The Afro-American
Friday, September 1, 1922
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
FRANCE'S FIGHT FOR LEADERSHIP TEN DAYS OFF
Senatorial Candidates Gather Forces Together For Whirlwind Finish
BOTH SIDES OPTIMISTIC
Mayor Broening Back, Is Expected To Get Busy In Campaign
With the pimaries but ten days off the senatorial candidates are busuing with added energy. On the Republican side, Senator France has been spending as much time as possible away from his duties at Washington in directing his campaign from his headquarters on the fourth floor of the Maryland Generaly Tower. The forces behind John W. Gartett are no less active, the headquarters on the
"The uphill fight being made by Mr. Garrett has made some inroads on the France strength, but it remains to be seen how many of his supporters come from the crowd that usually does not vote in primary elections. Senator France has a large proportion of the city workers with him, and then there is City Chairman George W. Cameron and City Solicitor John Maddison the latter credited with mobilizing to become the Republican boss of the city. Now that Mayor Brenning is back from his trip to the Far West it is believed he will throw his strength, by no means to be discounted, to the France side.
St. Clair For France
City Councilman H. M. St. Clair fleeced into France headquarters and told Chairman Thomas Parram that Dorchester was for the Senator.
William Diggs, who starred the white folks of Prince George County several years ago by aspiring for election as one of the county commissioners there, was on hand to tell Mr. Parram that not only around his home at the town was for election, but the whole village Garrett forces are gleeful over the support that James J. Dennis, enforced member of the Republican State Central Committee of Somerset County, has promised them, Capt. Edward H. Wilson, the most popular colored man in the county and who served for a number of years on the State Central Committee, is regarded as being for France. He has a large following, the Garrett community was held at Coventryville Tuesday, with Rev. J. H. Sunday and others speaking. The Colored Women's Republican Club of the 19th ward, at a meeting on Lexington street, near Mount Wednesday night, endorsed the Garrett candidacy. Addresses were made by Mrs. Fannie Kelly, the president; Mrs. Lella Wheatey Mrs. E. J. Truxon and others.
The Get-Together Club of the 16th ward, under the presidency of William H. Campher, is busy with Garrett, the local Republican Club, with headquarters at 1106 N. Carey street, is working for the Senator.
Down in the 3rd ward considerable sentiment is reported as having developed for Carrott. James Wilson is said to be trying to line the voters up for France. Carrott sentiment in the Fifth ward is reported as increasing under the leadership of William H. Gibson and Mrs. Mamie White. Harry C. Horner, Frank Hughes and others, are working like trojans for France, however. John C. Green and Harry Queen report on the 3rd ward Carrott sentiment in the 7th ward, while Daniel Price says the same for the 10th.
17th For France
In the 17th ward, where Daniel W. Richardson, Louis H. Davenport and John W. Badger are among those working for Garrett, France seems to have the inside of the neck. The French Regiment-Hall organization is working for the Senator. In the 14th Charles W. Owens, leader of the Garrett forces, has gained many adherents, but the France leaders there, including City Councilman Warner T. McGuinn and Ward Committeeman Walter S. Emerson, are on the
Garrett To Speak
C. Marcellus Dorsey, who is leading the Garrett clans in the 15th ward, has arranged a big rally for St. Peter Claver's Hall on Friday evening of this week, at which the candidate is expected to be one of the speakers. He will also speak at 1432 Pennsylvania avenue next Thursday night. The 16th and 22nd wards are regarded as France territory, unless the Garrett forces put on an
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Lenox Ave., corner 140th St.
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Monday, August 28 to Friday, September 1, 1922
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DA NONG DREE
extra effort. The 11th seems to be overwhelmingly for Garrett, though there is much French sentiment among the foreign element.
Main Still Optimistic
"I am highly gratified at the offices of support coming in here, and especially interest the women are beginning to manifest," manage of the city end of Garrett's campaign. "I believe now that we will carry three of the four city districts."
Candidate Garrett received an enthusiastic greeting at Union Hall, 23rd street near Carley, last Friday. He attacked Senator Joseph's record at Washington and asserted that he (Mr. Garrett), if elected, would stand by the Harding administration. He also said he is in favor of the enactment of the Dyer Anti-Lynch Bill.
Charles W. Main, Mrs. Jackson, Henry P. Arnold and William Chapman were among other speakers.
Is Mr. Weller's Hand There
Absence of Senator O. E. Weller in Japan; his hands off policy in the campaign; the face of former chairman of the Freierick is now a faint supporter; these things the leading downtown politician that Weller is fighting with. If Garrett wins, Weller will be senior senator and State boss. If France wins, Weller must continue to play second fiddle to France.
France supported Weller's senatorial candidacy with speeches and money. When he speaks help most now, Mr. Weller in Japan, France adhereents to including Mr. Weller of presbytery in claiming neutrality when they should have their coats off and be hard at
Out of the din of the senatorial fight can be heard echoes from the councilimic fight that is now on for next spring. Down in the fifth ward, where John W. Jones has said he will be a candidate there is talk that Harry Wilkerson, white, may contest for the Republican nomination. In the 11th, City Councilman Warner T. McGuffin still has the inside tack for the nomination, Roy S. Bond, Joseph Diggs and J. H. Bishop. He is manufacturer of hair preparations and he also mentioned to stonyurned in forwarding his candidacy, while City Councilman W. L. Fitzgerald is not asleep by any means Dr. Howard E. Young is attending to his duties as a member of the Grand Jury and side-stopping any suggestion that he run for the nomination. Meinwhile Dr. James A. White who also is being boosted, is doing nothing but sawing wood.
THREE INJURED IN AUTO SMASH-UP
THREE INJURED IN AUTO SMASH-UP
Three persons, Miss Rachel Holiday, 265 Falls Road; Miss Octavia Haywood, 255 Falls Road, and Miss Mola Jones, 199 Falls Road, were more or less seriously injured on an automobile in which they were riding Sunday night about 9:30 was struck by a south bound Garrison avenue street car at the intersection of Preston street and Madison avenue.
The car was being driven by Rufus Armstrong, 1265 Jenkins alley, and was dragged more than 100 feet by the street car. Miss Octavia Haywood was thrown from the seat and her escape, is considered miraculous.
"GOD HELP COUNTRY'S DEFENDERS'." SAYS JUDGE
"God help this country if its defense is in hands such as these," said Judge Amber, as he heard the testimony of two subjects in Camp Meade who had been hated by the military, with John Hulley.
Sike Rabbog street, who was charged with conducting a disorderly house. The soldiers found at a late hour in this home had been tried and fined in Police court and were witnesses in the Holly case. "How did you get into this house?" asked the Judge. Defender of Country:" I don't know." Judge: Did you see or have anything to do with any women in this house?" Defender of Country:" I can't remember, I was asleep all the time." Judge: Do you want me to believe that you left the camp and went way over on Rabbog street to take a nap in a colored home." Defender of Country:" Th' album, I can't remember." Well God pity this country if its defence is in hands like this, miss. Holly Wait, were these soldiers fined with the colored women in Police court." Clerk: "Yes, your Honor." Judge:—"Well that's alright then, they ought to have."
THE
HOW DID PRETTY MRS. PITTS LOSE ALL HER $40,000
What Were Relationships Existing Between Lovely Widow and Her Jewish Attorney?
SUITS FILED IN COURT
Additional Suits for $100,
000 Held By Mr. Pitts'
Attorneys
What legal relations existed between Mrs. Lucille Pitts, and Simon Needles? Why they be brought out in court?
The publication in last week's APRO-AMERICAX off the suit that Mrs. Pitts and her sister Mrs. Maybelle Wever, had filed against Simon Needle and his son, Attorney Siney Needle, both white to receive a fraudulent real estate debt, was the first news to notify that the pretty young widow had lost about all of the $400,000 estate left her by her husband, Alfred H. Pitts.
Mrs. Pitts is said to have become highly nervous when the news of her alleged losses leaked out. When a reporter called at her home, 1610 McCulloh street, a well-known young man came to the door and said Mrs. Pitts was out. He added that he would talk in her place, and later referred the scribe to her
counsel. Inquiry at the offices of the counsel for the women brought out the fact that no one cared to talk for publication.
It has been established that Mrs. Pitts was dealing with the Needleses about the time that her husband died in the number 18, 19. She took the elder's advice that she should buy in her husband's thirteen pieces of real estate cheaper, as well as other houses, if she hid her identity. The elder Needles would only charge $500 therefor. Mrs. Pitts claims that she was experienced in business ways and allowed the elder Needle to negotiate for her white the son looked after her interests as attorney. Unknown mortgagees and other charges soon got her affairs hopelessly involved, with the elder Needles threatening foreclosure. Then she alleges, she was finally driven to the wall.
It is said that suits aggregating $10,000 have been prepared for filing against the defendants. Whether they will be filed or not is a part of the problem because the declaration is alleged to be rather harsh against the defendants.
Attorney Charles W. Main, white, who was at one time counsel for Mrs. Pitts, warned her against dealing with unsuspectious real estate dealers and lawyers, it is said.
Health Dept. warning
Look out for small posy
This is the warning sent out by the Health Department to the readers of the AFRO-AMERICAN this week.
With the coming of cold weather, small pox is always more dangerous than during the hot days, of course all children going to school for the first time must be vaccinated, also other persons who have been vaccinated, but whose vaccination did not "take".
DIVORCES INSTITUTED
Mrs. Margaret L. Scott vs Thomas Scott
Benjamin Cornish vs Mrs. Georgiana
Cornish.
Mrs. Ilandia Rosellia Brown vs John
Brown.
Mrs. Ella Washington vs George L. Washington.
Mrs. Eva Stewart vs Alexander Stewart.
AVENUE
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EVERYTHING
IN THE LINE OF
FOOTWEAR
Cheapest Place in the City
937 PENNA. AVE.
BEAUTY CARNIVAL
CONTEST
Baseball Park
PORT, MD.
Friday, September 1, 1922
lady or gentleman, also hair dress-
will be awarded a prize
DANCING FREE.
z Band. Take Westport Car.
It's No
Secret
OUR PRICES
ARE LOW
NG TAILORS Domestic Woolens Illinois Avenue
Good Morning
Domestic Troubles Enliven T
Police Courts of C
Couple Patch Up Quarrel Right Before
To Church—Flapper With Gold B
59-Year-Old—African Tries C
Stuff and Steals Woman
---
After the sleeper thread that had been holding together Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hall, 1522 trudg Hill avenue, on the rough sea of marriage life had broken, and she had hated him into the Northwestern Police Station charging many things that a lovable husband would not do, the combination of loving smiles and Sunday morning church beds were too much for her and she softened up, forgive and made up right before the Judge.
Atty. Roy S. Bond, who has had many an experience in piloting couples either back together or away from each other, helped to maneuver the deal, and when the Judge had said "missed," they marched out of the station hand in hand and made their way to the nearest church.
It is all, right, to take your girl's car riding in high-powered automobiles provided, of course, you have attended to the small matters of loving such a car, but be warned
of buying south of I1, Reed, 1942 David Hill avenue had forgotten this little matter, so he took the car of Mike Edlaxen and invited his friend, Alfred H. Hill and their two girls, Miss Hemprieta Cooper, 305 W. Hoffman street, and Miss Regina F. Dyson, 305 W. Hoffman street, to go out for a ride.
All three of them were brought into court charged with the unlawful use of an automobile. Reed drew a fine of $25, while his guests were dismissed with a warning to be careful how they accept automobile ties.
A petite little flapper with golden bobbed hair and beadlebing eyes, an old man 50 years of age, with lots of money in a gold watch valued up in a trivial that led from Pennsylvania Avenue to Pear Alley and then to the Northwestern Station Saturday night.
The little bobbed-haired flapper was Miss Bomby Scott, 20, 302 W. Hoffman street, and the man in life case Mr. M. Hunt, 121 Erlangen street, a prosperous looking man of 59.
According to the story of Hunt he looked for the first time in his life into the eyes of Miss Scott Saturday morning about 12:20, when, after an informal meeting on the avenue she invited him to a little party in the room of a friend in Pear Alley. When he woke up two hours later the only thing he had left were his clothes and a little silk something belonging to Miss Scott, which he tried in vain to name in Police Court. A gold watch valued at $85, however, was the thing that warranted him and he begged in for harpy. She was released through efforts of her friends and Amy. K. S. God under $400 bail. Miss Scott is an actress and has played in several Baltimore houses.
Andrie Archie, a well-developed specimen of physical manhood, from the West Coast of Africa, has just learned the difference between the American and African laws. Where he came from you can pick out a wife and take care. On July 2nd he is allowed to have children in assuiln Miss Sarah Tipple, 204 Front street, while on leave from one of the ships on which he works. He was positioned in the Central Police Station to one year in the House of Correction. After serving three months he was released on habeas corpus proceedings through Amy. Goo, W. Pendleton, on the ground that he was not given a fair trial in the
The Friendly Progress
At Fishermen's Auditorium,
Saturday Evening, S
Under the Personal Direc
THE JAZZEOL
ADMISSION
P. S. Also LABOR DAY DANCE
FALL D
at BUR
FALL DISPLAY at BURTON'S
COME AND BEHOLD OUR FALE
SHOWING OF MEN'S, WOMEN'S
& CHILDREN'S WEARING
APPAREL
Never before have we carried such a
large stock and variety of nice stylish
seasonal merchandise, and we are giving
the trade an opportunity to come in
and take the advantage of the very invi-
ting prices.
Remember we are always here to give
service and satisfaction, and should we
chance to not have in stock just what
you want we will glayly order or make
to your measure.
There is no need of waiting, debating,
and presuming; but get yourself to
together, come right in, get acquainted
and let us have a business talk in a family
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We have the same like merchandise
that is being sold down town, or else-
where and terms to suit.
SAMUEL L
1214 1/2 PEN
OPEN 8 A.M. CLOSE 9:30
PHONE, M
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police court. Judge Amber released him in Circuit Court Saturday.
All kinds of bad luck came to Mrs. Louise Caruso, 923 N. Carleton avenue, who missed the companionship of her husband, Fred Caruso, so much that she went to Police Station Saturday, where he was being held on a charge of disorderly conduct to get him out.
When peaceful methods failed and she was told that she could not keep noise in the station house, she decided to go outside and make some sure enough noise. She and when the police objects she put only to show him that she could make all the noise she wanted to.
She was taken back into the police station, fined $20 and costs and placed in jail. In the meantime Mr. Carrugo paid his fine and went from the station a free man.
Fined for disorderly conduct or disturbing the peace—William Pisher, 1020 Sara Am street, $2.50; Albert Parker, 503 N. Glimor street, $25; Edda Scott, 1004 W. Lexington street, $1; William Ferguson, 223 N. Bruege street, $10; Charles Chunther, 409 S. Bethel street, $20; Edna Williams, 1203 Orleans St, $5; Honey Robinson, 252 East street, $10; Charles Darren, 302 Bethel court, $5; Albert Lewis, 204 Forrest street, $25; Alexander Wooddawn, 126 Calvin street, $25; Louis Caruso, 923 N. Carollion avenue, $20.
Fired for assault, cutting or shooting—William Brown, 522 S. Charles street, $15; Little Carr, 200 N. Glimor street, three months in house of Correction: Charles Williams, 19 N. Norris street; Paul Watkins, 512 N. Glimor street, $25; Herbert Wallace, 1400 Fajatte street, $25; William Spencer, 1009 Creek alley, $25; Mory Robinson, Melyale Station, $5; Goldie Houston, Melyale Station, $5.
Committed for karcey or robbery, Wilson Snell, 950 W. Saratoga street, committed; Nicholas Johnson, 118 Elamount street,
William Barwell, 223 N. Mount Street, 100 N. W.
[cd] drew a heaviest fire in Traffic Court this week for operating an automobile under the influence of whiskey. Judge Snyder, 82, issued him 300 and costs. For the same office of Win. H. Harris, 829 Leendhall Street, 100 N. W.
[cd] was sent to门后 for thirty days.
[cd] failed to give Right of Way: Russell T. Tolson, 1615 Brink Hill Avenue, 85; 224 T. Tolson, 1609 N. Wolfe Street, disbursed.
[cd] Slyvester Stanton, 227 C�el Street, disbursed. Charles Thomas, 822 N. Spring Street, 85; George Vass, 124 Cahom Street, 85; Charles Demiids, 822 W.
[cd]
[cd] No House or Registration Fard: John Mews, Washington, 810 John Tatt, 227 St.
[cd] Stricker Street, 815 Otis May, 150 N. Cary Street, 81; Frank Randall, 2558 Mew Street, 810 Jacob Anthony, 2501 Baylor Street, 81; Lauren Tahor, 710 S.
[cd]
[cd] Spealing or Backsore Driving: Clareen O'Neill, 100 N. W.
[cd] Bursley Street, 810 Argyll Avenue, 810; Martin Ives, 30 N. New York, 85.
[cd] 'Tawful Parking, No. Rights, etc.; James St. Jones, Waterbury, 51; George Vance, 1233 Multikin Street, disbursed; William E. Pfehlbe, 10 E. Hamilton Street, 810; E. Harris, 1221 Mulliher street, 84; Harry Ice Crane, 1015 Rice Street, 81; Lannel II, Reed, 1012 Bruid fill Avenue, 825 Alfred II, Hill, 815 Bruid fill Avenue, disbursed.
[cd] Healey Street, 866 W. Hoffman Street, disbursed; Region P, Dyson, 205 W. Hoffman Street, disbursed.
[cd] William Barwell, 223 N. Mount Street, 100 N. W.
[cd] Andrew Bennett, Cofonville, 310; the Laurenton Sutton, 1810 Lick Street, 85;
NORTHWESTERN PHARMACY Cut-Rate Druggists Penna. Avenue and Dolphin St. THE Penslar STORE
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DON'T JOKE ABOUT ANOTHER'S WIFE
George Brown Didn't Like It; Shot The Joker And Went To Jail
Robert Brown is fond of jokes. He is also fond of George Brown. 219 Jasper street. The two Brown's are not related but have been life long friends. When George and his wife fell out recently, Robert told her the reason was that George liked women, who did not have to wear gingham dresses and didn't straighten their hair. Of course this was only another of Robert's little jokes. But it was no joke in it for Mr. George. Fact is George himself was down-right insulted and to show his hard feelings, he looked up Robert in the dead of the night of July 15, and is said to have shot him twice. Down in Criminal Court Wednes this little drama was enacted. Judge—Robert who shot you? Rober—George. Judge—What did you shoot him for? George—It was not I, who did the singing, your Hopor.
Judge—Well, Well, You didn't. Anyhow, the evidence shows that you did, and so I sentence you to one year in jail on the charge of shooting with intent to kill and one year on the charge of carrying concealed weapons. Sentences to run concurrently. Next case.
HERB DOCTOR HELD
Washington, D. C., Aug. 31—"Doctor" George Harris, 1621 Corrion street, expert in herbs and cures for rheumatism, ich, eczema and other maladies of similar nature, according to his own admission, was arrested by detectives today on the charge of false pretence.
He is said to have accepted seven dollars for diagnosing a case of indigestion suffered by Mrs. Annie Harris, 94 Fenton street N. E. He said the indigestion was cause by someone across the water who failed to cure the indigestion with his herbs and finally sent for a doctor.
REWARD NOT PAID
Miss Sarah Wooden, 1931 Drulid Hill avenue, has not yet received her share of the 55,000 reward for the captain of Joe Thomas, Pittsburgh murderer, who was caught by police and was awarded Wooden was to share the reward with four Baltimore police officers. The money has been held up because Major W. T. Reese, chief of the Pittsburgh police commissioners, received a telegram from Graham Bayton who stated he repressed a fellow claiming a share of the reward.
Office Hours: 8 to 10 A.M. and 6 to 8 P.M.
17-YEAR-OLD CHILD
ASKS RING BACK
FROM UNTRUE HUBBY
Pretty Pennsylvania Miss Married Only Five Weeks, Files Divorce Suit
NOT OF LEGAL AGE
Therefore Suit Is Filed
For Her By Her Best
Friend
The dream of a happy married life has been rudely shattered for pretty 17-year-old Mary McDowell, for on Monday, just five weeks after her marriage to James McDowell, 325 Forrest street, she filed in Circuit Court No. 2 a bill asking for an absolute divorce on the ground of alleged adultery. She claims her husband makes as high as $150 some weeks and wants alimony and council fees.
Last Saturday morning McDowell faced the magistrate at the Northwestern District Police Station on a charge of assaulting and beating his young wife. The case was dismissed and when the principals adjourned to the sidewalk angry words followed, during which Mrs. McDowell demanded the wedding ring she gave him.
Determined that marriage rela
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FRIDAY, SEPT. 1, 1922
tions between her and her husband of five weeks were at an end, she was soon at the office of Attorney Koy S. Bond, arranging for a divorce.
Diving to the youth of Mrs. McDowell, the divorce proceedings were instituted by her best friend, Mary A. Powell.
Mrs. McDowell, who is now staying at 1291 McCulloh street, is from Pennsylvania, and was induced to come here, it is said, to get married. The wedding occurred on July 20th last.
TOO MUCH IS ENOUGH
Edward Turner Loses Borrowed $2
With Cards and Then Shoots
Up the Game
When Edward Turner, 223 Bethel street, lost all of his money in a game of cards with Oscar Marshall, 1422 Mince allen, and others, he went out and borrowed $2 more and joined the game again. When he lost this last two dollars he suddenly drew a pistol and began shooting. When the smoke had cleared Oscar Marshall was found lying on the floor with a bullet in his abdomen. He was taken to Johns Hopkins Hospital, where his wound is said to be of serious nature.
Turner made his escape and has not been apprehended yet. Other witnesses to the shooting were William Wood, 247 S. Dallas street; Mrs. Annie Knight, 2447 Bethel street; Mrs. Agness Graham, 233 S. Bethel street, and William Carter, 230 S. Bethel street.
Prominent Baltimore Man Says Herbs of Life Brought About A Wonderful Change In His Condition
"Herbs of Life is a grand medicine, and I think every man and woman ought to know about it." was the statement made recently by Major Thos. I. Barrette; at his residence, 2364 North Charles St. "I was exposed to bad weather conditions during the World's War," he continued. "This brought on a chronic rheumatic condition and kidney weakness. Until two months ago, when I commenced taking Herbs of Life, I had considerable trouble with my kidneys, being disfigured during a period of times, thereby losing much necessary rest. Since taking Herbs of Life my kidneys are in a much healthier condition and I seldom am troubled during the night. My rheumaties have disappeared and I am in remarkable health. I will always give a good name to Herbs of Life." -Signed, Mayor Thos. I. Barrette.
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Y-HELLYER
At Specialist
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In The Social Whirl
Mrs. Myra Williams, who underwent a serious operation at Johns Hopkins Hospital, is at home.
Mrs. Mabel Jones Acquila, of 1136 Pennsylvania avenue, is home after a serious operation at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Dr. W. T. Coleman and son, Cecil G., are motoring this week to North Carolina. They will stop by Jenville, Va., for Mrs. Coleman, who is visiting her sister, thence to Charlotte, N.C., to attend the Last Carey Convention.
Mr. and Mrs. A, A. Selden, of Boston, Mass., who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Gray, have returned to their home.
Madeline Randle, Cultist, of 1361 Strickler street, is visiting Mrs. Gray in Atlantic City, Z.
Editor before noon on Tuesday.
Mrs. W. B. Wrown, of Fairfield left Saturday for Atlantic City.
Mrs. Cora Gardner, and children and Mrs. Mary Hill, of Fairfield left for Gastonia, N. C., Saturday.
Mrs. Christina Ward, 2222 Culloth street, and her mother, Mrs. Lorie Thurton, have returned to Northumberland County, Va.
Mrs. Sallie Marshall, of 1440 Jefferson street, and Messrs. Abbey Connor and Chus. H. Green, of School street, motored to Calver County, Sunday.
