous, tiring; but mammy
was restful like the deep, lower
waters of a stream. My mellow
voice sang on:
"Iknow de Lawd, I know de Lawd,
I know de Lawd has laid his hands
on me."
"De Lawd" came out in three
long, rolling syllables, descending
from the high call, "I know." Herta
found herself breathing, slows,
quitty, her mother's hand
on her forehead and soft,
courting light.
When Herina went to her room that night a little breeze greeted her as she sat down by her window. It was cloudy at first, but in a few, moments the clouds broke and the moonlight streamed upon the dark trees and the white and she watched the moon sailing through the clouds, she smelt the roses by the porch, and the wall that her will had built against her sweet and rapturous thoughts broke down, and with a rush her spirit
KNOXIT PROPHYLACTIC
Affords protection against infectious diseases. All prudent persons should avail themselves of this dependable germicide.
AT DRIUG STOPES BYRWHERR
AN OASIS IN A
DESERT OF
HIGH PRICES
MORRIS BAVERMAN
Manufacturer of
FURS
NEWEST MODELS
BEST QUALITY
LOWEST IN PRICE
Out of the High Rent District
519 N. Eutaw Street
VERNON 6695-J
8 4, 11, 18, 25
MADAM IDA B. JEFFER
EVANGELIST 10th EPI
CHURCH, NO
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 Madame Jefferson can bring tangled braids to the light of helpful
sensibility. She can cure any disease that you were not born with in the body, who can any disease in the human body, and tell your complaint by your writing to her when other doctors have failed, then write her and she will you full details of your job. Madame Jefferson possesses a natural birth gift from birth and is one of the greatest licensed preachers of the age. She has the appreciation God has given her power to heal and lead her people. Her advice on business problems is worth more than you will ever be able to. Only business affaires send ten cents in stamps for reply. Madame Jefferson has discovered a wonderful hair restorative. It grows hair in bald heads. Agents wanted to use it. For consultation other than sick-
ness, send two dollars ($2.00)
will go on your bill.
MME. IDA
BOX 643
now"
leading Southern white fam-
ren to colored families.
does not find it out until she has
was swept with tumultuous love.
"Cinderella," Lee said to her the
next morning as she turned into
the orange grove, "you've been a
shockingly long time coming."
I know it," she answered, "but
there were so many things to think
of sitting by the fire."
"Don't think," he urged. "I've given it up. Don't think, but live." And this time she lifted up her face and, without a thought, gave him a kiss.
Continued Next Week
Menu For A Day
body
bad you
mint
bout
then
hurt
Biscuits
LUNCHRUN
Baked Bean Salad
Brown Brend
Raspberries
Leed Tea
DINNER
Cream of Spinach Soup
Rost Shoulder of Vend with Brend
Coffee
Cherry Roly Poly
Roll some baking powder biscuit dough very thin, about one-eighth of an inch in thickness, sprinkle with sugar, then dot with ripe, stoned cherries. Roll like a jelly roll, press and close the ends as tight as possible. The in a floured cloth and cook in boiling water two hours, or steam in a steamer for one hour. Remove from the cloth and serve on a hot platter with the following sauce: One-half cup butter, one cup of powdered sugar, one egg yolk and one egg whites. Add sugar.
Cream the butter, add the sugar and the yolk of eggs. Cook over hot until hot. Remove butter until hot. Remove the beaten whites of eggs.
How Old Are You By Your Hair?
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You may be young in years but your Hair is GRAY or FADED, people will surely take you to be many years older. A few applications of MASKIN HAIR STAIN will Positively restore Gray, Faded of Streaked hair to exactly the NatStreaked hair to exactly the Natural Color you desire, in a few days, Imparts Beauty to your Hair and YOUTH to your appearance.
Harmless-Easy to apply—No after washing. 50c a Bottle.
YOUR HAIR
Depends on the condition of your scalp. The Healthier it is the quicker the Hair grows. If you want to have your hair Grown One month and to have a mass of Soft, Glossy, Thick, Beautiful hair, Healthy and no more Itchy Scalp, begin at once to use.
MASKIN
COCOA-TAR HAIR & SCALP TREATMENT
Maskin Cocoa-Tar Hair Grower 30c
Maskin Cocount Oil Shampoo 30c
Maskin Vegetable Hair Touche 30c
All the MASKIN preparations are sold on a money back Guarantee, over here, on post paid by MASKIN DRUG CO.
1539 Monument St., Balto, Md.
Use MASKIN Skin Whitner and have a Bright and Lovely Complexion 25c.
FFERSON, A WIDOW LADY EPISCOPAL DIST. A. M.E. I, NORTH TEXAS
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THE
A B. JEFFERSON LONGVIEW, TEX.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
COCOA TAR-HAIR
& SCALP
TREAT-MENT
BREAKFAST
Cantilever
Brotiled Mackerel
Communal Statutes
CHILDREN'S COLUMN
"THE BLACK SHEEP OF THE REYNOLDS FAMILY"
(Continued from last week)
Thirty years have come end game since Will was driven away from the offices of his brothers. What changes have these years worked on? After leaving prison Will was a companion of the at the Railroad Men's Branch of the Y. M. C. A. Through the Secretary of the Association, he soon sailed a place as a day laborer in the machine shops of the Big Bend Railroad. He went to work in the Y. M. C. A. building. At the close of his first year's service with the railroad, he was promoted from a common laborer and made an apprentice. After four or five years he had learned the trade of railroad construction. At the end of fifteen years' service with the company, he was made the master mechanist. At the end of twenty years' service, he was Superintendent of Construction. Five years later he was hired as a mechanic, including at the expiration of more than twenty-five years of faithful service. Will Reynolds was able to write after his name, "General Manager of the Big Bend Railroad." He had, also, been married for several years, and was the father of five
Will's father and brothers had host sight of him for nearly twelve years, or until he papers announced his appointment as the new president of the company. They suddenly awoke to find that their conditions that he had probably long since led a drunkard's death, or had gone off a trump and had been killed, or was in train serving a sentence in prison some months ago. The same week that Will was made Senior consultant of Construction of the Big Bend Railroad, the new-papers spread all over the country, the newspapers admitted suicide. According to their way, the newspapers gave all the dekking details of the tragedy, together with the whole family history. They said that Col. Reynolds had been a member of the company. They said that she was much younger than he, that she was extravagant, that she was a leader in gay society; they told how, on her account, P. Reynolds had driven his son away from home, and that he had been the old man's life had been a hell to him; and that his wife had brought him almost to the vengeance of bankruptcy, and, in order to escape facing open disgrace, he had
When Will heard of his father's death, he hastened at once to the city, but was denied admission to the family residence, and had to attend the funeral in the little church around the corner, not as a member of the family, but merely as an outsider.
Each week three tickets for a moving picture show will be given away. Two will be awarded the child sending in all correct answers one to the person sending in the third person sending in the next highest will receive an honor button.
All letters must reach this office Monday before noon. All names of the windows will be published the following Thursday. Letters reaching the office later than Monday will not be counted. Write all communications plainly, giving name, age, address, name of child you attend, and your class.
All letters sent to the editor must be signed with the name and address of the sender, not for publication, but as an enignee of good faith. Letters must be written on one side of the paper only.
A CANVASS OR STORES SHOW UNSCRUPULOUS
A CANVASS OF THE DRUG
STORES SHOWS THAT 29
UNSCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS ARE LIMITATING
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
1
PUZZLE FOR THIS WEEK
In each of the following sentences you will find the name of a precious stone in the sentence.
1. The new club is on Amethyst street.
2. Has Mr. Sapp hired a stenographer?
3. Claudia, Monday is my wedding and
adversary.
4. Did him to come up early.
5. Do not rub your eyes.
6. This clear Nettle bottle is very good
7. The amount of Blood Stone lost was
tremonious.
ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE
Pekin, Theles, Madras, Bombay, Lyons
and Warsaw.
DO YOU KNOW THAT-
Colored Troops (G10th Infantry) fought the last battle of the war, capturing a German worm train of 20 wagons and sweeps a half hour after the Armistice week into
Sixty-two per cent of our church member-
"THE WATCHERS'
It seems as though the Gods of fate were working against Armour B. Friday, when all of his queens presented themselves, Rita B. Hilda, I. W. and so on. Armour C. was so elated with Ruth G., until he forget all about Marie G.
Ambury M. should be careful about backbiting, and leave Ethelne D. alone, with her charming Eden W. But Eden W. don't you know that Martin P. is lazy in the not matter fellow could get a dance with Marie M. and Hermine R. of Brooklyn, on the excursion Friday.
Rhodia L. was so lame-down the bay Friday, and it was all because Reese was not there. Never mind, say, Rhode, you had better watch "Hun."
Lowell W. is very often seen on Lawnville street, yet I will advise him to "watch his school, yet I will advise him to "watch his school."
Hershel D. better known as "Rip," came from Almibale City to spend a day, so of course, she would see her she to be Some to entertain him on the front steps.
Almibla L. when you are taking your evening walk on drunk Hill avenue, please smile sometimes, because she had forsaken you.
Rebe and Helen P. are the "hippers"
Rebe and Helen P. are the "hippers"
So many gentlemen call every evening.
Frozen Banana Custard
Put three tablespoons of boiling water into a saucepan, add one teaspoon of powdered gelatine, three eggs, four tablespoons of sugar, three cups of milk, the until thicken, add four tablespoons of rubbed through) a sieve and fold in one cup of whipped cream; freeze.
Fried Eggplant
Cut one good-sized eggplant into
sheets one-half an inch thick. Remove
the skin and dust with salt
and pepper; dip in beaten egg roll
in fine bread crumbs and fry in
smoking hot fat. When they are
brown on one side, turn and brown
on the other side.
OF THE DRUG
WS THAT 29
IS MANUFAC-
LIMITATING
COCO-TAR
GROWER
SUBSTITUTES
ANO'S
HAIR GROWER
MAINS
- NUT OIL AND
PINE TAR
BEST SELLER
DRUGGIST
THE
STAR GROWER
Pressing and Grower.
TS WANTED.
Good Money
Made
We want a-
gents in every
city and village
to sell
THE
STAR HAIR
GROWER.
This is a wonderful prepara-
tion. Can be used with or
without Straightening
irons and by
any person.
One 25 centa box proves its value. Any person that will use a 250 box will be convinced.
No matter what has failed to grow your hair, just give THE STAR HAIR CROWER a trial and be convinced. Send 250 for full size box. If you wish to become an agent for this wonderful preparation. a full supply that you can begin in terms, or to CROWER ME?
Berry, of New Dr. Theresa Fennell has undergoing treat-turned from a Southern trip. Hopkins Hospital. Mrs. Rosa Capheart, 620 Zarroll Johnson, 1026 street, Sparrows Point, Md., street, spent Sunday leave in August to spend two w in Atlantic City, N. J. GHTEN YOUR SKIP AMMIE HIGHTOWER, MEMPHIS, TENNESIS PLEASED WITH GOLDEN BROWN BEAUTY SKIN BLEACH AND BEAUTIFIER harages its general use by men and women everywhere
Mr. Wardell Berry, of New Dr. Theresa Pennell has York City, is undergoing treat-turned from a Southern trip, ment at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Mrs. Rosa Capcheh, 620 Mr. George Carroll Johnson, 1028 Street, Sparrows Point, Md., W. Lexington street, spent Sunday leave in August to spend two w in Western Maryland.
LIGHTEN YOUR SKIN
MADAM MAMIE HIGHTOWER, MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
HIGHLY PLEASED WITH GOLDEN BROWN BEAUTY
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
cake of Golden Brown Soup, prep
Wonderful opportunity offered a
durations to their friends and acqua
GOLDEN BROWN CHEMICAL
or send $1 and we will send you 4 boxes of Golden Brown Ointment, and we will send you 4 boxes of Golden Brown Paste. Wonderful opportunity offered agents introducing Golden Brown Paste.
Opportunity offered agents introducing Golden Brown Pre
ir friends and acquaintances. Ask for deal.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
---
Sicily Greer Praises EXELENTO QUININI POMADE
have soft, silky hair that can be easily dressed. TO has made happy thousands of women who had happy hair. It will do the same for you. If your face and lifeless or if you have dandruff and itching, box of EXELENTO QUININE POMADE. Call drug stores. Price by mail 25c on receipt of stamps or coin. AGENTS WANTED—Write for Paraculars.
O MEDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia.
EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIER, an ointment for dark, sallow skin, used in treatment of skin troubles.
STANT CARE—NOT LUCK
In history and experience have taught us that persons believe that a head of naturally long beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely complexion come from luck, but they do Constant care and the frequent use of nations of proven merit are the secrets.
YOU can have soft, silky hair. EXELENTO has made hape coarse, nappy hair. It will hair is brittle and lifeless or scalp, try a box of EXELENTO for sale at all drug stores. Price by AGENTS WANTED.
EXELENTO MEDICINE CO
We make EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFUL used in treatment.
CONSTANT CARE
Human history and experience many persons believe that and beautiful hair, a heath smooth complexion connot. Constant care preparations of proven n
YOU can have soft, silky hair that can be easily dressed.
EXELENTO has made happy thousands of women who have
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 drug stores. Price by mail is on receipt of stamps or coin.
AGENTS WANTED-Write for Paraculars.
EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia
We make EXELENTO Skin BEAUTIFIER, an ointment for dark, sallow skin,
used in treatment of skin troubles.
[Image of a woman with dark hair styled in a bun, wearing a light-colored dress with a high collar.]
CONSTANT CARE—NOT LUCK
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.
Use Madam C. J. Walker's
Vegetable Shampoo
Pure, thoroly cleanses
hair and scalp.
Wonderful
Nourishes and stimulates the g
Tette
For Tetter, Eczema
Four preparations especially recom
tette and eczema of the scalp. Se
Le Shampoo
proly cleanses
and scalp.
Glossine
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IDAY, AUGUST 4, 1922
MUSIC
MOVIES
VAUDEVILLE
. Mills Music Company issues New Catalogue
By J. A. A. Jackson
be Jack Mills Music company
be concern that seems to measure rather than more perl elements when considering member offered for publication.
be current in the field of that contains compositions by more than a dozen different musicals of the race. It is only fair to buy public among us, the identity of these artists the concern that provides opportunity should be known, of song and the composers was.
abemy Blues, Donald Heywood, Bobbe
person, Spencer Williams; Breaking The
canner and Layton; Beautiful
holland Blues, Dave Peyton and Spen-
Williams; Charleston Cutout, Shelton
ks, Tim Beym, Chris Smith; Caribbean
s, Donald Heywood, Lionel Belnsea;
At The Fork of The Road, Chris.
th and Tim Beym; Bear Old South
I'm a Cramer and Layton; Everybody's
the cimmic, Lord Me Blues, Chris
th and Tim Beym; Mandy, Cramer
Hayton; Jig Walk, Henry Cramer and
Valery; Keep My Honey Here Just
pay More, Shelton Brooks; A Little
d Treatment, Marco Pinkard; The
ing Link, Chris Smith; Oh, You Brune-
z Fool, Tim Brynn and Chris Smith;
What A Regular Feller Was My Old
Maco Pinkard and Alex Bulfedma
conclus
helton Brooks'
Funny Stories
date colored remedian to make a big Easday. His show is the Plantation Jazz - New York World.
Out at Shackamaxon there was English-man who had a colored body. The Englishman, just out on his first tee, took a swing at the ball and missed. Each time he'd he'd start beowailing conditionally saying, "Strike me pink." Finally, the caddy, getting tired seeing him miss and yelling strike me pink," said: "say, loss. All don't see this year, but I don't see at all. But I don't see you slam that little thing and stop bustin' the ear."
Fire colored men were brought before a judge who always had an unease way of sentencing. On the occasion the judge learned and said: "John gonna give you boys a chance to show what you can do with these dice. I want you to get out on out, and for my spot on the dice you get a shot in jail."
