The Afro-American
Saturday, November 7, 1925
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
SUES
EXTRA
35th YEAR Number 9
WILLS $100,000 TO TOWN, ONLY SISTERS, $500
Bronze Coffin And 2,000
Funeral For John Underhill, Mays Landing, N. J.
WHOLE VILLAGE OUT FOR THE LAST RITES
Hundreds In Tears; Keep Body Out Of Jim Crow Cemetery
Mays Landing, N. J.-John W. Underhill, supposedly poor candy-shop keeper here, died last week leaving $100,000 to the town but only $500 to each of his two sisters.
The whole town of 2,500 persons, all white, turned out for the funeral last Saturday which was held in the Atlantic County court, room Three, a Nebiotist, and a Catholic, conducted the services afterward Interrupted the body in Union Cemetery, not the jim cree section reserved for colored folks but in a place of honor among the white folk where a granite monument is to be erected over his grave.
Underhill's will had been down five years ago. Nobody ever klim seriously. He was the only colored man in town and he put 60 years old when he died.
As a business he kept a candy store catering strictly to school children.
The town largely of Ku Klux persuasion was astonished Thursday morning when it read on the front page of the local paper of his death and learned that he had left practically all of the town's school gymnasium and a fountain in the public park.
With this word spread abroad they immediately intertwined the deceased with the town's legal rights in the courthouse and covered the front of the room with hundreds of floral offerings.
Villagers broke down and wept during a service.
A joint chair from the three churches of the village sang "Lead Kindly Light" and "Able With Me." Women went and children looked at the officers and men bowed their heads.
For John Underhill had been fooling them all the time he had been suffering the life of loneliness through 60 years he was thinking of a great deed.
Well Read On Evolution
Today it was learned that in his private house John read and read the stories of the past and the masteries of evolution. He oasted his was not a Christian in the strict sense of the word. Such rulers as was displayed today in his honor, he was a barber shop. He gradually prospered and finally gave up his bering to cater to a growing body of shars, and building a modest sum which by thrift and careful investments, chilily in real estate, he built up into a fortune. But all the time the villager, were unaware of this growing prosperity. The house John lived in was sodden and unkempt. His culture he kept to himself. His only lengthy conversations were with children. When he died fellow citizens merely knew his death at first as that of the only colored person in town. Such was his only claim to distinction. Well maybe John it in his culture but John it in his culture. The Rev. John T. Richardson, pastor of the M. E. Church, sheds tears during his enology declaring we did not fully appreciate him until the Rev. William A. Thomas. Presbyterian, wept as he classed him the most educated man and the most progressed man and the ideal Christian. He has taught us tolerance. said孝 Frederick Halloran, Catholic. He must have wanted to leave behind not merely the legacy of money, but this lesson of tolerance.
According to Melvin M. Ripley, Chairman of the Township Committee, John learned one day that of the county to remove the county; buildings of Atlantic County to th: famous sea resort. Very secretly he donated a large sum of money to help fight the secretly too. it was learned from two ministers, he donated funds to churches, not a churchgoer; he would say, "but you will need this money." In like manner, he made other prizes, giving the village as a whole kite of it. The Record, the village paper, issued a special edition last week commemorating the chance to see the dean man found a smile upon his face as he lay in the coffin banked with flow-
THE MUSICIAN
New York—Harry Wills knocked out an opponent last week, then told the world about it.
A photo of Wills, heavyweight and rival of Jack Dempsey, and his wife, Mrs. Wills, waiting their turn before Floyd Johnson. Floyd Johnson in Newark, New Jersey—Wills broadcast his impressions of the fight, and what he felt about Dempsey—Underwood Photo.
Snatched From Gallows By Wartime Finger Prints
TRY AN AFRO
CLASSIFIED
AD.
DO NOT
DELAY
New York—Harry Wills knocked the world about it. A photo of Wills, heavyweight wife, Mrs. Wills, waiting their turn diately after Harry had knocked off Jersey—Wills broadcast his impress about Dempsey—Underwood Photo.
Snatched From Wartime F
Bluefield, W. Va.—After being twice tried and convicted of the murder of an aged man in May, 1913, Payne Boyd goes free, the State's attorneys have become convinced that he has been the victim of a case of mistaken identity.
Finger prints obtained from the War Department established the identity of Payne Boyd as distinguished from Cleveland Boyd, the man sought in connection with the murder.
The Bluefield, West Va., Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People raised $1,000 to fight Boyd's case, the third of the N. A. A. C. P., organized Payne Boyd Clubs throughout the State
Richmond, Va. (A. N. P.)—Sleeping Richmond was advised to wake up by Robert Bagnall, director of branches of the N. A. A. C. P., in an address here last week.
"You are the last place in the south," Mr. Bagnall told his hearers, "where there are white principals in colored schools. You are the last vanguard of ancient things." He told Richmond to wake up and get on the job and follow the example of other cities and see to it that there are colored principals placed in the colored schools.
Ben Davis Confers At Capital
Washington, D.C.—Benjamin Jefferson Davis, who has been nominated by the Georgia Republican State Central Committee to become the National Committee to succeed the late Henry Lincoln Johnson, together with Dr. W. H. Harris, of Athens Ga., and other Georgia Republicans, has been nominated by the Republican National Committee in the Munsey B.lding last Friday.
Since the death of Mr. Johnson, no patronage has been allowed to the State of Georgia, and it is assumed that this was one of the subjects discussed.
Mr. George S. Williams the Georgia State National Committee man, was also in the city last Friday and Saturday.
Mr. Davis did state that complete harmony prevails in the ranks of Georgia Republicans at this time.
Next Week
American dry laws and Florida land boom make natives of Bahama Islands rich overnight.
A native of the Islands tells of the wonderful transformation made by the money, in the last few months.
and aroused public interest in the. Paigne Boyd was further identified by both white and colored citizens who testified that he was not a white man. Walter V. Rose, prosecuting attorney of Mercer County, West Va., declared that had the finger prints been found, the jury would have been different. Of the earlier trials of Paigne Boyd, in his opinion the verdict of the juries would have been different. Dahlly Telegraph, the case "has attracted more interest, than any other case in County. In its second trial, the State found great difficulty in securing a jury because of the great incarceration and caused throughout country.
Football Results
Morgan, 7; Lineot, 7.
Douglass, 4; Huntington, 7.
Hampton State, 7.
Tuskegee, 40; Fletcher, 7.
Bordentown, 14; Princess Ame, 6.
Arnstrong, 0; Manassas, 6.
Albany, 5; St. Schultz, 6.
Ala. State, 5; St. Schultz, 6.
Va. Seminary, 20; St. Paul, 3.
Storey Freshmen, 9; Sophs, 6.
Shaw, Petersburg, 8.
Hawthorne, 8; Hawthorne, 8.
Tennessee State, 39; Walden, 7.
Booker Washington, 7; Dunbar, 8.
Sam Houston, 53; Austin Inst, 8.
Tulsa, 8.
Somerville, 8; Moulse, 18.
Morehouse, 7; A. C. T, 7.
Gets Hero Medal
Pittsburgh, Pa.—A bronze medal and $50 monthly for the support of his widow was the award made by the Carnegie Hirof Fund Commission. In 1621 Clark street, who was downed in an effort to save Jamie Waters, white, an attorney from death in the Monongahek river. Mitchell's brother, Langston, who went to the, rescue of the two men
Slip Of Juryman's Tongue
Gives Prisoner Freedom
Washington, D. C. — The slip of a jury foreman's tongue gave Tinoothy Williams, charged with assaulting the verdict was announced as 'not guilty', although the jury in the case of the foreman was made known to the court and the jury was polled, returning a verdict of 'guilty'. Justices of the court and the jury verdict in stand and ordered the defendant release 1.
Raised Biggest Beet
Darnetown, Md.—Lloyd Costes is
born in Darnetown, half
half, grown in his garden.
Pinckney Gets Job Back
Pittsburgh — Patrolman Rufus Pinckney dismissed on a charge of failure to make a raid, has been restored to duty. He was an officer in the First Separate Company of Maryland during the War. — Wylie C. Kegg of Nails.
FOR
COLONEL CHARLES D. YOUNG
Philadelphia—Drawing of proposed $100,000 Memorial to Colonel Charles D. Young in Arlington Cemetery.
Funds for the memorial according to W. J. Harvey are to be raised from the million photographs of John Brown, abolitionist and Harpers Ferry here.
RADICALS URGE VIRGINIA BARS REMOVAL OF WHITE-COLORED COLOR LINE SCHOOL PUPILS
Red Chicago Labor Congress Plans Campaign Backed By Communists
WANT FULL EQUALITY OF BLACK AND WHITE
Jury System, Army, Navy
And Ku Klux Are Secored
Chicago—Country-wide publicity was given to the sessions of the American Negro Labor Congress which closed a three day meet Friday.
Social Equality
"Full social equality" was demanded today in resolutions adopted by the American Negro Labor congress meeting at 3118 Giles avenue under the watchful eye of federal and local police officers. As a means of allowing one dissident to participate, congress voted unanimously to take the renting and selling of homes out of the hands of private persons and make this service available to the first applicant served regardless of race." Laws, forbidding miscegenation are confounded with the property of the whites at the expense of Negro womanhood," in a demand for abolition of all laws which forbid the integration of persons of different races.
Washington Is Repudiated
The late Booker T. Washington, founder of Tuskegee, was not a favorite with the radicals making up the congress. Richard Moore, defenseman, "the congress repudiates forever the policy of slavish submission proached by such so-called leaders of the race as Booker T. Washington, who was perfectly willing to repudiate the hand of the race for social equality."
Bishop Brown
The meeting place was packed as William Montgomery Brown, white, aged and well-to-do clergyman of the Episcopal church, munism and assaults on the theology of the Christian churches cost him his episcopy any at the recent convention of the Episcopal church, described the way in which he unleashed, unleashed, and steam rolled out of the Episcopal church. The bishop got a big hand from the 500 in attendance when he assailed the church for its 'reactionaries' enemies and race antagonism and lynching.
Bishops Arc Sinners
"I came to tell you the truth, and that is that the bishops and other prochers are sinners and that you are the salaints. They do no useful work. That is why they are sinners. You do lots of work. That is why you are salaints. That is why you are salaints. Human acts depend upon work."
(Continued On Page Three)
Physician Gets State Post
Springfield, Ill.-Dr. S. A. Ware has been appointed by Governor Small as a specialist in the Social Hygiene Division of the Department of Public Health.
WITNESSES TESTIFY
ANCESTOR WAS BLACK
"No, She Was An 'Indian',"
Whites Claim, And Employ Lawyers
Richmond, Va.—Over the protest of parents and counsel blue-eyed children of six Richmond families have been excluded from the Robert Fulton public school, white, here on the ground that they have a touch of colored blood.
Superintendent Albert H. Hill, white, made the following statement before the Board meeting last week: "Last winter some Fulton people complained to me that certain children were not eligible. I called on Dr. Plecker of the State Board of Vital Statistics to look up the family records in several cases. This case re reported that the children had as an ancestor a woman, reported to the bureau as 'colored.' Un-satisfied with the records, believed they are colored and so reported to the Board."
Dr. Plecker exhibited a chart showing that the families in question descended several generations ago with Indian blood.
A number of whites testifying for the children and their parents declared they knew the ancestor referred to them, and that they were full blooded Indian woman. Refuting this testimony, Leonard T. White, ains said there was only one alleged Indian in that part of the country and "we never heard of Indians until the Jim clown law was passed." School Board session lasted until nearly midnight adjourning to meet at a later date.
A 3000
Year Old Story
There is a quantit story about Matthew himself, one of the earliest recorded utterances about a better home.
An angel visited him and invited him to house of stone instead of living in a tent.
"How long have I to live?" asked Matthewiah. "Three hundred years," was the answer.
"Then I don't think it worth while," rejoined the patrilarch.
But he was wrong. A house was worth while and the change from a rented house to one of the best move possible.
Get in touch with splendid home values through the 'Real Estate' columns of THE AFRO
A Market Place for the People Read for. Prent. Use for Results
LOVE
THE SEA LION
New York—Florence Mills, star of *Plantation* believes there is no reason, why an educated seal should not be able to learn the charleston seals, that difficult step to "Ray Hulking" pzrz Hippodrome seal. Miss Mills claims to be the originator of the Charleston—International News Reel.
Tuskegee Veterans Hospital Hearing Ended Friday
Washington, D.C. (Afo Bureau)
—The hearing into charges preferred against W. L. Jones, engineer, and J. M. Dugas, registrar, of the United States Hospital for disabled Negro veterans at Tuskegee, Ala. was concluded by officials of the Veterans Bureau last Friday afternoon.
At the conclusion of the hearing Mr. Jones and Mr. Dugas immediately returned to Tuskegee. Neither would comment upon the charm of the hospital, but it was a violation of rules for a Government employee to give any information without the apology. The hearing lasted from Monday through Friday and is said to be the longest yet held at the Veterans Bureau.
Fraud
Mr. Jones was charged with seeking to defraud the Government and conspiring to remove Major J. H. Jones from the hospital. Mr. Dugas was charged with violation of the rules in connection with the handling of monies belonging to patients. He was said to have apprehended a burglar in bank deposits of patients credited to his personal. bank account and that he charged 10 cents for the claims. It is thought that Mr. Dugas will be exonerated. It is said that Mr. Jones gave a satisfactory explanation in regard to the circumstances against him. The correspondence between him and Milvin J. Chisum, however, is causing Government officials to study his case more close.
Mr. Jones disproved the charge that he was the author of several newspaper articles concerning conspiracy notated from Tuskegee and appeared in the AFRO-AMERICAN. Telegrams from editors denied that he had ever given them any information. Motion And Ward Friends of both Mr. Jones and Mr. Dugas say that the plan to bring about their dismissal through the court was initiated with Major. R.-R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee Institute and Major J. H. Ward. They say it is
Leaves $16,625 Estate
Richmond, Va.-The Rev. J. J. Harris, who died here recently left an estate of $16,625 to sixteen chil- dren. He was joined by J. B. Creighton, of Vienna, Md.
Hip Worth $20,000
St. Louis, Mo—Miss Letha. B
Tindle, whose hip was dislocated in
the fall, was awarded $20,000
damages in Circuit Court, last week
Houston, Texas — This town is up in arms because the white superintendent of public school in laying down his plans for a new school referred to by the courts by that district is hard. he will arm
U. S. WEATHER
RAIN
Temperature:
Temperature:
Sunrise: 8:44.
Sunset: $0.88, p.m.
Moon Phase:
Moon Phase:
Last quarter, 8th
First quarter, 2nd
First quarter, 2nd
c. in Baltimore; 7c. in Maryland
TO CHARLESTON
of Plantation believes there is no not be able to learn the charleston that difficult step to "Ray Hullings" claims to be the originator of the
Veterans Hospital
ended Friday
a retaliation for the charges which Mr. Jones made against Major Ward last summer.
The transcript of the, record of the hearing is being studied by the legal division of the Veterans Bureau. Their findings and recommendations will be, sent to General Frank T. Hines, director of the Bureau for approval.
MOTHER TRAPS TEACHER THEN CALLS POLICE
(East Tennessee News Service)
Knoxville, Tenn.—Prof. W. A. Bradley of the high school was held for criminal court under $250 bond on the charge of violating the Johnny Laws statute.
The Johnny law is a State regulation providing punishment for any one molesting, mistreating or attempting to influence along immoral Broad street, the mother of the 13 age of girl, Louise Clark, who is involved in the case.
Bradley had repeatedly attempted to enter the class room after the other children had left; for their homes and had written her several notes on two or more occasions requesting her to return him, she seen him.
According to the girl:
"He then approached me on Tuesday to make a request to him with him that night. I told him that I could not as my mother had to go to lodge meeting and I had to stay at home. He then suggested that I go to the lodge about the time mother would be leaving for the lodge. meeting."
Louise told her mother who answered the telephone when Prof. W. A. Bradley was talking to the child and arranged to come right over.
Mrs. Clark opened the door when he entered the steps and fastened it behind him when he entered.
"I could hardly restrain from shooting him; she told the police him not to leave until officers arrived."
Professor Bradley is married and resides with his family. Mrs. Charke who is a widow told the court how she would to send her child thru school.
Little Rock, Ark—Dr. G. B. Bled-
gell El Dorado. I recently
bought by a small ticket
of the Mid-LEEN ST.