Mrs. Mary Dennis, of Angly avenue, and Mr. Edward William are spending their vacation in Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
Mrs. Elli Gibson, of Washington is visiting her uncle, Mr. B. Waters, 1915 W. Mullberry street.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Costes, of La Mesa, Md., and Mr. and Mrs. Clyton Smith, of Baltimore, attended the Mason's session in Annapolis, Md., last week.
Mr. John H. Trotter and daughter, Miss Lucrecia Trotter, 12063 Metullih street, are visiting in East, Md., the guests of Rev. and Mrs. E. T. Addison.
Mrs. H. J. Purvince and daughter, Miss Florene V. Purvince have returned home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brewster Tower Hill, Narramsett Ri. R. I.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. B. Musselba have returned home after a pleasant visit to Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
Dr. D. H. Carroll, 140 W. Hill street, has returned from a metrorior to Atlantic City.
Dr. John H. Dickerson has moved back to Ypsilanti, Mich., after visiting his mother, Mrs. Mary Dickerson, of 1629 W. Lexington street. Mrs. Dickerson is now visiting at Ardmore, Pa.
Dr. and Mrs. James M. Hayes and family are spending a brief vacation in Virginia.
The High Cost of Living has delivered an eleven-pound baby boy to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wake, 761 Dolphin street.
Mrs. Minnie Amy, 1606 Drum Hill avenue, is spending her vacation at East New Market, Md., and Ocean City, Md.
Mr. F. A. Bryant, of Elkton, Md., spent the week-end with his wife, Mrs. Lala Bryant, who is spending the month of August with Rev. and Mrs. A. W. Robertson, Park avenue.
Rev. A. W. Robertson, 1922 Park avenue is unite H.
Misses Olivia Thomas and Gertrude Washington have returned home after a delightful stay in Atlantic City.
Messamines Flororege L. Snowden, Lillian Watkins, Jeanne Lawson, Adile Reid, of Littalmore, and Mrs. Annie R. Johnson, of Washington, D. C. left Sunday morning on a three days' automobile trip to Philadelphia, and Atlantic City.
Mrs. Annie R. Johnson, of 1035 Teach street, Washington, D. C., is visiting her nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Snowden, of 1326 Metullden street.
Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Jackson, the moving picture people of 1326 Metullden street, are spending their vacation with their three little girls in Philadelphia and Pleasantville, N. J.
Mrs. A. Carroll-Scott, of 1134 Bond Hill avenue, is spending her vacation in Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
Mrs. Florence L. Snowden, of 1226 Mumbet street, and Mrs. Beatrice Lawson, of 648 Mosher street, met up to Montgomery county last week to attend the colored horse show.
Mrs. Rachel Floyd and little granddaughter, Hortense, who have been visiting friends in Philadelphia and Canada, have returned to their home, 914 Elm Place.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry T. Talbott and daughter, Miriam, of Catonsville, have returned from a trip to Charlestown, W. Va.
Misses Xavier Fenwick, of 1412 Myrtle avenue, and Martha Jones of Lafayette avenue, are spending their vacation in Albany City.
Mrs. Walter Lawrence, of Norfolk, Va., and son, Master Wendley Lawrence, are the granddaughters of Mrs. McCulloch, Master Lawrence is being treated at John Hopkins Hospital for a broken leg.
Dr. and Mrs. John Robinson and children and their house guest, Miss Rosa Ashton, of Savannah, Ga., are vacationing in Atlantic City.
Mrs. Marion Howen Addib is spending her vacation with her mother and sisters at the Rowen Cottage, Highland Beach, Anne Arundel Co., Md.
Mrs. Mary Braxton, gc Eting street, who has been visiting in Philadelphia, Camden and Bridgeton, N. J., has returned home.
Mrs. Julia Tuckson and Mrs. Martha Hill, of Division St., have been visiting in Camden and Philadelphia.
Mrs. Geneva Johnson, 515 West Biddle street, is spending her vacation in New York visiting friends.
Misses Estelle Jenkins, Sadie Young and Mrs. Julia Jenkins were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Gillespie, of Fairfield.
Mrs. Lola Deshields, of Fairfield, is attending the Lot Carey Convention, which is being held in Charlotte, N. C.
Messrs. J. H. Littuker and Edward Ellis, of Fairfield, left Tuesday for Charlotte, N. C., to attend the Baptist Convention.
Mrs. Lear Deshields, of Fairfield, has returned from Tynaskin, Md.
Miss Annie Jones, of Fairfield, is spending her vacation in Atlantic City.
Mrs. Susie B. Weems, 1415 Druld Hill avenue, has returned home after visiting her brother, Mr. Charles H. Turner and friends in Easton, Md.
Mrs. Dwaschig Washington, 1015 W. Mulberry street, has returned home after attending the Ellis Convention in Newark and visiting her sister, Mrs. Pauline Williams, in New York.
Mrs. W. W. Brown, of Fairfield left Saturday for Atlantic City.
Mrs. Cora Gardner, and children, and Mrs. Mary Hill, of Fairfield, left for Gastonia, N. C., Saturday.
Mrs. Christina Ward, 2222 Me-
Mrs. Sallie Murshall, of 1400 Jefferson street, and Messrs. Asbury Connor and Chus, 14, Green, of School street, motored to Calvert County, Sunday.
Miss Mary Dennis, of Argyle avenue, and Mr. Edward Williams are spending their vacation in Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
Miss Martin Dugger is visiting relatives and friends in Philadelphia and New York.
Mr. Wm. G. Thomas, of 2346 McCullah street, who has been confined to his home for six weeks, is convalescing.
Miss Margarette Brooks, of West Nyack, N. Y., spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brooks, of Towson.
Miss Hattie T. Brooks, of Towson, accompanied by her sister, Miss Margarette Brooks, visited her brother, Mr. Albert Brooks, Jr. of Washington, who is a messenger in the U. S. Senate Chamber. They also visited Alexandrin and Arlington, Va.
Mrs. Robinette Grosman, president of the Independent Israelite Special No. 1, of Baltimore, left Monday, August 28th, for Charlotte, N. C., to attend the Lotte Carey Foreign Mission Convention.
Mrs. Alberta V. Pines, of 313 N. Schreiber street, is visiting friends in Milwaukee and Chestertown.
Mrs. Emma Mitchell Downes,
1115 Myrtle avenue, has been
spending a week in Richmond, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Grafton Moore,
Mrs. Lillie Johnson, Miss Elsie
Mountain, Mrs. J. H. Ross and Mrs.
Laura R. Garrett motored to Rebeil
to attend the District Conference
of the M. E. Church.
Mrs. J. Theodore Jones, of 1136
Myrtle avenue, who has been
taking a month's vacation, has
returned home.
Mrs. Geo. Hunter, Miss Nannie
Hoones, and Mrs. Lewis, who have
been spending some time in Atlantic
City, have returned home.
Dr. McNeal and Dr. and Mrs.
Benl. Brown attended the University
in Washington.
Mrs. Cramp is at the home of
Mrs. Sarah E. Murphy, 1528 Druid
Hill avenue, for several weeks.
Mr. J. W. McConico, munging editor of the Mobile Weekly Press, is in the city visiting his daughter, Mrs. James Harris, 1137 Eating St. Mrs. Emmia Downes, 1115 Myrtle avenue, has returned after visiting in Washington, and her sister, Mrs. Sohie Holmes, at Richmond, Va. Mrs. Lillian Byrd and daughter, Catherine Lyrd, have returned home after spending their vacation at Atlantic City, Philadelphia and Ocean City. Dr. James E. Bell, 1220 N. Gilmore street, is on an extended visit North. After spending the summer on the Eastern Shore, Messrs. Earl Martin and Otis Dekerson mutuoted to Baltimore by way of Philadelphia. Mr. John R. Grosse was given a birthday reception August 24, by his loving wife, Mrs. Rebecca Roberts, children, at his home, 1129 W. Franklin street. A few friends were present.
Mr. and Mrs. William Sewell and their daughter, Maude, also grandson, Edgar Sewell, all of 1534 N. Harvey street, are visiting their aunt Anne Arundel Co., Md., for a few weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. McMechen and Dr. and Mrs. Harry McMechen, of Kansas City, have returned home after a pleasant trip to Atlantic City. Dr. and Mrs. Harry McMechen will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. McMechen, of 2007 Meullah street.
Mr. William Bell, of 908 S. 17th street, Philadelphia, Pa., and Mrs. Susan L. Weldon, of Pennsylvania, Pa., were married on Wednesday, July 26th, 1822. After spending a week in Earmanate at the home of his nephew Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bell, they returned to Beryn, Pa., where they will reside.
Mrs. Grace Robertson-Crump, K. N., a former student at Morgan College, and graduate from the Barnett Hospital Training School for Nurses, Huntington, W. V. N., has been appointed by State Commissioner of Health of West Virginia as field nurse in the Bureau of Social Diseases in that state, being the first colored nurse in said State to receive such appointment. The Commissioner of W. Virginia arranged with Dr. Hammpson C. Jones for Mrs. Crump to study the Public Health system of this State before taking up the field work.
Mr. George W. Robinson, of Denmark, South Carolina, and Joseph Folks, of 426 N. Pine street, Bentimore, have returned from an extended trip to portugal to populate over at Nigama Falls and also visiting relatives in Buffalo, N. Y. They returned to this city a few days ago. Mr. Robinson left Monday, the 28th for his home in the South Carolina he will take up again with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, where he has employed for the post fifteen years.
Among the Baltimoreans who attended the annual meeting of the National Medical Association in Washington last week were Drs. E. J. Whentley, B. F. Brown, S. B. Hughes, James A. White, Julian P. Hughes, Ralph P. Johnson, J. G. Boyle, John W. Robinson, J. G. McRae, F. W. Jackson, J. M. Haven, F. W. Sykes, D. C. Brown, J. N. Noville, J. E. T. Camper, James D. Hawkins, Isaac Young Howard E. Young, Albert O. Reid B. M. Rhetta, J. R. Conase, Edward Short, L. H. Mayer and Lucius Butler; Mrs. J. G. McRae, Mrs Lucius Butler, Mrs. Alpha Peck Miss Alpha Peck, Mrs. John Robinson, Miss Rosa Ashton, Mrs S. E. Hughes, and Mrs. Howard B Young were among the ladies pres-
Mrs. Hester Hillill of 1600 E. B. monument street, has returned home from a three-month's visit from Atlantic City, where she was visiting her son Elmer, where she was visiting the star entertainer of the Paradise Cafe. Miss Eleanor and Melvin Wright have returned home after visiting relatives and friends in Philadelphia. Miss Mildred Gross of 1144 N. Carry street, and Miss Roberta Cohen of 1144 W. Carry street, have visited friends and friends at Northampton, Va. Mrs. Wm. T. Nelson of Bryn-Mar, Inc., is visiting Mrs. Minnie C. Harvey of 600 Lafayette avenue. Dr. L. A. Johnson and sister Miss Mary E. Johnson have returned after spending two minutes in Atlantic City. While there she met the daughter of Madam Lottie Saver and family owner and proprietor of the Little Savet flated housed on the corner of Arkansas and Madison streets. Visited to the Prather Cottage at Galluersburg, Md., were (Washington, D. C.) Mr. and Mrs. K. B. Thompson and family, Prof. and Mrs. Will
liams and family, Mr. and Mrs. Newman and family, Mr. Frank Madden and wife Fisher to mother and Miss Arnold, Mr. Fisher to mother and Miss Arnold, Miss Prater, Moors, Ochrome, Syphil and Charlie Rose, Miss Blanche Adams, Mrs. Merry and quailer of Alexander, Mrs. Merry and quailer of Alexander, Mrs. Carl Murphy and family, Lawyer and Mrs. J. Stewart Davis and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William HILL of 1921 Division street and Mr. and Mrs. Cogin, F. Clepman, Mrs. Cogin, visiting Mrs. Ella Wiley Duke, of Clonester street, Annapolis, Md.
Mrs. A. J. Andrews, of Sumter, S. C., is visiting Mrs. Laure Day, of 1533 Mculloh street.
Miss May Brune, 1622 W. Mulberry street, has returned from Washington.
Miss Milred McMechen, of 2007 Mculloh street, has returned from a visit to Wheeling, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Waith and niece, Miss Brosome, of New York, are visiting Fishop and Mrs. Owen Mohf.
Mr. John Scott, who has been visiting in Baltimore, has returned to his home in Indianapolis, Ind.
Mrs. Alpha Peck, accompanied by her daughter, Miss Alpha Peck spent the week-end in Washington during the Doctors' Convention.
Mrs. Ben Chandler, of Seattle, Wash., and children are the guests of their relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Ford and Mrs. Jane L. Wright.
Mr. Harry Brown, of 2127 Dudley Hill avenue, has returned home after grooming the just week in Atlantic City, New York, and Philadelphia.
P. B. Young, editor of the Northern Journal and Guide, was a visitor at the APFO-AMERICAN OFFICE Wednesday. He was en route to New York and other points on a vacation trip. Dr. Robert J. Brown is accompanying him.
Messrs. Irving W. Lockerman, Ralph W. Lockerman, Clyde A. Prihett and Gobberth E. Macbeth are visiting relatives in New York and attending the Elks' Convention in Newark.
Mrs. J. F. Jenkins and son Joseph Jr. motored to Dover, Del. company with Dr. and谋 who have been spending the week with Rev. and Mrs. Jenkins.
Miss A. Louise Matthews, teacher of French in the Louisville Colored High School, was the guest of her niece and aunt. Rev. and Mrs. A. L. Gaines. She has been attending the summer session at Columbia University.
Mrs. Maria Merrick, of Wilmington, N. C., is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Julia Hall, of 550 St. Sarah Greenleaf, 483 W. Merry St., and Mrs. Harriet Anderson, 1523 Sargentia street.
Mrs. Fannie Stevenson and son,
Mr. Emerson Stevenson were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Smith Byrd,
of Uttonsville, Maryland, during
the second week in August, after
which they were the guests of relatives
in Montgomery County,
Hallandale, and they took the lead
for Washington, D. C., and after
spending a short time there and
after having had a very pleasant
trip, returned to their home in
Chicago, Illinois.
Mrs. Henrietta Brown is president of a Woman's League in the 16th ward which has been organized to work for W. Senator,
candidate of John W. Cameron,
the organization was formed at
the residence of John Pindle,
1513 Winchester street subsequent
with the men's club of which J. W. Camner is president.
Mrs. James H. Shinault, mother Mrs. Childs and daughter Mary Catherine of Liverpool Manor, White Stone, New York, formerly of Flushing, were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hurrell, the wife of Mr. and Mrs. were entree at dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Williams of 1056 Argyle avenue.
The 12th Ward Women's Republican Club was organized at the home of the Mr. William Price, 28, Mrs. Katie Jackson, president; Mrs. Ozelia W. Gantt, vice-president; Mrs. Lacy Price, secretary; Mrs. Ruth Whitaker, assistant secretary; Mrs. Sarah Springs, Chapman, assistant secretary; Mrs. John Johnson, Sgt. at Arms. The meeting was well attended and was held in the interest of Hon. John W. Garrett. 1 1
MARRIED
Mrs. Mamie Taylor, wishes to announce the marriage of her daughter Nettie Lamise of Atlantic City to Mr. Samuel L. Davis of North Carolina.
Mrs. James H. Shinault, mother, Mrs. Childs and daughter Mary (Catherine of the residence of D. W. the Marquis) of Atlantic City to Mr. L. B. official. Refreshments were served.
KEY—DUNLAP
A quiet lot but very pretty marriage was solemnized in Charlestown, W. V. Va. On Wednesday August 18, 1922, At the residence of Mrs. M. Emma Rosenberg, the guests being Rev. Viviana T. Roy of Union, W. Va., and Miss Bertha A. Dunlap of Gap Mills, W. Va. Immediately after the ceremony the happy couple left on the evening trip to Union, W. Va., the last named place the home of the groom, where they spent a very pleasant time among friends and relatives, returning to Union, W. Va. Friday August 25, where the groom is now pastorizing. We wish for them and prosposus voyage across the sea of S. C. R. *
TILDEN-SHORT
On Tuesday Aug. 22nd, the wedding of Miss Elizabeth Short formally a teacher of Swan Creek School, Harford County, Maryland, and Miss Charles G. Tilden took place at 7:30 p. m. at the parsonage of St. Peter's Clarvter Church. Rev. Hoodhall officialized the wedding, and the bride was nutron of honor and Mr. Syrvester Short was best man. The bride was handsomely attired in white dress with tulle veil caught with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bridal roses. Mrs. Short wore a gown of white satin and lace. After the wedding, she met the bride at home of the bride's parents 303 N. Caliburn street. Many handsome presents were received. There were quite a number of out-of-town guests present.
After a short tour Mr. and Msk. Tilden will reside at Swan Creek, Md. B. C. *c*
Want every man and woman who appreciates good health, to try our remedies at our risk. FREE TRIAL, PACKAGES of the wonderful VITAL, SPARKS and PELL-MA TEA and TABLETS for Constipation will be given away for a few days at the Northwestern Pharmacy, and Launces Pharmacy, or at our office.
Appeal To Mem
PELL-MA MEDICINE Co.
Recommended and for sale by the following drug stores: NORTHWESTERN PHARMACY. Pennsylvania avenue and Delphin street; LENBERT PHARMACY. Pennsylvania avenue and Delphin street; LENBERT'S. Pennsylvania avenue and Delphin street; FUTTERMAN'S. Dried Hill avenue and M. Meeschen street; FUNNELLS. Dried Hill and Biddle street; FUTTERMAN'S. Green and Franklin; READ'S FIGHT STORES, and direct from our office.
If your druggist hasn't got it, have him order it for you, or order direct from us
Please cut out this ad for further reference as it may not appear again.
OFFICIAL DEATH LIST
Only 34 deaths were reported by the Health Department this week. Of this number there were eight under one year of age white, tuberculosis took four and seven month two. The complete list follows: Charles Murphy, 61, 624 Sarahann street, James W. Little, 42, South Baltimore, Hays, A. Clinton, 7 days, 712 W. Saratoga St., Lillian Donnerby, 23, Municipal Hospital, Mary E. Bruner, 58, 701 Mosher Street, Charles Cooper, 1 John Hopkins Hospital, Anne B. Lemmon, 65, 152 Dolphin Street, Bernard Jones, 2: 526 E. Federal Street, Lillian Johnson, 9, 511 N. Rachel Street, Franklin Alesen, 42, 156 Eastern Avenue, Sarn Vivalle, 29, 529 N. Duncan Street, David Frisby, 1718 Barnes Street, Abraham Harper, 63, Municipal Hospital, Clem Harper, 55, 404 Gold Street, John Turpin, 53, Mercy Hospital, Catherine Rollins, 55, 1529 S. Clinton Street, Mildred Jones, 56, 100 Collett Street, James E. Martin, 56, Mercy Hospital, Mary L. Beltran, 82, 947 Walnut Street, Ernest Jackson, 21; Municipal Hospital, Geraldine Gillham, 1; John Hopkins Hospital, Annie B. King, 2; John Hopkins Hospital, Pearle White, 9 da; 1704 Grant Street, Hannah Young, 57; J11 Winns, 1; John Carter, 5; 205 Bain Street, Jilly M. Harmon, 5; 165 135 Preston Street, Mary Garrett, 7; 160 136 Hill Avenue, Richard Bray, 1; 158 S. Vincent Street, Inflant Mosher, 52; 180 Vitee Street, Mary E. Copkins, 9; 922 N. V. Pewman Street, John E. Sumpkins, 57; 15 W. Preston St., Mende Schultz, 17; Mercy Hospital, Elia Steffel, 22; 85 X. Elen
CORRECTION
Jesse B. Clark, 2129 Dustin Hill avenue is incorrectly put down in last week's AFRO as a Garrett worker in the 14th ward, Mr. Clark is supporting Senator France.
Mrs. Paul D. Coleman and daughter, Eva, of 1257 McElery street, are in Atlantic City for a few weeks. Before returning home they will visit relatives in Philadelphia.
Want every man and woman who to try our remedies at our risk AGES of the wonderful VITAL TEA and TABLETS for Consult for a few days at the North Laurens Pharmacy, or at our
THANK
To young, middle-aged, single or married men, who are feeling old, as a result of excesses or follies, who are troubled by illness, ones with spermatorrhhoea, impotency or lost manhood, Sexual incapacity, Seminal weakness, night losses, losses that occur at stool, Defective memory, loss of organs, Vastage of organs and all forms of nervous affections. Should 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, lack of force that any man from our world will have. It will stop all losses (unlikely emissions whether from diseases or mistakes of youth. VITAL STAKKS works on the human system like steam works on an engine like a machine like weak or strong, should take VITAL STAKKS once in a while to regenerate the lost vital power (that is abused). There are a very few men in the world today out of whom who feel so strong that a box of VITAL STAKKS would not make them feel stronger, and make life worth living again in the future. For your own sake, get it today, tomorrow, and every day. Worked women, women, $1.40 per box, or a course of 6 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 day free trial, by ordering a course of 6 boxes for $5.00. Use it for nine days, and if you are not satisfied the results remain the balance your $5.00 will be the A-B-G-L-H-T-E-Y without any red tape. Get it right now. If you are still skeptical, send for a free sample. (Enclose a 2c stamp.
Any Man Who Had Private Disease or Has it Now ATTENTION
For Chronic Aliments of Men
KURA UROTOLL
A powerful urinary antiseptic. ANY MAN WHO HAS HAD SOCIAL DISSEASES SUCH AS DISCHARGES, can hurt now in chronic form should examine his morning urine. If there is sheds (cotton like) he should take Birotoll at once, until it clears.
PELL-MA MI
PRATT & BOND ST.
Recommended and for sale by the foe
ERN PHARMACY, Pennsylvania, avenue and
PHARMACY, Pennsylvania avenue and
sylvania avenue at Wilton street; GREEN
street; FENNELL'S, Druid Hill and B
and Franklin; READ'S EIGHT STORES.
If your druggist hasn't got
you, or order d
Please cut out this ad foe
may not appear again.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
BANKS-JAMES-james A., 48, widower;
grettope.
PORCELLA-HENVES-Chicago 6, 20, widower,
774 Nixman县; tollly 45,
WELLS-JONESON-Chicago 2, 17, 165
MOTION-JOHNSON-Chicago 18, 18,
MOTION-PHILLIPS-james A., 167, 162
Draim Hill avenue; Laverne, 28, widower,
KENNY-DIXON-james 21, 27, N. Parish
Port News, V. L. Dilian 22.
FURNER—HENSON—Englewood 31. Wood
Street 22.
ROCINSON—BROOK—Wilson E. 22.
211 E. 21st street; Ethel 20.
ELAND—BRISCO—Frank A. 222 Striker
street; Abercrombie.
ELAND—BRISCO—Frank A. 222 Striker
street; Abercrombie.
ELAND—BRISCO—Frank A. 222 Striker
street; Abercrombie.
JEFFERSON—SAMSON—monroe 25. 120
Elenen street; Berthar. 28. widow.
WALLACE—HPBARD—George E. 22.
E91 Division street; Ethel 20.
HELLEN—HPBARD—Benjamin F. 25.
Lexington street; Lilian. 22.
BRAKLEY—COATES Harry. 21. 123 N.
Striker street; Vaughn. 18.
STEWART—HILL—James. 14. 129 N.
Dallas street; Ethelco. 20. widow.
HELLEN—HPBARD—Benjamin F. 25. 120 Amos
street; May E. 28.
MITT—COMS—OMS. 42. 163 N.
Fremont street; Aznes. 20.
old to Mortimer.
HARRIS—LINDEN—Lindeton. 21. 123 N.
Nailah street; Flena. 21.
SMITH—Young Perey S. 29. 123 Ingra-
les street; Minnie B. 26.
A STATEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Robertson were in to wife directly or indirectly responsible for the appointment proceedings instituted by the Board of Trustees and for technical understanding on the part of an intern was the cause of the unpleasant occurrence. It is gratifying to know that cooperation has been made and that they will be home upon their return blood September 16. Mr.
who appreciates good health, risk, FREE TRIAL, PACK- TAL SPARKS and PELL-MA INSTITUTION will be given away Northwestern Pharmacy, and our office.
THANK YOU
To Men
Also for the relief of bladder
siruite and postate glumb
trechelog. Prices $1.00 per
box. 6 boxes for $5.00
Blood Specific
This wonderful remedy is specially adapted for the treatment of *Bloody Colon* (Syphilis) and its symptoms, such as rash, Copper Colored Sores, Mucous Patches, Aching Bones, Enhancement of the Glands, Warty Growths, Painless Recombination, Eic. All these symptoms of *Bloody Colon* are usually removed in a short time.
6.0-6.0 will not interfere with digestion is not like Mercury and may be taken for long periods when quired. There is no better remedy in God's world to be held.
Use $5.00 for a month for 1st treatment. The 2nd is $4.00 by soaking or showing the label or bottle, personally by mail.
FOR DISCHARGES
KURA SANTOR CAPS
A wonder remedy
for some and chronic discharges
such as Social Diseases of
men and Leatherwear (writhing
in ladies). Price: $45.00.
SPECIALS: $45 for $50, 1X-
FUNCTION, 75c for the Silver
Kind 75c.
CAUTION!
Don't confuse our Remedies with any parent medicineakes on the market. Our remedies are no patent medicines. Used with thousands upon thousands of wonderful results in the well known be, Phillips Medical trust. Specialists in chronic diseases of men and women since 1838 under the clinical observation of a medical staff of 14 members. Even if you would pay $10.00 to a honest 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 mentioned above except Kura Remedies and Pell-Ma Tea. For Constipation, a combination of 10 bowels and varicose, Price 25c, by mail 30c. For free sample enclosure a 2c stamp.
SPECIAL OFFER
to the disappointed ones with
mandatory remedies and al-
so to the so-called after-
using our remedies for a reas-
ouble time and if the desi-
tual results are not obtained you
can come to the well-known
Dr. Phillips Med. Inst. Pratt
and Bond Sis., and the head
Doctor will give you a special
examination and treatment
absolutely, free of charge.
Start with our remedies today,
tomorrow might be too late.
MEDICINE Co.
ST. Baltimore, Md.
the following drug stores: NORTHWEST
aveneo and Delphon street; LAURENS
s and Laurens street; TERNEEL'S, Penn-
BREEN'S, David Hill aveneo and McMechen
and Biddle street; FUTTERMAN'S, Green
trees, and direct from our office.
got it, have him order it for
our direct from us
and for further reference as it
FRANCE OR GARRETT WHICH?
Their Records Compared From An Editorial In The Afro-American August 25, '22
The Primaries
senatorial primaries less than
man and woman has so far made
Republican candidates. For
own while, of course woefully
rection.
less exhibit the same lack of
city.
Stephen I. France, who is a car
his present position largely be
ung in behind him in the elec
t time he introduced a bill in
Crow cars on railroads; he
down to stop lynching; he uu
point colored Marylanders to
measure to appoint a commission
in Liberia, and he asked the
estate colored regulars for the
likely for him none of the mea-
n carried out.
In colored people still pay first
new cars, and are denied Pull-
Liberian Loan and Liberian o
geocohoked somewhere in Ou-
Anti-Lynch Bill was defeated.
Lodge and President Hard
may not be passed this sess
against the Senator is his vow
in Haiti after the War Secu-
nion with colored regulars.
It is likewise unfortunate in
kept him away from his h
with the common people. I
Paris, the Hague Luxembu
Russia while important wem
in closer contact with the
affiliations with two exclu-
one in Philadelphia, four in
bring about this much des-
has a record of purposeful o
people in the United States’
ion on the many excellent p
rett, he has no record of effec
of the darker Americans.
Two facts in mind, it is imple-
manifest a grave interest in
men and women must decide
candidate whom they have
, or one who is new in the
elective office, has passed
common folk, and who ha
what he will do for his color
... VOTE FOR ...
SEPH I. FRAN
With the Senatorial primaries less than a month off, the average man and woman has so far manifested little interest in the Republican candidates. Figures printed in another column while, of course woefully inconclusive, point in this direction. The counties exhibit the same lack of interest that is manifest in the city.
Senator Joseph I. France, who is a candidate for reelection, holds his present position largely because a solid colored vote swung in behind him in the election six years ago. Since that time he introduced a bill in Congress to do away with Jim Crow cars on railroads; he introduced a measure of his own to stop lynching; he urged President Harding to appoint colored Marylanders to federal office; he offered a measure to appoint a commission to investigate conditions in Liberia, and he asked the Secretary of War to substitute colored regulars for the marines in Haiti. Unfortunately for him none of the measures he advocated have been carried out.
In the South colored people still pay first class fare to ride in Jim Crow cars, and are denied Pullman accommodations. The Liberian Loan and Liberian commission resolutions are pigeonhole elsewhere in Congress. Senator France's Anti-Lynch Bill was defeated, and according to Senator Lodge and President Harding, the Dyer Anti-Lynch Bill may not be passed this session. The only black mark against the Senator is his vote to keep the U. S. Marines in Haiti after the War Secretary refused to replace them with colored regulars.
Mr. Carrett is likewise unfortunate in that his diplomatic career has kept him away from his home State and out of touch with the common people. His services in Rome, Berlin, Paris, the Hague Luxemburg Venezuel, Bordeaux, and Russia while important were not calculated to bring him in closer contact with the common folk. Nor could his affiliations with two exclusive clubs in Washington, one in Philadelphia, four in New York and six in Baltimore bring about this much desired result. Mr. France has a record of purposeful effort in behalf of the colored people in the United States' Senate. Without any reflection on the many excellent personal qualities of Mr. Carrett, he has no record of effort or achievement in behalf of the darker Americans.
With these two facts in mind, it is important that the average voter manifest a grave interest in the coming primaries. Men and women must decide whether they will support a candidate whom they have tried and not found wanting, or one who is new in the political game, never held an elective office, has passed his life out of touch with the common folk, and who has so far given no pledge of what he will do for his colored constituents if elected.
PRIMARY ELECTION
day, September
authority of OLIVER P. METEROT
pean Mar sen ore
MACE TEN
Hy ATTCHELL,
Bis ‘
ANK GFFIGIALS
BRAG fe
ANK CrFit
fficei’s of Mechaties Sav-
ngs Bank in Richmond
Charged’ With
\ Theft
"SHORTAGE IS $150,006
Mitchell Says There May
<. Be= Irregularities, But
: (COptinued from page 1) a
‘the alleged shortage in the funds
of the Bank would reach $159,000.
‘The receivers will make np. esti-
‘mate, sgying that It Is imsossible
fatds. ge unul all the: yas toons
Bee then roaalved “anh ante
‘againstthe ledger accoupts. ‘They
Shisded ncanioute of the core
mMonweulth's utlorney is conserva-
Ponwealih’s athorney |
Whet Warrants Specuity
Lesa eadis ela ae a da el nae? Se
Norsells were airrgsted on a joint
arin thett fot $10,004
rder/of Catunthe, sand
depfeit tw the urder 0
Knights of Pythins
wa ‘nino. served Wilh
aeging whit on Jun
Aw checks. both to the
p hank, one for $19,000
the nevount of Kate E
raud_ keeper of deposits
fier of Calanthe, and th
$19,000, charged agains
font ‘of 'E, Wt, Jefferson,
aster ut the exchequer. 0
of Pythias. ‘It in alleged
Ge checks were slvawn will
Intent to conceal ts trwe state
Inewtwo accounts or Wy defraxi
san.
Be separate warrants were
(ron Cashier, Norra. Une
eq that on May. fe 4522." he
Zalse starment/ ef the von
Of the bank iA a statement
ieged to Chict dtute lank Es-
her FP. i. deehurdson, This
irene represented thet $7.75
Lol was em deponit in the Me-
pics? Savings Hank, whereas
O.pe the einuunt was held bs
Mfmericar National Bank ats
eral security ona persons)
of Michell for $2,500.
Ahrevis Made Last Night
auvests were made between
AWorchuek hist Priday
hijlent Mitehelt's bond, fixed
OG. wis subseribed by Genr-
Price, ALD. Price, an, Te
nd Ia. Sea?" nett beewm
rey for $2.53
bond wl Caslier A.V. Nore
ee fixer! at Sone, sind oF
vere, aged al S80, yeu
feat by: Ay Vp Norvedl, se
Shomi wt iewrs Wide yo
ogo, Wee furnishes by Thezive
snk Closed duly 15
Fechinicst Savtnins ta
eal closet By Ube: ernie
the state (Corporation
Bund ois late
pointe. veal
A sutanitted
atlesings te |
p wliiedy erin
ae
Mi in 1908
Br the Mechanies
fan hse on News
Nive civeuit eer at
witth se minimatne ea
of S10.0U0 and at maxt
Fe $25.00. olin Mitehwtt,
fg hanced ss presided cand
fA. Tunkint, view-presie
Phere was a long. list of
pi Including Jon. ‘Tyler.
fs the unis ene remaining an}
hike list nf directors tots
Ist suatement of the bane
Kom was heaton duties 0 ait
Pot this bank examiner. The
Ey aunlenintar ther tata
eee SAT
: tvua
250.0
ee so HEH
Statement Bani Made
in the papers Hed with
is report is ia exhibit
PSutement of assets etic Jin-
ag the close of Iitsiness shine
KR from the bueks without
tlon).”"
ASSETS
fond. discounts... S050. 15
stn wert “tae
ante ee hare
fete gah
forked ats” hen
Fata bonds San
rosette vinci 18,270.03
Race ii iain
a oarhated Ber
Sid terestof ren estate
EEO nes.
ge, tape San
Ne fen
EE nee SOR
F viapiLtries
GOK ences § ATHOLL
Se ome
ica Frais Tee
a ampoits a uinsrhte
les oan
eg on.
Repterst depoiit eo
rate eS ae
redtchecns”oaiending “HSE
ferwSabecks outro
te gunenteed oc. gn
aaleidends. meer eT
3 foe taxes GaSe
PM ics interest 2
a
pystebel Prominent fer Yours
fokn Mitchell has dee~ f?2ntl
Qe with “polities mn Riehn.at £0
re! than thitty years und is to
Fone ef tho outstanding sgures
‘affairsrin Richmond. In the late
gcho WRs.a member of the city
peil..
St dieay he was pul up bs Uh
“blacks” as the Republican
date for governor und did
lidemiye” compaizning. His
e's Beri usually at the head
ct veate wise Ialuchee ws
ted. to count
Isethe, only presiaest the Me-
esleBank over Inu. ‘The re-
Krein niaking their investiga.
sive. told by the cashier and
*vioves that Mitchelrs 0.
sary. before any putr-
Hes could be made
inde
thi: .» er connec-
itor isd owner of
cnet. :
Stetement
HY i-tned the fol-
this wel:
rin’ whieh tie -de-
6 publieare pri-
ea ie en i cad
its offices. are charga gem
regularities and péculations,
whether the assets of” the ‘bank,
together with the guarantees of the
Girectors and the liability of the
Rondiey, corgpens, wich, sited
sponsor for its oflicers, are sufti-
cient to guarantee the depositors
against loss und permit the AMe-
chanies’ Savings Bank to reopen
funder prover management.
| J um confident that this question
can be answered in the affirmative
IL i also a question ax to whether
it fs better 10 reopen the hank un,
der improved conditions than. t¢
close iq with a receivership, the
legitimate expense of which will
Approximate $20,000 outside 0}
cleriex! expense, ail of which musi
“ing paid out of the proceeds of the
dtopositors and at a damage to the
saving habit of s multitude of col
ored people, simonmting to many
‘million of Mollars. ‘There areas:
ets of the Mechanies’ Savings
Hank which this report does not at
tempt to disclose. ‘The hoard of
divectors and the surrender of as:
iscls hy the president, together with
‘the liability of the bonding com:
‘pany, will exceed $200,000. | Then
Wwhy not reopen the bank for busi
ness?
| Mitchell and Pythian Funds
| ‘The magnanimous attitude of
he shite people of this commun:
lity, the liberality of the leaders of
‘ule finaneial istriet, of this city
Should preveut a blow to Negre
financial prestige in this: commun,
‘iy which would reset. and affect
the colored people far the nex
Adueade (o conte. ‘The report of the
Iwo attorneys named as receivers
is expected in ten days’ tine t
destray the work. of wenty. sears
There are some things that this
receivers report fills 10 state.
falls to state that the account of
John Mitchell, dr. and the Grand
Lodge. Knights of Pythias, and the
Grand Court, Order of Calinthe
ave one cad the sume, hat the
overdvans in the aecount of Joh
Miuchett, ars were due to ebecks
Gmuwn (6 jee deatis-elaines and Ha
ilities wr oth organizations,
TUE Tails te suite that the saptiarent
orurdeaft ot $LSD0 Wass secured
1 deposit sent” ta the. Mechanies
Savings Hank by messenger te tal
care of the same, atier the ywesi
dene feared for the first Gav that
there was sin overdratt, sind. that
is deposir was refused sat the ben
aiid the msseniger returned tt
same to hit
The totst stmount of ihe puts:
book shortage, as shawn by the
extracts from the report, is $1700
As a matter oF Get, blanket mort-
axe has been drawn in faver of
the bunk for $100,000, with 6 per
cont, interest, payable iy owe year
This is $16,500 inore than the te.
uirersent of the banking division:
Coupled with the liabilits Lond wi
Approximately $25,000, this makes
ja total of $41,500, or $24,500 more
thin the amount required.
| INQUIRING REPORTER
RT egies Manali
pena
QUESTION
renee Rpg Ua eS
eat si dou
ie ie
ANSWER
elt, ition iC atest
sit
| oMr. doiu dones, barber, 0122
ciabatta
seen 3
Tees ciate Achat, ine
sung Adeiide Arti
auras caveat thio
SU fel ne ome ering te
aj hang ot ere hah
429 N. Central avenue. Yes. J and
dat & General want, ew gu
church gets most of it now,
ye ac mee a
ves euoepre, Ces as Kel
tn ree ele
si fen gate hs
Ue
DELEGATES HOME
FROM CHICAGO MEE]
Bishop Brooks ‘There~
Rev Dr. A. L. Gaines
Greeted As Next
Bishop
Loci delegates te the Atrican
Methodist Young People’s Cow:
gress, which came to an end al
Quinn Chapel, Chicago. ten. days
tse, say that the session was i
cess in every way,
Bishop Brovks was there snd
allowing ove of his moving piens
or West Attica the delegaten gave
tito $04 in cash: and numerous
wcles of jewelry. including dia
snond-stuudded picoas, :
Rev. Ure Al L. Gaines was not
miy greeted inf one who will be
devated to che bishopric at. the
text ALM. , General Conference,
Wut he delivered well-received
Uddvess on "Phe AL ALE. Church
and Civic Dutles.”” “Rev. Dr. C. M.
tanner, who conducted a ronnd
ably discissiun, was in the midst
3f a throng who expressed the
hope that ha be the next mission-
ary Syeretany of the denomination,
Elmer A. Henderson, who was
chairman e¢ the | Sunday-schoo!
ection of the Baltimore Conter-
mee delegation, conducted a class
n superintendence, while George
3. Whste, the seeretary. had
charge of one in advanced methods
for Sunday-xchool work. Mrs.
Violet Hil ot Baltimore, made an
appeal tor interest in the fight Cor
suppression of the illegal liquor
reitic, Dr, Tanuet took the place,
of Bishop “Ross at Quinn Chureh:
for a sermon and Rev. C. B, Stew-
int of Washington, sung a sole.
Rue. David Johnson, the treasurer
of the Congress. is a native of Bal-
‘more. He ig now pastering al
he Institutional A. ML. Chureh,
“hieage.
The baltimore Conference was
epresentad hy about forty dele-
ules and was one of the largest
cclegations there. G. W. Shane
vas chairman of the ANen Cheis-;
jan Endeavor League section. |
GOODYEAR RAINCOAT PREE.
[We will send a° handsome’ Nainproofed.
‘ANlcWeatlier-Coxt to one-person in. cwel to
ality who willslow and recommend it to
friends. Write today to the Goodyear 33.
Co, B87? Goodyear Bldg, -Kaosas City, Mo.
pera, A. R, RETIRES
WM. T, GREENWOOD
Ee ae
[ee See ae rege
(ae tro carne oe Niet
PSs sica emcee a nara eee pe
Fs Ses ea eee
a ee
Reger te: Wiese
ee
ee ty foe
[esi ie er ies
POOR ae Mare
pie oe ay eee
Poe ee
Well-Known Fraternal Man
Completes Forty Years
of Service Today
GETS PASS AND PENSION
In Continuous Serviee Me.
Greenwood Was Absent
Unly Six Weeks
Witham “T. Greenweud. mes:
senger and perter of the Pennsel
yania. railroad at the Calvert St
tion, WN be relieved of avtive duty
today, ‘Thursday, under the pen:
sion reguiitions with a vecard of
active service of forty years in this
division,
| Ar. Greenwood hax heen stition-
ed at Calvert Station om su cight
hour shift for the past two seus
Por four yeurs before this he work-
ed on a twelve-hour shift at Union
Station, bat hefore that he was fot
thirty-four years, messenger and
porter at the general offices of the
Haibend at Center sind Calvert Sts
Mr, Greenwaud was horn in Gale
Himore, February 24, 18as. He wits
Feateatod in tive puldie find orn
fsclmols, scrsuduestitige fan the chi ef
Isth. | Miss Nannie 1. Groumes
Mice” Agnes Minus, ef Kosten:
James’ Grooms sand. Prof, Herbert
Johnsen aie tive anly. wher sur.
vivers ef tet elias of twenty, For
Se while he taht school in How
aid Uebuty, resinins te enten the
Servier of the Vennaytvania litil-
roid,
PMetsah tne tags taco comin
ously, for forty: sears, at work, Ne
Tee missed only alk weeks fn that
time, for iliness, Sindays,. lalie
Mays, Christmas, New Years, he
has hwen ui tie jah, Mr. Green:
woud retires Train ative sereien
Wilh an alsoliedy chan recur,
having never beet disciplined far
any Tiftaction ef the rules af the
eon pst
"Tes eamjerny attows its employs
cost frm seven tay Lin alsys wtes=
tion euch sent. | Mr. Grenmwaod
has never been in jwsition ta like
saivaintage oof tlds afer, Me Will,
however, next week, when he and
his two srandehibiven, Veronica!
aid Lone How, twelve and
Fonmtech, respectively, take tp
to New Ver,
With this retirement sues at pene
siuny fren thee eiomapciny seid at pats
whieh will jernait hit send hie wit
ty travel ver the Pennetta |
lines free of charge for te Me
sie oF hiss day,
Only tee ater cobired nnen have
lien in the eangdages OF Ste valle
roid in thie este fonger thin My
Hrenuiumd. Pines ate Williaa
Henry Wilson, at tie President
Stree! Station, and Willi totie
con, at the Calvert Statin, “They
have seen forty-two sears’ service
service in heir positions. Under
iw thet positions. Under the rules
he retirement is voluntary bee
sven fe Gand 70 years of age, and
compulsory after that time,
An. Greenwood is. Mast. Grand
Worthy “Shepherd of the “Grand
United Order af Nazacites,
Past Grand Senior Warden of the
Mausonie Griter aud an setive work
vin Asbury M, i. Church. Ste,
vats also the first president of he
real. AL and served for seven
rear! Ile ustablished the woun's
wxiliary healed by the kate Maw.
ha IE, Ahwphy, owt af which grew
he YW AL He was atters
card blected ‘serretny of the Ase]
ciation and held his pasition for]
p number of years,
|
WOMEN ELKS CONVENED
fhe Grunt ‘Temple Convention
“of the Duughters of Elks of the
1B. P.O. E. of W.. held recentis
ab Newark, N. J.. Closed after a
pleasant anid busy session. Eriday,
August £5, 182%, "Nearly every
State in the Union was represent-
ed by delegates, also a represunta-
uve from the Buhume Islands, who
reports a temple of avout 72 mem-
hers. ‘The organization has now
ST temples. with 20 to B00 aver.
lige membership. ‘the majority wf
the “Grant Lempto uflicers were
re-elected.
| OKIG FOR DYER BILL
Columbus, Ohio, August 20 —
Ohio Republicans in’ State conven
tion Wednesday urged. innmnediace
passage of the Dyer Anti-Lsnehing
Bill.
_——————
MRS, LICLIE JONES
Bata -
| 1306 PENNSYLVANIA AVE, |}
Phone—StAdison 8103-W "||
SCALP TREATMENT with the'|)
wonderful PORO.HAIR GROW. |/
ER, which is guaranteed to grow ||
the hair in ‘six months. = In-
struction in Poro System. 6jven..|]
Old-T meer aes Going
-- +: To: Be A Hard Winter
| ARRIVED!
) ®
We wish to announce the arrival of a
car load of coal from our mines. This coal
will not last long in view of the coal short-
age which has been brought about by the
strike.
Call at ony ofliee and Jet us acquaint you with
our partial payment plan.
SERVICE COAL €0., Inc.
1515 Pennsylvania Ave.
Phone MAdison 9463 |
7 ee een ope en ee a a
rg Fura a at
Look: waren? warr row
HOLT’S ANNUAL TOURNAMENT
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1922
Near Drury P. O,, A. A. Co,, Md.
Orator of the day, MR. WAL RANDALL of Calvert County
Chie Marsrall, ‘THOMAS PARKER
Judges: Augustus ‘Tyler, Win, Queen, dames: Marital
Prizes, 820,00 sud 4 crowns
MUSIC BY THE KSIGHTS OF ST, JOUN
2 GAMES OF BASEBALL
Upner Marlhoro vs Baltimore Sluggers :
Blue Shirt vs Av Unknown ‘Cons
In case of mie can, shatter 2,000
ADMISSION 40 CENTS CLULDIUEN 10 te 1, 0 CHNTS
J. Harrison Holt and Wil, Sollurs, General Managers
p eee
BALM COCOLINE & 63
A WONDERFUL HAIR DRESS- @fUrey, 9 b
ER and GROWER, HAIR and OZ Jc nh
SCALP POMADE only 28¢ Gases ne
Mede sith Cocoanut ott, atonthol,: Pine , Gan ERG) |
‘Yar, Sage, Burdock and other vers sveln- RaepeRe| Weer ly
ful ingredients. Liked by everybody, AULMBIIN Wahi tl
sutisfuction guaranteed. It is unsurpass- Ay BMgge sy
cd. Use it and have long, glossy. “heal- oppePng,, 17
thy, soft, beautiful, straight’ hair ‘that one Ths i
will be admired by.everybody. tt is POP
only fhe a bos and it i worth a dottar, JC was introduced In
Washington, D.C. and it mot with great sucess: it is hiehly
Fecommended by eversbody that has used 1. Gat it trom Zour
Druggist or Manutacturer " . ‘
Leo S, Osman, 909:N.:Fremont Ave., Baltimore
By Mail. 30c
Re Co
¥OR ‘QUICK: SERVICE
FAR EAST’ CHINESE RESTAURANT
Under New. Mavagemeut ‘
Open. from 2 P. ML to 3:u0~A, M. ,
Steaks, Pork Chops, Chop’ Suey, Ya-Ka-Min, Fish, Egge and;
‘. style, Fried Chicken, Maryland style .