The first boy rolled a ten. The
first one rolled six and five—eleven
ninths. The next two each roll-
double six.
The last one fumbled behind his
skin with the dice and substitu-
tive two lumps of sugar rolled them.
"Blank" he announced.
"Hum," said the Judge. "You're
of those wise guys, isn'tcha?
all, just for that you're gonna
in the fall house, till spots
on those dice." Some people call
gallon-
balls. Others call 'em
on golf. But from personal
experience, Alive got a name
guts more appropriate—Little
sizes of Ruination—dats what
is.
East St. Louis has stockyards
at the train, you know St. Louis
mails wives away, a woman pass-
sar and her two children were-
ing a basket of lunch in one of
a forward cars. Some Limburg-
cheese was left and she shew
out the window.
A porter with his head out in
a bobbin caught the cheese
care in his face.
East St. Louis!" he yelled out
mudly.
NUMEROUS COLORED FAIRS THIS YEAR
BOSTON SUGGUMBS TO "SHUFFLE ALONG" CO.
BOSTON SUGGUMBS TO "SHUFFLE ALONG" CO.
By J. A. Jackson
Seldom a theatrical company has accorded a more convincing public reception than was accorded the members of the "Shuttle Along" company on its arrival in Boston on July 30th.
Tom E. Lucas, owner of the largest restaurant in the city that is extensively patronized by colored women, underlined the entire company a dilemma. The Women's Service Club, Mrs. Butler Wilson, president; tendered the ladies of the company a reception at their club house during the same day. The distinction on the part of the most exclusive social organization of colored women in the country, is in itself a social recognition of the profession that will do much in assisting the women, or her ideals to be better understood and appreciated. This same organization extended receptions to Mr. Gilpin on the occasion of his appearance in that city.
The show will be in the Selwyn Theater for at least four weeks.
PERRY'S INN THROWS OPEN ITS DOORS
What gives evidence of being a worthy addition to the hotel accommodations for colored theatrical people and other transient soujourners within the gates of Baltimore, as well as adding to the pleasure of the evening amusement seeker, took place on tast Saturday evening at the new hotel adjoining the Douglass Theatre on Penna, avenue, throw open its doors to the public.
One of the features is a cabaret, and this department proved the mecca for hundreds who crowded it to suffocation on Saturday evening. The Douglass Theatre orchestra composed of Oliver Pierce leader and cornist; Harry Lewis, violinist; Stanley Miller, pianist and Harry Jefferson, drums, has engaged in a musical concert. The entertainers for the opening were Misses Peggy Montge and Pearl McPhecters. The souvenirs were vari-colored for balloons.
The hostelry proper, consists of fifteen rooms. 10 double and five single on the two floors; second and third, with hot and cold running water in each room, and spacious baths are at the ends of the rooms, nicely furnished and will be heated by gas.
Two other features of the establishment are a well-appointed bar and a beautiful soda fountain both of which front separately on the street. The hostelry will not be ready to receive guests, however, until the fire escape has been completed. A fire alarm system on each floor is also a feature for the protection of guests. A regular hotel dining service will not be established at present, only light lunches and beverages will be served. For an hotel service will be installed.
The hotel is owned and managed by Mr. Maurice Patz, and the amusement features are under the supervision of Mr. Joseph Perry both white. The latter has had some twenty years' experience as a theatrical producer. A force of four waitresses; a chambermaid; bartender, 2 soda clerks and a porter have been employed. Rates for lodging will range from five to eight dollars per week, according
to the location of the room.
The room will be added
features which will be added.
Negro performers. That the statement is untrue; and is made for who do shack and tight wight work, heavy the purpose of avoiding the little additional expense of effort and balancing and teeth jiggling, to say moth ing of chair balancing and baton twirling money involved in securing for are another net not available for colored fairs in colored enterprise that which white to is simply not gray. Net can answer a "hello, Bill" shown by the attached list of available attractions. N. W., Washington, D. C.
ALL-COLORED ACTS FOR COLORED FAIRS
Harry Wills Among 33 Picked By J. A. Jackson As High Class Outdoor Entertainers
By J. A. Jackson
In response to requests from the promoters of colored fairs for a better representation of their race among the amusement offered by agents and carnival contractors, a request that there were not the effect that desired sort to be found among Negro performers. That the statement is untrue; and is made for the purpose of avoiding the little additional expense of effort and money involved in securing for an all-colored enterprise that which they are entitled to is shown by the attached list of available attractions.
A number of carnival companies depend upon the colored fairs to make their season's profit. In view of this fact, it seems odd that these same companies persist in providing to be at least a colored
shows, and as many colored concessioners as may care to work with them. As a matter of fact, the presence of a few neatly dressed-colored lecturers on the different sides of the street money from a lot of people who otherwise would not be interested in the attractions. It would be worth real money for the show owners to more fully realize the depth of race consciousness that they will capture this spirit, will
Here are some of the acts available. All are standard acts; and many have worked with white shows all over the country. Quite a few have travelled over Europe with great success. Tasmanian Troupe, a group of worldwild necrobats. Have traveled the world over. Bessie Coleman, aviatrix. Beenused in France, Holland, and Germany; now in Europe; due in America soon. Maharajah, a mystic with a complete show of magic; due in people: 10 years. Coney Island, now in Starlight Park, New York.
] Alphonson, well-known showman. Now out with carnival company.
company, and
Sidney Rink's show, shows a complete
pony and a trained mule show, now with a
new show.
Great Dimond Circus Side Show, C. E. Warren, propeller. Now with carnival. Robert Miles Audent Concert Company—Historic City Museum. Billy Townsend's Athletic Show. Princess Were Were, colored midgut, now at Coast Island, long with Barmingham and Bristol Museum. Alomnah, colored glamour, now at Coney Island. 4.14. Dion's Pit Show, now with gin company, a typified museum. Dayes Travelling Dance Orchestra and Platform. Watts Brothers, nerobots. Irn Green, acrobat. The Great Clemmon, contortionist and acrobat.
Ebwards and Edwards, wire walkers and contourists (man and woman).
Gray and Gray, heavyweight junglers and balancers (man and woman).
Billy English, hoop roster and Indian club jungler.
DeWayman Niles, contourist, now at $oney Island for third year.
Bond and Boud, contourists and nero-
Bored and Boyish, contortionsists and necromats (man and woman).
Wells and Wells, horizontal bars, trappe,
rings, 21-foot high rigging them and women,
Gaines Braithers, necobait, high wire, trappe,
rings work.
Allele Johnson, "the eat on the wire", wire walking in comedy make-up.
The 365th Infantry band has been reorganized as the 365th Veterans Guard of Illinois. Jude Peyton is president; Albert Jones, conductor, and Waltare Peterson, manager. Offices have been established in the Loop-Bnd Building, 177 North State Street.
Fisher's Full Festival is at the Bainmont Theatre, Pensacola, after having picked up nine notices in New Orleans.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
COLORE
RED FAIRS
National Amusement
News
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
WITH
J.A. JACKSON
The Billboard
The Foremost Weekly Theatrical Digest
and The World. World.
All Rights Reserved.
Gray and Gray (Walter and his wife), who do shack and tight wire work, heavy balancing and teeth jiggling, to say nothing are another net available for colored fairs that present thrills as easily as does any white net. Gray can answer a "Hello, Hill!" present when at 300 M street, N. W., Washington, D. I.
Lient, Michaels and his Fifteenth Regiment Band, N. Y. Guard, began a series of camouflage appearances in the One Mass houses, the former home of the band, the billing reads the "Ein Europe Band."
Oscar Michaels, with a company, is doing location work in and around Rome. He is preparing a new material that will be ready for release in September. C. Tiffany Tolliver, in the Southeast, and Horton Hamilton in Texas, grounding the distribution of "The Dungeon."
"The American Musician and Sportsman" has appeared on the stands. The Philadelphia publication is as attractive as ever, and Editor Putter has not surpassed any of the summoning the temporary embarrassment that overcook his publication.
Ed Murray, of Baltimore, has composed several numbers. One most promising music is "Everybody Else's Man Treats My Better Than Mine." Ed is a former schoolmate of Eddie Green.
The Musical Spillers will be with Joe Beilin's "Chuckles" on the Columbia Burlesque wheel.
Sibby Blink is doing his male act for turns, the Chicago agent, at Windos, Out. While his son handles the attraction on the Lester Greater Shows.
Billy Higgins, blackface, and Toney Dumman, who does an Italian characterization, have formed a team. If the boys get a chance at the big hones with the funny stuff they had in Coleman Brothers' review, they get the chance to enter the married between a fruit vendor and the colored brother is just plain fun with all of the racial characteris- tics discussed without being offensive.
Henry Hartman's band and orchestra, of Rockville, Mt., has corralled just about all of the musical contracts for the colored fairs in Maryland and northern Virginia. Since becoming interested in the fair games, he has cultivated a lot of outdoor show
Irving Miller has a new show with the title of "Mon-Jan Buddy." in rehearsal in New York. The show will open the bitter part of August. But Philadelphia, and is being set for New York. Miller wrote the book, Macos Pinkard and Van Nictem, the music, Walter Brooks, who acquired his fame in "Shuffle Along," is singing the piece. Ching Muir, the Texas Theatre magnate will send out a road show soon under the title of "Texas Girls." The company will be assembled in his Dallas house.
BRANDENBURG
EUTAW AND MULBERRY STREETS
30 DAYS SALE
1-3 to 1-2 Off on Men's Wear
Free
SALE
on Men's
and get
FREE with
$1.00 and
SUITS, $1.05
THE ANNUAL
of the
Stockholders of the Massey
HELD AT THE MAGONIC TEMPLE B
THURSDAY EVENING, AUGU
All Stockholders are requested to be punctu
of the Board of Directors, and to ce
GEO. E. FREY, President
EAST BALTIMORE
Mme. E. J. Nortl
Formerly at IREL
HAS MOVED
1401 JEFFER
Business establishment has been
Magic Never Fail Wonderful
Help! Help! Want!
Must B
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B. V. D. UNION SUITS, $1.05
Courtcous Service Our Motto
THE GOODWILL
STORES
220-224 S. Broadway
1022-1024 Fawn Street
1628 Pennsylvania Ave.
Dressers, 10c, 15c, 2c, 60c, $1.00
Children's Gara, onts, 50 Up
Shoes, $4.00, $10.00
Men's suits, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00
Stockings, 5c per prir
GET THE GOODWILL HABIT
PICTURES! PICTURES!
COL. CIAS. A. YOUNG, U. S. A.
Highest ranking Colored
Officer in the U. S. Army,
BERT WILLIAMS
World's Greatest Comedian.
Also 19 other subjects of
world-wide fame as a
Booker, Douglas, Paul
Lawrence
Dunbar, W. E. B. Dubois, Toussaint L'Overture, Henry O. Tanner, Crispus Attucker, Hattie Taylor, Colidge Taylor, Alexandre Dumais,
John Mercer Langston, B. K.
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R. Kruse, R. W. Walker,
Robert R. Molon, Dr Emmett
J. Scott, Wimlot Blyden. Heavily
mounted, high grade workmanship.
Price: Size 11x14, 50e each;
for $4.15; $5 per doz. Size
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Every HOME, OFFICE and SCHOOL should have some of these hanging on, in the Every Solider's Ex-Service should have one of Col. Young. Show your RACE PRIDE. Show your APPRECIATION for the SACRCHADE MADE BY THE SOLDIER. MUST BE RECONIZED AS A RACE AMONG RACES!!
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Chicago, Illinois.
HERE AND THERE
---
His plan takes cognizance of the fact that there are only 115 houses
By Wm. Anthony Aery
Hampton, Va., July 23—Mrs.
Florence Cole-Talbert, well-known
coloratura soprano of Detroit, re-
cently gave a concert progran-
tion at the Hampton Institute
under the auspices of the Men's
Club of St. Cyprus's Protestant
Episcopal Church of Hampton.
She sang the following selections:
(Could I Believe) from "La Sonnambula",
Italian.
(Marina) from "Schubert,
The Fourth" (The Trout) from "Schubert,
On the Wins of Song" - Mendelssohn,
(Hilario) (The Kiss Waltz) - Ardill,
("Hanson Indo") - Kang of India) from
Polonaisse, ("In Soil Titanic") (I'm Fair
Titanic) from "Mignon, Thomas,
Mrs. Dora Cole Norman of New
York gave two interpretative
dances—"Magnolias" from R. N.
banueli Detts "Magnolia Suite"
with Sultz, and "Magnolia Suite"
which were received with great
applause.
Mrs. R. N. Dett was accom-
panist.
Mrs. Norman is now teaching aesthetic dancing in the Hampton Institute summer school. She is a sister of the famous "Bob" Cole, who was known far and wide as a composer and playwright. On her graduation from the Wadleigh High School in New York City, she wrote the class play, class prophecy, and class song. Later she wrote a vacation playgrounds in New York.
Mrs. Norman wrote the Creole dances for Mary Hoyt Wiborg's "Taboo", which was produced last
ANNUAL MEETING
of the
The Masonic Temple Association
C. TEMPLE, MCCULLON AND MOSHER STREETS
SENING, AUGUST 2nd, 1922. AT $ O'LOCK
and to be munited in attendance to hear the annual Report
tors, and to elect the same for the ensuing year.
WILLARD W. ALLEN, Secretary
TIMORE BEAUTY PARLOR
J. N. Northern, Proprietress
unmerly at 1103 McElherry Street
HAS MOVED TO
JEFFERSON STREET
ishment has been improved to a large extent
Wonderful Hair Grower. Help!
Ip! Wanted Everywhere
All Stockholders are requested to be punctual in attendance to hear the annual Report of the Board of Directors, and to elect the same for the closing Year.
GEO. E. PREY, President
WILLARD W. ALLEN, Secretary
EAST BALFIMORE BEAUTY PARLOR
Mme. E. J. Northern, Proprietress
Formerly at 1403 McElherry Street
HAS MOVED TO
1401 JEFFERSON STREET
Business establishment has been improved to a large extent
If ou are bothered with Falling Hair,
Dandruff, Itching Scalp, or any Hair
Trouble, we want you to try a jar of EAST
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medical properties that give to roots of the Hair, stimulates the skin helping nature do its work. We give the hair
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ural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for
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S. D. LYONS
thousand flowers. The best known remembrance and Beautiful Black Eye-Brows, also restores Gray Hair to its Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for Straightening.
Price Sent by Mail, 50c; 10c Extra for Postage
AGENT'S OUTFIT
1 Hair Grower. 1 Temple Olt. 1 Shaupoo. 1 Pressing Olt. 1 Face Cream and Direction for Selling. $2.00.
25c Extra for Postage
S. D. LYONS
316 N. Central, Dept. B
Oklahoma City, Okla.
WOULD END FIGHT
FOR "VODEVIL" CONTROL
WOULD END FIGHT
FOR "VODEVIL" CONTROL
(BY J. A. A. Jackson)
Kansas City, July 29—Lawrence Goldman, owner of the Lincoln Theatre in this city, a house catering to Negro patronage and playing colored acts; the president of the Kansas City branch of the M. P. T. O. of America; and attorney for the Managers and Performers Booking Association, an organization that has been involved for sometime in a fight with the Theater Owners Booking Association for the control of Negro vaudeville, has advanced a plan for compositions differences between these two circuits.
His plan takes cognizance of the fact that there are only 115 houses scattered over 24 states; and that as a consequence jumps are quite long enough with only one circuit; and that they are entirely to great to permit profitable operation of two different organizations.
He would arrange that each office maintain its identity, yet have the work over the course from house to house by the easiest firm.
