The Afro-American
Friday, May 11, 1923
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
Thousands of Colored Voters Help to Elect Howard W. Jackson, Democrat, Mayor of Baltimore
BRIDE'S LOVE GREW COOL HERE
English Audience Gives Roland Hayes, Tenor, Ovation
Weakness of Republicans,
Popularity of Democrats
Accounts for Break
From Republicans
TWO COUNCILMEN LOSE
Bath McGuinn and Fitzgerald Defeated in Democratic Landslide
In the hottest mayoralty campaign that the city has ever seen Howard W. Jackson, Democratic candidate, hacked by colored voters estimated at 7,000 to 10,000 was returned the winner by nearly 25,000 majority.
The contest was three-cornered and the votes cast were as follows:
Howard W. Jackson,
D.—74,124.
Wm. F. Broening, R.
—49,919.
Jas. H. Preston, Ind.
—39,042.
For the first time in the history of the city, colored voters by giving over boldly into the opposition camp, and by staying away from the polls to cut heavily into the expected Republican vote.
Jackson Popular
Example of colored voters all over the country, admonition of president Harding to colored people not to die themselves to any party, weakness of the Republican candidate, and the personal popularity of the Democratic candidate were contributing causes to the break away of colored votes. A hardened address before the Longest City Club gained for Mr. Jackson hundreds of quiet and effective workers for votes.
In the Democratic landscape both colored candidates for City Council were defeated by some 250 votes. Their stand for a full Republican ticket have to have caused the loss of some votes, but in the last 250 registered colored votes, puzzled by the three-center contest stayed away from the polls. Some of them, Browningtiggs by colored Democratic workers were urged not to vote.
Strangely enough both colored candidates resolved practically the number of votes: McGuffin and Fitzgerald 9618.
Colocaval Within Party
Some Republican workers were indicted to blame Mayor Browning for the loss of colored councilmen because he is partly responsible for the institution of the one branch council his year in the place of the old council based on ward representation, closer analysis, however, indicted that it was the upheaval within the party that is responsible for the party. Added to this was the statement that spoils created in the primary election were not completely healed.
While the stay-at-home colored voters accounted in part for the low Republican vote, there was also a large vote east for the Democratic candidates. Democratic workers distributed everywhere in the Fourth District sample ballots marked for the Democratic heads of the ticket and the colored councilmen.
Ten Commandments of the Republican Party issued by Rev. A.M. Moloch, based on the Biblical ten commandments, decking other things. "Thou shall not commit adultery by unholy alliances with the Republican Party" created considerable unfavorable comment, as did the employment of campaign speakers from Washington.
Ministers' Names Used
A sensation was created by the publication in last week's AFRO-AMERICAN of a petition for Mayor Broening signed by a number of Baptist ministers. Rev. R. Browning, Rev. J. H. Green and several others declared that their names had been used without authorization, and it was proposed that an executive session of the Ministers' Conference had been called to file out who was responsible for the advertisement. As a evidence of the large colored vote polled for the Democratic heads of the ticket is pointed out that Broening received practically no larger vote in the 14th and 17th wards than he did four years ago. Jackson received 200 more votes. George Weems Williams and in addition, Woston received some 1$00 votes more white, the (total being practically the same that Jackson received
Bishon John Hurst, W. Ashleigh Hawkins, practically the whole local colored Bar Association and a number of other professions, men declared for the Democratic candidate early in the campaign. Jackson Club Busy
Truly Hatchet as head of the City-Wide Jackson Club, Thomas R. Smith, Howard Payne, Jacobi C. Nicholson, M. Ridgely R. S. Edwards, Rex W. W. Allen, Arthur Burns, John Gray, were among the active workers in all parts of the city.
Garver Endorsed
Annapolis, Md., May 9—Members of the Republican City Executive Committee of the Fourth Ward have endorsed R. P. D. Garger for alderman. The election will be held in July-1923. Those who signed the endorsement were Chairman W. H. Rebrons, John T. Sepenp, Mrs. Georgia A. Boston and Thomas Wooten.
London, England, May 4 (Special)
—Do the English like Roland Hayes?
Ask the big audience that jammed
Wigmore Hall to hear a recital by
the famous edored
American tenor last week who wildly implanted every number, and then stormed the artist's room at the conclusion of the performance in order to shake his hand.
A. B.
Mr. Hayes was accompanied by Harold Grayston, white, one of Loomis's "writing pianists. Last year he gained attention when he sang before King George, who presented him with a dimention pin. From the time Mr. Hayes took the stage until he had sung through his program of twenty numbers, the audience was simply delighted. Not a sound could be heard during the singing. Mr. Hayes began with a number of German songs and then sang some old English hymns displaying his soft delighted singing, yet with exertion, well told with its emphasis. The second part of the program was in French, winding up with some modern songs in English and two Negro melodies, "O Rock Me, Julie," and "Don't Scandalize My Name." Critics here praised him as the greatest singer of the time, an example to me that others whites in that he never mistaken an effect out of place no shows excessive display for a cheap effect.
After the concert Mr. Hayes left for Paris
DIES AT AGE OF, 115
Brooklyn, N. Y., May 10—(K. N. F. Service) Mrs. Sarah Williams of No. 298 Rockaway avenue, who believed in an old superstition that because she was the seventh daughter of the seventh daughter she would not die young, died last week from pneumonia, at the ripe old age of 118. She leaves many many children and one great-great- grandchild.
AVIATOR ON PROBATION
New York, May 9.—(K. N. K. Service) Huilbert Julian, noted Negra parachute jumper, who Sunday before last, leaped from an aeroplane 3,000 feet in the air and was immediately arrested for the violation of a city ordinance which prohibits trick flying within the city limits, was placed on probation for six months, following his plea of guilty before a magistrate last week.
U. S. WORKERS TO LOSE JOBS
New York, May 9.—(K. N. F. Service) Numbers of colored employees in Washington will lose their jobs when Col. Clarence O. Sherrell, officer in charge of public buildings and grounds, takes charge on July 1, according to a report from D. C.
K. K. K. CAN'T USE PARK
Columbus, Ohio, May 10.—Local police have revoked permission to Ku Klux Klan to hold their big demonstration and ceremonies on Friday night in one of the city's parks.
New Orleans, La., May 10—Ben Pitchen, white strawberry king, has been arrested charged with holding colored women in peonage and compelling them to pick strawberries.
EX-SLAVE LOSES SAVINGS
Montgomery, Ala., May 10—Roland Gardland, ex-slave, aged 94, testified in court that Rufus Harland blackmailed him out of $900 in savings.
John Mitchell Says: 'No Pen'
Richmond, Va., May 9—Sentenced to serve three years in the penitentiary for falsely involved in the failure of the Mechanics Savings Bank a year ago, John Mitchell, Jr., his president, told the AFROAMERICAN today that he would appeal the case to the highest tribunals if necessary.
Especially bitter is Mr. Mitchell, who declares that 17 out of the 18 charges against him were dropped, and he was convicted of false entry, when he never made an entry in the bank's books in his life or authorized one to be made.
The judge has triumphed here over the law. Its victory is temporary. Counsel will argue motion to set aside the verdict as being contrary to law and evidence May 15, 1923.
REPRESENTS U.S. IN EIGHT MILLION DOLLAR SUITS
Washington, May 10—Perry W. Howard, special assistant to the Attorney General, is now the highest salaried Governmental official of color in the United States. This distinction comes as the result of a promotion in the tangible form of an increase of $1,000 in his yearly salary. He now receives $1,000 a year. RESULT OF LEGAL EF- PORTS This promotion is a recognition of the very valuable legal services Mr. Howard has ren-
This distinction comes as the result of a promotion in the tangible form of an increase of $1,000 in his yearly salary, which receives $1,000 a year. RESULT OF LEGAL EFFORTS This promotion is a recognition of the valuable service Mr. Howard has rendered the Government. He received his appointment
Penny Howard ment. He received his appointment two years ago and was assigned a large number of suits brought by various railroad companies against the United States. Many millions of dollars in claims against the Government were involved. The railroad companies had the best lawyers they could retain. But Mr. Howard were authentically to his work and, as he defended the success with which he defended these claims against the Government, the Attorney General shortly after his return to the Department of Justice last week approved this promotion for him.
ENGAGED IN IMPORTANT WORK
A conception of the importance of the work in which Mr. Howard is engaged at the Department of Justice may be had from the fact that during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, 91 railroad cases were handled by him in which claims amounting to $4,999,415.70 were disposed of. The claimants, however, secured judgments to only $11,850.19, for a large part of which there was no defense; the only question involved being the assentment of the correct amount due. He now has 102 cases pending, in which the claims charged aggregate $3,901,294.46.
LIBERIA TAXES SHIPS
Monsrova, Liberia, May 6—Since the American loan from the United States has failed, the Republic has passed an act that taxes every ship that anchors in the local harbors thirty-five dollars each. The sum will he used to improve ports.
CUBAN HERO HONORED
Havana, Cuba, May 8—(A. N. P.) Thousands of school children placed roses on the tomb of Antonio Maceo, Cuba's colored hero who helped free the island from Spanish rule in 1896.
LOVE GI
Gives Roland
Itchell
No Pen'
"Seventeen out of eighteen charges were either molle prosequied or quashed. Then they found me guilty of false entry on the books of the bank. I have never made an entry in a book here in my life or authorized one to be entered.
FORTY I
QUALI
TUSK. I
Six Are Ord
APPEAL TO PREJUDICE
"Appeal to prejudice was made by referring to my being candidate for Governor of Virginia. A determined body helped me to wrest the Strand Theatre, one of the best theatres in the city, and the Mechanics Savings Bank from us.
"I shall continue the fight. My counsel are R. Lynch Montague, Esq.; S. S. P. Patterson, ex-Commonwealth's Attorney George E. Wise, and J. Thomas Hewin, Esq. Attorney J. Thomas Newsome, of Newport News, Va., has been here to offer his services."
TURNED OVER $100,000
"I turned over one hundred thousand dollars worth of assets to guarantee the Mechanics Savings Bank and the Order of Knights of Pythias against loss.
"The better or upper class of white people and practically all of the colored people are in my favor. The other class of white folks brought about this temporary result."
I "Took a Gamble"
Says McGuinn
"I am not suggested at the result." Warner T. McGuinn, who failed at re-election to the City Council told the Afro-American yesterday
"I was taking a gumble on the Republican organization playing fair in its vote. We delivered the colored vote to Ellison and expected them to deliver the white vote to us. They didn't do it. They delivered it to Ellison all right, but not to Mr. Fitzgerald and me.
"See what Ellison got in the 13th and 15th Wards and see what we got. It doesn't forbade any good for the Republican. They have got to eat some more oats now before they can do anything. The Democrats are supreme now."
MONROVIA MAYOR HAS QUIT GARVEY?
Gabriel Johnson, Reported Resigned; Fred Toot Leaves
Leaves
New York, May 10.—(Crusader Service)—According to information from reliable sources, Gabriel Johnson, Mayor of Liberia, and potentate of the Garvey movement, is said to have quit. The resignation of Mayor Johnson, it is said is being kept a dark secret for fear in event it is made known of the reaction it will have on the U. N. I. A. members in Africa. Johnson's resignation does not come as a surprise to those who remember his protest last year against the alleged mismanagement of the affairs of the U. N. I. A. by Garvey. Another to leave the Garvey ship is Fred Toote, a resident of New York City. Another reason for keeping Johnson's resignation secret it is said, is the bad effect this announcement will have upon the plan of raising money in the United States to hold the next U. N. I. A. convention on African soil.
Men "Du
Adam Didn't Know He Was Naked 'Till Eve Put Him Next
Men "Dummies"
Detroit, Mich. May 10—(Independent News Service)—"Women are superior and men constitute the dumber sex," declared Nannie Burroughs, of Washington, D. C., in address here last week.
"Adam was such a dummy with all the boasted superiority of mankind—that he did not, even know that he was naked until Eve put him next."
Noman is man's physical as well as mental superior. Physical superiority rests in power to endure stress and duress of flesh
GRE and Haye
FORTY NURSES QUALIFY FOR TUSK. HOSPITAL
Six Are Ordered to Greenville, S. C., for Intensive Training Before Re-
INSTITUTE GETS $150,000
Money Is Left by Wealthy Negro Who Struck Gold In Alaskan Mining Fields
Forty colored nurses for the new two million dollar U. S. Hospital for veterans at Tuskegee have been selected.
This is the statement of Abilion H. Holsey, secretary to br. R. R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee Alabama, institute, who passed through the city Sunday and stopped off for a meal with his brother oneperson home. Secretary Holsey spent last week in Washington unserhelling the eggs in connection with the hospital affairs.
Since this hospital is to be located near Tuskegee institute on ground given the Government by it, it is an unusual that those appointed to direct the work there will be those who will cooperate with Tuskegee institute management.
According to Mr. Holsey, six of the nurses who qualified have already been sent to Greenville, S. C. for intensive training and the head nurse will be selected from this number.
A sufficient number of colored physicians has not yet qualified, but was reported, that资格 in-chief has not yet been selected. This selection may be postponed until after the hospital is opened several weeks from now.
Institute Left $150,000
Tuskegee, Ala. May 10—By the will of the late W. T. Ewing, a wealthy Negro of Haywood, Cat., his entire estate amounting to $150,000 has been left to Tuskegee Institute. Mr. Ewing, an ex-slab was among the first to stake out claims in Alaska during the gold rush of 1896. When he struck gold he cleaned up $40,000 in three months. He owned property in Alaska and California.
175 To Graduate
Tuskegee, Ala., May 10—Dr. L. K. Williams of Chicago, head of the National Baptist Convention will deliver the 42nd annual commencement address here to 175 graduates May 25th.
ANTI-LYNCH BILL
PASSES PENNA. SENATE
Harrisburg, Pa., May 10.—The Anti-Lynching Bill, sponsored by Andrew F. Stevens, of Philadelphia, for the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs, passed the State Senate Monday by a vote of 33 to 10. The bill will now go to Governor Pinchot who has signified intention of signing it. It passed the House over a week ago.
Mrs. M. Mossell Griffin, national legislative chairman of the Women's Club, is putting anti-lynching bills in twenty state legislatures, many of them in the South. The women are also sponsoring a bill asking for compensation for domesticies.
"ummies"
and its burdens. A man makes a poor job of it.
"Not only have men found out that woman has its superior physically and mentally, but that woman is a human magnet that can draw a man, any way she chooses—and does so do.
Any part of her anatomy will draw a man—every one of 'em. Some fall for eyes, ears, color of hair. Others for form and figuro—but they will all fall—and fall sooner, or later. No woman 'falls' for a man. If no does not want him he has no chance of attracting her. He does the attract and knows how to make a healthy that he attracted her."
Jackson Says:
"I am happy and highly pleased at being elected. I realize my great responsibility to the colored people as well as the entire citizenship of the community. I pledge myself to fulfil every pre-election promise and to be mayor in common to all people."
NEW BROADWAY STAR
ALBERTA HUNTER never had actress who came up through "Chicago graph companies and finally has a "Come" musical comedy.
A.
ALBERTA HUNTER never had a vocal lesson. She is a soft-mand actress who came up through Chicago cabaret to a contract with photograph companies and finally has arrived as the real star of "How Come" musical comedy.
Disappointed? "No" Says "Fitz"
"I wasn't disappointed much if any." William L. Fitzgerald, who failed at re-election to the City Council told the Afro-American yesterday.
"The Republican white voters must learn to vote for Republican Negro, the ex-convict who would vote to support them. There was always doubt in my mind that they would keep their obligations.
"In the 14th and 17th Wards colored people played square. They gave Ellison within one hundred of the votes they gave "Mac" (McGuinn) and me. In the 13th and 15th Wards we ran from 400 to 190帮 behalf of the voters. If the white voters indotted for us like they voted for Ellison, we would have had as many votes as he had."
552 Workers Pass Thru Chattanooga
(Crusader Service)
Chattanooga, Tenn., May 10.
The migration of Negro workers from the South to the industrial sections of the North, has been assumed with the arrival of fine Spring weather, and '552 passed through Chattanooga yesterday in charge of Northern labor agents They came from Memphis, Tenn., Corrinhin, Miss., and other points Jackson, Miss., May 4. Joint meetings of white and colored citizens will be held May 19 at every Court House in Mississippi to discuss the exodus of Negroes to the North and the labor situation developing as a cause of the getting from under of the Negro worker. The meetings were called by the State Chamber of Commerce.
A large number of Negroes have also been arrested on the charge that they were involved in the abuse of employment agencies, notwithstanding appeals by Southern planters for help.
more 7 cents in Maryland
Ovation
In Says:
highly pleased at be-
e my great responsi-
people as well as the
the community. I
fil every pre-election
yor in common to all
and a vocal lesson. She is a self-made cabaret to a contract with photo-arrived as the real star of "How
KU KLUX KLAN WRITES LETTER TO PRINCIPALS
Praises Colored Boys Who Marched Well In Boys' Week Parade
Following Boys' Week parade, in which groups from several of the colored schools took part, colored school principals received letters from the local branch of the Ku Klux Klan this week.
The letter reads as follows:
"The Invisible Empire
"KNIGHTS OF THE KU KLUX
KLAN, Incorporated
"Non Silba Sed Anthur"
"Yesterday, Today and Forever"
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY KLAN
No. 6
REALM OF BALTIMORE
"Baltimore, Md., May 5, 1923.
"Sir:"
"During the Boys' Parade of last week, there was much, comment of a very favorable nature circulated regarding the excellent conduct, marching order, etc., of the boys of the colored public schools: also because of the number of American flags and signs emphasizing American-
"This Klan therefore requests that you accept our congratulations, and further asks that you let your boys know that their efforts were not in vain. "The disclosing of this occasion on the occasion of their usefulness later on as good and desirable American citizens. "Young faithfully. S. O. SEEL. Secretary."
May 7 to 12, inclusive
North and Middle Atlantic
States.—Unsettled at beginning of
the week and generally fair
weather thereafter. Temperature
will average near or somewhat be-
low normal.
in Maryland
HERE
Three-Inch Dirk Used In Attempt To Take Out Her Love Organ
LATER ATTEMPTS SUICIDE
SO BRIDEGROOM MAKES A TRY TO CUT HEART OUT
Doctors Say Woman Will Die, But Man Will Recover
Mrs. Carole Smith lies mortally wounded at St. Joseph Hospital, and her husband, who tried to slash her heart out and then his own, lies guarded by officers at South Baltimore General Hospital.
The near-double tragedy occurred Wednesday morning at a boarding house on Fourth avenue, Fairfield, where the neck was been living for the past two weeks. Following a quarrel Smith drew a knife and after slashing his wife about the neck brutally mutilated her breast in the region of her heart, "the love organ." He then drew a pen knife and attempted suicide by severely cutting himself in the neck and across the abdomen.
Sherlock after being found unconscious in an adjoining yard, Smith, who has been living in Baltimore five weeks and whose home is in Richmond, Va., told Patrolman Paul Weaver of the Southern Belle Shire since she was a child, who wife he weeks ago "her love had grown cool." He shushed her because of jealousy. According to the story told attendants by Mrs. Smith, the quarrel which ended in the cutting started when Mrs. Smith came home of Broms salts for her husband on Wednesday morning.
CUT AT WOMAN'S
From the nature of the wound inflicted by Smith on his wife, it is evident that he endearment his her love has helped him in almost above this vital organ, completely exposed her rips and knife used was of the dik type as a three-inch blade. Early Thursday morning at all ants at Joseph's hospital site, that he had but a fighting chapel her life.
Smith, whose self-inflicted wounds are serious, may recover, however. Mrs. Smith's home is in Luther Glenn, Va. She is 19 years of age, and has been married less than a year. Her husband is 22 and has been engaged for some time as a laborer on a trading vessel. She came to Baltimore to live with her husband just two weeks ago.
Bessie Coleman Leaves Hospital
Los Angeles, Cal., May 10.—On crutches, with her lower limb still in handages, and a wire cast, Reslie Coleman, noted aviatrix, the victim of a recent aeroplane crash, is again a resident of this city. Miss Coleman has been discharged from the St. Katharine Hospital, Santa Monica, she was confined something like ten weeks. Although hardly able to put the weight of her body on the injured member this gritty progressive little pigment has, during the next week, com-
atrix, the victim of a recent aeroplane crash, against a prominent officer of the Cadbury工厂. Mrs Coleman has been discharged from the St. Katharine Hospital, Saltha Monica, where she was contracted something like ten weeks.
Although hardly able to put the weight of her body on the injured member this gritty and progressive little woman has, during the past week, com-
picked a motion picture that was started the day of her unfortunate
COL. YOUNG'S BODY ARRIVES MAY
New York City, May 10.—The body of Col. Charles Young, U. S. A., who died while on a tour of investigation in Lakes, West Africa, January 1922, will arrive in New York on board the steamer West Hesselpine about May 20th. 'Interment will be in the National Military Cemetery at Arlington, Va., following a military parade.
$300,000 MASONIC TEMPLE
St. Louis, Mo., May 10—The
Masons have completed plans for
a $200,000, five story temple. Four-
teen stores will be on the ground
floor.
Births, Deaths,..Marriages
Phone Notices to VErnon 6016
Call Vernon 6016
Marriayes, deaths, births ine
serted in Ciese columus free of
charge. Jast call VErnon 6016.
Ask for Kdilorial Department,
ANDERSON—EROWNLEY— Win.
ao: Bertha J. 29, 10d N. Dur-
yam street.
DAMS—WILLIANS—Joseph 84,
1132, W. Bord St; Gertrude, 25.
MACLROY—JONES—Sherma,” 23:
“1 ThG. Keyser street: Marie 18.
GILLUM—ErAXTON—_Itaymond
24, Sparrows Taint: Esther, 22.
WILLIAMS—DORSEY — Charles
Jt, 34, 728 Pennsylvania Ave.i
Cordelia, 30.
HASKINS—WALLACE—Sherman,
27, 1015 Drokd Hl Aves Man
JAYLOR—PACK—James 24, G06
Comb Alley; Henrietta, 37.
SPENCE—CHESTER— Wm, 21
ASTAV, Hill street: Elsie, 19.
JORDAN-—OLDIIAM—Jobn FP... 4!
"1513 Pennsylvania Aves Mabe
43, widow,
BENTLEY-WILLIAMS— Alber
t... £17 700 Josephine street; Viola
se
PRATT-PERRY—Leroy_ E.. 22
07 Vincent street: Genevieve, 22
THORNTON-WRIGHT— Chris
opher, 22, 444 KE. 23rd street
caura, 19.
BROWN-GREEN— James, 28
alridge: Tay 18.
POOLE-WINTE — Charts T
27, 1603 Faith Lane: Ruby, 26.
PAULAS-GLAKE — Pernands
M.. 2, Stevenson: Mary, 22.
WreCATHY-LEWIS —— Frank
48, widower, 1301 N. Mount sireet;
Esther, 36, ‘widow.
CRAWFORD-Mecoy — Clar-
ence, “40, widower; Alice, 42.
widow,
WARBEVANS—Jame& 1. 23.
414. Myrtle Aves Lillie May 20.
MITCHELL —UIGMAS—Charenee,
28, 933 Pages Court; Henriett
cLARY UMPIRE Ys—letcher
99, 919 MeCulloh-street; Acti¢ 21
Divorces Instituted
Wm.eHenxy Thomas vs Mrs. oxeal
‘Thomes:
fairs. Sines V, Johnson vs Frank
Pe Fontieon
Jarthur Johnson vs Mrs. Vielt Sor-
tan
a ee
WILL SUB FoR DIVORCE
oe
ee
ee ae cr
CoN
ee eee” hoe
See See nens
eee Pe
| es Po
je ERMAN LIGON
a Z 522 Risks Avene?
saining Camp to
_- Open June 25th
; esa
BB War Deparunent announces
Bre summer training Camp
2 ‘ians will open on June
& anouncement is also ncute
Be 50 or more colored men
Apply arrangements will Ve mide
to form a separate unit in the
Third Arca.
Applications must be in the
sfiee of the Army. U.S. Heats
Turteps ded Corn Aten? KUL St
Paul street on or before Muy 25th.
eee
CUSTUS—va M., who depart
9 this life wine yGars gu, May
os.
some may think that I have for-
gotten you.
No! never in life will I forget you,
Yow I loved you dearly in life.
ind in your deuth T ever remem
ber you. 7
~teep on and take your rest,
as God knew best
By her devoted mother, MRS.
MAGGIE CUSTUS GLENN. and
riends, MR. AND MRS. HOLLY.
is GRY dace:
\ . GHARLES WITDIAMS
u~ahe body of Charles Willlums.
Fiza 2 years, who resided at 310
-S.. hel strect was found floating
Fat Pipr 6, May 2, 1923. He hind
eon Mnissing since April 11, 1923.
ie was-captain of Scow No. 45,
fAtianta ‘Transport Company and
eras employed there 14 years, He
eaves to mourn. their Toss, his
Ewite, mother, six sisters, five
Wprothers and a host of friends. *
aeiaaadaha Raia cada aaa
: To know
Bow good a cigarette .
really can be made” 2
4 you'must try a jo
Bes CP
BS 5S
Ba SAN CIT'STOASTED™,
es N a
Be: Ne 6
ea t _
eC
‘WANTED | ‘
50,000 WEAK MEN
Who can’t enjoy life’s pleasures to take |
KURA VITAL SPARKS to regenerate
their lost power. $1.00 per box. At
Read’s 8 stores, Northwestern, Laurens,
Fennell’s Livingston's, Buchanan's drug
stores, or at our office. Personal or by mail.
PELL-MA MEDICINE CO.
Pratt & Bond Sts. Baltimore, Md.
Maker of the powerful urinary antiseptic KURA
UROTOL to clear the (shreds) cotton like in chron-
ic ailments of men. Price $1.00 per box.
KURA SANTOL TORPEDOES for new cases of dis-
charges, $1.00. Injection. pink 50c and Silveral 75c.
KURA EMENAGOL for retarded female functions. |
Price x $1.00, xx $2.00, for chronic cases xxx $5.00.
Call VErnon 6016
‘Thirty-five deuths were reported
by the Mealth Department this
Week including six from. tubercu-
tosis, eight pneumonia and five
Infaits under one vear of age.
The complete list follows:
Kobere puter, br 21 s, Durham
W. 'T. Davis, 50; 660 W. Mulberry
Sam. Wilson. 31: 1516 MeCulloh
Mary L. Laws, 18: 719 Saratoga
NSS Brooks in, 1028 Penna. ave.
Hortce White, 1: Day View Hosp.
Paul Scott, 12; Paca St, Mt. Winans
Grant -B. Wright, 43: 316 WW. Cross
M. J. Dockins, $1; #26 MeBonough
Hiram Henry. 52: 1505 Mosher St.
Baby Pouer, 2 di; 1014 N, Carey
Robt. Grant, 7 mo.: 1404 Riggs Ave
Thos. Cazy, 56: 530 N. Bond St.
Hilda Curl, 1; 1857 Krvanaugh St.
Richard. Ciitithy 952-4082, Rbore
Mee Jones, .ano.:. 2411 Erankin
Walter Vay, 12; 125 W. Till St.
Louvinia Henson, 68; 306 N. Bond
Wm. H. Travers. 67: 750 Vine St.
Elmira FE. Watkins, 76: 1378 Carey
IM. 2, Richardson, 59: 309 Fremont
Harry Allen, 1; 130 W, York St.
Janne Heknes, 8: 1844. Division
An hs Sheowens 432, B40 Ttohort
Danke Winters Ga: 1028 Mecutiel
Gearie Tasary 40; 128 We. ste St
Slutvinia Jenkins 17; 22 Penpte St
Ghae"Wiltame: sit 810 8. Jethe
Grafton Biddle, 21: 142 N. Monni
Stile Alten, 23; 882, tyson St.
Mildred Roone, 73; 1209 Shields Al
David Eeeleston. 1; 2549 Oak St.
renun 2eee
| John H. Howard
John If, Howard, son ot the
late George 5. and Harriet A.
Howard, passed away on May 5.
1993 at’? P.M. at his home near
Rrookvilie, “Md, In his passing
the state loses one of its best and
most progressive citizens and
farmers. He resided at the Brook-
Ville address for 45 years,
Mr. Howard was always ready
to foster any movement for the
advancement of his people, being
a heavy donator to both ‘church
and school, which have the family
name, He was trustee of both from
their origin.
The deceased was horn August
25, 1899, Moward County, Md. Mr.
Howard was also a great laver of
sports and at one time was owner
fat some of the best horses in the
staté, and at the time of his death
retained his famous riding mare
which was known throughout the
county.
Tie is survived Ir eleven chil-
dren: Mrs. Mary Hull,’ Providence,
RL: John S. Toward, Rroskville,
Mis “Mrs, Martha Gaither, Con-
nedivitle, Pad Mrs, Hattie Parker,
Conksville, Mada” Mrs. Christine
Yanee, New York City: Miss Leona
Toward. New Yori “Citys Tas.
Howell Toward. Brookville, 44.2
Mrs. Sarah Wing. Washington. D.
Cr Mrs. Panche Mebane, ‘Talla-
hassee, Fla. Mrs. Elsie G. Davis.
Chiergo, is Daniel 1, Toward,
Trookvilie. “Ma. One’ brother,
Greenherry W. Howard, and one
aunt. Mrs. Susan Addison? twenty
five wrandehilgven and two great
grandchildren.
Mr. Howard married Miss, Har-
viet A, Gaither June 25, 1862 ang
celebrated thei golden’ annivers-
ary eleven yenr's ago. The jute
Martha “E. Murphy of Baltimore
vee Hixson.
SAMUEL WILSON
Samuel Wison, heloved Iushand
of Bertha Lewis Wilson and father
of Bernard and Karl Wilson, de-
parted this life Thursday, May 3.
AL 11.30 A, M. at his late residence.
1516 MeCulioh street, Funeria!
xerviees were-held at Ames M. ¥
Church Sunday. May 6th, whieh
he wus, Tnember of the usher
hoard and also a member of the
Wsizue, He itso belonged to the
Mount Olive Lodge, No. 25, Celes-
thud Chapter Toyal Arch.
Jlis wife and family thank the
relutives and friends for thei
kindness during his ‘iMtness and nt
his death, also the .ushers, the
league, Judge and members;| also
Dr. Lyon who spoke so beautiful-
ly und_his class leader, Me, Galle
way. We also. thank ‘the ‘friends
for the beautiful floral designs,
—1——
BUCY E. COWEMAN
Lucy E. Coleman departed this
life ‘Tnesday ‘morning, May 8, 1923
at 9:50 A. M. at her late residence,
13290. Mount street.
Funeral services will be held
Friday morning at 10 A. Mf. from
St. Mary's Church, Orchard street.
Friends are invited.
She leaves to mourn thelr loss
her husband, Joseph Coleman:
three sisters, Julia D. “Monroe,
Charity D. Jefferson, Anna 7.
Jester: one ‘brother, Henry 7.
Vizgs; three nieces, ' one nephew
und u host of friends.
Phone MAG. 3415-W
ERNESY BR. TOFFLER
‘Real Estate Loans”
T have several fine homes in de-
sirable neighborhgods for _ sale.
You can become the owner of any
of these beautiful homes with
sinall capitil. Come and talk the
matter over. T also have apart-
ments 3-4 rooms, bath, electricity.
709 N. CAREY STREET. it
_
THE AFRO-AMERICAN SOUTH’S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE, MAY 11,1923
————— ee aR Sees
IN MEMORIAM Tic "Afi" an grq]|___Classified Adve
. q Sc cena ne
= ; immediate employment to]
pe , lan experienced FOR RENT—Meeting rooms FO
. . MOWARD—In_ sad but _ loving] ~ niain hall of Nazarite Tabernacle, room
IN weMoRY OF —- remembrance of our aevated|l| - LINOTYPE Boa Ne Calvert strept. ‘Open daily] btock
MRS, DEBORAH BOND mother, May Howard, who depart- : oA, Bf. to 10 P. M, 3008
PP a thi fe v0 yeahs go today, MACHINIST ‘Apr. 20 3-mno.|——
, : Buh, 1921. jt rg
eee Gan wo help but feel to, lonely OPERATOR FOR TENT Cte rome. ono| write
ape sis aah hen your voice we jot heat Wri furnished, one unturnished. Apply| ditivr
oe When your voice we do Oecter’ ||| Write at once to - — I5i"p, unturniahed: Apply ditt
a Than the words of mother dear Mr.JOHN < ||fagt Preseutn Sete ee]
cone a From this world of’ grief andll|Care Afro-American Co.|l]— 75), junwpostore and fixtures :
OG ee trouble 7 FOR RENT—Store and fixtures} ’
BS TERE | 70 the land of peace and rest; 628 N. Eutaw St., for rent. Apply 132L MeCULLOM| 9 sq
Wee [Goa has taken you dear -mother Baltimore, Md. STREL'S, Ma 4-342) 0%
Lo Sikuee'sourarlt Hind Crernal rest ‘ We. Re ce ee
Ges - By her. devoted * daughters, First Class Wages __!}/ “vor siti —i-rogin house, 533] "85
ee LILLIE COMEGYS, — CASSLE eS [Sanford Place, Wlectrie HEhts,) pt,
See HUDSON, DAISY GREEN. D D Drath, teu Heat, stationery tus] Be
Cee .. KANE-—In- loving memory of! in basement, reat poreh. .“Avply| Sy
GO Ra Soh, Toad eae The Board of Directors || yor ieext—tvo carnnived or] tite
Be By | six months azo. eo of the, as unfurnished rooms. “Apply 1412) Vhon
a SE you done know the sorrow to be Homemakers Building [North Mount st. 1j—
ee jon't ki us ‘
a | lett alone & Loan Association i bs
Unt ee ens a message to your||| nasing dectired. « aividena |For Rent—New St. Luke Hall},
beloved wife of Charles Tt, Bond. home; Biwiiree Per Cent for. the 10S, MeCULLOLL Sit ay
peloved wife or or Roy 8. Bond, [Jt is hard when Me culls for onel}] past, six months, being atthe fl] Uronerty at the b Ot Taukee On| EEE
who died May, 8. 1922... 6. 6+ ‘or the other eee a eter cent per ane ||| satiation. | Laree suditurlum room Hea
ho ed May $19 oe Srcop| But husene for the one lett atone.|l| hum, alles at fe a Baieesctecy tenet, reerttions. cet | OS
| But hardest for the one left alone.|] num, alt Hees Sharehoblers With roams, stlsy Chird Moog dae with] EUS
BAKER —In sad but loving
memory of my dear wife and our
mother, Fannie A.. who departed
this life three years ago May 11,
1923, 7
No one knows how we miss thee
No one knows the tears we shed
Burin heaven we hope to meet
thee
Where no farewell words are sald.
gy her HUSLAND
and CHILDREN.
—_—_———
PAIDVLE—In daving remem=
prance ef my dear daughter, Be-
atrice Biddle, who died May Sy
1809,
Xo one knows how much T “a
you.
No Gne Knows the tears T shed:
Tut in Heaven T hope to meet YOY
Where no farewell words are said
diy her mother, EMMA BIDDLE
BRIGGS—In sad and loving re-
membranee of my dear daughter
and sister, Maggie E., who depart-
til this life Wee years ago, May
321.
‘the yose that was fairest and
sweetest
And the une we most cherished
and loved
Is the kind that God wants in his
garden
So ile transplanted our dear
Maggie above
And now that our circle is broken
‘And parting has filed ts with pain
We hold at slovious token,
ihe bright hope of meeting again.
Ly her bereaved mother and
sister, HBATRICE and LELIA
ites.
- BURGEY—In loving | remem-
rane of Kev. Thomas K, Purley,
loving hushind and father who
Qied May J, 114 at Cambridse,
Md. *
ty his WIFE
and § CHILDREN.
DOCKINS—On May 5, 1923
Marg Jane, beloved moiher of Win.
Dockine diced, Funeral was held
Moher tate residence 926) Me=
Donutigh sivect. ‘Luesday May Sth.
GAIL—In sad and loving re-
membrance of mys dear husband,
Mexander, who departed this life
three yeur's go, May 12, 1920,
Today recalls sid memories
UC 4 loved one Kone Lo rest:
And. the gne who thinks uf him
today
Is the one who loves him best.
Some may think that I forget you
Though on cards you are no more
But in memory you sre with me
AS yout always were before.
By his devoted WIFE
and CHLLDREN,
GASRLET—In leving — remem
hranee ‘of our loving” daughien
Amelie Garlet, who depaeted iis
jite one veuk ago today.
Asicep in Jesus Liexsed sleep,
Iwo which: none ever wake to
weep
A calm und undisturbed repose,
Cabroken hy the kest of foes,
By her loving parents,
MK. AND MES. GARLET,
'S3 E. Hughes sirect
MAXYWARD—In sad but loving
remembrance of my tnuther, Mrs.
Fuachel ayward, who died” May
192.
Gone, but not forgotten
BENJAMIN HAYWARD.
WITAAAD—In_ loving reniein-
brance of our dear mother, Jars
ret A. Hilliard, who departed
this life May. 1921,
Dear mother of ours
Your tove xo divine ‘
SUL lingers, though we are apart
‘rhromdh these sed two years
We have shed many a tear
Yes, shed with aching hearts,
iy her devoted children, 8. J.
GREEN, HATTIE KANE: ‘grind
children, NETTIE ASKINS, HAR-
RIETE KANE.
MADAM MARTE
The most wond-rfully gifted
Spicituin. and Busivess Mediu
trance, eup and palin reading.
Consults on all business matters.
Hours 3 A. M. to 10.30 2. M. Will
he in the city for 3, weeks’ only.
1426 Division St Baltimore, Md
3 weeks in’ Baltimore
Mie 11-3t
HOWARD—Iin sud but | loving
remembrance of our — devoted
mother, May Howard, who depart-
@l this lite two years ago today,
Say 13th, 1921.
Can we help but feel so lonely
When your voice we do not hear
For no words were ever sweeter
Than the words of mother dear
From this world of’ grief and
(trouble
To the land of peace and rest;
God has taken you dear ‘mother
Where you will find eternal rest.
By her_ devoted * daughters,
LILLIE COMEGYS, | CASSU
HUDSON, DAISY GIBEN.
KANE-—In loving “meniory of
my dear husband, “Thomas Kane,
passed from earth to» Heaven
Mhursday, Nov. 13th, 1922, just
sis months #80.
You don't know the sorrow to be
left. alone
Until God sends a message to your
hone;
sa hurd when Me exits for one
or the other
But hardest for the one leit alone.
His devoted wile, | MATTIE
KANE: children, MURS. bsa-
BELLE BERRY, | MRS. NETTIE
KANE ASKINS, MARKIETT
ANE. .
MYERS—In sad and loving re-
memberunce of our mother, Sarah,
who ‘departed this life 12 years
ago May 11, 1912.
You don’t know the sorrow to be
* Jett alone
Until God sends a message to your
home
It is hard when “He calls for one
or the other
hut it is the hardest of all_ when
lie calls on your mother. |
Oh God, what « weight o¢ sorrow
Must the Jonely ones bears
A lonely home, a silent voice
‘And only her vacant chair,
; By her loving daughters,
BEATRICE BRIGUS -and
AMELIA MeDANIEL
PEACO—In loving remem=
brance of my dear wife and our
mother, Sarah Vgaco, who depart-
ed this lite three years ago, May 7,
1920,
‘The rolling stream of life roils on
But still the vaeunt chair, +
Recalis, the love, the veiee, the
Of one who once sut there.
But you have never left us,
And when the waves roll fast,
1 know you will be with Us,
And whisper “safe at last”
iy her loving MIUSBAND
‘and DAUGHTERS
YOUNG—John T., in sad bat
Joving remembrance o€ — husband
wad Father, who departed this life
Three years ago Mas 10, 1020,
Gone, bue not forgotten,
Although three yeurs have passed
savay
"Since from us you have gone,
Yet, father, we miss you every day
‘And sll for you we mourn
HE CHILDREN
Oh, if at times the stain of griet
Upon my checks appear,
It is becwuise my saddened heart
prints some rete in tear.
‘Through suffering at all times he
stniled,
| A sinilo of heavenly birth,
And when the angels culled’ him
hurge,
He sthiled farewell to earth -
THE WIFE
We Know M—They Are High
: Bet Our Sole Kedenvor
4 town He ea RUS ho
fhe need “sour Suppart tw aeougylish thie
Your sapere ie Mewessuny. We tte nl
ieuys Narkiad tw He. peupiew tntecest nnd
ve mevatuptisy rent "anal fort oe
less dn tint neaiect_ tv cagpert. tur as
ewes at The EXCLUSIVE HEDIS. SUOf
fag) North “Rutave eteet tea: die JH
| warner |
| NOTICE!
Open
| May 13, 1923
PARRON HEIGHTS
INCORPORATION
Lultinore: Cliy ty growing,
(AIEEE GE EE Oe
with Ground Lent by buying it
june
Parron Height,
A, A. Con, Md.
henutifully loexted on the W.
OL. & AL Railroad. about five:
Miles Boch tat rces Cet
HOS heheh setae and Wale |
courtents sent Will ghally |
Rae ulin |
These Joly are from $48.00 |
and upward, and may he ses |
eured Sor a $mill deposit down |
Seem tie MrGmehin wo oat
ave guaranteed by the Mary-
dand Title Company, and the
When the lot hus been paid for.
SPECIAL PRICES .
FOR CASIT
For further information send
cand 1s THOM OFLC,
1506 E. MONUMENT ST.)
or ulione,
Gillmor 1667-J
| MONEY TO LOAN .
|" Ist, 2nd, 8rd Mortgées
SAMUEL J. AARON
110 E. Lexington St.
Room 413 1 Calvert 2396
What Is Home
Without A Baby?
Write
Indian Medicine Company
104 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
BALTIMORE, MD.
We Have the
PRETTIEST, BIGGEST and BEST
box of Tuleum Powder in Baltimore
for 23¢ i
Price 1o Hairdressers, $2.25 per doz.
= See ur windate display
The J. H, Bishop Co.
1433 PENNA. AVE.
“FOR “RENW Apartments; up-
to-date. 4 roms and bath, One int
700 block Carey street, one in, yuu
block Hortman street. Apply 2024
Madison Avenue. Phone Madison
9014-1. 7
MONEY TO LOAN
YOR YOUR: CONVENIENCE AND BETTER SERVICE
WE HAVE OPENED A BRANCH OFFICE AT
151] PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
| * Money To Loan
on Ist, 2nd & 3rd Mortgages
OR ANY OTHER GOOD SECURITY . .
EASY‘ T-ERM-S AND Q-U-1-C-K S-ERV-CE.
Reliable - Confidential + Transactions’
APPLY i bee
CONTINENTAL MORTGAGE: & CREDIT COMPANY
_[ sefuaaax | 15IL PEANSHLYAMA AVENUE | sue
untiL | MAIN OFFICE, ee BLDG. haa
The “AFRO” ‘can give|
immediate employment to]
an experienced
> LINOTYPE
| MACHINIST
OPERATOR
. Write at once to -
Mr. JOHN é
Care Afro-American Co.
628 N. Eutaw St.,
Baltimore, Md.
First Class Wages _|
SSS
The Board of Directors
of the
Homemakers Building
& Loan Association
having decked, «dividend
ot hree Per Cent for the
past. sig months, bel at. the
Frute’ of afk pet ect or ane
hum alt tee Sharehoblers
ieee reaquested Wy present thei
Luvks at the office of the
Assuciation, 1205 Euing Sty
for the purpose of having
the dividend entered thereon,
Ollice hours: Monday eve=
nings from 7 to9 P.M.
JOUN KB, CARY,
‘President
G's. AWALT,
Secretary
we to sharin acd fosehiate ton yon
wit make aber think, net ai food
we san Wish Pree” benk alinclowes sere
foe ‘wluning. tases iene ators, aoe
Cciopine yower, makin mney. sieeve,
Cong free foes ees to hel fay postr,
re Ae ty Sreram Heple Me Boe Ze
Variek Sta, New Yeek. ie
PANTS
Large Lot of
SECOND-HAND PANTS
Best Quality, For Sale
Retail at Wholesale Prices
608 W. SARATOGA ST.
Furnace Helpers.
Blast Furnace Operators
Laborers
Former employees will be given
bark service bonus snd fife insurance
holies Upon recurn to werk,
Other jobs open Tor ett seeksins
steudy eitployment,
slpwiy
Baltimore Copper Works
THIRD AVE, AND FIFTH ST.
CANTON, MD.
WANTED — Colored men to
quality for steegin: ear aad train
porters. Experience. unnecessary,
Aransportation furnished. — Write
* MeCuffrey, Supt., St. Louis, Mu,
COLORED PRESSERS .
WANTED _
Hand-and Machine
Apply
FRIBUSH BROS. ©.
744 E. Lombard St.
WANTED—Strone young cotor-
ea nan as sard man tebe gener
ally stat iround sunitner resort
Bisw trang man ss house man in]
large summer betel Apply be=
teen HAL Mand BTM TL
GIEBENS, — dtasenient ” Rtennert
Hotel. . : it
WANTED—A first class hair
dresser with experience, None!
ther need apply, A zoul position]
{othe Fight purty. Aphy wo Mrs, 6.
in care of \fro-Anieriean Co., 628
N. Eutaw St. iy
Tinusual opportunities fer men
without capital, become iniepend-
cnt, Jasna Teal Estate, Synopsis
vf Instructions free.
National Co-operative Teealty
Company,
205 Marden bldg,
Washington, D.C.
May 12-2t
; fe ait ee ,
Classified Advertisements
Pt chara ccc ata
FOR RENT—Meeting rodine( POR SALE—2-story hot
niain hall of Nazarite Tabernacle, rooms and bath, steam heat
628 N. Culvert street. Open daily| block Myrtle Avenue.
9 A.M. to 10 P.M, 2069 W. Lexington Street.
‘Apr, 20 3-mo,| ———________
—_$—$______—_\_\_— For Ssafb—inderwovoa
FOR RENE—Two rooms, one writer, new model in pertec
furnished’ one unturnished. Apply| dition, Very reasonable.
$47 Presstmitn St. near Division]! U_EPSTELN, 38 5. Hanov
oi ot ee eee
FOR HENToStore ond fisuires) 7802 DRUID AY
PY EASY ERMS
1a eRe SEL MOCULLOM| y cigeyiake couene & bath,
STRELTE. Ma 4-34 Croutrieity, ‘lets, 2
electricity, 2 ee 2p
HOWE SATIS Toane way os] HE, HaaNaewuareOE ot
See ee attsetes Thchu| acetone fomewa oot
Pathak eat, satinery, tue] eons 9S
Pi Dixement, eur poreh. DPI :
Jy basements TEN pore. APPSY vor SALE—A large brig!