_933 PENNSYLVANIA AVE. |
7 CHAS. MOON, Prop. 24, 28-831, 11 |
Doesn't Blame * Ex-surance
Men And Bankers For
Seeking Shelter Under
Papa Wilson's Roof Be-
fore Snow And Ice Come
Old Timer wis 45S Ah
round at the ARR eeaer ea
Pratt Library ae)
looking ‘aver Gib- een?
ome and uther Sage ree
books, tO REE
“What's tne peu
grand” iden?” Made
asked the report- gga) AOS 5S
er GOA PE:
‘ PEERS has
“Oh, 1 w te is
lookin’ vover “35 Lp
see how! men riz! tees
Old Timer wa:
found at th
Pratt Library
looking ‘aver Gib
bon's Fall
Rome” and othe:
books,
"What's the
grand" iden?"
asked the report
er,
“Oh, 1 wuz Jes
lookin’ over “t
see how men ri
and how som
Deere, Teen Gene: Gwenn wes os
closing his books wid starting to-
ward the door,
| "t jes’ read the ether day whar
them Garveyites: had said do W. UL
Eason could 10 longer be leader of
the American Negroes. Now, |
used to Sit up tin pins when | wus
a boy” and. ae “pews. Tike ty tn
them Garveyites want 0 lave $0-
called Teuders sit up like tin_pins
Now, who wah yeerd of Eason
evan, “hoint a leader, in enything
untwill Marcus Garvey sits him up
and tells him hes giine to be our
leader and live ina Black Mouse
at Washington, Excuse me!
“That making and unmaking of
‘leulers' seems to be disturbing
your mind,” remarked the report-
er
“somewhit sa" he replied
“Aho in the thunderation and
tarnation, eft aust say it, eval
Here of a fund gittin’ together
clectin’ a ‘leader’ for the race and
Uveu choos nother mean in his
place jes bekase the fust_ one
drank a" little moonshine foddy
Mt. Bethel Auxiliary
Reelects Mrs, Richardson
‘The Centh anniversary of the Wo-
mun's Convention, Auxiliary te the
AA. Bethel Baptist Association, wie
observed Augttst 22nd to 24th, at
Mt. Olivet Baptist: Chureh. Druid
Hilt avenue. Memorial services in
honor of the late Dr. W. Bishop
Johnson, organizer of the conven-
tion, were held ‘Thursday. At the
Slosing of the session, the Mt
Rethel Baptist Assoriation browsht
greetings to the Woman's Ausili-
ang with another man, walked in-
toe two. wimmin's ronnt fate one
hight, carfyin® a piteher of tee
water so the Zadies could gil sorter
A cooled git!
“Marews Garvey won't Tel sou
be ‘Date tle Cheese’ if you keap on
ritieisine his doings." the report
He sl
Can't bep that as 1 bins to spect
ng nnd. tie vid, "Cau aaa
AM "this high-taluiin’ “leadershtp
biznes aasway, especially when
is nuthin’ but hot sir suid hovd-
wink,
AWe seo i¢ mow in Laitimere,
Hevalt little peanee fetter in tev
With guts sande mout for ih
oes down to either the brace oF
Garrett headquarters: sand tells. the
Folks there that he has 400 or mere
Voters behind and ix te louder, The
Truth i he can't lead iinselt.”
"Athen have you seen Professor
Huflington 7" was asked.
"Not lately, ae T unerstand ‘he
is biz with ‘Pesser dames ai
is new faculty: st Wowie and the
euilit teachers throughout the
State xo that evrything: will he at
Fight for: then if Uhey don't listen
Cone agitation. Ha needn't think
bekase Hinge. Burkett js! die
there are no serappers left, ‘Thank
trod tm oie.
“How's polities?” the reporter
asked.
wT quome much. ke reptied
esonator Trance. has been tellin
the enilud folks so mich that soln
Cavett is gittens out en the stony
And tellin them surapyin ase,
Nuthin like, You pass your money
Awd takes sour choice,
“poy 1 brlieve this is goin’ ‘to be
Ja hard winter.” said O. Te as he
erabbed one af his rheumatic tes
agd doar ae onset then
Jexeuranee anon cand bunkers fo
Tepine. to hesthe under Tapa tarts
Oe avitsons wings hietore Hie fee
Shatin snow nomex. thes 20 0G
dagau and ite to look after a0) Bi
Cini sour bud st indifferent”
eget tad” walked ss fav
Heutiaw street ys Uhis ti, stud
failing w Mladison aeons car, he
hobbled: ubenrd,
ary. Mrs. Lute Richardson wa:
fananinousty fected preaitent fo
tive etovewtle tine
“rhe Aualiiary presented the Ast
saviation proj with $240, Wot
oid tn sean the pevsident, M1
Htivhavdson, tthe Natioual Hap.
tec convention. She chine 1h
fiecount ot her lesalth,
she Convention lit te eld
lovown's Memorial Chareh, Wash
ington, D.C
remake wre Mine Mi, aes,
vert demntan, Mea fa Hila St
Wea “Rinse tonsa two
Irn, Neus Secs rhs
Nitta ever Wiesinat Mees us thr
Meant, CS, nd, tnd
BE. Naan it reacies ene de
Charles We Wesiey has: reenived
satay aes GF panniers Toe Uae hee
peared in lie" works APIO:
Aatiitticas
the elie tamvemtinns ae Newark
fretlinss mn! they heed resid nas can:
Heuneenent i the APRON ERE
Ra Thiers HHH Get
Netddoas “Keene ang teleptn
ine
———
| We Will Please You
| With Lifn, Eaownent ond Weekly
| Pe sbing Sick nest Poti
|
| Star Life bisurance Co.
| eran rare suvo, —Barz0,, uo.
' HAIRDRESSERS
BUT OSL ONE
POINDEXTER..
$33 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Phana VE 8d,
EXPERT MANICURING
AND MASSAGING
Mme. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
Hairdressing
:1828 PENNA. AVE.
Manicuring, cic.
Moun # Ae te 9D. aS
Madison 8156
Peepers Ther
CHAWLES A. CHASE 2
Conteedtonery nnd Ace Create
£ Forioe :
+ Clara nod Chgaretts :
ean WUUID AGL, AVESER $
£ Visrnon $136 £
Sochocfosfonko oofentscfecheeecheclecdeedededeededetele ete
Hcourtcoms Service Our Mato
THE GOODWILL
STORES |
| 220-224 S., Broadway {
| 1922-1024 Fawa Street |
| 1628 Pennsylvaaia Ave. |
|e eaoaring
| stone Seite, sean, sino, 35.n¢ |
|e atockings. Be yon nit i
pooner ein aaa
: Bell Phone
r |
HOTEL COMFORT
_ Qeean Gay, Ne J. |
NOW OPEN }
fort, Gaean Ct Ne de
Mrs, M. & Comfort, Crop. |
HOTEL DALE
Gpen March 15
BE EE em Me on
Bice CIE, aA OE ig
Boe wig eh Ie alae AS
Be PS sagen, . a
Bae 8 3 SARE AO
Be. acy PR (3
Beir ee WEE ice mat tt
ee ee
Peete te Ws
Benes sheen SN Cs
| Re cuss
| Ki.
f i oa
| gl Pe
aN
N ee
: \
Beauty Aid
| for Darktcrplexions-
eel csioae yi a ae
sre de oa a
Pat ae Ba itt
way to a Bell, sith? coloets inten after
Woe hekveettaeewiiing |
to) hea
Dr. Fred Palmer s Lavorateries
Dest, C2, ATLASTA, GA.
SSSA RR eo ey
SG ee
B, MAYER
Registered Optometrist ‘
53 NORTH GAY STREET
BYES EXAMINED Glasses if newned
YREE made at Lowest Prices
WILSON GARAGE
511-19 Wilson Street
SPECIAL RATES
Storage $6.00 and $7.00 per month
Steam Heat
| Plenty Hot Water. 24 Hours Service.
ee
“WIEATCOWE Mf. , CHV RCH Wilh GIVE AN
EXCURSION TO BROWN’'S GROVE
Labor Day, Monday, September 4, 1922
Come aid ge with ms ad have a dity of pleasure, fiood music.
ROUND TRIP 35 CENTS
oat avis font of Kruadway at 8. Ac M1, and 230 7. 3,
boas ity! Week, Chiitman Bro, George Fisher, ‘Cieket Agent
Pe ISI A Aisinson, Seereuury Hew, dohn A, Holmes, Pastor
i |
DER SAMS CHINESE RESTAURANT 5
Open from 12 A. Moy ntl 2 A. 2
cow suby, vAKOSIY SPEARS, CHOPS Hu, aD FOFE DADS OF ALL INDE
. 1805 Pennsylvania Avenue
Uisranns, Bnd FLOOR
ausnse
_cossnenntinenainnntnnannennemernmpannstneenmmmmmnmrmmmmeannnana st
g © H. JONES MME. J. CREDITT JONES
: Peon. Manager )
&/ TIIW HOTEL with the quict atmosphere of your
own home. ‘The place where refinement, superior
equipment and service are combined fo give satis-
{action and complete comfort. :
3 30 Rooms, Sun Parlor
mf Cateteria and Sunchroom Privato Dining Boom
Wf 1631 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE i
5 Next Door To Regent Theatre
A CALL, WRITE OR TELEPMONZ FOR RESERVATIONS
POLLO OE
CaF DE oo UN OE RN DAI TR
Epona: avidow mon :
; = tn i
i BALTIMORE SCHOOL OF MUSIC :
i 1627 Druid Hill Ave. i
[oar Thventoutae Covey tit Hane Anges Rack oar Bor. sour Wl |
: Aut ingERVMENTS TAUORT u
nn
POST OFFICE GLEE CLUB
| 4
| TWILIGHT
i Brown’s Grove
, SAT, SEPTEMBER 2nd, 6:30 p.m.
| ROCHESTER'S ORCHEWRA
Refreshments
——————
Macbeth Photo Studio
/ £330 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., near Lafayette
OPPOSITE DOUGLASS THEATRE
. MAU. 8910-W
REGLESES 2A
i PENNELL’S PHARMACY
| BALTIRORE'S BUSIEST COLORED DRUG STORE
i MALLORDERS SOLICrTED
; PRESOHIPTIONS A sPEoiawt® E
ey Bas R BIDDLE ST.
The Busy Corner SORNER BIEN ti |
EEL ssneeyemarseereee se teeseeneeemnaresemree et TSE ea
MONSTER LABOR’ DAY EVENT
Monday, September 4, 1922
cpae 12 Noon, Uutil 12 Midnight 2. .
GREENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK
Winters Avenue,’ Catonsville
‘The Supreme Jaze Entertainers, featuring Wilbur Y: Weight:
BALL GAME at t:a0 P. Bl, "Howara cv. vs Catonsville
Chicken, Boiled or Sea Food Dinners j
ADMISSIGN, Adults-25.Cents. Chidven 15 Cents
Under direction of Messrs. Chas. C; Woodland of Catomsville
Avehip N. Gray-of Baltimore, ‘Ma, ‘Au 26-Sep?
' “ A sy
NEW GRAND MASTER
| OF MASONS MODEST
Yo all who stop to greet on his
election ay Grand Master of the
Most Worshipful United Grand
Lodge of Masuns of Margland, Wil-
ard WY, Aiton is saying at he
realizes Ue great responsibitity
Mat has been theust on hima aud
Hat he desives the eo-uperation of
all.
“syn eessttniug ple duties tind:
ful af thea mine responsibbities,”
gays Mee Aten, 71 intend ty phy
te faverites awd desire 16 use nen
Ge an shied of opinion ity worl
Sing ty bud pe the: Ged, To that
fuemt Lexpect to freely consult
Wid sind te soticdt the hely of zh
Fearless of previetts apiiions.”
Grand Master Allen expects {0
anmmtiice the fist Wf hoblers of i
huentives positions in the city 21
ee ntieat ta hauk Lp eee.
She Stil Alleges She Stole’ Foi
Unrvison Foote Under Threat Of
Derth—Foote Preseuted- On
Charge Of Recelving Stolen
Goods
Mis Mary ‘Taylor, the country,
ery om Virginia, who is held in
Jol a charge of-stealing jewelry
tr he home of UH. H. Gorsuch,
Whee at Guilford, has been in-
1 Harrison Foote, taxi owner
fo “un 'she ektinns 18 have stolen
ji sey under tieent of her
Hite, nis been indicted on a charge,
of receiving stolen goods.
‘To setectives who lave visited the
Jail reconuy say the young: woman
SUL Mainttinse that She stole. bee
anise Fugue ordered her to 0 39
Jai iceanag site Toved Rim tal
he is married. Foote Is" put on
bail. p
ALLEY HOLMES LOSES HIS TENNIS CROWN TO WESTERNER
T.1, 1922
BROWN, EX-B
S U. S. TENNIS
OM TALLEY H
ines And Smith Wint
nels Is Woman Char
ies Off Mixed Doub
nels And Dr. O. B
town Courts Have B
ican Tennis Associati
BROWN, EX-BALTIMOREAN,
S.U.S.TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP
OM TALLEY HOLMES OF D. C.
ines And Smith Win Doubles—Miss Channels Is Woman Champion—Chicago Carries Off Mixed Doubles With Miss Channels And Dr. O. B. Williams—Germantown Courts Have Big Gallery For American Tennis Association Matches
BY AFRO SPORTS EDITOR
Germantown Courts—Philipin made the courts of the most too heavy to stage the Association's annual marathon United States. When the year of the Y. W. C. A. was and some four hundred person. The court surrounded by a beautiful setting for the lea-colored frocks. The big feast the defeat of Talley Holmes for the United States. The vie-campolis, a novice in the game, in Baltimore where he soiled articles. Brown wutta cup, upon which Horrid leg. He also won the. The scores were 7-5: Miss Lucy Slowe of Balt-champion did not compete. The women's doubles were postponed on account of darkness and in the gloom of Dr. H. C. Metard awarded prizes to other Miss Ida Adams Champs of Chicago won the Metard Cup and women's singles championship by defeating
1. Thompson, 17-year-old
ington boy, won the juniper
ownership. Row, Charles Ma-
rquez of Liberia Church. New
a presented a special jubilee
G. Brown, making three cups
the new tennis king.
Finals Brilliant
a final matches were the most
ant ever seen in a U.S. juni-
ship. Brown, the newpo-
mer, asked a nociceptor last year, held
Holmes at his mercy. In
some spectators believed that
nes did not pull up a sufficient
tuff game to make the new
bowl himself. Brown's
is the sweeping follow-thru
with smashing drives for dif-
ferent placements as opposed to the
ing style and easy returns of
was decided to hold the 1923
ownerships in Chicago.
N'S SINGLES UPPER BRACKET
Rand Kound—N. Smith defended Walker,
6-5-4; B. Brown defended Jamison, 6-2.
Flimls—E. Brown n. Geoff. Smith,
6-3, 6-4.
WOMEN'S SINGLES
List Roud—Miss E. Leonard defended
Miss E. Robertson, 6-3, 6-5, Mrs. D. Newman
defended Miss D. Bailley, 7-5, 6-2; Mrs.
Junior defended Miss C. Cook, 6-4, 6-5;
Nicholas defended Miss C. Nicholas,
6-4, 7-5; Mrs. B. Alston defended Miss
Russell, 6-4, 6-1; Mrs. J. Harris defended
Miss H. Anderson defint; Mrs. A. Crawford defended Miss L. Thomas, 5-7, 6-4;
Mrs. N. Crawford defended Mrs. M.
Nicholas, 5-6, 9-7; Mrs. R. T. Onville
defint.
Second Round—Mrs. L. Wade defeated
Mrs. E. Leonard 6-2, 6-1; Mrs. L. Wade, 2-1
defeated Mrs. D. Newman, 2-6, 6-0, 6-3; Mrs.
S. Alton defeated Mrs. D. Ballard, 6-3, 6-1;
Mrs. S. Alton, 6-3, 6-1; Mrs. Crawford defeated
Mrs. Throbbing, 6-2, 6-1; Mrs. B. Burnett, 2-1
defeated Mrs. H. Jones, 6-3, 6-3; Miss. E.
Churwell defeated Mrs. D. Reed, 6-3, 6-1;
Mrs. Churwell defeated Mrs. D. Reed, 6-3, 6-1;
Mrs. L. Juniper, 6-2, 6-3; Mrs. A. Connick
defeated Mrs. S. Alton, 19, 6-3, 6-4; Mrs.
N. Crawford defeated Mrs. B. Burnett, 6-1, 6-2;
Mrs. N. Crawford defeated Mrs. E. Connick
Seoul Finals—Mrs. Wade defeated Mrs.
Monik, 6-1, 6-0.
MEN'S DOUBLES
First Round—S. Smith and Holmes defeated
Dawkins and Washington, 6-2, 6-1;
Milwaukee and Baton Rouge, 6-2, 6-1;
Savoy and Lofoot, 6-2, 6-3; Boyer and Duncy
defeated Bassett and Morton, 6-3, 5-7, 6-2;
Costa and Williams defeated Allen and
Copeland, 6-1, 6-3; Smith and Freeman defeated
Brown and McCarthy, 6-2, 6-3; Wright and McCarthy defeated Love and Rodd.
6-2, 6-3; Adkins and Jones defeated
Grinnell and Marshall default; Rhetts and
Walker defeated Jones and Connecys, 6-2, 6-1;
Jones defeated Jones, 6-2, 6-1;
Moore 6-1, 6-0; defeated Daniels and Irving, default;
Jor defeated Vaughn and Jamison, 6-2, 6-1.
Finals Brilliant
LOWER BRACKET
MEN'S DOUBLES
Third Round Smith and Holmes defeated Costen and Williams, 62, 64; 61; Holmes and Walker defeated Smith and Fresnell, 65, 62; Brown and Jones defeated McCormick, 65; Wilkinson and Brown defeated Smith and Jones, 46, 64, 64.
Send Finale Smith and Holmes defeated Rhetta and Walker, 62, 75; Brown and Jones defeated Wilkinson and Brown, 66, 64, 64.
**WOMEN'S DOUBLES**
First Round- Cook and Fisher defeated Bailey and Reed, default; Madison and Alson defeated Wharton and Wharton, default; Wilkinson and Crawford, 86, 62; Camill and Yarbrough defeated Thumball and Burnett, 62, 63; Nicholson and Smith defeated Thomas and Powell, 62, 64; Jambison and Harris defeated Russell and Baildon, 62.
Second Round- Wade and Leonard defeated Cook and Fisher, 60, 63; Norman Glass and Glass, 64, 62; Jambison and Alson defeated James and Harris, 64, 62.
Send Finale-Wade and Leonard defeated Norman and Glass, 64, 62; Charwells and Robinson defeated Nicholson and Smith, 64, 64.
**MIXED DOUBLES**
First Round- Cornick and Jones defeated Powell and Strange, 60, 64; Norman and Jones defeated Reed and Hilton, default; Alson and Cook defeated Kell and Crawford, 62; Leonard defeated Fisher and Farries, 65, 62; Smith and Alson defeated Junior and Walker, 63, 63; Crawford and Wilkinson defeated Glass and Holmes, default; Nicholson and Rhetta defeated Yuzuki and Norman, default; Jambison and Harris defeated Duncan, 62, 63; Robinson and Brown defeated Yarbrough and Grimmelside default; Wharton and Brown defeated Harris
Second Round - William and Carwell defeated Burnett and Cardozo. 6, 6; 64; Counk and Kearney defeated Williams and Hagley. 6, 4; Nassau defeated Williams and Hagley. 6, 2; Smith defeated Wilson. 6, 2; Smith and Alston defeated Jones. 7, 5; Williams. 6, 5; rawford and Wilkinson defeated Coleman and Rhett. 6, 2; 62; Robinson and Brown defeated Thermill and Spencer. 6, 5; Loosand and Jowning defeated McGriff defeated Avery. 6, 1; McGriff defeated Tyler and Avery. 6, 1; 60. Semi Final - Carwell and Williams defeated South and Alston. 6, 7.5; Rawford and Wilkinson defeated Wade and McGriff. 5, 7; 5, 7; 6, 6.
HIGHLAND A. C. WINS TWO
HIGHLAND A. C. WINS TWO
The Highland A. C. defeated the Battl-
more Shuggers in a twin bill Sunday 12 to
7 and 11 to 13 (5 innings). Monday they
defeated the Green Spring Valley team
at Stitching 2 8. The Highlands have now won 19 and
best 5. Labor Day they will play the
Green Spring Valley a doubleheader at Mt.
Washington.
Highland A. C. Baltimore Shuggers
ABRH]
Rannon,2b 4 12, Green,ss ABRH,
Wick,1b 4 13, Lands,1b 4 13
C. Scott,2b 4 23, Lands,1b 4 10
J. Johnson,2c 5 23, Wattkus,2c 4 21
S. Scott,7b 4 22, Wattkus,2c 4 21
C. Scott,7b 4 22, Wattkus,2c 4 00
B. Brown,3b 4 23, Wattkus,2c 4 00
A. Scott,cf 4 23, Wattk,cf 4 01
Totals 35 12,0 Total 35 7,8
Grumwell
Totals 34 11 29 Totals 34 7 23
SCORE BY ININGS
B. Dovell ..... 0 0 0 ..... 1.0 0 0
E. Dovell ..... 0 2 5 0 ..... 0.3 0 -11
B. Dovell ..... E. Dovell ..... J. S.
WOMEN'S DOUBLES
MINED DOUBLES
SCORE BY INNINGS
A. C. ... 0 2 0 1 2 0 2 x-12
Sluggers ... 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 3 1 0-7
1. Sex won their sixteenth by downing the Blue Blue to 7 before 300 fans. They season. The Sex by giving their own manager, 501
B. R. G. A. C.
ABRII
5 1 5. Bacon.e 5 2 3
5. Perry.3b 5 0 4
5. Randell.2b 5 1 9
4. a 2lim Randell.ss 4 2 3
4 1 5. 1 5.m. Sim.1b 4 0 2
5 2 5. Bacon.ef 5 1 1
5 1 4. Brooks.p 3 0.2
4 1 5. Brown.1c 3 1 3
5 1 5. Chain.rf 2 0 2
W. Smith
SOX TAKE TWO FROM NASHVILLE GIANTS SUNDAY
Crowd of 4,000 Sees Local Boys Club Southernns Leaguers Into Submission
LOCALS OFF TO PHILLY
To Line Up With Heavy Sluggers of Camden and South Philadelphia Four Games This Week
Maryland Ball Park, West Port,
—Have the Black Sox a baseball team?
Four thousand rooters said so
Sunday afternoon when the local
boys met the Nashville Giants,
of Nashville, Tenn., and clubbed them
into submission in a double header
Sunday, by the scores of 6 to 3
and 8 to 5.
The Sox went to the mound in
the first game and as usual, had
his opponents eating out of his
hand. He allowed nine hits of the
scattered variety.
The Nashville Giants jumped into
the game at the beginning,
scoring a run; they got two more
in the seventh but they were
through for this game.
The Black Sox scored two in the second off
Punch, and did get him in the
fourth, with driving him off the
field with a fusillade of hits and
five runs. Gilbor who succeeded
didn't allow another Sox to
dent the plate.
Second Game
Gilmore essayed the iron-man stunt by coming back to face the Sox in the second game, but he was no longer a puzzle, hopped on his back and added a first inning over three runs in the first inning. They scored two more in the fifth and when the Giants got dangerous around the eighth inning and tied the score, the Sox clubbed out three more runs to give them a second game. On the Sox and was relieved by Dark Night Smith. The Sox will be on the road four days this week, playing in Camden, N. J., Tuesday and Wednesday; in South Philadelphia; in Wilmington; and Saturday in Club at Philadelphia.
The Narrative The Sox lost to Spring
Cliff 8 to 5 at Mt. Holly, Archer
and Thomas were the batteries.
They came Jack Wednesday and
Thursday and won two games, 7
to 4 and 12 to 1. Logan and Kyle
were the winning pitchers. Saturday,
the Sox lost two games to the Acoo Club of York, Pa.