He would vest the supervision of both circuits in the hands of a committee of theater owners. He would have the profits above operating expenses used to employ supervising directors to improve the show; the financing of the show; the financing for an insurance fund for the preformers. His first effort to get Mr. Cummings head of the M. & P. and Mr. Starr, Genl Mgr, of the T. O. B. a together in Chicago failed but he is hopeful of bringing about a meeting of the officials concerned in order than Pensacola or Chattanooga the two headquarter towns.
MME. TOLBERT RECITAL AT HAMPTON INSTITUTE
MME. TOLBERT RECITAL AT HAMPTON INSTITUTE
Sister Of Late Bob Cole Appliqué
For Interpretative Dances
Axel Marle — Schubert.
A.
All Drug Store
Trou
IND
tains
roots
ing
spring at the Harris Theatre in New York. She also wrote "The Niche," which was produced by Player's Guild of New York, of which she is a director. She is a pupil of Chalfit, formerly imperial ballet master at Petrograd. She has directed in several cities the dances for the spectacular jagegant "Star of Ethiopia" and has studied symbolic work at Columbia University.
NOBLE JOHNSON STARS IN 'TRACKS'
Famous Colored Screen Star Heads Cast At Regent Theatre Next Week
"Tracks" a Noble Johnson production with Johnson, whose own soldier of fortune career is as facillary as the part of a crafty but interesting villain is the big feature which the management of the Regent Theatre have secured as the special attraction on Saturday Aug. 12.
The story of "Tracks" is as follows: A $1,000 reward is offered for the capture of horse thieves, by the presence of cow tracks in every trail of horses stolen. Leon Serrano (Johnson) the deputy sheriff is loud in his assertions that he will catch the thieves. Leon is a really leader of the thieves and is the leader force his attentions on Elicia, daughter of a wealthy rancher. Norman Draper, a Texas Ranger who has been sent to round up the thieves is also in love with Elicia. Finalizes the interrogates. Serrano as his man and arrests him breaking up the hand.
Johnson has had a long career in pictures having supported many prominent stars and been featured in numerous productions among which were the Four Horsemen; The Wizard of Oz; Southern Slides; and "The Serenade." He has played the leading rules in serials with Marie Walt-camp, Francis Ford, Eddie Polo and others; his latest work in this line being his co-star with Harry Myers in "Robinson Crusoe" playing the part of "Friday"; the serial is running at present in several local houses.
Blanche Thompson has been added to the cast of the "Shuffle Along" road show.
Our Detective friends, Ransuxus of Chicago, is learning something of the show business from the inside. He is associated with the Avenue Theatre in the Wind City.
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You have tried others now try this, for we guarantee to grow hair three inches in three months or money refunded.
Use Muham M. J. Jonce' Wonderful Hair Grower because it never falls. The price of a box of this wonderful hair preparation is 56 per box. By mail, 600.
Mme: Jones' Never Fall shampoo, price
Never Fall Gloss, price, 35c.
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316 N. Central, Dept. B Oklahoma City, Okla.
for the purpose of helping the men
to help themselves. The music is
written in the New York Point
System.
This band is now booking dates
for the fall and winter. Frank
Jobes is president, Peter Flizer,
band leader, R. M. Deaver, business
manager.
Archie (bontille) Majors, who left the
Herbert Minstrels at the Lincoln Theatre,
Washington, this spring, is now working
at an Atlantic City cabaret.
HOME HOURS: 7 to 9 P. M.
PHONES:
LAWYER
215 ST. PAUL PLACE
Formerly Courtland St.
Douglas 10 H. 3rd Floor
Rooms 30-31 Thur
Res. 1520 Druid Hill Ave.
Phone, MAdison 3193-W
THE FRISBY SER
1405-07 LAU
THE FRISBY SERVICE GARDEN
1405-07 LAURENS ST.
Modern Steam Heated Capacity
Automobile Repairing Battery S
Gasoline Oils Accessor
Storage Space for Rent 24 Hr. Ser
MADISON 7723 W J. ARNELT FRIS
THE WILSON
FORMERLY O
Wilson Street near
Gas, Oil, A
Steam Heat—Room
POLLACK BROTHER
Rates: $7, $8, $9, a
TO-THE-MINU
ROBERT EDW
"The People's
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND
Reasonable
Motor or Horse-drawn equipment
Phone, WOlfe 5410-W
NOT
MRS. IDA
Wishes to announce that s
ness of her late husband,
Funeral Directress
ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT A
LIMOUSINE AND CARRIAGE T
1421 JEFFERSON STREET, Cor. SPRING
Am the sole proprietor of this
—and am not
MRS. ROBERT
Funeral Directress
PHONE WOlfe 6580. IMMEDI
1725 Ashland Avenue
MRS. CHARLES B. J.
BRANCH OFFICES: 504 East
LIMOUSINE FUNERAL
THE WILSON GARAGE
FORMERLY CREMENS
Wilson Street near Division
Gas, Oil, Amoco Gas
Steam Heat—Room for More Cars
POLLACK BROTHERS, Proprietors
S: $7, $8, $9, and $10 Per M
...TO THE MINUTE SERVICE
ROBERT EDW. WILLIAMS
"The People's Undertaker"
ERAL DIRECTOR AND PRACTICAL EMPL
Reasonable Prices
Horse-drawn equipment.
Proof
Voice 5410-W
1106 ASHLAND A
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
TO THE MINUTE SERVICE
Motor or Horse-drawn equipment. Prompt Service.
Phone, WOife 5410-W 1106 ASHLAND AVENUE
NOTICE!
MRS. IDA BAILEY
to announce that she will continue
her late husband, CHARLES G. B.
FUNeral Directress and Embalmer
ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION - DAY AND
BUSEINE AND CARRIAGE TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASION
ERSON STREET, Cor. SPRING ST.
PRONOUNCE
sole proprietor of this business
—and am not in partnership with
MRS. ROBERT A. ELLIOTT
funeral Directress and Embalmer
VOLLE 6580. IMMEDIATE SERVICE DAY AND
Husband Avenue Corner McDow
MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT
OFFICES: 504 East Street 2109 Drume
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY
Wishes to announce that she will continue the business of her late husband, CHARLES G. BAILEY
ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMIT ATTENTION - DAY AND NIGHT
LIMOUSINE AND CARRIAGE TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
1421 JEFFERSON STREET, Cor. Spring ST.
PHONE, WOLFE 1170
Am the sole proprietor of this business
with anyone
GEORGE T. A. GIBSON
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Limousine and Carriages to Hire
C. & P. PHONE M
513 LAURENS ST.
Long Distance Phone Madison 448
RAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAL
one and Carriages to Hire. Open Day an
C. & P. PHONE MADISON 1417-J
URENS ST. BALTIMORE
Distance Phone MAdison 4466. Carriages for all
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
Limousine and Carriages to Hire. Open Day and Night
C. & P. BHONE MADISON 1417-4
513 LAURENS ST. BALTIMORE, MD.
CLARENCE C. WRIGHT
Funeral Director
Some people prefer QUALITY, or
suit you. My prices make it
when you need it
"WRIGHT C
1364 N. Carey Street
GEORGE H.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
(Formally manager for the
CARRIES FOR
OPEN DAY A
Will furnish Funerals at a
Polite, Courteous and 'Expres
1631 DRUID H
C. & P. PHONE
Funeral Director and Embalmer
sole prefer QUALITY, others look at PRICE.
My prices make it expensive to go on
when you need an undertaker
"WRIGHT QUALITY"
N. Carey Street Baltimore
GEORGE H. HOLLAND
GENERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
(Formally manager for the Iota Alex. Hamley)
CARRAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
furnish Funerals at a price that will suit
you, Courtesay and Expert Attention Guarua
1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE
C. & P. PHONE MADISON 697
Funeral Director and Enaminer
Some people prefer QUALITY, others look at PRICES. I can
suit you. My prices make it expensive to go elsewhere
when you need an auditor. My PRICES?
GEORGE H. HOLLAND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
(Formally manager for the late Alex. Ramley)
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Will furnish Funerals at a price that will suit you.
Pollite, Courtesans and Expert Attention Guaranteed
1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE
C. & P. PHONE MADISON 697
EDWARD RINGGOLD
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Will give to all the very best to
Carriages and Limousines
1463 North Carey
PHONE MADISON 8261
JAMES N. DE
Funeral Director
Temporary Office: 2009 McCullough
GENERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
to all the very best and courteous serv-
iages and Limousines to hire for all occa-
tions
463 North Carey Street, near Go-
PHONE MADISON 8261. NEVER CLOSED.
JAMES N. DEAVER, JR.
Funeral Director and Embalmer
Office Office: 2009 McCulloh St. Phone:
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
JAMES N. DEAVER, JR.
Funeral Director and Embalmer
Temporary Office: 2009 McCulloh St. Phone. MAJ. 0334
MOVIE REVIEWS
BY
WM. E. READY
BEST EVER MADE
We will read a giftise bar
to any address. BIG.
Free MONEY made muli-
ly on Rules Articles Pro-
fume, 350p. Thick, Ete.
WRITE FOR DETAILS:
AGENTS WANTED
TYSON, ASU
PARIS, TINN
J. STEWARD DAVIS
Attorney and Counsellor
At Law
215-217 Courtland Street
(3rd floor front)
Office Phone: PLaza 2471
Residence: 1047 MYRTLE AVE.
Mt. Vernon 4738-W
BALTIMORE, MD.
SERVICE GARAGE
SURENS ST.
Capacity 50 Cars
Battery Service
Accessories
24 Hr. Service
J. ARNETT FRISBY, Mgr.
N GARAGE
CREMENTS
Unear Division
Amoco Gas
for More Cars
ERS, Proprietors
and $10 Per Month
SERVICE
W. WILLIAMS
"Us Undertaker"
AND PRACTICAL EMBALMER
Single Prices
Cent. Prompt Service.
106 ASHLAND AVENUE
TICE!
A BAILEY
She will continue the busi-
CHARLES G. BAILEY as
ress and Embalmer
ATTENTION — DAY AND NIGHT
TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
ING ST.
PHONE, WOLFE 1170
T A. ELLIOTT
S and Embalmer
ASSOCIATE SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT
Corner McDonogh St.
JONES, ASSISTANT
Street 2109 Druid Hill Ave.
CALS A SPECIALTY
R AND EMBALMER
dire. Open Day and Night
MADISON 1417-J
BALTIMORE, MD.
1864. Carriage for all Occasions
and Embalmer
others look at PRICES. I can
at expensive to go elsewhere
an undertaker
QUALITY"
Baltimore, Md.
A HOLLAND
MER AND EMBALMER
(the late Alex. Hemalay)
ALL OCCASIONS
AND NIGHT
A place that will suit you.
Attention Guaranteed
HILL AVENUE
MADISON 697
ER AND EMBALMER
and courteous service possible
to hire for all occasions
Street, near Gold
NEVER CLOSED.
EAVER, JR.
and Embalmer
Oh St. Phone; MAd. 9324
PAGE ELEVEN
was
Univ
sociol
too
friends
LS ee eee ee ee
al: . . :
= SS ; ‘ 1
SS ae,
=e ASW "aay pay more ut will get d
zi NX Senne, tte,
a. : a $¢4 *
< y} Pic. U-S-PAT OPN :
i “REGULAR #4 Sty SIZE.
hey AR,
eS. ce " <r as yZ x
a “4 . i My &. x a a :
= se ae. u 5
= g It is a combination of the best Petrolatum Pure Cocoanut Ny IGHLY PERFUMED, FR} Facts worth knowing: |
4 $ Oil, Bee's Wax, White Wax, with Quinine and Sulphur, SAN PARKER “DRUG Co. ,/ of so-called Hair Dress’
= ae and is blended with a French Perfume. _ It is different \e es en " o4 of which only cost abou
Sw =. : . . Quay —
en from all other Hair Dressings as it is not only a Dressing Seas aw Os the.cost of Parkers’ Ha
sei ‘ ; “ cd , ‘
ve but a wonderful Hair Grower and it enables you to comb ‘ peu _\_ 40 cents a pound and ai
your hair in any desired style. 2, ac ‘ TRY IT ONCE! not counting cost of Pe
Te : | YOUR MONEY. RETURNED
B\ ZN I , - |. IF NOT SATISFIED -
mH Aw SS . } Oe ee ed :
me i \ % 2h _ Weare trying to give the people the very best article that can be, made. If we did not believe this we would
oe : : oe \ O . of boxes free. , We will send you'a trial size b ox on’ receipt of a 2 cent stamp. . a
ee shir \ % 7 Se grt / All leading Druggists Can Supply You or we will send a’ large Box on receipt of 25 cent
= Ee 3 ES \ ae = zi SS —=—<———SSt SS
eS aud N VF os 2 BARKER DRUG, CO.: - 3811 ROLAND AVENUE _ BALTIMORE, MD.
~ WHITE’S |
- MODERN CUT RATE DENTISTS
214. W. LEXINGTON STREVT
fF AVERSION SOPTIOS . : —
lowe yt pertetion Ruther
eee Ley
' S93 : “ i i J Plates, Guaranteed
NERA gy meas
COLD CROWN AND BRIDCE WORK
22K Gold Crowns. oe. cece 8 4.00
| White Crowna. . 0.2.0... he
| 22K Bridge Work.................. FUP
Gold and Silver Filling, 50e up
EXAMINATION FREE |
em Hours: 9a. mito Spom. |
-WHITES MODERN GUT RATE DENTISTS ©
on 2u4.W. Lexington Street
AGHA ANE NANPA ANP AUD Gp AG Ae
ak RUE
GARVEY MARRIES
HIS: SECRETARY
‘Fiéaa of UN. 1. A. and
“Fiancee Stepped Into:
~Fown To Have Dr. Diggs —
a Perf orm Ceremony
TOOK EARLY TRAIN BACK
Bey cera ate
<x=Jg 35 |
elt was -down at, Clerk Ton
ZiNot's desk in the Court of Com-
Ajioh Pleas that it alt happened
imhursday of last. week,
Benton: a stockily nuit man. o1
Squick manner of talking, wha ssys,
Swant a marriage license.”
“STNeil—"Name, please."
GiAppicant—"Marcus Gaevey.”
Joepy this Ume Clerk O'Neil is all
foused) and when tlie Tivense is
‘led ont with “Marens Garvey,
idge 45, divorced; born in West In:
iter,” it dawas upon him that it is
‘Mie famous Mureus Garvey, head
foYIhe Universal Negra Tmprave-
Susi. Association.
othe lady's name on the Mens
mwas Mis Amy 1. dscaues,
Aosecretary In his New York head
fqariers. Her home is Kansas
Ehy and har nize was given ax 26
Upsie. Deiendemery, tani aa 10
bw the romance began.
Santer Kev. J. Reb. Diges per
Hormed the ceremony at his home,
ig aud Mrs. Garvey visited the
game of Nes. Cora Earle, secretary
Aer the lead Hrauch. aud thea in-
gpecied Liberty Hall the recently
[acquired local headquarters — at
1430-2 Pennsylvania Avenue, for
which he expressed his admiration
nal as quietly as they had sli:
ped into town’ a, single couple, Mr
And Mrs, Garvey hurried back. t¢
New York ax newly weds.