CITY
EDITION
yland and D. C.; 10c. Elsewhere.
DENTIST FACES
$25,000BREACH
OF PROMISE SUIT
Miss Julia Hall Claims Dr. Reginald Evelyn Failed To Keep Vow
UNBORN CHILD ALSO FIGURES IN CASE
Accused Under Arrest, But Released After Hearing At Police Station
Estimating her alleged jilted affections at $25,000 Miss Julia Hall, 2417 Druid Hill avenue, began proceedings in the City Court to recover that amount from Dr. Reginald Evelyn, 1435 Pennsylvania avenue Friday.
In her complaint, which was filed through the offices of Irving Grandberg, white, she declared that the doctor had failed to Keep his prom-
The suit, followed closely, upon the doctor's arrest at the Northwestward, was held by him with being the father of her unborn child. Due to a nervous breakdown, Mrs. Hall was unable to appear at the hearing and was sent to the custody of his attorney, J. Stewart Davis. The charge was entertained on the testimony of Mr. Grandberg in behalf of Mrs. Hall, who could not be reached by a reporter, was formerly Miss Julia Johnson. She was widowed after the death of her husband several years earlier. When asked for a statement Dr. Evolyn refused to talk for publication. His attorney, J. Stewart Davis, however, stated that he did not take himself when the case comes up for trial.
Homesick Lad Walks 125 Miles
Armand Savoy, 15 year old school boy, arrived in Baltimore Saturday having walked the entire distance to Delaware. Young Savoy, whose parents live in the 700 block of Pitcher Street, was until recently a student in the school district of home sickness turned his mind yearningly towards the monumental city, he lived his father for-funds with which to return. The reply emphatically told the young hopeful to stick to his school and studies. It was there that the lad took initiation from French leave. Without money or food, he walked the entire distance of 125 miles. When he faced his father, he returned immediately or going to work. The boy chose the latter.
Recalled Lincoln As Barefoot Boy
Special to AKRO AMERICAN
Lexington, Mo.—Mrs. Martha Burden who died here last week at the age of 24, often recalled that she knew Abraham Lincoln when as a barefoot boy he drove cows to pasture. She was born in Lynchburg, Va. but sold South as a slave when 16 years old. A grandson, Jesse, survives. She is only daughter, Miss Nannie C. Burden of New York, will known in musical circles came south for the funeral.
Chancey Parker, 19, Francis Ridgely, 20 and William Smith, 17. Howard University students, were injured Sunday when an automobile in which they were riding overturned on the Washington Baltimore Boulevard near Laurel. They were taken-to Freedmen's Hospital.
Lincoln Sends S O S For Former Coaches
The recent defeat suffered by Lincoln at the hands of Wilberforce and the "game played" Morgan last week caused the Athletic Committee of the University to send out an S O S for "Sty" Woods and "Ernie" Martin, of Boston to help coach the team for Howard on Thanksgiving. Woods and Dr. Martin were assistant coaches at Lincoln last year. Dr. Martin reported Monday.
Five Dollars
GIYEN AWAY FREE
See Magazine Page
THIS WEEK
They's
Washington, D. C. — (AFOB Bureau) — The opening round of office for the new district, one of the most seminal settlers in local courts, was had when Mrs. B. Osterle, the wife of the street, northwest led suit against her husband, Jerome B. Osterle, of 365 Fairmount street, northwest, for limited divorce of the grounds of jurisdiction.
In her bill of complaint, Mrs. Osborne says that her husband's cruel and inconsiderate treatment of her mother and that ever since her mother-in-law and other relatives including upon living with them and that ever since her mother-in-law and other relatives of her husband have lived with them, she has been one of strife and unhappiness."
Violent Temper
Her mother-in-law, she claims, is possessed of a violent and ungovernable temper and has sought to upon many occasions and by her unwarranted interference in her domestic affairs created discord and unhappiness between them. There has long been a trace of insanity in the family of her husband and that both her husband and his mother have become enraged over trifling matters and have tried to average their feelings upon others to such an extent that she 'cannot but believe there are times when neither the defendant nor his mother are mentally capable of controlling them.
Don't Come Back
On September 1, 1925, she entered Carson's private hospital) for an opioid addiction. She met there, the only message she received from her husband was that if she came back to their home after having a baby, she would not her down the stairs. This message she says was transmitted to her by her two sisters and their husbands. Childs, Jr., wife of a public school teacher, and Mrs. Fred D. Wilkinson, wife of the registrar of Howard Uni-
No Support
Having received no word from her husband or no money for her support, upon her discharge from the hospital, she declared that she was compelled to go to the home of her sister where she lived. In preparing to leave her sick room, she claims, she sent to her husband that she had been banded and refused to let her have, and was informed that the clothes she left on hangers had been packed in a bag. Her husband, also refused to let her have her diamond engagement ring, another ring which she had given to her marriage, and her marriage ring.
Door Was Locked
When she became physically able to take a trip, she went to her home, their husbands, she says. One of her brothers-in-law entered the home and advised her mother-in-law that she was returning, she claims, and found it locked and was advised by Mary Higgins, her husband's sister. She sought shelter at No. 760 Fairmont street she asserts, and when her husband learned, she yelled at the top of his voice and calling her vile names and a policeman had to be summoned to "rest."
Anonymous Letter
Mrs. Osborne says that she is vaguely informed that the cause of her death was the binding of an anonymous letter addressed to her by some unidentified person which was sent to her without notice. She is employed temporarily in the bonus section, Bureau of Navigation, the Navy Department, a salary of $115 per hour. Her husband is employed in the Veterans Bureau at a salary of $120 a month. She asks the court to at her custody of the child, w...h she claims her husband has refused to let her see, allamy and a limited time. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome B. Osborne were married on June 25, 1920, in the District of Columbia. They have been married to E. Osborne, 4 years of age. Mrs. Osborne is represented by Admiral Raymond Geucker and Bertram Hampton.
WHITELAW HOTEL
Guests registered at the Whitelaw Hotel are: Charles IL, Feyton, Pittsburgh; M. Trent, Baltimore; David Dandridge, and wife, Fredericksburg, Va.; M. Parker, Philadelphia; J. Lawrence, Chicago; H. A. Dillard, Pittsburgh; Henry Hopewell, York; P. William W. Davis, Newark, N. J.; Jas. Bowman, and wife, Smithtown; Chas. Hawkins, Philadelphia; J. H. G. Burke, Norfolk, Va.; Fred H. Ramer, Martinsburg, W. Va.; C. A. Jones, Paladens, N. J.; James Johnson, Baltimore; James and Miss G. Williams, Newport, R. I.; S. E. Miles, Brooklyn, N. Y.; W. Gibbs, N. Y.; A. N. Christopher, Cumberland, Md.; Carl Allison, Greenwich, Conn.; Henry Talbot, Philadelphia; W. A. Easton, Portsmouth, Va.; B. L. Richardson, New York; A. C. Jones, Newark, N. Y.; W. G. Smith, Baltimore; Dr. Jones and wife, Charlotte, N. C.; Charlie Turner, White Post, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Alex Payne, Culpeper, Va.; John Horton, New York City; David Crawford, Boston; Josie Rivera, New York City; Augustus Cooner, New York City; F. R. Relich, St. Paul, Minn.; Agnes L. Harpe, New York City; John Carter, Boston; John W. Hayes, New York City; Robert Baltimore, Mr. and Mrs. Mary Jones, Baltimore; Edward Winston, Richmond, Va.; E. P. Montgomery, Cumberland, Md.; M. S. James, Baltimore; W. T. Nelson, City; M. V. Dagon, Marshall, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Howard, Mt. Clair, N. J.; Miss Loretta Wade, Petersburg, Va.
Call VErnon 6016
ALLIED CORPORATION ANSWERS SUIT
ALLIED CORPORATION ANSWERS SUIT
Washington, D. C.-Replying to the suit for an accounting was made by the defunct Allied Industrial Finance Corporation in the Supreme Court, last week.
An accounting had been asked by George F. Haton, a stockholder, who complained that the officers of the corporation had committed J. S. Diet, Dr. M. Curtis, Dr. John R. Hawkins and others paid dividends out of the capital stock and dissolved the corporation without notice to the stockholders.
Answer to the suit declares that dividends were paid out of the interest and bonus on loans; that the officers and directors worked without compensation; that the officers and directors charged to their pro rata refunds; and that they have paid back 10 per cent of the stockholders.
Relaitves Of Ex-Presidents Speak At Howard
Washington, D. C.—Relatives of former Howard University president, attending the National Conference of Congregational churches here, were guests of the University, Tuesday. Among them were Dr. Cornell Patton, Howard University graduate, and son of a former president, Mr. and Mrs O. O. Howard, wife and nephew of general O. O. Howard founder of the Fairfield University, New York Fairfield, Howard graduate and son of a former dean.
DEATHS
There were 45 deaths reported to the Health Department for the week ending November 2nd. Included in this number, five were under one year of
north
Harrisit Robinson, 75, 1825 7th St.
northwest
Maggie Grine, 59, 1143 6 1-2 St, 8t
Mary Louise, 59, 1143 6 1-2 St, 8t
James Armstrong, 60, 1203 28t St, 8t
Edward C. Moore, 70, Freedmen's Hospital.
Infant of Baker and Rhoda Hill, I day. Children's Hospital.
Nancy Royal, 75, Freedman's Hospital,
MAR, 75
Mary Eldridge, 12, Casualty Hospital,
Mollie Whitlow, 50, 1923 2nd St. nw.
Adeline Swann, 65, 2022 1st St.
Joseph Swann, 65, 2022 1st St.
Mamie C. Forest, 1 month, 1504 10th St.
northwest
Walter and Elizabeth Tate, 19 days,
Freedman's Hospital,
Walter S. Welbourne, 71, Freedman's Hospital,
Hawkins, 33, Home for Aged Blue Plains.
Beulah Elwood, 10, 19 St. Jr., ne.
M. Shedrick, 61, 29 E. St.
1000 FOXBROOK
northWest.
Dan, Opey. 70, 938 Westminster
St. Morrishy.
Thomas Johnson, 68, 1310 1-2 St.
James L. Lucas, 68, 1242 12th St.
northwest
Thomas Johnson, 45, Freedman's Hus-
hnille Ramsey, 19, Tuberculosis
Mary E. Settles, 6 month, Childrens
A Hospital
Sarah E. Griggs, 69, 43t and Yuma
C. H. Hirsch, 69, 43t
Willis Carley, 67, Freedman's Hosp.
James Shaughter, 64, St. Eliza Hosp.
Winn Johnson, 65, St. Eliza Hosp.
Joseph Hirsch, 65, St. Eliza Hosp.
Emma Robinson, 1, 14 D St. st.
Mary E. Jackson, 20, 315 D St. nw.
Mary E. Jackson, 20, 315 D St. nw.
Daryl B. Jackson, 50, 2315 L. St.
Mary J. Jackson, 52 years, 11 Fenton
St.
St. Thomas Naylor, 88, 1325 Colar St.
northwest. St. Serri, 51 Freedman's Hosp.
Murray St. Harper 252 251 nw
nw St. Harper 252 251 nw
Nathaniel Johnson, 2 months, 907 414
Nathaniel Johnson, 2 months, 907 414
Bessie Johnson, 49, Rock Creek Rec
tory, R C. Road.
Clifton H. Curtis, 68, 1100 3rd St.
northwest.
Ruth Johnson, 74, 1329 Conn Avenue
northwest.
Harry Byrd, 38, St. Eliz Hospit
Mary Traham, 62, Gallinger Hospit
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The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
HOWARD U. PRESIDENT IN NEW VENTURE EDITS NEW BOOK ON NEGRO BIOGRAPHY
By ALUMNUS
Not satisfied with Howard University's heavyweight championship title, wrested from Prof. T. W. Turner, or the world's record for completely revolutionize a college curriculum twice within the brief period of seven years, or the rare reputation of running simultaneously a Negro-loving and a Negro-hating school, or the new blushing honor of being Howard's undisputed post-laureate Dr. Durkex has now invaded the journalistic field as Editor-in-chief of the AMERICAN NEGRO BIOGRAPHY. Evidently, his colleagues on the Board of Trustees, who recently to the University of Chicago management of the university, have now voted him time for the external management of his journalistic venture. The gates of the Gerry School of Expression, Howard's chancellor president is now planning to create a new people as can establish their claim by way of their pocketbooks, to this enviable distinction.
Purchase Greatness
Dr. Durkee has just learned that some Negroes are born great, some achieve greatness, and some pursue a career. He has also this third class that his journalistic efforts are directed. These greatness-seekers must pay dearly for the renown that Dr. Durkee's publications have. For the lack of business on Howard Hill. Dr. Durkee has found time to edit the lives of Illuminated Negroes, showing the progress of the Negro community in the Civil War to the present day, "chronically the played by Negro men and women in religious, civil, military, political, economic and professional developments of their day." Office In Philadelphia. The Office in Philadelphia is making work at 1028 Street (an appropriate street for such a fleeting venture). Philadelphia. Pa. The telephone number is Locust 3844, a significant attachment to the exchange.
The pages of Dr. Durkee's epitome of Negro greatness, "are open only, whose achievements and accomplishments have made them worthy conspicuous; those people who have been by force of character, have made themselves centres of influence; character worthy of emulation." No White Inns Dr. Durkee is perhaps atoning for his Boston behavior by keeping the whites out of this publication as he kept the whites out of the school. Say what you will, Dr. Durkee is trying his darmset to show the colored people that he has been against more than he has shinned.
Negro With Small "N"
Since he has returned to the old battle-ground, he has remained away from his usual pulps to fill in the gaps. He has accepted most eager invitations to address colored assemblies. He has risked his reputation for being a "boss," yet he is, Brothers; and now he comes forth as the bio-grapher of Negroes, even though he spells the word, throughout his advertisement, with a black accent. He should have been told that colored people are fussy about that capital "n" whether they can just use it, or by the rules of grammar or not.
Cost I₃ $300
With Dr. Durkee on this biographical job, desirous of relogment and a desire to pay his living expenses, there is an excellent opportunity for many a person to obtain a copy of biography. Only one consideration forbids universal fame—and that is the price. To be recalled, the sappartant is required to pay $100 $200, or $300, according to the man's bequest, to bettersee his likeness.
If the aspirant is unmindful of how he is to appear on paper, so he propriety, and so foul in a matter of such vital importance, as to purchase the cheapest plate, he may choose a copper variety of 1-2 inches) for the modest cost of $100.
For $200
If he wishes to make a little bimpression on posterity, he is adamant to purchase the $300 plate (547 inches). If he becomes still more ambitious and nurses the fond hope of leaving his wife and children, he may always point with pride and courage, he is advised to purchase the $300 plate on steel (547 inches) and diamond plates. Perhaps they do not exist, or maybe they are reserved for other races. At any rate, he is not obliged to hardly, any excuse for obscurity when fame is knocking at the door every American Negro, through the generosity of Howard's president.
Greatness Seekers
Our only fear is that some intrusive greatness-seeker, whose name may properly belong in a scrap book, will be able to pay for the privilege. In fact, we cannot conceive of men and women who have actually achieved greatness being so eager to pay for the privilege. We are inclined to believe that only the pseudo-great will invest in such public libraries. Dr. Durkee's "Biographia Africana" to welcome the heroes of our race
Link With Past And Present
Dr. Durkee's stupendous effort is more than to publish the pictures of great careers. It is also to "link the past with the present and lay a foundation of reliable historical knowledge that will generate may build and preserve the life work and accomplishments of such standard bearers as Frederick Douglass, Josephine Johnson, and men whose devotion their age constituted a priceless contribution to its development and prosperity." Most wonderful.
The writer hopes that Dr. Durkee has a more definite notion of his editor-in-chief duties than he had manned before. "If he will be a careful undertaking for him to edit on a woo while he is preside of it," he says.
The truestees of Howard University, in their statement to the press this summer, declared that Dr. Durkee to be the first internal management of the university to bear the "romantic history" of Howard University to the public. How is Dr. Durkee going to cling to his tutoring presidency, entertain audiences and radio fans with his belated "romantic story", and elicit such an ambitious volume as AMERICAN NEGRO BIOGRAPHY?
Editor-in-Chief
The editor-in-chief of any publication is the member of the staff who is responsible for the planning and directing and has authority over the rest of the staff, though the editor-in-chief may be constitution and writing may be allowed to the staff writers, the editor-in-chief has the biggest job of writing, and the constant touch with the publication.