Black Sox
Parker,2b 4 0 1 Nashville Giants
Berry,2b 4 0 1 Naggs,2b 3 1 0
Hill,2b 5 0 1 Lewis,2b 3 1 0
Johnson,ss 4 0 2 Richardson,lf 4 0 1
Johnson,lf 4 1 Helf,lf 4 0 1
Freeman,lf 3 1 Wilson,ss 4 0 1
Rankin,lf 3 0 0 Gillner,lf 4 1 1
Dankin,lf 2 0 0 Thomas,ss 4 2 1
Gilmore,lf 2 0 0 Sykes,sf 4 0 1
Total 35 5 Total 32 0
Black Sox
Nashville Giants
Parker,2b AbRH 4 0 1
Berry,2b 5 0 1 Naggs,2b 3 0 1
Hill,2b 5 0 1 Lewis,2b 3 0 1
Johnson,ss 4 0 2 Richardson,rf 4 0 1
Johnson,lf 4 1 Helf,lf 4 0 1
Freeman,lf 3 1 Wilson,ss 4 2 1
Rankin,lf 3 0 0 Gillner,lf 4 1 1
Dankin,lf 2 0 0 Thomas,ss 4 2 1
Gilmore,lf 2 0 0 Sykes,sf 4 0 1
Total 35 5 Total 32 0
Black Sox
Nashville Giants
Parker,2b AbRH 4 0 1
Berry,2b 5 0 1 Naggs,2b 3 0 1
Hill,2b 5 0 1 Lewis,2b 3 0 1
Johnson,ss 4 0 2 Richardson,rf 4 0 1
Johnson,lf 4 1 Helf,lf 4 0 1
Freeman,lf 3 1 Wilson,ss 4 2 1
Rankin,lf 3 0 0 Gillner,lf 4 1 1
Dankin,lf 2 0 0 Thomas,ss 4 2 1
Gilmore,lf 2 0 0 Sykes,sf 4 0 1
Total 35 5 Total 32 0
SCORP 4Y INNINGS
Nashville Giants ..... 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 4
Hinek Sox ..... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 x=0
Sox ..... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 x=0
Premium, Hall, Rangers, Base on Bells,
Punch.4, Nolen Hassels, Hill, Miller, 2,
Thomas, Strike Outs, Punch, Sykes, 6,
batters,闸球, Attendance=400.
SCORE BY INNINGS
Nashville Giants ..... 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 - 0
Black Sox ..... 3 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 3 x - k
Two Base Bills - Smith, Parker, Dean
Three "Base Hits" - Johnson, Archer, Dean
Four "Base Hits" - Johnson, Archer, Dean
Basket Bills - Glimmer, 1; Archer, 2; Smith
1. Stolen Buses - Lewis W. Smith, Wilson
C. Smith, Strike Outs - Archer, 1; Gimmer,
2; Smith, 7. Wild Pitch - Glimmer, 1; Smith
1. Battles Hit by Glimmer, 2; Smith, 1.
2. Battles Lyons and Cromwell, Attendance - 1000.
PITCHING AVERAGES
Won Lost PC.
KYLE 2 0 1.000
RICHARDSON 1 0 1.000
SYKES 14 3 .823
SMITH 3 1 .750
ARCHER 4 4 .500
(The other at home games which
make up the difference between
the total number played and the
total number played by the various
officers pitched by the various
trout hunters during the early
part of the season)
ST. LOUIS DIVIDES
(By The Associated Negro Press)
St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 11. The St. Louis
tars defeated the New Orleans Crescent
s in the first game of a series of four, 14 to 8,
the Stars showing superior class in hitting
and in the field. New Orleans presented
a good team, and played hard, but class
paid. Sports:
New Orleans ..... 0 0 3 0 3 0 2 0 0-8
St. Louis Stars ..... 0 1 3 5 0 0 3 2 0-14
The second game resulted in victory
or the St. Louis Stars, the score of
14 to 8, the New Orleans lads being over-
whelmed by the Stars' heavy artillery.
HILLDALE WINS
THE AFRO-AMERICAN ES HIS TENN THE SPORTING MIR
THE SPORTING MIRROR
(By Afro Sports Editor)
Whether in the near future or in the distant can boast of a world's champion in any of the boxing, be keen to be growing more apparent with time at the greatest master of the fictive art that seen and whose like it is doubtful will ever be to the colored race, namely, Joe Gans.
The question of colored boxers has been much as the result of the attempt now being made to sell Harry Wills, the king-pin among colored heavy Dempsey, who wears the world's championship division. Thus some of the sports writers and others have found it necessary to delve into the record jugglists of bygone years for some comparison.
Two notable boxing authorities who have records lately are Leo P. Flynn, who has been fight game for nearly a quarter century, and R. E. of the New York Evening World. In recent pro subject these authorities are unanimous that Gans boxer the prize-ring has ever known. Mr. Edge in part, the following, in discussing Gans and Benny lightweight holder:
"Joe Gans never drew a $400,000 gate at panchionship fights." But the more Benny fight it is that Benny never was and never will be 'another Gans never would have fought an uphill fight' Lew Tender and worked his way painfully to the end of a twelve-round battle.
"Joe Gans knocked out Frank Erne, one of the clearest lightweights who ever held the title," After the fight, Gans told me that he trick of feinting and drawing quickly back just after he would stop and come in again with a blow.
"The first time Erne feinted, Gans hooked his power at a spot 12 inches back of Erne's chin. Erne brought his chin to the spot just as Gans glove clean knockout."
While on the subject, the New York sports subject of some fights in which Gans pans "Late in his career, Gans came to me one day and you have written that certain fights of mine were it right, but from now on I'm my own man and another crooked fight while I live.
"I just want you to know how it was. I was I had I always owed him money, and he had me to do what he ordered me to. I have broken me from now on I give you my word my fights will be win now as long as I can."
Mr. Flynn sums up his praise of Gans by everything a master ringman should have—and I've seen a lot of wonderful fighters in my forever doffer to Joe Gans, the greatest of them of ring history.
And yet some of the ring authorities of the various States are doing their level best to colored boxes and drive them out of the prize ring.
The Black Sox having been playing hang-up diamond all the season; out of 50 games played won 29 and lost 11, which gives a percentage of most part these wins been made against above the caliber of most that had hitherto been a notable instance of the prowess of the club with the Hilldale club, in which Cockrell, the was clubbed from the bill by the Sox stickers, pitched a no-hit, no-run game against Rube Foster who top the National Negro League.
However, local fans will get two more instances ever their various opinions may be in regard to the local club on the coming Sunday, when the aggregation of Indianapolis, who are in fourth League, and Foster's Giants, who will come home of the locals on the Sunday following.
LOCAL FANS FORM A RADIO CLUB
Organization Will Stimulate Interest in Receiving All Over State
P. A. L. S. For Boys Training
R in the distant future the race on any of the weight divisions of the apparel with the passing of the fine art this country has ever will ever be seen again, belonged to, has been much to the front lately made to stage a bout between colored heavyweights, and Jack championship crown in the same writers and other boxing authorities into the records of some of our comparison.
As who have been thumbing the nose has been identified with the berry, and R. Edgren, sports writer In recent pronouncements on the famous that Gans was the greatest own. Mr. Edgren went on to say uphill fight half the way against painfully to the front in the latter.
Ik Erne, of the fastest and old the title, with a single punch, that he knew that Erne had a back just about 12 inches where Gans hooked his right with all his chin's chin. Erne's quick pull-back as Gans' gloved first arrived. A York sports writer touches on the which Gans participated as follows: me one day and said: Mr. Edgren, of mine were fakes. You my own man and I will never fight it was. I was always in debt toness. No matter how many fights and he had me tied up so that I had broken away. I am free and my fights will be straight and I will face of Gans by saying: 'Gans had have—and had it in abundance. All fighters in my day, but my hat is fastest of them all, the super fighter favorites of the country and officials level best to discriminate against of the prize ring.
Playing hang-up baseball on the local games played at home they have a percentage of 780. And for the inside against teams that were far inferior been seen in this city of the locals was the game Cookrell, the latter's pitching ace, Sox stickers. Last week Cookrell inst Rube Poster's American Giants, due two more instances to justify what he in regard to the real worth of day, when they face the A. B. C. are in fourth place in the National will come here to test the metal ring.
DATE FOR MUNICIPAL MEET NOT YET FIXED
P. A. Sends Out Notice
For Boys To Begin Training However
Whether in the near future or in the distant future the race can boast of a world's champion in any of the weight divisions of boxing, it seems to be growing more apparent with the passing of time that the greatest master of the fastic art this country has ever seen and whose like it is doubtful will ever be seen again, belonged to a man named Joe Gans.
to the colored boxers has been much to the front lately as the result of colored boxers has been made to stage a bout between Harry Wills, the king-pin among colored heavyweights, and Dempsey, who wears the world's championship crown, the same division. Thus some of the sports writers and boxing authorities have found it necessary to record the records of some of our foes for some comparison.
puglistes of bygone boxing authorities who have been thumbling the records lately are Leo P. Flynn, who has been identified with the fight game for nearly a quarter century, and R. Edgren, sports writer of the New York Evening World. In recent pronouncements on the subject these authorities are unanimous that Gans was the greatest boxer the prize-ring has ever known. Mr. Edgren went on to say in part, the following, in discussing Gans and Benny Leonard, present lightweight holder:
"Joe Gans never drew a $400,000 gate at any of his great championship fights. But the more Benny fights the more apparent it is that Benny never was and never will be 'another Joe Gans'. Gans never would have fought an uphill fight half the way against Lew Tender and worked his way painfully to the front in the latter battle."
bent.
Joe Gans knocked out Frank Erne, one of the fastest and clever lightweight who ever held the title, with a single punch. After the fight, Gans told me that he knew that Erne had a trick of feinting and drawing quickly back just about 12 inches where he would stop and come in again with a blow. "The first time Erne feinted, Gans boomed his right with all his power at a spot 12 inches back of Erne's chin. Erne's quick pull-back brought his chin to the spot just as Gans' gloved first arrived. A
While on the subject, the New York sports writer touches on the subject some faked fights in which Gans participated as follows: "Late in his career, Gans came to me one day and said: 'Mr. Edgert, you wrote that certain fights of mine were fakes. . . . . You had it right, but from now on I'm my own man and I will never fight another crooked fight, while I live."
"I just want you to know how it was. I was always in debt to a man who was handling my business. No matter how many fights I had I always owed him money, and he had me tied up so that I had to do what he ordered me to. I have broken away. I am free and from now on I give you my word my fights will be straight and I will win every one as long as I can."
Mr. Flynn sums up his praise of Gans by saying: 'Gans had everything a master ringman should have—and had it in abundance. I've seen a lot of wonderful fighters in my day, but my hat is forever doffed to Joe Gans, the greatest of them all, the super fighter of song history.
And yet some of the ring authorities of the country and officials of various States are doing their level best to diseliminate against colored boxers and drive them out of the prize ring.
The Black Sox having been playing hang-up baseball on the local diamond all the season; out of 50 games played at home they have won 39 and lost 11, which gives a percentage of 7.80. And for the most part these wins have been made against teams that were far above the caliber of most that had hitherto been seen in this city.
A notable instance of the prowess of the locals was the game with the Hilldale club, in which Cockrell, the latter's pitching are, was clubbed from the bill by the Sox stickers. Last week Cockrell pitched a no-hit, no-run game against Rube Foster's American Giants, who top the National Negro League.
However, local fans will get two more instances to justify whatever their various opinions may be in regard to the real worth of the local club on the coming Sunday, when they face the A. B. C. aggregation, of Indianapolis, who are in fourth place in the National League, and Foster's Giants, who will come here to test the metal of the locals on the Sunday following.
LOCAL FANS FORM DATE FOR MUNICIPAL A RADIO CLUB MEET NOT YET FIXED
Before 700 baseball fans Sunday, the Wormly All Stars, of Utzonville, defeated the Forest A. C. 16 to G. A. second game, scheduled for Saturday. Next Sunday the All Stars will play a double-header with the Rainbow A. C. and on Labor Day will meet the Scalem A. C., white. Wormly A. C. A. B. Forest A. C. Wormly A. C. A. B. ABRH.
C. Hages,1b 5 3 2 Ford,lf 4 1 2
Matthew,2b 5 3 1 alm,cfy 4 1 1
Brooks,lf 5 1 0 steff,ys 4 1 1
Randell,sf 5 2 2 Dean,sh 4 1 0
Brown,sfh 5 3 4 Singer,p 4 1 4
B. Hayne,cfh 4 3 3 Singer,p 4 1 0
Terrell,rf 4 0 1 Huglett,sh 4 0 0
Dorser,sf 4 1 2 Harris,c 4 0 1
Totals 40 15 Totals 30 0 0
SCORE BY INNING
How Will's Compares
With Tut Jackson
Harry Wilts Tut Jackson
29 years Age 21 years
6 ft. 4 in Height 6 ft. 3¾ in
210 lbs. Weight 200 lbs.
76 in Reach 80¾ in
16 in. Neck 17¾ in.
44 in. Chest (Nor.) 42 in.
47 in. Chest (Exp.) 46¾ in.
36 in. Waist 31 in.
22 in. Thigh 23 in.
14¾ in. Calf 15¾ in.
Ankle 10¾ in.
Heart 17 in.
14%
On Thursday evening, local Radio fans met and organized the Banneker Radio Club of Maryland. The officers chosen were Roland Carrington, president; Clarence Facts, vice-president; Tecumseh Woodland, secretary; Ralph Reckling, treasurer; John Hebron, chairman executive committee.
The purpose of the Club is to stimulate interest in radio and promote the art of radio communication among its members.
Mr. Carrington is a Government licensed operator, holding an Amateur's First Grade License. He was the first colored radio amateur to qualify for a license in the State of Maryland. He has been in the game since 1915.
Weights, members of the Club listen-in to concerts broadcast from Pittsburgh, Newark, Kentucky, Georgia, Iowa, and the far away amateurs relaying their messages from coast to coast, to say nothing of the local and many other nearby stations.
Arrangements are being made to instruct the inexperienced member to make his own apparatus and to how get the best possible results from his set. Classes will be formed to reel the Wireless Connexion Code so that all the benefits and pleasures in radio will be derived.
As this is the first real attempt on the part of the colored amateurs to establish a club of this kind, and not knowing everyone who is interested in Radio, request is made that any person living within the C. State of Maryland desiring information as to membership to call on any of the officers or write to the secretary.
Address all communications to the Banneker Radio Club of ch Maryland, Tecumseh Woodland, church, 535 Pressman street.
WATTS CYCLE CHAMP
The 5-mile point races held during the month of August by the Fulton Cycle Club, were a great success and will be repeated in September.
In the finals held Sunday, Raymond Watts was the winner, with Sherlock Grinage, the colored 13-Men, second and M. Johnson, third; Joe Watts, fourth, and Mayo Brent, fifth.
The races were held over the 5-mile course at Park Heights and Slade avenues, and the time for the distance was 12 minutes and 4 seconds. Grinage, who is a new entrant in the racing game, has shown great promise and better things are expected of him in the near future.
Prizes for September will be follows: 1st, gold watch, New Departure Mrs. 2nd, pair trims, chalm,
WORMLEYS WIN
All: Stars .. 2 6 1 2 1 3 0 1 0 0 1 0
C..... 1 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0
Ise Hits .. Matthews; 2; Dorsely; 2
Three Hits .. Matthews; 2; Dorsely; 2
Three Hits .. Matthews; 2; Dorsely; 2
Matthews .. Sacrifice-Terrell
brooks, Ford, Dean, Home Runs
Base on Bases-Off Dorsely; 6
4. Solen Bases-Smith, Randell
5. Stolen Bases-Smith, Randell
6. Singer, 4. Tumpress
Alp,
JACK JOHNSON ISSUES DEFY TO JACK DEMPSEY
Guarantees To Stop Dempsey, Brennan or Wills In Ten Rounds or Give His End of Money To Charity
Atlantic City, N. J., Aug. 30.—Jack Johnson, at 44; wants to meet Jack Dempsey, at 27, for the world's heavyweight boxing championship.
"I am not only confident of beating Dempsey, but will guarantee to stop Bill Brennan, Harry White, or any other man within ten trades, or turn over my end of the money to the American Legion, not even taking out my training expenses," said Johnson here today.
Efforts are being made to match Johnson with Dempsey at an early date, possibly in October, in Mexico City. It is stated that an offer of $500,000 has been made for the bout. Lending color to the reports that negotiations are actually under way is the report that Jack Kearns, Dempsey's manager, will see Jack Johnson here next week, and Johnson has declared his intention of starting training on Monday.
"I weigh 222 pounds, only eight pounds overweight," said Johnson. "Give me three weeks and I will meet any man on earth. "I am a better man today than I was ten years ago, much stronger and a harder hitter. I am faster than Dempsey and can hit harder.
Johnson wants the public to look him over and judge for itself. "I am sending out a general invitation to newspaper men to attend a private exhibition here next Saturday night at the local boxing club, where I am going on for two three weeks," the newspaper men say. I am a "has been" I will abide by their decisions."
JOE GANS HOTEL FINALLY CLOSED
Place Once A Mecca For Sports Has Blinds Shut Now
As one passes the Goldfield Hotel at Lexington and Colvin streets these days, memories of the heyday of Joe Gans pass through his mind. The place has been closed since shortly after the sudden death of Charles H. ("Boody") Anderson, its last proprietor.
Out of a generous share of his winsmen when he bested Battling Nelson at Goldfield, Nev., Gans built the place. It soon became known all over the country and attracted visitors of both races from everywhere. Gans was one of the most popular fighters that ever lived and he made money there.
It is said that the lightweight champion was always in debt until he cut loose from his first manager. His hotel was placarded with cartoons by Edgren, a sports writer on a daily newspaper, and one depicts him sitting at a lunchroom counter spending his last thin dime the night before Goldfield fight. Edgren paid a tribute to Gans in a dighter in an afternoon paper one day last week after Gans' death his widow ran the place. Then it passed into other hands. The advent of prohibition helped to put a big crimp in business at the famous hostelry.
5000 USE "Y"
POOL IN 50 DAYS
The Y. M. C. A. swimming pool was open during the summer as a community pool. This was in the nature of an experiment. Classes were organized that would attract every one. There were hours for men, women, boys, and for mixed bathing. To all members the use of the pool was free. To non-members a small fee was charged to help defy the running expenses. Special attention and instructions were given to beginners who found an interested and patent teacher on the job every day. Mr. C. L. Pinderhughes had charge of the pool and under his care the attendance of the pool and the progress made by the beginners as well as the development of the swimmers were satisfied. Seventy of persons learned to swim while many others learned new strokes, how to dive and correct defects in the strokes already learned. Some of the more advanced received some instructions in life saving. Many of the boys and some of the men and women won the beginners and swimmers badges by success-
fully passing the required tests.
The success of the pool may test-
ly be given by the following: 4,531
persons took advantage of the opportu-
nity to use, the pool during
the 55 days that it was open. At
lease 2,000 parents and interested
friends visited the pool to see the
in work there who would not other-
bs have visited the building.
Viewing the situation in this light
in it would seem worth but
but essential that the "Y"
Community Swimming be made
in a permanent affair.
The work will close on Friday
night when there will be an exhib-
tion of strokes and several amus-
ing and interesting. The pub-
lic
MT. WINANS WINS
EN, Why Be Sick?
Why Suffer Delay and Grow Worse?
Enjoy Life—Health—Happiness
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A Safe, Scientific Tr
Weak, Diseased, D
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ARE NATURES
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Don't Wait—Don't Sue
SPECIAL MEDICAL
A thorough examination of the patient a man for treatment. A careful exam only way a perfect diagnosis can be made much pleased with the care and ease of the cal Blood Pressure System the consideration of all symptoms and bodily success to the fact I made proper diagnosis and this experience is an assurance of promise of your ailment.
A Sure and Safe Method
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CIRCUITIONS—ECZEMA, ACNE, PIMPLES,
ARE NATURE'S WARNINGS
can often take chances with a broken-out skin. You
can with which you are troubled merely a temporary and a minor signal of deep-pressed blood dissection. Then, too, you can come to me and take advantage of my free diagnosis.
Wait—Don't Suffer—Come in to the
SPECIAL MEDICAL EXAMINATION
high examination of the patient is the most important part of treatment. A careful examination by an expert spec
perfect diagnosis can be made. Patients calling at me with the care and ease of the examination, which includes a physical examination, chemical analysis and all of all symptoms and bodily effects to the ailment. In fact I made proper diagnosis, and this ability is due toience is an assurance of prompt and perfect results in treatment.
Safe and Safe Method for a Reasonable
Best Office For Men in Baltimore
satisfactory services can be obtained at my office. Specially, Practice limited to men. Nothing to embarrass
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SKIN EQUIPTIONS—ECZEMA, ACNE, PIMPLES, ETC.—
ARE NATURE'S WARNINGS
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SPECIAL MEDICAL EXAMINATION
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 of the examination, which includes Mechanical Blood Pressure Test, Physical Diagnosis, Chemical Analysis and a complete consideration 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 the success is an assurance of prompt and perfect results in the treatment for an ailment.
A Sure and Safe Method for a Reasonable Fee
Finest Office For Men in Baltimore
The most satisfactory services can be obtained at my office. Special treatment may be provided, particularly for children. I will provide individual training. Experiences, system and schedule methods.
IF MEN ONLY KNEW
- Of My Successful Methods and Treatments
- Of the Great Many Patients I Restore to
- My Practice
- My Short Time My Payment
- Slick, weak, ailing and discouraged moment.
I have been telling them these
- things and I have come and get well. I have had thousands
- now treating many patients daily, giving
- offices are well equipped and my expen
Successful Methods and Treatments—
For many Patients I Restore to Health—
For many Patients I Pay the Payment—
For many Patients I Take Time My Patients—
For many Patients I Take Treatment—
For many Patients and discouraged men would come to my office to be told men those things for many years, and not just for one day, but for all of it well. I have had thousands of patients under my care many patients daily, giving them every care and stable equipment and my experience is at your service.
- Of My Successful Methods and Treatments -
- Of the Great Many Patients I Resist to Health -
- Of My Respectful Things and Amendments -
- Of the Time I My Patients Have to Take Treatment -
- Sick, waking, illing and discharged men would come to my office beging treatment. I have been telling men these reasons for many years, but still there are thousands of victims who, for various reasons, have not but good sense to come and visit me. I have been giving them every care and attention, and I have given many patients 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 patients living two or three miles away, as well as sufficient, and your health is worth that much. Your treatment will be attempted except after a thorough examination at my office.
CROWDED OFFICES
Eat Everything Private—Having Many Pipe Floors of the Building. Private Entrance—do not Care to Meet. So any Man can Can there are no Other Office in the Building
MY SUCCESS AS A SPECIALIST DIAGNOSIS OF YOUR OUT WHAT
MY EXAMINATION IS TO BE DONE DON'T LET MONEY MATTERS KEEP YOU TO BE PAID AS ABLE
Consultation and Advice
Office hours daily 9 a. m.-8 p. m. Holi
DR. GEO. H.
COUNCIL OF PHYSICIAN
612 North Howard S.
(Near W. Mon
No Cases Accept
Private-Having Many Private Rooms, Occupying
Building. Private Entrance-No Danger Running Into
Meet. So any Man can Come and Go with the Uftus,
Other Offices in the Building.
BESS AS A SPECIALIST IS DUE FIRST TO O
DIAGNOSIS OF YOUR TROUBLE - I FINISH
YOUR HOME. YOU SHOULD HAVE YOUR
EXAMINATION IS SEARCHING, SENTENCING AND ACCO
MONEY MATTERS KEEP YOU AWAY. CHARGES TO
BE PAID AS ABLE. IS THAT FAIR?