Many persons who read the short
account of the wedding in last
week's APIO were surprised at the
[youth of Me, Garvey. whe gave Mis
hge as:25,
Tn August 120, Mr, Carvey sned
his first wife for divorce alleging
[that she was addicted 19 drink aod
was nntihtil to her marriage
lvows. The first, Mra. Garvey,
[Whose nate also is Amy" iim
mediately tiled a counter suit for
divorce asking large alimony. de-
Toluring that her husband's, salury
was over $20,000 a year. She also
uaned Miss Atay Jaeques, former
Hy Mr. Garveg's private seeretary,
respondent.
and nid his Second wife, as ‘care
| ——
HAWKINS PRAISES
BOSTON . OF P. HALL
Says Building Is Located In
Rasiness Section; Rent-
uls $20,000 Yearly
/ OW, Ashbie Hawkins, supreme
ehaneclor of the simuter win of
Knights of Pythias, who returned
rom Hoston tie ather” ay. | sass
the Pythiay af that elly are” doit
fell with thie $200.40) Tatil ere
sition 1 that community.
ihe hidh, inedted on Washingtan
street, in the business section, 6s
Serodinn, ie ds three stories in
height, wanting three large assent
Ty ropnis, eight tendge rooms sand
fe humihor uf atlives sand SOPs,
He rentat tote $20,000 gra
wht headquarters wf tie Supreme
hadge site there, ‘The Supreine
Ledge ineeia mere in E928,
327 W. Lexington St.
LADY ATTENDANT TTLEPHORE CALVERT £590
ie, S 8
fee Have Your
a a
Pee A a; Dental Work Done
Peer B.) At Cut‘Prices. By
ae Gee .
eee v 4] Expert Dentists
{aaa s :
a. AS
a Reasonable Prices
Consultation Free ——EeEEEEEEe
Saminetion ond - =
: 7 Sy
Big Reductions on | i)
Grown and Bridge Work | Gi beers roencat
PST Te AN Orie
treated Miecnine you havent ei
sutficient money on hand to pay inte es ———
tor the wark, Our prices are. very low, and, moreover, we will
<ive you easy terms—pay while the work is being done, a little
10a time, Our work is the best, our prices and terms most gen-
UNION DENTAL PARLORS
Hours: 8 A: M.to7 P.M. Sunday, 10 to 1
Eee eee,
DARIN PANAEDT
BAND CONGERT
THIS: FRIDAY
ithe Colored City Band Wil
| Play At Calhoun and
) Laurens Streets
| The colored eity band, A. Jack
iThomnas, leader, will give lis fourth
concert at Cajlioum und Lauren
istreets, this Friday evening.
‘The’ old-time melodies which
were not well received at the Just
concert at Sharp and Montgomery
Istreets, have heen éliminuted by
order of Wrederieck R, Huber, mun-
icipal director of rousic and other
songs substitited in their place.
Mr, Huber sent, the ARO-
AMERICAN the fAllowng leer
this ‘week:
st Inve just received a copy of
prour issue of July fis in whieh
you publish a statement of a Dr.
Rowley, objecting to the singing ot
Whit he terns, ‘reminiscent old
titue melodies,” at the Cancecis of
the Colored City Band.
it is needless for me ta say thal
{ was surprised as well as, disap-
pointed Ut the community at
Montgomery street did net join
inore heartily in the singing ol
these melodios ani as | organized
the City Pand and have arranged
these roucerts for the pleasure and
recreation of the colored commun-
ities J have omitted Uns style oF
song on the fare pragruns, ol
though ( feel very strongly Uh (he
view point is wrong. However,
the coneerts are for them and nat
for me.”
‘The program with new commun-
ity songs inserted will ine)ides
“Smiles, April Showers", "My
THE AFRO;AMERICAN
js i
Mammy": “Inet A Song “At’ Twi"
light”, a “Drink To Me
Only With Thine’ Fyes", | “Silver
Mthreads: Among .The Gola",’ “Till
We Meot Again.” a
eal Vana
| Mrs. Mattie G.-Tane, 1607. Divi-
ston sigeet has heen given a. per-|
jit fr8m the Building Commis.
sion's office ste erect a porch ‘and
‘other improvements on her * resi-
a atthe ahove address,
97 IN TRAFFIC COURT
:
| Hallare to ive eiieht of wase- naar, Oe
seo ints We Peston “atreet, 82 dames
Haneateroy.. ay asturd Street, contianed:
Gosngin HE Suekoa, F422 ehuad verve, $3
torhert iieawns iv ‘Fwentieth street, 815%
nie Helene, R Keister steve, $3,
Me oan a _rvelstration en el.—Cearze
Sualrrete 20), Winter street, Sz Leon OMe,
Fe Ae Bonnin steve S10: Aubert Wire,
tary ‘biyrale, street, Seige S. Meret, 102
XM. Canny street, EHO: de Mt iishop, 4425
Pinnegivaninn wsemie, 810: Hraneis Weld
Tata Aerallaly street, $10;, Geurge MeCuin,
Havre ae tienen,
Ayondiine anit rerktoss driving. —Ceo, W.
jeottnet ott camel street eantinge Be
se ican, Met Wisision Stewed, disiissed:
rank tarier, 10 Etat Steert, $25:
ertert. Haring 287." Scheurer Aen
Meter: te, Mbatuiwws, 340 Dobphin
sree Ses ‘Senes Moure, TEES Druid 10
arene, £3,
Tiperating ear i drunken eoudition.—dnek-
cont Minna kins, Mie Mburels. served, sis mutts
in Jui :
eels jeekiie, no Hette nod other ste
Inter tea Metbanrae, 45 We Bille
Meets #202 Hernard Divan, Danaelty's
Cannel sie mwmt tic in jails dose he Blshor,
Eh Tons Selon, 21 Ny Payne street, $3,
si eases
‘PLANS TRIP ABROAD
Rov. 1. RB. L. Diggs has asked for
a lénve af absence for a yeur from
the pastorate of ‘Trinity Baptist
Church, Fest and a desire for a
Rurepenn trip are wiven a8
hi renauns. Ilis congregation is
aiid to be npposed to bis” Jeaving
ene ‘
..Our August Sale....
of
Furs, Fur Coats, Cloth Coats, Tailor Made
Suits, Dresses, Etc., as well as Men's Suits
and Overcoats is now in full swing. And
to those who have never been to our store,
we hereby extend an invitation to call and
see for yourself the finest, newest 'mer-
chandise in the city. Not cheap, but priced
within reason. And in order to get you to
make your selection this month we are
giving you a $5.00 rebate as per coupon
below.
(a
HIS COUPON IS WORTH
seo TO YOU
In arder 16 Ket you to make your selection early,
we will aeeepi this Coupon as a frst payment or
FIVE DOLLARS
an any Pall and Winier’ Coat, Cloth or For, Taller
Made Suit or Dress, or Gent's Suit or Overcoat, pro-
viding you seleet same daring the month of August,
Please being vhis with you
ee
' COHN’S .
SAMPLE STORE eo
659 W. Lexington St., near. Pine
Open Monday 9 P. M. Saturday 11 P. M.
: i Cash or Credit
SUMMER SCHOOLS
| READY TO CLOSE
Elementary Pupils Only To
te Ch
Afier a most sneressinl session,
the summer classes al Morgan Col-
lege will come to an end on’ Friday
of this week.” ‘There hag been a
gooil enrolment, and the pupils,
inany of whom are teachers, Laok
varied conrses, Same strove for
ercdits toward the degree of bach-
plor af arts, while others confined
their work to professional subjects,
Much of the work of carrying
on the simmer elasses has. fallen
an the shaniders of Trot, J. Re Beal
Brock, the whle assistant director.
He had a, strong faenlty under
him, A feature of the summer
classes has been the model school,
composed -of public school pupils,
The public summer school wit
elose this Friday after auccosstul
sessions, At the igh School, the
majority “of the conditioned
pupils have made up their def-
cioncies, while others carned extra
credits.” Mason A. Hawking was
In chargo, assisted by Miss Fannie
TL. Barbour, Ralph — Reekling,
Gough B. MeDaniels and James 8)
PCs.
School (12 and 102. which hanse
the elementary glasses, will ae
close until Angnsi 18,
| The, Maple Lent Harmony, Band
inne up of ten students at the
Maryland Workshop for the Blind,
gave a. concert Thursday, July 27
lon the Roof Garden at the Com-
munity Houses
‘he band was organized two
sonra aga and ix under (he {astruc-
tion of M. Myers, white, a. graduate
br the Peabody Conservatory of
Music. ° ‘Phe band was organized
Aine: eee
First Moonlight Exeursion
|By the Welfere Dept., and Juslor Leegue
}> of JOHN WEELEY M. £. CHURCH
TO BROWN'S GROVE
TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1922
onott of Agua Chota omat ty Seedy
Ehildeene, Vim tripe te, Gia Mus
lant toaves. fot of Lining: at BERD pe Me
| fan sae
| ew. We AK, deuking, Pastor
For Quick Relief
use
BOWEN’S CORN LEAF
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE
A 8.49.37
Phone: Mad, SOW
DR. MARK 0, FAX
SURGEON CHIROPODIST
Room 3 1990 Pennsylvania Ave.
Opposite Douglass Theatre
AML Allniente af the Foot teented, | Areh
Suppo’ made feain plaster ensis of 00
tnt outs Worns and ngrossing als
remus,
Himes: 9 Ae ms C03 Dem, And G A. mr
tthe ane Suing, We tee A Be
Fane saat at
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1999
. : g Ps GERM CATs ~
dios,
ae \ i X ‘|
Wie Vea’ Yt"
peat poy Een Nr oy ee.
Z Tigieepenk rae pao he cormaiapeimes
ieee eae ee At Ot abet
———— i icncaen CELLET
EES a reer enter eR CUTEST ETT mate
aS ee
= SS ae
'§ GROVE and STEM
DATES tor BROWN’S GROVE and STEAMER STARLIGHT
AND ALL POINTS ON THE BAY
Also From Towns on the Bay to Brown’s Grove
hia fe the only sieamer and the dnly park In the State of
Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Culored
People.
rin order to secure choice dates, apply at once to
CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BROWN
2103 Deuld Hill Avenue Phone, MAdiaon H248
5 or call WALTER ft. LANGLEW
1418 Jefferson Street Phone: WOle 4222-5
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sunday
everamttrom now until the first of Muv. Be sure to.give your
committee authority to secure dates when application is made
fora eely nodules will be held in reserve. Captain Brown
a4 Pwait on any commitiee who Wishes to engnge dates, Make
Nourapnoiniments by qlone oe letter, Improvements aad
added features are ‘continually being added to the boat and grove
alder comfort _and enjoyment of our patrons.
‘The following dates have beenbooked:
1 31 AUGUST
August (Moontight)
(Day Excursions) 2-MeComas Lodge No, 8, Goad Hope
jo-tovane and buttwestile MB, Chneehew elle Coby
& duck ‘Thaiax Bund, B Junin aod Welfare Dept, N. 0. &
7- Waters A.M. B, Sanday School WL. of Jom Wesley MB, 3. 4,
Avant, St, Sunday. Sedoot a—eammandary. No, 24, Kubchts of St.
Dose Se Re Zinn, Chee Soest Sty Hariaie
“hcinaepeaient A, Ste He Cheek so-tichere ut St, Pant 3B. Cured
hCaymerowa Pint Ate Be haret MONS Carvoli Chapter, Epwarth-Laerwy,
sparrows Fiat Me upe Non, 0, Elks Shuey Street Chane al th
Eicdevat Senter Cahers of Mt, daha Aa4—Nonpaciel assembly inet
a eke Teceieand Conall St, OtlseBeneBetar
beat ary: toord of Waters, 17—remate Unhers of Waters AW. B Cy,
ear a etiiral wad DAC Is—Ladtew AW No, ty Alvtrupittna ai, 8,
Bary Savloty ta Cambitige, 34. 7 chee
Lee er ation AMM AvaHliaty 6f21—Pucturs Coachmants Aurtiany
Tee ines eal fcr fe Iniependont Ae ab. Cee
Hapast States Me Be Chueh, Zectumoetty Leagie ot Agies DUES
nays MG. a. ElAhwep Seve Chole
ahh Ut Sorat Sehclrlister's. Orchestra
2i~Contennint M. B. Church BS -Ausillury No, 219, Kalghts of Mt. Jona
Augost--Day’ Exeurvions Continaed ue St. Garuabas
ct. Calenry Haptist Charen u—ttehors Association and Epworth League
2--Prm Anna puis to 4e0¥e Sit Soteoynlitaa M.-H. Chee
2h. iO, of Nazariles, DR, Wilson at Waters M. Be ‘Sunday Sehuol
Alesina nied enee pa NEN
FENNELL’S PHARMACY
| BALTIRORE’S BUSIEST COLORED DRUG STORE
; MAM-ORDERS SOMCITED *
i PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIAUTY
i CORNER BIDDLE ST.
i The Busy Corner pauip iLt. AVENUE
eS ee ra mewn at eee
- Maebeth Photo Studio
1330 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., near Lafayette
- OPPOSITE DOUGLASS THEATRE
z MAd, 8916-W ‘
= i recep I meena
Gr
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1922
BOWIE NORMAL STUDENTS WILL IRON, NOT WASH
Fight Against Rules Leads To Modification of Washerwoman Education Plan
FORMER PRINCIPAL SPEAKS
Goodloe Says Neurotic Educational Clown Is Wrecking State System
The hard and fast rule of Bowie Normal School requiring girl students to wash the boys' clothes including the bed linen and personal linen has been modified according to announcement made by Principal Leonidas James, backed by the authority of the State Board of Education.
According to the new rule, "students will pay laundry fee of $5.00. This fee will cover the cost of the laundry and payment for doing the washing. The girls in the future will do the ironing, but not the washing of clothing."
Under this rule girl students will be relieved of the washing, but will be compelled to do the ironing, whether they like it or not. This rule is also backed up by another rule which compels students to donate one hour's work every week to the school.
Although every male student at Bowie Normal School signed a petition decking the board was vile, the new announcement also continues the rule that students will not be allowed to receive boxes of food from home except on Thanksgiving, Christmas and Friday. Only on these students will students be permitted to supplement their school time with绰绰 from home.
The lack of water supply which caused the closing of the school last February has been remedied and a new well bored. The school is expected to open on September 20th.
Goodloe Speaks
Commenting on recent articles concerning the miserable conditions at the Normal School for which Supervisor J. Walter Huffington, white, is said to be responsible, Don S. S. Goodloe, former principal of Nassau sent the AFRO-AMERIGAN the following statement this week:
"Permit me to say how glad I am; that your paper and the Institute of Nassau of the State of Maryland are awakening to the fact, that conditions in our schools are deplorable for many reasons; the first of which is the evident determination on the part of a neurotic educational clown to drive out of the State system every Negro with an opinion of his own and to replace such with subservient, spineless race traitors.
"For instance, Mr. Kraig, supervisor of colorado in Howard University, up as an example for all of our Negro boys and girls. It was obvious that this creature was no more fit to deal with decency in boys and girls than a frangy hyena is fit to deal with the tenderness of a young rabbit. Yet he was the trusted advisor of a certain man, who in my humble judgement is the most dangerous enemy our people have ever encountered with
It is true of course that this girl is dangerous only because of being white and of our people being colored, but the fact remains that he is slowly but surely many of our boys and girls.
"If we, Mr. Editor, permit this without protest to the limit, it will only prove what is evidently his theory, that the Negro is absolutely inferior and not deserving of any other kind of training than the miserable brand for which he is surely loving the foundation.
"Mr. Editor; it is your duty and mine and that of every other Negro MAN and WOMAN in this city, in this sly, insidious, dangerous, degrading program is fought to a finish, without counting any popularity costs."
POLICE SWEEP
FAIRMOUNT STREET
EARLY SUNDAY
(Continued from page 1)
$99 100s outbound N. 21 instr
1412 Fairmount t venue, $5; Charity
Paine, 19 N. Dallas street, $10;
Marie Wilmore, 214 Sterling street,
$25; Wm. Selby, 1523 E. Payette
street, $5; John Mosely, 1424
Fairmount avenue, $5; Ole Gee, 72
stone street, $5; Peter Thomas,
$2; Edward Ginny,
1422 Fairmount street, $5;
Wm. Lee, 1417 Fairmount avenue,
$5; Buck Young, Sparrows Point,
$5; Melvin Golden, 8 W. Bathel
street, $5; Lillian Powley, 11 N.