Figurehead
It is almost inconceivable that the trustees of Howard University would offer, and such devotion as he has, between the running of a university, and the administration, he is only the "nominal" editor-in-chief, just as he was only the "nominal" president of Curry University, and the president of publication, his stationery belies his status. We have a right to assume that he is what his own ad-hoc committee has been theudent of a university in Washington cannot perform the duties of an editor-in-chief of a publication in Philadelphia, and vice versa. Dr. Durkee has a rare genius for blinding him, and gives him himself into ridiculous positions out of which the trustees have to extricate him. His friends become terrificly peceived when these blunders are mentioned and ridiculed.
Unprofessional
One professor has been quoted as ridiculing Dr. Durkee before a class of students. If this is true, was it wrong? If it was, the classroom is no place for personalities or professors' judgments of their superior officers or colleagues. The minimum of professional respect for the president, no matter how overhearing he may be. The writer does not, for one moment, sympathize with such classrooms. No should be certain, however, that the report is accurate. The professor in question is personally known to the writer as a gentleman and he says that no such remarks were made in his classroom, over against the belated and unsupported allegation of the youthful reporter we wrote. The professor's word. No Proof Needed
Dr. Durkee, however, will believe the reporter, for his practice is never to call for proof. With him accusation is guilt; so we may expect some humiliation to come to that reporter, in the form of pensioning or economic pressure.
Though the writer believes that no professor should discuss the press before students are teaching that it is just as recherrendible for the president to closet himself with professors or students to discuss professors.
Eherrealized Gossip
The real root of the low morale at Howard is the etherrealized gossip introduced into Howard University by Dr J Durke. Before his time gossip monogamy was the trade it is he has established the trade in gossip. It is he who coined the expression—"a hundred earn and a hundred practice to the embarrassment of many professors.
Tale Bearing Encouraged
The writer has in his possession correspondence that proves that Dr. Durkee encourages the best-hearted to take the case because he himself was involved and threatened with a suit, if he did not tell the aggrieved professor where he was located, he immediately acquiesced in writing. Trading in goosin is still practised at Howard University. Since 1992, Dr. Durkee has bertened one professor on the gossip of another. He is never too busy to hear what has been said about him. This kind of business is the highest indulgence of the president.
Questioned Students
Whenever Dr. Durkee is persuaded, shamed, or cross-examined to tell the truth about the disastrous profession that he questioned certain students on the strike, had stenographic notes taken, and accepted the suggestion that he would be more sympathetic with the strikers. That, of course, was sufficient evidence of their guilt. He also hears the other side. He acts immediately upon the accusation. He naturally makes himself ridiculous, and men and women not only accuse him of being too likely to continue to his glaring inconsistencies, but the writer repeats that no classroom mis the place for advice, even though he may be Dr. Durkee. Ridiculous.
Dr. Durkee's connection. In any way, with a book on Nesro achievement is so ridiculous that it is really funny. If Dr. Durkee ever at a time would be the scream of the age; for when he tries to be most serious, he is most ridiculous. Neither the Harold Lloyd ever created mirth than Dr. Durkee's leaping lyric of eighteen stanzas, written in neither free nor fettered verse, but in defiance of thought, expression, and metre. Now just when we have recovered from holding both our sides from the attack, we are on our own pathos, he senses us spiky, blink and white application blanks to put on us ill terms with $100, $200, or $300, according to the retail value of the book. We feel so deserves to give us back what we say of ourselves plus a picture which really ought to flatter us to the very limit for the price we pay.
Not Literary
Some frank person, less mindful of Dr. Durkee's feelings than the writer, ought to tell Howard's sole opinion of his life. He is not the person to write a Negro biography. He will have done his literary party when he withdraws
from erudite society his leaping lyric and fills expectant ears with Howard's "romantic story."
Must Be A Negro
It is no easy task to edit sketches to tide people over tideptic peaks they have given birth. Dr. Durkee is not sufficiently well acquainted with the true aspirations of colored people to edit their text. Dr. Durkee is not well acquainted with the fugitive qualifications of some of the candidates whom he has recommended for honorary degrees will suffice to show his measuring tape too far stretched for accurate menus.
The editor-in-chief of a Negro biography, in an age in which the Negro is given such a raw den man, the Negro-barring school by public outdriven from the presidency of a a huge joke as the editor of Negro aspiration and achievement. Diplomatic Or Commercial Dr. Durkee's motive resumes the Negro as both his objectionable behavior at Curry, where he limited Negro aspirations to him, and not him on bad terms with colored people throughout the country and has forced the disfranchised alumni of Howard University to demolish his building. He is trying hard to write his way back into their high regard. He is overworking his cunning for a stampede back to his cause. Failure to articulate and biography is his allurement.
After Seven Years
After seven years of discouraging Negro initiative and scholarship and seven months of slamming door of the Negro youth's face, he suddenly gets an urge for prochaching Negro greatness. He asks Negroes with a book that would have to include the name of Alain Leroy Locke, whom he banished from Howard on a pretext too maliciously fake for any honest man to open?
Another Blunder
If Dr. Durkee thinks that his funny verse and biographical bosh are going to arouse the colored people's love for him, he might as well augment it with another, and insert it in that wonderful list of achievements of his. His fame as a writer lies neither in verse nor in Negro biography but in his own personality. He also resignation that will rid Howard of the worst apology for a president that this once great institution has ever had. If he really wants to merit the colored people's warmth, opportunity lies in his resignation.
Pension Himself
It is possible, of course, that he is trying to pension himself on the basis of any appreciable number of fameseers accept his proposition, his income from the venture should be immense, the price it is stiff enough to afford a fat pension, and bad that this "money-getting" president cannot devise some scheme to pay $10,000 yearly to afford him an opportunity for engaging in every conceivable kind of extra-university activity that might stuff his pockets with money.
$100,000 Behind
While this father strange president of Howard University is circulating a scheme to make the obscure issue of his own earnings, the president of the rest of the trustees is imitating the situation that the university is offering to some students its pledges for the medical school. Would it be asking too much of this president rushing for real work to make some active part in enter-mentation? Would it be asking too much of university? Would his feeling be punctured if the writer suggested that this wildest scheme be lodged with the junior and commercial colleges?
Should Stay Home
What Dr. Durkee should try to do, if he really has any genuine aspiration, to devote his steward and advocate him to a university. He might well leave Negro biography for more competent pens. The trustees have diagnosis for the university, and the public that they have found his talents of the pulpit and platform variety. They mapped out a program for him calling for a bony and formal management of the university. To let him try out new talents not listed in the trustees' list is something like breaking faith with the university.
Publication Not Needed
There is really no need of Dr. Durkee's publication except for his own diplomatic and commercial monographs, hidden, Carter Woodson, Monroe Work, Burghardt Dubois, Kelly Miller, Benjamin Brawley, and a host of other well-trained men of color with special abilities, peripatitions, discouragements, and achievements. In throughness and expression, Dr. Durkee's volume cannot surpass the works of these men, these men are students of the subject.
No Benefit To Howard
In what way will Dr. Durkee's new scheme benefit Howard University's students and members of the association? The writer observes, with a smile, that one of the promoters of this proposed epic is none other than Dr. Durkee's friend from Dixie, Dr. Joseph Shepard. It is wonderful how these two Jameses stick together. If rumors be true, the southern James will be a location about the time that the northern James is scheduled to pack. That letter to the alumun did considerable damage to the James, what his letter failed to do, his political meddling into the affairs of the A. & M. College succeeded in doing. We may assume that one $300 order has been received from North Carolina. At least one page ought to be devoted to commemorating another page, the tragic events leading up to a Doctor of Letters degree.
Loyal Four
Howard's "loyal four", cabinets professors of President Durkee's school appear in this "Biographia Africana." They must not desert him at all. He will be paid $300 with liberal hiatuses in the payments will make him a happy man. The hunched eyes he has focused on the professors. Their loyalty
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What will the trustees do about this? No doubt, they will follow it. We will, of course, mit Dr. Durkez to continue to jiddle his lives of great Negroes. Who knows but what they themselves may take a lower berth in this "De Lemos" way? We begin to wonder what Dr. Durkez's next venture will be. He is likely to fumble about until he hits upon a competent way to run it. But we know that his term will terminate before more damage is done.
30 A Students At Howard
30 A Students At Howard
Washington, D. C.-Miss. Enoa B. Pettingdon, of Baltimore, was among the 30 honor students of Howard University who obtained the grade of A during the last school year.
Honors Day was celebrated here Wednesday, with an address by Dr. Charles Wesley. The list of honor students includes: Theodore A. Austin, Demerian, British Gulana; Brinton C. Baskerville, Newark, N. J.; Katherine H. Bingham, D. C.; Ruth C. Brinkley, D. C.; Charlotte Corbin, D. C.; Llewellyn W. Davis, Hartford, Conn.; Melva B. Dier, Alexandre, La; Ellijah H. Fitchett, D. C.; John H. Harmon, Jr.; Houston, Texas; Penal H. Johnson, U. C.; Raymond A. Lemon, D. C.; Glendon I. Logan, New York City; Geneviève L. Lonax, Bluefield, W. Va.; Miriam N. Muldrow, Charlotte, N. C.; Enoa V. Pettigen, Baltimore, Md.; Cactle B. Shane, Gary, Ind.; Clarence M. Smith, Tampa, Fla.; Asa T. Spaulding, Durham, N. C.; Marlon M. Thompson, Newark, N. J.; James E. Walker, D. C.; Hazel I. Washington, D. C.; Walter Winters, British West Indies; A. B. Charles, British Gulana; Damon P. Young, Chicago, Il.; Frederick Watts, D. C.; Uleda W. Woldridge, Grennsbury, Pa.; Dorothy M. Wright, D. C.; and Edward Check, Camden, N. J.
Unity Club Wants Perry Howard Fired
Chicago—Unity Club in session here forwarded a resolution to President Hillary Rodham Clinton from the Department of Justice on the ground that he is an attorney for the Pulliam Company, possessible litigant before the United States Court.
Blind Man Indicted
Washington, D. C.—The Grand Jury last Monday returned an indictment against Shavuus Brown, a blind man, charging manslaughter in connection with the killing of Walter Cohen. The indictment was returned upon the testimony of Matilda G. Carter, widow of the dead man; Marion J. Terry, Mobel A. Jackson, Marion J. Terry, J. L. Murray, and John L. Rillman.
Gets Bridge Contract
Washington.—The firm of David Jenkins and son, contractors and builders of Indianapolis, has been awarded a bridge contract by the Indianapolis Bridge Company. In speaking of the success of the company the Indianapolis Recorder says: "Mr. Jenkins has been built bridge for the state of Indiana for 40 years, and has formed a partnership with his son, Martin, a Howard graduate of the class of 1923." This latest contract is for a bridge bridge in Whitelake County, Indiana.
Wants Judge Impeached
Chicago.—Nathan Dukes, 3705 Rhodes Avenue, policy operator, filed a petition in the Supreme Court asking for the impeachment of Judge Lyle, white. Dukes' hand from $1,500 to $25,000 and alibn Alva L Bates, Dukes' lawyer, for contempt to court when he protested.
Attacks Wife's Blind Lover
Little Rock, Ark., Oct. (ANP) — When Harry Lee discovered his wife Emma, alone with her Brooks a blind man, he attacked both of them照片 told police that his wife been keeping company with the blind man.
HOWARD WOMEN'S DINNER
Washington. D. C.-Five hundred
puncted in the fourth annual Howard
women's dinner arranged by Dean
Light at the University dining room.
There were 46 births reported to the Health Department for the week ending November 2nd. They follow: John and Naggie Jefferson, boy, Saturday and Sunday in Boston, girl, Edward A. and Dorothy Price, boy, Robert and Jenie Williams, boy, Walter and Fierdete Buges, boy, Joseph B. and Mattie M. Mackle, boy, Samuel and Jessie Anderson, girl, Augustus and Dorothy Patrick, girl, George and Melanie Burgess, boy, Alfonso and Helen P. Turner, girl, Ben L. and Azalla F. Turner, girl, Lewis and Gladys Littlejohn, girl, Eugene and Corlenna Nelson, girl, Jno. H. and Estelle Mayden, boy, Edward and Marie Spencer, girl, Fred and Mary Brown, boy, Joseph W. and Bessie M. Evans, girl, Rubin and Florence Granthon, boy, John H. and Florine Jenkins, girl, Joshua and Coral Jones, girl, Edgar P. and Heretta Johnson, girl, Tom and Eisie S. Curtis and Bernice B. McGarrity, girl, Charles and Georgia Hardeson, boy, Sampson and Annie Anderson, boy, Wm. H. and Leonora Bousch, boy, James L. and Custava B. Eubanks, girl, Frank and Beatrice Johnson, boy, Arthur and Adell Diggs, girl, Cornelius and Grace Cook, boy, Wm. and Hattie Washington, boy, Clarence L. and Carrie I. Compton, boy, Wm. and Catherine Hutchinson, girl, Baker and Mary and Gina, girl, Henry and Della Lindsay boy, John H. and Rosetta Thomas, boy, Geo. and Melissa Jones, girl, Louis and Edith Bell, boy, Leroy and Maudo Bowman, boy, Raymond and Grace Thomas, girl, K. Edward F. and Beulah B. Hughes
Wm. and Acra Robinson, girl.
Rogers L. and Susie A. Baker, girl.
Robert E. and Bartha Rose, boy.
What Will Trustees Do
一
.
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BIRTHS
Washington, D. C.-High school cadet officers recommended by Warwick Officer Edward W. Baldwin, superintendent, Garnet C. Willerson, last week. They are: Lieut. Carl Harvard brown commanding; Cadet William B. Capt. Herbert, supply officer.
Dunbar High School: Major, first battalion, Stanton Wormley; captains, Ernest C. Brown, James W. Butcher, Howard H. Fitzhugh, Geo. Steward, Charles B. A. Shorter; first lieutenants, John S. Armistead, adjutant, First Battalion; William Odom, Vardle L. Robinson, Granville W. Woodson, Roy W. Sorrell, Roy F. Greenwood, Earl Shamwell, Chester Bland; second lieutenants, Charles A. Shorter, James E. Green, Hayden C. Johnson, George W. Carter, Robert H. Cheeks.
Armstrong High School; Majer, Secr.
Third Battalion, Benjamin Drew;
Captains, Rufus P. Turner, Walter V.
Walter, Rufus P. Turner, Samuel
Somerville, Eustace T. Seller, Robert A.
Brown; first heatnittons, William T.
William, T. Seller, Robert A.
P. Jenkins, Manning Johnson, Rozier
W. Gaddis, Garrett B. Terrell, Na-
lah Terrell, Garrett B. Terrell,
Joseph P. Weller, Louis Gaskas, Jes-
Elmer Jones, Rudolph E. White, La-
Raine, Carlson S. Harris and
Frank N. Johnson
PATTERSON-WALTON, NUPTIALS
Miss Fenton牛顿, daughter of
Miss Emily牛顿, married to Mr. Charles N. Patterson, a
popular tailor, October 22nd, at the home or the bachelor's mother, 415 O. St.
Invitations are out for a wedding, receipts, envelopes, given on the evening of November 17th. Mr. Joseph McBoughlas, law student at Howard University, motored to Bailor Street, where he spent the day visiting relatives.
Miss Corrine Kendall, of 1102 Q. St. Louis, who spent a week at Freedmen's Hospital on account of illness, has recovered. Miss Maua Morgan, of 2014 12th St. Hall has returned from a brief visit to Baili. Miss Adline Edwards, of Frederick's burg, Va. has returned to her home. Miss Florence Morino, of 1327 Corcoran St. northwest. Miss V. Bannister, who has been confined to Freedmen's Hospital for four weeks, with permission from her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac C. Bannister.
ENTERTAINS AT SUPPER
Mrs. Susie Morton, of 1210 V Sr. northwest, gazed at an elderly supper, with her daughter, a senior, honor of her daughter's birthday. Fourth decorated dinner room, where a sumptuous repast was served. The Misses Missol Sinclair, and the Mamie Frye, of London County, Va., and Miss Music, of New York, music, and dancing, concluded the social function.
**FRAT GIVES DANCE** On the dance floor, the Kappa Apa Pel Fraternity opened its Kasua at 211 Florida avenue, northwest of the younger social circle of Washington. The house was beautifully decorated with Halloween en colors and designs. Including pumpkins, shaded wood-covered tables, and to about eighty, just a splendid social refreshments were served, and reserved.