Cultivation and Advice Is Free. Call T
daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Holidays and Sundays. 10 a.m.
DR. GEO. H. WILSON
COUNCIL OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
2 North Howard St., Baltimore, Md.
(Near W. Monument St.)
Yet Everything Private—Having Many Private Rooms, Occupying the Entire &
the Flooring 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 Uftmost Secrecy, as
there are no Other Offices 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 St.)
No Cases Accepted by Mall.
If Your Dentist Hurts You--Try Dr. Varden
TEETH Without Plates
Examination Free
Plates, $5 up. Fillings, 50c up
Crowns, $5 up
Bridge Work, $5 a tooth up
Extractions, 50c up
Work Guaranteed
Open All Day Sunday
Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
DR. VARDEN
SURGEON DENTIST
Eutaw and Fayette Sts.
Phone Calvert
1063
FREE Call One Time Only
Tooth Extraction and Fayette Sts.
Tooth Extraction and Fayette Sts.
With 3,000 fans looking on, the Pennsylvania downed the Piedmont Tigers, 6 to 4. The feature of the game was a home run by Gross.
Why Be Sick?
How and Grow Worse?
Health—Happiness
Success, No Kidney Diseases, With Plenty of Disease, Is the Wish of Every Middle-Aged Man
WHAT YOU WANT
You at All Unless
I Can Alleviate You
Don't Trite Away Your Time, Money or Day Too Long and Get So Bad Nothing
Me at Once and Get My Opinion
A Man-to-Man Talk
Serums and Vaccines
different person who lacks attention, confid- encomplish important things, can, without and doubt his ill-power and endurance.
KEEP YOUR BLOOD PURE AND YOUR NERVES STRONG AND YOU CAN DEFY DISEASE
Do You Suffer From Pain In Stomach?
Weak Nerves, Lame Back, Forgotfulness, Palpitation of Heart, Weak Lungs, Dull, Heavy Feeling, Headache, Dizziness, Dimness of Vision, Weakness of Limbs, Staggering Hands, Trembling, Pains, Tangles, Enlarged Glands, Sugar or Albumen in your urine. These and many others are often the first warning of one losing his health and vigor. If suffering from any of these, GO TO A SPECIALIST WHO TRAITS MEN ONLY AT ONCE, when only a little proper treatment would quickly relieve you and secretly keep you from undergoing a long, tedious, expensive course of medication, and perhaps become incurable. For any charges, they are reasonable, and payments can be arranged to suit the patient's convenience. Therefore, if you need my aid do not delay, but come to me and talk matters over.
Blood Diseases - Scientifically Treated, Here You Get THE RIGHT TREATMENT
Treatment for Every Discouraged Man and Blood Overcome By Medic Methods
AMA, ACNE, PIMPLES, ETC.—WE WARNINGS with a broken-out skin. You may consider burdened merely a temporary amnesia, but blood diseases. Then, too, your family infection diagnoseable and repulsive. Don't advantage of my free diagnosis.
Buffer—Come in Today
REAL EXAMINATION
client is the most important part of accept-examination by an expert specialist is the made. Patients calling at my office are of the examination, which includes Machtman-gnosis, Chemical burns and complete suffocation to the aliment. I attribute my rosis, and this ability is due to experience, prompt and perfect results in the treatment
Good for a Reasonable Fee
Men in Baltimore
be obtained at my office. Special treatment of to men. Nothing to embarrass you. Induktion and scientific methods are offered you.
treatments—
to health
to安排
to Take treatment—
women would come to my office begging treat-
things for them but still there are 10
sounds of patients under my care, and I am
taking them every care and attention, as my
officine is at your service.
By Private Rooms, Occupying the Extra &
Science- No Danger Running Into Someone You
Come and Go with the Uftmost Secrecy, as
riding.
IST IS DUE FIRST TO CORRECT
OUR TROUBLE - I FIND
WILL YOU SEE ME?
WING, SCIENTIFIC AND ACCURACY.
IF YOU AWAY, CHARGES REASONABLE
BLE, IS THAT FAIR?
Voice Is Free. Call Today
Holidays and Sundays. 10 a. m. 3 p. m.
H. WILSON
HOUSANS AND SURGEONS
d St., Baltimore, Md.
Monument St.)
"The Shadow"
Young Murraya falls in love with Hertha and after ardent wooing gets his First kiss.
**MARGARET** When his father appeals to him to mix the blonde of the races, he breaks off relationships, but seeks to renew them when a letter comes announcing Hertford's real percentage and a request of $2,000 from her white grandfather.
PAGE TWELVE
T
Rath, r than suffer the Judge and Mrs. George Covlie, w mother, Nineteen years later L. The death of the fosterest girl teaches the public scho young son just out of college an Young Merryvale talks s When his father apnea letter comes announcing Hert
1930
Hertha Refuses To See Her Former Lover
CHAPTER NINE
Hertha had a troubled sleep her first night with the weary rains. Next morning, before breakfast, there came a knock at the door. Hertha rose slowly, and without opening, called, "Who is it?"
"Jesus, me, Hertha."
She opened, to find the cook, Pomona, outside.
"Some one won't ter speak wid you, Miss Hardin."
"Who?" Heffler asked.
Pomona rolled her eyes and grinned. Her sales shook as though with repressed laughter. I can guess, honey, an' he don't gib his name.
"I won't see any one!" Hertha said angrily.
"You're noigly hard on folks now your white." Pomona did not go away but continued to stand in the door grimming at the girl who had recently been a servant like herself. "Ain't ye gawter to do muthin' her baby." Seems beafter all did laugh an' kissin' in orange, grobe—
"Come in!" Hertha drew the woman into the room and shut the door behind them. Her face was drawn with fear. "Do you woo, chille," the black woman said. Kindly.
"I won't see on yer, but it's Mr. Lace's friend" an' Iain gawnt ter see him put about, not for no white-faced heat.
Hertha's eyes were very bright as she looked the big woman in the face. "Toomong," she said, "you must help me. Go down to him and ask him as a gentleman not to try to see me along. I gaze away in three days, it is clear for him that I am sick. Go down to her, Domena, and bring his answer back to me."
She spoke with such competence that the colored woman was impressed, and nottert. "I'll think about it" turned to go.
Hertha to her and chatted her area. "Do it for me," she whispered.
In a few minutes, the woman came close. "He's gone," she said. "We're down to deal with her any way, yer he won't trouble yer again." The one closed the door with much entty.
The air the open window came a giant rustle of the wind among the lilocks. Hertha stood in the middle of the roofta, her head drooping, the windows behind her fell entirely her way, the old world was lost to her and she had closed the door upon the new.
Going to the window the looked beyond the roofs and stood the road, and in the warm afternoon light saw the man she loved slowly walking away. Moving up, the room the put her hand upon the knob, her heart trembling as she turned back, a determined look on her face.
"Keckon I won't trouble him again" she echoed.
Hertha In New York
Months passed by and Herbert
in New York where her brother,
Tom, had come to attend school,
"Brother" she said to herself,
It was hard to keep it in mind that
he had entered the white world
and by all the laws, she had no
now.
But my mind didn't take her
him. Herbert, then and Tom, whom
loved most of all was right in
New York and she had not seen
her out.
We will send a gift card next
free MONDAY mornings, sell-
ing our value Articles, Shops, Tickets, etc.
WRITE FOR DETAILS.
AGENTS WANTED
YOND, NO. 26
PARIS, TERM
J. STEWARD DAVIS
Attorney and Counsellor
At Law
215-217 Courtland Street
(3rd floor front)
Office Phone: Plaza 2471
Residence: 1047 MUSTLE AVE.
Mt. Vernon 4728-W
BALTIMORE, MD.
HOME HOURS: 7 to 9 P. M.
PHONES:
Residence: MAIDEN 7744-W
Office: St. Paul 4488
ROY S. BOND
LAWYER
215 ST. PAUL PLACE
Formerly Courtland St.
Rooms 391-394, Third Floor
(By MARY WHITE OVINGTON, Copyright; Reprint Prohibited)
THIS LEADS YOU INTO THE STORY
She disguise of having their daughter stand before the world as the e, agree to give it away to a colored family as their own. The loss grown to young womanhood is a member of a colored family named her makes it necessary for Mrs. Williams to e cn her living by was in the il the town, and Hertha was hired out to the white family of love with Hertha and after ardent wooing gets his first kiss.
She bimix to mix the blonde of the races, he breaks off relationship in real percentage and a bequest of $2,000 from her white grandfather.
She looked around herself now | "No!" so I Hertha, "I don't agree." She was close to tears, the boarders in the Pickens house, who, like herself, were tired after a week of strenuous work and a little appetite of the Sunshine before them, she showed the lessons in language, but her heart was to wait, to go on, and she responded to Dick for the first sigh that she was next to the worst in the class of thirty-two. What in the discussion she哭ed out, "What do you know about it? You're nothing but a cheap enlightened the wood. Miss Wood, Georgia cracker!" and with this social worker, helped her, while retorted rose from the table and hurried to her room.
"Dick, how could you?" Mrs. Pickens asked when the two were left alone together. "I didn't begin it," he said again.
"No, but you certainly went on with it. How can you expect a girl like Hertha to like you when you talk so coercily and say such terrible things?" She was right, anyway. I'm a southerner and I don't believe you a sweeping statement as that.
"Well, I do," said Dick emphatically, back at the dispute again. "You not a bigger better haver. He has got a better chief and getting up, began to pace the room. That stiff old man with her darned talk makes me want to kill somebody."
He stopped in front of Mrs. Pickens and took up the subject again. "Haven't I known the nuggets?" They worked my father's land, when they didn't leaf and get drunk, "纯男人才." Every father, I know men. And I see mother's child with a different gin, the play-footed, stinking devils."
Mrs. Pickens looked at him, surprised at the intensity of his feet. She shrieked like the black dog she all her was in a matter of course, accepting their tails and short-cramps, never questioning their inferiority, but also never questioning their good qualities and their value in the world in which he was reared.
"I think you ought not to talk that way about any human being," she said gently, "and on Sunday, too."
"They aren't human," Dick chowed, and then added salty, "unway not more than half human."
"You don't believe," Mrs. Pickens spoke a little hesitatingly, "you don't think, Dick, that they're our brothers in Christ?"
"No," he veered in answer, "they're no brothers of name, the dirty, dis-tipped, sphy-food-fed backs. What are you giving me? Wam it up, you and your perky arm to my sister? Oh, come" said Mrs. Pickens, with a little laugh, "I'm a southerner, you know. You don't have to talk that stuff to me."
"Well, I can't a southerner? No, I'm notothing but a cheap Georgia cracker, that's what I am. But I ain't a nigger lower, anyway. Pretty way to talk to a Feller, and in now?" he said, facing Mrs. Pickens, the anger dying in his eyes. It was very minked; I don't want to argue. Then she added back her arm at him, so she thinks that way about him, why don't you give her me?
"Oh, don't say that!" The lady's whole appearance yelled, his mouth softened, the tears started to his eyes. He gripped the table.
MADAM
EMMA PERRY WALLACE
Poro Beauty Parlor
AGENT FOR TOKO
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We specialize on short and gubb-
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MADISON 55433
MADAM IDA B. JEFFER
EVANGELIST 10th EPR
CHURCH, NO
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Every man and woman ought to see this wonderful lady, for she can tell you many things that will put you to wondering. Madamo Jefferson can bring tangled brains to the light of painful
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MME. IDA
BOX
She looked around herself now at the boarders in the Pickens Boarding House, who, like herself were tired after a week of strenuous work and with little appetite for the Sunday dinner before them. Tomorrow the lessons in stenography would go on, and she recalled with sigh that she was next to the lowest in the class of thirty-two. Mrs. Pickens was doing her best to enlist the meal. Miss Wood, the social worker, helped her, while Dick Brown, a banky Southerner, who had made violent love to Hertha from the first time he saw her until now, followed Hertha's slightest movement like her devoted slave. It was Mrs. Wood who began it. "You are from the South, I think, Mrs. Auguste," she said, addressing Hertha. "You" answered Hertha.
"I am aware of that fact," Ms. Wood went on in anything but a casual tone, but I wished to ask Ms. Ogilvy's opinion on a certain question. I was reading in a magazine today," she looked across at the floor, smoring the young man at the table's head, "in an article by a contemporary physician, a man I knew, who was writing an article. In writing of the Nexcess, he said that he was confident there, was not a pure colored woman, in the country where the age of sixteen."
Miss. Dickens choked over her book and a butter. She had not been brought up to discuss sociological questions and she deeply disappeared of the way Miss Wood frequently abused them, especially when she had been treated to a shocking lack of reformation, but this was the most time they had been drawn into the cruel evil. Looking at Harte, she expected to see her with dreaming head mournuring a couple mourning. But she was mistaken. The southern girl's face was on her face with anger, not shame. "It's not true," she said. "And I say it is true" eroded Dickens, his face down on the table, and she didn't know what he was writing about. It's damned true, every word of it.
He gulped at he realized he had been guilty of swearing, but Miss Wood, who was in control of the conversation, paid no attention to
him. I am interested in what you say, she went on to Herria. "For it agrees with my own impression. I have not met many colored people in my work, but I have had a few cases among them, and while I have seen degradation it has not seemed to me any greater than that among the whites of the same class. Such a skewing statement as this is impugn. "It's wicked. said Herria, addressing Miss Rosso. Despite every effort at control, I found her chin
"You were fked." Dick cried excitedly. "That doctor knew what he was talking about. A bigger which is always rotten. Why, every southern man knows it." "Iubod?" Miss Wood looked at him for the first time. "Dick!" said Mrs. Pickens, in real consolation at the turn the conversation was taking. "You should not talk like that. You own us an apology." "I didn't start the subject." "That's quite true," his handbady replied, and well drop it. Dick was still defiant. "I'm sorry I awoke," he said, speaking more quietly, "but it's a swearing subject. And I won't be picked up as meaning what I didn't intend. A man needn't be gotten to know what a woman's like. And the pigger women are all the same. They don't understand what it means to
he purse. And I tell you, the man
who works. And good reason, too.
It must safe for them to go out
alone at night. Some photos
aunt barely safe day or night.
If we don't bring up a black back
every now and then on an example,
and never on a day," they're a bad lot, the whole crew of them,
and they're getting more blasted
impetiment every day."
He brought his first down again
in its narrow ugly line, his eyes
and faced them all, his mouth set
hard as stool.
Miss Wood smiles over at Hertha,
who glad you don't agree," she said.
She was genuinely interested in
the subject, and she also rejoined
in showing Richard Brown at a
disadvantage. It was her greatest
hope that he would not win so
attractive a girl as Hertha for his wife.
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and looked at his woman friend as though she had struck him a blow. "I couldn't stand that. I love her so."
"But you know, Dick," there was a teasing smile on Mrs. Dickens face, "an attractive girl like Herbal, an attractive girl like of hearts, she can't marry all of them."
"There isn't anybody else; you can see for yourself there isn't anybody else. I've got to have her. I'll go to the devil if I don't!"
He was so charged, so shaken with feeling, that Mrs. Pickens took the hand that hung by his side and patted it. And then to her amazement and her happiness, for it was good to mother this long-legged piece of masculinity, she found the boy kneeling by her side, his head buried on her shoulder. "I supposes," he said, looking up after a minute and blinking, "she had an old black mummy that took care of her and loved her and that she loved. Perhaps" contemptu-
She played with bigger babies when they were cute and small. Nigger babies can be awful ones.
(Continued next week)
WIDOWER, 62,
WEDS WIDOW, 42
Book, Evans, widow, and 62 Margaret Johnson, widow, and 42 were married last week. Mr. Evans is a Washingtonian and Mrs. Evans is a farmer Baltimorean. Michael Mrs. Evans, who have been spending their honeymoon at 554 Redwood street, have returned to their home in Washington.
How Old Are You
By Your Hair?
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Use MASKIN Skin Whitener and have a Bright and Lovely Complexion 25c.
FFERSON, A WIDOW LADY
EPISCOPAL DIST. A. M. E.
I, NORTH TEXAS
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[Image of a person lying on a bed with a crown on their head.]
$2.0J) and if you take treatment, this
A. B. JEFFERSON
LONGVIEW
Children
A SHORT STORY
ANNUAL E
DR. CHAS. H. FO
ALL READY
PALACE STEAMER LOUIS
Wednesday and Thursday,
Boat leaves Pic
GOOD MUSIC
REFRES
Round Trip
..BATO
By RENE
N. V. Herald: "Batoma is a
book is uniquitively the greatest
ment of his care so far.
London Daily News: "When a
full bloomed Negro, gains the
Prize, when it appears with a b
are being sold daily; when it is
pollination in the Chamber and of
0.140 0.140 0.140
COCOA
TAR KAIR
& SCALP
TREAT-
Children's Column
**PICNIC BASKETS**
"Horace! Stop that! Don't you dare take another sandwich. Mother, make him stop. There won't be anything left for our picnic supper."
Horace grabbed another handful of cakes and rushed out into the back yard where they were feet deep in his sister's hunch so angry with their things to eat? They would never give him anything.
Immediately a scheme of revenge finished in his mind. He would touch those women a lesson.
Horace knew that when the girls went out to Warren's grave they usedly left their taskets behind a certain pile of rocks muff it was to eat to. He would hide in the trees, and—well the girls would find out.
It was a good half hour's walk in the hot son of late afternoon. But Horace in a cool spot noticed the girls were grabbing out on the ground to wait. It was comfortable there. He felt drowsy. He would doze a few minutes. The girls would make noise enough to the neighborhood, as soon as they came in
Next thing Horace knew, he felt strangely chilly. He woke with a start, and he began to cry. He healed around obesity. No one was in sight. Down the hill toward the road he ran, there, at the bottom of the hill, he remained at the picnic supper, but not alone. Horace looked at his watch. He had already missed his dinner at home, but he might still get something to satisfy this hunger if he hurried. He started running just around a bend in the road a quarter mile farther on he ran into the bunch "Oh, here's Horace!" exclaimed pretty Miss Nelson, one of his sister's friends. "You'll help us carry some of these empty baskets, won't you, Horace?" That's a nice beak. And an Horace, loaded with empty baskets, passed out of sight. Miss Nelson remarked to his sister, "I must be due to things. Horace is such a sweet little boy."
Roberta S. and Midford P. were very very homeschool Sunday. I wonder which of the young ladies were looking for Loisie S. and her homeschool because Mary D. will soon be home. Mare K. did you go to the movies alone on the other night? I know you told thidia A. all about R. Better "Watch your step." Mare.
A number of our Junior and Senior High girls like knitted sweater body suits with color and colors. Every size is demonstrated, long turt, or small. The following girls have made one Umbrella L. Mare K. Mare G. Karen M. Stuine P. Carn K and John W. Waltry. Alumina J. is always smiling. Wonderful P. where is "Lolly Lumphies?" William H. Osborne T. and George T. you are to small to associate with such big girls. Waltill you grow a little
PALACE STEAMER LOUISE to CAMBRIDGE, MD Wednesday and Thursday, SEPTEMBER 6th and 7th
THE WHOLE WORLD IS READING IT
The Novel By A Negro Author
Crowned with the Prix Goncourt
..BATOUALA..
By RENE MARAN
N. Y. Herald: "Katonau is a great masterpiece. R. Maran's book is unquestionably the greatest intellectual or artistic achievement of his race so far.
London daily News: "When a novel of Negro Life, written by a full blooded Negro, gains the distinction of the Gonecourt Prize; when it appears with a label indicating that 8,000 copies are being sold daily; when it is made the subject of an interpolation in the Chaucer and of heavy relukes in the 'Temps'—then it may reasonably be assumed that the book is something out of the ordinary. And so it is."
Send name and address and a copy will be forwarded C. O. D.
MINOR & PATTERSON, DISTRIBUTORS
922 West 435th Street, New York City, N. X.
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One ticket to a moving picture theater will be issued, steding in the door manner to the puzzle.
All letter must reach this office Monday before noon. Names of the winners will be published the following Thursday. Letters reaching the office later than Monday will be published the following Tuesday. Individual names plausible, giving name, age, address, name of school you attend and your class.
All letters sent to the Editor must be signed with name and address of the sender, not for publication, but as an evidence of the work. All letters must be written on outside of the paper, ink.
PUZZLE FOR THIS WEEK
The Nrecht Collinar parademed slap top noco kobe to Ngorl theraphils. "Ip rom Salvery" yh Bkeroo T. Wingshamst, no heitil to okos mundecedure of adergy limey Aenent entstut to othl aceret. NOTE: Aenge the shore to make complete sense.
0
ANSWERS TO LAST WEEKS PUZZLE
This acorn may some day burst forth, and for old nature play a part. Though 's insenuse, the acorn has a spreading oak wrapped in its heart.
A Children's Fancy Dress Porch Party was given by Misses Muriel E. Watkins and Harriett Jones at the residence of Ava between the hours of 2 and 7. Games, dancing and refreshments were the features of entertainment carried out on a beautifully decorated porch. Those present were Mildred Smith from Campbell, Joseph Bayspore, Minnaer and Milford Lutch, Regina Francis, Thelma Smith, Mary Jolly, Louise Rigle, Ophelia Donaway, William Smith, Winn H. Lee, Alice Snook, Chase, William Smith, Winn H. Lee, Alice Snook, Chase, Sue Sorrell, Lillie Mue Chuse, and Sarah Johnson.
Woodmen Meet
A get-together meeting of the officers of city and county camps of the American Woodmen was held at the local headquarters, Dolphin and McCulloh streets, Wednesday evening of last week. H. L. Billups, Vice Supreme Commander of the Order, told of his recent 10,000 trip through the South, visiting camps and observing general conditions. Unity and activity was urged. State Supervisor C. W. Glorence presided. A collation followed.
Sold for 35 years. Pamphlet on the
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EXCURSION
WLER, Chairman
LET'S GO!
ELE to CAMBRIDGE, MD
SEPTEMBER 6th and 7th
nr 16, 8 A. M.
SHIMMENTS
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DAMONG
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UALA.
E. MARAN
great masterpiece. R. Maran's
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the distinction of the Goncourt
label indicating that 8,000 copies
made the subject of an inter-
library redux in the "Temps"
named that the book is something
it is."
$4.75
WANTED
copy will be forwarded C. O. D.
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WON BICYCLE PICTURE BARRED
Little Girl's Mother Told That Baltimore American Does Not Publish Colored People's Pictures
"My little girl won a bicycle and there is her picture. I want you to put it in the AFROAMERICAN." Mrs. Henry Harris, 322 N. Pine street, said to a reporter, mentioning her daughter's success in a subscription contest being conducted by the daily American, white. The reporter told her how he could be thanked with her receipt of the daily paper in question should run her daughter's picture, especially since it is running those of each white winners. He further explained that the daily
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PETER
FRIDAY, SE
newsreapers of Baldur run a cup of a colorless less it was of some sortous crime. White that is Baldur happens now and in Southern oak swims a colored person running the D. R. Meton Wagner weeks the opening day of the National League there. Northern white news quently contain photo colored people.
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VAUDEVILLE
FTEEN STATE AIRS FORM OWN RGANIZATION
L. Pacy Is Vice President For Virginia And Maryland
OFFICES IN NORFOLK
Executive Headquarters
There: Plans For Membership Drive
Often of the more than fifty colored fair associations represented as charter members in the newly organized National Association of Colored Fairs came into being during the Norfolk, Va. week of Aug. 15, Negro Business League John H. Love, of the Raleigh, N. State Fair, the first fair official voice to the need for concert effort for the improvement Negro Fairs is the President, J. Janders, president of the Lexington, Ky.) Fair, our oldest collar fair is one of the vice president. The secretary-treasurer,urt Gross, manager of the Norfolk Fair, will maintain administration offices for the association 210. Attues Theatre Blvd., Church street, Norfolk, Va. We first division meeting will be during the week of the Norfolk Colored Fair, Sept. 13-18 in the city. Associations from Virginia and Maryland arise this week, with Dr. A. Amye of Norfolk as vice-president in charge of the district.