Spring street, $25; Sidney Holland,
8 Dallas street, $10; Gortrade
Others breweries, $25;
Wm. Johnson, 1428 Fairmount avenue
Wm. Johnson, 10 N. Spring street
Henry Williams, 277 N. Spring street
Walter Reed, Sparrows Point
Harvey Henderson, 7 N. Spring street
Sadie Burrell, 1417 Fairmount avenue
Belve Dorsey, 12 N. Carolina street
Collinville, 1417 Fairmount street
Andrew Davis, 423 N. Spring street
Frank Washington, 200 N. Central avenue
Oscar Smith, 10 N. Dallas street
Monroe Law, 100 N. Bethel street
James Braxton, 1417 Fairmount street
onis Baron, 5 N. Spring street
Wills Burrell, 1417 Fairmount street
Wills Burrell, 108 N. I. Sparrows Pt.
Honlettle Johnson, 21 N. Dallas street
Pauline Hickens, 15 N. Fairmount street
Annie Dandy, 1417 Fairmount avenue
Mary McVill, 1415 Fairmount street
Margaret Gungin, 1400 Tn Pan alley
Olsen Gee, 738 Vine street
William Linden, 1414 Fairmount street.
Charles Spencer, 1414 Fairmount avenue.
Charles Banks, 425 Sonsert street
Sarah Johnson, 1 N. Spring street
Ada Scott, 1414 Fairmount avenue.
1934 Mullen Street
William Gilman, 1412 Tn Pan alley
Johanna Hill, 22 N. Carolina street
Norina Helson, 1414 Fairmount street
Andrew Davis, 423 N. Spring street
Irene Tse, 100 N. Spring street
William Warner, 1881 Fairmount street
THE MAYOR OF THE CITY OF BENIN
SO THIS IS PARIS? Or words to that effect, in the Dahoney dialect. Photo shows the 'big chiefs' of the tribes in France's African colonies, taking in the sights of Paris during their recent visit to the world's capital. Some of them brought five or six wives each.
The reporter met Old Timer coming down the Hill road, just below Morgan a n College Thursday morning.
"How are you?" said the scene-extending it his hand.
"Toey, I am poorly, you know I was just up to that college and seen things."
"Why then culled students git out a paper, but a white woman is the editor. Wherever yeard of that here."
Wouldn't you think our colored skate teachers could edit their paper? Now wouldn't you? Futhermor* Morgan College is a collud skate, but they is got a Jim Crow dining room for the collud school teachers and a white dining room for the white pussons what teaches out there. "You ought to go right back to the college and get a degree," the reporter said.
"I got a degree of common-sense and race pride years ago, and that's more than some of you educated young dudes has," snapped O. T. How's the politics?" the reporter asks.
"Gosh!" said the reporter, "he and McGuinn will both worry when George Walty and Captain Brown got into the fight for Council." Just then a new automobile driven by Dr. Cary gave O. T. a lift to the Harford road car, but he hollowed back: "Don't fergit to say that I'm still on the fence in that senatorial light."
FREED OF ASSAULT CHARGE
Bet Air, Md., Aug. 3—Jacob Ridley was acquitted by a jury in Circuit Court of the charge of assaulting Lillie Singleton, white, near Alberdeen, June 1921. At the first trial last December, the jury disagreed. After forty-five minutes last week it rendered a verdict not guilty. Authorities strongly against Ridley, but the woman identified another man as the assailant.
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1544 Penna.
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A
MIDNIGHT JOY RIDE ENDS IN FATAL WRECK
Autoists Attempt to Change
Hands At Wheel While
Going At High
Speed
YOUNG GIRL KILLED
White Employer's Car
Wrecked, Driver Held
For Murder
Miss Evelyn Williams, 17, 725
Sterling street, is dead and Miss
Nancy Creek, 1120 Biggs avenue
and Edward Robb, 129 Winter
street, are lying at the South Baltimore Hospital with wounds and bruises about the face and body as a result of an accident when the car in which they and a number of comparisons were taking a ride
Sunday night was driven into an iron lamp post and demolished.
The accident occurred when James Simms, 1024 W. Lexington street, who had been driving, made an attempt to allow Edward Robb to take the wheel while the car was speeding down the street. The driver of the car was beat and it struck a lamp post, careened across the street and smashed into another car standing there.
Miss Williams was killed instantly when she was thrown on her head in the street and Edward Robb were also thrown into the car. The other six members of the party escaped with minor bruises and shake ups.
Others in the car at the time of the accident were Miss Daisy Crowder, $31 Iaborg street; Loha Crowder, $31 Iaborg street; 1043 W. Lexington street; George Bell, $31 Iaborg street; Ethel Gough, $31 Iaborg street.
Simms was arrested and is being held for the grand jury charged with causing the death of Miss Williams. Other charges as well as states witnesses. The car is the property of Simms' white employer.
Crisfield, Md., Aug 3—Mack Tabb who killed Henry James, white, a traveling salesman with an air at Triggs, a former prisoner sentenced to life imprisonment at a special session of Circet t Court.
It's All Yours"
Talking Of You"
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My Doggies Now"
Difference Now"
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P 1544 Penna. Ave.
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ORRATED 1884
Insurance Company
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venue, Baltimore, Md.
the Home Friendly to the
viving the best Insurance
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Photo by Underwood and Underwood
BOU
Gin, Rye, Scotch
(For flavoring confectionery,
1 oz. Flavor and Colo-
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nute to give satisfaction
Prices 1 o.
One dozen asses
One pint
Goods sent C. O. D. if desired
E. B. D.
208 N. WABASH AVE.
PANOS AND
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We manufacture the
We deliver gallon or half
PRICES: $1.60 per
.40 per
.20 per
Churches, Lodges and FI-
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Sodas, Sundaes, of all kinds,
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2101 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
THINK! AG
ORDER YOUR
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Do you know that winter?
Do you know that prices
sky high on account of the
Come to our office and lea-
Partial Payment Plan tha-
ful high prices and con-
from the Coal Strike.
SERVICE CO
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Both Sides Prom
To Settle Fuss
mittee of Ten
FISHERMEN MEET IN WEST VIRGINIA
First Biennial Session Is
Being Held At First Baptist Church There
Charleston, W. Va., Aug. 5—The National Grand Lodge of the Galilean Fisherman is holding its first biennial session at First Baptist Church, having discontinued yearly gatherings when the 64th annual one was held at Atlantic City in 1920.
Besides reports from the supreme officers and the transaction of much business, the delegates attention is now riveted on the election of a supreme ruler and other officers into today (Thursday).
Golden Link Tabernacle is helping to make the stay of the hundred or more delegates a pleasant one.
Baltimoreans here include: Supreme Ruler Joseph P. Evans, Frank Carter, J. Macauley Dorsy, Elliott Foster, M. Ehloge, Mrs. Marietta Stewart, Mrs. Carle Earle, Miss Larry Gross, Mrs. Amanda Pinkney and Mrs. Chaney Thomas.
Have the AFRO follow you when you go on your vacation. Don't miss reading the news from home.
B. MAYER
Registered Optometrist
532 NORTH GAY STREET
EYES EXAMINED
FREE
BOURBON
Lin, Rye, Scotch and Brandy Flavor
oiling confectionery, non-alcoholic beverage.
f. Flavor and Color 1½ gal. Price
adduest on the market. Sold under pay-
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Prices 1 oz. bottle $.75
One dozen assorted flavors $8.00
One pint bottle $6.00
C. C. O. D. if desired. Agents and salesmen
E. B. DALY & CO.
S. N. WABASH AVE. CHICAGO, I. N.
Ju-29
PANOS AND MAKRISI
ICE CREAM.
MANUFACTURERS
We manufacture the CREAM OF CREAM
over gallon or half gallon to any part of
PRICES: $1.60 per gallon
.40 per quart
.20 per pint
Caches, Lodges and Pieces given special at
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Indices, of all kinds made from fresh fro-
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INSYLVANIA AVE.
Phone
Ju-29
ACT Q
DER YOUR COAL ON
PARTIAL PAYMENT PLAN
know that winter is fast approach,
know that prices on coal are likely
on account of the coal strike?
Your office and let us acquaint you
payment Plan that you may avoid the
prices and congestion which is in
Coal Strike.
RVICE COAL CO.,
Gin, Rye, Scotch and Brandy Flavors
(For flavoring confectionery, non-alcoholic beverages, etc.)
1 oz. Flavor and Color 1 1/2 gal. Price $1.00
Best and strongest on the market. Sold under positive guar-
anter to give satisfaction or money refunded.
Prices 1 oz. bottle $7.5
One dozen assorted flavors $8.00
One pint bottle $6.00
Goods sent C. O. D. if desired. Agents and salesmen wanted.
E. B. DALY & CO.
208 N. WABASH AVE. CHICAGO, ILL.
Sodas, Sundas, of all kinds made from fresh fruits in our Ice Cream Parlor. Cigars and Cigarrettes of all kinds.
2101 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.. Phone Mul. 6705
2101 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.. In 28 Aug 14:18
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 powerful high prices and congestion which is inevitable from the Coal Strike.
1515 Pennsylvania Ave.
Phone MAdison 9463
ENON CHURCH IN AN UPROAR AGAIN SUNDAY
Pastor and Seven Members Taken From Services and Put Behind the Bars At Station House
MAKE PEACE ON MONDAY
Both Sides Promise Court
To Settle Fuss In A Committee of Ten
Some of the members of Enon Baptist Church wanted the pastor, Rev. J. H. Green to speak after unday morning services some of them didn't.
Those who didn't made such a lustrence that the police were called in and by order of the pasr, members who gave their names as Mary R. Brown, 1728 Brunt street and Annie Johnson, 2107 Division street, were arrested. Deacon Byrd M. Lipsecomb, Bolton street, one of the chief officials of the church was also arrested. That did settle it. When he smoke cleared away, Rev. J. H. Green, 1212 Bolton street, N. A. Hackett, 1211 Remington street, Rebecca Washington, 213 W. Biddle street, Fannie Washington, 859 Breward street, 215 W. Hoffman street were disturbed up to the Northwestern police station and safely locked to
Each put up $102.50 for his or her appearance at court Monday morning and was released, although the neighborhood of the station house was crowded by Eton Church members discussing the church matters all the farreom.
The light between the pastor and congregation has been going on for sometime and two weeks ago officers of the church secured an injunction restraining the pastor, Rev. Green, from entering the pulpit or acting as pastor. He stayed away one Sunday, but East Sunday was on the job again. Cries of, "Sit Down," "Come Down," "Shut Up," greeted his appearance in the pulpit and attempted to speak. Sunday might have allowed to speak without disturbance.
In police court Monday, neither side would prosecute the other and all were dismissed with a warning. Magistrate Ranif declared him. If seek and tired of the disturbance at Eton Baptist Church and threatened heavy fines if they came before him again. The judge, that they were before him and they ought to be able to settle their difficulties as Christians in the church.
Each side agreed to appoint a
workmate to assist all disagreements.
Glasses if needed made at Lowest Prices
CARBON
Brandy and Brandy Flavors
non-alcoholic beverages, etc.)
1½ gal. Price $1.00
market. Sold under positive guar-
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bottle $7.55
sorted flavors $8.00
bottle $6.00
Agents and salesmen wanted.
MALTY & CO.
CHICAGO, ILL.
Ju-29 Au-4-11-18
AND MAKRIS
CREAM.
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The CREAM OF CREAMS
gallon to any part of the city
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home-made
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Phone Mad. 6705
Ju 28-Au 4-11-18
CT QUICKLY!
COAL ON THE
PAYMENT PLAN
is fast approaching?
is on coal are likely to soar
the coal strike?
let us acquaint you with our
that you may avoid the power-
gestion which is inevitable
COAL CO., Inc.
Now On In
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Here they go! Hundreds of pairs
All Newark Stores Open Saturday Evening gs to Accommodate Customers
NEWS IN BRIEF
A delegation of ten men from the Holy Trinity Catholic Church, Washington, D.C., were entertained at the residence of Anabie Charles E. Chadden in 1816 Myrtle avenue, Sunday of last week. The name Parade, of Baltimore and Washington Societies, which takes place in October in Washington, was discussed.
Announcement that Monumental Lodge of Elks No. 3, is not going to take Lt. A Jack Thomas' Band to the convention at Newark has created a mild sensation. Some of the Elks are trying to get the band committee to change their decision.
Local Lodges of the Fisherman of Callee will be represented by about 35 delegates at the annual session of the Grand Lodge of the Order, which opens in Philadelphia on August 14.
The Independent Club of the 17th Ward held a smoker Thursday night at the headquarters, 714 Franklin street. The club which meets every Tuesday night has not endorsed either Senatorial candidate.
Nelson Price Jr., age 19, 212 W. Chuse street, and McKinley Pratt, 1026 Park avenue, await action of the Grand Jury on charge of assault preferred by Miss Catherine Simpson 17, 1520 Carter street.
The Elliott City Nine will play Rockville at Jonestown, Howard County, this Saturday afternoon.
At a meeting of the GetTo-Gather Colored League of the 16th Vard at Pilgrim Baptist Church Monday prior to the Seminarian canvass of John W. Garrett was unanimously endorsed. William 11. Camphor is president and John Finder, secretary.
Mesdames Addie Woods, Ora Culsey, Harry Lauris and Thos. Seymour officers of the 16th colored Republican Club which endorsed Senator at this meeting held at headquarters 1166 Carey street.
POLICE HOLD D. C.
AUTOIST AND WOMAN
POLICE HOLD D. C.
AUTOIST AND WOMAN
A Washington autist and a woman are held at the Central police station on the suspicion that they are implicated in the death of Charles House, white, four'clock Sunday morning, House was killed by a fast moving auto, the driver of which was scaping from a policeman. David Butler, D. C., and driver is held for the grand jury charged with the crime. William Richard and Stephen F. Parker arrested in Washington brought hereupon all absences were released. Miss Annie B. Marshall also of D. C., is being held also by the police. She admits being in a air at the time with a man whose name she will not dispute.
Beach cloth and Snow White Canvas Oxfords for men---all at ONE PRICE, $1.95. Once each year at this time we make a clean sweep of our entire stock. This year we smash all previous records in value-giving by giving you your choice of EVERY PAIR IN THE HOUSE at the amazingly low price of $1.95. Some have leather and fibre soles with rubber heels--also some with leather soles and leather heels--others have white rubber soles and heels. When you see them you will say they are worth DOUBLE THE MONEY! All sizes and widths in latest styles. Includes are stunning "English" and brogue style lasts for young men. They are going fast, not quickly. No more at this price after these are sold
MANYWOULD HEADI.B.P.O.E.
Lively Contest for Grand Exalted Ruler Expected At Newark Next Week
Lively Contest for Grand Exalted Ruler Expected At Newark Next Week
A lively fight for the position of Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elites to succeed George E. Wiberyan of
Wibecan is said to be desirous of having the law confining the exalted ruler to a one-year repeal. This law was passed at the instigation of the New York state delegation, and took effect of the law which authorized George W. F. McMechen, of Baltimore, to two successive one-year terms.
Among the many aspirants for Wibecan's post are: J. Finley Willome of the more congested plains Eagle; W. H. Stanton, lawyer and civilian of Baltimore Thos. W. Welling of Cleveland, Ohio. Richmond, Va., will be among the many cities contending for the 1923 session.
Monumental Lodge will have a large delegation at the session.
GET BIRTH CERTIFICATES
Principal Geo. B. Murphy Speaks
At Open Air Evangelistic
services
In the course of an address at
the open air evangelistic services
on the lot adjourned Payne
Memori I A M. E. Church last
Sunday night, George B. Murphy,
principal of School 112, urged
interest in church and social welfare
projects. He addressed that birth
certificates be secured at once fog
children, so that there
all Yields are unbait when time for entering school came. He spoke of the baths at School 112, saying they were well purified. The talk was the first of a series of brief ones that Pastor James G. Martin is going to have leading new deliver nights just before the evangelical services begin. According to Dr. C. Martin, the people not only need to know how to live hereafter, but must learn how to live on earth.