BL PESNA, AVES |inuit, three ‘story house, 00
FOR RUNT—two furnished or|ditlon In 800 block N. Serie
unfurnished rooms. Apply 141i] Uhone Owners MAdixon 2}
North Mount St. a ee et
——_. ror SATA—600 Lilock
For Rent__New St. Luke Halton, Ave, direc store
10S, McUULLOL Sit Tee ene cu tt ed
Cee eee AT ws cre| Ang Int, Yarns trae: I
ganization, Large auditorium: roont SSMU HY ey .
a ere ncaeuta, renin eee | avumuitn lung £5 es
fon emtertsinnate, recente, oe] wrucenslonal man, ‘cine hus
a ee ae are Kor ine [rat clio condition, anny, b
formation, apy. to by I. Davenport, [st any Une. Apply tu Box
1906 Henna, Ave. Phone, Vir, 347] Sy in care Afro-Americun C
IN. Bani Bt.
FOR HENT—One neatly fue-|}——
nished room. Suitable for a sentle-| FOR SATAE—16-room ho
man or a lady. Apply at 21)7| doctor's home) $4500, Call
Stok SERERT. telinon, 3908. :
FOR RENT—Two large bright}
unfurmishpd rooms and. kituhen-
cites ApH atier 6 Pe ME, (moder
ale) 404 N. MOUNT STREET.
FOR RENT
CORNER HOUSE
6 rooms and hath. All mod-
ern conveniences. Located
on Franklin Street. Apply,
Box C, AFRO-AMERICAN.
POR ORENT—One furnisived|
room to lily with family of twee.
(owner) Apply 1Su9 Division
street. 1
FOR RENT—Caiuenished, room
Camatter 6PM. 1805 Division
street a
POR WENT OThree neatly turn
ished ronms with all modern con.
Yenionces saiitihle for married
couple and single persons. Apply’
1134 Druid Mill avenue. 1
FOR RENT—Furuished room
with young couple. Apply 517)
Gold street. vat
FOR RENT—Fhat, suiable for
Tight) hotwekweping, — eluctricity.
Abily 2545 Mecelloh St it
US Se ee
FOL RENT—Two rooms, third
floor, Tarnished or unfurnished
with a quiet family of we located
in XN. W. section uf ekiy, _Addrest
mail to Hox Wa, entre” of Atros
American Co. #28 N. Fuca Street,
be May Lt-1s-25
FOR RENT—Two rooms unfur-
nished. Apply to 1116 Druid Hilt
avenue, — Phone Vernon 1S41-f
¥OR RENE — Four furnished!
rooms for vent. Apply to Mes.
Kite Giverns, 204 Falls Kua, West
Roland ark, City.
Phone Fradhurst 0545,
Nowery Public
CHARLES J. 1. HAMILTON
Reat Este, & Tisurance ‘roker|
J15 West 15h Stroot
New York City
THE HOME AND. PLACE
YOU WAVE WEEN
LOOKING “FOI.
Hh tax exeinjet © rownn houses in
Timvaien, N.Y. damien ty part
of New York City, just 30 minutes
ride from, City Tati, ‘Trains every
A minutes, Pare Ge. Price $5.0,
Cush, $1000, Halanes tering 10
suit. These houses are new, never
Been occupied anil are renui'kahly
well built. Binished in hardwowt
throuzhout, Ai improvement
such as steum heat, hot water.
eleetvivity, Laundry’ and tubs: in
haserient, Driveway for cars for
cach house. AUD we ask isi
chaner to shew you, If jnterest-
ed, write uf at once.
HAMIEUN & CO,‘ The, New
York, Chas. J. H. Hamilton, presi-
dont, 115 W. 135Ut SL, New York,
N.¥. 7 ” it
Call VErnon 6016
FOR SALE—2-story house, 6
rooms and bath, steam heat, 1200}
block Myrtle Avenue. ‘Apply!
1069 W. Lexington Street. At
FOR SALE—Underwood Type-
writer, new model in perfeet con-
U_EPSTEIN, 38 5. Hanover St.
SU BOE NSS'S. Snover 8
2302 DRUID HILL AVE,
BHASY TERMS.
cleetrivity, 2 tuilets, 2 porches, |
Before y A.M. or after 6 2. MM.
VOR SALE—A large bright well
dition in 800 bluck N, Stricker St.
FOR SATA—H00 Llock N. Crus)
yollton Ave. hree story, Uiree
ut any ume. Apply tu Bex i. M.!
S.,.in care Afro-American Co., G28
No Buuiw St. it
doctor's home) $4500, Call MAd-|
Druid Hill Avenue, McCulloh
Street, Gilmor Street, W. Franklin
and Stricker Street. See
PETTY B. GROSS.
2010 DRUM) HILL AVENUE
. . Phone MAdison 7639 ~
The Green Bungalow
IS NOW OPEN.
tu automobile tourist, parties.
Famous tor its Chicken and Seafuod
For Private Automobile
. To Riverside
Call MAdison 7639
From 6 to $ I. M.
REMOVAL NOTICE
Annie: E, Anderson
Real Estate, Fire Insurance,
Notary Public and Collections
hus removed. from
14 EAST PLEASANT STREET
Faditiniores Ma.
Phone, VErnon 5233
-_ Overlooked Values!!
In modern. wo- and. three-story
homes, await sou. These magni-
fleane” iumess are purelaseabte
with small cash deposits, balaiee
8S Pe ye ntame af Servier
ADDISON E. JOHNSON
2110 Metullaly St. MAA, Ghote
Lofflers Employment
Agency.
709 N. Carey Street
can supe with oe positions,
Beet Ghumbertnalis, ntindresse,
ter
BOSSOSSOOOSOSOOY
g WANTED Q
g COLORED GIRLS Ann}
8 WOMEN FOR
9 LAUNDRY WoRK §
g Apply 3
9° Empire Laundry”
; Winchester and N. Carey
9 Streets
WANTED’ =
Several boys about 18 yeurs og,
“Apply 2. ©. Keller Go,
36'S. FREDERICK sp,
eee
SOLICITORS
WANTED '
The ACO needs
TWO GOOD MEN
Who Have Mad Experiencg
psi at
Afro Oflice :
(3rd floer)
ws N. RUTAW Stine
_——
Phone, MAd. 9761-J
WILLARD W. ALLEN
Real Estate, Loans
Notary Public
| 1137 N. Fremont Ave, |
Res., 1325 Mosher St. |
Phang. 340, 6006
HATTON FARM
HOTEL
MeDunil, Talbot County. si,
ennai aitaated, overlie
wate tnt’ cheavente ‘ape
hen rt nse we
commingte a tye authet of feo
Fae caters aaine eo Toad
access el bey from Balt, ae
See ie asec ime
tim Gite
Pieeirairesty lapel niet
Urata tha "on hele fora
fear lees Mi Ue” dlink
Meee idl ite ewan
es ya nt
jenpleater orn ire
gala mi aN Nae
eet cathe hg any tae
Toa
See ture tufriatin at ye.
etl: Sie
OS" CHAS. D. CALDWELL
; ‘MeDanic!, Talbot County, Md.
| |
J. Howard Payne
Attorney and Counsellor.
At Law
1536 McCulloh St.
Office Hours: 9 to 5 P. M.
Res.: 1006 LINDEN AVE,
Phone, VEr. 2493
CHARLES A. CHASE
Confectionery and Ioe Cream
Parlor
Cigars’ and Clgaretter
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CHURCHES
NEW PASTOR IS
WELCOMED TO ENON
Rev. Arthur Payne was greeted by an overflowing congregation when he preached his first sermon as pastor of Eton Baptist Church last Sunday morning.
The recent differences which divided the congregation over the removal of Rev. J. H. Green as pastor were apparently forgotten all giving the new shepherd a warm greeting.
He took his text from Acts, and his subject "Why Did You Send For Me."
He told his hearers that he can to them unattached and was so orator, but that he came to work in the spirit of the master. A large congregation was on hand at night.
Rev Payne will be formally installed as pastor sometime in June.
Noah's Curse Doesn't Affect Race Today
Rev. D. G. Hill Takes This View Before Ministers' Conference
In the course of an address before the A. M. E. Ministers' Meeting Monday Rev. D. G. Hill, pastor of Allen A. M. E. Church, took direct issue with the contention that the curse that Noah uttered upon Cainan affected the Negro peoples.
His theme was "Does the Noahian Curse Affect the Negro Race Throughout the World?"
The speaker asserted that it was unbelievable that the curse uttered upon Canada for the action of his father Ham, in uncovering Noah's maleness while the latter was drunk would have weight with God. The greatness of Canada's people was cited in support of Dr. Riak's view and mention made of the earth culture of the Ethiopian. The speaker predicted that the white race may lose its world presence through irreverence for God.
0
Bess, Ernest S. Williams, R. F. Cates, Charles S. Briggs, J. H. Johns and S. A. Virgil, Miss Elise Mountain, of the Sharp, Street Community House, and Mrs. Mary Davis were among the Baltimoreans who were in Louisville this week attending the second annual City Workers' Conference, to hold the business of the Negro Dept. of the M. K. Church, Rev. Dr. W. A. C. Hughes is the director of this department.
---
A rally to raise $4,000 by the second Sunday in July was launched by Rev. L. T. Reed at Calvary Baptist Church, Biddle street, near Pennsylvania avenue, last Sunday. Following an appeal by the pastor $2,500 was subscribed. The money is to pay off the second mortgage.
Rev. Dr. A. L. Calines will deliver the commencement address at Shoreer College, Little Rock, Ark.; on May 24. He will speak before the Literary societies of Morris Brown College, Atlanta on May 28.
Rev. J. C. Parola has opened St. Paul's A. M. B. Church at 622 Laursen street, near Fremont avenue.
The New Jersey A. M. E. Conference is meeting this week at Asbury Park. The annual session of the Philadelphia A. M. E. Conference will begin at Tatchel Church Philadelphia, next Wednesday.
The Ladies' Aid of Howard Chapel, Brookville, will give a May Fost Saturday, May 18, beginning at 1 P. M.
HOWARD—A tribute of love to the memory of my dear husband, John Barlette Howard, who passed away suddenly on May 12, 1920, three years ago.
The rolling stream of life rolls on, But still the vacant chair.
Recalls the love, the voice the smile.
Of one who once sat there.
I never am without you.
The time is passing fast.
Some day in perfect silence.
I must the river pass.
I am lonely, sad and weary.
My troubled heart doth mourn.
That the world should seem so weary.
For I feel that I am all alone.
As death has robbed me of my prize.
And tears now often fill my eyes.
My life has changed and joy has
fled.
As I life's path alone must tread.
Often I seem to be cheerful.
I smile and they think I am gay:
But also, I am gloomy and tearful.
Because of the one far away.
You don't know the sorrow to be
left alone.
Until God sends a message to
your home.
It is hard when He calls for one or the other
But its the hardest for the one
left alone.
Dear husband could you speak to
me.
And could you live again:
My aching heart would then be
heated.
But this I wish in vain.
No tears up yonder! All are nearer
Than here, the nearest friend
would be;
No dearest love will there be
dearer.
But more than all is Christ to see.
You are gone but not forgotten
Never will your memory fade—
Sweetest thoughts shall ever linger
Around the grave where you are
laid.
By his devoted wife,
GENEVA R. HOWARD
WHISTLE
The whole
Family likes
WHISTLE
REQ. U.S. PAT. OFF.
in bottles,
too
'SOME' drink!
ES NOTICES
S. S. LESSON
Call Vernon 6016
Short accounts of happenings in the churches, Sunday-schools and other people's organizations will be released without charge if received on Wednesday. Just call V from 6016, Ask for Church Editor.
Sunday-School Lesson
Sunday, May 13th: DAVID, THE
POET-KING. 1 Sam. 16: 1-13;
12: 3 Sam. 1: 1-24 25: 1 Kings 1:
1-12: 12. A Survey of David's Life.)
Print 1 Sam. 16: 1-13.
Golden Text: Surely goodness
and loving kindness shall follow
me all the days of my life—Psalm
29.
Devotional Reading: Psalm 1.
Reference Material: Psalm 51:
Isa. 9: 7. 64: 33: 15-26 Luke 1: 32:
Acus 2: 29-54: 4: 25.
Primary Topic: A Shepherd Boy
Chosen King.
Lesson Material: 1 Sam. 16: 1
to 13.
Memory Verse: Jehovah look-
eth on the heart. 1 Sam. 16: 7
Junior Topic: God Calls a Boy
to be King.
Lesson Material: 1 Sam. 16: 1-13.
Memory Verse: 1 Sam. 16: 7.
Intermediate and Senoir Topic:
David as a Friend.
Town for Young people and
Adults. Lessons from the Life of
David.
Baptist Young People's Devotional Meeting Topics: "Why Do We Believe That Jesus Christ is the Son of God?" John 20: 24-31.
BIBLE THOUGHT TODAY
ROAD TO WANT:—He that oppresseth the poor to increase his riches, and he that giveth to the rich, shall surely come to want.
QUESTIONS
AND BIBLE
ANSWERS
If Parents will encourage
children to look up and memorize
the Bible Answers, it will prove a priceless heritage to
them in after years.
Why should we sing and rejoice?
—Isaiah 4:13
How do all things work together
for those that love God?
—Romanus 8:28
What is the joy of the ransom?
—Isaiah 35:10
What is God, and how should we
worship him?
—John 4:24
Whence cometh wisdom and
understanding?
Job 28:10, 28
What is promised when we ask
seek and knock?
—Matt. 7:7
What did Jesus say about the
power of faith?
—Matt. 17:20
What did Jesus say about
prayer?
—Matt. 21:22
Rev. J. M. Turpin, pastor of the
Apostolic Faith Church, has returned
from ten days' visit in
Philadelphia and New York City.
Rey, I. A. Carter, of Aberdeen,
who is chairman of a committee
appointed by the Ancient United
Order of Moses to confer with a
similar one from the Independent
Order of Moses about merging the
two, expects to call a meeting in
the near future.
An enjoyable chicken and waffle
supper was given at Union Baptist
Church Thursday evening of last
week.
The election of officers for the
M. E. Ministerial Meeting, scheduled
for Wednesday, was put off
until the last Wednesday in this
month on account of a number of
ministers being in Louisville
attending the church convention.
MARYLAND BAPTIST CHURCH
Dr. E. C. Hicks, Pastor
Notwithstanding the down-pour of rain on Tuesday evening, May 8, people came in great crowds to attend the pastor's birthday reception given him by the church at which the valuable press conference was given.
The following auxiliaries presented pieces of gold amounting to $150.00. Sunday-School, W. James Spivy, Supt.: B. Y. P. U. Pros, E. D. Smith, president; Choir, Mr. Holloway, and P. Steward, leaders; Colonel Wild Club, Miss Gretitude Wild, president; Miss Hobbs, secretary; Busy Art Club, Miss Jenna Botas president; Miss Viola Bolden, secretary; Deacon James Gaskins.
WHISTLE
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
THE MARRIAGE MARATHON
BY WILLIAM PICKENS
(For A. N. P.)
Everybody is seeing who can do it the longest now-adays, even the jazz-dancer. Well, why can't we boost for a "Marriage Marathon," and see who can stay wedded the longest? Now and then we hear of a couple celebrating the Golden Wedding, the fifth anniversary, but the average run from the hyphen gunshot seems to be fast dwindling toward fifty weeks of marriage.
. . . .
"Here comes the bride" this spring, and "there goes the groom" next January. In the marriage Marathon some of them get heart-failure so early in the run.
And, as if things are not bad enough in some of the States, they report now that an American can get a divorce for twenty cents in the true, the moral trade with Russia will get on the boom soon.
. . . .
What is the cause of this faint-heartedness on the woodlock run? Here and there we meet up with the little girl who just married unang a million flower summer before last, and this winter she is at home with "mammu," and you are ashamed to ask her where the vanishing half is. Our fathers used to get married "for keeps," for good and all. Being born, getting married, and dying were the great Fates. Now marrying is simply an adventure, an experiment.
---
It is due to the spirit in which the thing is undertaken? We know of nothing more sordid than to marry a person for money, for prestige, for place and power and social advancement. These things lose their charm when married, and if you have not married a person in a bond of love, you soon find yourself rudderless and anhembed.
...
Perhaps the older folk who have been married longer know best, but we have very little faith in the commercialism that is inceded today among marriages by insisting that the man must have a house and electric lights before we can allow him to approach our precious daughters.
```markdown
```
Most of the worthy young men have not got so much. Sometimes it is the old soundrels who have most of this world's goods.
* * * * *
And when a girl goes property-hunting, she is likely to get what she goes after. It may not last beyond the honeycombon, but she may get it. Besides, it is sometimes dangerous for the young man to get too much property before, he gets married—for if he has a nice-looking house on a front stoop, good fur coat and silk stockings job, he cannot always be sure whether he is marrying a real lover or an adventurer.
---
Getting married is coming to be a pretty risky experiment for the woman follow with lots of money. We like the girls who can book a fellow over, and take a fellow over, and be made of become, and what he promises, and not because his Dad is going to die some day and leave him something.
```markdown
```
If you start out with him and only him, you may run the race with him as long as he lasts, but if you start out with a bag of money or a financial prospect, with him thrown in for good measure, the money and the prospects may later vanish, and then you have nothing and maybe nobody.
...
To the Overland Marathon and the Dance Marathon and the Jazz Marathon, and the Aviation, Swimming, and Boating Long-Distances let us add the Marriage Marathon and set the prize of highest honor for it.
To run this race, they must start early and vigorous. They must not wait until they are off the course and rich and 'Queen' and hope to win in this Marathon. You notice, those who reach the Golden Weddings generally start in around twenty—Let us start early and make the great run, not for Russia or for "Mama" and the old home town, but for the fiftieth, or even the sixtieth and seventieth marital milestones.
Twenty-six sessions of the Howard E. Kelly Community Bible Class were held last year. The enrollment is seventy-two, the largest in history. The average attendance has been twenty-four. Metropolitan, Grace John Wiley, Boltel and Sharp Street Churches are represented in the membership. Twenty-five members are Sun School teachers. The course of study for last year was "The Gospel of St. Mark."
SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY
Earth Has no Special Season for a Mother's Love
Sunday, May 13th, is Mothers' country this special day has been set the mothers of the world. But every Day, after all. There is no time, no or of the heart, that is not mothers'
From the first moment, when brow the wonderful halo of motherhood when she leaves life desolate, each of great price. Sometimes it is lation comes to us. We are so apt to deeds of ministration as a matter of prone to forget the sacrifice, the carc gone into each day that she has spent.
God made mothers to keep the wi Through all the petulancies of child aspirations, the despairs, the hopes, to the desolation of life, her love she light of benediction.
There are words, silvern and be may speak of the love of youth; the and golden, that may tell of the low words like a flame that may voice the no one may find words that speak a n.
For the words that speak of me to mind the long hours of her tend her unfailing courage, the depth of herty of her service, and the glory of that are held close and sacred in whispered only in the still watches of to an all-wise Father who made n world.
Sunday, May 13th, is Mothers' Day. All over the country this special day has been set aside to do honor to the mothers of the world. But every day, is Mother's Day, after all. There is no time, no season of the earth or of the heart, that is not mothers' day.
From the first moment, when God sets upon her brow the wonderful halo of motherhood, to that last day, when she leaves life desolate, each day is hers, a pearl of great price. Sometimes it is late when this realization comes to us. We are so apt to take all the gracious deeds of ministration as a matter of course. We are so prone to forget the sacrifice, the care, the love that have gone into each day that she has spent with us.
God made mothers to keep the world sweet and sane. Through all the petulancies of childhood, through all the aspirations, the despairs, the hopes, the discouragements, the desolation of life, her love sheds, and unwavering light of benediction.
There are words, silvern and beautiful, in which one may speak of the love of youth; there are words ringing and golden, that may tell of the love of life; there are words like a flame that may voice the love of country, but no one may find words that speak a mother's love.
For the words that speak of mother love, that call to mind the long hours of her tender care, the days of her unfailing courage, the depth of her sacrifice, the beauty of her service, and the glory of her love, are words that are held close and sacred in the heart, and are whispered only in the still watches of the night, in prayer, to an all-wise Father who made mothers to bless the world.
New Pastors Please
Rev. W. H. Manoko, the new pastor of St. John's, A. M. E. Church; Rev. M. H. Davis, who took the place of Rev. J. W. Norris at Waters Church; Rev. W. A. Harris, who assumed the pastorate at Carroll, and Rev. W. H. Hall, the successor to Rev. J. R. Nelson, were warmly greeted by their new congregations last Sunday.
A.
The ideal May weather brought out many church-goers and all of the pastors who were returned to their old charges were welcomed back.
Rev. R. E. Ford, presiding elder of the Hagerstown District, put in the day visiting Allen, Payne Memorial and other local churches.
Rev. C. J. Stephan, presiding elder of the Baltimore District, started on his first quarter's work.
Trinity Elects Pastor
Trinity Baptist Church by overwhelming vote elected the Rev. Luke Reynolds, acting pastor for the next 18 months to succeed the late Rev. J. H. L. Higgs.
Ministers Should Get Together Now Or News For Inter-racial Improvement, Mr. Editor:
Here is an item, from the "Tampa (Fla.) Bulletin" worthy of extended notice. It is as follows:
Last Monday April 11 united ministers day upon Tampa Negroes, when twenty-white and eighteen colored ministers in Reuben Baptist Church assembled in their before-unheard of initial Inter-racial Ministers Meeting, the Rev. John E. Culmer, rector of St. James Episcopal Church, and President of the Tampa's Ministerial Alliance, presiding.
The table collection on last Sunday morning was $114.58. So far we have been able to meet all our financial obligations without borrowing any money apart from the host's allowance. We are making plans for the building of our $75,000 community church.
The above is not only a most encouraging sign, but it is indicative of what ought to be done everywhere. It is nothing short of disgraceful that white and black ministers find no place of perseverance and of better understanding. And, yet, all of them profess that there is nothing in this whole world that they love more than "Jesus. The love of "Jesus" ought to constrain them to get closer together. Much of the evils we are formed to arise because of misunderstanding failure. They had better get together now, for there are no introductions in heaven.
Last Sunday morning the audience increased so that the building was unable to accommodate all. It was the largest morning crowd we have ever had afternoon the church was again overcrowded for communion servant and $240 was laid on the table. Five joined the church and one for baptism. There are now 200 candidates for baptism without any special revival campaign. At the evening service the church was again crowded and the audience listened to a special gossip pal sermon. Hearts were thrilled with the spirit of the crowd. The sum of $88 was laid on the table. Total for the day $139.98
George F. Bragg, Jr.
Rev. E. S. Williams, superintendent of the Baltimore District of the Washington M. E. Conference, filled the pulpit at Metropolitan M. E. Church last Sunday morning. Later in the day he held quarterly conference at Fallston, Baltimore County.
We are glad to see so many of our friends, whom we left at Eton attending Metropolitan Baptist Church. All are welcome. The only thing the pastor has against Eton, if anything at all, is that Eton owes him back salary. He hopes that him, because the money
The annual conference of the United Christian M. E. Church will begin at the Willing Workers' Church, Lexington street above Gilmore, on June 13. Bishop Joshua Williams will preside.
he needs a gospel sermon, subject "Mothers" as Sunday is "Mothers" Day."
Local Knights Templar held their annual Ascension Day at John Wesley M. E. Church Thursday evening, at which the season was preceded to them. A priest prepared the services at the church.
Bible Class at 10 a.m. m. 11 a.m. m. Sermon and baptizing at Perkins Square Baptist Church by, Dr. Curtis W. Williams m. 12 a.m. m. We will return to Mt. Merritt at 7 p.m. for Prayer and Wise meeting. 8 p. m. m. Sermon by the pastor, will be served. We will receive. You have a cordial welcome. Thursday evening 17th Old Folks Concert by, W. F. Dickinson, D. Pastor, Residence 90615 Pierce St. Sister Mary Green, Clock
"God Neither Made the Earth in Six Days nor Rested on the Seventh" was the subject of a paper read by Rev. J. W. Robinson before the A. C. F. Young Calary A. M. F. on Church Monday. His views were attacked by a number of ministers.
TARRISSON
Mr. TARRISSON, S. S. Supt. Mrs. Annie
Smith, S.A., Supt. Mrs. S. E. Iancandl.
Pres. E. L., Mand Carey, Pres. Jr. E.
Mrs. Elizabeth Puller, Pres. Liesia
Alis Society, Mrs. Mimie Harvey, Pres. of
Mrs. Society, Joshua Puller, Pres. of
the school
The Post-Office Glee Club
AT M.T. ZION M. E. CHURCH
SUNDAY; MAY 13, at 8 P.M.
Silver Offering at the Door Mother and Daughter Service at 11 A. M. Ivov, S. A. Virgil, pastor, Pierre Ave. and Gilmar St.
11 a. m. Preaching, 2.30 p. m. S. 8. S. 6.50
m. S. 6.50 for Pastor and Commission service.
"TREE OF LIFE
SERMON BY REV. WELLIAM I.
Sharp Street Memorial M.
Dolphin and Eiting Street
SUNDAY, MAY 13th—At 8:
60 Living Angels will appear.
Special Music by Sharp Street
Rev. Wm. H. Dean, Min.
RELIGIOUS DRAMA—The Chris
Entitled, "Way To The
RELIGIOUS DRAMA—The Christian Pilgrimage
Under Direction of Mrs. Ryan Coleman
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH—Biddle and M
Sunday, May 13, 8:30 P. M. Rev. Lyles, Pastor. S
ST. LUKE M. E. CHURCH—Bond Avenue, Reist
Wednesday Evening, May 15th, 8:30 P. M. Tick
Mrs. Mary Burkett, chairman; Rev. M. Williams,
MT. CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH—Mosher Street
Avenue, Thursday, 17th, 8:30 P. M. Admiss
Rev. A. W. Taylor, pastor; Mrs. A. E. Edward
Mrs. Marie Thomas, pianist.
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH—Biddle and McCullah Sts,
Sunday, May 13, 8:30 P.M. Rev. Lyles, Pastor. Silver Offering.
ST. LUKE M. E. CHURCH—Bond Avenue, Reisterstown, Md.
Wednesday Evening, May 15th, 8:30 P.M. Tickets, 25 cents.
Bishop, Rev. M. Williams, Pastor.
Mrs. Mary Burke Foster 6866
MT CALYVARY BAPTIST CHURCH—Mosher Street and Myrtle
Avenue, W. May 17th, 8:30 P. M. Admission, 15 cents.
Rev. W. Taylor, pastor; Mrs. A. E. Edwards, chairman;
Rev. Moris Thomas, pianist.
Metropolitan Baptist Church
Metropolitan Baptist Church
Madison Aye, and Preston St.
Rey, J. H. Green, Pastor
MT. VERNON BAPTIST CHURCH
Oxford St. near Penna Ave.
(NEWARK) MAY 10th
ST. MATTHEWS M. E. CHURCH
E. Bird, Jr. investment Ave.
Rev. R. H. Green, Pastor
St. Matthew street
---
BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923
WATERS A . M.
Aisquith Street,
REV. M. H. DAVIS, Pastor.
Mr. Frederick W. 2
Mrs. Emma Stanley
Pres. A. C. E. L.
MOTHER
11 A. M.—Sermon by the Pastor,
8 P. M.—Sermon by the pastor
Mother in the Home."
2:30 P. M.—Sunday-school
Class Meetings—Sunday, Monday
day, 8 P. M. Prayer Meeting
ing Class. Mr. Chas. Cary, F.
THE 75th (DIAMOND)
of Madison Street I
Madison St., pr.
18 NO.
11 A. M.—ANNIVERSARY SERIES
Eternal Christ."
4 P. M.—THE DIAMOND AND
Sunday-school. Mr. Bernard
Every night, of the week of
felicitation by the various denom-
A Diamond Welcome
Rev. W. W. W.
MOTHERS' DAY
11 A. M.—Sermon by the Pastor, subject, "The Mother of Israel"
8 P. M.—Sermon by the pastor, subject, "The Influence of a
Mother in the Home."
2:30 P. M.—Sunday-school 5:20 P. M.—Allen C. E. League
Class Meetings—Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
8 P. M. Prayer Meeting—Friday, 8 P. M. Boys' Training
Class, Mr. Chas, Cary, Instructor.
11 A. M.—ANNIVERSARY SERMON by Pastor, Topic, "The Eternal Christ."
4 P. M.—THE DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY EXERCISES by Sunday-school, Mr. Bernard Webb, Supt.
Every night of the week of the 13th will be programs of felicitation by the various denominations of the City.
A Diamond Welcome Is Arriving You
SAINT JOHN A. M. E. CHURCH
Lexington Street near Pine Street
Rev. W. H. Manokoo, Pastor
11 a. m. Sermon by Pastor
2.30 p. m. Sunday-school, Supt. J. W. Woodlion
6 p. m. A. C. E. League, Mr. Morris, Pres.
8 p. m. Sermon by pastor.
Class meetings Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
ings. Prayer meeting Friday evening 8 p. m.
ST. PAUL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Robert St. between McCollbe and
Brent Hill, Avenue
FIRST INDEPEND
CHUR
Biddle street
11 a. m. Sermon by Pastor
2.30 p. m. Sunday-chool, Supt. J. W. Woodhous.
6 p. m. A. C. E. League, Mr. Morris, Pres.
8 p. m. Sermon by pastor.
Class meetings Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday evenings.
Prayer meeting Friday evening 8 p. m. Mr. Ebb, Sec.
Revenue 4, H, H. Smith, Minister
Residence 442, Saint George Ave., Goranus
11 m., Preaching service, 2.20 p. m.
Sunday-school, 6.30 p. m. Christian Endeavour meeting, 8 p. m. Preaching. Every Wednesday night prayer meeting at 8 p. m.
S. M. Minaraj School
Sunday-school 1 p. m., Sunil. J. W. Stanley
School 1 p. m., Sunil. J. W. Stanley
School servery and Communion 6 to 7 p. m., Junior En-
deavor Society 7 to 8 p. m., Y. M. Meeting.
8 p. m., Endeavor Worship servery and
Communion.
Mid-week prayer meeting Wednesday, 8
p. m. Trustee meeting first Monday
in each month 8 p. m.
THE PEOPLE'S CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Bond and defferson streets
* MONTEER'S DW SERVICES
9:30 a. m. class meeting. 11 a. m.
Sermon by the pastor. 2:30 p. m. Sunday
school. 2:30 p. m. Mother's Testimonial
2:30 p. m. C. E. League. 8 p. m.
Special program.
Sister Rose Pitts, President
10 a.m. class. 11 a.m. preaching. 2
p. 10. S, S, 630 p. 10. C, E. The League of
Authors of the Bible will confer with
nomenclature Christ Median, President.
2 p. 10. Preaching. The day night class.
Bro. Wm. Pitts, Sept. of S, S. Sister Rose
Pitts, Pres. of S, E. Bro. Julian Moore,
Pastor's Steward.
11 a. m. Pastor Rev. J. W. Nicholson
2 p. m. M. S. 6:30 p. m. C. E. 8:48 p.
Sermon by the Rev. C. E. 9:48 p.
Are welcome. Mes. Carrie McIntosh.
Sept.
CHRIST INSTITUTION CHURCH
Darser St. near Monument
G. G, W. Kennard, Pastor
H a. m. Schoenberg, Custon
2.29 p. m. Sunday school, 6.29 p. m.
Emphore Lodge service, 8 p. m. Seminary
spiritual and test service. All are welcome.
Residence 1110 N. Glimor street,
11 a. m. Sermon is pastor, Sunday at 8 p. m.
Special sermon "Throw Out The Old Man And All That Is His", Services every night except Saturday at 8 p. m.
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH
Dolphin street and Fremont avenue
M. C. Strachan, Pastor
Residence 2000 McCullough street
Sunday 4:30 p. m. Lymburn, 6:30 p. m.
Sermon, Wednesday, 8:30 p. m. Prayer meeting, Saturday (Sabbath) 10 a. m.
Sabbath School, 11:30 a. m. Sermon, All people's Services. All are welcome.
JERUSALEM Spiritual CHURCH
Sarajevo street
Preaching on Sunday by Rev.
Coleman. Spiritual Test every
night. Thursday night, Materiliza-
tion meeting. Every one is w
welcome. Pastor Mrs. P. Taylor.
"Ruth The Moabites
Will be B
Sharp St. Mem. M. E. Chu
Dolphin and Fitting
BY SHARP ST.
Wonderful In Song
Calcium Lights
Positively S
Rev. William T
Wonderful In Song
Calcium Lights
Dominically Hilary Offerin
Der. William H. Dean. Minister
Picturesque In Scenery
Benefit Drive
MUSICAL RECITAL
BY THE PUPILS OF THE LA
Under the Auspices of His Day
AT GRACE PRESBY
Dolphin and
Friday, May
Admission 25 Cents
Special Mothers' Day Services
Montgomery S.
SUNDAY, M
Under the Auspices of His
11 A. M.-Special Sermon to Mother
3 P. M.-Rev. R. T. Coates, White
8 P. M.-Spee
Mrs. Edwin Morley, Pres.
Cora Roberts, Chairman
Mr. A. J. Holsey pres
Miss Claudia B. Ross, Lyric Soprano
Brooks, Tenor, of Washington, D. C.
B. M. Rhetta
BY THE PUPILS OF THE LATE PROF. CHARLES J. RUSK
Under the Anspies of His Daughter, Mrs. J. Theodore Jones
AT GRACE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Dolphin and Biting Streets
Mr. A. J. Holsey presents in Musical Recital Miss Claudia B. Ross, Lyric Primo of Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. J. Stanley Brooks, Tenor, of Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Petty B. Gross, Reader; Mrs. B. M. Rhetta, Accompanist
At Sharp St. Mem. M. E. Church, Monday, May 14, 1923
8:15 P. M.
Call VErnon 6016
M. E. CHURCH
near Jefferson
Parsonage: 427 Alsquith Street
Scott, Supt. S. S.
Mr. J. F. Waters
Sec'y Trustee Board
RS' DAY
subject, "The Mother of Israel."
subject, "The Influence of a
5:30 P. M.—Allen C. E. League
day, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
—Friday, 8 P. M. Boys' Train-
instructor.
AND ANNIVERSARY
Preseterian Church
near Park Ave.
NEW ON F.
AMON by Pastor, Tople, "The
ANNIVERSARY EXERCISES by
And Webb, Supt.
the 12th will be programs of
iminations of the City.
The 18 Arealing You
Walker, Pastor
18 NOW ON
J. W. Woodhous,
Morris, Pres.
day, Wednesday, Thursday evening
8 p. m., Mr. Ebb, Sec.
FIRST INDEPENDENT A, M. E.
CHURCH
Biddle street, Poinna Ave.
Rev. L. C. Cortis, D. D. Pastor
11 a. m. Sermon by the pastor.
2.30 p. m. Sunday-school, Miss Ruth White.
Sept. 8 p. m. League services, Miss
Thoreau with president 8 thursday on
the occasion. After the service
our Spring Rally will take place and we
ask that every member of the church be
on hand and report. We invite our church
also to the present at our conference in
night at 9 o'clock. All members please
be present.
ST. PAUL A. M. E. CHURCH
632 Laundry Street near Fremont Ave.
Rev. L. C. Parham, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES
10.45 a.m. Me, Preaching, 7.45 p.m. Sun,
Preaching the Holy Communion 10.45 a.m.
The Holy Communion 8 p.m. Sun,
Prayer meeting, Come one, all will.
BIG ZION A. M. E. ZION CHURCH
Penn Ave. near Dolphin St.
Rev. J. W. Metoy, D. D. Pastor
11 a.m. Preaching by pastor, 8 p.m.
The Pastor will preach his farewell ceremony
for this year, Friday May 11 at 8 p.m.
The Pastor will preach M. E. Church, church
and congregation will worship with us.
All are welcome.
Rev. Lewis Oipher, Pastor
11 a.m. Sermon on the pastor 2 p.m.
Sunday Morning, M 1200 3 p.m. Sermon by Rev. Thomas Campbell, 7 p.m. M. Italy Communion, 8 p.m. M. Italy, 9 p. of Royal Mites will turn out at which time a sermon will be delivered by the pastor.
The pastor will be welcome. Bro. Lewis, Church Clerk.
FIRST COLORED BAPTIST CHURCH
Cer. Cremine and McKederry Sis.
SUNDAY MAY 12, 1952
P.O. Box 101, P. T. Porter
Residence 1611 Ashland Ave.
Phone Walce 2557-W
MOTHER'S DAY
11 a.m. Sermon by pastor 1:30 p.m.
Bible School, M. Bible School services by Mothers Circle and chair, 6 p.m. Program by B. V. P. V. 7:30 p.m. Program by Silver Spring Social.
Weekly services: Monday, night
Baptist Help, Association, Friday
night, prayer meeting All are Welcome
Morris Myers, Clerk.
Residence 1903 McFallin street
17 a.m. Preaching, 2:30 p.m. Sunday
school Mrs. Rosa Irving, Sunt. 8 p.m.
Suprel Test
Weekend Preaching Tuesday, Sutrel Test
Thursday, Sutrel Test, Friday Experience
and Prairie Meeting. Every one is
welcome in worship with us. Sunday May
20. 8 p.m. Confirmation and Communion.
Let the public know what is going
on in your church.
ss"—Sacred Cantata
rendered at
arch, Sunday, May 20, 1923
Streets: 8:15 P. M.
TREET CHOIR
Picturesque In Scenery
Silver Offering
Benefit Drive
I. Dean, Minister
DATE PROP. CHARLES J. RUSK
Physician, Mrs. J. Theodore Jones
BYSTERIAN CHURCH
Fitting Streets
18, 1923—8 P. M.
Rev. J. T. Colbert, Pastor
Mess. Ebenezer A. M. E. Church
St., near Charles
MAY 13, 1923
Miss M. Monkey Society
Bury by the Pastor.
Coat Church, Choir and Congregation
Special Services
Mrs. Annie Delta, Vice-Pres.
Rev. J. O. Morley, Pastor
Events in Musical Recital
of Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. J. Stanley
; Mrs. Petty B. Gross, Reader; Mrs.
; Accompanist
SHARP ST. MEM. M. E. CHURCH
Dolphin and Fitting streets
Rev. Wm. H. Dean, Minister
10 a. m. Adult Bible Class. 11 a. m. Mother's Day Sermon by PASTOR. Wear a flower in honor of mother if living, pink; if deceased white. 2.30 p. m. Sunday-school. 3.20 p. m. Sacred drama THE BEAUTIFUL CITY by the children. Miss Maggie Daley directress, benefice D. R. M. BADMAN IN GYM by W. M. S. M. Laura Carroll, presbyterian. 5 p. p. Epworth League. 8 p. m. TREE OF LIFE Sermon by PASTOR. 50 LIVING ANGELS. 16 TRUMPETS. 12 FRUITS. SPECIAL MUSIC BY OUR CHORI SILVER OFFERING for $7,000 Drive. Come early to avoid rush for seats. Bring a friend. Monday 8.30 p. m. MR. A. J. HOLESEY presents MISS CLAIRA D. R. BOSS LYRIC SAPRANO, of Philadelphia, Pa. MR. A. LEY BROOKS, of Washington, D. A. MISS PETTY R. GROSS REAERER, M. R. MIBHA, actress, nominist. Bonus Drive. Cards for admission 75 cents.
WEDNESDAY 8:30 p. m. "THE HARPERS OF JERUSALEM" of John Wesley M. E. Church will present "THE GATES MAR" Admission 10 cents, Mrs. Gertrude Mcers, captain,
Thursday 5 p. m. Sharpe 10 p. p. CHURCHEN SUPPER 25 cents,
Early 8:30 p. m. Drama "WATCH YOUR STEPS." It attracts large audience, Mrs. Annie C. Schult, captain, Strangers and visitors Welcome, $7,000 Drive June 17th.
CENTENIAL M. E. CHURCH
Cor. Coelaine and Bank
Rev. Charles S. Briggs, Pastor
Rev. James M. Briggs, Pastor
Junior Church, M. Sturley
Superintendent, 10 p. m. Provoking Mother's Day, 2:30 p. m. Sunda school,
Mr. John Johnson, Superintendent, 5 p. m. Ripworth League, Mine, Dean, President 8 p. p. m. Union Ridge Memorial Association.
EASTERN M. E. CHURCH
Patterson Park and McKinley Street
Rev. J. W. Warren, Pastor
11 a.m. preschool by the pastor, 2:30
p.m. m. Preschool, 3 p.m. pastor, bachelor
and congregation will visit Wayland Baptist
Church, 4:30 p.m. m. Epworth League
Church, 6:30 p.m. m. Merrimack School,
3 p.m. preschool, Tuesday p.m. preschool
Thursday p.m. m. Prayer meeting.
Spiritual Services Reserved at
FIRST INDEPENDENT M. E. CHURCH
Pierce street near Fremont Ave.
Rev John E. Cooper, pastor
Residence Kit Pierce street
Sunday May with Mother's day
11 a.m. m. Preschool, Sunday-
school, 8 p.m. Sermon by the pastor and
Spiritual Tect service.
Spiritual Tect service.
Wednesday night Church meeting, Bro.
M. Thomas leader, Thursday and Friday
night, Spiritual Tect Everybody Welcome.
Dont open at 7:30 p.m.
AMES MEMORIAL M. F. CHURCH
6 a.m. Class meeting, 11 a.m. M. Men's
Bible Class, 11 a.m. M. Sermon by pastor,
Holy Communion, 2:30 p. M. Sunday
School, School, Robert H. Napier, Sept.
Covey, William H. Napier,逊逊
7 p. M. Motherhood, 8 a.m. M. Sermon by
pastor and Holy Communion, Friday
18, and Old Fashion Love Post, Public
most cordially invited.
MT. OLIVET M. E. CHURCH
Edmondson Ave., near Winters, Catonsville
Rev. B. Robinson, Pastor,
1220 Avenue, near
"MOTHER'S DAY"
11 a.m. M. Sermon by pastor, subject, "The
Sacred Love of a Good Mother,
2 p.
Mothers, 8 p. Mrs. Ethel Wicks and
conduct the services.
Parsonage: 128 N. Pine street
10 m. by Bible Class. 11 a. m.
Parsonage School 5 p.
m. by North Lawn. 8 p. m. by
the pastor. Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday night.
"Those class and prayer meeting.
All are welcome.
JOHN WESLEY M. E. CHURCH
Rev. J. 14, Jenkins, D. P. Minster
9.30 a. m. General Class, 10.55 a. m.
Communion, 2.20 p. m. Sunday-school,
5.30 p. m. Epworth League, N. o'clock
5.50 p. m. Assassin Club. Its auditorium will
be its own normal prefected to
them by the pastor.
Residence 1850 R. Barry Street
Street 11 a.m. special sermon to Mothers by
the Pastor. 3 p.m. Mather's Day program,
Mrs. Alice Hall in charge. 8 p.m. annual sermon to Unified order of Jobs by the Pastor.
Monday May 14, at 8 p.m. Rev. Dr. Green of the First Baptist Church with
chair, congregation and ushers. Wednesday May 16, at 8 p.m. Rev. W. H. Tay,
chair, congregation and ushers. Wednesday May 17, "The Gates of Joy and Harpess of Jerusalem" Mrs. M. C. Mace, deceased.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Formerly
GILLIUS MEMORIAL M. P. PCHURCH
Stuckton street, near Baltimore street
Rutherford R. Robinson, Pastor
2220 South 9th Avenue
MOTHERS DAY
10:30 a.m. Class meeting, Bro. William
Barnes, leader, 11 a.m. special sermon by the pastor. 2 p.m. Sunday-school, 7 p.m. Lutheran School, 8 p.m. The church is conceived by the choir, "A Sermon of Story and Song."
Fitting and Dolphin streets
Rev. J. T. Colbert, D. D. Pastor
At 11 a. m., Sermon by Rev.
Pezavia O'Connell, D. D. of Morgan
College. Excellent music by chol.
Society. Eight by chol.
Holy Communion and Recognition
of new members. All are cordially
invited to these services.
U. WESLEY C. M. F. CHURCH
(Formerly known as Galliee)
is again swinging into the limelight.
Our new pastor Rev. S. H.
Stirling is infusing new life into
the membership by a loving and
deep acquaint in delivery
and highly spiritual. Though he
has been here but a few days, he
has led his people to install new
electric lights which adds beauty
and comfort to the church.
Sunday the 13th inst, the pastor will
preach at 8 o'clock p. m. from the
subject "Consecration, which will
mark the opening of a revival
which will be conducted by a
pastor. Sunday service was very
impressive. The pastor preached
very impressive germons. Persons
were added to the church.
the University of Community
Music of Community Services, the
gournth Avenue, New York City, is
encouraging to foster this growing
interest and to acquaint more
music groups, both wate and co-
lorized, with the possibilities offered
by the possibilities offered
by the possibilities offered
by the possibilities offered
BIG AID TO CHOIRS
Bulletin Enables Leaders To Plan Sacred Service of Negro Songs
MABEL TRAVIS WOOD
MABEL TRAVIS WOOD
Everyone knows that Negroes have given to America much of her most typical and beautiful folk music through the spirituals and piñatas that have grown out of the life of the race. But what musical art owes to the modern Negro composer is not so generally recognized.
There is today a wealth of music both sacred and secular which have come from the pens of Negro composers. Some of it is based upon the spirituals, and some of it is not racial in character. Such Negro composers as Harry T. Burleigh, S. Courage-Taylor, Will Marron, K. Nathaniel Dett, Carl C. Diton, J. Rosamond White have given the fifteen years written songs of rare melody and originality, songs that will live.
Of late there has been a steady increase in the appreciation of musical compositions by Negroes both among white and colored groups, church choirs have given over services to African-American women, many women's clubs have devoted time at their sessions to the performance of religious compositions by Negro composers, especially the slammer choral works. Colored groups operating locally united community service have presented special programs of Negro music to the public, songs by modern Negro composers, in New Haven, Connecticut, a festival of Negro music presented by a Negro community chorus and in Augusta, Georgia, a musical program made up largely o. compositions by No
by compositions by the composer.
A outfit, "Music composers by Negroes" has been prepared by his guard and is sent out at the annual charge of the剧院. It has the compositions or seven of the incarnate Negro composers, telling for what combinations of voices and instruments they are arranged and where they may be secured.
Examples of well-balanced programs Negro music which already have been presented are given. To help groups desiring to take up the study and performance of Negro sporans the onetime mentors the best existing collections of this type of music.
MAY HEADS RINGLING BAND
BY J. A. Jackson
Percy Lee and Frank Martin of the Bacquain and Larry Riggs, Brother side show band came upon the rage just before the show left New York, and provoked us with a list of the members of our show show band. Thomas J. of Cleveland, successors P. C. Lowery as leader, Richard Ritter having moved to training to succeed legal in that city. Other members are Bentley Elliott, Clifford Walker, Richard Jaspe, William Matthews, Vincent Inglesias, Win. O. Rushall, Attiford Butcher, James Janks, Winston Walker, Billy May, Jasfaulner and James Holmes.