New divisions will arrange for us at an early date. The body convening again the part of January. At that committee on constitution by Wm. Kemp, vice-president the Natfolk Fair and Messas. Cross, Victor and Just for our people. National Farmers' Association have both granted consociation and the Business one approval and promise active cooperation with the body that is determined to provide cleaner and better fairs for our people. There is little doubt that as soon as the policy and plans of the body become known that all of the Fair associations of the race will become affiliated with this body; and avail themselves of the concerted effort to provide better environment; and to secure a greater array of commercial exhibits.
The following is the complete roster of officers elected: J. H. Love, president, U.S. Congress, secretary-treasurer; Dr. A. Page, vice-president, Eastern Virginia, Maryland; J. H. Edmondson, vice-president, North Carolina; Henry Hartman, president, Western Virginia Division; J. W. Westberry, vice-president, South Carolina Division; P. C. Parks, vice-president, Alabama-Ten, Division; J. G. Sunn, vice-president, Kentucky Division.
Bard Directors: J. H. Love, Raleigh, N. J., Dr. A. J. Frey, Norfolk, V. V., H. M. Edmondson, Winston-Salem, Henry Hartman,ville, Md., R. W. Westbury, Sutter, D. P., C. Parks, Huntsville, Ala., J. G. Sunn, Lexington, Ky., E. I., H. Rance, St. Paul, V. V., Albany, I., Halsey, Tuskegee, (Maron Co., Ala., fair) Dr. J. H. Love, Columbia, S. C., George D. Carey, Chester, V. V., James J., Johnson, Sill, MD., E. T. Atwell, Philadelphia, Pa., J. H. Love, Onacock, Va.,
Special Representatives—J. A. Jackson, Billboard New York, N. Y.; Advisory Board of Prof. B. F. Hubbert, Tuskegee, N. Y.; L. Jackson (Defender), Chicago, IL; Dr. Brascher, A. N. P., Chicago, Ill.
Bassett and Lilian are in the Fox houses in New York and vicinity.
COLORED FAIRS FORM INDEPENDENT ORGANIZATION
Another Hustler
Leroy Mitchell, who assists his father, Thomas Mitchell, in disposing of nearly a thousand AFRO5 each week.
AL. G. BARNES CIRCUS
By J. A. Jackson
Harrison R. Hall writes the following interesting letter concern in the Annex Band with the M. G. Earnes Circus.
"We are in the State of Pennsylvania with the only show of its kind in America, a dead wild animal circus, and the patrons go away talking about it. It is a clean cut show from ticket wagon to pad room with nothing to hear the feelings of impulse. It is a No. 1 show with excellent accommodations for everyone.
Arthur Wright has the side band of 14 pieces and two lady singers—Miss Minnie Watts and Mrs. Mabel Williams.
The musicians are besides Director Wright, Walter Lee, Herbert Marshall, Arthur Jarrett, Walter Mays, Lois Feed, D. W. McBannon, E. F. Fields, S. Wiggs, Howard Duffy, J. Frank Terry, H. R. Hall, Harry Johnson and J. N. Anderson.
Six Chicks Of Araby
The outstanding sensation of the month is the "Six Chicks of Arabia" Matt Houssley's new act, a mixture of music, dancing and aerobics that was the big name in the lights at the Greenpoint Cup Theatre in at the Greenpoint Theatre in Brooklyn recently and has a Keith route as a headline act. It is an all-male act with special security and wardrobe. Matt says the production cost him $3,500. It looks to Wm. Euler, Aaron Thompson, Frank Robinson, Tansha Hammed, Engelhard Crummel and Matt Houssley constitute the personnel. Johns McGowan, of the Frank Evans office, is handling the bookings.
Tasley Fair Ends
Tasley Va. August 21 The Tasley Colored Fair ended Thursday of this week following a fine attendance from the people of Acoma and Northampton counties. Attractive exhibits of livestock and farm products were displayed and horse racing attracted many. J. L. Whirton is president of the fair association and M. J. Hall, secretary.
Louis Azarsky, long associated with the "Smart Set" has become the personal representative of Moss and Frye in the new "Dumb Luck" show.
"Love Is Like A Bubble," the Arrow Music Publishing Company's big number contracted to produce by the Infants' Theater Piano Company of Midwinter.
Harrisburg band will furnish the music for the Mississippi horse show (Virginia September 4 and 5. This is the 17th annual show of President J. H. White's association. Arthur Beverly is the senior
"FOLLOW ME" IS NEW SHOW
New Musical Comedy Opens In Chicago And Will Come East
"Follow Mr.", a musical comedy in two acts and 18 scenes, presented by L. M. Weingarden at the Grand Theatre in Chicago, August 14th, opened to capacity business. The scenery was beautiful and the costumes attractive; while the chorus was as fast as any ever seen in Chicago.
Cliff Ross, an unusually intelligent comedian, who has heretofore persistently declined to consider metropolitan offers, wrote the book with the assistance ofilly juggers, an actor of just the opposite mind. He has appeared in almost every worthwhile thing in Chicago and New York. Jerry Milk staged the production.
While the show was mansing and entertaining, the story was very light indeed and dwindled out of the picture before the last scene, 22 song numbers were programmed, and all were well rendered.
The cast was well selected, almost every member having a name value. Here are the principals: Billy Gifford and Clifford Ross are the stars, other principals are: Earnest W. Wilman, Susie Sutton, Alice Gorgas, Etha Hicks, The Legend Sisters, Ioa Young, Madame Krugheg, M. Phraselmet, Walter Krugheg, M. Phraselmet, Goyne, Zaranda La Rue, Loupard Barton, Hoss Crawford, Robert Theronton, Fred, Vaughn, and a chorus of twenty-six. The show is coming Era.
Creamer Show Closes
The Crimer and Layton show closed Aug. 26; and headed for Chicago under direction of the Frizee office. It is understood that the Frizee office will then added chorus girls and wives from the Fifth Avenue.
pieces from the Private Registration Hand, a late Keith office feature, are to be consolidated and the resulting production of 75 people presented at the Auditorium Theatre in the Windy City.
$120,000 HI. SCHOOL FOR LYNCHBURG
Lynchburg, Va., is building a $129,000 high school for its 3,000 colored people, according to W. F. DeBardieben, principal of the school.
Mr. and Mrs. DeBardieben were here this week, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George V. Loutier, 1141 Bend Hill avenue, this week.
The high school in Lynchburg is offering courses in Virginia provides by law for secondary schools with four-year courses. There are nine assistant teachers. The new building will contain twelve classrooms, a gymnasium, an assembly hall and room for a junior high. The main difference between white and colored schools in Lynchburg is that colored teachers are paid less than whites.
Mr. DeBardieben will be the teacher of the best Y. M. C. A., delivered an address on "Success" (there Sunday afternoon).
Louis and Shawn engaged at the funeral bar Theater. Philadelphia the week of Aug. 14, were held over or another week. The funeral bar Theater he made be a substantial bit with the band.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
FORM IND
National
Amusement
News
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
WITH-
J.A. JACKSON
Of
The
Billboard
The Formost Weekly Theatrical Dice
and Review of the Show World.
All Rights Reserved.
HERE AND THERE
The writer wishes to thank the management of the Lincoln Theater, Washington, le Altpkrs, Norfolk, the officers of the orfalks, and the Negro Press together with the Shrimers and the Negro Business League, for the many courtesy accorded him at their different lands.
The writer further acknowledges with regret the inability to attend invitations to the initial affair of the La Rohme Society on Aug. 21, in Atlantic City; and in Annual Erolic of the Soup Rey Minsted on Aug. 25, in Philadelphia. Simply must perform our appointed task.
James Bevlin, with the William Lykees office in the Palace Theater Bldg. N. Y., is an agent who is sincere in his efforts to place colored acts of the better calibre.
Gus Grangh's tirehesten of New York has caught on in Brazil where they are a feature at the Palme Hotel. Andrey Wickes ones of the boys has favored us with a nice letter from Rio de Janeiro.
“Improvident and Co” is the name of a trained male not Sidney Rink offers for the colored fair. He will be at Liberty at 2201 Commercial Avenue, U.S.M., after September 25.
John Carl makes the announcement that "Shuffle Along" will not be seen in London his season. Indications point to a run of at least five months in Boston.
Sarah Martin and her Jazz Fool Orchestra are commending some favorable comments and nation-wide publicity for their singer-in-jungle She is a "Blues singer if unusual north."
Alfred Wied, the Jazzy upager Jester is in the northern town of H. A. homes, Week of Aug. 21, he won in Detroit. His set is a pretty motley.
If Freddy Tucker, a troubadour originally of Grizzly Lake and last heard from with the Smith's Tribute Band will write, we have a bit of information that may interest him.
Bob Russell asks us to whisper something to him on a postal card. You let we will, Bob. Always glad to do the little thing you mention, Bob has made some impression with the way he has produced Mr. Collier's Silks Green Company, he knows how to show.
Gray and Gray were among the nets that worked a Midnight Kamel for the Actors Union in Washington, D. C., on Aug. 18.
Edhie B. Simons, Spencer Bison, Sage Moore and Allen Hunt, who made on the Caroline Funk Four are on the band's roster. They are members of that territory at the Strum, Jacksonville, they will head North.
"They are an unprecious pair, their merit being an original and billionaire brand resulting in their sibling, one of the biggest and most successful companies in daily power in San Diego, cal, says about the "Ghoum Chuvers" Jones and Crumby.
"Tune Tom's Calib" in the film played the Douglas Theater in the Hurley section of New York City Aug. first for three days and goes back to that district to the Franklin for the week of Sept. 4. Well, it is modulably the classic of our race.
Cuffed I. Mitchell, a presenter in the Michigan State person at Marquette is rapidly becoming an authority of a unified sort. He uses his spare time compiling statistics, mailing lists and business information concerning people.
The Steel City Amusement Company of Paterson, announces the resumption of construction of the Steel City Amusement Company, the house located in Pawtucket and Rose streets will be 250 feet long and will contain besides the theater, 18 offices, a tea room, barber shop, ballroom hall and beauty salon. The contraction cost will be $100,000.
James Butts, a member of the Norfolk Jazz House, Okey Record players, who was killed in his home town recently, was buried by the Elks Lodge on Aug. 15. The full bury and land turn out to perform with the members of the Page attented the services.
The Johnson Brothers and Justa broke up their canvette net on Aug. 27. Dale Johnson and Miss Anna, the daughter, and Frye show, and Charles Johnson doubling with Lewis Fountney, a well known singer.
ANY AMOUNT TO LOAN
Bring your Deed or Building Association Book and get the quickest possible service.
Office open from 10 to 5 P. M.
C. W. Weissenborn
B. E. Corner Loxington and Mount Bison
HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
YOUNG MAN!
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Do You Want to be a Farmer!
Do You Want to be a Cheerleader!
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YOUNG WOMAN
Do You Want to be a Nurse
Do You Want to be a Milliner!
Do You Want a Business Education!
Do You Want a High School Education!
Enter
Downingtown Industrial &
Agricultural School
Refitted, New Equipment, New Alms,
New Measurement, Ideal Situation,
Healthy Location
Opens Sept. 21, 1922
Courses in College Preparation, Business
Training, Agriculture, Home Econ-
nics, Blocksmithing, Automobile
Operation and Care, Building
Treeds
Write
DE J. E. M. WARING.
Principal
Downingtown, Pa.
By J. A. Jackson
DEPENDENT
After closing the brief tour of "Step On" and doing a work in connection with the business of singing at the Lincoln in Washington, Louis Schober, the business and publicity agent is again in New York at leisure.
Late Maid Rimes is the featured singer at Jacks, a cabaret on Seventh street in Washington and she is popular with the patronage.
The Page bis incarnates that might interest a few cabaret singers of the better sort. Would like to hear from an experienced entertainer with a placing personality.
"The old Maid Rimes" is the name of a once premier put out by George Bates, composer and publisher at 3320 Wabens avenue, Chicago.
Watts Brothers, Billy English, Bodd and Amnade Richardson wire or write me and Boyd, Gaines Brothers, Alle Johnson and learn something of importance to you.
The Harper and Blanks Receive at the Green Mill Garden in Chicago has been such a pronounced success that a second company has been put into rehearsal.
Mr. Taybor of Williams and Taybor, billed at the Palme, New York work of Ang. has taken sick Tuesday with throat troubles and his partner finished the week as a single.
Verna Lalva dynamic render, has taken charge of Baby Coryne Boyer the dancing in the movie of an invalid mother. The child is clever and deserves a chance to work.
Sam Davis and Walker obliged to cancel his route on the coast and return to his home in Chicago because of rheumatism.
Bell and Bell are in Huntington, Ind. doing work with Dr. Redwood Medicine Show after which they will go over the Interstate circuit.
The Chanceon T. Potter Musical Association of Bands and orchestras has gotten out a most advertiser blotter bearing an ae. of law of the jazz bands. The ae. of the association is at 105 West 123 street.
Gilpin headed a bill that went to Washington, T. for a special Sunday afternoon performance at the Lincoln Theater Aug. 20. Cress Simmons arranged the date for manager Thomas.
The Lafayette Theater offered a strong mixed bill for a works beginning Aug. 21. The colored band once held in "AT The Race Tank" an old man characterization: Lovejoy and Fairchild, a working black act of the old "Two type bands," no music, not the Mitchellland Recor Trio, a girl not in the which the musician pianist was the most clever worker; and Cook and Smith a Chinese and a barm art artist. The Musical Director was the Whitfield and Carlos Clements who the white acts that balanced an all around good bill.
Th Gonzelie White Company is with Copper's on the Columbia Wheel. The Musical Spillers are with John Bedins, the bassist, in Falluco, N. Y., Lee and Vandykie are with "Bubbles." All burlesque shows.
Assenson Commandery, a recently organized unit of the Knights Templars is composed largely of professionals, among them theatrical and musical backing agent; Thomas Chappelle of chappelle and Stinette; *Happy Holly*, of orchestral fame; Win, Vodney, the arranger; Chas, Gilpin; Earl sturtsch, Trombone edun; and that, among others, the chapelle members are top line performers.
*Princess Mysteria and the Prince did a three-day stay at the Hurlem Open House week of Aug. 14, looks a bit promising for our Mystics on the Keith time.*
Nat Cush, stage director and producer of some of the first dances in "thin, joy" the Tott and Whitney show at Rancho Lane on 5th street, as a result of the publicity given his work in the special number was the recipient of a chance to try his kind of acting, and he added to the reputation of himself* and his employees under whose brutege he has developed.
Jack Johnson will be the feature Labor Day week and the Laguette Theater. He is the feature at the Music Box, Atlantic City during August.
The Jenkins Band is in Vanderbilt. This
bunch of 12 to 18 year old orphans was the
feature of the Koppen theater bill in the
built recently.
ROBERT EDW
"The People's
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND
Reasonable
Motor or Horse-drawn equipment
Phone, WO106 5410-W
111
Magic Never Fail Wonderful
Help! Help! Want!
Must be
ROBERT EDW. WILLIAMS
share equi
tributors.
are increase
the reason
mches in
You ha
we guard
three in
Use Ma
Grower be
box of this
per box.
Mme. J.
500 per box. Mme. Jones' Never Fri
Madam Jones Co., 444 W. I.
Branch Office, 425 Four and
Drug Stores
Trou
INDI
tains
roots
ing r
soft a
(Guitarist, Composer and Arranger)
that might be
of the better
from an experi-
pleasing person
No. 4
is the name of
George Bates.
There is no chance for
Flies nor Germs
WE DELIVER TO ANY PART OF
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WM. INSLEY CUT RATE
MARKET
705 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
Phono, Vernon 5837-J
8 11 11
BERT EDW. WILLIAMS
"The People's Undertaker"
ECTOR AND PRACTICAL EMBALMER
Reasonable Prices
Town equipment. Prompt Services.
- W 1106 ASHLAND AVENUE
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You have tried others now try this, for so guarantee to grow hair three inches in three months or money refunded.
Use Madam M. d. Jones' Wonderful Hair Grower because it never fails. The price of a box of this wonderful hair preparation is 60 per box. By mail, 606.
Mmm. Jones' Never Fall Shampoo, prices 1' Never Fall Gloss, prices 356.
Dandruff, Titching Sealp, or any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a jar of EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER. The remedy contains medical properties that go to the roots of the Hair, stimulates the skin, helping nature do its work. Leaves the hair soft and silky. Perfumed with a balm of a flowers. The best known remedy for Heavy
AGENTS OUTFILE
1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple Oil,
1 Shampoo, 1 Pressing Oil,
1 Face Cream and Direction
for Selling $2.60.
See Extra for Postage
FAMOUS MUSICIANS
FAMOUS MUSICIANS
---
JUSTIN HOLLAND
Justin Holland, designated by Trotter in his "Music and Some Highly Musical People" as "Author, Arranger and Performer on the Guitar, Flute and Piano-Forte" was born on a farm in Virginia in 1819. When 14 years of age he went to Boston and thence to Chebea where he decided to take up the study of music.
Later he became acquainted with Martino Perez, a Spanish musician who was a master performer on the guitar. The beautiful guitarist which the Spanish drew from his acquaintance charmed the young Virginian that he decided to devote his study to that instrument.
He managed to arrange for instruction under guitar and other music teachers among whom were an instructor in the flute and in the arranging of music. When he began teaching he went to Oberlin College to advance himself in general education which he realized was necessary to the profession which he had chosen.
He remained at Oberlin for three years and having made fine advancement in his studies, even to the extent of collaborating on a treatise on moral reform, he left Oberlin and went to closely where having soon made known the fact that he was an adoptant performer on the guitar, he was sought by many of the best families to give instruction to their children.
He was however not satisfied with the extent of his knowledge and had to take the best system of playing was taught in the works of the French, Italian and Spanish masters of the instrument, he entered upon a course of study of these languages.
His skill finally began to spread and in time publishers all over the country were sending him compositions for arrangement for the guitar. Among the scores that he thus arranged were "Winter Evening," a collection of 15 Flowers of Melody" a collection of 23 pieces among which is the "Flower Song" from "Fear" arranged as a solo, and "Gens For The Guitar" a collection of 20 pieces. In addition to this he found time to write a book of instruction for the guitar which was thus spoken of on December 24, 1888 by a writer in THE CLEVELAND PLAIN-DEEMER: "For several months Mr. Justin Holland, who was a teacher of the guitar, time off a teacher of the guitar, a performer upon that instrument and a successful musical author,
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MOVIE REVIEWS
BY
WM. E. READY
YOU WILL NEVER HAVE
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'OLD MAN' WALSH'S
TONIC
SEWING MACHINES
At
BARGAIN PRICES
66 1-Model Singers, $30
127 3-Model Singers, $30
115 1-Model Singers, $25
Other Drophead Machines,
Slightly Used, $10 Up
Hemstitching done at low-
est prices. Expert repairing.
Supplies and accessories for
all makes machines.
White Sewing
Machine Co.
323 N. EUTAW ST.
Phone, VErion 4386-J
TO
The enough for
WALSH'S
BLOOD-P
KIDNEY
PURIFIES AND S
WHOLE BODY AN
WHOLE ARM
WEAK AND WO
WOMEN WHO HA
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WALSH'S LIVE-LONG BLOOD-PURIFYING KIDNEY REMEDY
PURIFIES AND STRENGTHENS THE
WHOLE HODY AND IS ABSOLUTED
IN THE WEAK AND WORK-OCT MEN AND
WOMEN WHO HAVE LOST ALL AM
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A REALLY
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WE HAVE MANY OTHER REMEDIES,
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WALSH'S FAMOUS
OLD HERB SHOP
910 Pennsylvania Ave.
Baltimore, Md.
HOME OF THE REAL, GENUINE, OLD-TIME, HOME-MADE ROOT AND HERB REMEDIES OF
IRON-CLA D GUARANTEE FAME OPEN MONDAYS, FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS, H I A. M., UNTIL 11 P. M.
NOTICE!
---
MRS. IDA BAILEY
Wishes to announce that she will continue
mess of her late husband, CHARLES G.
Funeral Directress and Embal-
ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION — DAY A
LIMOUSINE AND CARRIAGE TO HIRE FOR ALL O
1421 JEFFERSON STREET, Cor. SPRING ST. PH
Am the sole proprietor of this business
—and am not in partnership w
MRS. ROBERT A. ELLIO
Funeral Directress and Embal-
PHONE WOLFE 6590. IMMEDIATE SERVICE DAY
1725 Ashland Avenue Corner Mc
MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSIST
BRANCH OFFICES: 584 East Street
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A S
she will continue the busi-
ness and Embalmer
ATTENTION — DAY AND NIGHT
TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
ING ST. PHONE, WOLFE 1
this business
not in partnership with anyone
T A. ELLIOTT
ess and Embalmer
DIATE SERVICE DAY A
Corner McB
JONES, ASSI
St Street
RALS A S
A.
HO
R AND
who late Alst.
ALL OCCASION
AND NIGHT
a price that will
port Attention G.
HILL AVENUE
MADISON 637
Wishes to announce that she will continue the business of her late husband, CHARLES G. BAILEY
ALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION -- DAY AND NIGHT
LIMOUSINE AND CARRIAGE TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
1421 JEFFERSON STREET, Cor. BERING ST.
PHONE, WOLFE 11
Am the sole proprietor of this business
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Limousine and Carriages to
& P. EXON
513 LAURENS ST.
Long Distance Phone M
CLAREN
Funeral D
Some people prefer QU
suit you. My prices na
when you b
"WRIGB
1364 N. Carey Street
GEORGE H. HOWE
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND
Formally manager for the late Alce.
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASION.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Will furnish Funerals at a price that will
Polite, Courteous and Expert. Attention G.
1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE
C. & P. PHONE MADISON 637
GEORGE H. HOW
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND
(Formally manager for the late Also.
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASION
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Will furnish Funerals at a price that will
Polite, Courtous and Expert. Attention G...
1631 DRUID HIEL AVENUE
C. & P. PHONE MADISON 637
EDWARD RINGGOLD
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
Will give to all the very best and courteous service
Carriages and Limousines to hire for all occa-
sions
1463 North Carey Street, near G
PHONE MADISON 6361 (NEVER CLOSE)
JAMES N. DEAVER, JR.
Funeral Director and Embalmer
Temporary Office: 2009 McCalloh St. Phone,
R AND EMBALMER
and courteous service possi-
t to hire for all occasions
Street, near Gold
(NEVER CLOSED.
EAVER, JR,
and Embalmer
h St. Phone, MAd. 881
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
Will give to all the very best and courteous service pos
Carriages and Limousines to hire for all occasions
JAMES N. DEAVER, JR.
Funeral Director and Embalmer
Temporary Office: 2009 McCulloh St. Phone, MAd. 88
has been engaged upon a book of instruction for the guitar.
"The work was undertaken at the suggestion of Mr. J. L. Peters the widely-known music publisher of New York City who has purchased the book and will publish it. * * * * * Mr. Dressler of THE UNITED STATES MUSICAL REVIEW, published at New York University, he especially examined this new method for the guitar and must confess that it is already in its present state, the best in this country." Thomas J. Bowers—Topper-Vocalist will be the subject of our next sketch.
—W. E. E.
BOUQUET
HAIR
POMADE
PARISIAN GARDEN
BOUQUET HAIR POMADE
FOR THE HAIR
STRAIGHTENS STUBBORN HAIR
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135 N. NORTH GAY ST.
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30c a box. For sale at all barber shops, hair dressers and drug stores, or 135 N. Gay St.