John C. Garrett has charge of the Garrett campaign among colored voters in the 7th Ward, Dr. J. H. Hilburn is noted among the Garrett chan. Applications for applicants for second and third grade teachers' certificates in. Baltimore County will be held at Towson Colored School on August 15.
The Protective Association will go on an outing to Culpepper to hold two days services Sunday and Monday at the Mt. Mior, Eagle Mior, pastor. The Association will leave Saturday night. Dr. Junius Gray will conduct the services, assisted by Rev. C. B. Jones, A. B. Callis, and J. T. Johnson. Other pastors of the association will attend also.
BROOKS--BROWN--Englewood, 42, 829 W.
Lexington street; Martin, 42.
GOLMES--FISHER--John L., 41, 1622 Edmonson avenue; Anne, 40, 41.
ANTHONY street; 1121 N. Calyrean street; Helen G., 19.
JOHNSON--SMALLWOOD--Daniel, 22, 1157 Myrtle street; Mary, 21.
MURRAY--WILSON--John A., 41, 754 Winscoe street; Borton, 25.
ANDERSON--WINDER-Flood, 22, 2165 Lafayette street; Francis, 21.
MACKENNY street; 21, 78, 716 W.
LEE-TAYLOR-WILLIAM L., 26, 1821 Wasson street; JONIE, 25.
DINAWAY-SMITH-Lombard, 32, 921 Woodward street; JOLIN, 21.
DINAWAY-ARlIRAN, 30, 751 Dover St.; Elizabeth, 38.
DUBLEY-ROSE-HOK, 27; ALIE, 28.
PERKINS-MOODY-GOEorge, 20, 105 W. Schroeder street; HATTLE, 10, 20.
WOGGINS-LEE-JANE, 20, 1225 Linden St.; Johnson-TAYLOR-Albert C., 28, 728 Maryland avenue; LILIA, 22.
SMITH-JOHNSON-WILLIAM, 21, 1222 Lommon street; JANSE, 20.
GROSS-MOODY-GOEorge, A., 43, 158 Inst. street; LUNA V., 43.
BOHDEN-KELLM-GOEorge E., 24, 712 W. Franklin street; LAURA, 18.
MONXOE-LEWIS-ENOS B., 35, Newark; ANNA, 24.
WALKER-LAWRENTE-A., 40, 512 McNeil street; FANNIE F., 38.
GLADEN-JONES-Edward, 35, 55 McKinney street; ELLEN, 22.
WALKER-COTTAN-Clos, S., 26, 600 COTTAN street; GEORGE, 48, 1009 Etting St.; LEM, 38.
HOOPER-BRISCHE-Jacob, 42, 1061 Preston St.; LONNIE, 41.
TAYOR-CARTER-Charles C., 20, 263 N. TAYOR street; SHIPLEY-NORWALK St.; GENEVIE, 92.
GASOWAY-SHIPLEY-109 N. Whalot St.; GENEVIE, 92.
RUSH-RAKER-GOEorge, 32, 111 N. Coratine St.; HATTIE, 18.
42 DEATHS THIS WEEK
42 DEATHS THIS WEEK
Of the 42 deaths recorded this week by the Health Department four were caused by inexperienced, four by pneumonia, and three deaths under one year. The complete list follows.
89. Ridgman Robinson, 99. Municipal Hospital,
George Berry, 39. Municipal Hospital,
Alice Welsh, 50, 554 McMoon St.
Edith Williams, 41. Johns Hopkins Hospital
Bennie Driver, 1, 1915 N. Calhoun St.
Early Books, 14. Days, Johns Hopkins St.
George Pugh, 14. Days, Johns Hopkins St.
George Pugh, 14. Days, Johns Hopkins St.
Perry Miles, 55, 114 Hasselberger St.
Leye Jenkins, 20. University Hospital
Hattie Officer, 55, Fairfield, Md.
Emnice Jones, 42. Stockton and Estates St.
Harry Satley, 41, 127 Earl St.
News From Our Correspondents
- Edwards aad Moore
. Express and “Moving ;
g 110 W. 23rd Street
PUONE HOMEWOOD 3520 “
Pronipt Service Reasonable Prices
eee
. EMERGENCY CLOTHING COMPANY
- 800.8.Fremon: Ave., cor. Barre Sts
sunt Si aree |i RHONE, TOUTE ew .
‘Wi'ané atvenss tonite! ty borer noni Dutins Gents! and’ Children's, eads-to-wear
xéronentes Sign Wonta's Gariorais’n ¥settalls.” Bente Sait aud Dvateonte. Sede. 39
Spann, edteee UL ahernmteod, andi” sind, Penta” haptizing fubee m npectaltes Lets
SES RON OP pitt wus Siac 18 CONTROLLED BY COLORED VEEL"
“@bbace’s. Quamy Maser ‘acHhra. WANTED
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1922
CAMBRIDGE
° Cambridge, Md., Ane. B—Mise, Tillie
hopes, 16 sears cfd, danxhter of Mr. and
ind Sirs, KH. Doses. dled at Catoastille
Sst werk. where whe fad gone to recuper-
Te “er funeral was liekd at Bethel A. 3.
12 chueeh and was largely attended. # Me.
Feanele. Waters, of Falrimoint, and Mrs.
Ams Chose, ‘of Salisturs’. were called here
fast week to sre tris father, Me. Job F.
Diver. of Utzh street, who wax quite sick
Be the thor, but He is samewhat Sapraved
Mt present, * Se. Daniel Easies. of Mrincess
Apes Std. vive his dhuchter aul sen
inlaw, Mee aad Mrs. Allen Fisher, durias
the Convention, * Me. und Mrs. Jue, Cepbu.
Of Chestets Tis. motuzed Iien Saturday” wad
fyent a few dass with relatives, * Mr.
Rourew Maddox how retuzued to lis Lowe
fo Une cits after sending several months
Bt Atinutie 130, Nod. © Me. Mex, Varsha
wnt list Satueday ine fatinwre on fut
bes. * Mr. liver Griffin is still very
Riek at his residence, 220 Mish sweet. *
Mix Willie Camper, of Halthinore, t= spend:
fhe several inunths here with relatlves wud
frlends, » Sz. Grauvitle Matthews, of Ches
fer, was a ferent sibligt here. ©The fan
erat of Me. fou framie, who died at hi
Hine on Fine stecot last week, wos eld
at Wansh M.B. Chrch Sunday afternoon,
Kev. M.A. Thowpson wfticinting, * Mex
La Witton ‘and erandvon, Elsworth, have
returned) to thelr fisine of Wis street, after
Hyending rometime in Maltimure, * Mr,
Fobu A. Crowuetl, of Battimore, visited
ils reluiites rere during Gwe past week. *
SMe. and Mes. Lawkwordt have returnde tu
Ui "howe in Philadelphia after, spew:
eterat weeks 03th 36 NG kosoed’s nvoiler,
Mes, Eaune Fisher. * Mine Fautie Colder
Of Grose street, in visiting Mr. amd Size
Fo Re deunitt, of St. Micheis * Two laws
partice were iven fast week for Ue Sun
Mas) School children uf ous churches, * Mex
Mabel Bennett bas retiirned to her sn
fon High street after spetding several day’
fn Ttaltinre with frienils, * Blaster Rober
Benuvtt geemapaniod hire hone to spend see
eral weeks, © Rervtowe were vers Well at
Ueuiled Just Snudes at Tethel Church, Rev,
TL, W. Lewis preacied.
, HAGERSTOWN
Magerstown, Md. ARS. SoBe, Hone
B. Pony gsidin elie, Uazeestown dls
trict, edd. yuartes congecenee Prides
Main, © Meediees. were “wetland
Bienerer xamine. The Wes. "Dre ie E
Ford, presiding, ier. delivered to oer
True, Morutn and nisi, = The Helin
Tami ha of First aetttan Chueh aay
A tentieul on the baw ones the nf Mes
Ratinda,“Metthew, “Tiesday ernie, to
ie brnwsit af tke wheel © 3h, iol Mes
el time ait oitdres fof” Wettuestn
ineraine far Cineinatis bho, where te
iM pesid © Mew ad Mee, AbaoutExwks
of Clarkrsineg, Wee Va, was eae er
‘Feng on aceon of Te mettle Hae 0
hig sisiee, Stee, Hla deans © Mrs, Vn
Broa tivesetired fron Hanuyin Vast
Inter tamptine Was sere to waa ante
Tne simuwr seiout * Mrs, Elly He Jobs
Aecd at er dunn, TEE WW. Norte steret
‘Thursday aftecnind Rt AR) hw. Fa
fore than a nth, see Ia. Leva ser
Sih perience wnt. She wae 20 Zea
Of ages Sloe be raises her bnshal
Tenia i, cons fete, toon, Werke
OC Frostings Mut sey Awiees, Leal
Me ha ad tien, We Tne ot Poet
Wing, “Sia.2 sisters, ‘Mrs, Wi ‘Naulrewe
Gin: juniors, Mivsons uf Ularkstaes, We
this cites ad Als. Winn, Hell, of Slanted
Vin fm tenerts nf Ware ety.” Puneral sere
Tose "Wort td Sania nwrnine at i
Greluck Inthe, SecundUsistina Chased
fhe tenn He A dobsta Tuten a
Usitway centers. Soha Pati tie
At the Wavhinstsh Voss Hospital Word
Isday morning. wt Wine disease, Pc
eal ae hl Feta meting at the to
ig Mees Othe A, Weiler * Me, Jota High
WS sink ater lane at Hiatfway. 2 A
Sahent Gineert seus feuered hs) ue Big
Kee tiie at Benger ar MB, eure
Thunstas, ering at Ste Naty, Me teu
eatgoson: "tevitation, Mes, hubs: sen
nity weachinston: Mawailun nebo
Sinithy mint Titers onde, Mire. Bese Kine
imeteumental sac, Mare trays soln, Chas
Kiely cornet soli, Hse Spisels: sat Mes
Gina We Revd tucks Mess Wiis and, Bor
uns. atin amt pai duet, Me. Wiliam
KowtMfieg tizs solos Ante Het: Ele
Extawre Suypresonmted dub Sets ona
cara
Fairfield, Md.. Aug Me, W. W. Howe
District Suntays Selo! Snpprinteuteat af
the Salishaey Districts Tet Weilwestas for
Assille, Ne C.. ur atieal the Generel Su
Ans Seoul Convention of the A. Me Zin
Charen Kee, PX, Watts deft Pavstns
ncn the tain Maes etn
he Nalishues Distriet, to de heb xt Avon
Mritic, Vay ee. Waite is. yews puto
Teown Memoring AN. MB. Zan Caerh
Shere hw te meeting with weemt succrss,
Sire" atngzie: Clark dion tact. Saturday we
teenonn nfter a tiuserine. Hines, at the
ome ot her daughter, Mrs. Rezinn Ct
Shaghown, © Stes. Won, Birton at sont dames
nd. Mice Mure Jewkes Toft Saturday fo
Greenvitie, S.C. * The ity is installing
Oteetrie Hakts wit a heatine qdant in the
Schoo! at Faiefield, * ex. Geurae PM
inghua has rereathe pueetusest ha
Soin var, © Miss Mattie Oliver was buried
Friday (ron lise Ine residence. Third axe
Puce eaieiehle ter, Watts atleated.
Mrs Matic Mecors her son ant stanchver
re" spwning wir sxeaCnae at Daviioon
oc. Sth: rally whichis Weing lel a
Frown Memoriat \. MoE. Zinn Cheol,
Pateiente will close Suviiny. Angus Bil, *
Meo Chhizedl Care, of Ponrite nventic,
attending the EL Net A. Convention x
Sewn York. Mise tron. Westlake speat
Sanus in Waskinstin, * A Fated. oF
Cliesten ie bees wnatinived ig Me. Mltebel
Canon, # Tew. 1 We Widseutt, pastor of te
First Hoptist Church, wn roneretion wor
Gites Bees de Ms Heulwhp. hs the pastor
Midpea nt Me. Wits Jinptist Cinerelh St
of Att. Winans. Mes, W, WW, Brown will
foun, lonve. for Wittsbarzh, Hn. to Ie the
Bnest of hie tuther, Sir. Holmes Rey
olde. *
2 epee
OXFORD, MD.
Oxford, Md., Aus. ii.—'The Willins Wz:
ere at Atasnini, Memorial Chueh 2¥e
ferccert oh duly 28th, for the went Uf Ue
hares iieve, Gasiig he thw ata
Brewched fer 'Kets. 1, Jo, Haven. Sincay
oe per _pracied_ iat Bows xn
osama ER
The Knickerbocker Buildin
and Loan Asso,
1187 N. FREMONT AVE.
(near Lafayette Ave.)
Plenty of Money to Loan on
First and Second Mortgages
on Easy Terms
| HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
Vhone, MAd. 3277
W. W. ALLEN, Pres,
Res.: 1117 N. Carey St.
MA@, 1856-3
Notiry Public Drop card or call
Peete wectnen cpr ste
Jame Green, Md. Aue. B—Rer. J.C.
Mekuday, “preaeled” Sundar morning "au
Mfterawn, * The M, 0. 1. Lode at Samer
field C0, C., aneisted hy Towson Ledxe,
Mo 0. The also visiting Sir Kolshts from
Haltiores ‘held their” memorial services
at Mt. Zion, Addrewsex were ammite by
Lieut, Green and Sir Boiht tuandles. 0
Raaltinores and PN. Coo Je J. Pouninston,
of Simerteld D. 0. C. GC. ‘Setow by Mr
Guilt ot Baltimore. Ste. J, Fields of Tow:
Sin, und Mie Flownee Peminzton, Sol
nd chuene he Mew Tessie Seott nnd _com
may. nt Iaate Green, Hee. Joc. Meads
fireaehind the, sermon. The afternoon col
[retina ammnnted fu 87000, ° Mrs, Mary
Cities haw retuned to ber home wt Ones
Yen * Mee, Rte Clark. i home from th
borpitain, = alles ‘Mabel (Bourne and
mothe and Sirs, Sunrke, of Sealtinore, ar
guests uf Mrs. Grorgianne Juhusoa, of
Siv Ladys Matwr, * Stine Violet Chatina.
Spending her vacation at hier home ot My
Unive Mato, * Mr. aud Mex, George Das
er, Mrs Me Dave, ‘in sons vinited elm
fies heme of Sunilay. * The Wonan's Mis
jsiouary Society iH hold ite monthly meer
Je atthe howe of Mrs, Nedtbe Winder, oh
Tinsiiaye Aneust 3th. Mrs, J.C. Me
Eady, presileut: “Mes, Tixttie” Cromovet
sevretarys Str. wud. Mrs, William Ceoby
Nell, of Washington, D. Ci. was the werk
fad suest ot Bir, and Mes. J. Crowovells |
Mr aud Mes. William Welly and Mr.