OBGAN HAS 2000 PIPES
Hampton Jutl., Va., May 19—
"The Prissile Memorial Organ",
dedicated here last week by
deceased musician, and semi-
autonomous organ, with some 2,900
pipes, which includes the modern
stops that make it possible for
skilled musician to play colorful
orchestra scores, and string in
audience of great importance.
In the English and French
horns, the string instruments
clarinet, oboe, and flute.
Chambers' Review
Birmingham, Ala., April 2—McGar and DeCaston's Nighttime Steppers with ten people was the week's attraction. It is the much talked of show, was heavily billed and packed house awaited their opening. The show is a vaudeville carrying special guests, with the people who bookers on and company was introduced afterorking overture, by straight Goin's introduced the company before a partly raised curtain that disclosed only the lower part of the chorus. After the opening "Dusty" and DeCaston kept the house in an uprour for seventeen minutes. Their line of absolutely clean talk terminated in a crab game that the steppers beamed. McGar followed with "baby Fingers" supported by the chorus in mid-night habitations. It was borlesued by Dedy" playing wench. The latter Gaston doing a baby bit and "Dus could eliminate the blustle with good advantage to the bit.
Miss Francis Goin's did "Agrivating Papa," to a heavy up plaque. A mixed quartet offered Addie Haywood's Black 'Bottom' very effectively in spite of the orchestra's failure to play the piano well. "Goin and Dusty" put over a dance, offering that, closed with a "over the top" after which a sketched called "Th. Schemers," wait on with pleasing effect. The chorus did "Way Down, Yonder in New Orleans," offering that December. She as with Mothern."
Trent, and Aldo, took a lot of applause with "Wabash 'Blues'" and a fast finale closed the show to a power of an applause.
Call VErnon 6016
Alberta Hunter
Rea
By J. A. Jackson
Two days after the "How Concet" show opened at the Apollo Theatre in New York, a famous Broadway obstacle, Alberta Trunner was called to the cost. Since she was most obscure patrons promptly turned their contribution to that of the extravagant and black Swan record customers; and to the long since cannual approval of the coopers, the pubs, where this incivious singing girl was first discussed to the public, just when makes her unevent from the outer singers in her class or offering, is not exactly on hand, the pubs are public schools who never had a music lesson, but who sing with a wonderfull natural tenor, has a carry of voice, a monotone of tone, a clear pronunciation, an bleedthro
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Washington, May 16.—Judge R. R. Reeves, of the Municipal Court continues to improve at his home on 8 street N. w.
Minne. florence - Cole-Ralbert, prima donna soprano of the race, appeared in a brilliant recital last Tuesday evening at Metropolitan A. M. E. Church, 19th ed. added the superspec of the Alpha Alpha fraternity. The recital was given for a scholarship fund.
Howard Glee Club will repeat their annual recital by request of the Rancho Memorial Chapel, May 11.
Next Thursday evening Howard University School of Music will present Antonie Garnes of the Orange Opera Company in a voice recital at the University Chapel, singer Jesse Abortion, who has been indsposed is reported in media.
Mrs. Elizabeth Morton and daughter, Mrs. Willy Robinson, of 192, Corcoran street, N. W., entertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Clas, Watts, o. toward University; Mrs. Florence Jackson, of New York; Miss dessie Dixon, o. Washington and Mr. Winobrose obstetrician, o. Pennsylvania; Prof. Bregnach, of 1821 Corcoran street, as in Freedmens hospital undergoing treatment for a broken leg when she received last Thursday when her mother fell down a night of steps at her home. Dessie Sterling of 307 Virginia avenue, who was sentenced to 25 years in the prisonitory upon conviction of poor seating was a new trial Monday by civil justice Smith of the Court of Appeals. Her attorney's submitted amicuit repudiating the testimony of Revenue Agent Radon p. Kany, (White). The churches here will observe Mothers' Day Sunday the 15th.
Varnells Review
NEW STAR THEATRE
Shreveport, La., April 23—The Idea Company with sir, Mr. and Mrs. Patio to come and reading lady, respectively scored out so per cent to a fifth house that greeted their aggregation to nine people. Leona Lynen, one of the important members of the cast was under the care of the physician when accounts for the shortage.
Leona Lynen was the second come, Louis Attridge is a magician, names Seward a stuntman. Others were storyteller, court scout, baken griege and devoted devotee of the comics and the four girls did an opening chorus that went. Louis Looman then offered a song in one with about the same results. Miss Scott did likewise. Starkee got a new manuscript for a line of talks and a comedy.
Ratoo and Ratoo got over a S. D. and I. T. act to applaud miss Ratoo made a change cost some time during the oil, and put over a sentimental number to a good rum, but decimated the encore.
Jamis Stewart followed with a dance that registered well with the tans. This was followed with ten or magic and a good escape stunt by Adrienne who had two people from the audience tie him to a chair, with a chain and then tie him into a bag from which he escapes in five minutes.
A comedy drama that had to do with a passp, and several disturbed married couples ended in the unevitable all round light that led to the make-up an hour and twenty minutes time for the show that would rate at least 10. Miss Plano is well equipped with four nice changes and the show is well costumed.
Jamie Matlock will be required to close win this week and go to hot Springs, under the doctor's orders.
Four Jazzing 'Hounds'
In vaudeville at least fifty percent of the success of a singing and dancing turn depends on the men in the orchestra pit. This percentage is even higher in the case of a tab organization in putting over a jazz ensemble. We have in this city a four-piece orchestra that is not only rapidly gaining fame as the rabbits rubbers among local jazzers, but is the talk of all the vaudeville players who play the local circuit, mainly: the Lincoln Jazzers, of the A. L. Stevens, theatre, composition as "Steve," leader and pianist, Tom Stirman, cornetist; Willard Sinkford, trombonist and D. A. Johnson, drums and xylophone. What his quartet can do to a jazz tune, "tap-t."
Jimmy Dick Writes
Jimmy Dick drops us a line to say that his partner James Crosby has been forced by Illness to leave the show they were jointly presenting under the mute Tongue Girl, and that she is now in sole control of the organization.
The show is now being booked under the name of Dick's New York, Subway Girls and is composed of Ocotuva Dick, Mary Bradford the clever blackface comedienne and "Blues" singer, and also Thomas Dixon the "Strutting Fool." The Washington last week from which it was scheduled to head West.
Colored Actors Write Of Prejudice In London
and sent over the foot lights with a savir faire that as to place her in a class by herself. With the handicap of a hostile orchestra unfamiliar with her numbers, she hit in the high spot spot of public esteem to the extent of really "stopping the show," which is the highest tribute that can be accorded any artist.
A Letter From London Leicester Square Empire Theatre
Waited after our opening, also to give the prejudice which we encountered upon our arrival a chance to subside.
In spite of adverse propaganda in the "dailies" which began about three weeks before the opening of the critics of salt papers, "Plantation Days" was the most nicking hit of the show. The critics and every one worth white agreed however that "The Rainbow" presented by Sir Alfred Buit, produced by Albert Decote and the most decorative and gorgeous production ever presented in Europe. Twenty scenes, 110 performers, 35 band, stage crew 40, and etc.
We are doing only fifteen minutes in the show which is just long enough to hold proceedings in each great formate. We are going to overcome from antagonism caused by the jealousy of the English Variety Artists Federation, and the Actors
DEANWOOD, D.C.
DEANWOOD, D. C., May 1n-
Zion Baptist Church of whom Rev. E. T. Broundus, is pastor celebrated its 11th anniversary last week. A reception and purse were tendered the pastor. *An Old Fold's Concert was presented at the First Baptist Church last Monday evening under the auspices of the presiding bishop, Dr. Hader is present. A packed house was in attendance. A still quit was given Mrs. Lottie King as first prize for selling the largest number of tickets. Three other prizes were also awarded. *Zion will give a musical Sunday night in winning up a successful rally. *A chicken dinner was given at the residence of Miss Edmunds by Messrs. Branch and Tolliver Tuesday evening for the benefit of Zion Baptist Church. *The Deanwood Citizens Association meets Friday in Deanwood School. *Mrs. Eagley, died at her residence last week. *Franklin was held at Zion Baptist Church.
Lucille Hegeman Locks Box Office
Lucille Hegeman Locks Box Office
BY J. A. Jackson
Laurie Rigeman, coming direct from the starring Opera house in New York's up-town district adjacent to the colored settlement, were she was a big draw for a seventy per cent white audience, opened as the headmaster at the Lincoln theatre in the center of the city, books from the other stand, and justified Aes's Downs judgment of her as a draw, by absurdity competing, not only the discontinuance of ticket sales, but the Fireman even ordered all door tenders to admit absolutely no one. This was at the first matinee. The week's business was one of the record sort. Three songs were written by Lyle and her band closed a bill that got approval all the way down. Others who appeared were Scott, Allen* and Lee Walter Winthrop and the Trevis Duo, together with a feature film.
"The Unloved Wife"
George M. Gatts, the Fitzgerald Building producer opened what he says is the first of a series of colored dramatic productions at the Latroye Theater, N. X. on May 15, 1939. University of Texas presented prior to being sent on tour. The cast is an admirable one from every angle. Evelyn Ellis, long a leading woman with the lead roles, with Arthur Pryor as leading man Jessic Allison, Ruth Carr, Margaret Brown and Monte Hawley complete the small cast required.
The show is provided with the same elaborate scenic investiture and big lobby display that his productions with white casts. His Negro artists are being employed under precisely the same equitable terms as are his other casts, and his other major assist in assembling the show, and in laying out the route which includes Baltimore.
H. U. WINS DEBATES
Washington, May 10.—For the second consecutive year the Howard University debaters by defeating both of their opponents, Lincoln and Union Universities won the inter- collegiate debating championship.
Furrell and Hatch are on the Poll time and over the whole route they were spotted fifth on a seven-act bill, and the local newspaper critics justified the bookers
The "AFRO" can give immediate employment to an experienced
Jacob Jackson, the Secretary of the Berryville, Va., Fair and Horse show announces that this year's meeting will occur July 22-26. In common with several other shows in the immediate vicinity whose dates co-ordinate with Berryville, he desires to hear from horse exhibitors of every type that our race affords.
Ors Write
Rce In London
Association and English Musicians who adhere to their slogan "British Theatres for the British" These different Federations, Associations and Unions got with the
newspapers and published many many stories about the importation of American musicians and actors which we note has been given quite a bit of space in your paper. The public however proves they care for American entertainment and especially color-performers. The trip over was like a vacatio and all members of the company enjoyed it. We have been nigly entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Scott, and Mr. and Mrs. Whalley, and Mr. and Mrs. Whalley james, and Mr. J. C. Layne who was a member of "The Exposition Four", Mrs. Jenne Haton wife of Mr. Jason of the Verset Three, and Miss Dora Doog whom we are know and love, have helped on each occasion to make us enjoy ourselves to the highest. Harper and Blanks Co. "Plantation Days."
judgment by some mighty fine notices. This week they begin a tour of the 1905 doctor houses in New York.
The Worcester, Mass., Evening Post, Gazette and Telegram are unanimous in their praise of the "Shumie Along" company that is playing the New England territory headed by Whitney and Tutt, S. T. Whitney, Dink Stewart, Paul Bass, John Alexander and Miss Rates receive special mention in these papers, and the whose company is highly complimented in stories that range from six to ten inches.
Harry Fidler sent a unique card from the Orpheum Theater, Salt Lake City where according to local papers his single Chinese act is receiving the same favorable reception that has marked his tour of the coast.
C. Tiffany Tolliver, announces that his New Strand Theater in Roanoke, West, Va., will be ready to open about June 1st. The house will have a capacity of 650 seats. Pictures will be the policy and the Hampton owned by the same interests will be used thereafter for vaudeville and road shows.
Dick and Dick are now heading their own show of eleven people, they have played thru Maryland and Virginia and are now headed for the West. It is billed as Jumie Dick's "Subway Girls."
Eddie Green Smith and DeForest and Wooding Orchestra were all properly written by the Columbia. Ohio duties in some nice reviews that "Plantation Days" received during their engagement at the Lyceum Theater in that city. The show moved to the Lyceum in Pittsburgh from there for April 29 and week.
400
Sample
STRAW HATS
on Sale at
$1.50 and $1.95
All Styles and Sizes
Also
STRAWS and PANAMAS
from
$2.50 to $5.00
New Silk Novelty and
Sport
SHIRTS
LOUIS HACKERMAN
1731-33 Penna. Ave.
Opp. Lafayette Mkt.
STYLISH
CLOTHES
Depends on the Work-
manship and the ma-
terial used.
MICHAEL TURK
Tailor of Experience
5 S. Green St.
...Lyric Theatre...
Friday, May 25th, 1923 8:00 P.M.
WILL-O-THE-WISPS
Class of Department and Artist of Supreme Vocal Ability with 100 Characteristic Impersonations. Mr. T. Henderson Kerr in charge.
MES LILLIAN HEIDSON 579 Oxford Street
Phone: 5811 VERION
MIR. L. H. KANDOLPH 680 L. MONUMENT STREET
JACKIE
COOGAN
in
"OLIVER
TWIST"
Directed by
Frank Lloyd
Not just Jackie Coogan's greatest picture. More than that—the first true screen presentation of the classic. Directed by Frank Lloyd, who directed "The Eternal Flame." There could have been no more perfect portrayal had Dickens written "Oliver Twist" just for Jackie.
National
Amusement
News
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
WITH
J.A. JACKSON
OF
The
Billboard
The Foremost Weekly Theatrical Diary
For the foremost Weekly Theatrical Digest and Review of the Show World. All Rights Reserved.
Drake and Walker with 25 people in his "Bombyb Girls" show is in the middle West playing the Gus Sun houses and getting a lot of favorable newspaper comment. A Dayton paper, gave the show twelve inches with a double column head. That's hitting the high spot.
According to those interested, The Ballet, a daily in poster form, may resume publication soon, inability to get a printer who would get out on things is the cause for the suspension.
H. K. Felts has closed with the South Southern Shows, and will operate with the old concession on the Jones-Jenkins Carnival Co. His wife will handle tickets in one of the box offices. They were engaged thru the Dudley offices.
..Lyric T
Friday, May
8:00 P.
WILL-O-TH
Extravag
Mr. L. Ellswu
PRESENT
Class of Department and
Vocal Ability with 100
sonations. Mr. T. Hend
PRICES: $1.50
To be had on
MISS LILLIAN HERDON
Phone: 5811
MR. L. H. RANDOLPH
Wore 6
MR. JOHN JONES
Wore 42
COMING SOON
"SOULS FOR SALE"
"BRASS"
Mary Pickford in
'Little Lord Fauntleroy'
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WED
A Super
GREAT REELS
THAT MAKE
YOU ASK FOR MORE.
Another milestone in screen achievement.
Screened as the world would wish it.
A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACTION
A Super
Not just Jackie Coogan than that—the first true classic. Directed by Fran Eternal Flame." There perfect portrayal had Dick just for Jackie.
Every Dickens character
Curl Stockdute .....Monks
Lon Chancy .....Fagin
Gladys Brockwell.....Nancy Sikes
Artful Dodger.....Edonard Treoat
Sowerberry .....Nelson McDonald
“RIVOLI”—Hundreds
REGENT
J. H. (Bigboy) Bank and Tootsie May. Flukers have teamed up in Atlanta. They will use two songs of their own, "Sweet Mama Keep De Skillet Warm" and "Strut and Behave Yourself." The hope to make the U. B. Q.
Jennings and Wright have been keeping busy in the white theaters in and around Philadelphia after their engagement with Mr. Gibson at the Standard where they held 'em for a week.
H. L. Pryor, now in the cast of "The Unloved Wife" has the distinction of having been New York's pioneer Negro Player. On Feb. 10, 1907, he married "Jersey" at Carnegie Hall in that city. No earlier colored performance of modern drama has come to our notice.
It is stated on pretty good authority that six colored girls will go into Siegfeld's Polls in the very near future.
Bonnie Butler, the theatrical writer has joined the staff of the New York Star. The paper gets a man who knows both show business and the press game, and how to co-ordinate them.
As a result of the publicity given E. J. Belts comedy "In Wrong" by Frank Dalham in the N. Y. Herald recently, H. E. Webb has joined Mr. Belts and will put music to the piece. They hope to have it ready for a producer soon.
Theatre...
25th, 1923
M.
HE-WISPS
ganza
worth Toomey
ENTS HIS
and Artist of Supreme
0 Characteristic Imper-
derson Kerr in charge.
.38, $1.10, 83c, $55c
of Agents:
.579 Oxford Street
11 Vernon
.159 L. Monument Street
6019-J
.1422 Jefferson Street
4222-W
If It's Good
REG
EDNESDAY—
er Special
JACKIE
OOGAN
in
"OLIVER
TWIST"
Directed by
Frank Lloyd
Special
Man's greatest picture. More
the screen presentation of the
bank Lloyd, who directed "The
he could have been no more
ckens written "Oliver Twist"
portrayed by the ideal artist
s Fugin teaches Oliver a "game"
Jackie Coogan.....Oliver Twist
Linel Bedmore.....Mr. Brownlow
George Sicymann.....Bill Sikes
turned away every show
Call VErnon 6016
They will never fail,
To say you were no black man
When they know you aint;
Tut, Tut, Tutsio, don't cry,
Tut, Tut,Tutsie, good bye,
M. Jackson, C. H.
Toot toot totois, Good-bye.)
Tnt, Tut, Tutis, good-bye.
Tut, Tut, Tut, Tutis, good-bye,
that take this
(way form us a white man will try
To make thee.
Kiss me, tutis, and then
COUNT BANJOS
READERS OF THE WORLD.
Are Exclusive Agents
In Baltimore for these world-famous
instruments. They are incomparable.
amount Banjos are used by all the
red banjo artists with the leading
thestraz, such as Paul Whiteman,
accent Lopez, Paul Specht, Benson's
thestra, etc.
PARAMOUNT BAN
LEADERS OF THE WO
We Are Exclusive A
In Baltimore for these wo
instruments. They are inc
Paramount Banjos are used
noted banjo artists with the
orchestra, such as Paul
Vincent Lopez, Paul Specht
Orchestra, etc.
PARAMOUNT BANJOS
PARAMOUNT BANJOS
In Baltimore for these world-famous instruments. They are incomparable. Paramount Banjos are used by all the noted banjo artists with the leading orchestras, such as Paul Whiteman, Vincent Lopez, Paul Specht, Benson's Orchestra, etc.
We invite you to call and hear a demonstration of the Paramount. We carry a complete line. All models ready for immediate delivery.
Seven Styles
A—$130 D—$240
B—$150 E—$290
C—$185 F—$350
Leader—$200
Special Cases, $24.00
H. R. EISENBRANDT S
417 N. HOWARD STREET.
Phone VE rnon 3898.
ENBRANDT SONS
OWARD STREET.
phone VE rnon 3698.
New
n Theatre
Lincoln Theatre
934 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, MAY 10K
WATTS & WILLIAMS THE RIDLEY TRIO
Featuring Black Patti A Real Act
THE RIDLEY TRIO
A Real Act
JOHNSON & GALE
2 Brazil Nuts
JOHNSON & GALE
2 Brazil Nuts
WALKER & SMITH
Everything New But Voices
A NEW RECORD BY
SARAH MARTIN
'Michigan Water Blues'—'Keeps on Rainin''—8060
(Upa Can't Make No Time)
ALSO HEAR RESSIE SMITH SING
'Downhearted Blues'—'Gulf Coast Blues'—3844
THE JAZZ SHOP, 1544 Penna. Ave.
RECORD BY
SARAH MARTIN
Blues'—'Keeps on Rainin''—8060
(Para Can't Make No Time)
EARL BESSIE SMITH SING
Blues'—'Gulf Coast Blues'—3844
SHOP, 1544 Penna. Ave.
A NEW RECORD BY
SARAH MARTIN
'Michigan Water Blues'—'Keeps on Rainin''—8060
(Papa Can't Make So Time)
ALSO HEAR RESSLE SMITH SING
'Downhearted Blues'—'Gulf Coast Blues'—3844
THE JAZZ SHOP, 1544 Penna. Ave.
COMING SOON
DOUGLASS
FAIRBANW
in
"ROBIN HOOD"
It's At The
Special Attraction Special Attraction VAUDEVILLE JOHNNY HUDGINS and MILDRED H THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY— The Drama of a Girl who Danced with D MAE MURRAY in "FASCINATE STRONG CAST AIDS
Special Attraction
DEVILLE
and MILDRED HUDGINS
DAY, SATURDAY—
Girl who Danced with Danger
URRAY in "FASCINATION"
IDS
VAUDEVILLE
JOHNNY HUDGINS and MILDRED HUDGINS
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
The Drama of a Girl who Danced with Danger
MAE MURRAY in "FASCINATION"
ROBERT Z
LEONARD
Presents
A METRO
SPECIAL
MAE
MURRAY
in
FASCINATION
One of the strongest casts which has ever supported Mac Murray has been assembled for her newest Metro picture, "Fascination," a story of Spanish love, now at second of the series in which Leonard Z. Leonard presents Mussel Murray. The first was "Peacek Alley," presented and directed by Robert Z. Leonard for Tiffany Productions.
Vincent Coleman, star of stage and screen, has the leading male role in "Fascination," Mr. Coleman, who has been a People, "have been with that show from the opening until it completed its New York run.
Helen Ware, who has the part of a singer, has a long list of stages and screen successes to her credit. Creighton Hale, one of the best known juvenile portrayals, appears as the brother of the heroine. Some of his more recent screen appearances are in "Orphans of the Storm," "Way Down East," "Women Who Wait," "Her Majesty," and "The Idol Dancer."
Release of Energy
Found in Jazz
Mac Murray believes that jazz and dancing provides the "jeep" that persons who are indoors a greater part of the day need. Miss Murray is herself a dancer of note, and was a star in Ziegfeld's Follies before she entered motion pictures. In her new Metro picture, "Fassation" presented by Roland Pettibone, she ranning at Regent Theatre, the popular star introduces a number of new dances.
Written By
Edmund Goulding
A
TIFFANY PRODUCTION
---
I've gone into the musical instrument part business with the same thoroughness and teness that have characterized our piano like machine departments.
I find a big assortment of standard inits here. We feature only makes that
Joseph B. Jackson, 1631 Pennsylvania Avenue, Fortemay, a salesman for the securities of the Douglass Treasury Corporation, was arrested Wednesday by Sgt. Oscar Bock of the Northwestern Police Station charged with passing a balloon with Washington.
it is being hired for the Wash
ington office.
6000 AT WONDERLAND
Over five persons took an afternoon in and went to Wonderland Park at Sunday. Amusements were going on tall blasts and bumps of others and around on the point, given on the shade on benches and on the ground.
WILLIAM H. WREDERS
William H. D. Whistler, the widowed better in Baltimore catering to white traitors died on a inspirational Poughkeepsie, N. N. Saturday. He also born to a tainting family for life more than a month. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mary Whistler. For many years he was a regular contributor and contributor to Madison Street Presbyterian Church. Church services were held at St. Peter Claver Catholic Church Tuesday morning浸祭 was at Cathedral Cemetery.
We Will Sell It--If For Sale
instrum
Call VErnon 6016
The Bomenmakers Building and Loan Association which meets weekly at the Sharp Street Community House, declared its usual semi-annual dividend of three per cent. April 1st.
The monthly report of the Association shows $26,840 invested in property. The Association was covered over one year by John R. Carney and others. Increased assuring colours people of small means to purchase homes by making a small initial payment and the balance as rent.
BISHOP HURST
NOT HEARD FROM
No word has been received from Bishop John Hurst who said July days ago sent a month's stay in Haitu, has sent Dr. R. Price Hurst of Washington told the American yesterday. Both Bishop and Mrs. Hurst are believed well and word from them is expected at any moment.
CAN'T STOP MIGRATION
Fremingham. Ala. May 10—local colored newspapers admit that they can't stop the Negro migration northward. One of them says: "The Negro is not asking that the white people change their position, he has decided that if they don't be well."
THE AFRO-AMERICAN SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE MAY 11, 1923
83 NEW DU PONT
SCHOOLS IN DELAWARE
Wilmington, Del. May 5—During the past twelve months 42 buildings for colored schools have been erected out of the Pierre S. Du Pont Educational Fund, according to a report issued a few days ago. This makes a total of 42 colored schools erected out of the Pierre S. Du Pont Educational Fund. A total of $1,644,656 has been spent on colored schools paid $754,146 for whites. In addition, $1,524,224 has been spent in improvements at the Colored State College at Dover.
COMPOSER IN COURT
Newark, N. J. May 9, 18 K. N. F. Servick J. B. Rosenthal Johnson, noted composer, principal in a musical act at Loews' State Theatre here was in court last week to prefer charges against Samuel Treff, manager of the Beechhurst Advertiser. 121 Market sat for retiring to serve him. Treff was held in State bail by Justice Scofield, a counsel justice of the court.
BOOKER T. LOSES
Los Angeles, Cal. May 16—
Booker T. Washington, Jr. and
Thomas Alexander candidates for
Council were defeated by a small
majority this week.
JUST
OUT—
"VOD-DOO BLUES"
JUST
OUT—
"VOD-DOO BLUES"
and
"LOG CABIN BLUES"
By Terry Smith
You have heard all the Pines
now bear the "Baltimore Pines"
BALTIMORE MUSIC
SHOP
You have heard all the Pines
now bear the "Hen-How Pines"
BALTIMORE MUSIC
SHOP
The only Colored Music House
in Marshfield
1222 Penna, Avenue.
MAIN ST. 1928
BE
MADI
WE W
MAKE
Piano Victrola
Tuning Repairing
Player Work
A Specialty
Specialty
Goldfie
Goldfield
913 Warner Street at Hamburg
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, MAY 11
Monday—
William Russell
in
"A SELF-MADE MAN"
Tuesday—
Dustin Farnum
in
"STRANGE IDOLS"
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Monday—
VICE RAIDS IN "CHI."
The Associated Negro Press
Chicago, Ill. May 16, 1960. Third
Wards known in the second and third
years of the war are "experi-
encing a tough time since the ad-
vent of the new administration.
Police Captains led raiding parties
into the amusement resorts Thursday
night, scattering hundreds of
merry makers and arresting 220
men and women on charges rang-
ing from violation of the search
and seizure act to disorderly con-
duct.
HARRISBURG TEAMS WIN
Harrisburg, Pa., May 9 $—The Capital City Baseball team beat Lipskens, Pa., on Saturday 10-2. The Harrisburg Transfer Starts celebrates the Penn office force on Wednesday 11-6. The Harrisburg Giants played two games with Elmhirst N.J., Sunday each winning a game.
Indian Medicine Company
1044 FLENNSYLNANIA AVIL
BALTIMORE, MD.
WHEN
BETTER
CLOTHES
CAN
BE
MADE
WE WILL
MAKE 'EM
HARRY. THE TAILOR
1919 Penna. Ave.
Open Evenings
GINNING MONDAY, WAY HIRS
Tuesday—
Dustin Farnum
in
"STRANGE IDOLS"
STAR THEATRE
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, MAY 4TH
Vaudeville to Please
Monday—"JUNGLE GODDESS"—No. 6
Wednesday—"OREGON TRAIL"—No.2
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DUNBAR
CENTRAL AVENUE, near Monument St. If Good Pictures You Want, Follow the Crowd to The Dunbar
DLE STREET, near DRUID' HILL AVENUE
UNION HIGH GIRLS
DEFEAT BALTO ORLEANS
The Oriole Girls' basketball team was defeated by the Union High School girls' quarter of Hampton, Va., at the Hampton High last Saturday night 22-11. Friday's matchup was manifested by both teams during the game. The Peninsula's third band was on band and offered music during the game.
lively arrangements are being made by New York colored Democrats to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Dammany Hall United Colored Democracy, Sunday, June 18, at Renaissance Casino, Governor Smith, Mayor Kylan and other prominent officials will take an active part in the exercises.
THE
STAR
MONUMENT STREET
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK R
Vaudeville
Monday—"JUNGLE GOD
Tuesday—William Duncan
Wednesday—"OREGON T
Thursday—"Gold of the
Friday—"Demon Shadow,
Saturday—Pearl White in
DUN
CENTRAL AVENUE,
If Good Pictures You Want, Fol
Week of May 14th
Special Cast in
"BISHOP OF THE
OZARK"
Pearl White
in
"PLUNDER" No. 11
Comedy
"Gasoline Wedding"
tuesday, Special—
All-Star Cast in
"OUT OF THE
DARKNESS'
Century Comedy
Jeggie O' The Movies"
Starring Baby Peggy
dncsday—
Wallace Reid
In
"WHAT YOUR
HURRY"
Geo. B. Seitz
In
KY RANGER" No. 15
And a Good Comedy
OLE STREET, near D
Jacob Friedland
FRIDAY—
In Carew presents
"MY LAK' A ROSE"
—Don't Miss this Picture
of a beautiful young
her violin and the magic
melody wrought in the
band of thieves who
her for their crooked
and how one of them was
willing to sacrifice every-
thing that she might know
he loved her.
E
something in 'The Miracle Man', "Humoresque" and 'Over the Hill' that, you did not see on the screen, but felt in your heart 'Mighty Lak' a Rose' has it—in a different way.
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---
- Kid-Nord
heavyweight
the "Winged
matched to
and bout here
Springfield, O. Maa
folk, the Ballastiere
and "Tiger" Flowers.
Tornado" have been
hook up in a 12-ron
Saturday.
TELLS DYSPEPTICS WHAT TO EAT
Avoid Indigestion. So ve Acid Stomach. Heartburn. Gas on Stomach. Exc.
Indigestion and practically all forms of stomach trouble. say medical authorities. are due nine times out of tea to an excess of
THE
THEATRE
T NEAR BOND
BEGINNING MONDAY, MAY 12th
e to Please
ADDESS"—No. 6
an in "STEEL HEARTS"
TRAIL"—No. 2
Desert"—5-Reel Western
"starring Mitchell Lewis
in "PLUNDER"—No. 10
BAR
near Monument St.
allow the Crowd to The Dunbar
Doors Open 1 P. M. Sharp
Thursday—
Special Cast in
"LONG LAND
SHADOWS"
Ben Wilson
in
"BRANDED FOUR"
No. 15
Elnor Fields
in
"JUNGLE GODDESS"
No. 6
Star Comedy
"GOD MOTHER"
Friday—
Frank Maye
in
"ALTIC STAIRS"
Art Acard
in
"THE OREGON TRAIL"
No.4
Comedy
"SMILES WINS"
Saturday—
Eddie Hooi Gibson
in
"RIDING WILD"
Comedy
"KIDS and SKIDS"
DRUID' HILL AVENUE
Under, Prop.
SATURDAY—
HENRY B. WATHALL
with 7 stars in
"A SPLENDID
HAZARD"
Adopted and produced by Allon
Dreen, the man who made
RORINIDOD. From the story
by Harold Macarth. A
story of thrills and mystery.
The thrill of a hunt for the hidden treasure; the bizarre color of life on the Mediterranean shows, the tension of a mystery skillfully unfolded; the sheer magnitude of unqueming acts; all spring to the fascinating story. The cast is headed by Henry B. Mathall, one of the silent drama's foremost character actors.
Also A Good Comedy
CHARLES CHAPLIN in
"THE PILGRIM"
RICHARD BARTHELMESS
in
"FURY"
"The Voice From the Minaret"
hydrochloric acid in the stomach taken in
Chronic "acid stomach" is exceeded food
wildly dangerous and suffers badly
should do either one of two things: prevent
Either they can go on a limited remission
and often disgraceable. Just avoid trouble
the food that afflicts with them, naturally
their irritation the stomach and lead need of
their acid, so condition them down.
Hydrochloric acid in the stomach taken in a little water with the Chronic acid stomach is exceed- food will neutralize the excess largely dangerous and suicides acidity which may be present and should do either one of two things, prevent its further formation. This Either they can go on a limited removes the whole, cause of the and often disagreeable diet, avoid- trouble and the meal digests foods that disagree with them naturally and healthily without that irritate the stomach and lead need of poppin pills or artificial to excess acid secretion or they degreements. can eat as they please in reason. Get a few ounces of Magnesium and make it a practice to counter- Magnesium from any reliable dis- act the effect of the harmful acid diet. Ask for either powder or and present the formation of gas tables. It never comes as a liquid, soerness or premature fermenta- milk or curate and in the dis- actration by the use of a little Bisultrated form is not a laxative. Try Magnesium at their meals. this plan and cat what you want
Get a few ounces of Nitrated Magnesium powder any soluble drugstore. Ask for vinegar powder or tablets. It never comes as a liquid, milk or carrageen and in the dissolved form is not a laxative. Try this plan and eat what you want at your most meal and see if this isn't the best advice you ever had on "what to eat."
There is probably no better
thing than to be disappointed.
Advertise!!!
AREY
STMAN STS. BEST IN PHOTO PLAYS
from 2:15 'til 11:35 Continuously
and it is widely used for this purpose. It has no direct action on the stomach and is not a digestent. But a teaspoonful of the powder, or a couple of five grain tablets
CAREY and PRESTMAN STS. RES
Open Daily from 2:15 till 15:35
CAREY
THE WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, MAY 22d
Milton Sills,
Claire Windsor and
Henry B. Walthall
in
"ONE CLEAR CALL"
(7 acts)
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, MAY 2014
The John M.
Stahl
Production
"One
Clear
Call"
DOROTHY
PHILLIPS
IN
"HURRICANE'S
GAL"
A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACTION
Seed, Elinor Field and Truman
Van Dyke in
LE GODDESS"—Episode No. 5
ENGER in "DADS ROY"—2-net Comedy
HEAD in "VERDEL BLOOD"—2-net Western
"IN GET YOUR MAN"—Some Comedy
More, Ralph Graves and Cast in
WILD IRISH ROSE"—6 acts
feature with a Love Story as sweet as a Rosa
in "STEP LIVELY PLEASE"—2-net Comedy
Pearl White
Geo. H. Reed, Elinor Field &
Van Dyke in
"THE JUNGLE GODDESS"
BUDDY MISSEGGER in "PAID BOS
THE COPTERHEAD in "TREETEL BLOOD
PAIL, PARCOB in "GET YOUR MAN
THURSDAY
Goleen Moore, Ralph Graves
"MY WILD IRISH ROSE
An exceptional picture with a Love Story
CHESTE CONKLIN in "STEP LIVELY PI
Geo. H. Reed, Elinor Field and Truman
Van Dyke in
"THE JUNGLE GODDESS"—Episode No. 5
BUDDY MESSENGER in "PAWS ROY"—2nd Comedy
THE COPPERHEAD in "FEETEL BLOOD"—2nd Western
PAIL MESSENGER in "GET YOUR MAN"—SOME Comedy
Goleen Moore, Ralph Graves and Cast in "MY WILD IRISH ROSE"—6 acts
An exceptional picture with a Love story as sweet as a Rosa
CHESTE CONKLIN in "STEP LIVELY PLEASE"—2-act Comedy
Pearl White
and a great supporting cast in
"PLUNDER"—Episode No. 14
and a great supporting cast in
"PLUNDER"—Episode No. 14
ENGINEER in "SMARTY"—2 net Comedy
F in "FORTUNES WHEEL"—Some Comedy
mond and Laura La Plante in
NTOM FORTUNE"—Episode 1
MUDDY MESSENGER in "SMARTY" 2nd Comedy
JAMES, SARGENT in "FORTUNES WHEEL"—Some Comedy
Wm. Desmond and Laura La Plante in
MUDDY MESSENGER in "SMARTY
JAMES, SARGENT in "FORTUNES WHI
Wm. Desmond and Laura L.
"THE PHANTOM FORTUNE
SATURDAY—
Art Acord and Louise Lorraine
in
"THE OREGON TRAIL"
EPISODE NO 7
HAROLD LLOYD in "FAY YOUR DUE
Jack Dempsey"
Champion Prize Fighter of the
"DARE DEVIL JACK"—Ep.
ROY STEWART in "THE SECRET CODE"
AESOP'S FABLES in "THE GAMBLE
COMING—
RODOLPH VALENTINO and NOBLE JOE
"THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE
All-Star Cost in "TRUNDER
RUTH ROLAND in "HAUNTED Y
D in "PAY YOUR DUES"—Some Comedy
Jack Dempsey
on Prize Fighter of the World, in
EVIL JACK"—Episode No. 9
"THE SECRET CODE"—2nd Detective Play
DIES in "THE GAMBLER"—Cartoon Comic
NTINO and NOBLE JOHNSON in
HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE"
Star Cost in "THUNDERCLAP"
AND in "HAUNTED VALLEY"—Serial
HAROLD LLOYD in "TAY YOUR BUES"—Some Comedy
Jack Dempsey
ROY STEWART in "THE SECRET CODE"—Sact Detective Play:
AESOPH'S FABLES in "THE GAMBLE"—Cartoon Comic
RODOLPH VALENTINO and NOBLE JOHNSON in
"THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE"
All-Star Cost in "THUNDERCLAP"
RUTH ROLAND in "HAUNTED VALLEY"—Serial.
Call VErmon 6015
J. C. Cremen, Prop
Dorothy Phillips.
Wallace Beery.
Gertrude Aastor
And cast in
"HURRICANE'S
GAL"
(7 Acts of Action)
The Girl who loved
A Traitor—
And the Girl the
Traiter Loved.
Lola, warf of the Sea, stole
the woman who held the trai-
tors love-swept her from so-
cial world to a South Sea
Schloss, there to stage her
own battle in TW. While the
Hurricane housed a destroy-
ed power in mansion and above
a flamed seafarer like.
WOMAN did not fight
against WOMAN, but FOR
WOMAN, so in this story
they show you how a Woman
can fight.
Charlie Chaplin
"SUNNY SIDE"
(2-act comedy)
WEDNESDAY—
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FRIDAY—
Harry Davis, Manager
"ONE CLEAR CALL" from a mother to a prodical son. "One Clear Call" to the heart of a man whose love was to shatter the love of others! "One Clear Call" to the Night Riders! Whoo! What a thrill when they come rearing down for vengeance! Hundreds of the mourning drams, action, and tingling sensation.
THE COLORED AMERICAN REVIEW
Showing many prominent people so the race and the pro-
cess and subventions of the OLDEO MAN
CIVIL WAR
ETY THE SOCIAL WHIRL
SOCIETY THE SOCIAL WHIRL
Miss Ophelia Dennis of 218 Market street, Chester, Pa. spent last Sunday in the City as the guest of her two aunts Mrs. Ophelia Green and Mrs. Octavia Dudley of Argley avenue. She also attended Woman's Day service at Metropolitan M. F. Church.
Mrs. Naomi Johnson, of 124 S. Caroline street, has returned home from Beckwith, Md., and Chester, Pennsylvania.
Mrs. S. J. Cromwell, of Cambridge, Md., was the guest this week of Mrs. Mattie T. Herbert. While in the city she was entertained at dinner Wednesday evening by Mrs. Elenora. Cooper, of Druid Hill avenue, on Friday of ternion a tea was given in her honor by Pamela Wilson, of Bristol street and Mrs. Mary Dorey entertained in her honor at an elaborate luncheon at her home in Arlington on Monday evening. The guests present were Mrs. Leonard Cephus, Mrs. Mary Ernest Herbert.
Dr. and Mrs. Jos. Evans of Brooklyn, N. Y., are in the city for a while on business. They will return home next week.
Dr. and Mrs. U. G. Bourne of Frederick, were in the city on business Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Sanders Calhoun street, celebrated 25th wedding anniversary April 30 and received many beautiful presents.
We wish to thank our friends for their token of love, Payne A. M. E. Church and Ruth Court No. 28, for their large sum of money they presented to us.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Boyd Holland of 1408 McLohan street, were tendered a surprise on their first wedding anniversary by their mother and sister-in-laws, Mrs. Mary W. Holland Sr. and Mrs. Viola M. Minor. Among the invited guests, we had Mrs. David Hardy, Mrs. William Smith, Mrs. Wilson Mack, Misses Eulalia W. Woingust, Mary E. Earle, Josephine Jenkins, Maude Blake, of New York, Beulah King, of Philadelphia; Messrs. Edgar A. Stevenson, Preston Harris and Dr. Isaac Young of this city.
AGAIN!
At Last We Have
Eau Sublime Black Hair Dye
For Sale
Price 90c box
The J. H. Bishop Co.
1425 PENNA. AVENUE
ve Gums
Sensitive Gums
By the use of a soothing dentifrice in the following manner: Before retiring thoroughly massage your gums with PYRODENTO. Do not rinse—in the morning sensitiveness is gone. Prompt attention should be given all symptoms of Pyorrhea.
Purodento
TOOTH PASTE
Turodento
Guaranteed to nip mouth troubles in the bud!
TOOTH PASTE
Ask for the Society Editor and give her accounts of engagements, births, marriages, deaths, receptions, club meetings, together with the names of those who attend. There is no charge for this service. Items received after Wednesday noon will be held until the following week. Just call the Arno's Society Editor.
Mrs. Wm. F. Lewis, of 1329 Drulid Hill Avenue, who has been very ill at her daughter's Mrs. R. G. Chissell, is able to be out again.
Mme. E. Cooper, hair artistist 1229 Penna. Ave., is very ill, confined to her bed.
Miss Mary Lizzie Keys, of 220 N. Bethel street, is spending a few days with friends in Philadelphia.
Mr. Albert J. Madden Jr. of 648 Pitcher street, has returned home from a recent visit in New York City, as the guest of Miss Theresa E. Madison.
Mrs. Lula Smith, who has been ill for some time with a nervous break down, is now a convalescent.
Mr. Israel Barnes who has been sick is able to be out again.
Miss Rosa Cager of Atlantic City, Mrs. W. E. Franklin and Mrs. M. E. Talbot of Baltimore were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Mitchell of Willington. Deb. A very enjoyable day was spent.
Mrs. Mary M. Lee will furnish the program for Mother's Day at the Riddick Chapter Epworth League of Centennial M. E. Church on Sunday May 13th, at 5 p. m.
Miss Charlotte Fortune of 311
Virginia Ave., S. E. Washington,
D. C., spent the week-end as the
guest of Miss AnnaBelle Layne of
820 N. Wolfe street.
Mrs. I. Gassaway who has been
ill for four months continues seri-
ously ill at her home 511 Wood-
bourne avenue, Govans.
Mis Mary Tingle, of Jersey City
was in the city last week the guest
of her foster parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Tingle.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Johnson
and children, of Hackensack, N. J.
were in the city last week visiting
their parents Mr. and Mrs. Robert
of Mosher street.
Can Be
Soothed
Call VErnon 6016
Mr. Wm. Kier who has been very sick is improving slowly.
Mrs. Cormolia Anderson, one of the oldest members of Trinity A. M. E. Church, and an active spirit in up-keeping work, visits her home 527 Dolphin street. She is the founder of the Day Nursery at 953 Drudu Hill avenue, and held the first Women's Day services in a local church.
Mrs. Ella Boone is ill at her home, 1103 Russell street.
Rev. and Mrs. Samuel Rozier, of Unionville, Md., were the recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Holland, of 694 W. Mulberry street.
Mrs. Laura Smothers has returned to Philadelphia after visiting her sister, Mrs. John Prettyman, of 1855 White street.
The Dorcas Club of St. Mary's Episcopal Church will give a dance and bazaar at St. Mary's Hall next Tuesday evening.
Mr. William Z. Hill, 1601 McCulloh street, and Miss Mary E. Jones, 2129 McCulloh street, were quietly married in Washington, D. C., last Monday.
Miss Mary Feld, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gaines and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Montgomery, of 1419 Mertle avenue, gave Mr. and Mrs. E. Thurmon a small amount on Tuesday, May 1st. Those who assisted in receiving the guests were Misses Elveria and Emilia Mallory, Mrs. Jessie Hill and Mrs. Ianthe L. Strange, Dr. Wilkins was tostmaster.
Miss Eleanor Wettton, of 520 Plohm street, secretary of the Brooks Auxiliary, who has been confirmed to the bed a week, is able to be up and about.
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Wheatley, of W. Roland Park: Mr. David Gross, of McCullob street: Mrs. Carrie Cornish and Miss Sarah Hawkins, 1208 Harlem avenue, motored to Long Green last Sunday and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Foster. While there they attended the opening of the Allen League of Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church.
Mrs. Mary Jones is ill at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. John W. Henderson, 1592 E. Monument street.
Mrs. Esther Holmes, 1627 W. Lexington street, who has been ill for the past two weeks is improving.
Mrs. Etta Flipping Tucker of Atlantic City, was the recent guest of Dr. and Mrs. John E. Hayes, 510 N. Stricker street.
The Swastika Whist Club was entertained last Thursday evening by Mr. and Mrs. Wm. White at their residence 1291 Druid Hill Ave.
The extra guests present were Dr. and Mrs. Jos. Mason, Mrs. M. Trent, Dr. and Mrs. A. O. Reid, Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Lawver and Mrs. Wm. G. McCard and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Nicholas.
Mr. and Mrs. John Nixon entertained Mr. and Mrs. Smart, of Washington, D. C., at cards Wednesday evening.
Misses Lillian and Davenport Butter of 120 W. Cross street entertained Miss Elise Johnson of 1778 Carry street at dinner Tuesday May 6th at 7 o'clock in honor of her seventeenth birthday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. J. Beni, Heath, Miss Elise Vaughn, Miss Frances Waters and Miss Iona Savage.
Mrs. E. Williams and baby, Misses Anne Williams, S. Burcous, Eleanora Wright, Melvina Wright and Mr. R. W. Williams motored to Hereford Sunday.
Indian Medicine Company
1044 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
BALTIMORE, MD.
REMEMBER, YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
STYLISH CLOTHES
for STYLISH MEN
and WOMEN
We also carry a complete
line of
Sheets, Spreads, Muslins,
Tableclothes, Long Cloth
and many other articles
too numerous to mention.
ONLY A SMALL PAYMENT
DOWN IS NECESSARY
CASH CREDIT
A. J. MARLING
1110 Laurens St.
MAdison 2578-J
THE AFRO-AMERICAN SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923
MEN PLAN
FLOWER MART
Mrs. Truly Hatchett, of Druid Hill Ave., returned home after a pleasant visit in Philadelphia with relatives and friends.
Good Hopes Meet
The semi-annual session of the
TWO BOYS KILLED
IN PISTOL ACCIDENTS
WOMEN PLAN
FLOWER MART
The Women's Co-operative Civic League will hold its annual Flower Mart at Perkins Square on May 25. There will be a display of all saleable articles from flowers in the pot to tomatoes in the can on beautiful decorated tables in the line of moulded mails and matrons of Baltimore.