D. Charles Whitby, 31, 1307 Brightwood,
C. C.; Frances Strang, 31, 1706 Seaton
St. northwest. The Rev W. J. Howard.
Tamie Courtier, 26, 1294 Brightwood,
J. C.; Francis Strong, 26, 1638 Seaton
St. northwest. The Rev W. Washington.
Shellie Murray, 22, 5200 James Place,
northeast; Jenile Stroman, 18, 5233 J.
Stroman; John W. Davis, 51, 757 City,
D. Molle Laddeler, 50, 605 11th St. northwest,
Lawrence B. Checks, 21, 609 L. St.
northwest. The Rev R. Revl Prochlein,
18, 605 11th St. northwest, Abhousen Wheeler, 23, Annie Henson,
21 G. St. southwest. The Rev W. West,
Andrew Stainfield, 21, 754 Columbia
Columbia Road. The Rev Joseph D. Wilson.
L. D. Langebridge, 25, Frederickburg,
C. F.; Funnie B. Johnson, 22, 307
14th St. Frederickburg, Vn. The Rev
W. A. Prater, 55, 1456 Church St.
northwest; Olla Chama, 30, 2000 11th St.
George Gorham, 21, 2446 Out, Road;
Josephine Watt, 18, 2446 The Rev B. T.
Harry Garnett, 23, 1911 9 1-2 St.
northwest; Marie Garley, 18. The Rev
James S. Chilba, 22. 2225 G St. north; James S. Chilba, 22. 2225 G St. north; The Rev. J. T. Harper, northwest; The Rev. J. T. Harper, northwest; Frances Brown, "22. 2225 G St. north; The Rev. C. H. De Vos
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AFRO Bureau—
Washington, D. C. The suit of J. Gordon Dingle, New York broke against Mortimer M. Harris, realtors for an accounting was referred to the auditor of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia last Tuesday day morning by Justice Siddons. Attorney Leckie, who represented Mr. Dingle, told the court that Mr. Harris had sold ten houses in the 1800 block of Eighth street northwest; for their client and had failed to make a full accounting. Attorney for Mr. Harris stated that he, Harris had made a full accounting for every house sold and his answer was a cross demand for an amount over $1,500 for commissions by reason of two checks on which payment had been stopped by Mr.
Justice Siddons took the view that inasmuch asgst it was a matter of counting, it should be referred to the theory of fraud in the transaction and is regarded in the nature of a legal foray for Mr. Harris by his attorney, Nos. 1830 and 1858 of 10 of 15 houses. Nos. 1830 and 1858 houses were purchased by Mr. Dingle's office at a price of $50,000. Mr. Dingle is said to have put but $2,500 into the purchase. A first trust was made in the case and Mr. Harris negotiated a second trust joint for the difference between charge price and the $60,000 realized charge price and the $60,000 realized trust and Mr. Dingle's deposit.
Wins Essay Prize
Washington, D. C.—Miss Dorothy Houston, 16, an older daughter of a senior and honor student in Dunbar high school won the first prize of $50 in the essay contest, conducted by the Society of Mayflower Dealers. Awards were made last week.
Six prizes were offered, three for the colored and three for the white students. Colored high schools (same price as given the white high schools). First prize—Dorothy Houston of Dunbar, whose subject was "Ambition the Pilgrim Fathers." Second prize—Dorothy Ferechre of Dunbar, whose subject was "Ideas of Pilgrim Fathers." Third prize—Dorothy Ferechre of Dunbar, whose subject was "Ideas of Pilgrim Fathers." Mabel Shipper, also of Dunbar, whose subjects were "Importance of Compact Day and the Mayflower Dealers" and "The Mayflower Compact and its Significance for Self-Government in the United States."
Honors: Miss Otelia Cromwell and J. Francis Grezey.
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‘gree 2s att Cea
Soe Ate ath Bae
Bi Heine sac or Gi as
LSS” comsnece Potmae asd Sich
camer He taney ee Bis
BRST, Wa thea" Hanae
EEE Mah ai an
freee dist
eel oma, af 1812. Agile
acelin tits ha
ner cat sceemecn te
Wg gues ea etre HS
coli ransyemetes Be
ae ating a
Rife Lone, of 124 Strnad a
Teel tattered
Hee ie et
Sey teins ate hua tea RS
Hehe Wis tpi Ne
Beet Easting nate
Ff, est ona toent memtere
jnutonding the, 8th 8
PLEASANTVILLE, N. J.
riegapnieee 3 —twoaba eeng
oe HRM i a Be Pa Chee
gn, aston Cin ots eae ee
Sela see ess Ph nae the felon
Eran ak Ton mt Saas
Sate Hare hats nie chat
pie Hpelceata GS an Suan Sa:
Bee EGY ational Biadgecon aa
gare Gace We ag ve
Be Dre aueber Aemberi a
sere tg Ae iehne nse tall
Pecan Mh ie, Rae eet as
Hieinent 15 Ct ntuni to come iis
SEES uate * A sere
Sie Meatant Choreh, “Phar evens
Bie Moma Chan hie bun
Be Ie ila Wears ot Waste
ao ee eid et
Pine asa eGE Stl tat Chane
Lea, Motadbe Ree ne, © Shen
Souda CU ta Wedncaat at
Teradaet ee Thmten ala
poet a ett, Who” mie
Shee Witt ae Blgomutc sent, wae
Pikeaithetate hate of her ennentr
ore sree Ge hens Ne ena
Be ice MOM ender
Fer tee eee cad ors
mae ee, Tea eae in we
Bebra Be ite rh teehee S
Funda a ort ie ‘ange Sheen
BHT hy (ah ont Son Rd
BSE: Ha yAS"ind vilerac Soe
Sate galt ogra in the near
Sa ce Se ear oeh haa
falar: endl anni ta aint ta
jaracd fragt UML ictd at aati
Anaiehett octane ander Se gh
Chara eet Boreas Shea
Piece ay aa, eran
ree a as Sat ure ona
ine pee
— =
Orphanage Head Jailed -
sew York (A342) —Wthson
Johtton a superintendent of Lone
Janet papuat “ornmsages ae
dsand Dep ipeia under $18,000, bal.
SRS 4 aitted “Inummctes wiih x of
He wamitted tnt
NEW JERSEY
the organization of this club. why
Beant et the iargest mmarerp of any
colored’ club nthe. State, ef, New der
sey tSrore tnan one Hundsed and Ay
Heinbersr including’ the ‘Eades AUX:
Hae. were present,
Wie pastor defined the word "Stand:
potters! ad in ms exhortations urged
BRene"to five tp is the sigmiacance. of
iherhame, iapcrsing upon hi ear
Ghat relia and morale. ware. inle
penattiy lenin the atic funda
er hamid che, Cie fore shen
Menfanee and: aarhred then a hearts
Seleomne atl ales to wership at this
"Phe aecretary of tive club, W. Forrest
couare Se eave g trie aaitrase on the
Ristors’ ofthe cio,” Sossells Aiimond
detond,sicerpestan of ty Sah ao
iipurae tribe tuatecn, aA
idraie ade the neekentatinn to, the
panies ane all rend rl
itor of the work aone by the Ladies
ite Seanapatters Club, meet
Frldny “evenlag ue re Palter Motch
Teestafie awenies Weal has heen, re
Eeltea by ge presidente fy Gy Ca
Sane role De Wee Ninna, 0
Sante N. f'n. member ot the advisory
Soardof the “State Hepubitean Com
Pitee, that he wll be present tex
Blonds evening, Rlecgeraii's. hen
menage mucdng wit be eld under the
Auspieeasat the chub.
SOCIETY
dno Janne, 381 Nien Pag,
sth s3eoreting trom pnt npr
celed int the Sime uty" at the ‘See
Se sei tie
‘Would (uke) Johnson, award (Su
iy) llivan aod Hanene, bani ae nes
ih New Vor Cit ooking over “th
Unent gma Oe eeking
Mie an Stes, Robert Poole, who were
reeanaly marie at sew York Ci, have
returned to thik sis, "Ales Poole, a
the" Berme, Stabe oui” Hoth on
aint promi ae popular in socal church
an fraternal elteles .
Mie Tamt Sire Jonepk, Dain, of G12 X:
tring axenic, i for i Woks
(Barat sgn, Hales New York Ct
Biladeanni nna Caltianore, .
Samet” Be Hagen and sienrze Mac
tsa ae “Just returned from Ne
More tit snere they arent so wok,
WeTiae ibe tnnbas ex sire Maynen
JERSEY CITY, N. J:
SOCIETY ENTERTAINS.
‘The residence of Dr. and Ars. T. A.
Jones, “af 8 Jewett avenne, was the
een of @ social gathering ti honor 0
Mrs avd Atte Conrad Barrows, a newly
Imnetied coupte ‘of Toston. Meets sehn
Were on a honestigan trip to New York
and New Jereey. lies Beekyit domes, a
ie, fons Elena of the ‘pride athe
hostess,” After duneins, inehiding ne:
Cini, numbers by’ = Mentalg”™ Seay. “Bx.
Ble” ones and “Happy Brown, and
games, the party wae regaled. with the
iceson's delicacies. ‘The guests inchuted
friends from: Slontelair, Newark, New
ork. and. Jersey" City,’ who. jolted
ishing the couple health, wanlth and
Reach, ope present included Mr. a
ines Conrad Afchibold Barrows. Mr and
Mes: Atehinold Hart, Mise Leola Carter
Alisten Hinreiet Seay, Huvel Burke, dus
ina Burke, Magion lax. helms, Gnz~
on. Sisan Nellson, Beale Jones
Sfesers, Siuenatd Clarke, alfred Town,
enite Nelison. Alfred Fostre, Sam Fos
ter. dakie Wright, Withert Henry. 1.on-
he George, Iilebsrd MeDul, and Dan
Taylor.
WILLIAM A, CROFT PASSES
an ihe death at Seilany “Arthur” Van
crete lp hig earie thirties dho-eity has
Been" severely shocked. About” nit
Mens hizo. Ne married” Miew Gertrude
Ue Daten and the family. was blessed
Sinn three children, 2 iris and sn
Whilamy deo Desh came warshertedls
last. Sunday | nfternoon. followin 2
Remorrhases ‘the fumerat was helt en
XCminestiay atteenonn sith, Tex. uetny
fificiting. Inthe place of the Ret. F
AW Meatis ies pastor, having heen
tailed fron” the Veity aa ministerial
inn hu eect the
Naonal cash Register eompans, sid
Sas considered ome af the As1 mon,
The managers Ta S, Roberts, hs Ta
personal Interest Ia Ure welfare at his
fai "an Nae Croft aw eit of
Anion for the past sear. The funeral
Aiteetionn were in-charge é¢ Jahn White
and the” Incerment swan i Neve Yak
Hay Comevers. The familly fives ae 2
Oak etree
be er nae ag Mahe Ie ang Mn
Gon wvenue, has Telurnied ta the city
fromm Peneacsin” Has after a three
Seeks” Sanit with tnx parents, ate. aut
Sirs. Sino Tolllenr, of Warrinicton, Mr
Marshall -atke visited (ends in. Louise
Silt tnelanaths Pleenirsh wid we
fAiso' the guest of his wunt and avsine
ite, reg Waters, and. ates, ‘Myeto
Watera-ising, of Younstown, Onl.
HARVEY M. BURKE AT, HOME
Coutrars to'feports that Barces M.
Toarke- had been geriousiss minnie Iv
the wreck asweck man on "thes Penne
Siteanin Teallrand, near Humtingzany Bit
‘When an eniite’ nection wars drvaiied
iad ents left the Fond ied snd Dassen
ors’ and ‘crew's liver in-duncer with
{he excention of hinveeit andthe Senond
Sook no enn. was either hurt oF kill
Siew"burke seas Teall nthe. hoxptal
And afterwards trnnaferrer to: hin bome
acu ae Forrest ‘treet, where. he” will
Aoubtiess Im for the next two, months.
Ho niniained severe mnrhins of hs twp
ower lege ind feet, and for fling it
fas ‘chonghe™that ties woud. have tn
Sevipotatea, he throwsh the shi
foneration of ‘some ‘of iy, train cr
ana passeszery were tréea from the
Sebo ihe thee eee ented gee ne
line ali hopes: were dispensed that the
could be saved, .
green SRRAeITE Meee OI
air. Talbot Bivlih. formerty of tls
jis, live at 188 Union aireck, and nom
fof Hinlunnave, with Nie two brother a
Benndehitared of the Inge Stlenndhe Smith
Rito was the ‘mother of ‘athot. Smut
presented, St Matthews 3. E. chureh
Jaccwhich be ix n miember, Sineas. Octo:
Ber 18th, a very handsome. hammered
silver bow with’ fine alld eal pedoria
In'memone of thelr mother and cen
other's tne garte Wan Cary dnrens
eas eversthing pertaining: the. 20
soma, Sehoan ie, Bad onazea ot en
fugit 10 the astention of thos ‘pres
rent, The members of the Family” ane
tein gueate precent, made. the church
vena ionation of $n St. Matthews
[Enureh 1s located In Balelmore.
JERSEY CENTRAL PORTERS
SovoANce
‘The mnniversary and. reception, dance
log the ‘Jermes Central Te ity Porters &
Matters will bo held. at Colusa Hal
JGecan Aad CAG avenue on ede
gahidadom'ic he nocdens 9 Say Ie onc
Sf the leaders for charity: neat beacvo:
Tent purposes: inthis chy. They ew
their benutifal club house at Tt Be
sonar a ev th eae, ine
arden’ joining fin “the reer. ios
Hosen 12: Gibson i president, nil wit
an’able committee a¢ arrangements
HEADS CHURCH FEDERATION
New York—Neleon Williams, J, 0
Richmond, Wa who as been get
forty hy the Amerlean aptise Pani
Eatian Soctetyy to Rend the. federation
St Churches, haw suecreded tn getting
More theaiet-nocr i eh-chute ze
fra to ewe the. gospel tan any. advise
the Sorkets ‘haw ever had.
"Prat Wiliams “ex leading member
of the Pirst. Baptist Church: of Teh
‘yond, Yar anda graduate of Calum:
Gentlemen:
I owe GLANT-OX
om for the re-
2 covery of my
Wee | health, I
KAe.| sure im-
P97 proved rap-
MARE idly after
the second
box.. I tried every kind
of: medicine and none
came up to Glant-Ox.