Teardley, of Baltimore, were the week
taivets of Me. wad Mess daa Cook, * 3
Juha Prvetor is able to be ont mzaia, * Mr
Wud Mess (lagraireIehltson yas the ets
St she, nd. "Stes Kbert” Purrester Sunda
evening,
; ST. MICHAELS
St. Mirlinels, Md. Aus, th--One pastor,
new Pomp, geeariedeainy morog
eye Ree, Aion encom Her. Tilt
fe hoting nt ietinee,Nated weanze
tasant! famous frearier ove ewe fo
tern Ste chart crea aa Dem
Bieta twee Monee ae the ae, of
SES." ncaa et trong: eee ce
EEN uempsam, omgtiine, + We note te
tiath of hee, Charice Ws owe who. dled
Shits ae weed a “praia. * Our pastor
Tre, Thomo sive oldtaney, wee er
essen sbtice aetes ot tie denarteds
Ser tenet Taree aid fiewd Sts
Stim incense Faltires npe_ at a
Tag Tons snd eatin £3 Tem
Fakes ue hilt, and ene ar
hing “ior Mfetiertnews Me Hera
Hooke» Geioe'a ule of ur folke vale
ed Casieehiee an duis Tithe se aes rae
fe) Sere Se. Ca leet te ae te
Fasten Msgs © Miss Brym Grete
Peat gmt kee Suare Cartes 30 sues
Micaces vieted tie eaehor. Be ede
retire, “erst, aivkart, forthe we
i es Nese Melton ue Ae Sars
ta same, Halthmzes inde two
Sit cater auot ad singh Str oad es
Hosnee 3k tee.
| —e—
BELAIR
Vel Air, Me. Aus. $—The aanual Sun-
stay Selon pies af Ate MB Churel
wes heb at Denke TY. Bark wah Jase Thies
fap weeke T tag gitte stress, The
Cinptive Chase aaa Ichi sts pleas Juintly
Wein Auiess | Rone teaspartstiott Ante Ine
Were fuerion ‘Tike dae meant wnt, for the
Tittle Salle “Those swell as tlhe zewoetps
nik gibsautvse wf the mane jnteresthag
Chiesa see MO the WAR fire the nfo
Taint of these sho si, * An esvellent eat
fata, eutitbed, A Day’ in thie Woon” tems
Ede ig thee eihdven af hae Sunday” Sehoa
fa July ASHI, for the beseilt wf the pent.
2 simdag wins the hesinningg of Vilase
Merting.” aad althogzle a are ero at:
Sent the elisine of Clark's Chapel Cann,
fe ekeM Ames Chareh was_eruwied, tn
the Tinwenbie the gurstor, Res, Re Be Kins
Setanta dW the afternunm, Hew, tC. He
Rank, uo Steen, amd gt ashe, Htors
Kutt and ified Yoowe sate short “experi
Hane, Tne ering. weil somtinete west Nanas.
we Chask's Chapel. of when Kee. Clutetes
Sows Te pastors ceed Hat Shay with
even casters, A ney hurse erm wi
escea the ehising, a ‘Flourway, \uzust
Trin, Askire 3. a, Chhoeelt will celebrate
fhe 39th Esmuneipation Cebleration, At 30
fies there Will tee A Pavede, *AL TO pe
ty. prmiownt speaking. au ek 2200p. ake
Inicelatl, * Me, Thomas Ostarue ait Me
Fee ‘Fooues who have beet winder the
rare uf tne dete for vumetine, are alle
tir te aut tenia * Stepliew 1 Mguce ‘hay
Piirehasead a tenet of banal af 5 fers fein
Mr davols Durlius, foeierts the owing
prowrty oon the Tarford Pike sur tel Ain,
Welch he eaqerts ty clear off and imgrave,
Me espwte ty Wild ant apetate wand spe
cious wumisement park in the wear future,
PONDTOWN
Vondiuwn, Ma, Ang. 2.—Suaudny was tn
rsa eek of our -eatup, Quite m0
Amiering attended. worainz ni evening
Gur tustor, Key. J. Me Cooper, prenebed
2°C, Hail nn brother. Sirs. Annie 6 Pier
Binion Henley, Agustin Hines, i compan
With Mr folert Resesll, motoreit ever Ui
Pantnia’ Weduesias,aetendiies “Ure Fumera
of Me. Viwninax Siauiler, baterment i
Fountain Cemetery, © Kee Wet and lex
Hadges offiriatiae. 9 Ste, Wa, Plorehee wi
hauried Saturday, duty with, at Pondtow
Church Rees dH. Couper att Reg, W
se Nitcer Mietindntiaa, Interment, ta oun
Bieaxant Cometerss. ® Visitors: Mes, Chie
Mines, statin Seats, Elwont Sexiss "Mis
aon “Wilon spont Simeay wither pu
Ponte, Mr, and Mire, Win, 1. Wilson. © Quit
Aefeww of amie sem mew =e aL work on th
State mn betwen Jeetterten kad SUM Pon
Kent touts, Mid.. ewded by Mr. dos I
Savas and Ate, tivo. Wines, © Please pi
for smur APRO-AMELICAN beranse yon
gent Ine ty wy ewsh ba advaner, and. so
Sell twas hive a eos. ©The lurk visit
ed the geeddewee of Mr. tau Mess Marr
Tall aid heft a lovinetis baby ick. Moth
and lay are doing. for,
SE,
‘
be 8
@& ©:
aS oo
\ \\ gh b»
mn BMA
a S-ie>
* he forge
SINS 3,
( NN.
CI NY K
\
A change for the better fron
pasted aid other lenses with ugly
‘easts tothe clear Kxyptok lenses,
“Q NOT Q”
I. J. BRAUN
OPTICIAN
Expert Watch. Jewelry and
‘Opticon! Repairing:
423 N. Eutaw St.
} July 14-Aug 4
ANNUAL OUTING TO BROWN’S GROVE
Come s0, with
St. Matthews M. E. Chureh “Thursday, August 17, 1922
MUSIC. TEURESUMENTS.
Good Diner of Chicken, Fish, Crabs and every thing ty nlease you
ROUND TRIP BB CENTS
| Bont leaves foot of Lrondway at $0 A.-M. and 2:30 1. M.
Mrs, Elsie Amos, Chidrnin Rev, B.A. Green, Pastor
ANNUAL EXCURSION
DR. CHAS. H. FOWLEL, Chairman
ALL READY LETS GO:
/PALACE STEAMER LOUISE to CAMBRIDGE, MD.
| Wednesday and Thursday, SEPTEMBER 6th and 7th
coop wesic "8 SthdShatins DaNciNe
Round Trip $1.00
Au 4-at
TWI-LIGHT De-LUXE to BROWN’S GROVE
Tri Mu’s of Sharp St. S. S.
Saturday, August 5th 35c Round Trip
Boat leaves 6:30 P. M.
Rochester’s Orchestra
Come, Let’s Go! . With Who?
The Ladies of the Great Southern Temple ‘No. 30
Daukhtors of 1. B. P. 0. Elks of W.
TO BROWN’S GROVE
Sunday Evening, August 13, 1922
‘MUSIC BY IMPERIAL BAND ‘TICKETS, 35 CENTS
DAL Mier, Sarg Stunzley Dt, Rearrice Vrisss, Chiaieindy
7 Tout Waves foot of Trutdway at 2240 shiney
| 7:80 Sunday August 6 7:30
2 . ERNEST PURVIANCH
Sunday Twilight Brown’s Electric Grove.
Boat leaves 730 SUNDAY, ALGUST 13
SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, the next Saturday Swilhzhe
| Classes ut St. Mary's Hall Uns coming Saturday =
SR)
f HELLO BILL! f
. E
ELKS’. OUTING :
UNDER AUSPICES ‘OF :
: Monumental'Lodge No. 3
S WB POE W. :
4 ‘On Tuesday, August 8th, 1922
5 Music by the Ess: Famous Orchestra E
~ At GREENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK
Refreshments will he served
CHAS. A. SMITH, Chairman
3 Admission - _—_—_—i_,_- __ 25 Cents &
SOMERSET SCHOOL
TRUSTEES NAMED
‘West Princess Anvo District,
Geeenwoot™—antivnyAvatery, daa,
ee entre
te Tae Mimecl, anthay Jobe
fon tera neiaal
Fm aie sce Alburoge Bask
1a, Wie TelbotDonoboe, te
Sat ier ato
i, eter aot
ititesan 2, BA, a, a
yao
Beiahley'e istrst
sinion ete wantentn, Tt
RNS. tarot
sant le
eatin Mekiwon, hous Ease
wee ae
Misti, Gren, Sn Robert, Je
a
Meer ex tart, Cureton Her
Pei Nhat esas, aba
ci ara tones
: ‘ust Ditiet
“ cotnse rote i, tambeet
settee Be reteani
| Pindles's—tiew, Johnson, C. . Margis
site one
ic, vernon tatsct,
once neh sear Mine Wobaey ute
nacht wate
se eee uel Jeforon, Joba Win
nn apne
i alincuat Distt
| Cyper Fairmount —fovin 1. Waters, Gem
ie Nee em cae: Harter Weal
Pocarare
start ater, aml Jeb
Cena pian
Coble wunaierie, Wa,
eee eae latina
es aid
Saupe tle: sm
eee dame ll
Tangier Diet
ork oa ERa Si, da en
ants Gourter Diss
a tetas Relere
Asbury Dietrice
‘enver Distiet
este ape a alter ant
ie
Hn sionnivm Smit, Sat i
be Tata Dineet
tise oes a
ae toe.
ime Fas ‘Anan Ditret
earn able
Lae Ci Etat Hesond Writ
SE i inane, GaN Te
ceennlae atin
gtomnten BA Se teste OE
atoetnee, Caper Magy Xs doe fOr seok of
fy 21 25
Paiadelybin, PaonStee wn Mes, [Ser
sone Mes, Lawnard WHE wn oom, Mes, Sar
Bien te Whites Capt, aot Mrs Tacs, Me,
ind Mre, Chae. Kelle. be. TM Mitton
Mine ‘Toresn Tiles. re Jolin Frew,
Warhinstuae Th, Corsle, DT. Tasor,
Mr Heys Je Taglar, diss” Sane Bu
ros
Liertytown, Mii, ane feo-Mine Maret
Sulste loge setened “tooo, Data, afer
Shorting sometime with "teiatives and
Miemtes © Sifcore Blea nun Eoin
donees of. Walkersrilic, stent Saturday an
Sande with their mune. Myre Tint
Janees * Mis, Atandta White, af Wav kins
Toate 3) Cae saat ite a while with Res.
int Mtr We aesty al family * Se
faut Mes, Minin of Bal iwne, peat
feat sags with Mess Willian’ tother aud
auites Se. Those Key wf Broek Bary
Misc Cem Tal of Mt. Pleat,
Ciniting we aunt, Mir, faurn Teoterte, >
Me Mert Faster. of Washirztom, Ih Ua
spent Sula with hie wife. Mrs. Foster,
PMs. al Mess tivurse "nwa bail soa
Elvin, uf Keye Chapels sper Satay with
Mrs. ‘Ftonas’ brother Ie Taltimte, ate. der
meh ona fam ar Rt
dad Sire, Willige HD. wt Rey Chae,
Sst) Friday with r= aie Dagter.
Me Ge tle ts Ritz, (WW. Sn ut Batinnge
City, visited tee tours sid. Pastures ft
yy Neat Libersstown Distt. Frias
aid Satie.
Xow Chapel, Md.. Az, t.—Mrs, Katie
Harris ais returned hiwiae after spline
sone tinue with he stn tn Warhingtett
Mise Mavhhel Staten, nf New York, bs visiting
for Iauthor, Sir. Sante! State, at Mav
thewstown. * Master Hownrd (thson bs hts
for w fow Ways. # Mes. Susie Miller is ter
fre Atlantic City" for n few dass, Hew,
Henes: hiner, nt Thiludetvtie, 1s. bwnoe
isiting Wis ldaweliters nul frinndes 1
So preach ae Latigsind ott Siting. * Me
Arne Gruss and iis Steyaangttoe “na
Wie patntul seeldeor” Sact fyalsht
when thoie iigey wee striek fo ak ante
riokihe driven Oy a white mia.” Seas * hn
pel camp sill Dexia the lest Sunday i
ecu
ROSSVILLE
omtlio, Mie Aye RAE 3. he th
ae ate xt dl ta Me
aa ey eaperintenent, ese
Seer te Sete ciel enn
ee Aiuto me
A ete ete nthe peed
sia Be nena feasste wns vite
Ste watt sagen, eorgtr of Centenai
a eae aliensaes who, 200
etc Staaten 0” hee
eval are tine sonsiog Avogiat
ee Padi swe esactatin ti
eee eat ggs andthe elect Te
a ae Sra Quartet were te to
dered Me Ugg ety ae suk
ee ee ae camera fut
se reel ee mori, ais
acne of Ta ea serve her ent Se
eee he hy lve dieeatld +
A ae we, fakee So, 18, ae
sts ot eae nt iran hosts TH
ese taat cammoent o fatrr mothe
ten eae tarts tte mnie £0
wa ae ls tare tov all rte of
er See bnerars rom the
eat rae aa cetipeepared tte
sa te Bn amex sta
emt Mn aevtlent which wrecked
teams aca ere eel
ata tl from trewasin is
insert Me titan ease fe ar nt
le tae Waleaes of Pita
aM ate Me Whee
Fe ee ibones se ie
esate snags tise Aum tame,
Hea ee asm ili, of Pal
pew tate erate eater
wan tne rade Belt Tas.
Foe ete arse nt Extn, Tl
tet cay Smt
CRISFIE'D
| ROCKVILLE,
LUTHERVILLE
iuutherviNle, Md. Aus. The tran
Asch Soest uf Baltimore tuned out, W
Eizvwion MB, Chnireh at am. Re
Ho tas Atmnminss, garstur, yeeuelied the ser
foot, 4 3Mise Cora Lon spent hureuay: after
ents iv Fattininre cis wr ant. Mes
Cineles Rees © [ithe Miss Gertetite slat
elohrated her Hind. seae births Thee
flay efter, ‘The ahests were am follows
Misses dienpltte aot dager Tow, Hn Hal
Daseatis Sas an Cathrine Carell, MMe
Teesaevs Masters. dedi Durses iil iberss
Moo Charlotte Lave spesit Sumilny” fternean
Sihiting her danske, Mes, Raul Drown,
At dattts Haphine Hospital, She ts one
Weekes Zit Chred, AUS Be a Bre
Palinek. pastor, wreaetwal, * 3p, Wi
nproved.. ? A Kieze erat attended Joh
“iim shout Saas i Howard Coals.
Mise Marauret Sembly spent Suny after
towon ae toons Sinitine hee aunt, See, Jal
Carat,
HARRISBURG, PA.
| Mucristues, ie Aus. Mes, Marzret
Deine, of 650 Coaubwrtaedt street, tind
Street pasty ad mule. ride ont Batata” eee
fing foe the teat wf the ML. Zio Rapti
Chineehe * Mis. Mectenens af 1280, Walla
Steeet Dad ie tava party ahd ate tht
fu saturday ish. © "VIwe Kose Ten Chas
Sf the Hetil A. MB. Susy. Schutt
vers interesting pruceata ot Sunsdas, Mise
acta Ceainpton, reedlation: -ABeeta, Jubiion
asin soba, 4 Kes, Kemymumd 6.) “Tash
Pievached i wery Guteresting wsetgnt a
Satay tornine aU the ahose aneet. = The
tach visited Me, nied Mes. ten Taston aud
Heft n boueiwe has siel, | Mather atl
tianghtor are dik weeks, ® Misses Waters
hn Stanton. uf Ealitinre, Mie new silt
ing Mr ai Mrs, Ticwons of With street. *
Me. Koss Joisioun, 3fisses” Sable Heda:
som, Rider “Tall” and Dorothy Marker, of
Tanieaster. matured hee ait Sinise Sib
Newsrs, sages tid Samuel Morrbvams
Wasa streets * Mrs Kk. Contes lag reported
See Wk aie Lie al fees ae. Wa.