Mrs. Ella Tasley, Mr. and Mrs. William Cook, and son Lee, of Washington, D. C., Mrs. Maggie Johnson, Mrs. Martha Johnson, Mrs. G. Hoe, D. Gilbert and Mr. J. Murphy, Jr., all of this city were among those who attended the Mintmery County, Minmery County, Messrs. Carl Murphy and family, Goo P. and son, James and Miss Frances Murphy motored there Sunday to review the remains of their uncle.
During the afternoon the crippled children will be entertained, and faries and elves will dance on the green under Miss Kristina Robinson, Miss Mia Miller, Miss Gortrade Dalton and other young ladies.
ANNOUNCEMENT
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Mrs. Hattie Kane wishes to announce the marriage of her daughter Nettie to Mr. Frank Askins Monday, March 19th, 1923. At home after May 14th at 1409 Orleans St.
Mr. and Mrs. Ceasar Jackson gave a birthday party for their daughter Eleanor, on May 4th their residence, 1821 Drumlin Hall, availing the occasion were the Misses Ethel Banks, Sophronia Banks Cathering Deshields, Thelma Murray, Louisa Williams, Anther Williams, Hattie Woods, Julia Parker, Gladys Johnson, Marion Overton Esther Jackson, Velma May Tripp Emane Wagner and Ruth Willey
NOTICE
MISS GLADYS GILES
wants to locate her father,
ERNEST HARRIS
formerly of Norfolk, Va.
Her address is 168 W. 141st Street
New York City
BLAKE'S WONDERFUL
ENGAGEMENT
Engagement is announced of
Mr. Raymond Bevans Jr., son of
Mr. Raymond and late Sarah A
Bevans of 1032 Leadenhall street
and Miss Pearl Elizabeth Jackson,
of Cornwall, Pa. March 3, 1923.
WILLIAMS—DORSEY
A positive
HAIR STRAIGHTENER
and GROWER
Miss Cordella Dorsey, of Detroit Michigan and Mr. Chas, H. Williams of this city were married at the residence of Rev. W. W. Allen pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, last Sunday evening at 7:20 p.m. in the church of the Church and Mr. George D. Tyler, best man. After the ceremony a supper was served by Mr. J. A. Johnson, proprietor of the Superior Restaurant.
A trial will convince you Order a Jar Now Once used, you will use no other For Sale Everywhere Agents Wanted On receipt of 35c a jar ' will be sent you.
Mrs. Clara E. Hall, entertained the Monday afternoon Whist Club May 7th, at her apartment 1924 McCullob street. The extra guests Mrs. Sally Logan, Mrs. Columbia Butler and Mrs. Wm. Cambia
A. W. BLAKE
738 Dolphin Street
Baltimore, Md.
SAY
FELLOWS!
Miss Sara Fernandez, has gone to Virginia for a few days in business.
Mr. B. C. Crump of Ashville, N. C. spent last Thursday in the city with his sister-in-law Misses Essie and Mabel Ray.
Mrs. Charles Croxson and daughter Julia and also Mr. J. F. Height spent Sunday in Washington, D. C. visiting relatives.
---
We have some pretty good used tires taken in trade on MILLER CORDS that you can buy right.
Mrs. W. A. C. Hughes and daughter motored here from Philadelphia on Sunday and spent a few days in the city visiting her sister. Mrs. Rachel Fleet, 1612 McCulloh street.
Miss Ida Finks, 1731 McCulloh street, entertained on Sunday at dinner in honor of Rev. and Mrs. P. H. Armstrong, of Germantown, Pa., and Mrs. W. W. Walker, Rev. and Mrs. J. T. Colbert, Mrs. Geo. D. Gilbert, Miss Emily Finks and Mrs. Irwin Finks.
WILBUR'S
Eutaw & Biddle
Bring this Ad, and get
1 Quart of Oil Free
with a purchase of
Betholine Gas
Mr. Edw. Fleet, Jr., went to Washington Sunday to take his father from Freedman's Hospital to his home in Montgomery County. Mr. Fleet, Sr., is much improved.
543, A. F.
MUSICIANS.
SUMMER PRICES
May 8, 1923
Number of Musicians
Is Grove:
Men.....$30.00 One Meal
Men.....$33.00 One Meal
Men.....$17.00
Men.....$32.00
—4 hours:
Car fare one way
Car fare one way
$8.00) (Orchestra, $6.00)
Vivalds:
$27.00
$27.00 Piano included
(two men must be added)
Orchestra are to be designated
I. N. THOMPSON, Press.
LOCAL 543,A.F. of MUSICIANS
SPECIAL SUMMER PRICES
Effective May 8, 1923
Minimum Price and Number of Musicians
Brown's Grove:
Day Excursions—(Orchestra) 5 Men.....$30.00 One Meal
Day Excursions—Band) 10 Men.....$33.00 One Meal
Moonlights—(Orchestra) 5 Men.....$17.00
Moonlights—(Band) 10 Men.....$22.00
Catonsville—4 hours:
Band—10 Men.....$33.00 Car fare one way
Orchestra—5 men.....$30.00 Car fare one way
Over time per hour—(Band, $8.00) (Orchestra, $6.00)
Carnivals:
Band—10 Men.....$27.00
Orchestra—$ Men.....$27.00 Piano included
(In absence of piano two men must be added)
Arrangements for Band or Orchestra are to be designated
by Public and Leaders.
MAY SALE
MAY SALE
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN:—
Burton
We are closing out our entire stock of Winter and Early Spring Purchase of Men's and Women's apparel.
Our prices are exceptionally low and any one in need of cloth or Pur Coats and Suits (even for next winter) will save from 25% to 50% by making selection and placing deposit now and continue payments until wanted.
The prices on our regular Spring line is also reduced so as to reduce stock and make room for our Summer apparel.
Men's Suits . . . . $19.75 Up
Men' and Young
Men's Overcoats . $19.75 Up
Ladies' Coats . . . . $12.50 Up
Ladies' Capes . . . . $8.50 Up
Ladies' Dresses . . . $6.50 Up
Ladies' Skirts . . . $3.98 Up
Ladies' Blouses . . . $1.98 Up
Ladies Palsey Blouses $5.00 Up
Yes, your credit is good with us. Yes,
we credit out of city customers. If your
credit is good with others, it is better
with us.
LYVANIA AVE. P.M. Saturday, 12 P.M.
1214½ PENNSYLVANIA
Open 8 A. M. Close, 9 P. M. Saturday, 12 P. M.
SATURDAY IS
AR -$- DAY
OUR STORE
to give you the choice of any
Air Store absolutely FREE with
lease.
89c THREAD SILK HOSE
69c A
Pair
SATURDAY IS DOLLAR -$- DAY AT OUR STORE
We are going to give you the choice of any 10c Article in our Store absolutely FREE with each Dollar Purchase.
Extra Fine Quality NAINSOOK
19c a Yard
29c CRETONNES
20c a Yard
69c ENAMEL WARES
49c each
R FARE—SHOP HERE
Goods. Prices Will Please You
0c and Variety Store
Pennsylvania Avenue
SAVE CAR FARE—SHOP HERE We Guarantee our Goods. Prices Will Please You National 5-10c and Variety Store 1803 Pennsylvania Avenue
Good Hopes Meet
The semi-annual session of the Grand Council of the Grand Unified Order of Good Hope was held at Good Hope Hall on Wednesday and Thursday evenings of this week, at which time reports from various departments of the Order were presented. Grand Master William G. Price, in calling the session to order, reported that there had been a steady increase financially and numerically. Grand Treasurer Alfred Nixon, Grand Treasurer William Cornish and Grand Degree Master Lloyd Palmer were among those making remarks. Degrees were made from county lodges and Atlantic City.
Schools Merge
Cookman Institute, of Jacksonville, Fla., and the Daytona Normal and Industrial School for Girls at Daytona, Fla., have effected a merger.
Cookman is a Methodist Episcopal School with an annual income of $18,000. Daytona, founded and presided over by Mrs. Mary McLeod-Bethune has a plant valued at $350,000.
Mrs. Johnne is one of the foremost colored women and passing through the city recently discussed the merger with Bishop John Hurst, one of the trustees.
It is said the General Education Board will make an appropriation toward the work.
$ DAY $ DAY
SATUR
DOLLAR
AT OUR
We are going to give
10c Article in our Store
each Dollar Purchase.
T
SAVE CAR FAR
We Guarantee our Goods
National 5-10c a
1803 Pennsy
TWO BOYS KILLED IN PISTOL ACCIDENTS
Jury Says Alton Brooks Contributed To His Own Death
Two boys paid with their lives the penalty of carless use of firearms this week.
Alton Brooks, 13, of 1494 Myrtle avenue, was playing with 12-year-old Walter Williams in his yard, 1128 Penn Avenue, when Williams seized a revolver from his hand.
The weapon was accidentally discharged, the bullet passing through his heart killing him instantly.
At a Coroner's inquest Wednesday night, Williams was apologized from the blamers the killing was produced which tended to show that Brooks caused the discharge of the weapon which killed himself.
The second tragedy occurred when Thomas Boyer, 16, 1011 Orleans street, was accidently shot in the mouth by a 38 caliber pistol in the hands of George Midgett 39, who conducts a coal and wood yard at 107 N. Spring street. According to the story told Northeastern Police officers by Midgett, he was showing the gun when it accidently discharged. Boyer died on his way to the hospital and Midgett is being held pending the Coroner's investigation.
All One Price
Henry Clay SHOES FOR MEN
$3.50
The Fastest Selling,
Longest Wearing, Most
Talked of Shoe In Town Sell-
ing for only $3.50. All Styles.
All Size. All Leathers. See
this Famous Shoe and you
will see SOME VALUE.
Henry Clay
"Henrys" Today—then you will know why Henry Clay is such a Favorite and that it is no longer necessary to pay $5 to $7 for a pair of Good Shoes.
Six Baltimore Stores
17 N. Howard St. 523 S. Broadway 1719 Pend ta
1237 W. Baltimore St. 11 N. Eutaw St. 350
HENRY CLAY STORED OPEN EVERY
Call VErnon 6016
Turner Denies Being Love Shocked Hubby
Turner Denies Being Love Shocked Hubby
Robert Turner arrested recently on charge of his wife pending divorce protesting that he was annoying her, denies a statement of the case which recently appeared in the AFRO-AMERICAN. At the time, Judge Ambler ordered that he, he given mental observation to see if he had been a victim of shell-shock. "I love my wife who lives at 2128 Division Street, but have not bogged her to come back home or written her sixty-five letters. "The Federal Government supported my wife and child as the
rate of $52.50 a month not she was arrested on a disorderly charge-involving a white man, unknown to me. I do not, unlike my wife, but my mother-in-law for the difference between us. I am neither shell-shocked nor lov-shocked," he said.
PORO AGENT HERE
Miss Minnie De Haven, connected with the Information Bureau, Poro College, St. Louis, is here in the interest of Poro agents. She was a visitor at the Mro Office Thursday.
Mrs. Marguerite Trean is visiting Mrs. Joseph Muson, of Pressman street. Her stay is intelle
Call VErnon 6016 THE AFRO-AMERICAN SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923 Call VErnon 6016 7
A New Ice Cream--a New Organization Presented By Pioneers of This Industry
The SUPREME ICE CREAM COMPANY with the officers named above, has acquired the interests of the Crane Ice Cream Company and is manufacturing at the former Crane plant an improved product.
[Image of a man in a suit with a tie, facing forward, set against an oval frame with decorative borders. The man's face is pale, with a serious expression. The background is white. There is no text or additional details in the image.]]
Andrew H. Baumgartner, Vice-President. 15 years in ice cream business, 3 years with Crane Ice Cream Co. as Baltimore Manager.
New Ice Cream
Presented By H
The SUPRE
with the officers named above, has a
uring at the former Crane plant
A New I Presented
with the officers
turing at the fo
PRO
"S= UPREME Ice C
plies in quality
in the manufact
chosen with the utmost o
products used---there can
PRODUCT
"SUPREME Ice Cream" is just what it implies in quality. The ingredients used in the manufacture of "Supreme Ice Cream" in the utmost care. And as far as used --- there can be none better.
UPREME Ice Cream" is just what the name implies in quality. The ingredients that are used in the manufacture of "Supreme Ice Cream" are chosen with the utmost care. And as far as quality of products used there can be none better.
EXPERIENCE
=E= VERY member of experience in its by-products because of their turers—an important part of good ice cream. The time through merit and experience can produce an ice cream justifies the name "Suprem
ERY member of this organization has of experience in the manufacture of its by-products. These men have because of their association with low important part in giving the Baltic team. The time has come when art and experience—we, too, with produce an ice cream of the highest quality "Supreme."
turers—an important part in giving the Baltimore public good ice cream. The time has come when we believe through merit and experience—we, too, with our own interests can produce an ice cream of the highest quality, which justifies the name "Supreme."
Try "Supreme Ice Cream"
"The Ice Cream Supreme"
Today
Absolutely Co
ely Connected
Clifford Southall. President. 18 years in ice cream business, 11 of these years with Hendler Creamery Co. in capacity of Sales Manager.
---
=E=
SUPREME
ICE CREAM
THE ICE CREAM SUPREME
COPYRIGHT 1923 BY THE SUPREME ICE CREAM COMPANY
“=S=
F course, every firm must operate at a fair profit but can only be successful when the product receives public approval. The foundation of this new organization is to be built upon high ideals, principles that are constantly before us, which in sum and substance mean the best product at a fair price, for the health of the public, who, we feel sure, will agree "Supreme Ice Cream" is conscientiously made with these thoughts in mind.
cerity we say to you, our efforts, our thoughts are all combined in the management of this company to produce—and we are positive we can—the best product possible. Your confidence is our success, and we ask for your judgment on this basis and a trial of "Supreme Ice Cream."
UPREME Ice Cream" will be sold by aggressive dealers, and, as you know, all good dealers require the best of service plus a superior product. Service means so very much and we shall never overlook the fact. We are willing to prove all these let you be the judge.
formerly CRANE'S
am--a New Pioneers of
ME ICE CREAM
acquired the interests of the Crane firm improved product.
the name im- nat are used "Cream" are its quality of
=O= F co bu cei new organiza- that are consi mean the best public, who, w conscientious
as had years the cream and performed— al manufact- more public we believe— our own in- quality, which
=E= CON of "S you cerity we say to in the manage- positive we can is our success, trial of "Supre-
=E=
SERUICE
EME Ice Cream" will be sold by aggressive know, all good dealers require the best of prior product. Service means so very much or overlook the fact. We are willing to you be the judge.
George E. Thumser, Treasurer. 20 years in ice cream industry, 9 years in capacity of Sales Manager with Horn Ice Cream Co.
New Organiza
of This Indu
AM COMPANY
ane Ice Cream Company and is manufac-
nization
industr
Y
is manufac-
erate at a fair profit,
when the product re-
n foundation of this
high ideals, principles
in sum and substance
for the health of the
supreme Ice Cream" is
hts in mind.
F course, every firm must operate at a fair price but can only be successful when the practice public approval. The foundation organization is to be built upon high ideals, constantly before us, which in sum and as the best product at a fair price, for the health no, we feel sure, will agree "Supreme Ice Creamously made with these thoughts in mind.
MANAGEMENT
CONOMY in all departments, plus most of experience of all our officers, assures "Supreme Ice Cream". will be beneficially you and priced reasonably because of this.
nts, plus many years ers, assures you that he beneficially made for cause of this. In all sin- nights are all combined produce—and we are able. Your confidence ment on this basis and a
CONOMY in all departments, plus many years of experience of all our officers, assures you that "Supreme Ice Cream" will be beneficially made for you and priced reasonably because of this. In all sin-
Quality Our Motto Service Our Boast
n Compa
IDEALS
Harry M. Wagner, Secretary. 15 years in ice cream business, 3 years as local office manager of Crane Ice Cream Co.
air profit,
product re-
lation of this
principles
substance
with of the
"cream" is
many years
you that
made for
In all sin-
combined
and we are
confidence
asis and a
mpany
Election Brought New Mayor Third Victory
OE
Lady Telephone
acy, 327 W. LEXINGTON ST. caiver'2990
: °
‘He Does Not Fear The Dentist Now
Sate. Last week a young man called and said that he had not gone to a
| LEE: dentist for a long time because he feared the pain. He had read our
d See ae ‘advertisement regarding our famous U. D. P. Nerve-Blocking Method
e - BA which alleviates pain. :
xe Za ‘This‘young man said he had
Be ‘ THREE TEETH TO BE EXTRACTED
Re but would let us try one first go,he could see how painful tt would be.
} eae RSH) We did so, and HE WAS SO DELIGHTED—he said: :
ae me “Go ahead, take out the other two.”
Fy e ee) ff We never saw a man more pleased. He shook the dentist’s hand
Cee hoes and thanked him. He is coming back for more dental work and says
Pes MNO LONGER FEARS THE DENTIST.
a a ARE YOU LIKE THIS YOUNG MAN? 7
“Come, give us an opportunity. to convince you that our dental work is different. Thousands of
People will not visit the dentist because they are afraid, but if you will give us an opportunity we
Will convince you that our methods, are gentle and considerate, and there is very little discomfort.
“ALL OVER THE UNITED STATES YOU'LL FIND NO y
a3 BETTER DENTAL WORK THAN OURS 2a
Se < You-ean‘t-go to ony. city in the world and receive better treatment . |
‘with lees pain than is offered-you. right here, in your home town, by i Bs
gar experienced denties, thy ‘shouldn't you and your family receive Renee “J
ie Beno ee Sea ee Yor 8 commere ln om cases wo AG COO aee
CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK, PER TOOTH, $5. «Stains
555:."'¥ou-May Pay As the Work Progresses - Fite Not Slip br Brose
fos Soe Gace Hodea: SA, 3L to'S PLM.'Suoday, 10.cqa eso 8 oo
7S dcenctows Petients Should: Write for Appotatwent-and Have Work Donw.Same Day They Coma’. -
3
LADY LUCK STILL
FOLLOWS CAMPAIGN
‘OF HOWARD JACKSON
Victory This Week, Recall
* Former Campaigns of ;
. 1915 and 1921
ALL WARDS SHOW UP WEL
Democratic Candidate Giv-
{en Substantial Majors
+ ties in 4th and Sth
The proverbial luck of Toward
x Jackson in being eleetal by
ereased majorities each time he
has run for office was with Tues.
day, when he triumphed over
Mayor Willian F. Broening anc
Gormec May James TH, Preston, his
Dpponents in the mayoral race
by'a plurality of nearly £4.0190,
“Ag sn 1915 and 1921. he had 2
fonsidernble number of colored
Votes with him. Hundreds ot cal-
‘pred voters -.ére opposed to Dr
Barry C. algire, the Republienn
Romines for Register ot Wills, in
2915. Algire, as coroner, _ ine
Picked the Jury which | freed
Charles Guth, chocolite _ manu-
facturer, for Killing his colered
Thanifevr a man named Murphy.
Jackson heat Algire by x inajerity
“Exceeding 1.000,” Jeading the
GDemecratic wicket! Sines that
Sime he has been groomed for the
Mayoralty.
S Hundreds of colored voters
Alded” him when he defeated
Charles 8. Montell in 1921, there
fy adding to another ‘vecurd-
Breaking majority.
+ 10,000 Late Republican Ranks
> Wostility on the part of nearly
JHA veters vo the Lrocaing ad-
Sninistration contributed to. his
hig pluratity ‘Taesday, | Cy ia the
Tsth Ward, where the most ine
Celligent and Unrifty eolored peo.
ple in the city live, he received
Many colored yor.
In the Sth, fh. 1ith, 12th, Lith
45th, 16th, Veh. and | tat pee
eints of the Lith Weed, heaviiy
Fopublican, he rreeived a Hatters
Ing Vote. his was also tue at
the colored precints of the 15th
Ward and the lieavily Repabliest
Vth, There tens alsa 4 large-stas-
at-home elenesit, whieh rivalled
that of 189%,
Colored workers for Jackson
were in evidence in every preciast
where there is i Consisershle ann.
ber of race voters, “on Sinith
had an army of workers ont slo.
‘Such well known nen tos ‘Crnly
Hatchet, dace. Niehoben, Hes
S. Bond. Charles ‘Pina, J. Hoss
ard Payne, Ve, dames A. White
Charles, Wesley “and.” Steward
Davis. Rev, WW. Allen, ant Bev.
8. J. Edwards were aiso ia th)
Jackson camp.
The vacillating potier af Mayor
Broening and his levitation to ae
Borne. Of tie things that the tive
Wanted dune Cwitsiluted 29 the
first defeat he his sustsined in his
political career, Like the col.
ored voters uf Chieage, Kansas
City and New York. a large min
her had “xeowa tieed Ae eatin
Republicans isto ater and then
Reing forgotten,
Buck Kobinson Desert
Tho tide against Proentag was
“shown jn the ath snd Sth. pero
eincts of the 4th Ward. In the
first-named precine, there are 206
registered voters, 74 of them he-
fog Demoerais | The vote for
Mayor was Broening, 5: Jackson,
57, and Preston 9, “Buck” Kobe
inson who hus usually worked
with Charley Main, the Renubli-
ean executive, cast his Int with the
Jackson people,
Ta the Sth, whieh (kes in dose-
phing and Arch streets, there was
a small army of Jackson warkers,
The vote there was Broening oti
Jackson, 180 and Vresion 8 Tn
the 6th’ nrecinet_Brorning | fared
hetter, receiving 78 votes ta 28 for
Jaekson.
Jackson In Fifth
{The Sth Ward. which has about
21800 colored voters. gave 1,028
votes to Hroening and 1.163" to
Jackson Preston gor 175.
Preston would have gotten
“more colored votes than he did,
But for the last-minute attacks he
made on the race when speaking
fo white audiences.
Call VErnon 6016 THE AFRO-AMERICAN §
JUST OUT OF THE BOX—
“Gulf Coast Blues”—“Down Hearted Blues” —3844 |
Ressie Smith, with Clarence Williams at the Plana
KAUFMAN'S MUSIC SHOP
439 N. Gay Street We Ship Anywhere |
We Are Open for Business fs |
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. a
Our Cafe Is Open Day and Night. Everything in Season
SMITH’S HOTEL :
435 DRUID HILL AVENUE Clayborne Allen, Manager
eer a & 1:30 At
[Democrats ‘Will
Form City-Wide Club
Pe
faniied, ith the berms
‘on “a Meward We) daekeon 2
SMe means that a eousidersbte
reheat sn cletteng here
eee ——*
SCHOOL BOARD PLANS
e TURN OVER NO, 79
Building Now Used by
| White Children Would
| Be Colored Elemen-
tary School
CONDEMNED BY STRAYER .
Sarvey Recommended It
Be Abandoned — for
| School Purposes
Tf reeammendations of the Fuitd=
ing Committee of the Public Ime
provement Commission anette
Srhool Beard are carried out
School No, Ta, white, will be turn
ed inte at esloréd elesentary
eee
Nuntier Ty which is loeated rt
Fark Avent cud Hefimcin Street
is one ap the eity’s ult buildings
and xerominodaion "at pent
ihuur Soe white pupils wah thirty
Genehers. Wis Rnowe as Me Late
Sivette: duabae High Sehuol, Cones
eo ite given ia eianmercial ste
Joots, wtenariedt ss stem meta, Marie
eronomies aiid Went work, Ti the
Schiad sand thers aire: six portale
buildings,
‘Phe sane repent suggested that
the white pupils in New. Ti and 43
ie transferred ta the Wester. Bee
tale High Sehoet on MeCulled
Strest and the Western | Beatle
High Soloed lee moved tee a 280 ut
AW. Nord Avenue "
Caine tr Sanieed
The Baltimare echaul survey
inate by fr, Strayer two” years
AGO Nas the followin to say abet
Schiol Noo 78:
Sohal 78, Lafayette Junior
High Schent
This MuiMing presents a intni-
mun of protection frei fire risks,
He is cia old buihtings with se gloomy
interiog die to the type ag valor
sehetue secording ta which the
walls finve Jenn devoraied. ft is
a laiibling which is highly inadr-
quite for jinier high seheul pir.
hoses, [He facilities wipe exvtrenvely
linited, is Class rooms very hoor
ty Lighted, ix toilet rouis insani-
tary sat ts plarsround very ine
sudeqnicste, Thee stairwabs tn tive
tuilting are daagerons, Probably
pe inore hazardous renstriietion
fan be found in the rehood sysism
thin ie to be seen in the trent
enttanee of this buildin. ‘The
bulldiag shoud be abandanes for
Seon! purposes.
BAILEY ON GRAND JURY
Charles G. Pailey, 1421 deffere
Son Street, Was one Of Hie nuinber
chosen by the Baltimore Supreme
Bene te serve ot the Grand Jury
far the May terme et enurt, whieh
bettie ae Mat VRthis
“TOM” SMITH HAPPY
OVER JACKSON VICT'Y
Hotel Keeper fs One of
Oldest Democratic
Politicians In
STARTED 26 YEARS AGO
Held Out Against 6. 0. P.
Following Victories in
the Nineties
One of the happiest men in hale
timore over he election of Howard
W. Jackson as Mayor and prav-
Uiedlly alt af the Tiemorratie ticket
je Thomas ft Smith, veteran Dems
aeratie politivian, “1 was a srest
vietenys* he Said,
rom" Smith a8 he is familiarly
foe, hase the record for being 5
Hemorrat longer Chan any rotored
man in Raltiinere, In fact, when
White men showed a dispasition 19
yun peit mel inte the Republican
eng tatnwing the party sere
Jia Ta, 18! cand TR4T, he bs sti
to have turned dawn te sugges
tion of the late James Itoach, who
was une of the stiunehest white
frivtuts he Mead at that time, that
ie ishoukt cast his tot with the
GoGo T. His judament was. veri-
ied by the Temorratie victories
Inthe city att State elections in
1589,
Shrewd Politician
A avis ,over 50. years of ae,
ae Stuith’ was ord iye this ‘cits
When there Were few #ueattonsl
fumortunities, He is, nevertheless
ont of tie shrewdest ealared poli-
Uckans in the country.
Tess thin 25 yeare ago he wae
broke, Starting in the saloon
Dusiness at dasier dnd New streets
Tee made ineney. ‘The Tate
Frewtnan alsin took a liking 16
hie aud after the defeat of Frank
C. Watelier by Kubert St. MeClane
for Maver 1wanty years age he Tee
amie at fear in polities:
Me wot an anlent supporter of
Howard Jackson in eaeh sf the
Uae sneessful arnpealgns that
the lotion make for Register of
Witte, In the fast twa. Tris ease
profited by hestility on the part of
AU late urber of colored. caters
Against the Hepnbliera nominees,
Tie eagle tis marshal his few:
tongmts ia all parts uf the elty. foe
Sacisun” ‘Thesday working trem
horbling 10 night, ‘Then. there
Wet that lave numhac af colored
Mech atid Women Wha Ware oppose
cd ta the Froening gulininistration.
Many voted outright far dacksen
Gthers stayed at home,
Tan" is rated at being warth
eovop Stoatni, He is uaeried, BM
Live ne ehibiven, “Cone ot tke traits
is ounine valle 10 his friends,
Tie weithew deinks nor einokes
lant years ages Was sind To lowe aun n=
verenate eigweette. sinoker, THs
town ini ist 2083 Dornid Ul
avenue seid ie alen has a fine
Suluirhan, faee on the Keister
town read.
Sve of his heaestss is iat he as
never oppnsed a cloeed nominee
for the Gity Corneil He is re
xinded ag takings no’ part actively
in national electious.. When the
Tiemecrstie National Convention
met here in 12 he aid not
Auaee in the deliberations of the
National Nearo Temacratie League
in whien” Fishop” Alexander” Wal-
feng, Kobert XN. Wood, J. Prank
Wheaton amt dines D. Carr, each
of whoin is “new dead, played
ba Lhe Peg
TH’S BICCEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923. Call: VErnon 6016
Councilmanic Vote—Fourth _Distiict
eee
= 2 : § :
2 e | :
” Kl lila:
218/318 ),.812
_ ale|ilelatale
Do cvescsevescdecnessses 1a 136 ay 133, 6+ 63
WS isis esecsevecesecs SOOR 1729 9588 1663 3846 3786
V4 liscee eee eeeereeetene MOM 2803 1847 2894 2118 1990
TS casaceusessvecctssene BEGS 1482 B95 197G BOSS 9134
TODUIEEE ESI “aaa aig “ag 7a “ata “aes
VD ce ceeeee ere eee reece e STG a204 G13 2218 Gou —GOR
trots cecsceepess11B53. STR —-SBRG ERD TOMO 4844
ENXHIBIT—HANDW’ORK IN COLORED SCHOOLS
RICHMOND MARKET ARMORY
2to5 P.M. MAY 15 to 18 8 to 10:30 P, M.
ALL WELCOME
Think of Getting Paid —
° ° e
For Holding a Picnic!!
eee Oe ee
. Is The Ideal Picnic Ground of Maryland
Every season witnesses an increase in the number of outings held at
this garden spot for fun and wholesome recreation. We make a special-
ty of giving PICNIC SERVICE to CHURCHES, lodges and organizations
and we have a PICNIC doing it. *
COME OUT AND PLAY FOR A DAY
If you are a member of some church, lodge or organization which
thas not yet decided on the time and place for its annual outing, don’t
forget ‘WONDERLAND PARK. =
Covering a large ,water-front area, with shady picnic groves and
several score amusement devices and games which are’ comparable with
the best to be found in any amusement park in America, the facilities are
such as to make this park more desirable than others for outings.
If you hold your outing here you can share liberally in the gross
receipts, ‘
LET US HELP SWELL THE TREASURY OF
a YOUR ORGANIZATION
Communicate at once with Mr, Boyd H. White at Wonderland
Park, or at 1621 Munsey Building. ‘An early decision means a choice
. ‘selection of dates. CAE
FITZGERALD AND
MCGUINN LOSE
Either catweea Candidate
Needed Only 256. Votes
To Be Re-elected
NO NEGRO MEMBER NOW
City Council Ts All-White
_ Fourth Time in Thirty-
three Years
The defeat of City Councitmer
Warner ‘T, MeGuinn and Win. 1.
Fitzgerid far re-election cansed so
eral regret. LC mens that forth
Fourth tine in the past thirty-three
years the race will be withenrt rep
fesentition in the city-law-tnaking
hod, Kach was less (han 225. vote
Tehind Win, 6. Towers, tie lowes
mien elected, “SleGuian bel Pivager
ald ft the Cid ard 17th Wards.
MeGuinn and Kivageratd reveiven
auuite ie tiuimber of sehiter votes sine
Maul the race vate come OMe solid
aun supported them they: yeoulel hae
erent Geena
OR CE EEA
Das ;
‘Paint Up
Clean Up:
(eN" SAVE ;
: — $1.25 5
: | RMbxEe . dleece
[RBMNT Paint.)
‘vou buy al our store, and
slon’t forget we want you,
sto know we guarantee they
squality. ;
Northwestern:
Hardware Co;
S 2211 Penna. Avenue
Tata enigh tana naek aaa
The ke Marry 8. Cummings was
the first min of the Re to be Hect:
Jet to the Cy Connell, ‘That wa:
lack In 180, when the Temoerats
had throws taujority of the ealare«
voters Inia tha akd uh Ward, 1
was defeated by G. Hume Craif, 4
Dement, In 1892. No other et
reat msn peared In the City Conny
eH until 1895, when the late Dr.
Mareus Cargill was elected, Me was
rrorlected in 1886, Harry S. Cum.
things suceeded hin. in 187,
‘the Veepublican Ingisiature of 1895
seorryanaanlered the city, selingg W6
more wards,
“The ol 11h Ward was split in
half. the present 11th being thre pa
east af Denid THI avenue, snl Ou
Tauh wast therent. This change ef
Mr. Cummings in what is now On
Tih Ward, ane in 18! de tate Ut
atm Watt wis looted Ferm the 17
Ward, then knawn as the tht
Greggnt Milton Fiennis detected Mr
Weatte by fesse thin 58) votes B15,
many colutedl men neglecting V» Ke
tthe polls, Harry Carnninis wa
ical returned to the City: Comncl
in 1107, reining there untit Me
died ia WAT. Charles 1. Cartel, 3
Lienert, Was elivsen toy HIE MIS Un-
pple term, Roth Messrs, Me-
Guinn sual Fitagerahl were vlected
eau.
Ta. RTA Ses = =
.
Some Ladies
| 1
Think
& That only men can |
have the distine. |
‘tion of wearing
DUNLAP SHOES
We have genuine
DUNLAPS
for ladies ina number of
} captivating styles. Noth-
w is 80 irresistable,
z rm
RP extRa se,
“TN | E
| DUNLAP |
Py, SHOES
ian NC 28 =
; m
WEARWELL |
SHOE SHOP
587 N. Gay St. |
= ee
Dr. Hayes Fined
In Traffic Court
partone 70 Give ntone oF yay:
eeCAIEORE 26 fa ee aeets 480 oo
Prateek at Sts aeineld ih
rosetta Wee Balle ast, oe Sete
Fes i Orenaed tect, a1) Thome
ergkinn, ria"'se Rockton ster, Bs
XO LICENSE OR REGISTRATION CER
jrivicanes Weosle tars, Sparrows Yui
Fins caece otimans 155 SAreyIn Ave
S27: iota Mason, FAT Dolph stent, $36
oan ean Tig Mutitea scot, #2
Mien sttee. isa Sfonbmced St
AA tien ag. Hea Witon nest, 22
ide ttn Sacto en a8
ae eer ins ace Bale ater
gsnard RIES, i. fall Rosd a
Pe anes ead Sten atest 0
eee ars lata haurtioa atten, seh
SERRDING Ol RRCRERSS nave:
Walee iam: Tite Sorte ere ea
Pins eater, ise teat atc, fe
wee Mygbary adh tata HM or 3
Paces ars ah ellen mre aie
teed ae sagee ag 8. linn sheet
Bede Meotete See tmnt meses aor ae
Ws taeeihe imetehts, Neat Slvntt
ee Races” ast tien genders
Mitins sui,
No Inn, (Rose PARRING & PTC:
wh Rater Oat Pieoee stern eat le
Siam, THe comet Steet, I lk
Rinses Wie) aeetterye sists $20 Lawn
se a er a A sence
{58 Gin steers $30 Es Pally hE
eee ist ae Pater 6 “hat
Fogel scree:
Herbs of_ Life
Medicine Co. To
Invest Two and
and a Half Mil-
lion Dollars in
Baltimore To
Stop Profiteer-
ing on Colored
People
Will Buy Homes and
Re-sell to Working
People on Small
Weekly Payment
Plan
| ie thera, of Like iallat Saale
les then ther Battimere Barn,
ult tion slits fe tie tty fo
Fe a a
[jrophe afta "the teak. pronoun
Hie ie inuing eeoey Sin ok
Psalary eh Week. ‘Mhey ure going te
sits tte ley art roms tthe
SUIORAL peste the Work ay
iment a
Te corininly te vme for somehwdy
to step tn yd heup Tih th sie
tina Foeuse! wen. acutely te
Mreren dewey tennant tye sianwiard at
ty ine mene ft ad stort
val eimpluvers. | ueing the next TW
Sars "we stall have. the geeatent
Sout, sca oon Ne
wes taf in sees af What it poppe
we access pole with "undoes
vai gone hit stuadant 6
ates ie the yer St and mest eae
SNe eamtiinn fat mg em
data” Wan ate ave fuer te
thtetison cf tainitnunn wage 1?
kop ane vorrective embeavre to
“the rent suuree of high rosts—waste
eeacether wh tsking eA niage
aa tiqurtunty: Gest Sail proment ie
seen the Nenevolenre of the
| orl fannturs Vervr of ite Med
Mir Ca wo ahail be taking real
ep forwara
“Pater ierians interested In. own-
Hing theie liomes on the small weekly
1 ite Hive ml got In eh
tee Httumone. nen et ibe
Mabe Kite Modivine, Cans” 1088
Jenne. Ave,
. “ . FOR
BROWN'S GROVE & STEAMER v
3 cata fete este
.,
aN OR Be Kf
YW / pe 4S BoP rch)
S/o AA EH ratte tir ees
Lact erate Pee meee
Pe amine: Ronn es te ere ae qevavosnoontii
=e aS
SSS a ee
aa —— a
All Points on the Bay; Also from Tovons on the
Bay to Brown’s Grove
‘This is the only steamer and the only park tn the State of
Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Calired
People. =
‘In order to secure choice dates, apply at once to
Captain George W. Brown, 2103 Druid Hill Ave.’
PHONF, MADISON 8288
OR CALL
Walter R. Langley, 1418 Jefferson St.
PHONE, WOLFE 4222-5
Miss Lula S. Richardson, 214 Dolphin St.
PHONE, MADISON 1866-3
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday end Sunday
evenings from now until the first of May. | Be sure to give
your committee authority to secure dates when appileation ts
made, es positively no dates will be heid In reserve. Captain
Brown will walt on any committee who wish to engage dace
Make your appointments by phone or letter. Amproverments,
| and added features ere continually being added 10 the boat
‘and grove for the comfort snd enjoyment of our patrons,
Ernest Purviances—Saturday Twilight Excursions
BROWN’S GROVE
Saturday, May 12—Boat leaves 6 P. M.
Sunday, May 27—Boat leaves 7 P. M.
Baltimore Syncopators Theodore Upsher. Songster
| PET OS, ia | ieee Seas —_
Th ¢ citi Of. "
Bl d ;
GET YOUR BLOOD RIGHT
You know that steady nerves depend on the condition of som ‘
Mond! You also know that your loved anes’ sympathy and comfort wl
hot vormeet the cause, Nelther ¢an_ impoverished blood: rghitt the bay
Buc you can remedy this condition by restoring your blodd to its ae
slate, Remember, your blood Hows through xour body—whon £09
Awake and when vou are asleep, It's the great body axerit whieh mage
iife, And where there's Iife—there's happiness. Stronger andl mare Ue
nerves depend on blood power. Here is your opportunity. Herbs oF
Efe will prove to you its "why and "how" reason, Herbs of, Me
contains only pure vegeuible medicinal ingredients, Because Uerts
Life does. build blood-power. it routs rheumatism, stops pimples, Mae
hoads, boils, vezema, beautifies the complexion, improves tie sppelll
builds you up when sou are run-down, and makes your nerves sell!
’ GET YOUR BOTTLE TO-DAY - oT
10 :
sors Read Drug Co. =<
10 4 ° 10
YOU GET HERBS OF LIFE
WHEN YOU RUN RIGHT TO READ’S |
Not two bottles of an Aqueous Preparation that is re :
posed to take the place of a time-tested medicine like
famous HERBS.OF:LIFE. ;
= (ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES) ;
DAY EXCURSIONS:
MAY
W—Sehwa W8,
igi Solio UE
30—¥. M,C A.
JUNE
2Morgan Collec Student Body
BoA. hs of ML Jamal No. iat
SoPatement Peasnre cud Renefietat $9
elety ty Chesteriwen
E-Minerea Club
‘Folalies Ansiliary’ No, 105 Kalgnts of St
John ut St, Peter Cluster
Suiraune of Teinity a. Me B, Chureb
Wobursey Vorns Star Honse Nu, ¥ dob
[tckecue Moneileiat Ascortatlon A. N. A
1eoPeaviience, Heneticlat Suchet
Hokreshin Later Se OR at Pt
Chestertonen
Hecenisnlein Raptisr Chureh and 9. 8,
Tyckealenlter Neluhlesrinod Ct
{i—Folared High Sehnl ¢Afternoan)
W—-Honnge Fraternity eToiisht
1S—Mirgad tieehestew of the Sereath Day
Adentist Uhueet
19—Fuunteia. Heaptiot Chureh and A. 8.
Lio-Calenry Maplist Clauets aa SM.
So ation A, Me ES. 5
A —Paltein Dept, K,of P. to St. Mivhael
StoPeimale W-hers at Trinity, SME
chest (ewiltenty
24--Maple Lent Llteeary ond Sustea! Soetety
—Peuple's Chih and. 3
soot, WW. Mogal Mites ty Cagphehbee
I St. Vineet Detwul Aunitiany uf SC
Petce Pachsbe
1g—Willing Workers
myoknin Hsgtise churn and 8.8.”
—————
aULY
Iofaldon Eagle Foetal
2c Leaientalt St, Baptist 8, 3.
SoWhareat at B, eaueen sad * 8,
Scladependent A.M. E, Uhuseh nd 3. 3
OF eral Binghaiers to St, SMenmete,
B—Prople's Chmecds, tleeptizoxy
Gtorine Trips
S(Atternnn) Calord Socing Metner
Ujeratnes, ‘
Dedewel vines bod oliie’ of Aw MR
‘Chest
Lo—atines Mt, BS. 8.
Uoethel A. 3h, BS
(2oPalna Rayetae 8. 8
TioPiest Raptlst Chore & 8.
Ao—Sietal Pree WAI Baptist Whured
iRepticing!
te—nstmont Cheletiae Industrial Mat No,
(eoduna Westes MESS
18OS1. Katherine's Churcd.
HoMecedonia. Mapslst choroh and SS.
M—Meteoqutitan hated Aid, Na, 1
B—Cahlen Gate,
Bi—Gasking Hellllant Star Honse No 1 Job
e—Telolty A. ME. 8, 8.
2e—tentennlal: MM, EAA
2st. Paul SM. B. 2. 8,
Broth Metormere
28—Pasor amd Allen Soagnes, (Toitighe)
So—asiuire M_¥, Chnech, Date Meeting
2UCSt, Varnahas.
MN—Ehenerer a, MB. 8. A
—o—_
avast
I—Keadonball St, Maptist Chute
2ohenwrer Rapier 8,
Eohuthereiie & Gorags, M. BR, Chueh &
Sanutaesecheal ci
soa dack Thonas Tand
Coivawes a0 MES, S,
Fa Amerlean Woadmen Offive Fore
SAA. MB. Zign Che & 8 3,
Soinependant A, MR. Charly
Veotallen Lent Cirle Ke of Poof Fair
felt
MASI, Matthews M.-P, chive & 8. 8.
a iiaat maeitesn Tenals ta, Hike.
MOONLIGHT EXCURSIONS
MAY
s-—Ladiex Ald of Ventennlal M. B, Pant
Bi—Combine Brottebod
JUNE x
1—Commmbin Laer So, as Kat a
FeMecalton Cirle
FaUoion Heider BeneBclal Ave,
Goicthees of Telolty A. SE. Chart
F—Wiling Workers
SoBast Plowsire Clo,
T—Avollgns Schad
[rcAmweivan Weudmen’s OMe Yer
Hint. a G, Soelal
Actiulen fiate
15a Liests Pewutvastve, No. 1
Tx Hrowne Mleele
TwoDontors Caawhimen, Jr. Auritery,
ha Warktorn's Reetention Stel Na, 3,
Ete ar Tow ited
ac leeger wf Wales ALM. E, Chavk
pao tady. Takers foSt ohms 8. MB
‘ehneek
Hogueen Retoe Monsehuld Sa, 4, 4. 6
tof 0,
escelittioa Please Soctsl,
SecDadiea Aualinny ot Y. 8 a,
ITLY.
2aGrorge Street Mearnre Clio
PUkenge Voters af lea 4. 31 8, Clan
Loeatcine Cirle of Eattinice
Botte cTusiethee Loaene,
Actpeat Sanheen Teauple, Sy, 98 BNE
feoWobels eherbe
iO-Mlue Actuy Sictat
[oPrapels E, Rather. Honsstald of Rat,
Neo mi GE Mo uf OF
(2 tarta Piescure Soetal
Hoke, Lewis Sela Sw 2.
ic ttwery Prugteselve, Set
TScAlpiton Aueiliary. stol 1 oaucuntry Ok
19 —Gullele Ct
Spouncin Elizabeth Caner So 4 Kt
Calantte
BABIN thie
2-Tnion Bride
Btunterener aid af ohare Se WE
ehaeeth
sMANotdea Rod Dlemsure Sootel, So 1B
Baltimore
Sotaities Ansitioty of ABH A ME
Chee
M—Uabies Baye Seta,
ataTewtor Cusehren'’ de, Aes
sea Tansee
1 Mints, sin
yotoectantres sel
Uke deatah Bestace Set TA
wes
reaweitore Megt, © J eat SB
See that
Mone Wing sd Town, 8
fciterm Wewemeaal a, Sa Sef
snctcagne wa smarn i, Vise
RT SMee Siatace ears ot 3 as
ter tneoatae 8,
1eThotoee Cuarhtpens 32) Aster
a ceaeen teet Meng
TRite (Pthere ne Watee
at
et mas Lean So, 2 tel
io Temettn pomes and Hewat ah
EEC Puat Morintte ted
Ee Niersey ete we Hissin
iia s
maWiting Weber
Foto oe x, nae
oer :
arePeiramnt. Peacire ant Pict
lae—tataretta Business Teas
Bioware A. MESS
ROWarse Slee Upitne Ae ot 3
ec Bae tea
IN THIS SECTION Local News, News of Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania and the South CHURCH CELEBRATES DIAMOND JUBILEE Best E Are Secretar
Best Essay Writers
Are in Our Schools
Secretary Roche Tells School
Board in Announcing
New Contest
A check for $150 is in the hands of the School Board to be given as prizes to six pupils of the public schools of Baltimore writing the best essay on the model of the Baltimore Harbor now on exhibition at Lexington and St. Paul Sts.
This includes colored and white schools alike. Secretary Roche in reading the letter to the Board paused long enough to state that two of the best essay writers in the city are in colored schools.
The board of Superintendents indicated that the Play Ground Athletic League he allowed to use the yards of schools 101, 110, 112, 113 for the year beginning summer season. June 25, and ending September first
THREATENED REVOLT
AT ALLEN FAILS
Some Members of Church
Protested To Bishop
Against Long
Sermons
MANY TAKE OTHER SIDE
Other Fine Qualities of
Minister Overbalance
This, They Say
The threatened revolt against Rev. Dr. D. G. Hill assuming the pastorate of Allen A. M. E. Church did not materialize and he filled the pulpit and administered sacrament last Sunday morning. It is said that a delegation from the church waited upon Bishop J. Albert Johnson at the Baltimore Conference and protested Dr. Hill's return for another year. The delegation is said to have told the bishop that there was no objection against but that he is too show as a pastor. The Sunday-School was closed for a time Sunday of last week but immediately reopened.
One of the regular attendants at the church summed up the opposition in the following way: Morning Services Too Long "We can say nothing against the character of Dr. Hill, but he is too show as a pastor. Many times we do not get out of Sunday morning service until three o'clock in the afternoon. Dr. Hill was educated at a Presbyterian school and presches like a Quaker, and that is not the way we Methodists like things. He has worked well with the officials of the church, however."
Services did not keep in until three o'clock last Sunday however, the congregation being dismissed before two o'clock.
Many Take Other Side
A man who takes an active interest in the work of the church had the following to say:
"There are some who do not want Dr. Hill because he is rather a teacher, we can point the finger of suspicion at his character. I would rather have a slow pastor whose character is unblemished. Therefore, Dr. Hill suits me."