Yours truly,
Gennaro Galano.
lM
ate TAN a7 Artic Ave,
Study Center Holds
Interesting Meeting
A, Jarce and emthuslastio meeting
marked the Inauguration of the seat
SerE din At Ine at tae Tada eres
‘Mug. senoek. “Tha Texhstraclon showed
trie tepretentatien fromthe schecit on
the® Morhsldes Sirse "Frances Stina
Sphned. the seeding with m. statement
St her hones form vigorat ‘nl ti
Sean pear for he ‘gxacition. Ma
Sota" inetia ‘then prevented the. new
donmuiutlon, which Was adopted onan
sly
Sha’ following parent weze elected to
the executive committees Now derse
Mie, Figaro, ‘see Bruce, ex Mende:
Indtanae Ste. Filer, Siew, Pluie. and
HS a ee ai
agony” spoke e
"Phere Wax general surprise expressed
af the complatenny ang? atte eness
SE the equlpmenc for thes girie voen-
Sonat cinases wich Incleded a made
Uinle kitehen, a” aiming. oon ce modern
Bedroom nd Adjoining broom ec
Theselal au seqgemie ranches, ‘The
‘tone 1 ‘drawing, manual teaisiie, An
ihe opportunity asses all Tecelved ihe
eof? nea” detighted uitenion of the
Cire Bein _
ne adn cal cicen: witane a
piste turpesey eat given Wiliam, af
Ehinn Us "See Chinn’at. thelr beautiful
ome, 1F NS Neie' Vere avenue, om Fel
dag ‘evening. Friends “of tho couple
Buinerel stn eur” Done’ An co
pletelss wntorised “ate: Chinn “when. he
bnterea his home about 8:10, showering
igs with presente nd weil eishen
Siuste, dancin. stosinge and radlo, 8
Ieciong were the fexten of ihe. ee
hing. “rne' parts was: fade. more si
fronting the. “entertalament” of Nin
Exrorite Williams: whowe singing, danes
fag. ad wiki sala wow grea
na
‘ALi Inte hour the queste sere wah
aed into the henutlfully decorated win
ing room, where they were nerved wit
a elight tal enaste In the center, of
ther tabi) Mam arse” wile: birhay
tadke “with “pin exniies’ Mrs. (chinn
prosed hersrit'a, wonderful, hostess 3%
nied hy Mrs, edna Gadsden'and ‘Stes.
fanaa. Hases
‘Among then prasent were: Me, and
Mie Boole, Sie aint Mire Lest. ate,
Ue" and Nira) Cometies. Str, gna, Sirs
Nawlew Haves, Me. anol Ste Leroy
Gadsden, Nie aud Ses. ie, TAOS, Asses
Een trees Minsa Moaris, sulle Goons,
ies. Jrroy’alorrie Syn. eed, Johnson,
Mix: imnd TineinsSivests ohm iat:
shows Hmmett xnd Willian Stessay aad
O° Fohasan
Weddine Reception
riage of her daughter, starion, to lorvin
riage of het daughter, Atation, to Hrvin
Giiiner, Of Gretnsbora, Ne Cay atm
‘een elven in let honor on’ Friday
Srealia'of at weet
She fait ook Tae, at the home
na Mowieres SS sole atte’ re
iiac hore’ «charming town of green
Fesrgtie tenn teaged with, ive
Men 'nand trinmed, with Safeer Bead
isa chicane wnotider howawet 2
Wihlyooe addea' «Routh of bens
“ine meld of honor, Mies Tanta Steoh-
Jen” ware on Ue Yutongette ‘aren
{Bhan wh gold ene head fam ad
Sle gueste endoved a vasied and
pletiog“teogeatns AY acaet ance, Wa
a bs Sieg Vera stephens apt
iMoney “Mle Nithoe “Harrie
eran" aegg slensea “toon exert
Midln am addeN tina ac hay
ing! aluging and amet foie.
Fin ising roam. ea ects
ecoraten be one of “Atuntie elt
Heioas interior Gcortarye Sire, Ola
‘Rema ine’ eal saber Waa nk
and arcen, ‘he gate formed ane'of tt
Hn sonen "Seah note Su fon
Iai osee'to atch, “Rouebuls wale
iirniaker the table
an elstgrate banaue, wan nerve y
cattecr Shamus te tnent coment
ail the delicacies of the season. zi
Irie couple tose ‘he “Pocnienta’ of
uta amet gee
eione" present’ veto: Mist Tan
Gaines ald “Sone Carnot tence
fieithe Camden, Fach Nis
fain gtepn ae iit ari Mie
Eine and Alta fiveles sie nd Sire
Frank Wy ios Chine Jot
Keg ihe States che On
re cial af Washington, D, C.
Mie Arti Wanhingtan, of pahons
‘is, SUNRn covet Mes ts Pk
Slog Mr fonner ei Mira. Taps
te kia Min Me Haas Sire Te
Soni Stead Sire debi tee
ooo, Mesh ‘Kaige Mes, Mood
Sear Urata, Bein! Mee Ah
SNiSanthu Sw "Sica Mae JE
Jerercom. aie. nd ew fe Thomas,
Mee Sines Se, aod re We
Moning ahr ana’ ies sam sr
Elnrence Reon. ama ait, Thorne
Sins bs Goviay Sinan Siew Meu
en Wes Ronen Sewn she Wea
Bn Mand. ined. dordam, Nise A
Soran sles and are, Pergerson, Rew
Pe Sieiouaail Mae ©: Walkers Nise
Thee Stee Gites. Gia aie eae
Complete Plans For Father
_ And Son Week
4 join sommiten of the, Arctig Ave:
uso Bane eM €. A nnd te cbr
Me eeeGhuecl mit ae take Vee fe
ete ngo ea campleted nny fo
inc apnronrlate uberis of father ant
Gi eating a Fin Ree
Church ‘on Suatins, November isin.
hconniven aver fo the commiting hy
ee AN La alartin the pastor and
cif. “the orimltet ane that the
Gersice of ihe evening wil Bethe Dei
eink neat they seek A Soret
Pots Miler dircetnr of the bentor hott
and ‘the addrext of the evening will he
mud bbe ye tn Sawkli,” Pra
NENG, Biexeeson, ehairmon et the boys
Mork ‘connmitine” ofthe -Aretie Aven
itrenehy und Superintendent. Pelt, of
the anburt" Sundsy-achoo,
an on hance le Hel nthe toe
or auaitoriam, (9. whieh fathers, ‘and
Soars invited whe price af adie
Sion and supper for the bom ell he that
Herings he eather er wuaralat,
foe Une fauer iat he hig hs sone
sult on (Or the evening
REV. MARTIN PREACHES SERMON
YOWebustican clus
dase Suntuy evening, whe Asbury X
t Ghul ie Gowda fo ened
aria adheP nan wit Sad
unter isa Wand ieepupitenn chin
nbiers Third Nard Keeani Se tact
At$1.00.A Bottle
BALTIMORE, MD,
apo sk seein South's: Bigiedt antt Best Weekly... <- <> --Baltimore; Mie. <2 = Bogelthied’
SOCIETY
By C. Bion Jones
THE WORLD'S METROPOLIS |
__ sae (NAACP Starts Nation Wide!
TO REQUIRE LICENSE OF $50,000 Defense Fund | |
: ELEVATOR MEN American puslte Poa Gives $5,000 |
New York—An ordinance, requiting
quis levator Tugner inns New Yerk
Sie ee ant a he
tio’ ee Bemers Stas Basta ot al
he ae Pee ar scien eres ths
fegicre t Bleg lade tn
fon" or ex's “witch Malhews
Plone, ‘s diecetor.
a attetee eh mide ard thes
aiate SA Rate ale ee thee
HEN s de eer hn
Nigorousiy" opposed ws Jolin. Mt, Meyai
See PSE ibedtahe the ow
erate Ther anostd ine ines be
eaten a a eect ta Senne Sa
eae, ON te con Sorters “suany a
ion aPbelved bye ston, ar
ear tM emt nana be
Hadieees feRusineas placer sed Sn
eieteehtt wtinet Tt tere
ei ate tat gay uae 0
sxe ease ene aU tes
{ane Gnaeus
Charleston Said To
Make Feet Flat
New York, Ors TANPI—De, Jo:
sep, Interiand of 281. Went Sine
Hem da rece present of the Pe
ious itettarthe Association, bas
Sivech thatthe sulment of fat fect I
arresting vein atseming. rapidly
Miron he its of oan,
"Bre mand deplores the “Cher
jeatear uS the prewieulae Gane, f
tmostingutions tote feet and wena
thatea en? neous. i not fatale
ment fag fect tareatens untess the
mentrtesten ie baomeds 3 taal
Te ee oChacleston” tho. mile
ttlart and presture are brought di
Sealy ‘uhog Whe tender feet ot the
South ica or tse properte_ des
Flop? eisthonfe atibition oe ef
ian Ose proportionate.” development
OE hip’and ene Join.
SKIRTS TO BE SHORTER
Xow: York, Oct CANT) —Aceora-
ing to dlsnatches. from Paria. the
Hfonch "tinpners have. adonted
hone sklrtl tor’ the net: ‘seuson,
ita thowghe at fest that fe wow
fesult in savings but the new sir
ihe mide lowing kind, offered by the
model makers at the cutani shots
Tiave been found to take-up juntas
tnuch cloth asthe “longer, ‘closer
ing ones, and ‘therefore the price
trust as arent
Quick Garage Courses
‘Turn Out No Good
Xew vorereriain garggen lave
heen “advertising. (a. The New York
Worator students who were, promi
2 hort course ht gavoe evr chars
Inge efi Sm ome
work in garmees afterward whieh paid
as high as £00. 4 Week re
‘eat tes TO West Maly steet
anni’ Sclomen inuchenss tind Wort 6h
Sra is ne Trade nlon for
twsaniiey Segre Workers an "alleged
the heey hal aid std to tear the
arnge business in three nights, and
comin get Jone.
“the Fes eee St to the Urn
fitter” tn the Worbhe whieh In tem,
Haveitigniad won eater idl Baa tne
mg aiseontneds="
Spiritualists Adjourn
Xow Pyorke Tite Notlonal Spittal
isi Convvitton nf Annies adlouied is
sinu eneion Ye Miia, atuiny:
Site hating ntti cocoon
cathe Coke Nations) Smite Gane
Satine ike wie hs euged
SN atee bole: Geral nl Meare
Sameat “ute eaearzaniaton
Savion sa Ainerten? iting Ita osnt
Han ee thufeel a "ori
Tehie” WOFk SH ensiante mage fromm
cattery” hbase Pandan.
Tees dunt Me White, Gre seenaent
wil otain hie Nealgwartes fen ae
oon serena
Hen, eorwe) Beanison of Sa race
ethene mutta: and Sectee Ee
inl, of Nears Weanuter.
Jamaica. 1s, 1—-On donday evening,
xatennbee’ Sui, izebmuomtendge, Now 3
Sees 2 ete aia net
Behe dar Houniatat it ar tance
Uitte wh tans see
(irom Geurze. Dunjainin Tannen "The
Whine fouebamnene ahr Mt the rebe
Pn tamesonte Tee ay the PRaaser
Sree ean sam aon Crhueetas,
Seeuet EN, oe well attended Ts
RRGE S Se aeting
rae" a of ewe aah a
Tart ced ae Set Week Se Shak wage
aereeeeas UIE Rate cote
SF ne aa et cal tinned eerie
Sie ees eerily tthe ew eae
PA ae rome a
wn ort es a: eee a
SHlet a. at Chen Enoredan Oe
Meta Sat ee pn, oT tialinws ek
Boag att aiae laitiendota are
ene ae acta dates, Ms
ERanihe dekh, OF ehlhon Binge, Vie
Sai Bett Pen RE et
Sin eae Ga ati rectly
fein tlie weekcend. guest nf Stes. Whee
Sita! audkin‘op theoloce sire, @'A
Sues hal tatating! wnerancne Tatteday
occhersolchT Mt the “home a ey
Setener ett tere Manet at
‘the Younz Peaple’s Socal Chub. who
tately: gave the plas, “Every Youth.
Under Ground Treasures
HOW AND WHERE TOFIND THEM
scsare ys amano, fm me
eons ve eet tre, ones
woneL co 83 cant Loe, pam
a & ACHED”
Lady Says Her Back “Hart Night
and Day”—Least Noise Up-
set Her. Better After
Taking Cardui:
‘Winfield, Texas.—"My ‘back hurt
pight and. day,” ‘says Mrs. C. 1.
Eason, of R. FD. 1, this place. “E
ached and ached until I could bard-
ly go. I felt weak and did not feel
ke doing anything. My work was
‘a great burden to me. I just hated
to do up the dishes, even. I was
‘noaccount and extremely nervous.
"My mother had taken Carduf
and shé thought it would do mo
‘good, so she told me to take it.
‘My husband got me a bottle and f
began on it T began to improve at
once, It was such a help that
continued it until after the baby's
birth.
“L took eight bottles and 1 can
certainly say that it helped me.
Ie ts a fine tonic, It built me up
and seemed to strengthen me.
grew less nervous and began to’
sleep better.
“ET can certainly recommend
Cardut to expectant mothers, for to
me it was a wonderful belp. 2. Tn
every way 1 felt better after taking
4 ang think it 3 eplendd med
rer
Cardui Is purtly vegetable, and
contains no barmful drugs.
‘For sele everywhere. | NC-163
NAACP Starts Nation Wide
$50,000 Defense Fund |
American Fund For Public Service Gives $5,000
And Offers $15,000 More
pec Ee a Bo
sine yeee [Geaeterinete
ule al Fe ain Saat ey
WAZARENE CONGREGATIONAL [SH JIE, Arhting, tHe Sweet and. othe
a metsaze In belialf of the colored peo-
rete werondered through the at
ee
CHURCHES
Xew Yark—The Executive Count.
Harlem Teague, het Ite Qctoler inect:
Inge With the General oflerrs of, Federa.
tian tt We 3k, October goth.” he fol
tawing were present: Dr. J. D. ushel
chairman, presiding: Exeeitlon, Socres
fares Wiliams, Harlem Teragie: tien
Ley’ speretarss Dre WB. Stine; Field
Seereigee, De, Me. Panam: ells
Bee Setretare, WW. AL Mowhotte De
(re athtnron, Sz. Mark? Dr dc. JD
tionaiaes Tantine “Temples Dro PLA
Callens Salem Ae Yer Dr HL Ks Speae
fame Bethel As 3s ei Bider Me
Stenchan S. De Az Dro J. W. Brown:
Mcther Zion: President, J. 1,, Storkton:
Dey, Moped mene Ste dames: he
Re carmen. Grace, “Congrenationa}
Spurge Commitee 19 the. Churcher:
1 NW, itabingon, We tees, 7. D,
Huaheit Finance Conimivten: ‘De.
Fo Noberts. A. pledge of $100. front
Be, We ion,
‘Sundays November Sth, 4p, ma. spec:
ad 'propeam, be tineeda ible” Chass
Aisduipian,” Feteration speakers—Dr
AMG Powell, De. 2, F. Catiamme, Prot
Saison Willams, Nelson ‘Dixon, Direc:
ior Andrew €. Wilson,
Oyen. forum, roneains will, he held
with St Marky, St. dames, Salem Sf
Be Watkein ‘Memorial, Pilgrim ‘Baptit
Firat National Baptist, ‘Trinity Baptisi
during November: and. December
‘Education Day, November 1, 4 p.m
Mother Zion, Seeretary, Willitms, "rep
MGcnted the League as presiding ‘oft
EE MS cA Secretary, Anceson
Seiy Yorke Chie ‘Stixgion Societys tis
Bath Je, Wille, Program presented
Py the Dirwrtor, Mes, Congo. | Adah
De. FSW. Brown, ‘Children societies
Miss Clenienza Briscoe,
Whe. George, A. Rutherford, Heath
ccturer. ei teak Wranenias, 9,
Tae Social Study club, Abessinish, Aw.
Bhew te, Wiison, leader. Walker Sten
ori, November! Hkh, 6:30 p- ms Mf 3
fee “lones. muperintehdent.
Stews A Tanykins. wax ordained
raster of Pllgeimn Bapelst chute, 3
Be Sbena. cee Mev. Jerome Harris
st. jattnens Baptist Church, 270 W
sie.
PFicev, N. &. Enns, First National Bop
ist, has. heen called tn. Virginia oF
SSSount the. gent hi, tether
‘Bantist Temple, ene ofthe Us
group of “workers “In Pederasion,
Ex aahhy Yor $2000, to ralse the. seconé
morteage.on ‘the. proper, and With,
ikon ont ote, emer. auaeery de
hevable leadershlop of Dr. C. D. Dour.
Bee fonw Savage ina lige BY. P
Wieder’ among’ Harlem's best ‘so:
letters
Ghiste Class, Thursdays, Bible Insti
tule, Metrepoiltan aptist Church, $:30
Sacener estnine School, Abyssinian
Hondas, 710 88d p.m, SH
“Tho Negro Baptist, Mission Societs o
Now Sori, an aueiliare to the | en
Nick Baptist City. SMlesion Soctets, has
heen organized “to help in. the reat
fell in diariem, Dr. HM. Arthur Rooke:
fe the chaleman, and Dr. W. P. Hayes
the feoveaentattve in the wilte“oreat
tte society cen Fras evening
bein Se
Sugersol’,
YANKEE
* RADIOLITE
aT
(GLEE
S=s
Te time in the dark.