Family Excursion to Cambridge Md,
STEAMER ANNAPOLIS
‘Given by The Silver Spring Social
Thursday, August 24th, 1922 |
Music BY UNIVERSAL Jazz HouNDs
FARE ROUND TRIP $1.00
hoot tetves Mer 13, Ligh St 8 A.M. sharp
Wm. Hawkins, Chairmin Henry Hill, President)
Get Tickets Early
Boat will positively lind, |
SE
SS
io eee bial a =eose s ees ft
r. Colored Industrial Agricultural Fair "I
Get ready now for the Big Annnual Fair to be held at
a SALISBURY, MD. a
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
SEPTEMBER 5, 6, 7
Pbays 3 SIGHS
Come witness the fastest races on Uke aster here, Iand
Concerts, wsear Jenkins Caruival consisting wo Merey~0-
a ruund; ‘Three Shows, Oe Minstrel show, Concessions B
eS to Free Attractions: Daily
- premiums awarded to owners of Tt and tnd scelctions:
ee Ne all Witds. wt estOits
Address das, Le dolmson, 307 Fe Church Ste Aw 2t
ee ECO RE So 5 Seu & me
ima a ie or ey
TWILIGHT
Between ALLEN & PAYNE LEAGUES
Saturday, Aug. 12, 1922. To Brown’s Electric Grove
MUSIC BY VELVET ORCHESTRA
FARE ROUND TRIP TO ALL 35 CENTS
Mr. Nehenmish Laughton and My, Wm. 1, Butler, lresidents
Revs. JG. Mustin and D. G. HU, Pastors
Boat Hexves at Ure Foot of Bradway at 7 1. Me
—atr—_
BROWN’S ELECTRIC GROVE
FRIDAY, AUGUST 18th, 1922
Water Events: Open--220 440, and $80. Amateur. 50, 100, 200
Medals for test and second: plices
BALCIMORE WASHINGTON PULLADELPIUA
Chas. L. Pinderhughes in charge. ENTER NOW,
} rand Events: Open to everybudy. Horse Shoe Mteiiag Contest
Watermelon Race and Contest — Skee Batt Match
SPECIAN MUSIC ALL DAY
Hot Dinners, Sandwiches, Jee Cream and Soft Drinks
‘The "Y" boys will show you the time vf your lite.
Secure Your Tickets 7 35 Cents
From any of the following:
W. H, Langley, George M, Lane, W. A. Jones, Dr. A. 0. Reid,
EB. T. srd, Geo. ¥. Lottier, Charles Tolxon, Richard Osle,
dos. L. Hress, “B. M. Mall, James Jones, A. ‘T. Knox,
Maurice Mitchell, H, E. Young, C. L, Pinderhuxhes
Boat leaves at 9 A. M. and, 2:30 P.M. foot of Broadway
DON'T GET LEFT, PAKE THE FULD DAY OFF,
ee WATERS A. M. E. SUNDAY SCHOOL
Invites the orderly Pleasure Seeking Public to their
® ANNUAL ALL DAY QUTING
: To Brown’s Electric Grove
és On the Palatiat Steamer Starlight
MONDAY, AUGUST 7, 1922
B Select music by Universal Jazz Band
) Magruder and Methearson, Leaders
Good order will be maintained
y Sale of tickets refused Disorderly Characters
Fare to all Round Trip 35 Cents &
. REFRESHMENTS ON SALE
K Boat leaves foot of Broudway 6:30 A. M. and 2:39 P. 1.
BF. W. scott,.sunt. Emma Frisby, Assistant Supe. Qf
Eulalia Woingust, See'y. Earl Williams, Avsistant Sec. 3
Ret. Jr W. Norris, Pastor |
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
Atinntic City, N. do. Aug. B—Mrs. Lilian
Histone ite of the inte Cael Re Cte)
mes aad daughter, Helen, twent bast
Suinday” at the Shore “vlaltiog” friends and
Siintiees. Sirs, Hirlsewe wae formerly
feachre at Indiauin avemte School, Int ts
howe tenvhing at tndinwapotis, tnd, * ‘Che
Sines, Merniee Allen and, Helen’ Combs
tresta of Mra J. A. Lightfoot, of the 10°
Fett Apartments, ete for their hoacs, 9
Washington Inst Tiesday after spending
an enjoraule fortnight &€ the hume of this
fopuive searhore inatran, * Mr f Jordan,
tru recently underoent a shecessfit oper,
Mian xt the hoenl rspltal. $8, eeparted
tiiich fmuproved wal hopes to be diseharzed
From Anis institution I a few dass, * Dr.
hud Mire, Maxwell, Me, nod) Mess “Carter,
Sites Tatler, nnd Waddie Tiekdon, of Whita-
diphig, were nninierrd emo Ue motoriem
Tothe Short fast Sunday’. * ‘Co the surprise
be iuang of tied felends and aequantmees
Stine Ttanehe t2- Sinibt and Sir. Miche
Pamjwes at the Hato Awarbineits, weer
fintetiy. mvaeried Wesiwcdsn evenine, duly
Me by Mees he Se Metin. yotstor nf Astiney
Se vuerte! “Atier the eereianys wat
Performed. daints eollntlon was served
TThve wesiding arts included Me. aud, Mrs
Won, Harlot bhilasedphia: Misa tanttie
Mii Meter Eeeeett dobnson, Whiter
Rtulltige, ana Henre Banister. * Mr. Geo,
We stewaets of the Denil HY. Me CoN.
a a visit te tlse Shore uci the “yast
wreck. Yhis was I tirst tite Co tee Stuer,
nik he wg vers) favoraly fuaprensed by
Wie ateite # Fiaettedts the, Whszest sen
Hon hi the way af eiteriainnaent ty teak
Tents aunt visitare to thi Shure Will tothe
amcter"attgaction At Walle Dream eae
siemy Saturday afters, Auzuse GU, “Chis
SHIM bes nan vther that the ames Sinfte
Moz! Resiec, whieh Wiss far the past six
Geeks fwen the talk of the Boardwalk, ty
Sviad rennet Me. Wilfred 1 abo ts
uve tv uated et ctise Ur bins thin attra:
lam tor the northside, where, ovine to eon
tious that aint ian the resort, Will bie the
Cals phortunity for our ‘via tw seth
certs thie entice compane i "present
eit whole show. foltoselae sled thee wil
Ter uncle. foram 40 nntit Che Sto
Atos "Usrhestra anil the Rina rns
ass will fave ithe dane tousie. “The
deme sale af seats fs wiry loan, te
Sizing a record Josise far Une Olio Svea
PT oh Mcniaoak:
MASSILLON, OHIO
Massillva, thio, Amz &—'The pastor wud
meubers of Yrieudshig Baptist Char ote
Hannius a Wi weteunay ramps aewtine at
Patton, OAM are ensdiatly iited
Rud, "Rheee with be buses runing to
fn trout Hie semids, © Hees dow W Blane
we, Washinston, U.. weay ie thie tes iat
Feidigs He was. th suest of Stes, Marit
find Sie, nd Mess Ve Wigztus, © Miss
Maret funn, of B, Walnat street, eater
Tale a aninboe of sana joe last Sats
ferag in aioe uf Mies Theres towar a
Nittawer, tee The As Median Cees
in ere ne in. Te
fill have a big shay. the fifth Sunday in
Saly. the wwension bein the layin of the
rave state * Me. 8. F.SMet ah nad Res,
Tee Rlebmedeom cretirned Tat werk fen
Cotutabase where, tes attended the Sunny
[School Convention. © Sexes Frances Tle
sed coca sees Ws Thee
ig 96 rca
| . SYRACUSE, N. Y.
sernense, N.Y Awe, Me. am Mrs
[Yk ing, sel sjenke ne tine Haptiat Cire
Veeevtin Wawl, uf S25 8, State street, un
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
Williminsport, Va. Ang. SMe. Wt. Et
Atavnittan wie host ‘Thursday evenine to the
Yanez Meu Catexarical Clit, # Ses, Annie
hater nal Ses, Mone Starry ave returned
Froue Philadelphia, where thee wttened the
Eastern Star rinvention. * Ue. 1. , Bette
Spent. a week I Serauton, © The Junior
Seen! eM Mtge of Sake A. Mea. Zion
Cured, etd ite wnoual soins Priday at
fuding. ark. © afr, aust Mrs, Won, Citta
Mee tie Foxton antored tn Seraiton Weil
Msing an returned Yesterday. * Revs Fare
Toye amstar af Rethel A. MCE, Charetis is
Spending his two weeks yaeatign In Atiaotie
tie, 2 Mrs, Elsie Cole faves Sumtay for
Ss esmthie stay in New York wadd Poston, *
“The animal Surday Sehuol convwnttid, wader
the auspice af the Suilay) School Calon
fax heb ‘Troalas evening, July 20 In
Eneuegce Hapust Church, © "Phe St dukn
anid fans Hen enaased to plas a series of
Sauntlng, hight “ewmverts on the lawn mt
Ttethel Chaeeh, * Mrs, Marzaret Wuskinzton
iad Sirs, Mines deity eae the Kolzhts
Ae Uy thias unyentinn in Seraiton tis week,
SMe iawn Suthers mtd children. of
eilavedyinin, sare visiting at the ame of
Hen heey Sathnrs. Seana Vlaer. St
Juma Yast eters! huawe Saturday frou
Uifabs Ne Yoo Thes bid a very sterwssti
{Hip ite bdtuie ponte teaabered he toad
iEzdniention a steat uation, damien Pays,
tarmac Wilitaanagriet boy way tat to the
Botts tana sca Avestivdas sesenbiis. te
Wiltiancyueters who helped to make i
leasiat fae Sto: dodan Tiuunk wore Mrs, Ann
Noite, Warkington, Jaen Allen, and” duke
Wuchington Me, vi Ses, Willian Cul
out Mise Hite Taslar matured ta Seewnton
Weduesday. and retiened yesterday.
a Burton’s
eye :
ee AUGUST
Our August Clearance Sale takes in every depart-
ment of Summer wearing apparel and more than
that we are offering our Furs, Fur Coats and O’Coats
at a reduced price for the entire month; and it means
a saving to anyone to come in now make a selection,
pay a deposit and have it checked and put away with
your name and address until you are ready to take it
out.
Beautiful Waist & Blouse from_-------69c to $9.50
Skirts from _----------~---------$1.00 to $15.00
Dresses trom ------------------~-$1.00 to $39.50
Ladies’ Suits ----------.---------$7.50 to $52.50
Ladies’ Coats _-.---~-----------$7.50 to $250.00
Men & Young Men’s Suits__------------$16.50 up
We will make to your measure any Suit or O’Coat of
any cloth at a very low price to help stimulate
business.
We appeal to Men and Women in every walk of life.
LET US HELP YOU TO DRESS WELL
We can sett you from a Poeket Handkerchiet up to and
including Furniture for your home
+SEE US FIRST
SAMUEL.L. BURTON
12145 PENNA. AVE.
Open Even’gs until 9.30 Phone, MAdison 4821
PRICES RIGHT TERMS FASY
| : , a : DON’
| ger” eee
|p ere:
eS
hoger. INeglec
Or Seamnge Yo ur yes |
Z
ff 15 tent a omy FN
WAZ y NJ
f Z . |
vi }
> eZ Se ™ |
You will not suffer and risk injury to nature's most |
precious gift—your eyesight—when you know that |
a specialist will examine your eyes free of charge
| and give you the best lenses suited to your eyes for
| the unheard-of price of—lenses and frames—ONB
i DOLLAR each.
| “This big sale extended for a few days to enable |
| you to take advantage of this unusual offering. If
| you don’t need glasses we will tell you so. Positive |
ly no charge for examination. i
Flat Bifocal Lenses |
$ Por near or far vision; these slases “are $
absolutely the best suited for their pure }
pose. |
Toric Lenses
We feature lunge Torie Tenyes. either
round o oval. I makes no difference what
lenses you need, there is positively only ane
price for these. We do not teil you that
your eyes need higher-priced lenses. All
lenses ONE DOLLAR each (except standard
brand Bifocal and Crookes).
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
Being us your oculist’s preseriptions and we will filt them for
one doliar per lens, Let ux have the ghuses you are wetting
how andwe will duplicate them at the xune price.
Temember—every pair of glasses guaranteed and we ill
change the lenses as often as necessary for one yeur tree of
Handsome gold-filled chain, regular $2.50 values
free with every pair of nose glasses sold during this
sile, They are absolutely PRL.
READING GLASSES:
—itted to your eyes. Complete for ONE DOLLAR
| OPTICAL COMPANY |
Ae _ With S. Spungin, Jeweler |
oy a |
<@y> <EOTS .
101 N. Liberty St.
JOHN D. CHILDS, Reg. Optometrist, in Charge
STAUNTON, VA.
Staunton, Vas, Aug. S—The moonlight
onic ot Giyey Hit Cark Wednesday wight
eerige Superior lub of tho Augie St?
te Be Share was iuite nn cnsoyable af
Hints Mews HW. Stenuette hax returned
fate Gacshrgs We Varsswhere, be, attended
Ue ameral of Hee, Gries. * Sus Slam
Wee Ganson, Me, Wah Bilis aad Me Job
an cone isnt aad
fXtcor Coarention. test werk in) Covington.
See sie und Mins. WW. F. Wood, of, Siw
Yori ars visiting Mel amd Mrs. Covell
Tiurcton* Friemie of Sir, 3. A. Brown, of
Hatten, mre sled to Rene Une he Se able
toi aut azsine + Me, Frank Jones by i
Meting, at nie none. in Baptist rect. *
Aro Siney doran is hettor at thie writing
seer Ne, atonay Seale, the ail Rows
ecto! vn a pei, of Fare
cei esta 306 epi
(Giurehe tie shoo we cbnstta St, Ms
Chprek, the ved and fourths nt. Rleneze
abet Cheeks ie spoke toa eauaelt
seein eget aisht, * Ste. Flemming, dont
We Nistine his nother on Tanne steect,
Fue state Crosressive Chub tact inet
Paling 'afteromt nt Stes, Carrie ‘Ehnan’
Enatoarie + Stes, Sarg: darkson and dant
for tett, hurls for Cumberland, MM, *
Mire tise Be ttenn an fer sons are
Melting in Michmade Va, © AMee eth
Tien and ses torus ftooe expect Uo eae
ne Ieletnnuinl “Ate 7th They exert 1
Mike it, bh wags. tM, Marry Folasan
Hint cow "were “visitors, in Washington lax
Rinukags = tatatiewe ret far te mar
lain nd Stl Toe Slaw nth to Mr. “hom
astoge Awenst Lathe ae 3It. “ion Hoyts
[Chnreh, = Mes, Hechert Teen ad” Sr
pnrnch’ Heli aigeuied the Stas” lve
ten a oxic
‘Stns Sebo of te Hreverly Manve Haytis
Chee. ve
HARRISONBURG, VA.
Marrivonlurg. Va. Mug. Rev, wed
Ment. 8. cite hee’ am tein giteme Mes,
Muisiin's Mother, zs, MeKinney, nf Wash
ington, * Mes, Fred, Newman amiul her teu
War nf the Toes, 4 rally bei: conducted
at Juhu Wesley ME. Church, will terminate
Monday evening with @ literary progrom. «
sees Ctra ee a me
COLUMBIA, PA.
Columbia, Tat., Aue. 3.—The Juvenile Re.
Viv Diemsie, an" arzmnfaation wt children
tudor D1 seurd af agi ssisted by a few
ciecen, reawleread W tte sacred sweet dn Me
‘los A.M He Chace Inst Snuiny oeening
wth Page Bass of Mt Zan A. Me
ehareh preseated Ue elsireh sith a epe
tismial fone Inst Sunday evens, * re
Plurence EMIS entertained a few friemte
tlhe pastor, Kee, WC, Flamer, nai) the ster
ntdesses of Mt dian A. MoE, hited, in
iuaior ot the Trt betas atiniscreney of
her granduinther, Mrs. Susan Kier, Mr
Hive was tHe recipient wf many” its, fy
cluding eumey vauitul Inevicta of Bowers,