Dr. Hill is a native of Frederick County and was graduated from Lincoln University in 1886. He is generally regarded as a middle school teacher in the point of training and ideals. He is in no sense a church politician, even if such activity meant his own advancement.
Local Physicians Seek Hospital Jobs
Several local physicians are aspirants for places on the staff of the Colored War Veterans' Hospital, at Taskgeege, J. R. C. president of the American Medical, medical and Dental Association, told the Afro-American.
The requirements include from a class A medical school and at least one year's work as an intern or in post-graduate work. Then the civil requirements have to be met. A number of local men are graduates of class A schools and have had the requisite hospital and other experience to fit them for positions there.
What Is Home
Without A Baby?
Write
Indian Medicine Company
10144 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
Sale of Dresses
.75 $29.75
in the Newest Styles. Also
s, etc. All Millinery at Re-
Gent's Furnishings, Etc.
Wonderful Sale of
$15.00 $19.75
All Colors and Sizes, in the New
Coat Suits, Wraps, Capes, etc. A
duced Prices. Hosiery, Gent's Fur
Men's Spring Su
Wonderful Selection....
COHN'S SAMPLE
659 W. Lexington
Open Monday and Saturday Evenings
Accounts Open
Madison Street Presbyterian Congregation Is 75 Years Old This Week
OLD DAYS REGALLED
White Men First Pastors,
and Whites Taught Sunday-School
With a special sermon by Rev
Dr. R. H. Armstrong, pastor of
Faith Presbyterian Church,
Germantown, Pa., a two-week celebration of the seventy-fifth anniversary
of the Madison Street Presbyterian Church began last Sunday
celebrating.
In the afternoon, Carrington L. Davis delivered an historical address, tracing the life of the congregation during various periods. The pastor, Rev. Dr. W. W. Walker, will preach the anniversary session this Sunday morning, taking for his theme, "The Eternal Christ." The Sunday-School will be in charge of the services in the afternoon under the direction of the superintendent, Mr. Bernard Webb. Special services will be held mighty next week. Rev. Walter H. Johnson dean of Lincoln University, will preach on Sunday May 20. In the afternoon a recital will be given under the direction of James F. Fessenton.
With Etheopher A. M. E. Church, the Madison Street congregation compels for the honor of being longest on one side. Other old congregations in the city include Sharp Street Memorial M. E. Church, Bathol A. M. Church, First Colorized Baptist Church, St. James P. E. Church, the A. M. E. Zion and Union Baptist.
The first pastor at Madison Street church were whites. In days immediately following the Civil War white women from the best homes in the city taught Sunday-School there.
Among the colored pastors are the late Rev. W. T. Carr, the late Rev. J. E. Hedges, founder of Grace Presbyterian Church; the late Rev. Dr. William H. Waver, who served there for a quarter of a century; Dr. Rev. R. H. Armstrong, and Rev. L. R. Johnson, who is now a professor at Howard University, Walker University, and Union Theological Seminary, was called to the passionate three years ago.
The church is debt free and dur-
ing the pastorate of Dr. Weaver
a fund was created which annual
investment interest to take
care of the ground rent.
ELECTION NOTES
ELECTION NOTES
A big streamer flying from Dr. Young's Druid Hill avenue asked the voters to support Preston and his running mates.
Pictures with the photos of Howard Jackson and his running mates were seen in the windows of a number of colored homes and business places.
A colored man who holds a city job booked a colored man who was urged the support of Jackson at a mass-meeting at Lexington street and Arlington avenue last Saturday night.
"You would not heckle a white Democratic speaker and why should you do so to a colored one," admonished a policeman who told him to desist.
Democratic candidates addressing colored meetings was unknown here until the campaign which has just ended.
Jacob C. Nicholson, one of the original colored Democrats and head of the Pluro-Partisan League, expresses himself as being well pleased with the way the colored voters split up their selections.
The Post endorsed Warner T. McGinnan, saying that he is honest, intelligent and a credit to the race. And the Post is the only daily paper in the city that capitalizes the word "Negro."
Rev. C. B. Bishop, Robert J. Young and Josiah L. Diggs, who were among the defeated candidates in the Fourth District Councilman primary worked ardently for Republican success.
Morning Services Too Long
BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923
Citi- the Un- A Miss Ethel Scott Named As Co-respondent; Other Charges Alleged.
O
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Edward N. Wilson, registrar at Morgan College, is compiling a record of the graduates and former students of the institution. A card index system is being used and the aim is to give the salient points in the lives of those recorded.
The college has had a long array of students, beginning when such men as Hey, N. M. Carroll entered more than fifty years ago. Many of the students became teachers and ministers and a teacher entered the professions. W. Kampson Brooks and M. W. Clair and his bishops, W. Ashieh Hawkins, I. H. Nutter, T. Gillis Nutter, the late Philip Waters and Ephraim Jackson are among the many lawyers. Drs. W. A. Warfield, S. B. Hughes and T. S. Hawkins are among the physicians.
The late Isaac L. Thomas, as well as Revs. F. J. Handy, Frederick H. Butler, W. A. C. Hughes, J. W. Jewett J. W. Fenderson, W. H. Brooks, Charles S. Briggs, J. S. Carroll, Edward Tyler and Ernest S. Williams are among the ministers.
The late Joseph Lockerman, Mason A. Hawkins, Carrington L. Davis, William I. Michele, T. H. and the late Joseph Lockerman entered the teaching profession. Earl Johnson has won fame as an athlete and Miss Eva A. Jessye is winning hairstyles as a writer of poetry.
A committee from the alumni, headed by Rev. Ernest S. Williams, is co-operating with Registrar Wilson in securing the records.
BLIND BAND TO PLAY
The Maple Leaf Harmony Band, composed of blind musicians, will give a concert at the Richmond Market Armory on Thursday evening, May 24. The proceeds will be to aid the musical department of the Richmond Blind Frank Jones is president, Peter Fizer, leader, and R. M. Deaver, chairman of the committee on arrangements.
SCHOOLS EXHIBIT
An exhibition of the work of the pupils of the colored public schools will be held at the Richmond Market Armory for three days beginning next Tuesday. It will include manual training, cooking, sewing and domestic art.
J. HARRISON FOOTE SUED FOR DIVORCE
Mrs. Bertha Foote Institutes Proceedings Against Alleged Erring Spouse
INFIDELITY IS CHARGED
Charging infidelity and naming as co-respondent a Miss Ethel Scott, Mrs. Bertha Foote filed a petition for absolute divorce and alimony against her husband J. Harrison Foote, last week in Circuit Court.
In her petition Mrs. Foote sets out that the two were married on January 22, 1908 by Rev. D. W. Hayes and lived together until March 28, 1923. Since the latter date she has refused to live with her husband, and has lived with her two boys, Joseph Harrison, 14, and Frederick Leroy, 13, at their home at 1500 McCulloh street.
As co-respondent Mrs. Foote names in her petition Miss Ethel Scott and also sets out that her husband committed adultery with numerous other women. Other more serious charges are also set out in the petition.
In asking the court to grant her both temporary and permanent alimony Mrs. Foote states that her husband conducts a near beer saloon at 1320 Pennsylvania Avenue and makes $75 per week she uses her home at 1500 Bruid Hill Avenue as well as four acres owned by them in Glenburnie be sold and divided. In addition she asks the custody of the children. In reply to the 'allegations set forth by his wife J. Harrison Foote she week substantially denying her accusations as to his infidelity. He also denies that he is making $75 per week as set forth in her petition and while neither admitting or denying that she has always been a good, loving and true wife, states that he will demand proof of sainte. The trial of the case is set for the Circuit Court Monday, May 14.
POLITICIAN BURIED
Albert H. Roes, whose funeral took place on Monday of last week, was probably the most influential colored politician in 'East Baltimore. He lived in the Sixth Ward, but held sway in several others.
"Al" Ross was one of the best workers in the forces that backed John W. Garrett for the senatorial nomination last fall for the member of the York Rite. Masons and, Monumental Lodge of Elks.
PAGE NINE
BOTTLE BRIGADE BUSY
Children Gather Containers Which They Sell to Salmon Keepers Have you met the bottle brigade? It travels all over the city and may be seen daily entering near bait stations or the purposes of selling the proprietors of bottles for hooch. These bring two cents each. Enterprising boys and girls are engaged regularly in the trade and when olders drink all of the so-called gin or whiskey out of bottles these are gathered up and sold. In the days before the Volstend acj children were not allowed to enter saloons, but this ban no longer exists.
THREE PERSONS HURT IN AUTO ACCIDENTS
White Woman Driver Crashes Into Yard, Knocking Down Man and Baby
Auto accidents took a toll of three injuries this week.
A machine driven by Mrs. Chas, Quarterly white 3802 Forest Ave. crushed into the yard of Matthew Brown who lives on the Old Court Road, Baltimore County. Brown was sitting holding an infant and was knocked down by the automobile after it had struck a mail box and tree standing in the yard. He was bruised about the body while the baby was slightly scratched. Muriel Thompson, age 5, was struck by a machine as she was crossing the corner of Cumberland and Carey streets. He was rushed to John Hopkins Hospital where it was found that his skull had been fractured. The car was driven by Ethelbert O Powell, white, 2026 E. Preston street. John Preston Wilson, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. received slight injuries by being struck by an auto in front of his home Saturday. The car was driven by Albert M. Lewis, white, 2012 Norfolk St.
Fractures Man's Skull
As a result of an alteration between Sherman and Kenneth Wilkins on one side and Wilbert Hall on the other, the latter is at Bay View Hospital in a secluded condition. The Wilkins boys who live at 614 X. Bruce street, it is said attacked Hall with bricks.
MAN FATALLY BURNED
Charles Fisher, 1130 Peach Alley, an employee of the National Enamelming and Stamping Company, was fatally burned while a work Thursday. He was taken to the South Baltimore General Hospital where he died at 7:20 the same day.
Various tabernacles of the Ancient United Order of Moses are now installing officers for the enlisted men. The selections took place in April.
Good Mornin' Judge
Mrs. Sewell's Tonic Cause Trouble—$3.00 Too Much for
One Dance—Bates Couldn't Remember Name He
Gave—One Small Taste of White Lightning
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Tonic Worked Wrong
For Mrs. Sewell.
When Mrs. Elizabeth Sewell, 820
Whatacre street, bought a bottle
of tonic Saturday she did not know
that instead of easing her "misky"
it was going to end in putting
a big knot on the side of her head.
But this and some other things
is just what happened to Mrs.
Sewell.
According to her testimony at
the Northwestern Police Station
sporting when her husband,
Kenneth, came home, he mistook
the bottle of tonic for bootleg whiskey and claiming that it had been given her by some gentleman friend went on the warpath.
Mrs. Georgiana Franklin, mother
of Mrs. Sewell, being present,
joined the fight and along with
Mrs. Sewell was chased out of the
by Sewell who wielded a baseball bat until the police arrived.
Mrs. Sewell exhibited a large knot on the side of her head put there by her husband, and Judge Rantt fixed him $25 and costs.
$3 Per Dance.
The trouble which will cost Jackson White, $25 and costs or quite a while in jail started at a little dance on Riggs Avenue. According to the testimony of Mrs. Anita Williams, 1404 Riggs Avenue. White, not only made her take the count with a swab beside the face but took her pocket book and money. But White's version of the affair as told to the Magistrate at the Northwestern Police Station Tuesday morning is that affair with spent three real good dollars on Mrs. Anderson, the party she was with him once.
After she had shown the Magistrate where he pushed her. His Honor thought that push worth about $25 and cost.
Don't Forget Your Name.
William Bates, 1027 Park Avenue, caught with eight others Saturday night "rolling the bones" had a hard time getting out of the lockup Sunday morning, even though he had the money to pay his fee. When he was arrested he gave his name as Samuel Jenkins and by the next morning forgot what name he had given. As there was no William Bates on the dockhe had a hard time paying his fine. Next time he will write it down. Others arrested and fined at the same time. 1306 Ruiter street; Robert Preston, 1027 Park Avenue; Frank Lindsay, 1222 Brevard street; James Roman, 201 W. Hoffman street; Charles Williams, 1027 Park Avenue; Randolph Brown, 1021 Druld Hill Avenue; Alonza Shuby, 218 Chase street.
Drink Was This?
After Henry Hudson, 627 Pitcher street, "had merely tasted" some of the contents of a bottle long enough to hold him, including some of the strong arms of the Southern Police District.
Hudson was found in possession of a whole block near the corner of Wells and Charles street Monday by the officers and was taken to the South Baltimore General Hospital where physicians said that he had been poisoned.
Fined for disorder, conduct or disorder, Kellie Clark, 210 Colvin street, $10; William Slater, 1415 E. Pratt street, $10;
Benjamin Smith, 920 Peach alley, $5; Louis Warm, 304 Colvin street, $5; William Taylor, 604 Stump alley, $5; Joseph M. Ford, 233 W. Hill street, $5; William Washington, 1109 Kershev Jackson, 1109 Matthews street, Matilda Chlyton, 245 N. Montford street, $15; Thomas Braxton, 630 E. 28th street, $5; Walter Robinson, 630 E. 28th street, $5; Matilda Chinn, 521 East street, $5; Frank Gaskins, 6 N. Bethel street, $10; Walter Clark, 407 Gaskins, 407 Aposee, Bowle, 454 Boyd street, $10; Clarence Taylor, 1028 Pennsylvania avenue, $10; Jimmie Marable, 330 Dover street, $1; George Strickle, 3 Kelley alley, $15; Louis Smith, 521 S. Green street, $10; Ida Bell, 425 E. 23rd street, $5; Ella Godfrey, 1414 Pennsylvania avenue, $5; Grice Smith, 1134 Kelley alley, $5; Thomas Widgeon, 819 Leendenhall street, $5; Lee Eta Wilkerson, 296 Vincent Lee, $5.
Arrested for assault, cutting or shooting; James E. Brown, 1005 Reynolds Court, held for court; David McFadden, 604 E. Madison street, $50; John H. Williams, 543 McMechen street, $25; Emory Neal, 593 Baker street, $10; Emma Jackson, 1010 Park avenue, $50.
Held for larceny, burglary or robbery; Clarence Taylor, 1028 Pennsylvania avenue; Charles Madden, 1705 McCulloh street; Laura M. Butler, 1715 W. Franklin street; George Banier, 28 S. Carlton avenue.
Held for disorderly house or obstructing free passage; Nellie Davis, 1219 High alley; Octavia Smith, 10 W. York street.
Held for obtaining money by false prowess; Thomas Taylor, 213 Amity street; Charles Tibbs, 930 N. Strickler street.
Arrested for violating Volkstedt
Arrested for Pincayne Foute, 926 Elm St.
2 Women And Babe Trapped By Fire
Exploding Oil Lamp Starts Midnight Blaze on Sarah Ann Street
One woman is probably totally burned and another is in serious condition as a result of a midnight fire Saturday night.
Mrs. Sarah Ann, Mrs. Bessie Anderson and Mrs. Bessie Carpenter and the lates four-month-old baby were asleep on the second floor of 1004 Sarah Ann街 when an oil lamp on the first floor exploded setting fire to the house.
The fire was first discovered by Alfred Smith who was awaken from the second story windows. A few moments later Mrs. Anderson was seen to run from the house enveloped in flames and Mrs. Carpenter"with her child in her arms.
IMPROVE HOSPITALS
A sewerage treatment plant has been installed in the Colored State Hospital at Crownview and in cost and cost plant for the Colored State Tularecushes Hospital at Henrytown Carroll County, has been completed.
Miss Harriett Thompson, who is known to thousands of circus-goers as Princess Wee Wee, was here with Ringling Bros. Circus last week. The little lady lives and has a wide circle of friends.
IN THIS SECTION Sports, Woman's Magazine Page, Editorials Serial Story
Local Politicians Hazard Guesses As To How Much Georgian Got For Trip From Washington
OTHERS DREW PAY CHECKS
Local Workers Well Paid
In All Camps for Political Work in Campaign
How much did Link Johnson,
National Committeeman from Georgia get for coming over to this city from Washington last week and making a speech for Mayor Broening?
This is the question that puzzled politicians last week. Link himself declared publicly that he was not paid. Local politicians, who are wise to the game declared, the he was paid, and that with his experience, he should have demanded
Criticism of the Republican leaders for bringing what was termed a "voteless Southerner" here to direct local people how to cast their ballots apparently had no effect on the redoubtable Link, who spoke for over an hour of the Doughass. Theatre to a well-filled house. Before speaking he went to the office of Warner T. McGuinn and jotted down notes on the local situation which he afterwards used.
The hand of Melvin Chisum of Salisbury, Mt. is seen back of the coming of Henry Link to Baltimore. Mel is the jiggin leutenant of H. P. Jackson on the Eastern Shore, and undoubtedly suggested to "W. P." that Link was the man to stop the G. O. migration to the Democracies. Phl Brown was an American political observer from D. C. Republicers during the week. Around ten o'clock Tuesday night he heard the results and made the next train back home.
Local Men Well Paid
Local political workers of all
three candidates were also well
paid for their work. Some of the
high type who would take no money for the work
they did. On the other hand one
local minister drew down, it is
said a fast full of money, and a
number of his brethren were
looking him up to divvy. On
the many petitions around
was only said, it is said, when
the lender declared the money was
washed and would be properly divided.
Breeningites not only put out the money to establish a club for women, but set up several other headquarters. Other candidates were not so liberal in the funds for headquarters.
Politicians are telling a story that Robert J. Young may have beaten William L. Fitzgerald in the recent councilmanic primaries had not a man who led in the fight for Howard Jackson got busy. A certain man who the 11th ward and the large following took the wing ring for Young, and Fitzgerald was losing ground. The Young worker was "seen" and then became an ardent worker for Fitzgerald. As it was, "Bob" came within 200 votes of defeating "Fitz."
This certain man was sought by both the Brooming and Jackson forces the Mayoralty elector. The same man that switched dh. from Young to Fitzgerald got him for Jackson. He made speeches and worked ardently for the Democratic ticket, and insisted that he be well paid for his services. The man who switched him paid him every time he asked for money, but with a groan.
"Why don't you stop giving him so much money?" Jackson asked. "I just want you to be my assistant."
"I can no better do, for as soon as I stop paying him the Browning people will grab him," was the answer.
Farmers From All Parts of Eastern Shore Gathered at Princess Anne on Saturday
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3,000 FARMERS MEET AT PRINCESS ANNE
21st Annual Farmers' Conference Under Auspices of the Academy
EXHIBITS ATTRACTIVE
Leading Educators of the State Tell Best Methods of Farming
Princess Anne, May 10.—Nearly 3000 farmers gathered at Princess Anne Academy last Saturday for the 21st annual Farmer's Conference given under the auspices of them. Come in all sorts of rigs, from nearly every Eastern Shore county and also from Virginia. Addresses were given by Federal and State experts on the best schools in farming. There was an attractive exhibit of the latest in farming implements. The work of the school in agriculture, blacksmithing, carpentry and domesticscience was also on exhibition attracting the attention of the visitors.
Among those who delivered addresses along general lines were: Frank L. Goodnow, president of John Hopkins University; Dr. A. E. Woods, president of the University of Maryland; Dr. John O. Sower, president of Morgan College; and Dr. T. H. Kish, principal of the academy. Governor Ritchie was also on the program of speech. Among those who assisted in making the day pleasant for the students were Robert A. Griggs, principal of the academy; John E. Smith, of the department of agriculture; Barton White, horologist; Charles E. Smith, of the department of animal husbandry; and Louis H. Martin, demonstrator in agricultural.
CAMBRIDGE
Cambria, Mc. May 10—Tothelia Cramer-Sunday morning, 9:30, 11:30, 12:00, Ivy, H. W. Lewis, 2:00, 2:30, Sunday-school, with a large attendance, 6:20, Epiphany subject, "Thanksgiving," 5:00, preaching services in Sunday, Boy. Charles Herman, communism was held in the morning, and communist. "Prayer meeting will be held on Friday night, "Tuesday, 10:00, "Many friends are glad to see Mrs. Anne Stewart, of Washington, out again, she has very ill for sometime." Mr. Walter Young met with a sad incident last Thursday by being kicked by a mole in the leg. "Quite a large good work on the excursion to Sunday to Philadelphia." Mr. Mrs. Joe Copins of Chester, mother of Mr. Robert Taylor, was Sunday at Mrs. Joseph Sailer. Mr. George Turpin be out again after being ill for sometime." Mrs. Robert Taylor is attending after it at the Cambridge Hospital." Mrs. Calvin Horney is getting along fine after undergoing an operation at the Cambridge Hospital." The Cambridge High school boys played at Haston Hall and defeated by a force of the Cambridge High school boys. A large crowd attended. The High School boys of Salisbury played at Cambridge Thursday with the high school boys. Score 20 to 6 in favor of Cambridge. "Mothers' will be observed next Sunday." Mr. Ernest Lyne has returned to Washington after spending last Sunday.
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day with his wife, Mrs. Mildred Lyte.
* Mrs. Hester B. Hayes has returned to her home in Virginia after spending three months with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hansel Wright, of Washington street. * Merry Concert Band of Cambridge rendered music at Euston last Saturday for filed day. A large crowd attended. * Mr. and Mrs. Cophing St. Clair, Miss Lee Cromwell, Messrs. William Killam, George Colder, James Cornish, Vivian Farrane, Charles Clash, Alfred Stewart, and Charles Camper, of Cambridge, attended field day at Euston last Saturday. * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Douglass, of Chester, spent Sunday week as the guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Kennard. * Mr. Rene Brown, of Chester, spent Sunday week with his mother, Mrs. Emma Carey, of Dumns avenue.
EASTON
BASTON, MD., May 10—Special services were observed at Bother A. M. E. Church Sunday, Rev. E. T. Addison the pastor who returned for 54th year preached two interesting sermons to the delight of the congregation. * The following persons motored from Chestertown Sunday, Mr. David Johnson, Mrs. David Johnson, Mrs. Isabella Johnson, White Johnson, visited the A. M. E. Church. * Mrs. Flammer, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dickerson and Mr. Homer Wayman motored here from Denton Sunday and were the guests of Mrs. E. T. Addison and Mrs. Charles Freeman respectively. * Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Copper, Miss Della Copper, Harry Smith motored to Cambridge Street where the guests of Mrs. Margaret Cornish and Mrs. Sarah Chase. * Mrs. May Beams has returned home from Atlantic City where she was the girl of her daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Carl Griswell. * Mr. and Mrs. Ed. McClain, spent Thursday in Easton with Mr. and Mrs. James Downs. After bunchey they motored to the moon fishing. Those in the party were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Downs, Mr. and Mrs. James Downs, and Mr. A. Bailey, Mr. Ed. Downs caught a catfish weighing four lbs. Miss Emma Keyes of Baltimore was the week-end guest of her mother, Mrs. Julia Keyes. * Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Copper of Baltimore is home for the summer. The guests of Mrs. Julia Keyes for the summer. Those on the sick list are: Mrs. Sallia Rasin of East Lane, Mrs. Sarah Barney of Higgin street, Mrs. Katie Moore of Port street, Mrs. Susie Johnson of Port street. The field Day exercise was held here at Federal Park, a very large crowd attended the No. 1 Dodge Ball team of E. H. S. who won the championship. The band furnished the music for the occasion. A dance was held in the school auditorium at night. * Rev. and Mrs. George Dockins of Sparrows Point visited relatives and friends here.
Arrested For Assault Case Dismissed
When Or, C. Elliott Strickland told Oliver Denver that his sweetened water would give better results than Herbs of life, he succeeded in getting his jaws shapped. For which reason, Oliver had to tell it to the judge.
"Well, Judge, it is just like this," said Oliver. "I know what Double Strength Herbs of Life is and what it will do, because all dom doctors had given my wife up for me to do the same thing. I cured my wife and I decided to try some myself. So I went down to de store where disyear doc works and ask him for a bottle of de herbs and he told me two bottles of his squasques would do more good than that. I told him that he was a lie and de truif wasn't in him. He started to hit me and I was forced to uppercim him in de jaw. Dats all." After looking at the bottle containing about one quart of a preparation resembling pure sweetened water, the judge said. "Well I guess I would have done the same thing. Case dis-
"With the exception of a mighty few stores with tonics of their own, druggists are enthusiastic about the great surds Herbs of Life has made which in thousands of tests has proven beyond all doubt its right to the distinction of being the most powerful, effective and palatable tonic digestive, reconstituent tonic made. Any druggist to be awful narrow to think that he can equal such a famous and well balanced medicine" exclaimed the Judge.
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HAGERSTOWN, MD.
Hagerstown, Md., May 10—Dr. M. P. Robinson, pastor of Second Christian Church, was called to his home at Louisville, Ky., on business. *Rev. Wallace preached at Second Christian Church Sunday morning Sunday-school at 3 p. m. Rev Fluck, pastor of White Presbyterian Church, preached Sunday night to a large audience. *Rev. J. A. Brisice, the newly appointed pastor at Abnerzee A. M. E. Church, preached day morning and night to large audiences. The collection was $52.27. *Lev Iverson, the stabbing Mrs. Mary Wilson, Harmon's avenue, was given a hearing in police court before Justice Bitner at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon. The alleged attack occurred at about 8 o'clock Sunday night. It was said that Iverson was under the influence of liquor. According to witnesses, Iverson was the woman, and without a word whispering knife and begain stabbing her. After cutting her he led through an alley, Dr. Wm. Hoffer dressed her injuries. Iverson was found guilty in the Maryland House of Correction. *Hillary Keys, belaying at the Hamilton Hotel, was arrested Sunday night by prohibition agent J. B. Brisice, and furnished 5500 bail for the action of the U. S. District Court. France Miller went his bond. *David J. Cornick, of Norfolk, Va., an employee of the Dickinson Construction, co. at the W. W. D. R. Sheps is a patient at the Hagerstown hospital, with fractures of both legs. The accident in which Cornick figured happened Monday afternoon while he was assisting others in lifting some heavy material. *Geo. Washington is critically ill with heart trouble at his home on N. Jonathan street. *Edw. Sparrow, of Portsmouth, Va., is spending the week with Dr. and Mrs. Iverson. *An interesting program was rendered Thursday in the schools of Hagerstown in connection with Parent-Teachers' Day. *Frank H. Thomas, a former citizen of Hagerstown in New York City last week. His body was brought here. The funeral was held at the Asbury M. E. Church, conducted by Johnson. *Mrs. M. James Thomas and baby daughter, of New York City, are visiting their parents here. *Misses Annie Harmon and Zolma Wilson, students at Storner College, are spending the week-end with their parents.
DENTON
Denton, Md., May 10—The church services were well attended Sunday. The people of Union Bother Church are rejoicing over the return of Rex, John Hammond as pastor for fifth year. * Mr. and Mrs. William Pinkett has occupied after spending a while in New York and Atlantic City. * The field day exercises by the schools of Caroline County.
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Cold, Grip and Flu Capsules
Will cure a cold in one day; break up chills and fever over night. They make ginses and sorbases in the body and limbs or arms over night.
They break up coughs and tightness in chest, head, colds, mastitis. They move the palsies next day.
Price 500.
Sore Throat Remedy
Will relieve sore throat in one day ENLARGED TONSILIS
Ulcerated Throat. Tonsillitis, Moresiness. Ulcerated Mouth, Bronchitis. 500.
Eat-A-Tab's
For Dyspnea, Acid Stomach, Indigestion, Constipation, Foul Breath, Heartburn, Water Breath, Nausea, Fermentation, Fever, Poisoning, Gasy, Windy and Bloated Stomach after eating, Palms about heart due to Gas, Belching, Sour Stomach, Headache.
Capsicum Rub-Salve
RED PEPPER SALVE
The Great Pain Remover should be
used in conjunction with the above
remedies.
Price 250., $80.
Gray and Faded Hair
Restorer
Keeps you looking young. Grad-
ally darkens Gray and Faded Hair,
Price 500., $1.00.
Tape-Worm Remedy
Will expel the worm in two or
three hours. Price $1.00.
For Gatorath of the Blades as running-Range, Inflammation.
For Bed Bugs Only
Gentermine Schlumte mixte
160. FIRST BOTTLE
408-410 North Gay Street, Baltimore, Md.
conducted in-Towers Park, were a great success. The attendance was exceedingly large. Great credit is due Miss Knox, the County Supervisor, and her splendid corps of teachers. The Denton High School, under the management of Professor Wright, rendered a fine concert in the assembly room of Kennard School last Wednesday night. The audience was large. Music was rendered by the Silver Leaf Band. *Prof. H. C. High School, the pupils of Kennard High School, the students of Kennard School, last Friday and attended the State Declaration Contest by the high schools. Armstead Williams represented the Denton school. *Mrs. Louisa Wright and her mother, Mrs. Lee, of Norfolk, Va., accompanied the party. *Mr. Jesse Rich, who was accidently shot last week, is confined in the hospital at Easton and is improving very slowly. Mrs. Lizzie Rich bites mother, has returned to school, and is shining. *Roy. M. W. Waters and a few friends motored to Easton Saturday and attended the field day exercises. *Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dickerson and Mrs. O. G. Flamer motored to Easton, Sunday.
CUMBERLAND
CUMBERLAND, MD., May 16—Holy Communion was celebrated in moss of our churches on Sunday last and reports are that attendances were excellent. * At Metropolitan A, M. E. Church where the pastor Rev. W. H. Inker has been returned from the recent Annual Conference, a number of members and friends assembled at the parsonage to welcome the family. * Rev. Robt. A. Hart, pastor of McKendree E. Church is at Metropolitan A, D. I. College in Washington. D. I. C. * Among those still ill but recovering are Mrs. Hattie McNeal, Father T. G. Washington, Mrs. Louise Hilleary and Mrs. George Dawson, the latter in Allegheyn Hospital. * Rev. C. R. Dawson pastor of Saint Phillips Episcopal Church also Rev. J. H. Robinson pastor of Ethelenzer Raphael and Mrs. George Dawson, the latter in Metropolitan A, M. E. Church parsonage during the past week. * Traveling Deputy of the Colored Elks Edward Clark has recently opened a hotel on Bedford street known as the "Ritz." * The Allegheyn County Civic League, Holden the monthly meeting of the community Dr. Spurgeon and Mrs. David Spurgeon with the cooperation of other committeem presented Rev. W. T. Kenney is very much improved from a recent indisposition also Mrs. Sarah Broermer, Mrs. Walter Edwards, Mrs. Ella Stephens, Nora Hollington's Miss Jessica Battie, and Mrs. attending the conference held in Baltimore last week from this city were: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hairston, Mrs. Rosie Davis, Mrs. M. E. Rhodes, Miss Alice Taylor, Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, and Mrs. Susan Davis. * The Womens Mite Missionary Society, Junior Stewardess and the Saddle School of Metropolitan A, Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, the Amelia Current Opinion Club of this city are among those who presented tokens of esteem to Mrs. Addella Bake before she left for conference. * Reports are that Mrs. Goldie Bates
SS, Dru
110 North Gay Street, Baltimore
Patent Medicine, True & Tried Re-
all these Medicines, $1 each. By n
Tonic Nux & Iron
Liquid
The great builder and strength-
ness. It note a general tonic and
will give you better health, strength,
energy, power, force and ambition.
It enflashes the blood and builds up
the nervous system and puts Gems on
top. Also regulates the bowels.
For weak Kleenies and Blenders
stop getting up at night. For Back-
ache and . . . in the johns and grubs,
for chafing and . . . to urinate; suppressed or scans
burning urine; bed-wetting, allays all
irritation and inflammation of the
Bladder. It eliminates the uric and
system and prevents abrasion.
For all kinds of rheumatism, swelling of the joints, inflammatory, solution, neuralgia, lumbago, hernia, sciatica, sciatica, sciatica, platyarthritis, pains in side or hip.
Recommended for Fluttering, Nervous or Palpating Heart, Shortness of Breath, Irregular Pulse, Smothering or Palmny Feeling, Shaping Pains Blue Lips, Tickling Skin and Harvous Heart. Price $1.00.
Dyspepsia and Indigestion Cure
For Constipation, gaseous stomach, swelling and puffy feeling after meals heartburn, excessive balching, sour stomach, pains after eating and all stomach troubles.
Sweet Pink Powders
FOR CHILDREN
A valuable remedy for children when Feverful, Constipated, Droopy, Sore Stomach, Oedicured Stools, Bad Breath, Sour Stomach. If given in time will prevent spasms.
PRICE $500
Incontinence Mixture
For bad-wetting in children and aged persons. Price $1.00.
Blass' Pile Ointment
For Bile, Pile, Bleeding, Knotting and Protruding Piles. Give instant relief. One box will be all you need so don't suffer any longer—get a box today. $60.00. $10.00.
Koenns, tatter, barber's itch, riff-
worms, soily eruptions and all itch-
ing diseases of the skin. Gives in-
stant relief.
Roach Killer
For Boaches Only
Kills them on the spot
$FIRST BOTTLE$
HARRISBURG, PA.
Harrisburg, Pa., May 10.—The pastor at Bethel A. M. E. Church is making preparations to attend conference. * Baptismal services were held at Second Baptist Church Sunday. One person joined the church, Mrs. Porter, of Pittsburg, sang solos. * Five new members of Zion Trinity Baptist Church were baptized in the Susquehanna River Sunday. Collection for the day was $105.91. * A far is being held at St. Paul Baptist Church with much success. * Those on the sick list, but improving, are Mr. Jas, Wilson, Mrs. Keyser, Mrs. Jas, Wilson, Mrs. Keyser, Mrs. Jas, Wilson, ill for sometime now at her home where she lived 7th street, was found dead on Weil with tuberculosis. * Dr. Emmett Scott will be the principle speaker at Second Baptist Church, May 13th, at 2 p. m. * The rectal held at Second Baptist Church last Thursday was a success. * Mr. G. T. Tucker of Linden street, spent the week-end in Pittsburgh. * The dramatic concert given by Mr. David Wilson at Harris A. M. Church Wednesday was he repeated. * Mrs. Betty Johnson, of Hargrestown, Md., was the week-end guest of Mrs. John Shorts, 318 Mullberry street. * Mrs. Margaret Phillips, of James street, who was severely burned, died at the hospital last Thursday.
contemplates taking up residence elsewhere in the near future. * All notes for these columns must reach the correspondent not later than 6 p. in. Sunday. * District Deputy and Mrs. George Palmer are still unable to fill the demand of their rapidly increasing trade for home-made bread pies and cakes. They are producing daily.
PE-RUNA
For Stomach Catarrh
Master that catarrhal condition of the digestive tract with the remedy which has proved its usefulness over a full half century.
PE-RU-NA
A Splendid Tonic
For Spring and Summer
Sold Everywhere
Tablets or Liquid
uggist
re, Md.
medies for 20 Years
small. $1.15
New Life Tablets
For Men Only
For lost manhood, nervousness,
semipal weakness, nightly emmi-
sions, dability, and impotence. They
not as a general tonic and put new
life into your worn-out system.
Female Better Health
Tablets
A vegetable compound for the treatment of all female troubles, diseases, weakness and disordero peculiar to the form of the disease have proven a blessing to thousands of suffering woman who have been made well, strong and happy. These tablets prevent the extreme pain and needles suffering regularly endured by so many of women, which makes life so miserable.
With these tablets we Mint!
Douche Powder,
Acid Stomach Powder
For gaseous stomach, swollen and
puffy feelings after meals, barking,
excessive bloating, your stomach,
eating, and all stomach
troubles.
For extreme nervousness, sleepiness, twitching, nervous dyspnea, headaches, despondency, lump in throat, quinine in stomach and all nervous disorders.
Blood Tonic & Purifier
For akin blainless, empties and titching, increased blood disorders, aficious sores, catarrh, white patches on tongue, blotches on face and body. It also regulates the bowels.
Stomach and Liver Regulator
For billionious, habitual constipation, diarrhea, sick or nervous headache, loss of appetite, dyspnea, ingestion, soul breath, jaundice, sous gassons stomach, liver and intestinal
Sweet Breath
Tooth and Root
This product will effectively
Cleanse, Beautify and Preserve the
Teeth. It will impart to the Breath
a most delightful Fragrance and to
the Gum's healthy Action, and a
consequent firmness and brightness in
color. Price $80, $100.
Blass' Little Pinks
For constipation and indigestion,
$30, $60.
Blass' Magic Corn Cure
It gives indigestion relief. You can
paint it with your finger. It will remove warts and callositis from bunions and soles of the feet.
Price $30, $50.
Use Blass' Rat Poison
The kind that exterminated all the rats in our market house.
$50 and $50, per Package.
PARKER'S HAIR DRESSING
REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.
HIGHLY PERFUMED
MANUFACTURED
BY
PARKER DRUG CO.
BALTIMORE, MD.
PRICE 25 CENTS
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y. May 10—A large campus, the closing of the Dunbar Community Center for the season on Tuesday evening, May 1st, at Rubenstrohn's Hall. Miss Taylor, representative of the girls' club of the Dunbar Community Center, presented to Mrs. Knowles a beautiful bouquet of flowers, and Mr. James LaGrinn, the announcer of the Dunbar Center, presented also to Mrs. Knowles a loving cup. Mrs. Knowles extended her gratitude and her friendship towards the center. Some of those from out of the Gee and son, of Buffalo N. Y., Payne, of West Virginia, *Mr. Edward J. Moore, of 802 E. Washington street, just happened to be the only colored salesman of the W. H. Walker Co. Pittsburgh, Pa., out of 5,000 in the United States, for the "Household Essentials and Medical Preparations perfumes." *Mr. Merton Wallace, of E. Washington street, has been called away to Willisbarre, Pa., on account of the death of his father, Falken Schuyler of Falken Church Schuyler, of Washington street, is now confined in the Crouse-Ivine Hospital with complicated diseases. *Miss May Franks, of 818 S. State street, met with an incident several weeks ago by scalding her foot. She is improving. *Mrs. Veneuer, of 809 E. Washington street, has been confined to bed for several weeks, but
Indian Medicine Company
1644 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
BALTIMORE, MD.
HOTEL COMFORT
Ocean City, N. J.
Will be open for the ac-
commodation of patrons
during the Easter Season
beginning—
MARCH 24th
Mrs. M. B. Comfort,
Proprietress
How Old Are You
By Your Hair?
You may be young in years but if your Hair is GRAY or FADED people will surely take you to be many years older. A few applications of MASKIN HAIR STAIN will Positively restore Gray, Faded or Streaked hair to exactly the Natural Color you desire, in a few days. Imparts Beauty to your Hair and YOUTH to your appearance.
Harmless—Easy to apply—No after washing. 500 a Bottle. YOUR HAIR
depends on the condition of your scalp. The Healthier it is the quicker the Hair grows. If you want to have your hair Grown One Inch a month and to have a mass of Soft, Glossy, Thick, Beautiful hair, Healthy and no more Itchy Scalp, begin at once to use MASKIN COCOA-TAR HAIR & SCALP TREAT-MENT
COCOA-THAIR
& SCALP
TREATMENT
MASKIN
Maskin Cocoa-Tar Hair Grower 30c
Maskin Cocoanut Oil Shampoo 80c
Maskin Vegetable Hair Tape 80c
Have a Smooth, Bright Lovely,
Beautiful and Clear Complexion-
Use MASKIN SKIN WHITENER
and MASKIN Health and Beauty
Skin Soap, 25c each.
Agent wanted to make big money. All the MASKIN preparations are sold on a money-back Guarantee everywhere, or post paid by MASKIN DRUG CO. 1539 Monument St., Ballo., Md.
Parker'
THE HOTEL with the quiet atmosphere of your own home. The place where refinement, superior equipment and service are combined to give satisfaction and complete comfort.
20 Rooms, Sun Parlor
Cafeteria and Lunchroom Private Dining Room
Next Door To Regent Theatre
is able to be up again. * Mr. and Mrs. Kunholbil Leonard, of 1988-E. Washington street, are the proud parents of their daughter, Dawn Jamnett Leonard, born May 1st. * The Social and Pleasure Club give their third annual dance at Snell's Onondaga Academy on May 3rd. They were somewhat disappointed with some of them who had booked to entertain for the evening, however Miss Hilda Westerland repels several selections. * Mrs. Westerland and certain at the Tatertail Hall and Style Review on May 24th at Snell's Onondaga Academy. There will be prizes given to those who sell the largest amount of tickets.
Do You Need Luck?
Indulgence, love, unlure,
stiness, money, troubles
Why not be Lucky Sara
help you? Not a ring or
worthless trinket.
Burn them—one or
both. Don't be afraid of
diseases.
"Best ick i ever没," said Robert Kitt, Riffles.
skinless, money troubles.
Why not let Lucky Stars help you? Not a ring or worthless trinket. Burn them one or several—according to directions.
"That look I ever used," says Robert Kitt, Birtlesville, Ark. "Have found them all your recommend, and none," says Mrs. M. Branigan, Birmingham, Ala. Hundreds of others say the same! Send the money or stamps for a liberal trial package containing 20 Lucky Stars and all details completed, pay box, $1. Satisfaction guaranteed, money back.
WARNING:
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
The Only Records Using Negro Voices and Negro Musicians Exclusively.
NEW RECORDS EVERY MONTH. HEAR THEM AT YOUR DEALER'S.
Write For Complete Catalog
Agents Wanted Everywhere
BLACK SWAN PHONO-
GRAPH COMPANY
2289 7th Ave. New York
QUALITY
Macbeth P
1230 PENNSYLVANIA
Phone, M
PROMPTNESS
Royal Pala
C. H. JONES
Prop.
THE HOTEL with the
own home. The place w
equipment and service an
faction and complete com
20 Room
Cafeteria and Lunchroom
Next Door T
You May Pay More
But You Will Get No Better
It Is Not Only A Hair Dressing
But A Wonderful
ALL NEW HANDS
Rebutting the marriage of the Rev. Mr. Marshall to Mrs. Marion Stallworth, the Mobile Presbyterian News tells us that it was the first time Mr. Marshall was married, it was the first time the officiating elderman had a marriage and it was the marriage that Dr. Ogden had served as best man. Quite an experience all around and no slam intended on anybody.
HOTEL DALE
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Rates reduced in keeping with the times. This magnificent Hotel, located in the heart of the Most Beautiful Seashore Resort in the world, is replete with every Modern improvement. Superior kitchen, Aquatic pool, Service and Bedroom Patioage, Orchestra daily, Garage, Tennis, etc. on Premises. Special attention given to ladies and children. B. W. Dale, Owner
BIG SALE
All Kinds of Talking Machines $2.00 up
Graphaphones, Musical Instruments, Watches, Clocks, Oil Stoves and everything required. World Wide Guaranteed.
Latest Records and Rolls 49 up
We have any record you want
522 PEARL ST. Car Pergola, Ave.
HUDSONS FOR HIRING
Good Sturdy Super-Sir
Open and Closed Used Cars
Lambert Auto Co.
Mt. Royal and Maryland Ave.
Vernon 3310
Wholesale and Retail
Cleaning and Dyeing
VERSION 3820
4 Suits Sponged
& Pressed, $1.50
C. THOMAS
PRESSING CLUB &
HAT RESINATORS
C. THOMAS
PRESSING CLUB &
HAT INVESTORS
Free Call and Delivery
Ladies' and Gents' Garments
Cleaned, Dyer, and Altered
Suits Pressed, Hats Cleaned-and
Reblocked While You Wait
Photo Studio
MANIA AVE., near Lafayette
MAD. MA. 8961-W
PERMANENCE
Palace Hotel
MME. J. CREDITT JONES
Manager
the quiet atmosphere of your
place where refinement, superior
are combined to give satia-
comfort.
Rooms, Sun Parlor
Private Dining Room
Door To Regent Theatre
TELEPHONE FOR RESERVATIONS
Pennsylvania Avenue
Dressing
etter
ressing
erful
Hair
Grower
And it is not made of cheap yellow or black material. It is made of the most expensive ingredients. If used once you will use no other..
For Sale Everywhere
Price 25 cents
WHERE M. E. PASTORS
ARE. NOW LOCATED
NEW YORK DISTRICT
J. K. Brown, District Superintendent;
Brockly, N. J. John Weekly Church, Sunday
Luptage; Newman, W. J. Cooper;
Milfo, N. J., to be supplied; Tangwong,
N. J., to be supplied; W. J., to be supplied;
Hudson, N. J., W. J.
Lug; Jersey City, N. J., to be supplied;
ount Clair, N. J., J. W. Jewett; Mount
Lake, N. J., J. W. Jewett; W. J.
A. Hibbard; New Rochelle, J. E.
Eum; N. J., E. E. O. Parker; Eum;
N. Y. G. Anderson; Spring Lake,
N. Y. G. Anderson; Spring Lake,
N. Y. G. Awards; White Plains, N. Y. E. H.
Crampton; Yunkers, N. Y. E. H.
PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT
WILMINGTON DISTRICT
T. H. Woodley, District Superintendent: Bridgeville, Del., F. A. T. Laws; Bridgeville Circuit, to be supplied; Buttonwood, E. B.; Green; Church Hill, Md., J. W. Parker; Chestertown, Md., L. H. McArthur; Cheeswald, Del., W. C. Jason; Colesbury and Fort Deposit, Md., M. F.; Sterling, Coleman, Md., J. N.; Nutter; Crompton, Md., to be supplied; Delaware City, Del., J. T. Rufum; Dover, Del., L. S. Moore; Tirealt, J. S.; Coard; Fairlie, Md., a L. L. L. L. L.; Frankfort, Del., T. A.; John an; Galvan, Md., T. B.; Randall; Hareine, Del., to be supplied; Laurel, Del., B. J.; Walters; Lewes, Del., T. L.; McBould; Lirendy City, Del., E. B.; Jolly; Middletown, Del., E. J.; Horsley; Milford, Del., J. C.; Holland; Millington, Mr., J. C.; Esmond; Del., J. C.; Harris; New Castle, Del., J. L.; Taylor; Newport, Del., J. L.; Næker; Ojesson, Del., M. H.; Murphy; V. V.; V. M.; W. T. B.; Weyon; Port Penn, Del., K. S.; Stewart; Boeig Hall, Md., J. C.; Saeffner; Md., A. A.; McBowell; Easfor, Del., W. T.; Parnell; Smyrna, Del., W. Gillie; Still Pond, Md., W. C.; Westown, Del., F. L.; Tomlinson; Trinity, Del., B. P.; Carson; Wilkinson, Del., Rev. Wilmington, to be supplied; Riden, W. C.; Thurston; Hareon, G. T.; Field; Moon Joy, J. A., T. Foust; St. Peters, P. E.; Bolg
FASTON DISTRICT
SALISBURY DISTRICT
J. E. A. John District Superintendent; Berlins, Md., New Bethel, E. L., Showell, St. Paul's W., J. Helm, Clinicette, Md., R. A., Fi. Graham; Cottage Grove, Md., H. C., Snyder, Crd. Ed., Shiloh, C. S., Sprigg, Union Asbury, W. E., Waters, Dams, Quar., Md., C. W., Sharkley, Seals Island, Md., J. E., Waters; Belmer, Md., F. G., Campbell; Fairmount, Md., Continental, to be supplied; St. Andrew's C., C. C. Cogington; Frithand, Md., F. D. Pitts; Gidler, Md., J. L., Nichols; Greenwood, Md., K. C., Bingwe; Hebron, Md., C. A., Norwood; Hopewell, Md., W. T., Spellman; Morrion, Va., U. H., Spence; Jimenez, M. D., U. P., Dickerson; Keller, V. C., L. T., Robbins; Kingston, Md., to be supplied; Leont, Va., G. T., Townsend; Liberia, Md., Roosevelt Waters; Medellas, Spira, Md., W. H., Turner; Marion Station, Md., W. A., T. Miles; Mt. Vernon, Md., G. S., Jacobs; Nanifol, Md., Malnyi, Paris; Newark, Md., Jose, Anzlo, Oknvllle, Md., C. W., Miles; Oride, Md., S. G., Dix; Parsons, Md., E. N., Davis; Powder City, Md., W. E., A. Palmer; Princess Anne, Md., W. H., Henry; Quantles A. Abina, Chase; Salisbury, Md., John Wesley, T., M. Dickerson; White's Chapel, J. A.