It. has the dependa-
bility that: everyone ex-
pects in.an Ingersoll,
» $975
eee
What A Bellhop Thinks
New York.<-On, the day: that Clarence
Beta of ia. sce! a feat
oe teva se. Bare nome” tran
inal he Muto Associ fo th
ogee NS sb Re deena, fay Ye
ct ene
th hue the XA AP
ER Soon, Reretar af the 8h
See eae
“re iaasoo xoxroen, In Amerle
rea'ia tae am he San. OB
tet Ya eat ae! Sota
abe amet Ant te entre
chual pester hone ett
feos ie Ue fo ta tor
8s, ont ttn we eat
etvee the tS. Supreme Court, the
ie pent awe Whur
sea aaa ue Sle
fae ttt Patna geno
eng” 9600 mak
SE te its i al se
istenting’ fet Gobo a
vera nai Bet
Rostra eae eh
SSEAS a read ta
stati sto an ng hee
anata ice"
pistes" wh “oars bot
It al hse hee es
a a
Hons, a ell ae cers hull
Mrs. Rhinelander Doesu’t
_ Deny Race Blood
Le
ey Ae UR eee
ee ne
eee
bake) oe oe eee
Ae My <a
fe
NEN, oe Hie ;
Ee RS Re
dee oe bess
gee oe
Bie ee
e ek gees
Seer Pea
UNG eee (area
3 el ae
PO PER soc Na ED
Whi FN a
pexriee Jonee-Rhinctaneer. former
mmatt-whg mtried the pitt
fovsia, Kip Phineender andi
tov fighing Meat for annullent
Wit ot deny thet she hos colored
ioe
Tier attorneys asked for 415.000
aon! counel fees it eek
hinge wanaredgolars Was
seamed
Yun Bhasin stores
fave xpent $20,000 In tracing the pa-
cere‘ llents ene i
ieee all aa foun that ith
feviietes i et Weve nen and
Saat UF eee a
Lite Neste.
Sven sonics etme, re
inane sat supposea te dete
i thar eng he
ia ehe it relating to ae
ithinelaader’ colve ‘snd re" hon
Srentcontned ecloidk cio
meen cere ened ot ena
Movant ihe Pent uatce trom
Erg eee
Sisal eld Che soon ne
anes enae sot '220 08
ea 8 conte wae St,008 ana eh
fhe could not expect any more. unt
the feuh'oe sitter. Pai
tiislamhcl there eit fone:
IesBSagbb ne hie ws father
hot pee ot Sapo
preme Secretary “of Caravan, No.” },
By MIRE WENEEY
T went to the Southland Totel,
Norfolk. Virginia.
‘The owner and mmnager “there
reilly wunted clean and. up-to-date
hatel, The week-ends found sil Ue
hotels full of sailors and soldiers as
it was in a direct fine with the Na-
val base, which wasn't very’ far a-
wus. Anyone knows that sobdlers
and sailors aro a hard bunch to det
with and. thes made Che manager
miss many goud nigins’ sleep, wateh-
ing them.
Srrom the beginning, T knew his
days were numbered. Norfolk was
no place for. fim and his kind. Ie
was ton slaw; Norfolk too fast. He
Insted about five weeks then quit
the hotel flat and tert town.
‘The average bellman fs a good
traveler and one that knows the
road. ‘The.traveling seaman knows
the value of the bellman and teeats
him accordingly, as without his
nid, he would B6 lost and he Knows
te
{ know’ salesmen that have been
going up and down the voad for
sears and stopping at the same ho-
tels. could cll the! clerks, porter
and-hellmen by name, Just As 1 the;
were sutest there permanently. The
wise sulesman trled-to make friend:
with the hotel force in ordér to re
what he wants for less money ‘and
the least effort. He: realltes.’: too
‘that if he js "hard, he will be-rail
|_Heads Military League _|
a oe |
ie ow.
|e
ie
ee
Mae
ae |
ON
ec ere ©
ee
tl
“New jYork—The Nationa Niiitary
ante bUntacns untee the command
we Geternt usanSveaverse, Who: hs
Shot Surtad rom i) enepal camo
Mateus In Sew ders Wie
santas ane feaaie, pera
Boban
Sie Bluseheth ice and Silas, Pann
pote ai Capua ae at
‘iret tanta Sa a ss
yale ele HS
zeneea amd Dr Robert Le Cooper i
mn)
Booker’s Chef, 94,
Dies At Tuskegee
as
ce
‘ Cera
aw
ee et ee
ae
Po ee
,
.
SS eee eae
Cg
es
Soe ise
‘Fuskesee, hla, (A. X. P.)—Fell
panes, tee tla culae
Pe a tetnan cher ot took
cer Walngton, diet here atthe
teoeme
‘Avhen ie. Washington opened
rushenee tn 28¥ie ration, eft Nis
seen eeteatie it prions tip
ese pe A
bs aeee “ccameaaehy chee
eer eere i ees everal atta oe
Bina hi ses
Purge fy yas of Mee
igen leant ee hs wane
een at erat tara athe is
ee than $248,163. In the begin.
eee As hee” atte hea
Gittee'and ‘matron, aif Sembined i
sateen
Pullman Porters Fired
Xew York—Ashley Ti, Totten, chair-
mia ia Lasal No.'s, Bolin Bars
lr Hemet, Ameoclon ja meh fd
inea He ta the third man’ to bes dine
rnloged hy: the eohnpy” whilt fs daleg
gemstiie Somaig 9, prven Ne or
Saat wank ere of. Fue porters
wan put in change ot the, rondWae
infted out of Chigage,
ANDERSON HONORED
New York—
chavlen Wo Ane
ernon, colleatsr of
FETE internet revenue o
eS SE ithe ‘third istic.
PASMBCE Nias esta dished
“ER |nimseit an a. much
Fe ae Fs |noughe after -din-
1 USER Incr speaker.
ya | Mr. Andérson's
oe Mey," \speech at the En-
2 pare |Nishe sinner heard
is recently at-the Un-
* a Swajion League Club,
Bd cagaleroved tno Tous:
enon wana es applause.
PRR aeM Thursday night
Reeimemlnc. headed the
ie HAMA) committee of. ar-
SS rangementy and
‘spoke at a teatimo-
poke St a teatime
oe
ee
R
ges ©.
eae
ese eS
RIAL GIR NEE an, eiie ari, of Wine
Sh 'wise, white, of the firm of Wise
Mea" Benappopristors of, Pal
Bia et New York and: Paris
6 , > CH
“Appearances” Still
Showing At Frolic
Now Fork-—Laoter W. Sega's with
araveal of iandll support from nr
trad “andeons Hay. eappesen nes
Ieteyorted to have interested Wiliam
Wi 'SReater, ‘omits in ths pieces when
Wit poem the nroduelion to Fun fo
Bug Drove weeka"at leant
"Pee ranagermentlaiied that the
vont “iguse Rare the Hagen busines
Fhe Nose grossed” but $2000 tnt
inca Ween Anderson ts former
Priteo"Geiboys there are, three, cl
dred pembe fo the Sask Dede Green
ered members fo the cast; Dodo Gree
OVERCOATS
UNCLE. BENNIE,
» 401.N. GREEN ST.
RADICALS URGE
oe
Red. Chicago Labor Con
gress Plans Campaign
Backed By Communists”
WANT FULL EQUALITY
OF BLACK AND WHITE
Jury System, Army, Navy
‘And Ku Klux Are Seor-
ad
eexadciea Geum Paawbes
“Down with wars,
“Long. live the Ritts @nd the Sy-
lang and the Chinese,
Kegatd Rew, down with Jim Crow
“hong lve the Amerfeon Negro
Labor Congress on the same footing
with American Caucasians!”
‘Asks Rights In Public Places
Another: rexolution, read $n part
‘Ne demand dhe (ull'and equal.ad~
mittance of our people to all thea
ters, restaurants, hotols, ratiroad
[station waiting -rooms sun, all othor
pinees of public resort, and no sepa
Futon or recognition of eolor Wis:
finctions, and that heavy penalties
be Imposgd' upon parsons who dls-
eriminates” : i
In hailed Soviet Russia as the drst
power to establish race equality, 80-
Sax, politically aa osonomicay,
he conguesysisy goes on record fOr
the convene: of an international
Thee congress to discuss methods) of
combating imperialism. 4
‘Avmy And Sosy
A resolution read:
Spo ie rerolved, That thls con-
gress demands that the war depart
Rent and navy departments of the
United Statos government :tholish all
Sint Crow dietinetions in the army
and macy: and be it further
“itexolved, ‘That wa demand that
vongress pais a law forbidding the
Briny.ana navy to make or Keep any
Pecord, whatwoever making any dite
Uinction uf Nero and white in the
mnilivary, air and naval forees in ine
bf peace. or war or in any Way 10
Semregate the rices In these services,
fant be it further
“Resolved, Tht we deny the right
of any nation to conscript any Ne-
Bro whlle such nation holds our Fee.
Sha, ckiss In subjection and inequale
He
{ dnvles
“A second resolution read: =
SiCis a general custom of potice
and criminal courts to ecard 1
every white defendant a jury, com~
poset UC White parsons, Dut At | tho
fame me to exclude Negroes front
Juriex ‘to. uy Negro defendants, hn
inportane caser. This elm.om ts
baxed on the theory that the waite
pun alone proves tke presence of
face preiudien in every such trial;
Merefore, be ie
SHtesolved by che American Negro
tabor Congvers that ae long as the
feineiple of white supremney: exlets
A’ Nogro cannot get x fair trial be~
fore a white urs or 2 mixed Jory
And ye demand that a belief in
‘white supremacy? shall be a leat
dar to anyone serving on a Jury
Bry o Negra; he ie curther 7
“Resolved, that no Negro owes
any respect ar obedience to the de-
Cislons of any court Ia which he fs
Glscriminated against.”
‘New Teaiers
In decrying the present leadership
of doctors, lawyers, ‘ete., who have
always betrayed the workers of tho
face, R. i Moore, of New York,
said?
“You Negroes have to develop |
new tyne of leaders. Ie must come
From the workers, one who will not
[Wend the knee.”
Tpletures of Leaders
Pletures of feaers of revolt in
this and foreign lands decorate the
Meeting. luce. Dieectly above the
platform ie a picture six fort wide
Showing a black worker and i farm=
erahaking hands, °°
Abd-el Keim, chloe of the Russian
peoples revolting against Spanish
nd ierench rule in Morocco, and Sun
Fat Sen, lato president of the Chl.
nese republic were given places of
Ronor as "resisters of white impo
rialism.”
Nat ‘Turner and Denmark Veney.
americans, sha led skie uprisings
inthe pre-elvil war era. and Tous
saint TOverture, who led the Hat-
thins to thelr revolt a century neo,
twere the leaders given places of hov-
or.
Against Ilan
Another resolution read:
Ho fe resolved by the Amorican
Negro Labor Conaress that we de-
Biase the ku Klux Klan an enemy to
Humanity, and that we will fight tt
tothe bitter end, and will make com-
tion cause with foreign-horn wark-
fers and others who arg persecuted
by st sp
‘sessions were held in. Metropolitan
Community Centre. 3120 Giles Ave
fiue and gourded by local police, de-
tectives and agents from the Denart-
ment of dustice, Carl F. Phillips,
Commissioner of Conctilation, was
[sent from Washington asa govern-
[ment observer.
‘Gniy sixty Aolesntes from many
parts of the country wore. resent
Re day sessions but 2 beral sprink-
fing of. white communists helped
swell the number.
Greetings
the Sonth African Industrial and
‘Commercial Union of Negra Miner:
Gite Peasants’ International and the
Detense sengue of italian Peasants
were among the organizations send-
Ing greetings to the congress,
“rie convention seas directed hy
tovert Fort Whiteman, able omtor
And linguist who ie leader of race
radicals inthis country and repro-
Rented {he radicnis of the communist
internstional in. Moscow.
Sirs Whiteman returned only Inst
year from an axtondod visit In Tee
| Sia studying communism ant told the
Congress tat three nico irks rnd
|seven race men are inking a three
[Year cnurse'in. Russia now a order
Fee eee the Rasalan diptomet-
FEZ ae
a
MHP =
if)
ies aceaame
Licdraf, ther and al scalp dieesece and wil
SOR tin at Baul
Your drei gor ores wl seid you
HEROLIN MEDICINE COMPANY — _
ROOSEVELT
CAREY
Two women vie for man's love—which gets him? The girl who wood-will a lie in her heart—or the girl who sacrificed her own happiness that this man might be free?
SPAT FAMILY IN "RADIO MAD"—2-Act Comedy
TUESDAY—GEORGE ORBRIEN, ALMIA RUBENS, MADGE BELLAMY and NOBLE JOHNSON, the Popular Colored Actor in "THE HISTORY OF A TIME"
Young love—sweeping blood, life—juices, hurt couples fung against one another like leaves in a storm and to have a secret and abnormal understanding. Be careful, guard your HONOR and HEALTH and on with the dance. Noble Johnson plays the part of Ponifilo in a tropical dance hill.
MACK SENNETT COMEDIANS in "RIDERS OF PURPLE COW"
2-Act Comedy
A dramatic story of Sunny Spain with its warm blooded dancing beauties and its torseheads who think no more of killing a bull than you do of eating a steak. But come see Silver King fight a bull to rescue his master.
FOX COMEDIANS In "BRAINLESS HORSEMAN" -2 Act Comedy
PATHE INSELL -All the Latest Happenings
THURSDAY—CONWAY TEARLE, BARBARA LA MAR and
JIMMY ADAMS In "THE HEART OF A SIREN" -6 Acts
ARTHUR LAKE In "BY THE SEA" -Some Comedy
WALTER MILLER and ALLEEN RAY In
"PLAY BALLE" -Last Part
FRIDAY—HOOT GIBSON AND LAURA LA PLANTE In
"THE HURRICANE KID" -5 Acts
JIMMY ADAMS In "SHIP AHOP" -Some Comedy
JOE MARGUENE QUIBBY and JACK DAUCHERT In
"BonoPio, the Willie's Family Robinson"
Enlake, Nc
GEO. LARKINS in "BEAUTY AND THE BANDIT"—2-Act Western Park
AIDS' FABLES in "AIR COOLED"—Cartwheel
AIDS' FABLES in "AIR COOLED"—Cartwheel
COMING—Nerma Talmage in "THE LADY" 8 Actions—Mie Marsh in "TIDES O F PASSION" 8 Actions—Jack Mulhall and Alma Rubens in "SHE WOLVES" 8 Actions—Chappie Rastah, the colored jockey, in "WILD WEST" return engagement—Jack Mulhall in "WILD WEST" serial
ALTA MELBA BROWN
SOPRANO NEW MEMBER
Earned $10 A Minute For
18 Minutes Radio Appearance
New York—Miss Alta Melba Brown, dramatic soprano, has joined the Dixie Jubilee Singers. The membership of this artist is greatly appreciated according to Miss Eva Jessey, directress of the group. On last Thursday the singer was captured a program from WEAF on the Abassador's Orchestra's program at which time nine stations were hooked up. The joint appearance netted the singers $10 per minute for 15 minutes' service. The annual mention was made by the announcer.
Fill Request Dates
The orchestra accompanied the first two numbers. sung. "Down Yonder in Virginia," composed by the composer of the gramed songs. Popular demand brought the singers to the station again on Saturday night, and to WJZ at the politician Brass Quartet at the Church Federation Hour. Sunday the third date in three weeks was played at Presbyterian Church, Long Island.
To Enter Contest
On invitation of Sigmund Speath, white, the singers will enter a mixed quartet in the Close Harmony section, followed by next Monday, Mrs. Bertha Powell, contralto; Alta Melha Brown, soprano; Purnall Hall, tenor; and Philip Pattern, bass, will be the participants. The Dixie Singers are now exclusive to special features only. The program of last Thursday follows:
Dizzie Judible Singers w/th Orchestra
1. John Saw the Holy Number.
2. Stund Stendy, Brethren.
3. Nina Singers
4. Negro Love Song
b All over This World (Male quartet)
c. Southern Finale—"Down Yonder In Virginia."
Columbia Fair Closes
Columbia, S. C. — The Colored State Fair opened on Monday, (26th), and the attendance and quality of exhibits far in advance of any previous season. Excursions were run to Columbia all points in this and adjacent state.
Coyan And Ruffin
Playing Seattle
Seattle — Covan and Ruffin, the dancing team, are playing the Orpheum this week. Their cat is billed the history of Motion." And justifies the
Chileno, Ill.—"Fats" Thomas, Wendell Phillips grid star will forsake the gridion on November 6th, long enough to play the leading role in "Wes Sr. She's My Baby," a musical force to be presented at the school.