GEORGE T. A;
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Pry eee eee eS ek oe Fr SR gg ae Senne aN iteas St |
EEN w / . sienna. } —__— PRD AT o
. * Hall Saus DIST CONERENCE ©} 3” NO HOODOO COLORED POPE power oe
” 2 once EST MIS aa nmvene MEGPPOSEDTON. AK BPs dN J
Laws Are Not Enforced mrisscccr ng root vin ih Sato Calo QM BBANH COUNCIL cA BOATS.
(aes
ED |
Says Whites Should Teach
Themselves Respect for
The Laws They Make
» CONFERENCE IN SESSION
Hagerstown District Gath-
ering In Session At Fred-
eriek Church
Frederick, Ma., Aug. 31—A deci
Fatlon hy Kev. Dr. 1, G3. Hie ahs
the white race should teach th
masses of their people in this 4-19.
try respect for the law of the Jond,
the outlining of a religious pro
gram for the ministers and laymer
hy Hresiding Elder Robert &. Ford
un address by Rev. James G. Mar-
Hin, of Baltimore, on "Che susiness
Side of the Ministry,” und reports
from churches throughout the div:
trict occupied the attention of the
Hagerstown District Conferencs,
whieh was held at Quinn A, M. &
Church on Wednesday and ‘Thurs:
day of this week.
‘Phe District Sunday School Cor.
vention hegins ity annual session
“Friday morning of this week, with
Distriet” Superintendent Elmer A
Henderson In charge. 1t closes with
ft mass-meeting this Sunday attes
noun.
Following the annual sermon by
Rev, G. W. Scott at the opening
session, Wednesday morning, Dy
ord spake on “Problems of they
four und Gur Fitness to Mec:
gm." making the following 7-
contgendations:
1. pliner preaching of tae
Gospel
2. AQpenter attendance at our
prayer gd clase meetings.
A greaitr.Gierest in the fas!
ness of quurterly conferences.
4. Magnifying our quurtorty
meetings.
Gi. A stronger local ministey.
8) Better handling uf chureh
ansitiarles,
7. A greater extension of mission
work.
4. The proper comet of our
Hott, ji
00 Suid ‘To the Herded tn. & 0.
Yaris Av Lrunswiek
Up car the Feattimore and Oki
yards at Brunswiek shaw S00 eal
Gred ten are amon those eM:
Dloyed ae xttiketreakers, it is said
They are quartered sind fed with-
in the yards and not allowed te Ko
Into the town of Livunswick st
night for fear the sirikers ving
there will auuack then,
To make them contented 1 dig
YoMO GAL but has heen built
within jhe sards, and there the
men nny while ‘away thoi idle
time to their heart's sgitem in
any way utes ehoxe, Sohne nights
Wiccan Gazz netisie” ind the. i
hinswiek frown core Up Ls
a Tittle with the hoxs,
closing times come the
evort the girls off the
hind (he. best they can
fier out, “Good bye.”
Implovment of kirger num-
strikebrenkers at the Rive
Props of the Baltimore and
fas inde room for some eol-
nen, including several. exit
crows used in feeding the
al YA SEE?
: 1
‘town hy Juha
tera wens
ele
os dd heen
Bien in
ind
ms
. ad
wae
pais
7 Bridgework
ers seg a
ministered.”
Fe Crt fe
aeRO
PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
Rev. CM. Tanner, of Thenexer
Church, Baliimore, in un aadvess
iv the afternoon session asserted
that many city: chirehes could win
the unreached by making it a. spe-
cial husiness 10 go after Uiem and
having the church inore attractive
than the present haunts of the fel-
low who but seldom visits 2 house
of worship.
Dr. Hill spake an “Law Enforee-
ment, Why Not?" “Je said, in
part: .
SCHvi Inws aire not. as a rule,
instituted for chose trurhfully: amd
honestly: living under the kingdom
Of grace, exerpt ies to all suel it
serves a8 a servant, while TL bes
roines i eurreetor said a tnaster.
Oh fide Lynch shakes his
shay head in” the presence of
ferleral sind State srathorivies, and
parades forth in broad daylight,
holding his hogus courts, finding
his spurious verdicts and exeenting
his Baxaras. punish invents,
“In vivie duties the pompons
white ree needs to spend a serene
él more time and money, as well
us in instructing the major portion
of their cosmopolitan peoples 16
respect the benign laws tf this
lund." :
After giving statistics concerning,
Iynching, le tnaude a plea for inter=
est inthe effort te have Congress!
puss the Dyer hill penalizing, Use
rine. He cals wxpresser the spit
ion everywhere that colored people
everywhere are growing in respect
fur the law. ‘Chen. he tool at knwek
it the wilesprend disrespert Tor
Une Valsts act,
Dr. ‘Tanner preached at nixht.|
Rev, James WR. Nelson, of Baltic)
nore. spoke an “The Advantares|
of Ministeviol Uatuns” Thursday
ind GW. Seat male suggestion!
for betwee meeting the “penton
needs of tied sand ware nin
eters, Revs. dH. Rinday, C21
freen, C. C. ianily, Joseph Gisenn. |
.W. Shewden, WT. Baker, |
H. Young, J.B. Ler, 1. He Steve
Wn Ba Mubes Jo i Barman.
P.O. Bundirk, S12, Denuunend,
fH Dawid and We Harn ae
Messrs. J. 1. Manns, Henry 1h
tarier, John S$. Gordon, Henry}
Hudson, derensinh — Maharomnet +
Williaa Brooks. Blige Lew, CL W.
james sind Juha Chilis were amon
hers taking part in the program.
UAZEL MacBEtH MEAD
OF THE 1TH WARD WOMEN
The Wourteouh Ward [epubli-
can Club is holding regular werk:
ly meetings, working for the te-
Floction of Senstine duseph Lt
France, Men of intluence and
means are backing this tight and
the outloak is very bright.
Mr. Lawson NX. Dulin was
named deleguie tacthe Suite Con-
vention by a nanimous vile and
Mrs, M. Hideout was named ater-
hace, The women al che club
are plannivg a big, mags-meeting
in the interest of this canaizn
to he held in the near faire. A
committee headed by Mrs, dletniv
Hose tnd including Mes. J. Lain
Jenkins, Mes, Minnie Garrett, Mrs.
Hessie Coleman ind Mes, Marie
Deison ave working fur the sie.
cess uf this meeing. Mr, Walter
S. Hiterson ward) executive ane
pounced the selection at Miss
Mazel A, Mactethi, as view-rxec
mtive,
——
The closing of the swimming
pool is drawing ner nly one
more Week remaining oF the pres-
ent season, ‘The attendance cons
tinves to fall, that of ast week
iainlins iileint Tee,
Wholesale and Retail
Cleaning and Dyeing
Virnon 3830
4 Suits Sponged
& Pressed $1.50 Ee
C. THOMAS «spies
Pressing Club Sy
& Hint Reno- FER
vators SPN
ndies’ & Gents’ Garments
ned, Dyed and Altered
ressed, Huts Cleaned and
peked While You Walt
roid Hi Ave., at Eutaw
ve Call and Delivery
RO) aha ORES
natural and mucous dis-
Barges can be avoided by de-
pi roying the germs of infectious
diseases.
j $r.te at all druggists
The Knickerbocker Building,
| and Lon issn,
| 1187 N, FREMONT AVE.
j (near Lafayette Ave.)
Plenty of Money to Loan on
| Firat and Second Mortgages
ie Bee
| @ HOUSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
| Phone, MAd. 3277 |
W. W. ALLEN, Pres. |
Bent AT N, Carey Bt
MAG. 1856-3 !
jNotary Public Drop card or call:
CO ee ee ee
fein Hae ae 1 ULEEC UME ALN
Sites, Pin 1 Pan THE ERTICHTON GF
Porcelain FEYBAR TS com gt
| = BRM EEE ser
, $+ VireBowt Ais for Easiavtion:
| (e EA Gala tt
MY Rey eX Bridge Works % :
| (/ ‘) Se-staitoras Kanaloged,, MU Wark
Teun bey. Hire Lede Perens ty,
UT "ie, LESHIE, CutRate Dentist
‘enr Sortts Ldleras sioort
eres i I nny bane ot ve cine me te NM EU ste Ta tt ae
og
| Build “LOVE NEST” |
|
| Youn WES |
| Gut In The Beautiful And Modern |
Suburb
‘ .
| Where there's a wealth of health to be |
| found in the wonderful open country, |
| bracing air, sanitary streets and mod- |
| ern homes.
| meas TERE ree og |
Bete Ps
ae ee See
Bes Fig eee
ee a ern
EY aR ROMER ee NS Mwave |
Re aoe ese paetae | ALS {
2 eee (pee Rene Mpene Ree
eee rs Wig ae Ng ct be
ieee oe een eae ae :
ee ree ie aimee:
lem |
If you want to build your home and §
live in a suburb that is equally as good
as Roland Park, Ashburton, Guilford,
Forest Park, Ten Hills or Montibelle i
Park, then make up your mind right ‘
now that Morgan Park is the only §
place that can offer any such compar-
ison. e
To convince yourself make an inspec-
tion of any other colored development §
around Baltimore and then let us take :
you out to Morgan Park. It preves &
itself. E
\" nny Retuiré one. 5
BN. senseeencencwecenmanaesanncowedaerenss c
pe ee emery
‘ a
CITIZENS’ INVESTMENT 0, 5
CHARLES AND SARATOGA STREETS = &
BALTIMORE, MD. 5
PLaza 7560 Gilmor 0397-) &
Day Phone Night Phone 5
WANA INE STATES
DIST. CONFERENCE
MEETS AT ANNAPOLIS
Se nt ved
ers Gathering
1 Annapolle, Avg. 33-—The ‘aun
session of the Potomac Disirie
Conference of the Baltimore A.M
FB. Conferenes will be jretd a Mt
Moriah “A, M. f, Chure, Friuli
sireet. next Tuesday ant Wednes
day. tex, dines A, Hriseoe, pre.
sidding elder of the distriet, will
be in charge sid Rev. 1 de durdan
vit Mae the entertaintieg pastor
Pies dashua N. Waters wi
prenel the aunual sermon at the
Spening session, after whiel the
ranferenee will he nrgenized,
(0G, Hall, Re HL. dimes, af Wash:
ington, sud Tess. es. Bsbweardy
Mod. Key, BNO Thomox We
Parham, W. 1. Manokdo and Ww,
1. own sees on the programy tor
Une irternoun session, Lev, Chistes
HE, Stewart, paste of Motropotizan
Church, Waskingtan, will preaeh
aU night. Tews ALA. Murray and
Charles Westes will tes ina dis=
cussion on “Is the Autamobile
Help te the Charen!" Weduesitay
morning.
Itev. 0. 1, domes, tev, 2. a.
Jordan and’. be Lew, wt Wasi
inutint, WHE tI Gy “WBA the Ale
inn Christian deter feats
Mena ta ie Punure Cured.
iev. CB, Stewart and bev. de The
Sent will Wises phins for “te
aintennaies at the Conference:
Henne, tar te Aged, and Mews, ay
XN. Waters aad Gb W. Armstrome
wil) speak on “What Hel bs the
Weanan's Mite, Missionary: Sowivis
He tte Loca) Churek 2 ieparts
Fran eninmitiees Will Ie recived
Wrduvaviay, afternoon, ineluuins
save trons teak, due it, Merwin
incrneda! secretary ut thie denantine:
ition, cunt thie fone pesiding ets
nr ai tine cantereners Rex, WAL
Maaukon il preset elon
erinen ait Mehl,
13” NO HODOO
3” BX
Reporter Finds Few Dwelling With So-Called Unlucky
Nember. —Occapants Beelsre Numbers Have
Not Brought Them Hi Fortene
Thivtes naiay he a bedag but
Lhe peat tivnthie is Ending seni
Sonne Wiis lives far a dwedting the
Moet anitnbor wf whieds i 12.
Sh the tits pear No, 7 secs
ten jee esttinet i diattiinmne aonany
Cadared pss, Ueaweter the
RETO. veqnaeter wove wat UE watt
Gr pponfvette stow stvves, Wanting
tae te Tiekg. Mit tones te in
fave fave wleth the get reste al
Hinting suey few Urtorns,
‘The first pelnew visited was
Ktethed street, Sithe the tract
eet Munro, ert thirteen
Stati hws at rust nt wena Tonk
Tike fevcns penis the spiawe,
umber i Dallas streot is. ine
lasbitesd bat ihe: onen sins ont a
heigisdun however, said tut the
Hneiiy vine at No, 12 seemed te
ine tain xin enestls Inek.
Siasher 12 Sursmz steven is the
beara i stow whieh is lewrated on
iinttiniwres strewt,
Mindies store! namie 12 is
blimninated hy ie rewe af veer Stree
bares,
Ninuber 1 York street is ween
bint hy ilts, itelle Carter Wha says
Ejay talerinistes xeanl tek sett
tisenis the Lard per it, it bs all!
eisht
AC NO 12 Sinekten -atreet--they
iy ost thee heats Wi tl, SA. tite
sha ead dane as ee RE Rt
hone: MAG. SBR Ww
BR. MARK ©. FAX
SURGEON CHInOPODIsT
Ronn & 1240 Penasotvania Ave,
Gnoesito, Dowtacn ‘Theatre
AM Situs af toe Past fronted, Azeh
Situincte ino fan placter eats af Jomte
Hees a ne te fe ts AG
Tepe tne Shwbeyes May bag Pood ft
Ferhat
Advertise
0 *
ee business, It will
i CHR Re a IR m Pay
a eee puesta esr a
a Ps ee : F
ee glace EG 5
a Aor Ca
e | oe ue co ance 50 CENTS §
See rel
Pm OOS, els YDR| 5
pe Fe alec reac ne
i a Eien see eae
be 2 | fulling ow rom
ee Cee OM ete ae El
oleae on gives new
lee. a edt see a I
peo ee ae
ia. silo o he Ha ef
oe i the armen and mon
oo ee a Ea sing he
g ee a ae cia tar proviag all we B
a LVORA JONES, 830 N SAAC ll Dig stores or
Hagerst . Jonathan Str ~ 8
f nuprenmown: Marries et 6g
£1510 MEM NG cc. 5
Oe ee veey Baltimore, Md.
7
| PARKER'S HAIR DRESSING
SEAN SS Tt fx » Combination of the
$3 gal SLES. oat Petron, Pare Cocake
EF Si Se
ES Xo SMD een win un toa
id\ HIGHLY PERFUMED [AY ior, so0 smart with
| eS MALE ESTA EES AY ruescn reurcae, it te
TAPP PARKER Drus Co Aesth fitterent tron other Tele
S Rees CLUTTER OT YH rveonsings, an it le not ony
Sua PSS POH)
Pe a SAS) Drwssing, it a wondertat
eee” Tinie Groseer, aud Mt enautes
6 a ee yon tu comb sour Tale In any
SS Aestrod nts.
TOR SALE BY ALL DRUGCISTS OR SENT DIRECT
‘Ow RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS
Parker Drug Co., 3811 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md.
a
B. Zeligman
Se—10c and DEPARTMENT STORE
661-663 W. Lexington St.
; SPECIAL SALE OF WHITE
& WHITE ENAMEL WARES /C
_ Values from $1.25 to $2.00 |
6M. Tea Kettle....87¢ fog! |
| LQ Dish Pan... .87¢ gS “ !
=-. i ai
ATO. Dish Pan... 87 fe a SE |
ie iS & : sz}
G6Q1. Saneopot .....87¢ PR Es I |
Fs |
#41. Saueepot .....87¢ [Sg : i |
6 Qt Saueepan.....87¢ |S Sy ee)
D aegee ze (RB BE BI |
i 3 Qt Coffee Pot....87¢ [la Be Zeit |
Se e| |
§ 10Qu Oval Dish’Pan.87e |] ‘
10Qt. Water Pait....87 {| Ge si
| These Goods are Extra Fine Quality |
| and are Triple Coated Enamel
rkyew of no ib-lnek attaching te
[tine mutaher and trene the appeae
Hien of tive tront aud i pee
[itiroustie, che open dine one xa
sizue OU presverkty,
1 Ninaber at Norris St. is entre:
fay valuainatedd. the shubs block on
je andd talon sie eg the ean
| sities the repaetne fad such hard
Hiatt tiadhne. tbveste huey naimaiers
SH ge theeedyen—ahie, et ined
a Nee ae tity Oa stan
Silver tine uihercette reailt Wast
At SEE Argyle caivenus, she
ena the: henies of Mise AL My Tad
feud aiid family, Mes. Bedwards
SCHL st Raw had sox dou Ieke here
acy evr hide The lady. who
Fiera fetes teeta yw saved $2,000
ff Tho igen earns, Uavele bs
Stoute Gods ies, ist as
Shon live Miers as ang other muimber
ia the wag
Whether it tax smnething in
font or behind Vk IR 1x0 at
fig Kuanw sirent Ais, Domglassy
Woven stated, So, 1 ie all right
Haven't a thing ta sue xbowt it
Weren't attord tn find frat wit
shirivea, bewssiere (he: baat a he
emits
IP there are any dhirtenns ue pee
peste Midge otal Wibe
Liter alan? Ue ata bald wht ie
AL AMC Aline: Ler bit ake A SU?
COLORED PEOPLE
ARE OPPOSED TO A
‘ONE BRANCH COUNCIL
2 ad eure
| 4
\ 2 ag
- (pies Pas a
\, YJ K RSA /f j
ACME sm re Yi" ly al
wilalA Lt oes yakieanini| | US an
eee ie ca" Peace
= Lee sia oe otaenys TERRE
‘Ste mean
2 eee
SS SE
— = 3
c ° s
DATES for BROWN’S GROVE and STEAMER STARLS
AND ALL POINTS ONTHEBAY 4
Also From Towns on the Bay to Brown’s Grog
‘hia ts the only steamer and the only park in the Siig
Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Colmy
People. onal
‘Jn order to secure choice dates, apply at once to 4
CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BROWN Ml
2103 Droid Hil] Avenue Phone, MAQhon Kl
or call WALTER R. LANGLEW "
1418 Jefferson Street . Phone: WOlte 493)
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sumi
evenines trom now until the first of May. Be sure to give yl
committee authority to secure dates when application ta muy
as positively no dates will be held in reserve. Captain Bien
Gul walt on any committee who wishes to engage dates. Min)
wir vappelntments, by phone or letter. Improvements wif
ddded features are continually being added to the boat 8nd gray}
for the comfort and enjoyment of our patrons,
‘The following dates have been nooked: \
aveusr SEPTEMBER ;
(Moonttghs) ‘tonntighe) :
sI—Waters M, K, Sunday Schou! 2-Post Ortice Glow cub CP mehy
SEPTEMBER Fd Horhester
‘(Dayllght) PLM Sinia” fate No. 908, 0 m4,
+A. Sock Thomax Rand. &.
oWinteowt Mek Chanel G-Montozum Sense No.1, 8 a,
iM balks evra, Tusa Mites
et Hochontor Lense and Msslonaey So
Ee Le. count to aanopelle, 2 Uae Ne thoes
ao. 11 Syracuse Co. No. W, Ke uf B
ooo 1scPunonace Akt of ‘Shep Sto th
tost. toha'a Gommaniers, No, 9 9 H}—adien ausillary Np. 105,
ise Neen Neg ba a eae ee
Secon Wise Sen 18—Chtan Su, 7, Weters AL MB
'Proposed Plan Would Rob
Them Of All Represen-
; _ latives At City Hall
{Inquiries at several, suh-stations
‘if the Bulumore News, where
Votrry petition were on fite for a
referendum on the one-branch
{city Council proposal, reveat the
fach that there were ‘some eolor-
tl skeners, At one place about
25 were reported as having signed,
(The play for w one-branch City
‘Council of nineteen” members fy
onposed by the great majority. of
fevinreal voters as the race would
probally loge representation there
jhy in the ity lawemaking body,
Pe riimre arm at present two color
ed city vonnciinan, Roth would
Juxe their jobs under the proposed
plan which would redistriet the
city xo that there would not be a
inajarity of colored people in any
ward, |
toe
BURNED AT STAKE
‘the Associated Negro Press
Lambert, Miss, Aug. 3.—John
Stetlnan, thivty-five-year-old farm.
hud “was burned at the. stale
tear here by a torch applied by
Mex. Druee White, the wife of a
ScEiaiial bs diane
ERNEST PURVIANCE A
TWILIGHT SOCIETY EXCURSIONS
BROWN'S ELECTRIC GROVE
SUNDAY, SEPT, SUNDAY, SEPP, 1
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17
SPECIALLST. MARY'S HALL
LABOR DAY, MONDAY, SEPT. 4
Matinee 210 7, and Night'® to Hochest Orehett
Vernon Hutehina, Sololst
Lots of New Merchandise
‘ecceemtnnsisnmit csi 7
has arrived this week, and to those who have failed
to avail themselves of the opportunity to make their
selection for the coming Fal] and Winter, we advise
them to do so this week. Our Coupons, the value
of which is $5.00 will be, accepted until Saturdgy]
inclusive. ‘The finest variely of Furs and Fur Coats,
Cloth Cvats of every description. Tailor Made
Suits in the long straight lines, Dresses in the finest
Poiret Twills and Canton Crepes, New Pleat
Skirts, Waists, ete. all reasonable priced.
—EXTRA SIZES OUR SPECIALTY—-
Finest Variety of Men’s and Boys’ Suits |
and Overcoats :
jp
‘THIS COUPON 18 WORTH E
$5.00 TO YOU
In order to get you to make yonr selection early,
we will accept this Coupon as @ first payment of
FIVE DOLLARS
on any Fall and Winier Coat, Cloth or Fur, Tatlor
Made Suit or Dress, or Gent's shilt or Overcoat, pros
viding you select same during the month of August,
Please bring this with you
COHN’S
|
SAMPLE STORE |
659 W. Lexington St., near Pine |
Open Monday 9 P.M. ~ Saturday 11 P, M
Cash or Credit :
ee ae
j vA ae =
| wNIO# DENTAL PARLORS
taay ‘telee
Attend- i home
“327 W. Lexington Street <7:
—.——
Fray —— ee Nloney |
Until you are perfectly satisfied we can treat your teeth in auch
® manner that
Sa, You Will Be Glad to Come to Our
Cases) Specializing Dentists
fe ps BA he rete hy tmounande of arnt
a “ wou't vinie the dentiat In breaune they bate
Bis ZA NGA wera so muck avout the palatal, arb
ime A methody of dentiaty that
i ‘
Ea hI They forget that some dentists
Efes BeSORs| are more skillful than others in
- Preventing pain.
a Our dentists are this kind of operator,
PREM §=— Under our personal supervision they
Psa EVERY RELIABLE METHOD FOR
ee THE ALLEVIATION OF PAIN. |
‘They .bave at thelr command the most thorough, op-to-ii |
dental equipment, and are wondertulty expert in the appiteacion |
The Famous U. D. P. Nerve-Blocking Method |
aud they are particularly expert tn the EFFECTIVE USE OF
Viracivep Cas.
Don't teuore this heart-to-beart
tule. Of Fea are Dot entively cone es
viaced, cai and have us EXAMINE o
jon't Ve apprehensive when yous i ie
come tote. Bat a mile on your MEET SOT
face when You come 10 ace an. and er poet
79ar emule will be tween genine Uae
Our prices for all dental work are .
not oue cent more thau others nak, :
notwithstouding the extraordinary Plates That Fi Pertectly
skill of our operatora, De'Nor Slip or Drag
Crown and Bridge Work, Per Tooth, $5:
‘The beat equipped and most sanitary dentel office tn |
scrupulously clean, Inrge, airy rooms, with Jady aaststant ead sted |
Gf dental apeciailers capable of pertorsaiug every brauch of Bautist? |||
ae ieahould bee Ss
You May Pay. As the Work H
Omtce Hourat 8 A. M. ¢0 8 P.M. Sundoy} 10 10 1
os dnthents Should Write tor Appuinimifit and Have Work’