Call VErnon 6016
Kishi; Sharpown, Md. N. R. Purnell,
Snow; S. N. Quillen; Snow Hill
to be supplied; Stockton, Md.
Alexandre Road; Stockton Circuit,
supplied; Univilleh, Md.
N. W. Brown; Wetplow,
N. S. T. Parker; Wiley Haver, Md.
J. C. Griffin; Withus, V. J. N. Purnell,
Snow; Md. to be supplied; Whitley,
Md. to be supplied.
DETACHED SERVICE
DELTA
F. H. Burt, Secretary for Colored Work
Board of Equestrian League, 740 Rush St.
Chicago; member of Zorah, Philadelphia
Quarterly to Journalist
W. M. W. Assistant to Philadelphia Area Secretary.
T. N. Klah, Principal of Princess Anne Academy.
Academy,
William A. Mulley left with appoint-
ment and counsel
meet 10:30 a.m.
College of
Counsel, Professor at Morgan
College, Baltimore, Professor at
Ethan
College, Baltimore, Professor at
Conference.
---
LEXINGTON, VA.
LENINGTON, VA., May 19—
Sunday April 29th, was well
observed by both Churches. The ser-
vice of the church was to cresting sections were delivered by their respective pastors. The programs rendered at Fandioph Street
e. E. Church Apportionment Church, L. E. Church Apportionment Church, L. E. Church were above the ordinary.
HARRISONBURG, VA.
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. May 10—M. John Washington of Renora, spent several days here the guest of his family. * Mrs. Annia Cuff has gone to Linden to spend several months, * Mr. John White, of the school, dropped dead on the stree Friday. Hear failure caused his death. * Mr. and Mrs. Laucee Dockins spent Sunday in Elmira, N. Y. * Mr. John Brown who has been for some time to be out again. * Miss Maria Green formerly of this City, was married Sunday April 22 at Corning, N. Y. to Mr. George Edward Randall. * Mrs. Lilly Davison returned to Barnard after spending two months, here-attending his sister, Mrs. Mary Elise, who has been very ill.
ROCKVILLE
Brockville, Md., May 10—The public school of Montgomery County closed last Friday. On last Tuesday night the school was closed in Fisherville Hall, until on Thursday, the oratorical contest was held in Jerusalem M. E. Church. Mildred Rogers, of the Kensington School, won first prize for the girls' Rockville School, won first prize for the boys' *Mr. James Lee, of Redland, died in Sandy Springs Hospital Saturday. Funeral services will be held on Friday for the local U. O. of O. F. *Mr. John Howard, old and respected citizen, died last week at his home in Howard Chapel. * The L. E. P. O. E. of W. of Rockville held their child in two night care. The official success, thanks to the affair of the many friends.
The G. U. O. of Old Fellows will hold their annual sermon and exercises at Jerusalem M. E. Church on Saturday, July 12th. All are invited attend.
HAVRE DE GRACE
Havre de Grace, Md, May 10—The baby given by Mrs. Pearl Jackson and Mrs. Mayfield Harris on Sunday, April 22nd, was successful. The amount raised was $470. Theravival meeting concurred with Javr. Thomas Johnson's successive Five and added to the church. On Sunday, May 13th, there will be a grand rally under direction of Rev. J. Fletcher. The Mt. Zion Baptist Church gave to their pastor a $45 suit of clothes as a gift. Mrs. Jackson, Mrs. Mayfield, of thechurch gave a week with her sisters, Mrs. John Taylor, of Stewartville, Md, and Joita Ehlinghe of this city. *Miss Zonia Stokes, of Washington, D. C., was the weekend guest of her aunt, Mrs. Bond, of Perry Joint, and also her sister, Miss Jill Ridgley, of Havre de Grace, Md.
Dr. E. S. Williams District Superintendent held quarterly conference last Saturday at Union M. E. Church, Rev. L. A. Carter pastor of Union M. E. Church presented an eloquent Sunday at 10:30. It was communion Sunday, 127 perspiring commun and $ joined church on probation. Dr. J. H. Walters physician and preacher preached m.p., and Mr. George W. Colber recently moved to Alkens, O. *Mr. George Warfield is now in Mercy Hospital, Baltimore. *Mr. Wm, Kinky Sr., Mr. John Dennison and Mr. George Stansbury are quite slick. *Mr. Wm, Brown Sr., was buried in Chester, Pa., son-in-law of Mr. Wm. *wn. Sr. will be buried at Union M. E. Church Tuesday May 8.
REGULAR SHIPMENTS
OF
ALAGA
BEST
SYRUP
Minnesota Georgia Iowa
Regular shipments of Real ALAGA Cane Syrup are now being received in Baltimore right from where the Sugar Cane grower, going to the Real Alagas, has Cakes and Hot Biscuits for those who know its quality. Persons from Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida and Alabama especially over the syrups, and can tell about the "goodness" of Real ALAGA Cane Syrup. Then too for fancy baking and candy making it has no equal. ALAGA Cane Syrup is the entire juice of the Sugar Cane plant boiled down to syrup, with nothing added, except a very small portion of corn syrup to prevent sugaring in the can. The quality is therefore near that of simple syrup at only half the price, but with a very different flavor. Ask your grocer for the Real ALAGA Cane Syrup. If he does not, he will him till he gets it for you. Until then the following stores can supply you:
M. Levin 1100 Elliott St.
Baker, Kes. 1101 McCulloh St.
Wm. W. Fields 1024
M. Sakolakoy 1012 N. Eutaw St.
M. Brilliant 1009 Kichman 1000 Linden Ave.
J. Feldman 1000 Dark Ave.
Sam Taylor 75 Kich, Mtch.
I. Hickwitt 268 W. Biddle St.
Max Zoehle 268
S. Feldman 447 St. Marg St.
I. Costanne 726 Pena Ave.
I. Dresspisch 726
I. Kerkel 1015
A. Scher 1014
J. M. Harrison Jr. 350
Mortis Stern 1100 Percy Ave.
W. Wickman 1100
Geo. A. Haclet 701 W. Lavalte St.
C. L. Rode 1155 Laurens St.
E. Blowberg 1150 Striker St.
S. Nielsen 149 Pearl St.
B. Jaselae 322
J. Mezlez 142
James Price 609 W. Saratone
J. James Edwards 602 N. Pine St.
J. Zlobovich 401 N. Fremont St.
N. Neff 115
E. Gromann 115
Wm. Lats 926 S. Fremont Ave.
H. Garfield 544 W. Lee St.
Bold. B. Lowa 510 W. Fremont St.
Wm. J. Blair 15 E. Gross St.
M. Kerbel 1415 Orleans St.
G. Siegmund & Segal 1415
M. Garfield 1233 N. Bond St.
M. Garfield 601 N. Bond St.
J. Carmel 1422 E. Mouvement St.
M. Garfield 1232
C. Siegmund & Sons 613 N. Gay St.
NORTHWESTERN PHARMACY Penna. Avenue and Dolphin St.
THE Penslar STORE
The Drug Store--
Always filled right
Always filled with what your doctor orders
Always filled promptly
Always filled by REGISTERED PHARMACISTS
Always filled with fresh drugs
Always filled as cheaply as possible, at the same time giving you the RIGHT THING—no substituting of cheap medicine for what you should have.
ASK YOUR DOCTOR____HE KNOWS
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SOUTH BOSTON, M.A. May 10—Miss Edith Ragdale left Saturday morning for New York. Melvin Wilms met with an accident Thursday morning, and he was out of a house he was helping his father to paint. He was not seriously hurt and is getting along nicely. * The stork visited the me in the of Mr. and Mrs. Ragdale, the baby boy, Mother and son are doing fine. * South Boston Summer School will open June 17, with Prof. Coleman in charge. * The children are on the sick list are improving: Mrs. Mattie Morton, Mrs. Lout, Davis, Mrs. Elvira Kent. * Prof. H. A. Pindoe was in town Tuesday to hang the Williams Singers. Chicago made their first appearance in South Boston Tuesday night at the First Baptist Church, to a packed house of cities of both races claim they were the best they have heard specially the singing of Mr. Crabbs the basso and Miss Kennedy the dramatic soprano. * Mr. and Mrs. Dirch are to be congratulated on having the Williams Singers come here. They have consented to come to South Boston every year. * Mr. E. F. Sheranda of Ragdale town Saturday in the interest of Standard Life Insurance Company.
FREDERICKSBURG, VA
Fredericksburg, Va., May 10—The Misses Virginia Bayard, Marilyn Young, Marileta Smith, Smith, Marilyn returned home for their summer vacation. * The pupils of the grades schools were a most excellent play some months, while the pupils were well trained in their parts. * The mammoth
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Indian Medicine Company
1044 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
BALTIMORE, MD.
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220-224 St. BROADWAY
1022-1024 FAWN STREET
1628 PENNA. AVENUE
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1921-22
Standard Reference on
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County Training School, Bowling Green, April 23rd, under the auspices of Miss A. Pearl Mabry, the County School Supervisor teacher. The industrial work was exhibited in the morning, showing the work of the various schools, and in the evening the pupils and students gave a fine exhibition on physical culture exercises, the most beautiful being the Indian Dance and the Dumb Bell Drill, led by the Misses Anna Ferguson and Pauline Myers, of the Training School. $ ^{a} $ The big revival which was launched at the Shiloh Baptist Church, Bowling Green, was a great success in every way. The Rev. E. W. Warfield, pastor, was assisted by sixteen voices, under the leadership of the Rev. E. J. Walter stirred up the community in such a way that there were twenty-two converts and seven reckoned the church. The Church thanks our Mr. E. J. Walle for his -Eligible- Mr. E. J. Walker for his great service in the song service.
campaign for funds for a new building at the Mayfield High School is about to be launched, and the different organizations of the city are preparing to take part in the parade which will take place Tuesday, May 11. * The baseball team team from the Rappahannock Academy, Friday evening on the campus Mayfield. The game was close at the beginning, after the sixth heavy hitters on the Fredericksburg team success in solving the curves of the Academy pitcher. The score was 19 to 9, Group One of the B. Y. P. U. and charge of the program at the evening at the school. The selecbon will be excellent and enjoy by O. W. M. Richardson *earned no points in arranging such an interesting program, Mr. N. C. Rorts will have charge next week. Woodford Dandridge will be moved to Washington Sunday to see the game at Washington and Boston. * A large number of Fredericksburgers of the Sewickley School expressed their interest. The County School Exhibition was held at the Carolina
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Agents wanted everywhere
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We are now forming a class in advanced Method of Beauty Culture, and we are offering to the women who want to learn a trade and be independent, a chance to join the class at this special club rate. We are giving a full six weeks' course in Hair Dressing, How to Treat Dreaded Scalps, How to Treat Dandruff, How to Promote the Growth of Hair, How to Straighten Hair Without Injury to Hair or Scrub, save the Face and Cars for the Traveler, Manifest a Hair Salon, Tear Salve Shampoo and Persevere Dream. This is an opportunity that you cannot afford to miss, and by joining the class now, you take advantage of our Easy Payment Plan and get a full $5.00 Course at the Club Rate of $5.50, payable $2.00 down on a registration, balance to be devised in payments suitable to Class Members. We teach through Mail as well in our Class Room.
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Ideal Scalp Food.....200
Ideal Olly Brillantino.....350
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MFG. CO.
823 DRUILD HILL AVEN.
Baltimore, Md.
Call VErnon 6016
ROYAL OAK
Royal Oak, Md. May 10—Sunday, Rev. C. W. Winder preached an interesting sermon to an appreciative audience. Sunday was also Communion Day, and several persons communicated. Meeting is held at St. M. E. Church every Thursday night. *Mrs. Hattie Bentley is now in the Euston Hospital. *Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brummell, Miss Prent Brummell, and Miss Lohen Mell were the great ladies and Mrs. Bellevue. *Several persons motored to Euston to attend the Field Day. *Miss Mary E. Moore accompanied by Miss Floming, both teachers of Baltimore schools, to the week with Mrs. Frank Lowery. *Mr. Frank Lowery after a few weeks' illness, is able to be out again. *Mrs. Sarah C. Harris entertained relatives of Wittman, Md. on Sunday. *Mrs. Mary Lawrence has returned home some spending on the children of N. V. Lowery. *Mrs. Ada Fields is visiting friends in Baltimore. *Miss Susan Wallace spent Monday with Mrs. Mamie
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Agents wanted every
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Bishop's School of H
1425 Penna. Avenue
A
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330 N. JONATHAN STREET H
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1610 JENNSVLVANIA AVE.
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HAIR CULTURIST
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use
MADAM B. POINDEXTER'S
Ideal Scap Food.....$00
Ideal Oily Brilliantine.....$50
Ideal Tar-Salve.....$50
11
Fitchett. * Mothers' Day will be observed May 13, 1923.
CHURCHVILLE, MD. May 16—Mrs. Hester Shell has opened a very fine grocery store at Church Hill and daughter spent Sunday April 29, in Philadelphia. Pa. *Ms. Cotton gave a birthday party April 30, in honor of Miss Hester Smith. *Rev. Charles E. Jones presided large and appreciative audiences at Clarks Chapel Sunday May 6th at 11 a.m. *The Senior League at a m. *Rev. Charles E. Jones presided, Mr. Charles Johnson charge of the program. *Churchville Giants will play their opening game Saturday May 13th, at 5 p. m. on Ashbury Campus. The team will meet any new in Hurford County, Mr. John Brown captain.
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For BALD SPOTS
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READ THIS FIRST.
John Walton, an aspiring Negro lad from a Southern village wins a scholarship at a Northern university. Here he encounters Philip Brckenridge, son of a rich man from the same place. Philip is hostile to John's being at the university. John, being very poor, secures work with Prof. Bruce, and one night while in the Bruce home he overhears a mysterious conversation between Mrs. Bruce and a stranger. John also falls in love with Lucille Page. Now go on with the story.
FOURTH INSTALLMENT
CHAPTER X
tion, Mrs. Bruce began in a you heard me talking with a know you are having some probably thinking that I—I it. It isn't so, and when you I am telling the truth." heavily, then commenced
r. A sound as if a key was started. "There's Wellington citedly. She rose and with into the dining room. John Nothing more was said about ening.
"John Walton?" she exclaimed. "You're at the university, aren't you?"
Yes.
"Are you the John Walton that won the Arnold senatorship?"
Yes.
"We have all been talking about you. Why, where have you been keeping yourself?"
"I've been very busy. When you both passed last week I tol like speaking to you but I noticed that up North one doesn't exchange greetings without an introduction.
Now, don't forget the address," she warned as she said good bye. "Let me know when you're coming and I'll have some friends to meet you."
Wound Lucille Page be there was his first thought. He had been eager to ask about her but something within him made him hesitate.
The following day he received a letter from his mother, assuring him that she had no trouble with their neighbors, and thankening him for the seventy dollars he had sent. This sum was the first instalment of the scholarship fund.
Pale with suppressed emotion, Mrs. Bruce began in a strained voice:
"A few minutes past you heard me talking with a man you did not see, and I know you are having some strange thoughts—you are probably thinking that I—I am untaftiful to my husband. It isn't so, and when you hear my story you'll see that I am telling the truth."
She paused, breathing heavily, then commenced again: "My mother—"
A scratching at the door. A sound as if a key was being inserted. The two started. "There's Wellington now," cried Mrs. Bruce, excitedly. She rose and with apparent composure went into the dining room. John buried h asset in his book. Nothing more was said about the myst dous affair that evening.
The next evening John waited "John Walton?" she exclaimed expectantly to hear, but Mrs. You're at the university, aren't Bruce made no more toward tell-you? ing him, although they were alone. "Yes! in the house, John, though, myself," are you the John Walton that time, was silent, accusing that it won the Armand Scholarship?
ter again, and John noticed that a few days later she became much more cheerful, laughing and talking with vivacity as it a great burden had been taken from her mind. All of this puzzled him much more. How in the days to come he cursed the late that they interrupted the telling that they were refected at him. The owner of the staircase voice must have been hanging in a closet when he entered, now else count he have disappeared. Wasn't that why she? There had refused us and in coming downstairs, he asked himself.
The following day he received a letter from his mother, assuring him that she had had no trouble with their neighbors, and the seventy-five quarters he present at Lucane roge, was attending or evening keeping you very busy. When you both passed last week I felt like speaking to you but I noticed that up North one doesn't exchange greetings without an introduction.
"Now, don't forget the address," she warned as she said good bye. "Let me know when you are coming and I have some friends to meet you."
Unlille Page be there, was his first thought. He had been eager to ask about her but something within him made him hesitate.
The following day he received a letter from his mother, assuring him that she had had no trouble with their neighbors, and the seventy-five quarters he present at Lucane roge, was attending or evening keeping you very busy. When you both passed last week I felt like speaking to you but I noticed that up North one doesn't exchange greetings without an introduction.
"Now, don't forget the address," she warned as she said good bye. "Let me know when you are coming and I have some friends to meet you."
Unlille Page be there, was his first thought. He had been eager to ask about her but something within him made him hesitate.
The following day he received a letter from his mother, assuring him that she had had no trouble with their neighbors, and the seventy-five quarters he present at Lucane roge, was attending or evening keeping you very busy. When you both passed last week I felt like speaking to you but I noticed that up North one doesn't exchange greetings without an introduction.
When John Walton arrived in Mrs. Allegory's cozy home, through a raging snow storm the following Saturday night, there were many present to greet him, the ponies especially around tomb, but not among white wine, in matching with a guest Mrs. Allegory's say:
to the beauty parlor. After lingering outside for a few minutes, stading the pos of the late cream and powder in the window, most wande, he saw a large energy from one of the little white boots to disappear quietly into another one of them. His head visibly at a loss was she—very young and at last sight and irresistibly keenened in her spotless white unorned cap, and dainty shoes she fooled even more appealing with an earl of early youth he felt that here, at ease, was the one girl in the world for him—his uream girl in very near one o'clock. The next thing to do was to gain an insight into him. But how, takes him as he would, he and an excuse for energizing
When John Walton arrived in through a raging snow storm the morning Saturday night there were many present to greet him, the puces experientially around for but not see her. Later, while he was talking with a guest he nears doors, Momoe said, "I miss you to Missrage." He turned quickly around. Contrained at last with the girl he had been so eagerly planting to hear, he test overcomes by a wave of buseness. The dainty vision in the striped skin was and smart sergeant seemed to parachute him. But quickly recovering he uttered the formal. He glad to meet you, Miss George.
How different both in tone and waving was what he had been planning to say. She seemed perversely at ease, however, and this soon put him at ease, too. From talking about the snowstorm they want to discuss a variety of topics, the town, the university, the South, education. He was delighted to see that she was intelligent and well-informed. A bond of sympathy seemed to have been assumed between them from the most words that had been said, most common words seemed to him diverse, and they laughed and enacted play and dance. Later when he offered to take her home, and she accepted him he told as if there was nothing else on that he would care to wish for.
Thereafter they met every Saturday evening and Sunday. "You must not neglect your studies," she had warned.
She declared her greatest delight was sleigh-riding, and on Lincoln's birthday the ground was well covered with snow, he hired a sleigh and called to her. To the merry mingle of the bells and the smooth gliding movement of the sleigh, the well-muffled pair struck
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PHONES:
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Office: St. Paul 4488
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EMMA PERRY WALLACE
Poro Beauty Parlor,
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538 ROBERT STREET
MAdison 5543-J
Phone--Madison 3193-W
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Baltimore, Md.
service. A few evenings later he returned.
The next thing he decided was to gain an introduction. But, now a black his brats as he would, no count and no excuse. A beauty parlor of six places around, surrounded by trees occurred a jacaranda we womgo in and bask in a jacaranda we womgo, then start a conversation. But he remembered that his son wewn was twenty nine cents. Twenty-nine cents, face cream survey cost more than that. The only course, he decided, was to wait until he and received his five dollars weekly wage from the brutes on Money. He was, consolingly somewhat relieved also at the prospect of no immediate encounter. "I've located me, anyway."
Two evenings later he was again sweeping the sidewalk when he heard roosteps behind him, and stepped assue quickly to let the person pass. One gleaned the saw that it was a woman who had been into "Lucille Lage" that first "using," "herses your opportunity," said a voice imperatively within him. Speaking up quickly he said:
"I didn't hit you this time, did I? Good evening."
"Good evening," replied the woman pleasantly, "Are you a stranger in Nortonville?"
"Yes, very muen of a stranger. I'm just lonesome for some colored folks."
"Well, you must certainly come around and let me help you meet some. I'm Mrs. Montgomery and I live at 29 Elm avenue."
"I'll be sure to come. My name is John Watton."
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MADISON 8756
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LEO 8. OSMAN
900 N. Fremont Ave. Baltimore, Md.
Fly sale at Drug Stores, also agents
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KNOXIT
PROPHYLACTIC
Unnatural and mucous discharges can be avoided by destroying the germs of infection diseases.
$1.10 at all druggists.
CHAPTER XI
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
out over the main road. Urging the spirited horse to full speed, they sped on and on, the wind whistling in their cars, and frosty air making their blood tingle.
"There is no other pleasure in the world like sleigh-riding," she said ecstatically after they had covered several miles, "nothing else in the world gives you such a thrill." She burst into a joyous sleighing song.
The song, the novelty of the ride, and swift movement over the road filled John with a strange sense of exhilaration. He felt as if some other fluid far more vivifying than blood was coursing through his heart. How good it seemed to be alive?
When the song was finished John said stefcfully, "Sleigh-riding is wonderful. It is thrilling, but I know something that is infinitely more thrilling — more thrilling than anything else on earth." He hesitated, for one brief instant then added, "And that's just to be near you, here or anywhere."
"Now, now, Mr. Flatterer," she warned daily.
"Lucille," he continued, "I have thought you were life's greatest thriller from the instant I first saw you. That evening on the sidewalk when I sprang around and found myself gazing into your eyes I was so thrilled, oh so thrilled. I felt as if some surge current of electricity had suddenly leaped from your being to mine. It has been coursing through me ever since." He went on to tell of his schemes to secure an introduction to her.
Quite overcome by the frankness of the confession, and the deep sincerity of his voice she replied:
"I too, experienced the same feeling the moment I saw you. To sit beside you is better than to listen to the most wonderful music."
"And yet you never turned back to look at me, though I gazed so hard, hoving that you would," he said in mock reproach.
"I was just dying to do so, dearest," she replied, "but I felt that you were looking at me, and I simply couldn't." Dropping the reins, John turned to clasp her. She flew to meet him. Their beings fused in a close embrace, "I am so happy," she murmured, "This is paradise," said John. When he returned to his little room that night he felt as if he had been invested with some indescribable power. He had an indescribable power. He was the Stanton prize contest coming soon at the university. He meant to win that. There was a good medal and $1,500 in cash attached to it, but what mattered
NO1
This is to certify that RO
Umbraker, who was formerly in
ness by himself and has his offi
Caroline. ...
Prompt and polite service gi
patronage. Phone, WO1e 6295-V
Long Distance Phone MAd. 446
CLARENCE
Funeral Directo
Some people prefer QUALITY,
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when you need
"WRIGHT"
This is to certify that HOBERT WILLIAMS, the People's
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Prompt and polite service given to all who favor me with their
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Some people prefer QUALITY, others look at PRICE. I can suit you. My prices make it expensive to go elsewhere when you need an undertaker "WRIGHT QUALITY"
1364 N. Carey Street Baltimore, Md.
GEORGE H.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
(Formerly manager for
CARRIAGES FOR
OPEN DAY
Will furnish Funerals at
Pollte, Courteous and Ex
1631 DRUID B
C. & P. Phone
I am the sole proprietor of C.
and am
MRS. ROBERT
Funeral Directre
Phone WOife 6530. Imm
1725 Ashland Avenue
MRS. CHARLES B.
BRANCH OFFICES: 504 En-
LIMOUSINE FUNER
GEORGE H. HOLLAND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
(Formerly manager for the late Alex. Hemsley)
CARRIAGES FOR ALL OCCASIONS
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Will furnish Funerals at a price that will suit you.
Pollite, Courteous and Export Attention Guaranteed
1631 DRUID HILL AVENUE
C. & P. Phone, MAdison 0692
I am the sole proprietor of this business
—and am not in partnership with anyone
MRS. ROBERT A. ELLIOTT
Funeral Directress and Embalmer
Phone WOlfe 6390. Immediate service day and night.
1725 Ashland Avenue Corner McDonogh St
MRS. CHARLES B. JONES, ASSISTANT
BRANCH OFFICES: 604 East Street 2109 Drudg Hill Ave.
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY
GEORGE T. A. GIBSON
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Limousine and Carriages to HI
C. & P. Phone
513 LAURENS ST.
EDWARD RINGGOLD
V. A. BROOKS
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Will give to all the very best
Carriages and Limousines
1463 North Carey
V. A. BROOKS SUCCESSOR
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
Will give to all the very best and courteous service possible
Carriages and Limousines to hire for all occasions
1463 North Carey Street, near Gold
Phone, MAdison 5361. Never Closed.
NOTICE!
MRS. IDA BAILEY
Wishes to announce that she will continue the business of her late husband, CHARLES D. BAILEY.
NOTICE!
Wishes to announce that she will continue the business of her late husband, CHARLES M. BARLEY as
Funeral Directress and Embalmer
All Orders given prompt attention—Day and Night
Limousine and Carriage to Hire for all occasions
1421 JEFFERSON ST., Cor. Spring St. Phone WOlfe 1170
All Orders given prompt attention—Day and Night
Limousine and Carriage to Hire for all occasions
that. He intended to win it for the glory of the thing.
That same night he wrote telling his mother of his wonderful new adventure. Lucille, he painted in the most glowing language. Happy weeks followed. Winter fled. Spring came, the young lovers rejoicing in the re-birth of Nature. Then came tragedy.
One evening in early May John went to the beauty parlor to wait for Lucille to appear. A two-seated car passed him. The sole occupant John saw, was Gregory Leigh, an intimate friend of Philip Breckenridge and also a friend of the beauty parlor and he saw Leigh get out and enter the establishment. A few minutes later, thunderstruck, he saw Leigh emerge accompanied by Lucille. Petrined with amazement John saw Leigh help Lucille into the closed car, jump in beside her, and drive out. She was beaten with smiles as she was told if all she could to feel had suddenly been withdrawn from his body. He staggered and would have fallen but for a wall.
All that he had ever heard about the fatlessness of woman now surged into his mind. Dazed, crushed, humiliated, he staggered home, "I hate her!" he said about savagely. He grumbled his teeth: "Good God, must a black man forever have to put up with this sort of thing."
Passers - by gazed at him strangely.
Recklessly he plunged across the main street. Presently he heard a sharp rhi-er, and heard a loud oath. Glancing up he saw the angry face of a driver who had stopped his automobile but a few inches from him. Another second and he would have run over him. "I wish to God it had killed me," he murmured, as he staggered on. One, thing he decided savagely, he would never speak to her again. "White men," he said have but one use for our women. "He was as he resembled him with manners with the same smile, how way in which he had always gifted him.
"God only knows how long this sort of thing has been on you," he said bitterly.
Back in his little basement room he lung blamed on his bed. Blacked with mental torture, he saw the photograph of his mother on the table. How much neider she seemed to him now in this hour of misfortune would be true to him always, always. He gazed at the dear features long and carnely, then suddenly started as if stung. His arm drooped and the picture all to the floor.
"Good God," he cried in agony.
NOTICE
MERT WILLIAMS, the People's
with Felix E. Pye, is now in busi-
ce at 1515 McElderry street, near
even to all who favor me with their
N.
6-20
A. Carringes for all Occasions
C. WRIGHT
Dr. and Embalmer
others look at PRICES. I can
it expensive to go elsewhere
an undertaker
QUALITY"
Baltimore, Md.
A. HOLLAND
DR. AND EMBALMER
(the late Alex. Hemsley)
ALL OCCASIONS
AND NIGHT
a price that will suit you.
Import Attention Guaranteed
HILL AVENUE
M, MAdison 0692
This business
not in partnership with anyone
T A. ELLIOTT
Dr. and Embalmer
mediate service day and night.
Corner McDonogh St.
JONES, ASSISTANT
St Street 2109 Druld Hill Ave.
REALS A SPECIALTY
DR AND EMBALMER
re. Open Day and Night.
MAdison 1417-J
BALTIMORE, MD.
SUCCESSOR
OR AND EMBALMER
and courteous service possible
to hire for all occasions
Street, near Gold
Never Closed.
ICE!
A BAILEY
she will continue the busi-
CHARLES G. BAILEY a
attention-Day and Night
to Hire for all occasions
ing St. Phone WOlfse 1170
NOTICE
Never Closed.
"She, too. Is it in the blood? God help me! God help me!"
The following day he went about his tasks in a dreary mechanical manner. "If I could only forget! If I could only forget!" he nounced.
CHAPTER XII
Philip Breckenridge was seated in the cosily furnished den of his elegant apartment. Scattered on the table beneath the beams of the expensive lamp were books lying open and much manuscript. Apparently his bed meditation held up a letter his hand which drooped over the chair.
"I must make it!" he said aloud, "I simply must, I can't let that nigger beat me."
A knock, Philip arrose, and opened the door. A student with a freshman's cap entered.
"What! You aren't ready?" gaped the newsman. "Why we are late now."
"Can't go tonight. Gaston. I must get down to my mathematics. Awfully sorry, old man, but I'll have to meet the jones another time." "Can't go? You're joking, Phil. After all the trouble I've gone to make the dates. The girls will be awful soce."
"Can't help it just the same. Get another fellow."
"You make me sick with your eternal cramming," sowed Gaston Leigh. "You must come."
"I can't, I tell you. I can't afford to let that nigger beat me again. I got to win the Stanton prize."
"Oh cut it, Phil," sucered the other.
"I must win that medal. I tell you. I have just had a better father, saying that he is expecting me to. I can't afford to let that nigger get it. Think how it would sound back home—the grandson of the ex-slave, Peter Breckenridge bearing the son of the master, Philip Breckenridge. You see the position I am in. Go like a good fellow and make some excuse to the janes for me.
Just this one evening won't hurt. Phil! Please, Gaston! "Come on. Put on your hat and coat like a good fellow, and let's go."
"I can't. The tests are tomorrow!"
"It's a dead shenan," said Custom savagely. "A white man having to compete with a nigger. This could never have happened in the South."
Rough Dry 9c per p
Dried. All fla
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1634 Druid Hill A
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Phone, MAdison 1664
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The other shrugged his shoulders. "We aren't in the South," he said dryly. "There ought to be some way out—some way of eliminating the nigger." "I don't see any," said Philip. He added whimsically, "Would you have me knock him on the head?" "I'd d—d well like to. But, as you said, this isn't the South." Gaston pondered for several moments. "I have it," he cried, "I have it." "Well?" "We'll buy him off." "Buy him off?" "Yes. Offer him a few hundred dollars—five hundred, say." "The prize is fifteen hundred, not to speak of the medal," objected in Niggers are improvident. They never look ahead. He'll take the five hundred, never fear. I know niggers, if you don't." "Well, this happens to be one nigger I know that won't be satisfied with that."
"Well, offer him (twenty-five hundred, if necessary. With him out of it, you'll get it all back. By how much is he leading you now?"
"Only half a point, and I five points ahead of Abernethy, who comes next."
"You're sure to win it back."
"The money doesn't count with me. I'd give ten thousand if necessary. It's the prestige—the prestige which counts, counts nothing for the nigger."
"That's right. If he wins it won't count. He'll be a nigger just the same. It's the money that matters with him."
"The question is, how we are going to put the proposition up to him?" quired Philip.
"Leave that to me."
"Will you."
"Yes, on one condition—that you come with me."
No reply.
"Is it a go?" Philip nodded.
"Good, I will telephone the girls, and tell I am we're on our way, and to show you that I mean business, we'll drop in at the bigger's as we go," she said. "We'll wait outside. We won't have any trouble, I promise you."
outside in the car they speeded
along the leafy avenue. Presently
Philip said:
"Say, who is that nigger girl I
saw you with last Thursday about
six."
"Ch, that's Lucille Page from
Glasses if Needed made at Lowest Prices
By J. A. RODGERS
Author of. "From Man to Superman"
By the Kelley Newspaper Feature Service
Copyright 1923
her but she was just impossible
she turned her down cold.
"Turned you down cold?"?
Philip doublely. "That's what
What was she doing in your
then?"
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What Users Say of Tissula
Chicago, Sept. 26, 1922
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it has helped my skin wonder
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Cincinnati, O., Feb. 12, 1923.
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now unless you expect to be call
when the mailman calls. If you
surely $1.15. This pays for every
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ferred postpaid and with the surr
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within your reach. The rest is to
you. Write today. Send post
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blank below.
$2.50 jar of freshly prepared
will pay postman $1.15 when
if I keep Tissinax. If I am
$1.75 to be refunded.
requested to send $1.22 in advance.
STATE
or send postcard or letter
FOR NEW PROFIT PLAN
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Madame Jean's beauty parlor.
She's some beauty, I'll say. Umi
"Hasn't she a friend?" asked Philip eagerly.
"A friend? Why, I tried the hardest way to make a date with
ALL the race is talking about it. Its marvelous results are being praised on every hand. One little dreamed such a demand for it would spring up practically over night. It was just that a
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DR. W. H. HUFF
Discoverer of
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checks. Bloom
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What It Is
The name of this new boon to bad complexions is TISSULAX. It is the discovery of W. H. Huff, noted Chicago chemist and former Pharmaceutical Scientist the National Medical Association. He had been seeking in his laboratory for a remedy especially adapted for the needs of his people. To an age-old substance, celebrated for certain properties, he added active ingredients. The new compound he
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You may have your first for only the bare base of your hands. This to enable everyone one to obtain the salut. For a limited time limited time will sell some $29 for all, laborers $29 for all, laborers
Send No Money
O
A COLUMN FOR
BOYS AND-GIRES
~ newer to Archer PUT TANT
c week will be given next
Five Missing Words
0 7
zt OR
ue eeee 3
Gili seds
THOROUGH
Starting with the word "0," by
adding one letter, we form the
word “or.” If the proper letter is
ued to “or,” a third word wil be
mamed;, and by adding ‘nother
jeter # fourth will be formed: and
ter ean words 5, and. 7, Until
the ward “thorough” Ts completed.
can you fill in the missing words?
eo
To Make Your.
Party Jolly
Real these riddles aloud to the
famig, withhelding the answers,
and see ow many can guess thein,
SE FS SERINE vee ee rar eet REN CEN HOT ee
Haw long can you curry water
In ausieve? AS long ats it is frozen
What is i which you can hear
hut enn not see? Wind.
What comes in the iniddle of
April? The etter Re
Why is it /ingerous to take a
nay on a train? Because the cara
rin over sleepers.
When is a sallor not a sailor?
When he Is aboard.
When has niin four hands?
When he doubles: his tists,
Whon is the first man prentioned
inthe Bible? Chap. 3
Why is # pious man like a sieve?
He is holy
How niany sticks xo, to the
building of & crow's nest? Nong,
they are all curried. ‘
Why must a fisherman be very
weatthis? Because his fs alt net
roti.
MW hen is 4 baby mot a baby?
When irs a tatie dear,
Where nid Noah strike the first
nail in the ark? On its head,
ie
TONGUE TWISTERS
FA ROORE | SEED ASR Se Nga
rong twister Tet us pring iti
tis coun, Address the ‘Tongue
Twister, AfrocAmerician,
Ful butcher boy broke abs’s
lmuneing ball—Anne Braxton,
Oliver Ggilvic ogied an olive and
ayster—Sevolt Castor, 426 W.
Cross St Tents ap
Alice ate amples at Anna's, aunt's
ainiversary.—Flarence Turvianee,
Dantar Sehewl grade 6 A.
Flora found Florence — footing
fellows for fun—tor favors, —Mel-
ore Sinnias, Annapolis, Met
Mervin Martin married Mineevi
Morton's mother—Kloring Holly,
S10 Laker SL
St PRIZE WINNER
‘The guide was guiding © guy.
Ax the enide guided the guy, the
uid guyed the guy, wutil the guy
would no tonger be guided by a
guide whom he had hired to iuide
fiw not toxuy. So the guyed kus
gused the guide, No “wonder
Sverybody ghyed he guyed: kus
whe did at ike ta be suyed by A
guide van L, Briggs, class 1A,
CWS.
eMother, if a aman amarry’s. a
bos's mother dunt that make bit
the hwy’s: stepfather?”
“Yes, son.”
“Well, isn't aw boy called a lad
miyther?"
“Yes of curse Johnny.” 4
Well, ‘don't that, make’ the boy
his stepladder?"—Paul W. Dock-
eit, Linthicum Steights, Md.
ee
PUZELERS
Where can a man buy a cap for
lis knee?
for a key for a lock of his hair?
Can bis eves be called an acadenny|
Revanse there ure pupils there?
Inthe. crown uf his“ head) what
eins are set?
Who” travels the bridge of his
Can he use when | shingling Uke
root ot hig thoatht
‘The nails on the ends of his toes’)
Whar dows he raise from w slip of
his tongue?
Wie phys’ on the drum of his
cars?
And whe can tell the cut and style
of ie coat his stomach weurs?
Can thw ergok Uf Wit elbow be sent
te jail? %
Ant itso, what did it do?
How dors he sharpen his shoulder
blades?
TH be hanged i€ f know—do you?
Holand Scott, C. 11.8, class LA,
eee
RAN OVER HIMSELE
Perey—"A. chauffer ran over
himself the other day."
Maud—"E don't belfeve w ehaut-
fer could run oyer himself.”
Perey—"Here's how it, happen-
cd. ‘The chauffer was, driving his
car up the strect and he wanted a
cigar. He met a little boy and he
sand “Little boy, run over to the
Store amd get mé # cigar.’ The fille
fy went, and caine ‘back shortly
and said “The store man will not
sell me a cigar Vecuuse Lam 2
ininers So the chauffer ran gvet
hinseif."—Manit, Ridgely, 4418
St. George Ave. Govans, Md.
Jannp—Let's go get Tit up.
Match—What on?
Jaunp—Wood alcohol—Roberta
Horsey, grade 6B, Dunbar Schopl
Noth
——
SAW HIM IN A DREAM:
As a young girl my oldest sister
became engaged to young man
Why was a good enough fellow but
Hot of the saine religious fail. So
Mother was ufraid It would not be
a happy match and determined to
break the engugement. She sue:
ceeded. ~My sister gave up the
Young man” but told’ mother, she
Would marry the next man “who
asked hér, If he were, good enough
Whutever his church might be.
After that mother had a dream.
She saw Jennie married to’ aman
Who Was sinall and durk, but ‘a
min she hud never seen before,
The next night she way culled to
the sick bed ofa neighbér, “When
she cunie honie ‘she wild she had
seen the man ‘of. her dream,’ He
Was i young ductor, who had Jately
Settled in the neigherlioud. © =
1yS0U after, that sister, met. him
hey fell in ‘love with eack otilcs
and were married.” %
; TAMNT OTs TE)
WOMAN’S MAGAZINE |
Edited; by Afro’s Woman Editor—Every Reader. of this Page is Invited to C
Week’s Best Joke
Alto ays $1 for vest cuntribu-
tion to his column. “Write Joke
Editor, Afro-American.
$i PRIZE WINNER
James: “John, my wite, saw th¢
"Three Musketeers’ and presented
me with triplets.”
James: (one yeur later) “Govt
God! Juha, my wife just say
tho Four . Horsemen." == Mrs
Gharlowe Wrightson, Puitudetpnke
Pi.
A lady ‘entered a grocery store
and aoked: “ly dese here haigs
(eggs) fresh"
‘The groveryman replied: "4
ain't saying dey ain't.
J Womans et ain't ass sou
dey ain't I'se asked you Is dey ts
is, dey?"—Mabel Waters, 540 N
Calvert street.
“Young man, ean 1 get, inte Uke
park through Uhat gate?”
“eGuess so "kids; 1 just saw 3
load of hay ge Uiroughi."
“Want a baie cue?"
“No thanks, L want all cut off.
Willian German Je, 184 W
Hamburg SU
Unee erat fell into barrel 0
licker. A cut came along, and ti
rat called vut: "Mr. Cat if you wil
HC me out and tick me dry, yeu
ean eat me”
The eat licked him dry as ne
could but when he had finishee
the rat ran away to his hole, Th
ext Went to the hole aiter “th
rat und culled, “Mr. Jit, though
you said {eouid eat you.”
Nr. Rat auswered A fellow’
liable two say anything in ‘ticker’.
Edith Davis, 1603 Argyle Ave.
| ffere’s a bouk smadain,” suid
(he bouk agent, “which® tells yor
how tw keep sour husband. 105
wonderful little bok.”
GTve been keeping my, husbanc
for the last fifteen years.” repli
the wonmun, “What 1 want is 3
book that would tell ine how
make bin gy to work amd Keel
me Tur a change."—Iikda tenon
[isos Druid Alt Ave,
- Surgeun—"Young mun, | if, you
went to take out a man's hear
where .avguld voy, insert Un
RO TN
Git] medical student — “High
into his stumach, sit."
Surgeon—"Where did you ge
that crams’ iden?"
Medical student—"Well ay ani
told me that the surest wig’ to 4
man’s heuer was through — hh
stomuch."—V, Scotland,
We hag a Chrisimas teefup a
our house ‘fast Chiristniis. +
‘Mother hung her stocking on it
little brother hung his stocking ot
2, sister hung her stocking on tt
aud rather Lung bis stocking on a
but the doard of JTeaith made hit
like then: down—Thelme Ander
sun, Hrederick, Md.
MY LUCKY-ACCIDENT ~
1 was Just ton when this happen:
ed. My cousins and 1 were suing:
tu a new house, being built accoss:
the alley from us: to get sume Shay
tig ang carpenters fad tert. A
Hegte' stood In tie alley way, cross
wise, impeding my progress. My
cousins had gong on, betore wwe
fore hud. decided to bar my
progress.
Pefever vould bear wo be stupped
wwtten ft guteted. om in tinder taking,
BO shed beoween the, horses
legs. When L regaincd conscious-
ness 1 found inysetl at home in bed
surrounded by my relutives und
Wecping moter ‘Phe lure hi
Meee yin oF his hout pon ty
upper lip und the sear will always
peters.
“the ductor why was called wies
ano Sone why. iwut yecentiy” Host
atte lel about ty ages Ie LOUK
Hine ererese in ve trent His Wal
He offered to adopt mes quid ty’
are ete ee ity apoor widow, eun
ented.
This kind, gyod man sent me
cae Sotuat add college, cud when
he died he lefty me ah he had. Se
t say, hurrah for the horse in the
Cay INT teed ae ice gin ol
Sey it good home ant Uru
college!
2 DW.
=e
MAKE FILLINGS
IN DOUBLE BOILER
All_kinds of thickened | filings
for either cakes or pies nny be
taaily) prepared in the doubl
Guiler. Mix the tngredients|
tRoroughly, and put it in Uie boiler
ie°cook. A have # very convent-
font voller tht fits in the teakettle.
Te 'the lilting gets lumpy, beat 1
Well with un egg beter and it will
be perfectly smooth.
EMMA L. MILLET
THE LEFTOVER BISCUIT
‘A good way to utilize leftover
piseuits is to souk thee 10) win
ites and then drain off all the wa-
ter not absorbed, then tasty then
and udd-2 cups of sugar to a duart
Of mashed biscuit. Separate, che
Whites and yolks of 4 cgss. Heat
the yolks und add them to Use bis:
suf with sulp to taste, Grate und
dissolve 2 suuares of bitter chovo-
fate und mix.it with the other In-
gredients. utter a baking pan
and pour into it the batter sng
bake Until done. Beut the whites
of the eggs to a froth, to them
add a. cup of sugar, then put this
fon top of the pudding and tet it
brown.
MARS. Cb.
—
SEWING TIME HINT.
Ig snool thread is immersed in
lukewarin water and then dried it
fe less likely. Lo break und will not
sirink when the gurment iy wash:
fe
MRS. L. JAMES
—o—
IMPROVES MEAT LOAF
‘pry a cup ‘of mashed potatoes
with the bread crumbs in making
a ntéatlouf of any kind and note
tive hnbrovement. It. will be much
there moist and still keep the
shape well when sliced,
MMA. I. MILLER
MAY: 1574: LAST DAY
TO; SEND. IN: CAKES
Baking Contest To Close
The Afro-American-Royal Cake
Enking Contest will close at nor
May 15th. Cakes will he reeciver
At the Afco Office May 14Un aud
May 15th up to noun when the
Contest Closes.
The lis of contestants ia the
APRO-AMERIUAN-ROYAL Cake
Raking Contest grows daily, 1 is
surprising Loo how many of Balti-
mares young housewives have en-
tered the contest. One young
housewife declared tothe write
that although she knew she wis
not an experienced cake baker si
felt that she was King Lo win onc
of the four prizes.
Nobody sccus Co be hesitating «
minule beeause Mrs. So and Sd
whe i5 considered 2 fine eake bik:
er has entered the contest. livery:
body is in the contest to win, And
from the reports of successes in
trial bakings of the prize cake, i
appears that the Judges are going
to have the, time of their lives in
deciding the winners.
Vrizex in the fontest offered hs
the Educationas Department of the
Royal Baking Vowder Co. New
York are certainly worth workins
for inasmuch as the recipe for Ui
prize cake the ROYAL CREAM
LOAF CAKE is 80 simple and in-
expensive renuiring only Gwo ese
One Filtimore lady, who has beer
in brooklyn, N.Y. sonte time sent
in her entrance blank last week,
She wrote a (riend an the Avenue
that she Was vine to send. he
cake from Brooklyn, feeling eer:
Gtin Unt iC would arrive in per:
fect condition, | She bases: this as
surance on "former experiences
With cakes muide with, Hoyal.