ROOSI
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING
Monday-Tuesday—"
Call VErnon 6016
REVIEWS
Regent
Melancon and Fisher open the bill here this week. The act, a mixed double, are energetic workers, and seemed acceptable to the listeners in at the supper show on Monday. A white team cast in the second spot, did a routine of lifting and balancing that kept the hands of the customers busy. Their finish in which one member draws the other from the floor to several feet above the stage with his teeth as he sings. Grace Smith sang three songs pleasingly and displayed a set of blonde tresses that almost disguised her beyond the point of recognition. The audience was appalled. Teopose, a sister act fast becoming extremely popular in this neck of the territory were spotted fourth and did justice to the little animated girls who sell their act with but little apparent effort. They both doil themselves tatsetself. Monday's audience couldn't get enough of any-
"Speedy" Wilson and Jessie a mixed double were entrusted with the closing spot, and proved their ability to hold it. "Speedy" Wilson, on anything but fast, his manner of delivery is of the slow motion type, but none the less effective. He has framed an amusing line of talk, that with the aid of will, will Attendance at the first show on Monday was normal.
A completely filled auditorium turned out on Monday afternoon to give the vaudeville bill the once over. Stamp and Mack were with a routine of singing, dancing, talking. The duo was evidently to the tast of the buyers. Johnson and Mack (Baby) were next with their always pleasing collection of entertainment material. Notwithstanding the evident knowledge that the "Baby" has grown up, she is as appealing in character as Sarah Martin, who means minors for the recording companies was spotted third. And what a third that is full and an armful two as far as that goes. She is one of that tall, good looking type of brown that wise elderly men call nobilis. She is full and nearly teeth" and the portrait is complete. One or two of those East Baltimore married men received a "soldier" look and unplaced too frantically.
There are "blues" singers and then there is SARAH MARTIN, don't get the terms mixed. I have always had the greatest experience of the range of sem, but then the closest I was ever to the Divine Sarah was on the outside of a Victoria. The artist set em frantic with two numbers on Monday, and when she sang and acted she was in a ship going around Hatteras. The Star was solidly for Sarah Martin on Monday and I was with 'em.
Makes Dumb Talk
Chicago, Ill. Oct., (ANP) I became known here this week when Dr. Harvey a Fetcher of the Bell Telephone Laboratories of New York came to this city in 1915. Ophthalmology that an artificial larynx has been made when used by dumb persons will enable them, to talk.
There are about 500 persons in
the United States who are using
the dGK56.
T. O. B. A. CIRCUIT
Liberty Theatre, Chattanooga, Tenn.,
Maggie Jones, Hampton and Hampton,
Prince and Connie, Dudley and Byrd,
Bifou Theatre, Nashville, Tenn.,
Carter and Clark, Ozlo McPherson, Nuggle and Eve, Baby and Burdu Ali, Palace Theatre, Memphis, Tenn.,
Susitton company, Vendome Theatre, Hot Springs, Ark.,
Bolsy DeLegge company,
The Star Theatre, Shreveport, La.,
William Benbow company,
Ella Moore Theatre, Dallas, Texas,
Roscos Montella company,
The Lyric Theatre, New Orleans, La.,
Williams and Brown, Hugh Turner,
Dounvear and Dounvear, Sledge and Sledge,
The Frolle Theatre, Birmingham, Ala.,
Chas Anderson, Glasco and Glasco,
Marle and Clint, Booker Washington Theatre, St. Louis, Mo.,
Sam Gray company, Lincoln Theatre, Kansas City,
Mc, Richard and Pringle, The Liberty Theatre, Galveston, Texas,
Dusty Murray and company to play The Best Theatre, Houston, Texas,
Smarter Set Kopplin Theatre, Detroit, Michigan,
Plantation Days, Globe Theatre, Cleveland,
Grand, Chicago, Georgia Minstrels.
KEITH CIRCUIT
Florence Mills and Company-Keth's
Hippodrome, New York.
Garden City, New York.
Joyner and Foster—Proctor's Albany
Pearson
Four Chocolate Bars—Bingham
ton and Jonkins—B. K. Feltz,
Boston
American White's Review — Towers,
Carmdes, N. J.; Nixon, Philadelphia,
Milinda and Dade-B. K. Feltz,
Carmdes
Ixlele Four—Majestic, Johnstown, Pa.
Sheridan Square, Pittsburgh.
Joss and Frey—Davis, Pittsburgh,
Pilipropole, Pottsville,
Secard, kid.
Harris and Holley, E. F. Albe, Providence.
PANTAGES CIRCUIT
Sheftal's Revue — Bellingham, Washington
Chadwick — Travel, Portland, Oregon.
Chapelle and Stinnette — Pantages, Los Angeles.
LOEW CIRCUIT
Rucker and Forrin — Willard Richmond, Long Island, first half.
ORPHEUM CIRCUIT
Tabor and Greene — Orpheum, Des Moines, Iowa and Ruffin, Helg, Portland, Oregon and Jeanette — Orpheum, San Francisco.
BURLESQUE ROUTES
Dathing Beauties -Laying Off, Aaron and Kelly.
Dathing White Revue -November 2nd, New London, Conn.; 3rd, Stamford, 3rd; Meridian 4th, Lyle Bridgeport, 5-7.
Judy Sambo - Empire, Brooklyn, Julia Moody, Billy Ewing, Joe Byrd, Ernest Whitman, Billy Higgins, Hilda Ratin' - to Go-Launch Off, Dancing Dave, Tim and Jimie Moore, Lena Nelson, Sharps and Katie Ferguson and Smith
Seven-Eleven—Empire, Toledo, Howard and Brown, Cook and Smith, all colored. 2nd, Billy Watts—Geneva, New York, 2nd, Auburn, 3rd, Binghamton, 4th, Colonial, Ullich, 5-7, Columbia, Yale, Yewcum Columbia, George McClellan.
TYLER'S LETTER
By George D. Tyler
Because of a flying trip made to Pittsburgh on Monday following our checkup of Eastern activities, we were unable to get our letter into the local office on time.
Percy Glascoo, Baltimore's own clarinetist, outside of being featured with Bobby Lee's Cotton C服ers, is recording for Collinger, putting in plenty of jazz rhythm. Johnny Powell has produced the best imitator of Johnny Hudgins that this writer has ever witnessed, one Fred Hodges, a clever novice, assisted by the Invisible Trio, appearing nightly at the Capitol Palace.
Snelson Ahead of Show
Floyd G. Snelson, Jr., has left the newspaper game to accept the position of advance man for "Running Wild." Doc Hyder and his Southernaies are the latest attraction at the Club Bamville.
Mills De Sausage, of the Club Bash, whose photograph appeared in our last issue, is constantly corralling some new talent for the benefit of her patrons, her latest being Mildred Brown, formerly of "Lucky Bambo."
George and Inez
a big hit in the Eastern theatres, are daily receiving buttering offers from the bright light cabarets.
"Lucky Bambo" is playing the Columbia Theatre and proves a great all-race production.
Florence Mills' "Dive to B'way Revival" will re-open the Plantation Monday.
The following colored stars appeared at the Low-Mayer matchroom Halloween and in the gymnasium. Flutter Henderson and in the gymnasium, Cotton Club and Club Albany clubs.
Smithe Lacey, Philadelphia's well-known star opened Cinderella in Philadelphia. Miss West Home
Therean West, after a tour of Gay Park, she attended the States. She formerly starred in "Shuffle Along." From Ned Young's associates in Charleston, W. Va., that Mr. Young has obtained an 80-foot "pull-up" machine ("From the Land of Sunshine," carrying orchestra 4, primaline, 12 for good talent, Address, Ferguson Hotel, Charleston, W. Va.
Pittsburgh Smoke
In the Springtime smokers have and wonderful offerings for the past few weeks playing such stars as Charlton Johnson and Emmet (Gane) Anthony. "Shuffling Sam from Alabam" will feature with The Nay Bros., H. S. Dudley, Jr. The Palmetto Quartette, Seven Vampires, and the Nat Brown Hotel.
The Urban League's Costume Ball promised to be the outstanding affair of the season. John C. Smith and Richard (Dick) Cheatman's Orchestra Vieing for honors.
Julina Bledsoe, harlone, proved a success in criticizing were generous in their prove.
A movie film presenting the life of Fred Douglass was a feature of an entertainment given under the auspices of the Parent-Teacher Association school, Friday evening, October 30. The scenes of the picture were taken in Washington and carried through throughout the life from birth. The Principal, Mrs. Gynn. presided.
BARITONE STUDYING
Ralph Banks, Pittsburgh barfette is now residing at the International Center for the Arts, where he takes a course in voice training. Mr. Banks appeared in Baltimore at Bethel Church last May. It is pre-graduate training and an early date in other residals.
FILM TIPS
Pictures You Will Want To
Two New Col
It would not be amiss to see
of Satan" on local programs before
these films have had "first runs" in
accounts of the reviewers, have the
Michelux productions, which mean
distributor. WHY NOT REQUEST
ON HIS BILLS?
Does You Will Want To See At Local Movie H
two New Colored Feature
not be amiss to see the "Devil's Disciple"
local programs before they become comm
had "first runs" in all of the largest
reviewers have pleased the patrons mig
tions, which means an all-colored cas
HY NOT REQUEST YOUR MANAGE
Pictures You Will Want To See At Local Movie Houses
Two New Colored Features
It would not be amiss to see the "Devil's Disciple" and "The Son of Satan" on local programs before they become commercial. Both of these films have had "first runs" in all of the larger cities, and accounts of the reviewers, have pleased the patrons. They are Micheaux productions, which means an all-colored cast, producer and why NOT REQUEST YOUR MANAGER FOR THEM ON HIS BILLS?
Bootlegging Picture—Regent
"The Making of O'Malle," see next Monday and Tuesday, is a plead and fair sprinkling of heart intreath story follows. In John O'Malle, a sticker to traffic duty near the school in w comes interested in Margie, and Danny, the Dude, whom he hones. In the second scene, they are all captured save the leader, notices his peculiar costume. Later, O'Malle calls at Lucille a millionaire, and arrests him, only to learn that mites the man to go, and is strippin O'Malle's efforts. In the ensuing say by whom Danny is captured and ley is reinstated, and wins happiness. Milton Stuart, Dorothy Stuart, Jack and mandments, to this theatre for the closely upon the playing of the mas
ing of O'Malley, selected for the Regen and Tuesday, is a pleasing photoplay with loving heart interest and comedy. A O'Malley, a stickler for the letter of the dear the school in which Lucille Thayer is in Margie, and learns that she is in whom she owes her love, to round up the rest of the gan guarded save the leader, who escapes, but not near costume. Lucille's home to take Marge calls to Lucille's head bootlegger a only to learn that he is the flance of a to go, and is stripped of his shield by Danny. In the ensuing fight O'Malley is shot Danny is captured and discloses the leader and wins happiness in Lucille's love. In the ensuing fighting November 19th, will bring the epoch me this theatre for the entire six days. The playing of the master film in the down
"The Making of O'Malle," selected for the Regent's program on next Monday and Tuesday, is a pleasing photoplay with plenty of action and fair sprinkling of heart interest and comedy. A synopsis of the story
Patrolman O'Malle, a stickerler for the letter of the law, is assigned to traffic duty near the school in which Larry is living. But this is not the case; that she is the daughter of "Danny, the Dude," whom he has "sent up" for five years for bootlegging. O'Malle gets evidence to round up the best of the gang, and in a raid they are all captured seated, the leader, who escapes, but not before O'Malle
Later, O'Malley calls at Lucille's home to take Matgie home from a masque hall. Here he recognizes the head bootleaker among the guests and arrests him, only to learn that he is the flame of Lucille. It permits the man to go, and is stripped of his coat. Conan is taken to the police, who is out on parole, due to O'Malley's efforts. In the ensuing fight O'Malley is shot, but refuses to say by whom. Danny is captured and discloses the leader's name. O'Malley is reinstated, and wins happiness in Lucille's love. Milton Stills and Dorothy Mackall, having the leading roles, The week of November 10, will play the leading role making "Ten Commandments" on six days. The booking follows closely, upon the playing of the master film in the downtown section.
Carey To Play "The Dancer"
"The Dancers" a picture with day. Hero is a powerful indemnite crazed girl. Not a preachy or unwilling hero. Not an unwilling hero. The story deals with the wild war, the whirl of jazz, loosening sequences in one of the many cases, girl who remains a preachy hero on the screen wife force and tender suggestion of bets is wonderfully impressive. situations ber of Spanish dances that are mis could not be desired, and the same a elaborate interiors and brilliant groove marriages, confesses her fault to he and dies, just as Tony is about to 8 back in the Latin-American resort, dance: a hint that the sun of happiness
aras" a picture with universal appeal, playful powerful indemnity against the madness not a preachy or immoral sex appeal filmed in the dark, but a powerful deal with the wildness of the young girl of jazz, loosening of moral standards, of the many cases, a youth's disillusionment with the world, and the hit on the screen with such poignant bitter suggestion of better days to come the impressive situations gave opportunity for dances that are miracles of artistry, beired, and the same applies to the London music connoisseurs in opposite where Una, assures her fault to her childhood sweeter a Tony is about to forgive her a bit of the American resort, and the latter say that the sun of happiness is beginning to
"The Dancers," a picture with universal appeal, plays here on Monday. Here is a powerful indemnity against the madness of a pleasure craze age, and a proud smumma sex appeal film, but one that may any day had a pretend meaning. The story deals with the wildness of the young generation since the war, the whirl of jazz, loosening of moral standards, the terrible consequences in one of the many cases, a youth's distillation and rupture, and the need to find a new identity, but it works on the screen with such poignant bitterness, dramatic force and tender suggestion of better days to come that the net result is wonderfully impressive. The situations gave opportunity for filming a number of Spanish dances that are miracles of artistry, better atmosphere could not be desired, and the same applies to the London scenes, with their elaborate interiors and brilliant grouping. The film is set where Una, just on the eve of marriages, confesses her fault to her childhood sweetheart, takes poison and dies, just as Tony is about to forgive her, a bit of drama alive with paths and suspense. The end shows Tony and the Maxine, the mother and the father, and the "let's dance," a hint that the sun of happiness is beginning to shine again.
Dunbar—"Troubles Of A Bride"
Manger Carr assures the patriary day's feature, is a sure attraction, leads are indicative of the quality of a following story also holds forth work. Learning that his daughter Harriet as a applaud for his daughter Mil伯en, a crook, possesses all of confidence. Being slightly jealous of arrangement by arranging a take kidnapping of his daughter The oblitation by Mil伯en reasons to deploy the array couple as they flee on a runaway train saves Mil伯en the train is about claims that he was merely carrying a satchel. Ben Lomond The oblitation on 5, Friday.
Other attractions for next week Robin Hood, a superior "crook" of the Bad Man, a western master "Flying Fish", chapter 2, plays on 5, Friday.
Lafa
Thursday picture, of this week tertainment for the patrons of the aturing Kenneth McDonald, is set a fast pace in "Flying Fish", comedy, "In High Gear", supplement Friday, Forrest Stanley and Man of the west, "Beauty and the Bad Man", Scandal, "Pioneers of the West", bill on公示, accompanied by "toon.
turr assures the patrons that "Troubles of a sure attraction. Alan Halo and Mild active of the quality of acting that may be also holds forth wonderful entertainments. Colonel Fatterson is about to have this drama managed to Robert passes himself off as the architect. Hiding slightly jolous of Robert she decides to take a fake kidnapping with the Baron, who the abduction numbered, but he deplore the arrangement. However, Fice on a runaway train, he following on as the train is about to hurtle into a rift was merely carrying out her instructions, for next week are: "On Thin Ice," superior "crook drama, Wednesday; a western masterpiece, on Saturday, chapter 2, plays on Thursday, and "Wild picture, of the Lafayette. "Slow As McDonald, is that picture ni which to the tears and hand of the girl "Plymouth Plain, seven, and a high Gear," supplement the hill. rest Stanley and Mabel Ballin, in a breezest and the Bad Man," will be screeching decks of the West, which title explains it, accompanied by "Tender Feet and a "
IN LOS ANGELES
Los Angeles—Irving L. Hardon, bar-
tone, pupil of Dr. Rudolph Emanuel
Von Liebich, white, will appear in re-
cital at Wesley Chapel, on Tuesday
evening. The artist was assisted by
Rowena Mucketroy, soprano. Dr. Von
Liebich was accompanist.