Demonstration of Prize
eake aunt other dainties wow
oing on at Bethel ALM, BE,
Church.
Thoxe persons whe want to see
the prite cake made or xt point
ers on the making will take st:
wantaxe of the list demonstra liens
for Haluimore now being eonduet
ed by Mrs, Allen and Miss Boyd
at Bethel every afternoon this
week from 3 to 4:30. In addition
to. this cake new summer desserts
andi brends will hie also demon-
stiiited Lay these experts from the
Torn) Raking Powder Computy.
caneeitane aedie.in ak wind
‘MY NICEST COMPLIMENT
very) pleasingest: compliment you
ever received? Send us a little
Story about how ik came to he
Rianided seu. Afro-American wil
Pav dollar. for avers. one. sud
Uhhough ‘tor prints, Pen rime wil
ig tar publivation. Adiress Con
pliment Editor, Ara-American,
ee
Home Tested. Recipes
Seni sour favorite recipe Sor
ude eatin, pureticlarty If this
Hie sensatt for its Addevsty Coke
try Badltoy, “AtrncAmerien.
Monkey Faces
‘These cooking are cull woke
and always # serene delight to. chil
arent tae 1 ‘eny xusar, 2 ood:
eigetl oune 2 tiablexponns af bitter.
% cup sour milk, with | teaspoon
of Sida eups of Mou, vanttla to
pavers rm the baller by shunts
five sud ise Parfsins’ on thea Uy 10Uk
fie moukey feces
LAURA FB. LOViEdoy
Cooking Greens:
= A nice way to cook any kind of
gccen or sjinael oF green Wei,
Bee oe Then cthorcughiy wd
rch Uhhena well. Sut thew wn te
wea UML aad picise of taveon, te
cael tiene: ui the sont
See teas els eouked, Du ot
OF rey amore wemucr aiid feb
td ich etings. te. ten sehen
Ca Me ene lone setae
are Green ae delicious cul
oe ie wage A sinall tube Of &:r-
fie may be aula Tked
Ms, K. 4. CEDERMOLM
Stam And Kgs
Ham und eggs retin ity hdl
viduactits ais egy Tor lunches or
supper with bread or it duked poe
eet cregompanying tA Kou
te for unis eonbltnition i 2
follows:
Take 1% cups of chopper. eonk-
attain, SCouk. Une. haan for 1
eo ince aidexjuns wf halber
ee pteantts ot, fim, stirei
fall Uae time. Add 14 Leaspoon of
a Me Cigsgpoon ot ster l 2
salts alii aiid, cook until thick
eon oe ipa thiy inte 1 bultercd
platter, or a buttered dish.
Make six hollow places in the
nieture, und iy acl one drop in
CEE. Sprinkle with salt and
CEE oe ‘nd cover with ~ buttered
crumbs. Wake until eggs ix set
Feiss may be wort ne eunker
re ee he tamily prefers, Sere
ae once
ite orumnts “are soft brent
eruinis with enough melted: tutte
added to make them well buttered.
Cleveland, 0., 8. B.S
ee
Games For Children
Take several different colored Valls
or several sinalt objects, seh is a
binckhourd eraser, a piewe uf chalk,
Grea peneit: [et one child pass these
fround, giving cach arUcle to a dit-
ferent child.
The children hide whatever thes
are given, then the child who has
given oUt tho things joes around
End asks cach child for the exact
article Ie gave hit.
NOTE:—A very good quieting
game. Good memory test. Devel-
Ops self-control."
>. —
Washing Johnny's Face
If the stilt son “dislikes | the
idea of hiving his face washed,
(ry a shaving brush ‘like “dad's”
Tae lather won't hurt and the
fated task becomes a joy. A
Sinslar brush used. by mother: on
her on face will refresh the skin
and vemove any of the tired
Wrinkles: Follow. with a thorc
rinsing of cold, clear , water and
you will ‘be pleased'with the, re;
coi
x MARY A,
|__ What Baby Said
| _ Afro pays $1, for best coutribn
tion to this column. Write Buby
altor, Afro-American,
SL PRIZE WINNER |
We were trying to teach }ittle
Jimmy, age 3+ how to count but he
couldi’t remember what came at-
fur any one to call hin a kid so
said hello there dehy how are
houn street. |
My daughter Evelyn Inet been
toiling meat sone ee ka ae
high School using. the, expression
“ink yeu”
She cris heme ate evening.
and for tun asteed uf iL rw uy
thing of hee “ink “pens
UC said, “ink pen? What other
kin of jen is there?
‘iy baby girl 3 years old, whone L
that had paid to attention fto the
conversation, si "Why don't SOU
tell her hng-en.
Sais. Bua idarninn, 1161 Cithoun
1 tuk tittle Foue-yenr-obt Agnes
down towne she sage i teal en
nd! creamed owe to tes Metter
Hire it funny that, down here
Thee Have imeersseerounds with
pudlyemtomaened ble, en te
Rides them aeaund sid people
suo tes lv Tee
Halt Davis, 1gus Argyle Ave.
My tite taranters age Fate stl
a Malt esse was ruselinge ible
Stories Lash bint tw readout teud
For ime Ales Iwan Zadeh
han then Cavk ana ae wnt 6
ittvact ie atta,
Sse Me dohinsans Wovadiewen, Ma
Keep Well
ae Oe. PROC NE ANE. Ne
ime Whether olive ail ix helphid ty
general bealth IC se, how should
Oe Grke 1
on Nest olive old is a very: spel
tunic, Take one-hit i wine glass
fo vlive oll before meats
Mr BM At. Q—Will you
Kindly cell: me whit causes: a cane
stunt soreness In the cords of ms
neck?
me your xguaptoms ay
diye ta mmuseuktr rheumat
Gentle anassage | amd Tote wates
hotties or an_electric pad applica
toy dhe affected aires wal mw aula
help.
ties 8. QI aa constantly
Ingthered with wax in nis ens
for this?
Gently ievisaites thie exes with
he warin boraci: aril swbition Wn:
Ti! the was loosens sid Moats ont
Te tis Tails to help Sous consult
an car specialist or attend an ein
cline and have further tecuunent
ACK. Gat tave been tuvine
trouble wit: iy eyes, tn he
morning especially they buen, and
iso after reading, WIL yau icine
iy tell, me what causes this?
ALthis is undoubtediy dues te
ley strain andl it issnecessary for
yn to wear reat gkssis. Yu
ould consult a exe shelist to
Haat eniuinimation anil sulvice,
| Q—Will you please Well nu
“what causes headache?
ee \tleadaehe tay be suet
‘nigh bland pressure, constipation
Hindijrestion, uito-intexication, Kid
ley compliint or eyestrain, “at
Lyour physieun amake sn examina
Yion, including a urinalysis an
Mood count, to find Une eine
‘After the. ewuse bas heen laesiten
jihe jeroper treatinent «cn be pte
ee
WHEN IS AN OLD MAID?
1 have in mind one such woe
man. in her young days she
fad a love dream whieh dit pot
come inne in the psual way. The!
tan of her choles died suddenly.
fe few days before they were to
Have been married. She idealized
Tig memergy and never laved! ante
jather, Finally she been: a sue-
ressful business wonci, then she
took two fille orphan girls senul
reared them to fing wenunhond.
HThis woman is new 60. 7 never
Teard her cabled an Gh wucid sd
hin ane ever Ubinks af hek as such.
Tae the. good old days when the
end and tint of a wonnin's: life
gas fo get a husband. he wins
considered ain ould netid ab 28 it
ghe had wo wuurried by Uru, time,
She was aise considered — sonte:
thing of a joke, heciuse for seme
Teagon, she. was supposed to de
serve ‘her fair, Didn't our fairy
Stories ail end by the pringe murs
fying the fairest and best maiden?
And. the one whe was left deserve
fc husband sanywas.
TD this has changed since wee
men have bernine mere independ
ent, Jf an anirarried, woman hs
alied ain ob inaid these days, It
fs usually because of some peel
Har characteristic she has whieh
was formerly stppased ty belang
exclusively 1 ob maids, ‘This he-
fng the ease, sone women are
horn Old maids while others are
not, even the they never ner’.
MES. RD. SS
PRPOWNED FRIED MUSH
T avid a, Tittle sue ane Te
per cent of milk when making
vernmedt “mish, Both” ingvedi-
ents bély it brown when fried. 1
aise put ina ln of shortening.
aha part fr will make it hold
together Tt ix ood thing to
oxor the mush and set it in the
oven for ahout 30 minutes,
BE. rR. GRAY
ee
Beauty Is But Skin Deep
Preserve It
‘We give Mineralava Beauty Clay
Facials and R-No-Mae. ‘Facial
Steam and Radiant Light Baths,
Lwwhich we highly recommend for'
| clearing the skin. removing. wrin-
Kes and preserving beauty. We
also have the Mineralava Clay for
Sale at wliolesale and reall prices.
Bishop’s Beauty Parlor
= 4465 Peina. Are.
iva
FREE |
PROPHESEX.
OC biimen beings, + aniv
plants or o¢ products der
any matter which has
tained life.
DIRECTIONS
tthe object to. be te
tupon ai table send ty
steadies bis arm. by: rest
fae upon the teble ani
ing the instrument. by
the string held between
and foretinger su that t
the indicator is boul
abave the object of the
TL is exxential tb have
SEX absolutely at rest]
Giject and in no way
influenced in its moven|
most instantly 2 motion
strament will be pereen
Will inerowse in nasni
evident Lo all observers:
objects the. Phophesex
ag a pendulum Inek i
a straight Tine: qver (ey
it will swing in at pert
gradually increasing dif
example: if the PRO]
held over the hand a
Woman the results are
tained very auiekly, 0}
hand the PROPHESE
in a straight Tine ‘bad
Forwards; over st wom
will swing in a civele,
RESULTS)
allow the directia}
With sume persons ¢
tikes pkice more
with others, but uted
Titions itis resily
Hawever, if the insted
pended from inanime
Will not work. ‘The
can he operated an
fifertive whether Matt
or female sand mt
tests can be made
SUGGEST
Many novel and
feats may be perfor
PROTHESEX and i
ing it will Anmediat
Tention and cause
For example: ‘the =f
aver a person's: hay
tained if the instru
over animals; cats,
kuinew vis, | ete, 0
chickens, ranaries, ef
jects which are prod
Inaly suelo Teath
Feathers, ete.
Another Interest
may be made tn 4
sigiatures were wrig
feomien, ar agin at
hy mite and female
dy. this instrument.
Mundeeds ot oti
sad entertaining es
es eed with 108
cording to the ing
hperator, iL will pre’
tings | source
sunuisement, delight,
ing study to young,
Show it ly your
your honte eirelo—i
and amaze them,
| PRICE 50
ov free with every: 3]
Hin to the Abit
that you send in,
HE J. H. B
Manu fact
Hair & Skin P.
School of ean
AAMNDRESSING, AME 8
pynix
Wholcoute and Ret
fairaressers’ Suppl
es, Petrolutuin, tut:
itair Nets, Dolls a
Tipu s08P
neal estar ’
Buoreies
1425 PENNA.
“Phone, MAC
SST REE SS
= MADAM IDA B. JEFFE |
: 7
=. 10th EPISCOPAL DIST., 4. M. E. j
z A Healer of Great Power
2 every man and woman ought to consult this wonderful lady.
2 she ean tell you tings that will put you to wondering. Madam
= Jeiferson can bring tangled brains to the light of hopeful sensl-
= bility. Her medicines ean =
= euch any disuse that .
= you were not born with, 5
= nd in faet she can locate : }
= any disease in the human 5
= Hoy, and tell yor com-
= paint by your. writing,
= When otliers have, failed, ) .
= Write her, and sho will 3 i
= five you details of your ‘|i: gaammmee ,
= disease. Pi rs
= Madam Jefferson posses: “ff 5 Sh {
= ox a natural gift from [ieee 3
= birth, and is one of the |B. 3a
= greatest licensed preach- |g bes
= Fr of the uge. She has a |e sgen |
= yupernutural gitt. Cod |Riaraaa pas
= has given her great power, ‘ ae
Se et and Teed, her peo” meh ea
= pile. Her indigestion medi- i oo
=. Une is wondertul, She al. i Po
= so has discovered a won- [ig Se i
= Gertul hair vigor that pre- ff Deen te
= vents falling hair, and ECL
= [ives new life and growth. [amas ial a8
= fier pressing oll:18 won-, ager gg
= fertul iter, face bleach |My Aire dead
= removes black heads, sun- Ok haa
= purn, and gives 2 beautl- |MRpAae
= ful complexion. Her. piles, Ramis -<§ F
= falves reaches the worst PRABSIe.g f 5
= fives, Her liniment is ;eQapaaai
= food for stiff joints, tooth- Faas :
= cho and all pains. _ E E
z . sents ‘wanted. Send ten cents stamps with all letter Qr-
gers promptly filled.
= Address MADAM IDA B, JEFFERSON
= Box 648 = , Longview, Texas
Sv spuisnrag mii ltMma ITU TL
- BEAUTIFUL WOMEN - ’
LEI Wigs a move cnrinn-rors lem tothe
fe gelna cesar ees
Live eS + You can easily Benutify your Mair by uaiag 4
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ie ee HI-JA CHEMICAL CO.
eee Atlanta, Ga. ‘
ae 4 Seat y
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sere ae
ee es OT
Que te spe or
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Its all in the way yore
care for ye UE Skeli S
your complexion can be easily and quickly beautified, yout 3
skin lightened, your neck and arms made plump and velvety,
‘your hands soft and smooth and your hair ong, straight and Juxuriant
hy simply using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations.
‘These are the most exquisite of all skin whitener preparations and
‘are used and preferred by thousands of the best men and-women, -
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A FEW SIMPLE DIRECTIONS » bbe
TO TAGIERS THR SKIN: No wate how dack son compleston, tt. ts €asy. 8
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Sie haone wontortal fale. Soresingkoowir to science, * * i
Bakes thie, hale straight, soft, long. and luxurlant—re- J
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DR. FRED PALMER’S LABORATORIES * | re rapidly poa'|
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Week’s Best Jingle
‘The Afro will seud $t, to, the
pader who submits the hest last
Ine to -the ‘Jingle which follows.
Wl it to Jingle Editor, Afro
icrican.
fall the pests *
That. make me shrink,,
‘he darndest Is
im glid that the sky is painted
blue
Janae the earth Ix painted green,
With such a lot of nice fresh air
"Tis tine to live between
John H. Summers, Pittsburg, fa.
OTHER LINES
That's felt und can't he seen
-Adelene Marshall, Berlin, Md,
Ta enjoy a plite'of cream
Eliza. Saunders, Harbeson, Del,
And Pretty things to be seen:
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ani
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A new sheet costs xoyeral dollars’
and a blanket moro. ‘Then some
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YOU ARE WELCOME —-
I wish to Uhank you" for’ the
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am very glad it met your approval.
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EXELERTO preparadous night NOW
ATLANTA, GEORGIA ”
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
a MANEER Evenywaceny,
9,000 Fans Saw
SOX AND BACHARAC'S
DIYIDE SUNDAY TILTS
Locals Outbat Seasiders In First Clash, But Lose on Errors by 6-4 Score With Sykes Pitching
Sox Garner Nine Runs In First Frame of 41/2-In ning Setto; Wins, 15-9
The Black Sox divided with the Bacharachs in the first two games of their second Eastern League series last Sunday Josing the opener 6-4 and grabbing the nightcap 15-9.
The biggest crowd that ever fought its way through the gates estimated between nine and ten thousand, and as is generally the case in all families when a lot of company comes, everything seems more embarrassment to the heads of the house. Which is to say that the twin clash Sunday was the most rugged, tantilizing and wearying double billwitnessed at Maryland Park many moons. The team was on errors, being the guilty of a total of five. On the other hand, the Bacharachs won and were guilty of four injuries. But the whole story lies in the fact that local's hons in the field were costly.
- Poles Makes Costly Boots
Poles was the chief offender of the Sox team in this respect, showing the worse form he has displayed since donning a Sox outfit. Wilson identified the fuss with a double play in the very first inning. Crockett led off with a safe hit. Francis rolled to Sykes, who tossed to Wilson at first. Wilson spying Crockett sprinting for third on the play shot the pellet to Miller cutting him off. The locals were blanked in their half of the first inning then the visitation one in the second off Poles' error. Mason led off with a single to left. Reid was thrown out by Smith Mason going to second. Downs flied Mason taking the catch, then followed with an easy grounder to Poles who had hands to throw him out so to speak, but tossed the ball carelessly pulling Wilson of the first bag. Gunnings being safe as Mason crossed
In the fourth frame, an error by Poles gave the visitors two more runs although this time, the music was the unavoidable one. Wundy dropped a safe when Wundy dropped the toss to nail him. Mason bunted to Wilson and beat him to the initial hissock. Lundy pulling up at second. After Reid had fouled out to lose, Downs had grown closer to Wilson. Cummings in a grouper to Poles dropped it in attempting to throw. Lundy had already crossed the plate and Mason sizing up the situation rounded third home and was safe to take. In too late to nab Cummings threw wild to the plate to catch Mason.
Rojo Fans With Sacks Loaded
In their half of this inning, the Sox made one run, the Bacharachs made two more in the sixth and one in the eighth. The Sox made most of their rooters in the seventh and ninth innings. In the seventh with two down Harper after hitting Sykes and Smith getting a single, walked holding the bags, and then enrolled pleaded with him to put the pellet over the palings. But Harper showed himself the master of occasion by forcing the Sox receiver to repeat, the property to
The Sox threw in Trent into the visitors in the ninth. Sykes with a double, Britton was sent into run for him. Baggles followed with Singleton, singled to right. Mason recovering the ball and throwing Raggs out as he was dashing for the third sack. Hall singled to left and Smith scored. after Wilson and lither Smith. Rojo scored Hall. The rally ended. Richardson forced Hall by rolling to Downs.
Sox's Line-up Patched
The Sox outpat the visitors Sykes holding the latter to six scattered hinges. Poles. Poles. He hitched ball in the fifth inning and had to retire from the game. The lineup was then shifted. Cleo Smith going to short. Raggs. from one end where he was playing leftfield in the place of Lefty Smith who is still out of the game as the result of falling on his arm in the second inning. Saints, being shifted to centerfield, and "Hooks" Mitchell sent to left.
Nine Runs In First Inning
After the visitors had scored one run in the first inning of the nightcap which was all the harm they could on four miscues in succession by Raggs at second the Sox hung up a record for the park by consecutive runs in their half of the inning. The worst contest seen at the park for many a day. Next Sunday the Brooklyn Royal Giants will come here for a three-game league series.
Petersburg, Va. May 9 - In a di-
amond battle of the series for the
Colored Intercollegiate "Athletic
Association, baseball championship
Coca-Cola
Black Sox's peppery little third sacker and captain who after a batting slump lost year appears to have found his "eye" again.
FIRST GAME
RACHARACTS: BLACK SOX
ABRIH
ABRIH
Crockett,f
4 0 1 Rages,f
3 1 3
Franck,2b
4 0 0 Smithgb
4 1 2
Lundy,s
2 2 2 Wibson,b
2 1 0
Mason,rf
2 1 1 Robey,
Reid,lf
2 2 2 Ried,n,
ft
2 0 0
Down,2b
2 0 0 Poles,s
1 0 0
Cum'gs,lb
2 0 0 Miller,sb
4 0 0
Jones,c
4 0 1 Skees,p
3 1 1
Harper,p
3 1 0
Tongs
3 1 0 6 Mitchell,
Th
SCORE BY INXINGS
Bacharack Giants
..... 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 -0
Black Sox
..... 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 -4
Black Sox
..... 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 -4
Britton ran for Skees in although
Two-base lite-Rojo, Skees, Three-base
-Two-base Towns, Stolen bases-downs,
hits-Smith, his-Reid, Mitchell, Skees
Sneelter, his-Cuninins, Hall, Double
flex-Downs, Cummins, Hall, Double
play-Skees to Wilson to Miller, Bases on
play-Off Harper, 2: off Skees, 2: off
ball-On Harper, 19 in 0 ball-On Skees, 6 in
off Harper, 19 in 0 ball-On Skees, 6 in
(Poles, Skees, Strike out-By Harper, 6:
(Poles, Skees, Wild pitch-Unper, passed
by Skees, 5:. Losing pitcher-Skees,
ball-On Jones, 12:. Losing pitcher-Skees,
ball-On Arley and Conwell,
SECOND GAXOR GTRS
BLACK SOX BACHARACH ABRIH
Raggs,20 4 2 2^Frock-Lef 2 3 2
Smith,es 4 1 2^Lundy,« 2 1 1
Hall,ef 4 1 2^Lundy,« 2 1 0
Wilson,ib 2 1 0 Mason,ef 2 0 1
Rajoc, 2 2 2^Wright,M 2 0 0
Richson,ef 2 2 2^Tea^p,p,2h 2 0 0
Mitchell,lf 4 2 2^Hcm^cs,h 2 2 1
Miller,2b 4 2 2^James,c 2 0 0
Wheeler,p 3 0 0 Hamilton,p 1 1 0
Logan,p 32,15 15^Red,lf 2 1 2
Total 304 10
SCORE BY INNINGS
Black Sox 2 4 2 0 x-75
Bacharach Giants 13 0 5 0-2
Two-base hits-langas, Smith, Richardson, Mitchell, Miller, Francis, Three-base hits, Rojas-Richardson, Stolen base-Mason, Enrichfie by-Richardson, Bases on balls-Enrichfie by-Richardson, 1: off Downs, off Wheeler, 1: off Hamilton, 1: off Robinson, 2: off Hilliard, 6: in 313单位:
Off Hamilton, 4 in no Inning; off Robinson, off Hamilton, off Logan, 1 in 2 23单位:
7 in 1 limit: off Logan, 1 in 2 23单位: off Downs, 4 in 3 limits; struck out-by Wheeler, 1 by Jozan, 1 by Downs, 2 by Robinson, 1. Wild pitch-Robinson, Pass-Red, 1. Wild pitch-Losing pitcher-el ball-Jones (2) Hamilton, Empire-Arbory and Cromwell, Hamilton, Empire-Arbory and Cromwell.
Sox 6, Bacharach 5
The Black Sox made it two out of three with the Batch, Guitar Hall, and the Soilers 5-5. Mahoney was in fine form holding the Giants to seven
sq. Hamilton started on the hill for
the visitors but the Sox's war clubs
finally drove him to the Red and Hold
and held the O'Sed. The
battle scenes were three sna-
clubs by Wilson, Smith and
Toelo, the latter with the buses
loaded.
Line-up:
BLACK SOX BACHARACH GTS.
Abbi
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
Bazzell, jz.
Smith, ss.
Wilson, lb.
Wilson, lb.
Rejoe, j
Riehl, son, 2b
Miller, jb
Mahoney, p
Total s
SCORE BY TOTALS
Black Jack
Bachrach
Two base hits—Downs, Lundy, Rauzig
Three-base hits—Smith, Lundy, Cummings.
2. Base on balls—Mahoney.
2. Hamilton.
5. Stolen bases—Richardson, Lundy.
Hamilton, him.
2. Double plays—Smith to Wilson and Gromwell.
Wormley's All-Stars divided a twin bill with the Piedmont Tigers before a large crowd last Sunday, winning the first game 5-4 and dropping the dewfall and the rubber for the S. in the open pit pitched a fine game holding the losers to five scattered bingles and fanned eight. Next Sunday the Wormley will cross bats with Payne's All-Stars, formerly the Chesterfield Tigers. Line-up:
A. U. PIMEMONT TIGERS
A. U. ABRITI ABRITI
Tayles,If 4 0 0 Huston,If 4 0 0
Matthews,If 4 0 0 Sunset'self,If 4 0 0
Brooks,If 4 0 0 Williams,If 4 0 0
Randall,If 4 0 0 Monroe,If 4 0 0
Brown,If 3 1 1 Parne,If 2 0 0
Terrill,If 3 1 1 Whitney,If 2 0 0
Allen,c 3 0 1 Green,п 3 0 0
Totals 32 5 1 Totals 32 5
Tarbes, l. 4 0 1 | R. Huston, l. 5 2 1
Matthews, f. 4 0 1 | R. Huston, l. 5 2 1
Matthews, f. 4 0 1 | R. Huston, l. 5 2 1
Randall, s. 4 2 1 | Moore, s. 4 1 1
Smith, s. 3 8 1 | Parce, s. 4 0 1
Smith, s. 3 8 1 | Parce, s. 4 0 1
Terrill, s. 3 0 1 | Whitney, l. 4 0 1
Allen, c. 3 0 1 | Burke, c. 3 0 1
Allen, c. 3 0 1 | Burke, c. 3 0 1
Totals 32 8 1 | Totals 33 4 5
**SCORE BY INNINGS**
Pledgom 4 | 0 0 1 0 2 0 1
Worley, A. s. | 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1
Worley, A. s. | 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1
Three-thirds beat-Randall, S. 2 | Sacrifice-Brown, Johnson, Allen, Base on
Base-Theney, W. White, Huston
Base-Theney, W. White, Huston
Sticke Out-By, Johnson, 8 | Grage, 4
Dunlop, Travers and Wilson, Attendance
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SOX SPLIT ON ROAD
On their trip last week, the Black Sox played two games, defeating the North Philadelphia nine-2, and losing to the Chester first mentioned game holding the losers to seven hits. The latter game was lost by Logan. The Sox schedule this week, calls for a game with the Crissfield League at Maryland Park Thursday noon and Saturday at Philadelphia with the South Philadelphia club.
ROJO'S WIFE DEAD
Just before the commencement of the first game last Sunday, Rojo the Black Sox's first-string catcher, received a telegram that his wife had sent to him. The Sox will miss his services for the next two or three weeks.
Black Sox and Bacharachs Divide Sunday
Sox Pitcher
02 X3A
Cheeter who is expected pod account of himself
PUBLIC
OIL LEAGUE
Week's Results
3, 4: 110 9; 104 0
9; 105, 0; (forfeit).
10.
2 vs 118;
0
Week's Schedule
vs Roland Park
vs 116
vs 113
0
I situation in the
Athletic League is be-
. Mr. Freericks told
week. He stated that
constant sending of
schools in regard to
the schools are show-
tied lack of interest
they inform him
he on hand to carry
be and that when the
or the game, they
are appearance. Thus
inves are being won
feits.
that the principals of the schools will
interest, for it nurture
it if this hack of in-
tendence to continue in the
it will soon find its
schoolboy athletic
100
All 100
31Fill.1b 413
31Beverly.c 412
31Nanes.p 401
31Nanes.s 401
31Williams.2b 401
31Williams.2s 402
31Parrell.3b 422
31Parrell.3s 422
31Jones.ef 423
31Jones.ef 423
31Tree.1f 411
31Tree.1f 411
317.10.17
BY INNINGS
ng Beats 'Hi'
nine went down to the hands of Armstrong in a lastless stunt and Park and Sandwich. About one hun- ness comprised the team with the "HI" aggregate journey to Cambridge to measure arms with the Cambridge High School nine. Coach Gibson is putting the "HI" athletic squad through a strenuous series of workout challenges to select candidates to participate in the Howard track and field meet Saturday. Representatives will also be sent to the "Hampton, Va." meet which will be held on May 19.
Other Baseball Resulst
Cuban Stars, 9; Scanlon, 3.
Hildale, 3; Doherty, 7.
Richmond Giants, 6; Breyer A.
A. 13.
Lincoln Giants, 11; Elmer, N. J.
(first game).
Lincoln Giants, 10; S. P. H. A., 4
(second game).
Cuban Stars, 0.
(Preston News Service)
Washington, Pa., May 11—Chas.
West, the famous athlete of Washington and Jefferson College, was given a monate welcome and one of the finest ovation ever given a Washington citizen here last Tuesday by the people of this city as an expression of gratitude and esteem for his wonderful feats in winning the national pentathlon championship at the Penn games last Friday week.
MONEY CAN BUY
CLUB
ARS
On sale everywhere.
EVERY MAN WHO HAS LOST THE VITAL FORCE OF YOUTH MAY BE RESTORED
Scientists Make Wonderful Discovery—Says No Man Under 100 Years Should Feel Old
THOUSANDS ATTEND
THE COUNTY MEETS
Best School Boy Athletes of the State Compete in Annual Field Day Games Under P. A. L.
EASTON IS VICTOR
Denton, Crisfield, Salisbury, Chestertown Also Carry Off High Honors
Reports from the office of the Public Athletic League show that more than 20,000 spectators from all parts of the State have gathered at various points in the several counties recently to witness school boy and girl athletic meets.
Hundreds of boys and girls brought honor to their schools and medals for themselves by winning the various events.
In the Talbot County meet last Friday, Easton, schools run away with the field scoring 80 points. St. Michael was second with 37, Tranau 34, Royal Oak 17, and Unionville 16.
Denton Scores 125
By scoring 125 points in the Caroline County meet on Wednesday Denton athletes set a new high mark. Belt was second when he scored 127. 4. Real stars were in this meet. H. Matthews of Hillboro threw the baseball 237 feet. N. Boston of Denton jumped 15 feet in a record jump. He also captured the humble vault dash and should do well in college.
Stockton Beats Berlin
Stockton beat out Berlin for the championship of Worcestershire county scoring 69 points. Berlin 65, Germantown 37, Pocomoke 15. The team won the Germantown school run the 830 yard run in the remarkable time of 2 minutes 36 seconds. Considering the character of the track, this was the fastest time made by the county schools for the distance.
Princess Anne Second
Crisfield scoring 44 points nosed out Princess Anne with 43 points in Somerset County meet at Princess Anne. Ashbury was third wilt with 42 points Quarter Elise Flixe School covered the 80 yard dash in 3-5 seconds.
Johnson Some Squirter
Sallsbury High School won the Wiemico county meet with 9 points. Fruitland was second with 8 points. Johnson of Quantico sprinted the 100 yard dash in 11 seconds. Cambridge In拔 Scoring Cambridge Hi School romped away with the Dorchester county team. Missiones was second with 31 and Jennifer Hall 18. T. Mobray threw the baseball 212 feet. Waters of Cambridge threw the dodge ball
Centerville Wins
Centerville won the Queen Anne's county meet with 67 points, Pondown was second with 37 nosing out Richneck with 36 points.
Chestertown Ahead
Chestertown with 73 points won the Kent County meet heating out 80 degrees. Coleman with 24 Murray of Edlesville throw the baseball 198 feet In doing the 70 yard dash in 8 4-5 seconds, Johnson of Millington set a record that was equaled by a record of Salisbury and Bristol. The record is 8 2-5 seconds this year made by Boston of Guilford, Howard County schools.
Summary fSY etai0 etain0 etao
BACIIARACHS VS POTOMACS
The Bacharach Giants after losing to the Black Sox Monday were scheduled to journey to Washington where they will be the opponent of Ben Taylor's Potomacs who will open their season on Thursday at American League Park. The occasion will be the biggest baseball event in the history of Washington and a half holiday has been declared by the fans. The will play Friday Sunday, Sunday and Monday. The Bacharachs will open their Eastern League season at Atlantic City May 30, at their new park.
EVERY MAN WHO HAS FORCE OF YOUTH
Scientists Make Wonderful Under 100 Years
A new discovery is said to have been made by a scientific study of Serbian mountain people who scientists say, live longer than any other people. They should add many years to lives of people in all parts of the world and quickly restore many strength, youthful vigor, grace and beauty lost neglect or abuse. Scientists agree that people in the internal glands and in these glands are stimulated and kept in normal activity, man might live forever and alliments such as tired, weak, sick, and debilitated, debility, sallow complexion, loss of weight, poor memory, premature senility, scrawny neck, restlessness at night, palms, headache, melancholy despondency, etc., should disappear. The difficulty encountered by the medical world has been to find the right invigorator for the glands. This new discovery is simple, perfectly harmless, inexpensive, and can be used if it was brought to the attention of
BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923 Bacharach
Danny Edwards
THE BOXING FIGHTER
New York's favorite and bantamweight fighter whose home is in Portland, Oregon. He has lost out since coming East.
The City Giants defeated the Baltimore Cubs last Sunday, in a well-played game 6-3. The features were the pitching of Hebron of the Giants who held the losers to five hits and fanned five, two double-plays by the Cubs and one by the Giants.
Line-up:
CITY GIANTS BALTO CUBS
ABRIL ABRI
Ware,rf 4 1; Hitchins,ss 4 1 2
Bick Red,rf 4 1; O'Cullen,2b 4 0 0
G, Johnson,lf 4 1; Brown,s 4 1 0
Hogg,rf 4 0 0 B, Jones,rf 4 1 1
Tanner,lb 4 0 1 C, Erswell,2b 4 0 0
Smith,ss 4 1; Gumming,rf 4 0 0
Wheeler,2b 3 0; Hall,rf 2 0 0
Gray,e 3 2; Thomas,lb 2 0 1
Helbron,p 3 1 1 S, Jones,p 2 0 0
Totals 3268 Totals 3325
SCORE BY INNINGS
Balto Cubs 000200000-3
City Giants 000111120-4
Watts Wins Bike Races
The Sudbrook Bicycle Club held its first track meet of the season last Saturday o r the Lindenhill races were run, two-mile scratch, two-mile coaster brake and five-mile handicap. The scorer and five-mile race was by Raymond Wintz, prize, gold watch and gold medal; the coaster brake was won by Ralph Roberts, prize, gold watch, silver medal and horn. Others who participated were Turner pair of rims, lamp and chain; Parrott, a pair of handle bars and Smith a pump. The Sudbrook Bicycle Club held its 20: Cyclones were next with 10 and unmatched, unmatched scored two.
WORKINGMEN!
Don't be fooled by imitators. There is only one Pants Shop. It is located at 511 W. Franklin Street, on the south side of the block. We give you the very best for your money. And we help the poorer man save cash with pants plainly priced, $2 to $3. Better pants, $5. Find 511 W. Franklin street.
Np Branch Stores
THE PANTS SHOP
511 W. Franklin Street
On the South Side
Between Paca and Green
AS LOST THE VITAL I MAY BE RESTORED I Discovery—Says No Man Should Feel Old
the Atlas laboratories, who, after careful research, have such great faith in its restorative power that they have arranged to make it available up in tablets, known as Vim-Ets and is said to produce almost immediate results, first indications being improved appetite, nerves toned and fuligor. The results obtained by scientific tests were so wonderful the Atlas Laboratories have arranged for everyone interested in long life, youthful vigor and health to test it. You will need to send your name and address (no money) to Atlas Laboratory, Dept. 12, St. Louis, Mo., and they will send you a full-size box of cookies and a per. On arrival pay manly only $2 and postage. If you are not highly pleased in one week, just notify the laboratory and your money will be promptly refunded in full. Anyone should feel free to accept this truine offer as it is fully guaranteed.
hs Divide
Johnson S
Former World's Heavyweight
Round Whe
Johnson Stops Lodge
Johnson Stops Lodge
Former World's Heavyweight Floors Opponent in Fourth Round Who Claims Foul
Havana, May 7—Jack Johnson, former heavyweight champion of the world, demonstrated that he still retains something of his old punching ability by dropping Farner Lodge in the fourth round of their bout here today.
Johnson had the better of the milling, which was a rather slow affair, in the first three rounds and shortly after the fourth opened, he dropped the Minnesota farmer with a stiff left to the stomach.
Lodge claimed a foul and was examined by a physician. It was then decided that the bout would be postponed for a few persons at the ringside were of the opinion that if the blow was foul it was an unintentional one.
Homestead, 9; Imperial, 5
Homestead, Ta., May 9.—By the heavy clubbing of Owens and Moody, the Homestead Grays were enabled to chalk up an easy victory over the Homestead Imperials at Rankin 9-5.
WHY BE SICK?
DELAY AND GROW WORSE—
HEALTH AND HAPPINESS
BELK TO MEN
FOR YOUR HEALTH—
IS YOUR GREATEST FORTUNE
attention—think of the end. Then think how nice
think how good it is to get up in a warm-
cheace, or that rheumatism, that nervous
day's work to have all the possible enjoy-
come or with friends.
IF YOUR PLEASURE—
IMPARE WITH A FEW DOLLARS
you have only one life to live—do you real-
most of that life by ill health? A life worth
Neglect of one's health has put many a man
would rather be dead than alive—If you are
need not read this, I am talking to real re-
alize the services of a real specia-
good from the bad—Mom who realize the
grow who have confidence in themselves.
I will make you have confidence in others,
and optimistic and healthful.
MEN
IT HARDLY ABLE TO WORK
I GIVE SCIENTIFIC Up-to-Date
Treatment Quick Results and
Reasonable Fees.
MEN! WHY
WHY SUFFER, DELAY
ENJOY LIFE, HEALT
A TALK
MEN, CONSIDER YOUR
IT IS YOUR
Think about your aliment—think of it getting worse—think it is to be feeling well—think how ing without that backache, or condition, that it be beauty mealch or bowels. After the day's wement and pleasure at home or wMen, THINK OF YOUR
COMPARE
Do you realize that you have lize that you are missing most of the living is a healthy life. Neglect of in his grave. Some men would rai one of that kind you need but re-blooded men—men who will appre-men who know the good fr benefits of good health—men wIf you will come to me I will maI will make you cheerful and opiWeak Nerve-
Tired
NOT SICK, YET HAR
MEN! WHY BE SICK? WHY SUFFER, DELAY AND GROW WORSE ENJOY LIFE, HEALTH AND HAPPINESS A TALKTOMEN
MEN, CONSIDER YOUR HEALTH
IT IS YOUR GREATEST FORTUNE
Think about your aliments—think of the possible complications—think getting worse—think of the end. Then think how nice it is to be feeling well—think how good it is to get up in the morning without that backache, or that rheumatism, or that stones condition. To eat a hearty meal, or to have the stones ach or brench, or to work to have all the possible enjoy-ment at home or with friends.
MEN, THINK OF YOUR PLEASURE
COMPARE WITH A FEW DOLLARS
Do you realize that you have only one life to live? do you realize that you are missing most of that life by ill health? A life is living is a healthy life. You are either dead or better than alive—if you are in his grave you might rather be dead than alive—if you are kind you need not read this. I am talking to real blooded men—men who will appreciate the services of a real specialist—men who know the good from the bad—you will benefit of good health—you will benefit of themselves. If you will know you cheerful and optimistic and healthful.
NOT SICK, YET HARDLY ABLE TO WORK
According to Individual Requirements
Is Are the Latest and Most
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REE without obligation.
MEN AND MEN ONLY
Bief and Satisfaction Given Those Who
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AND BLOOD ARE LIFE!
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up-to-date Electrocardiogram and o
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I TREAT MEN
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Each Case Treated According to Individual Requirements
My Methods Are the Latest and Most Scientific in All Cases
I am prepared to offer a help hand to all who need scientific up-to-date Electro-Medical and other new methods of proven merit. Call and talk it over FREE, without obligation.
TREAT MEN AND MEN ONLY
The Lifetime Relief and Satisfaction Given Those Who Have Been Restored of the DISEASES Below by My Methods Should be a Guiding Star to All Men Seeking Treatment. Come in and have a friendly talk with me if in trouble or in doubt.
NERVES AND BLOOD ARE LIFE!
According to how you have lived your life are found your strength, mentally and physically, so if you have weakened or poisoned either or both the heart or blood better take care of yourself in time—go to a doctor at once and when you pick your doctor go to a specialist who knows how to tell what ails you and just what to do to get quick alleviation and at a reasonable cost.
No matter the man, whether young or old, single or married, so can care for a care so long his blood is not healthy, the face, body, bones, nerves and brain may be affected any day without any warning a day anyone spring on you like a thief in the night. So if suffering, don't grow careless.
Many time an innocent looking little
running sore which took months and yea
s somewhere else. Be warned in time.
WHY DON'T YOU CO
IF MEN ON
-Of My Successful Methods and Treats
-Of the Great Many Patients I Restore
-Of the Short Time My Patients Have
-Of the Short Time My Patients Have
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treatment. I have been telling men it
threatens to come and get well.
I care and I am now treating many
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Don't. Walt—Walt, Suffer—Com
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YOU COME TO ME TODAY?
MEN ONLY KNEW
and Treatments—
Is I Restore to Health—
and Payment Arrangements—
Please Have to Take Treatments—
desecruaged men who come to my office begining
men these things for many years, but still
lute who, for various reasons, have not
the right to be treated, most of patients under
many patients daily, giving them every care
will convince you. I understand your case.
ES
SURGERY
ELECTRICITY, MEDICINE
list With Care and Common Sense.
successfully when Others Fall
Many time an innocent looking little pimple left alone has become a serious running sore which took months and years to heal and then broke out later.
WHY DON'T YOU COME TO ME TODAY?
—Of sick, weak, alling and discouraged men who come to my office helping treatment. I have been telling men these things for many years but still there are thousands of victims who, for various reasons, have not had the good sense to come and get well. I have had hundreds of patients under my care and have many patients daily. I understand the care and attention. A visit will convince you of your case. BACTERINS, VACCINES SURGERY
612 N. HOWARD ST. (Near Madison St.)
Baltimore, Md.
Call VErnon 6016
A.
Do you feel tired in the morning and easily exhausted? Is it morning failing? Do you have difficulty in fixing your thots? Are you having ambition? Do you feel that you are worthless? Do you have little or no money? Do you have not flushes up and down your spine or sudden weakness? Have you given up publication of the heart? Dull headache, pain at the base of the brain, sudden spells like fainting? Are you very restless or sleepless at night? Are you nervous and irritable, with a feeling that you want to quit? Are you with a sense of great oppression upon you? If you need any treatment, a visit
```markdown
```
Johnson weighed 212. and Lodge 215.
The Pleddon A. C. would like to book games with 16-year-old teams either with or without their own grounds. For games address, George Hodges, manager, 120 N. Spring street, City.
No Pain. No Loss of Time from
Work
BRAINS
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CORNELIUS THOMPS'N WILL RACE GOURDIN
Coach Gibson's Charges
Will Run Against D. C.
High Schools
Washington, May 10.—Excellently by all its predecessors both in quality and number of entries, the Fourth Annual Track and Field Meet under the auspices of the Department of Physical Education of Howard University on the Campus Saturday, May 12th bids fair to become the athletic classic of the season.
The list of events includes all the championship contests on the intercollegiate Athletic Association program. In addition, highly High School and later-scholars' championships give all indications of being a battle royal between Howard, Armstrong, and more than High Schools.
The feature event of the program however, will be an exhibition of blood jumping by "Ned Goldman, ex-national pentathlon champion and holder of the world's record of 25 feet and 5 meters in the running and jumping Gymnast will also special 100 yard dash against Cornelius Thibodeau, star spinner of the Male Physical Culture Club of New York City. A 2.9 yard spindle is being arranged that will probably include C. Thompson, New York University, "Jamme" "Moore, Pennsylvania State College; Kelly Perry, Howard University; and J. Irvine, Hamilton Institute. In the competition, the championship, the first opportunity of seeing Jokers' Championship Team when made the second fastest time in the mile championship at the University of Pennsylvania Boy Scout Council, pitied against Dennis, Sargent Normal, and the OSS. Winston Beam which is the first opportunity. Last to
Historians have entered, thirty
athletes, including the famous
The prince with the awarded
papar of capturing the point
topics. It was well fortified
in an old castle with each star
as Robinson, Nichols, Crayton,
Yallis, Green, Bridges, Wright,
And Anderson and should make
the boys not and furious-all the
Union 8; Hampton 3
Hampton, Va., May 10. —Union gave Hampton a decisive trimming in the second and last game of the Hampton institute season. The Hampton team won easily by a score of 8 to 3. Merritt of Union picked great ball and with good support did not allow the Hampton team to score until the last of the innings. Rain fell continuously.
Batteries: Union —Merritt and Jackson —Hampton —K Robinson, Hargrove and Jackson.
Score by innings —
Union 2 0 2 0 2 2 0 0 x—8
Hampton 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 x—3
West Wins Again
Beaver Falls, Pa., May 9.—Washington and Jefferson College coached Geneva College in an interesting track meet here last Saturday, winning ten of the thirteen events for a score of 67 to 46. Charles West won the 190-yard dash in 10.4-5 seconds, but was defeated in the broad jump by Shape of Geneva who out leaped the all-around athletic champion in America by 1.3-4 inches. West jumped 21 feet 6 inches and Shupa 21 feet 7-4 inches.
MAKES TRIPLE PLAY
Philadelphia, May 9—Ed. Bolden's Hilldale club won a hard-pitch game from the Doherty Silk Sox, formerly known as the Patterson Silk Sox at Hilldale Park last Saturday 8 to 7. A feature of the game was a triple of seventh inning by Hilldale with two men on as follows. Allen speared Reiman's inner at first tugged Crowell and shot the ball to Captain Lloyd who mabbed Lehr off the bag by a foot
Brown Sox. 3;
Ivy Professionals,
West Chester, May 5, 1993
The brown Sox nosed on the Ivy
Profs. of Philadelphia by a score
of 4-2. The Ivy thurled a great
game. The feature was the batting
of Walker and Ross and the playing
of Brown at first. The score
by injuring:
Ivy A. A. 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0
Sox 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 x
Batteries—Scheller and Lyons
Mohan and Ross.
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I'M GONNA DROWN MYSELF AMOS. I DON'T WANNA LIVE. MITT ME GOOD BYE!
YOU AIN'T GOIN' FOR GOOD; ARE YOU EDDIE?
THIS OLD WORLD'S BEEN ROUCH ON ME. I DON'T SEE WHY I SHOULDN'T SHUFFLE OFF THIS MORTAL COIL.
YOU HAVE BEEN A TRUE FRIEND TO ME. AMOS WHAT CAN I GIVE YOU AS A LITTLE MEMENTO.
THAT SIX BITS YOU OWE ME WOULD BE APPRECIATED
SELLING OUT
Call VErnon 6016
AMOS HOKUM—Grie
I'M CONNA DROWN MY SELF
AMOS. I DON'T WANNA LIVE.
MITT ME GOOD BYE!
YOU A
GOOD?
JACK KEARNS HAS HIS LITTLE SAY
Manager of Dempsey Says Champ Would Have As Easy Time Licking Wills As Gibbons WILLS TOO BASHFUL
Sits Back In Corner Biting Fingernails Instead of Going After Champion
BY AFRO SPORTS EDITOR
The failure of Harry Wills to cut loose from his present manager and put himself under one who would see that he kept in the boxing limelight, has again borne fruit that is bitter in the mouth of "The Brown Panther"—or should.
Announcement is made that Tom Gibbons, a third-rater, has been chosen to battle Jack Dempsey on July the 4th, white Wills, who stands on a plane with the champion as one of the two best heavyweights in the world, must sit at home and bite his finger.
As was to be expected, Jack Kearns, manager of Dempsey, has taken advantage of the turn of the wheel of fortune which gives Gibbons the preference over Wills, to declare that he would have much preferred Wills to Gibbons, as Dempsey wouldn't have any more trouble defeating the colored
Robb. Edgren quotes Kearns as saying:
*Would Fight Wills*
*Harry Wills would suit Jack and sat me. I'd take Wills as first mate. Wills don't have any doubt that the big black yellow would give Jack a real fight.
*He's thirty pounds heavier than Jack, several inches taller, six inches longer in the reach. Nobody could criticize us and say we were picking on smaller men who wore bigger shoes. I think Dempsey wouldn't have any more trouble with Wills than with Gibbons.*
*Fighting Carpentier was a tougher proposition than fighting Wills would be. Carpentier was a smaller man and naturally had sympathy of the crowd, he Jack and I both knew he had dangerous punch and was clever enough. If he had an opening, Dempsey had to change his fighting style for Carpentier and take more time to outbox him.*
"But we don't care much whethed it's Wills, Wiltard, Firpo, Gibbons, Johnson, or anybody else." Kearns, went on, "as long as Jack has some work to do and gets what he entitled to in proportion to what he can draw. He is satisfied to take chances like a champion. He'll win as long as he can and if any of these birds can beat him they're welcome to the title." Bashful Harry Wills
Of course, Kearns may have the right dope, but if so, it is merely a guess in the dark. He doesn't believe Gibbons will give Dempsey as stiff an argument as Wills could, and nobody else who follows the fighting game belongs to it. However, so long as Wills plays the bashful boy and hides away in his Harlem flat, he is going to find himself pushed further and farther away from a bout for the title and he continually discredited in the fashion above mentioned.
Carpentier Kayos Nilles
Duris, May 7.—Georges Carpentier, former white heavyweight champion of France, demonstrated that he is not "all in" by knocking out Marcel Nilk in the round, the bout here yesterday, and is reported to be anxious to stage a return bout with Sikh.
SELLING
YO
2,000 B
ARMY
U. S. U
ARMY and N
THE AFRO-AMERICAN SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923 Call Vernon 6016
SPORTSMIRROR
BY AFRO SPORTS EDITOR
Floyd Johnson's manager is reported to have offered Harry Wills $1,000 for the mere little ceremony of signing his Johnny Hancock to a set of articles to square off in the near future with the Iowa "white hope." Yeh, the Kaiser still believes Germany can lick the Allies.
Chairman Wm. Mulloon of the New York State Athletic Commission is on the pan for his allege arbitrary manipulation of the powers residing in his position.
The chairmist, it will be recalled, is the same person issued an敛委 demanding Jack Dempsey to accept Harry Wills' challenge last fall, or be invited from participation in an敛委 meeting when a free access late, donated on its trucks and accrued the bout could not be held in New York because its assignment would miss out on the best interest of the sport.
This decision of the shifty chairmist is generally regarded as the chief stumbling block that prohibits promoters from putting up bids for a Dempsey-Wills scrap. All of when if true, leads us to megaphone the painners to give the are an extra stir for us.
Jess Willard and Eileen Johnson are scheduled to present a recently meeting match in New York Saturday for the benefit of the Stellar team.
Tis a noble deed, is this effort to assist in trying to save the babies. However, it has been rumored that these pigstyle (?) humanitarian will pocket a few coins as the reward of their noble deed are they take their final leave of the promoter of the Africa which as far as we are concerned gives the milk a sort of sour taste.
We hold no brief for the reported extravagance of Jack Johnson. The golden shower that rained upon him is said to have all been washed down the sewer of high living. This rumor has a subject for a long term by spouses for a long time who intend to prove that what Johnson was doing was the result of his gaelic origin.
Now comes the report that Jim Jeffries, the man whom Johnson defeated for the world title has lost his fortune and is "on his uppers" as the saying goes. Jeffries made thousands of dollars during his ring career and in his battle with Johnson, he pulled down the greater part of the $270,775.00 purse.
When Jeffries lost the title he retired and bought a ranch, and his apologists hasten now to tell an uninteresting world that he lost his fortune through bad management. Well, they certainly must admit that Johnson lost his by bad management also.
With Charles West, crowned the king of American athletes for this year of grace 1922; Ned Gourdin, holding the world's broad jump record, De Hart Hubbard holding the national hop, step and jump and broad jump records and Earl Johnson clutching the national five-mile title; things are not so worse for the race in the way of sports. All we lack now is the Biting of the heavyweight crown from the brow of Dempsey by Wills to make it a "day."
A communication has been sent to our desk reputed to be the sentiment of 400 baseball fans complaining about the failure of the managers of the Black Sox club to keep the seats in the park so that the spectators will not sell their clothing. Complaint is made against the employment of a white manager and other white men in various capacities around the park to do work that colored men ought to be doing as the park caters to colored patronage. We pass these complaints along to the management.
CHAMPIONSHIP TRACK MEET AT H.I. ON MAY 19
Gourdin, World's Champion
Jumper, To Give Exhibition. Many Schools
Entered
By GIDEON E. SMITH
Acting Physical Director, Hampton
Institute
Hampton, Va., May 10—Edward
O. Gourdin, world's record-holder
of the running jump—25
feet and 3 inches—will take part
in the second annual championship track and meet, which
will be held on Armstrong Field,
on Saturday, May 15, beginning
in Arrangements are also owing
made to bring other prominent
athletic stars to Hampton for
the meet.
These schools will enter: Virginia Union University, Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, St. Paul Normal and Industrial School, Bordentown Manual Training School of New Jersey, Dundee High School of Maryland; Dundee High School, Junior High School, and Armstrong High School, all of Washington, D. C.; Huntington High School of Newport News, Va., Booker T. Washington High School at Nortok, Va., and Norrum High School of Portsmouth, Va., Lincoln University of Pennsylvania, Livingstone College of Salisbury, C. W. Wilberforce University, Wilkesboro College of Knoxville, St. Augustine School of Raleigh, N. C., and Harrison High School of Roxanne, Va.
Lincoln, with her relay team fresh from its victory in the Pennsylvania relays, will be a strong contender for the relay cup trophy. The Howard relay team that made such a great show in Pennsylvania relays will be on hand to try to duplicate its feat of last year.
Keuben F. Jones of Hampton, is in season of the 1923 Hampton track team.
Youngstown, O., May 9.—The Youngstown Sent-Pro nine opened their season here Sunday by trimming the Homstead Grays, 7-5.
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Across All Frontiers The
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One Is Neil Thompson, Furrier Baltimore Bay, Who Will Fly N.Y. "U" Colors At Howard Meet
New York, May 9-20. In Digitally outs by the Montgomery High School Club for track membership, three colored candidates were successful.
Cecil Cook of Columbia University won the 440-yard run by a 20-yard lead; Charles Major, the junior national champion high jumper won this event by a jump of 6 ft.; Neil Thompson of Baltimore won the 100-yard dash his time being 10 sec. Joe Nush taking the 220-yard dash, his time being 22:45 sec.
Neil Thompson, who defeated Joe Rainey in Washington at the Howard University games will be again seen in action in the Howard meet on May 12, flying the colors of New York University. As the result of the recent form Thompson has been showing, he is being favored by the dopesters in sweep eyes, both of his other entry who is expected to show his heels to the field in the interscholastic 100-yard dash, is Randolph Taylor, the Stuyvesant High School dash.
HARRISBURG GIANTS
BEAT RICHMOND
Richmond, Va. May 9—The
Harrisburg Giants took the series
from the Richmond Giants last
week losing the first game 14-7,
winning the second 6-2 and the
third 3-1. Spotts won the game
Eduard "Ginger" Poles
Black Sox shortstop, is captain of
the Richmond Giants.
You Can Cure Your Rupture
Thousands of ruptured men and women will rejoice to know that Capt. Collins who was helpless and bed-ridden for years with double rupture will send for her all plan will by which she cured himself at home. Morely send your name and address to Captain W. A. Collings, Inc., Box 38011 Watertown, New York, where you may be worth a fortune. Hundreds have already cured themselves by just this free information.
1918
GOITRE
If you are suffering from goitre or enlargement of the thyroid gland, it would be wise for you to at once consult a competent Chiropractor. Cases are on record in which the circumference of the neck has diminished five inches during a period of three months. You should adjust the neck with a Chiropractor. Follow his advice rigidly and the chances are that your goitre will disappear when the cause has been adjusted.
Chiropractic spinal adjustments are bringing health to persons suffering from disorders of the head, throat, lungs, heart, stomach, liver, kidney, spleen, bowels and other organs of the body.
Your Health Begins When
You Call At My Office
CONSULTATION FREE
Catering To Colored People
DR. MALLETTE
CHIROPRACTOR
1841 Druid Hill Ave.
Entrance on Robert Street
Office Hours: 6 to 8:30 p. m.
"H" Awarded 10 Men
Hampton, Va., May "0—The following institute men have been awarded the varsity "H" in baseball: George A. Alexander, captain, Cynthiana, Ky; David L. Gunn, Stockbridge, Mass; Hiawatha Harris, Richmond, Va.; David B. Burrell, Ronoke, Va.; Joseph H. Jackson, Lynch Plains, Ky.; Borwyn J. Johnson, Lynch Plains, Ky.; John D. Jacobs, Elkton, Va.; Edward Hargrove, New York City; Arthur R. Ruffin, Cauthousville, Va.; St. Clair Robinson, Lee, Mass; Joseph H. Jackson, Lynch Mines Ky, has been elected captain of the baseball team for 1923-1924.
Relay White Sox Ready
Halethorpe, Md., May 9. —The Rehy White Sox have completed their spring training and are now ready to book games with all players. The team is the line-up: O. Smith, lb; B. Gray, c; F. Robinson, rf; J. Chambers, c; E. Myers, if; F. Jackson, 2; D. Garrett, f; E. Scott, p; O. Carter, p; H. Ross, f; W. Jack, c; W. Kyle, f; O. Olsen, c; Oks, p. For games, call Ekkrath-128 R. or write Jas. Chambers, Halethorpe, P. O., Md.
Scott, p; O.
W. Jack.
Smith, ss;
call Elk-
Jas, Cham-
Md.
Annals, 14
May 9.—The
Easter Term-
the Cuban
here last
month joining
the filled the
by Hugh-
cal broke it
AGAIN
According to
this week,
ier Buck, a
sville, Ky.
to fight on
am, Holland,
have been
Mutual Association of E
BASE
(Double
Sunday, May 13th,
MARYLAND BASEBAL
Baltimore
Brooklyn R
Monday, May 14th, one
Everybody out and be
Best Colored
Plenty of Good Seats
Cubans. 3; Terminals. 14
Rochester, Pa., May 9.—The nowly-organized Rochester Terminal team swamped the Cuban Giants of Pittsburg, Pa. here last Saturday 14-3. A ninth inning rally by the islanders filled the bases, but a double play by Hughie Danford and Caporal broke it.
New York, May 9—According to reports received here this week, Battling Siki and Soldier Buck, a middleweight of Louisville, Ky., have been matched to fight on in Amsterdam, Holland. The match is said to have been arranged by cable.
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NATHAN GOLDSTIEN, 577 N. Gay St.
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SIKI TO BATTLE AGAIN
Mutual Association of Eastern Colored Ball Clubs
BASEBALL
(Double Header)
Sunday, May 13th, first game, 2 o'clock
MARYLAND BASEBALL PARK, WESTPORT
Baltimore Black Sox
vs.
Brooklyn Royal Giants
Monday, May 14th, one game called at 4 o'clock
Everybody out and be a Booster for Baltimore's
Best Colored Baseball Team
Plenty of Good Seats New Bleacher Stands
Announcing ANOTHER ORIGINAL DUNLAP STYLE SETTER
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Sold by Dealers who specialize in Ultra-stylish footwear. If you do not know the address of the nearest Dunlap Dealer, write to us.
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Porto Rican Runners May Compete in Paris
(Preston News Service)
(Presston News Service)
Washington, D. C., May 11—Athletes from the Panama Canal zone may be America's hope in the marathon race to be held in Olympiad in 1924. During the recent memoirs of the 42nd infantry the jungles, several of the regiment's long distance men were detailed as runners to deliver messengers from the jungle camp to the divisional headquarters in Bailou.
The 42nd Infantry is composed of natives of Poto Rico, all naturalized Americans. Sargent Cabellero is the long distance runner and captain Charles Moño have finished a close second and third in recent races. Arrangements have been made by Homer Baker, former international champion midde distance runner, to conduct a marathon from truck to determine the possibilities of the soldier athletes.
A great shoe for playtime!
LINCOLN LIONS IN FOOTBALL PRACTICE
Initial Step by "Old Guard"
To Build Winning Team
for 1923 Season
BY I. J. K. WELLS
Lincoln, Pa., May 10.—Beginning with the first of May, in invigorating weather several of the Lion Eleven are taking spring football practice in order to work off some of the winter sluggishness. The practice is insistent and consists largely of rudimentary work such as snapping, punting and forward-passing.
Along with Captain "Whirwind Johnson" are half-back Lee and center Morgan who are exercising at punting, and Lancaster who is mocking forward-passes.
Last autumn Coach Law was confronted with the difficulty of building his backfield out of inexperienced material. This year this will be different, for all of last year's team will loss only three men.
He light spring training comes as a result of the efforts of the Lincoln "Old Guards", especially Graduate Manager Dr. W. C. Alexander.
It is believed that these practices will aid in eliminating a few weaknesses, and lie particular fumbling and imperfect passes.
J. STEWARD DAVIS Attorney and Counsellor
EDITOR
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
Con. of Civic Welfare and the S
Every Friday in the Afro-American Building
P.O. Box 141, Md. by the AFRO-AMERICAN COMPANY
H. Murphy, Editor and Publisher, 1896 to
President
D. AINETT MURPHY
on rates: $2.00 per year, $1.25 for six month
payable in advance). Foreign Advertising
Company, 608 Dearborn street, Chicago; 321 W.
Motton Building, New York.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
A Champion of Civic Welfare and the Square Deal
Published every Friday in the Afro-American Building, 628 N. Eutaw
street, Baltimore, Md. by the AFRO-AMERICAN COMPANY.
John H. Murphy, Editor and Publisher, 1896 to 1922
CARL MURPHY, President
D. ANNET MURPHY, Treasurer
Subscription rates: $2.00 per year. $1.25 for six months, 75 cents for
three months (joyable in advance). Foreign Advertising Representative:
W. B. Ziff Company, 608 Dearborn street, Chicago; 321 Victor Building,
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Member Associated Negro Press
'Phone: VErnon 6016-6017
What The "AFRO" Stands For
1. Colored policemen, policewomen
2. Colored representatives on city education.
3. Equal salaries for equal work for to color or sex.
4. Colored members on board of S are colored.
5. The organization of labor union workers.
6. A university and agricultural o ported by the State.
7. Closer co-operation between farm farm agents.
policemen, policewomen and firemen representatives on city, county and S salaries for equal work for school teachers members on board of State institutions organization of labor unions among all gro university and agricultural college for colore State. co-operation between farmers and the Sta
2. Colored representatives on city, county and State board of education.
3. Equal salaries for equal work for school teachers without regard to color or sex.
4. Colored members on board of State institutions where inmates are colored.
5. The organization of labor unions among all groups of colored workers.
6. A university and agricultural college for colored people supported by the State.
7. Closer co-operation between farmers and the State and Federal farm agents.
Mr. Jackson's Victory.
The clear-cut victory of Mr.ocratic candidate for Mayor was sterling city organization of the of the colored vote was also a fact. Estimating as accurately that from 7,000 to 10,000 color Democratic head of the ticket first time. The defection from the Red local and national dissatisfaction tunately this tidal wave carried the two colored councilmen. The AFRO-AMERICAN of who were courageous enough to also congratulates Mr. Jackson served and well earned.
car-cut victory of Mr. Howard Jack candidate for Mayor was due principally organization of the party, but the red vote was also a factor in the resting as accurately as possible, it, 1,000 to 10,000 colored people head of the ticket, many of thefection from the Republicans was tional dissatisfaction with that pars tidal wave carried down also to red councilmen. FRO-AMERICAN congratulates courageous enough to break partyulates Mr. Jackson upon a victo well earned.
The clear-cut victory of Mr. Howard Jackson, Democratic candidate for Mayor was due principally to the sterling city organization of the party, but the defection of the colored vote was also a factor in the result.
Estimating as accurately as possible, it is evident that from 7,000 to 10,000 colored people voted for the Democratic head of the ticket, many of them for the first time.
The defection from the Republicans was due to the local and national dissatisfaction with that party. Unfortunately this tidal wave carried down also to defeat also the two colored councilmen.
The AFRO-AMERICAN congratulates the voters who were courageous enough to break party lines, and also congratulates Mr. Jackson upon a victory well deserved and well earned.
Plasterers and Lathers.
Local contractors here in B plasterers and lathers at wages per day. The cause of this unscarcity of this kind of labor. That this condition, accord throughout this section of the course that many colored your assurance of sure employment a
contractors here in Baltimore are lads and lathers at wages ranging from the cause of this unusually high wage his kind of labor. This condition, according to report this section of the country shows the many colored young men might sure employment and excellent w
Local contractors here in Baltimore are begging for plasterers and lathers at wages ranging from $10 to $12 per day. The cause of this unusually high wage is the scarcity of this kind of labor. That this condition, according to reports, obtain throughout this section of the country shows that here is a calling that many colored young men might enter with assurance of sure employment and excellent wages.
Publicity and the South.
The more the relentless se-
turned on the peonage, mob law-
tion in the South, the quicker wi-
There have always been in the
women who, altho they did not
injustices perpetrated about the
their own affairs with silent c
these men and women must face
condemnation throughout the
these brutal facts, they finally s
needed reforms.
In world conferences dur-
statesmen from this country h
prestige seriously handicapped
shameful domestic conditions.
we are looked upon as a nati-
preaches democracy and brother
grossest infringements of hum-
brutal miscarriage of justice to
wealth.
There can be no doubt t
lynching, peonage, and the Ku K
ground for much of the success
in combatting them.
more the relentless searchlight of the peonage, mob law and convict law, the quicker will these outrages always been in that section man altho they did not approve the unperpetrated about them, went supraffairs with silent condonement, and women must face a horror-striking throughout the world caused by facts, they finally set to work to forms. Old conferences during the last from this country have found ourselves handicapped by the public domestic conditions. In many forced upon as a nation which hypocrisy and brotherhood while wringements of human rights and arraignment of justice to flourish in our can be no doubt that the public peonage, and the Ku Klux Klan form much of the success that has been ing them.
The more the relentless searchlight of publicity is turned on the peonage, mob law and convict labor question in the South, the quicker will these outrages cease.
There have always been in that section many men and women who, altho they did not approve the unspeakable injustices perpetrated about them, went supinely about their own affairs with silent condonement. But when these men and women must face a horror-stricken public condemnation throughout the world caused by baring these brutal facts, they finally set to work to make long needed reforms.
In world conferences during the last few years, statesmen from this country have found our national prestige seriously handicapped by the publicity given shameful domestic conditions. In many foreign offices we are looked upon as a nation which hypocritically preaches democracy and brotherhood while we allow the grossest infringements of human rights and the most brutal miscarriage of justice to flourish in our commonwealth.
There can be no doubt that the publicity given lynching, peonage, and the Ku Klux Klan form the background for much of the success that has been met with in combatting them.
Boys! Boys! Boys!
The very excellent showing in the Boys' Week parade last sign that we are coming to recog specific program to develop the boys of the race.
While they missed some Boys' Week so valuable in stimul in this parade they marched wi held heads and smiling enthusiasm of Boys' Week becomes more amo he included more generally in the
by excellent showing made by our Week parade last Wednesday is are coming to recognize the imporram to develop the widest possibil race. e they missed some of the features also valuable in stimulating ambition she they marched with trained pre and smiling enthusiasm.. As the week becomes more appreciated our more generally in the civic feature or to inspire them early in life, the for white boys included their se
The very excellent showing made by our 1,600 boys in the Boys' Week parade last Wednesday is a hopeful sign that we are coming to recognize the importance of a specific program to develop the widest possibilities of the boys of the race.
While they missed some of the features that make Boys' Week so valuable in stimulating ambition and hope, in this parade they marched with trained precision, upheld heads and smiling enthusiasm. As the importance of Boys' Week becomes more appreciated our boys should be included more generally in the civic features.
In order to inspire them early in life, the program of Boys' Week for white boys included their serving temporarily in many civic and business capacities. Something, at least, should be done along this line for Negro boys who must some day play their part in the city's life.
We cannot keep too prominently before us the fact that we owe our greatest amount of energy to the proper development of the youth. They are the unwritten poetry, the unsung songs, the undeveloped achievement and hope of the race.
Labor's Amalgamation Fight.
The intelligent guidance of the Negro worker through the many conflicts without and within the labor movement in this community is a most important problem today. Like all movements of oppressed groups there are extremes in conservatism and radicalism. Within the movement there are radical syndicalists and communists on the one hand, and conservative standpatters on the other.
One of the battles now being fought out within the ranks is that of the amalgamation of all labor union crafts. The effect of amalgamation as applied to labor struggles is to tie up the interests of all crafts so that they will be compelled to support jointly the fight of any union. Bricklayers will be called out, for instance, whenever there is a carpenters' strike, and vice versa.
The extent to which the labor movement is taking hold of the Negro group is wider than most leaders realize, and obviously, it is the radical element in the labor movement that is working most arduously to enlist the Negro workers in its program.
In a recent meeting of a local colored labor union a delegate was sent to the meeting of the Trade Union Educational League, which convenes in New York City Sunday, the wing of the organization that is fighting for amalgamation of all labor unions into one big union. The tendency of oppressed labor groups throughout the world to subordinate their racial and local differences to the bigger labor struggle opens the question as to how far this labor struggle will become a factor in solving the social problems of the world.
16
CALL VERNON 6016
MERICAN
Round the Square Bldg.
American Building, 628 N. B.
BIGAN COMPANY.
Publisher, 1896 to 1922
D. ANNETT MURPHY, Tree
for six months, 75 cen-
ters on Advertising Represen-
tation Chicago; 321 Victor Buil
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
O. T's RHEUMATIZ IS MUCH WUSSER
Wife Voted for Broening and Thereby Loses A New Hat
BOYS' WEEK
porter in
dis-
turns
ralty
out the
open-
space
"My
that got a
you
or?"
The reporter found 'Old Timer in a group on Central Ave. animatedly discussing the returns from the Mayoral election.
"Good," I wuz out busting from the time the polls opened until they closed," he said. "My only regret is that my rhamnus got a little wuzer. My why don't you see a doctor?" someone asked.
"I wuz up to see Doc Bernie Hughes this mawkin, but he's now so busy 'tendin' patients in their homes and operatin' that he's home alone. I guess I'll have to go oval to Hayes' drug store, or some snake oil."
"Well, what do you think about th election?" the reporter asked. "It suits me all right," responded O. T. I worked hard for Howard Jackson and wuz glad to see so many of our folks refuse to ride 'round' by elephant to be with us until fall comes and you'll see me cut up some divided. We've started to divide our votes and we want to keep them divided. The debt we owed Abelkumm wuz paid long ago."
"How did your wife vote?" the reporter asked.
"She stuck it out for Penny! till the last and as I have to eat and sleep in the same house with her I had to prevent a ruction," answered O. T. "She won't git new hat, howsome as, I'm goin' to take the money oath right away to Sam Burton's and spend it on myself in his reduction sale."
"Did you see the colored children in the Boy's Week Parade?" O. T. was asked.
"Don't ask me," he replied, "I seen 'em and I been mad over since. I stood myself downtown 'twill my bones ached waterlin' for the coluld boys in line and I watched 'em carefully when they pass." I told what was wrong with them? asked the reporter.
"Everything" answered O. T. "Any fule could see that. Did you see any boy dressed up to look like Crispus Attenus, what fell first and spilled his blood in the Revolution?"
"No I did not" answered the reporter.
"Shet up" said O. T. rolled" and wait till finish. Did you see any signs in the prade sayin' 400 of us Fort McHenry to keep the Britishers out of Baltimore in 1812, or thousands of we Baltimore collud folks heaped put sandbags around Baltimore in 1818 when we the rebel's goin' to take Washington and come on up to Baltimore?
"Did you see any signs anywhere that Fred Doughless, Maryland's black boy was one of the outlaws forimmins the suffrage, that Benjamin Banneker made the fust clock and hepped to buy Washington?"
"Did you see any signs what said how many of us fit with Roosevelt in Cuba or with Pershing in France? Did you see any boys dressed up like Booker T. Washington with a sign sayin' he was the father of industrial education in the Nineteen States? You see signs sayin' that for 250 American folks is helped to build America, and that we did it without pay?"
"I saw Bill Anderson's and Mrs Rolman's schools"—said the reporter.
"Don't answer me, boy," interrupted O. T. "Either you is seen what I afore said or you isn't. If you is seen it, then you is seen what wasn't, and if you isn't seen it, then you isn't, and if you aren't done with 'aggririn' to that there parade 'colud folks isn't done a thing since they've been born, that's worth writin' about or worth personatin'."
"But—" said the reporter, "the boys marched well." "Marchin' ain't showin', is it? Futhermo' tain't never no excuse for bad manners or failures, for fashing with a withering look. Old Timer hobbled down Central Avenue with his nose turned up.
Maybe She'll Stand For It
A youth marched leisurely into the office of his employer. "Ise gwann enck the job, boss," he said, grinning broadly. "Going to quit? Well, this is pretty sudden. Washington. What's the latter? Don't you like your position? "Yas, that's all right, but"—
"Yes, that's all right, but—
"Isn't your salary large enough?"
Yes."
"Work too heavy for you?"
"No."
"Get any money ahead?"
"Yes."
"Got a home?"
"Yas. A four-room house." "Write a check out for $50 for this man's wedding present," said the boss to the clerk. "The stretched across the youth's face which may have represented a blush."
"Raise his wages to $5 a week and give him seven days off."
"Sorry, boss, but I can't accept nothin' but your wedding present. Use retiring from business. You see my wife's gonna take in washin'."
Monkey Business
Recently a mother and her daughter were looking at the animals in the Bronx Zoo. When they came to see the monkey, they were quired, "Mother, doesn't that monkey look like Uncle Joe?" "Hush, my dear," replied the lady, "you must never say such things." "But the monkey can't understand, are you?"
SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST WEEKLY BALTIMORE, MAY 11, 1923
UNION
Uncle Sam to colored soldier: In war you died for America. In peace you also die. Is it not so?—Reprinted from a German comic magazine by the "Literary Digest."
Did You Know:
The African Civilization Society, offered and managed by Negroes open schools in Washington in
Items From The Afro-American
Of May 10, 1908
The Negro Baptists through the National Baptist Convention organized a foreign mission board in 1880. Missionary work carried on in five countries. They have on themmission field fifty-one stations, eighty-three out-stations, forty-three in-stations. There are forty-three native workers and 451 other helpers. The communicants number 14,760.
"Talkies"
Appear Here
Actual talking pictures continue to draw large crowds to the Holiday Street Theatre. The talking of these pictures is not done by people but by a cameraphone, a talking machine and a photograph. The performance is continuous from 1 p. m. to 11 p. m.
A little over forty years ago, on Easter Day, 1877, a boat set out amid the cheering and gospel-hymn singing of thousands of Negroes in an attempt to establish a Negro nation in Africa, to have its son of government in Liberia. Negroes support 238 vaudeville and 611 motion picture houses in 21 states.
Y.M.C.A.
The S. Coleridge Taylor Choral Society will present Taylor's greatest work, "Atomement," a musical on Thursday evening, May 21st, at Allough's Theater, for the benefit of the Y. M. C. A.
Noble M. Johnson is the most noted moving picture actor of the race. He has had years of experience, he has been employed by the largest moving picture company in the world.
Sermon to
St. Lukes
The annual sermon of the G. U.
O. of St. Luke will be preached an
Trinity A. M. E. Church, May 17th,
by Rev. J. O. Custis Mr. Jas, W.
Frey is R. W. G. chief.
His Visiting Card
A colored man entered the foyer of a prominent banking house and was confronted by the doorman one of his race.
Conference
"I want to see Mr.——," said the visitor, naming a partner.
General Conference of the M. E. Church opened at the Lyric Theater. Dr. J. W. E. Bowen and Dr. W. C. R. Mason were candidates for bishop. The A. M. E. General Conference opened at Nortford, Va. Five bishops were to be elected.
The doorman fixed him with a supercilious stare and asked him to leave the parcel or letter with him.
The caller merely reiterated the question, so the Gerberus of the firm sarcastically asked for his visiting card.
Nothing damned, the visitor pulled off bills with a thousand-dollar denomination on top and remarked that he thought that would get him through. He also handed a letter addressed to the partner.
Gates and Pope open up a new
door where Carey and Pressl
mannequin
In a few minutes he was in the private office. He was the representative of a Harlem religious organization and he brought $42,000 in cash to invest in bonds—Wall Street Journal.
Brown's Grove
Open
' Captain George Brown advertised that the Steamer Starlight ready for trips to the Grove or May 21. Pitts Electric Park was also open.
ENCOURAGEMENT
Will you ever take a tumble
And never stop to grumble
Just because you chanced to
Odd African Tribe
The El Molo "Poor Devil" are a small and little-known tribe, dwell on islands close to the east shore of Lake Itukolow, in East Africa, and are a community of about 70 souls under the leadership of a blind chief.
'Cross a stick? ...
'Tis a fact I've been observin'....
If we get what we're observin'
Half the time we'd be acurvin'
'Gainst a brick!'
Eva A. Jessye
They construct the poorest type of shelter from leaves of the Dom Dom palm. Their sole food is fish, which they occasionally spear, but more often catch in course-meshed fiber nets; their only drink is the vile soda-impregnated water of the lake.
Yesterday you had a song
I could not choose but hear.
Twas 'Oh to be in England
Now that April's there!
The El Moro are almost amphibious, and are apparently unable to go for more than an hour without water, for after that time their lips swell up and start bleeding. They have their own language.
A SIGN OF EXCELLENCE
---
"Mammy Cartoon" and a poem by John H. Wise, from the AFRO-AMERICAN of March 30th. The cartoon was from the pen of James F. Watson, creator of the excruciatingly funny comic strip, Amos Hokum, which, together with cartoons of a more serious type, appear regularly in the AFRO. "Little Jim Watson" is also known for the "colyum" of humor which appears every week on the Editorial page.
TOMMY HENRY
The best cartoons, the best editorials and the best news articles are culled from the press of the country and reprinted each week in the Literary Digest. The Literary Digest for April 28th, reprinted the
KELLY MILLER SAYS
New Tuskegee Hospital John Mitchell
Tuskegee's New Hospital
Tuskegee spells opportunity initiative and self-direction, endeavor to inspire the Negro to sail under his own six experts to conduct and direct great institution.
The doubting ones said chinery of a great plant to N. They told us that a Negro wred the absurdity.
The seed of self-suffering forth fruit unto its contiguous. The one who believe in him.
The philanthropists of Washington's self-directive pendow the experiment.
Hampton, the pet phi idea of white people work the plan of Negroes work.
This is the spirit and we agreed to cooperate toward What Dr. Washington under assured in the light of experiment in the mind of the rai Dr. Moton the worthy saturator, has caught a double will stand forever as the emprise of the Negro, for the one In fulfillment of this idea Booker T. Washington, the hospital for Negro soldiers of the ill illustrious founder, that the personnel of this he to it was to be colored.
But the army taste predisce is stronger. There is which no Negro is supposed to aspire to become an off color. This imperious percept During the war there understanding among arm-colored men to enter their ruthless elimination of not feel in his inner soul War were discounted and policy.
A hundred Negro physician government concern, with rai would frustrate the idea of Negro makes an ideal com above the ranks. The South of the specacle of Negroes This is contrary to The issue was sharply drrolling staff be white or pedestal reeared by Booker and down strait. He show He was reinforced by the Henry Lincoln Johnson.
President Harding desprotestation of the army the President has added great the Negro by this compoere recent years has presented brought such gain to the rai Through the scientific physicians and surgeons will and surreal opportunity the Negro physicians and surgeon be necessary to make this colatilous. The profession If there is a spark of so it will be keenly anxious pride and race loyalty so profession to serve cheer commanded.
Shame upon that sent because the location is South physician to carry his mini human suffering. The scientist in guest of satisfaction. Depute or social restrictions.
What Negro physician title spirit and race loyalty unity of Tuskegee?
the spells opportunity. It stands for Negro and self-direction. Mr. Washington devoted himself to inspire the Negro with self-confidence and the under his own steam. He searched out and conduct and direct all of the complicated operation.
bringing ones said that it was dangerous to enter a great plant to Negro engineers. Dr. Washington that a Negro architect was an absurd, Tuskegee. Used of self-sufficiency sown by the scent of North fruit unto an abundant harvest. Self-sufficient. The one who believes in himself will mind him.
Philanthropists of the North were so impressed with self-directive philosophy that they gladly experiment. Anton, the per philanthropic ideal, was based on people working for Negroes; Tuskegee耕 of Negroes working for themselves. The spirit and genius of Tuskegee. The two cooperate towards the fulfilment of this Washington underook as an experiment, has the light of experience. The idea has taken mind of the race.
On the worthy successor of the great founder, taught a double measure of his spirit. The forever as the embodiment of the ideal of a Negro, for the Negro and by the Negro. Amendment of this ideal and in compliment to Washington, the Federal Government has placed Negro soldiers under the shadow of the livingorious founder. It must have been taken on counsel of this hospital like the Tuskegee self to be colored.
Army case prejudice is strong and Southernanger. There is an understated caste line. Negro is supposed to cross. He must not be become an officer, even to command men imperious pervasive is reserved for white. The war there seems to have been a sort ofiding among army officers to discredit the men to enter their grade and rank. How cancess elimination of Colonel Young? What can in his inner soul that Negro officers during discounted and discredited as a part of a colored Negro physicians in charge of a three-concern, with rank, title and degree of high rank an ideal common soldier, but must not be. The South consistently enough dreaded breach of Negroes occupying high official status contrary to their social and political was sharply drawn. Shall the operating staff be white or colored? Major Moton stop reinforced by the political influences marshal Lincoln Johnson, national committeeman from Harding deserves great credit for which of the army prejudices and Southern passivity has added greatly to his prestige among and why this conspicuous act. No Presidential petitions has presented so much chargin and at which gain to the race.
With the scientific facilities of this institution and surgeons will be put in touch with the great opportunity that modern medical appliances and surgeons should halk at no sacrifice to make this experiment a success. Faith. The profession could never recover from there is a spark of race patriotism in the men he keep anxious to meet the challenge. If race loyalty should require any qualified men to serve cheerfully in whatever capacity and union that sentiment which would decline location is South. The healing instinct in carry his ministration of medicine where caring. The scientific spirit heeds no hindering satisfaction. Devotion to race cannot halk at real restrictions. Physician with the true therapeutic in and race loyalty can fail to respond to the Tuskegee?
Tuskegee spells opportunity. It stands for Negro enterprise, initiative and self-direction. Mr. Washington devoted his highest endeavor to inspire the Negro with self-confidence and the determination to sail under his own steam. He searched out and found Negro experts to conduct and direct all of the complicated operations of this great institution.
The doubling ones said that it was dangerous to entrust the machinery of a great plant to Negro engineers. Dr. Washington did it. They told us that a Negro architect was an absurdity, Tuskegee refused the absurdity.
The seed of self-sufficiency sown by the seer of Tuskegee is bringing forth fruit unto an abundant harvest. Self-confidence is contagious. The one who believes in himself will make others believe in him.
The philanthropists of the North were so impressed with Dr. Washington's self-directive philosophy that they gladly consented to endow the experiment.
Hampton, the pet philanthropic ideal, was based upon the idea of white people working for Negroes; Tuskegee proceeds on the plan of Negroes working for themselves.
This is the spirit and genius of Tuskegee. The two races have agreed to cooperate towards the fulfillment of this great ideal. What Dr. Washington undertook as an experiment, has now become assured in the light of experience. The idea has taken firm lodgment in the mind of the race.
Dr. Moton the worthy successor of the great founder and originator, has caught a double measure of his spirit. This institution will stand forever as the embodiment of the ideal of a great enterprise of the Negro, for the Negro and by the Negro.
In fulfillment of this ideal and in compliment to the genius of Booker T. Washington, the Federal Government has planted the base hospital for Negro soldiers under the shadow of the living monument of the illustrious founder. It must have been taken for granted that the personnel of this hospital like the Tuskegee school next door to it was to be colored.
But the army castle prejudice is strong and Southern race prejudice is stronger. There is an understood castle line in the army which no Negro is supposed to cross. He must not be encouraged to aspire to become an officer, even to command men of his own color. This imperious pervasive is reserved for white men.
During the war there seems to have been a sort of masonic understanding among army officers to discredit the attempt of colored men to enter their grade and rank. How can we forget the ruthless elimination of Colonel Young? What Negro does not feel in his inner soul that Negro officers during the World War were discounted and discredited as a part of a calculated policy.
A hundred Negro physicians in charge of a three million dollar government concern, with rank, title and degree of high army officials would frustrate the idea of race aristocracy in army circles. The Negro makes an ideal common soldier, but must not aspire to rise above the ranks. The South consistently enough dreads the example of the sneakiness of Negro occupying high official stations.
This is contrary to their social and political philosophy. The issue was sharply drawn. Shall the operating and controlling staff be white or colored? Major Moton stood upon the pedestal ceased by Bookee T. Washington, four source, unright and down strait. He showed courage in the superlative degree. He was reinforced by the political influences manipulated by Henry Lincoln Johnson, national committeeman from Georgia. President Harding deserves great credit for withstanding the protestation of the army prejudices and Southern passion. Indeed the President has added greatly to his prestige among and claim upon the Negro by this courageous act. No Presidential performance in recent years has presented so much chagrin and at the same time brought such gain to the race.
Through the scientific facilities of this institution, the Negro physicians, and surgeons will be put in touch with the best clinical and surgical opportunity that modern medical appliances can afford. Negro physicians and surgeons should balk at no sacrifice which may be necessary to make this experiment a success. Failure would be calamitous. The profession could never recover from the blow.
If there is a spark of race patriotism in the medical profession it will be keenly anxious to meet the challenge. Professional pride and race topiety should require any qualified member of the profession to serve cheerfully in whatever capacity he may be commanded.
Shame upon that sentiment which would decline assignment because the location is South. The healing instinct impels the true physician to carry his ministration of medicine wherever there is human suffering. The scientific spirit heeds no hindering conditions in quest of satisfaction. Devotion to race cannot balk at lines of latitude or social restrictions.
What Negro physician with the true therapeutic instinct, scientific spirit and race loyalty can fail to respond to the newer opportunity of Tuskegee?
The Afro-American Leads
The Afro-American rep
Negro race. It is in the U
so far has found its highest
The Haritan and the
ment; but the bindering
the people as a mass have
In South America, the Al
sema of color, and colors
element by which it is co
counter is many degrees be
the black contingent is left
to its Northern brothers, al
and social disabilities.
The colored element in
o-American represents the most advanced state. It is in the United States that the trans- found its highest development. Havitan and the Liberian have acquired so the bindering conditions have home so he as a mass have not yet been lifted to the de- America, the African contingent is relieved color, and colors substantial equality with the which it is enforced; but the general he many degrees below that of the United State contingent is inferior in education and sore brothers, although it is weighed with m disabilities.租ed element in the West Indies is held o by the cunning colonial policy which Great Britain to manipulate. The white man in the United States especial credit for the relative degree man within his cates. The dominant moti- oblation. All else has been incidental to it. An overruling Providence makes the wrath while holding the remainder of wrath in res
The Afro-American represents the most advanced section of the Negro race. It is in the United States that the transplanted race so far has found its fullest development.
The Haitian and the Liberian have acquired self-government; but the hindering conditions have borne so heavily that the people as a mass have not yet been lifted to the desired level. In South America, the African contingent is relieved from the stigma of color and enjoys substantial equality with the European element by which it is environed; but the general life of that country is many degrees below that of the United States, so that the black continent is inferior in education and social progress to its Northern brothers, although it is weighed with no political and social disabilities.
The colored element in the West Indies is held down to the lower level by the cunning colonial policy which Great Britain knows so well how to manipulate. The white man in the United States does not deserve any essential credit for the relative degree of progress of the black man within his gates. The dominant motive has been economic exculpation. All also has been incidental to this control purpose. An overruling Providence makes the wrath of man to praise him while holding the remainder of wrath in restraint.
Mitchell, so the dispatches tell us, has been a harry for mismanagement of the Mechanics, S. of us who know John can hardly believe the undaunted hero of Richmond for mankind's of his mind, and the movements of a not believe that there is a dishonest men- must be some error or mistake or misunder- us hope the higher courts will disclose, a full of this awful sigma. For a long gener- stood unfinishedly before the people of Wichita as an upright, courageous citizen who is no man. Only of the race hangs breathless upon the times triumphant over our fears.
John Mitchell, so the dispatches tell us, has been sentenced to the nonliquency for mismanagement of the Mechanics, Savings Bank. Those of us who know John can hardly believe the report. I have known the undaunted hero of Richmond for many years. I know the workings of his mind, and the movements of his imagination. I do not believe that there is a dishonest member in his make up.
There must be some error or mistake or misunderstanding, which let us hope the higher courts will disclose, and relieve Mr. Mitchell of this awful stigma. For a long generation John Mitchell has stood unfinishedly before the people of Virginia, and of the nation as an upright, courageous citizen who loved God and feared no man.
The anxiety of the race hones breathless upon the final verdict, with our hopes triumphant over our fears.
The Negro Migrant
no migrant moves with the birds. Northwest southward in the Fall. In both instances the peoples everywhere move from regions of low wages as the water downward or the snow motives enter, but economic consideration or polley is always shortslicated. The social crisis of the world are due to coercion. The love of money is the pool of all evil. Being under a burden of heavy oppression in much seeks the easiest means of escape. You would require that we consider the fills to be those whose sting we feel. We would consider calmly and inflictiously the contort fifty years. Whether it would not be fifty years. Whether it would not be he would take to the farries which are he with South, East and West. Whether the one of the race is not better adapted to agrivoltaic activities. Race statesmanship must ponder details.
The Negro migrant moves with the birds. Northward in the Spring and Southward in the Fall. In both instances the motive is economic. Dozens everywhere move from regions of lower to regions of higher wages as the water flows downward or the sparks fly upwards. Other motives enter, but economic considerations dominate. The economic policy is always shortsighted.
Half of the social evils of the world are due to economic shortsightedness. The love of money is the root of all evil. The poor Negro laboring under a burden of heavy oppression in the South naturally enough seeks the easiest means of escape. But a wiser philosophy would require that we consider theills to which we fly as well as those whose sting we feel.
We should consider calmly and lucidly the condition of for the next fifty years. Whether it would not be wiser if a for the next fifty years. Whether it would not be wiser if a greater number would take to the farms which are being abandoned. North, South, East and West. Whether the opportunity and genius of the race is not better adapted to agricultural than to urban activities. Race statesmanship must ponder deeply over their problems.
ERIC
John Mitchell
A
the long-distance dance championship being settled. Oliver Allison has his way to another record. Idaho, Iowa, and Illinois boiled eggs, oats, slice of bread, and a bowl of ice cream. At Arlington, Illinois, this established a new record.
for egg-eating. It is doubtful if even a houseconstrictor could beg it.
The pear tree buds and most of the blooms were all killed by the last hard freeze, but the dandelions have come through in fine shape.
Two full moons in April indicate a large crop of weddings this June.
Don't look for trouble unless you know what to do with it when you find it.
The nice thing about being a man is you don't have to kiss somebody that needs a shave—Nashville, Tennessee.
"You dirty boy," said the teacher. "Why don't you wash your face? I can see what you had for breakfast this morning."
"What was it?"
"Eggs?"
"Wrong. That was yesterday."
Ruth Gasson, 4, in her mother arms, was struck by an auto, compulsed in the air, come down the windshield and landed on the seat beside the driver with only a tiny scratch on her rear seat mast.
Miss Mary Meeker, Brooklyn, N.Y., wins a prize for hands pronounced by judges the most beautiful in America. They are 6½ inches long and 3 wide. Here is Miss Meeker's beauty secret for perfect hands—mothers should frame it: Miss Meeker lets no one else wash the dishes.
"Willie, give our inside of the bones."
"To keep our inside in and to protect the brain and other cavities."
Night-time crowing by Mrs. Symmon's big Plymouth Rock rooster brought two Denver women into police court. "Mrs. Symmon's," said the judge, "I don't you or order you to destroy your Plymouth Rock. But I will order you to insecure that bird in a box of large enough pouches to be stable big enough to permit the 6-inch stretch of the body that I have found a rooster of that size requires before he crow." Could Solomon have done better than that.
Having celebrated Be Kind to animals Week and Kinar Your School Week, we and the crowd is not come in House Cleaning Week to be followed later, perhaps, by Eat a Pound of Prunes Party.
The experience of the California boy who dislocates in the rock while washing the house confirm the widely held opinion of other small boys concerning the inadvisability of any such effort.
Say dye notice how police the coal man is getting?
I see they found a skull five thousand years old. It was petrified and solid. How little man has changed in that time.
Be it ever so honestly, there's no face like your own.
It's easy to please a woman after you find out what she wast but find out.
Average man just must make some kind of a fool out of himself so he falls in love.
It's all right to meet trouble half way, but let it go at that.
Sure is strange some men kick most where they get treated best—at home.
ASK AMOS
Dear Amos: What is the dangerous age? Oscar Sapp. Sanofiusk O.
Ans. This is
Dear old Hoke; Why do they call a "Leftover" woman a grass widow? I. B. S. Rackett Ridge, Tex.
Ans. Search me! Most of them are far from green.
My Friend Amos; Is it proper to call her "Leftover"? Eddie D. Luge, St. Chair, Pa.
Ans. Of course not. Use a scoop shovel.
CARE OF THE TEETH
The teeth should be brushed at least a month.
Never bite into anything containing horseshoe nails or cast iron.
Don't allow anyone to hit you in the mouth with a brisk as this is painful.
Keep away from dentists as they find great pleasure in depriving you of your teeth.
O. Juicy Jones
SAYS.
Little Fannie
Cline ran to tell
her mother that
Willie said his
prayers and he
ain't sick, or
nothin'.
"Yes."
said the mother.
"you must say
your prayers too,
if you want to go
to Heaven."
Little Fannie Cline run to tell her mother that Willie said his prayers and he ain't sick, or nothin'." "Yes," said the mother "you must say your prayers too if you want to go to Heaven." "Well," says Fannie, "you don't say yourn 'cepen you're sick." Mrs. Claude Orchid, sain for divorce on the grounds of desertion was asked when she saw her husband last. She said, "As well as I can remember, not since th' third or fourth time that Villa was kill-
290 Copyright, M. Holloway Bath. Nashville, Tenn.