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Four Gulbransen Models. Nationally Priced
For Cash-Easy Terms Arranged
Community Model .$450 Country Seat Model .$615
Suburban Model .$530 White House Model .$750
See At Local Movie Houses
Stored Features
The "Devil's Disciple" and "The Son
of the Lovers cities," both of
the seed the patrons mightly. They are
an all colored cast, producer and
AT YOUR MANAGER FOR THEM
selected for the Regent's program on using photoplay with plenty of action and comedy. A synopsis of the letter for the law of the letter, is assigned which Lucille Thayer teaches. He begins that she is a teacher or bootlegger, and the rest of the gang, and in a raid who escapes, but not before O'Malley's home to take Matigie home from the head bootlegger among the guests he is the flame of Lucille. He perpads of his shield by Capitol, and the rest of the gang, due to night O'Malley is shot, but refuses to dislodge the leader's name. O'Malley in Lucille's love, with many roles. I bring the epoch making "Ten Comentire six days. The booking follows after film in the downtown section.
universal appeal, plays here on Monagain against the madness of a pleasure moral sex appeal film, but one that stresses of the young generation since of moral standards, the terrible consequences of the whole thing in an utshelth, in such poignant bitterness, dramatic or days to come that the net result save opportunity for filming a numacies of artistry, better atmosphere applies to the London scenes, with their episode where Una, just on the eve of our childhood sweetheart, takes poison Troy, and the faithful Maxine with the latter saying archy—let'sness is beginning to shine again.
ins that "Troubles of a Bride" Monahan Halo and Mildred June in the act of that may be expected. The durable entertainment possibilities. He will give his house righted changed to Robert Wallace, The architect. He gains Mildred's Robert she decides to test his affection with the Baron, who tends to winkle beaten, but the Baron soon givesement. However, Roberts trails the man, he following on a locomotive. He to hurtle into a river. The Baron out her instructions, and as Mildred is are: "On Thin Ice," Tuesday, "Ladyram, Wednesday; and "Beauty and decee, on Saturday, Alleno Ray in Thursday, and "Wild West," episode yette
k, should prove decidedly an adyettey. "Slow As Lightning," feapture nl which the hero has to and hand of the girl of his dreams, on seven, and a Bobby Vernon at the bill. Bel Ballin, in a brecay, thrilling, story Man," will be screened on Friday in the studio, and a Bobby Vernon which title explains its story, fill the Tender Feet and a "Krazy Kat" car
"DAD STEWART WITH RUNNIN'
WILD."
"Dad" Stewart, popular Balto drummer, is now holding the spotlight with "Runnin' Wild." "Dad" writes they are only playing white theatres, and says he's hitting them up with the O'fays this week, in Cleveland, Ohio.
ATION'S
VALUE!
Lafayette
Who replaced Gertrude Saunders In "Lucky Sumbo," Columbia Burlesque attraction. In a former Baltimore school girl who once lived on Paca street.
Says Folks Don't Like Spirituals
Poughkeepsie, N. Y. — Marie Houston, coloratura soprano, appeared at the Poughkeepsie program of songs under the auspices of the Poughkeepsie High School. Mrs. Della Lawrence was accompanied, "My Star," Rogers, "A Tiny Garden," Hadyn Wood and other numbers were among those programmed for the spirituals the singer replied that she sang them whenever the audience was made up of white people, but did not care for them.
New York News
一.
New York, (Matson News Service—Margie Jones and Miss Jasmin Ruth Penn)
Margie Jones and Miss Jasmin Ruth Penn
T. O. B. A. They have met with ex-
ceptional success, and they have
been remembered as one of the Colum-
bia's most record acts. They are a
tense orchestra in Chicago and they are
able to save a midnight show at the Lincoln.
It was a very long bill and was approx-
sions being the Elks' Ladies Orchestra.
*Doc Straina has organized the Hotsy
which is full of life and pet. He should
do very well as there is plenty of
artists are in the cast. "Gone Crazy"
opens Monday a la Lafayette. He is
George Stamper has supplied Johnny
doing very well. His poker same go-
ing over wonderfully well. *Billy Pierce*
is that above mentioned agent sent a
Swatman is still on the United Time
and doing well. *Sidney Eaton has a
that above mentioned agent sent a
at the Lincoln and are "wowing" them
at every show. *Pert Howell being his
at the Lincoln and are "wowing" them
the first half at the Lincoln. This is
one of the best funding acts seen in
the Swatman Club one of new year's
where they are appearing at the Rede-
Red Ten, after a short tour, opened at
the new Paradise Caharet. Ed. Small,
are maintaining their standard of music at the Club Abraham, this young
Broadwayites and it is an uncommon
upbeat a dance number. You will hear a
great deal of this great young leader.
Club To Present Boston Soprano
The Post Office Glee Club will present Ethel Hardy Smith, lyric soprano in *Exposon* and Fred Street Memorial Church on Tuesday evening, November 17th. The artist has appeared with success in all sections of the country, has been prominent, has been usually favorable. She is a product of the Hubbard Studios. Her tone is of considerable range and clarifies a caricature of the singer to make expressive of the singer's appreciation of the music and text. She distinguished tenor, Roland Hayes, after hearing the singer said; "Miss Smith is the possessor of a naturally fine voice of beautiful quality, expressive of deep feeling and a great G. Wicks, is president of the glee club, secretary B. Smith, secretary
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Philadelphia—Feldner's Colored Stars are presenting "The Girl in the Limoine" at Gibson's Dunbar Theatre this week. Miss Evelyne Ellis is featured. "Decett," a fascinating photo-classic, with Evelyn Preer, Cec Desmond, and L. De Bulgar, played the Royal the first three days of this week. Manage Smiths Revue is playing the Standard.
ELOISE THOMPSON LEADS PLAYWRIGHTS
LOS ANGELES CRAFTSMAN IS LANDED IN "THEATRE" MAGAZINE.
Los Angeles—A decidedly complimentary reference to Eloise "Bib" Thompson, Los Angeles playwright, is made in the current issue of the "Theatre Magazine," by Eric Walmond, who refers to her in an article on "The Growth of the Negro Theatre."
He says, "When I think of Negroes writing plays which I fole sure will some day measure up to the standards expected by the New York stage, I immediately think of Eloise Bib Thompson of Los Angeles, a former drama student of Thomas Uzell, and undoubtedly the most competent craftsman of her race."
In private life, Mrs. Thompson is the wife of Noah D. Thompson, a member of the staff of the "Los Angeles Evening Express," one of the most prominent Negroes in Southern California. Mrs. Thompson has written several dramas. Among them are, "Caught," produced at the Gamut Club. "A Friend of Democracy," which was submitted to members of the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, to be put into libretto form, by Charles Wake Cadman. And "Cooped Up," produced in 1924, at the Lafayette Theatre in New York.
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The Aeolian Choral Society presented Anita Patti Brown, coloratura soprano, in rectal at Bethel A. M. Church on Monday evening. Attendance marks were somewhat lowered by the generally disagreeable weather conditions.
The program began with the singing of Dett's "Don't Be Weary Traveller" for mixed voices by the Aeolians. Miss Brown followed with Purcell's "I Attempt From Love's Sickness," and "Oh Sleep," Handel. The artist has appeared in Baltimore a sufficient number of times to make all familiar with her general capabilities. A trio of songs "Verbergen hell," "Germany," "Ode, Ode," and two French songs "Si me yers," and "I Wept, Beloved."
Spirituals Applauded
The last mentioned numbers were sung in French and German and seemed to have average attendance, though there was, of course, the usual polite applause for each. A group of students from Burleigh's Burleigh's "Seandalize My Name" was particularly well received. Three interpolated numbers were "The River" and "Every Time I Feel the Spirit" was delightfully rendered and generously acknowledged by the audience who were more as familiar to the familiars.
Acolian Trio Delights
The Acolian Trio scored one of the distinct successes of the program. Misses Mildred Bell, Cortha and Julia Harcuma, the memoirists and voice actors and intelligent interpretation, "Sinner, Dont Let This Harvest" Pass. "Responding to an insistent demand for an encore the singers gave 'Sing a Song of Siponce', a sprightly little thing that also pleas-
Male Singers Backed Fire
The female chorus of the society sang the Walz song from "Paust" for Comedie-Taylor's "Viking Song" seemed devoid of life as interpreted by the male singers. The number is one of that forceful types of comedies, but the slightest destroy from the composer's intent destroys its beauty.
Uniformly Successful
Doubts had led the full male choir been present a better result would have been achieved. The Aeolian and its director, A. Jack Thomson, and the choir's successes since their organization. On Monday evening the efforts of this group of singers in their own singing and presentation of guest artists adds much to the musical life of the city, the reception of the young, the changing attitude we are experiencing toward our own music.
Farina A Scream In "Greater Movies"
Farina A Scream In "Greater Movies"
New York.—In "Greater Movies," Our Gang's latest release, the rascals again exhibit their propensity to chase a man, which gives it a chance where which gives it an opportunity to burlesque the old-time movie thrillers which they do in great style. Of course, Farina stands out as a man who doesn't stress tries to vamp him. He becomes miserably nonplussed, twiddling his fingers and shifting his glam in embarrassment. When some pepper is on the table, he is funny when they all start to scree
News Briefs
Statistician's estimate that a man weighs 20 pounds, in an ordinary day's activities, is a weight of 81 tons upon his shoes.
The fingerprint system of identification since the Han dynasty (208 B.C. A. 25) according to the home ministry. The Bible is mentioned 49 times in the Bible. Sensors resulting from the Civil War Government about $6,000,000,000. Juries in the United States more than 2,000,000 of clubs are manufactured. Chinese contacts a present and it does not come a reminder. Juries has a much better chance of living than a reminder. If a vessel is partially filled with water, it is placed in the water, its weight will be added to the water. All boats' legs, legs, and their bodies are divided into three, the eight legs and are not insects, but complete storehouses in New York's newest office buildings. New York's complete storehouses on the surface and the River flows for more than 1,000 miles. The United States cotton crop forecast for January 1 was 13,586,000,000 bales. 22,000 bales less than the forecast of July 16.
Men
Concerning Charge Accounts
Fineman Wants You to Know
that when you purchase Clothes here and have them charged, there is absolutely nodeviation in or departure from his regular cash selling prices—which are, in every case, marked in plain figures on the price tags.
My Charge Prices Are
Exactly The Same As
My Cash Prices
Made to $32.50 And Ready to $27.50 And Measure More Put On More
A. Fineman
Makes-Them-Better-Tailor
Made-to-Measure Exclusively 318-320 W. Baltimore St
Made-to-Measure and Ready-to-Put-On 227 E. Baltimore St.
SAYS FOOTBALL PLAYER FAKED HIS INJURIES
INABILITY TO "STAR"
LED TO ALLEGED FAKE
A. And T. College Head, Answers Serious Charges Of President Woods
Greensboro, N. C.-Charges of brutal tactics on the part of players of A. and T. College in their recent Virginia Seminary were denied by W. P. Nelson, speaking for the athletic department of A. and T. to the AFRO-AMERICAN this week.
Mr. Nelson's statement is a reply to charges of President R. C. Woods, of Seminole County, for American quarterback Whether was injured and put out of the game by A. and T. players, who made free throws to "get the ball" before hand.
Lano Blamed
According to President Woods Lane was the A. and T. player who kicked Wheedbee in the head, knocking him down. He was asked to as the man who faced the fatal injury to Johnson. A Howard University football player who died as the result of injuries received in game with A. and T. soaked in blood. Mr. Nelson said in part, "Knowing Seminary's inability for forfeiting victory is from her grasp, we frankly were surprised that the game with us was played to the end. 1922 Seminary football games, arms, and in each case the opposing team was in the lead." Apparently, Seminary has changed her tactics for forfeiting games to newspaper albis for her
Selected Officials
He adds that the officials of the game were selected, and only one of the game was one for unnecessary roughness imposed upon the Seminary team. He continues, "Wheedle, the 'All-American Star,' and his part A. and T. received the ball at kickoff, and sent the Seminary's 30-year line. Seminary made several attempts to rush, being thrown for comeback, and sent the other attempt to punt, which was blocked by Cunningham. A. and T.'s right tackle and cover by the goal line. A. and T. made a touchdown. At this point, Wheedle walked from the field—was neither led nor cared
Lane figured in none of these plays. Attends the Dance "After the game, an instructor on the pronunciation of T. College Wiedhee to a physician who pronounced him all right. This
Baltimore, Md. SPOR
MORE FITES
GIVES UP DISH WASHING TO
ENTER FIGHTING INDUSTRY
New Orleans, La. (M.P.)-K. O.
White, Opoloussa, Ia. began his career
as a dishwasher, and by an accident go
to the fight against Gabe. Achie-
ned a sparing partner and he used
White, who showed up so well he was
used in preliminary bout, which he
bought by Knocken.
White has never lost a fight and has scored 15 knockouts in 18 starts.
GODFREY MUST QUARANTINE NOT TO KNOCK OUT HIS PROPELLER out here that George Godfrey, Philadelphia heavyweight, could get several matches to knock out and assurance not to knock out his opponents.
PAYNE, 25; Snow HILL, 0.
Salma, Ala.-Maya University football warriors downed the Oklahoma State a score 25-0. Snow Hill will meet State Normal of Montgomery here on November
ASSERTS CHALLENGE
Frank Hunter, Baltimore middleweight, accepted the challenge issued by the AFRO last week. Promoters are planning to bring the two together in Baltimore in the near future.
ANDERSON BATS PIMPUS
Alice City, X, N. J.-Jack Farrell's crack featherweight, Chark Anderson, of Cleveland, who is now in the AFRO defended Billy Pimpus, the pride of Atlantic City, in the Waltz Dream, on Monday will will make his next appearance in Philadelphia.
KID ALBERTS WINS
Boston, Mass.—Kid Alberts, middle-weight, of Panama, outskirts of Buenos Aires, here Thursday night. It enforced stopped the bout in the third round much to the disgust of the game South American.
Charleston And In Batting A
Charleston And Beckwith Lead In Batting And Home Runs
Philadelphia—According to the batting averages of players in the Eastern League for the 2014 season, he averaged 11.5 points per game. Harrisburg Giants leads the heavy clinters with an average of 430. John Beckwitt, of the Baltimore Black Sox is a close second, with 115. Wilson, of the Sox first baseman, with 400, gives the Sox the distinction of the only club having two hitters in the 400 class. "Heavy" Johnson and George Britt are the only other Sox players in the 300 division. Hillside has 9 in the 300 class: Harrisburg, 9; Bacharachs, 4; Lincoln Glintes, 10; Reynolds, 4; Black Sox, 4; Cubon Stars, 3. same night Wheedie attended two a faint the other a dance given at the College for the Seminary team. At both places the "All-American" distinguished himself far more than any other. This, too at a time when, according to the Seminary official's article, he was in a comatose condition.
"We, at A. and T., consider the remark concerning Lane and Johnson of Howard, a cowardly, insane, scary, cruel teacher on one of the best, hard hitting consistent players the college teams have produced. Johnson died of injuries sustained when he attempted to tackle Lane who was carrying the ball. Johnson tackled Lane and Lane did not tackle Johnson. Letters from the office of Howard University at the time completely absolved Lane of all blame."
Concerning Charge
Wineman You to Kn
WASHINGTON IN FOR
THREE GRID BATTLES
Washington is in for three games this week that will have an important bearing in grid circles. The game will be Friday, when Wake Forest comes out of the West to do battle with the Howard Bison. The result of this game will influence the betting on the Lincoln-Championship game in Philadelphia on Thanksgiving. Huntington High of Newport News, Va., will tackle Dunbar on Thursday, while Doughas High of the Eastern championship crown by defeating Armstrong Tech on Monday, November 9. The recent victories gained by Dunbar eleven in their first game have caused high school spades to greatly respect the Monumentals. Dunbash gridders have conclusively established the fact that Dunbar has a high percentage of their new million dollar dollar. But akin to the pride they hold in their new building is that of the Armstrong warriors who also have a $500,000 outfit to silt them on their highest achievement.
School Boy Soccer Starts Next Week
School Boy Soccer Starts Next Week
The Playground Athletic League School Boy Soccer league will get under way within the next week. Fourteen teams have already been entered and six more are expected to file applications. The closes close.
There are eight teams in the lightweight division representing schools 110, 100, 114, 105, two teams from schools 116 and 109.
In the heavyweight class, six teams have already entered from schools 110, 109, 114, 105 and two from 116. Games will be played in the afterparty, followed by a break, from 4 to 5. The schedule of the league will be published next week.
Charleston leads in home run honors by clouting out 14: 24. Beckwith is again a close second in the Harrisburg team, holds down third position with 12 circuit clouts. The Commissioners of the Eastern Street Y, M. C. A. building, Saturday. The league moguls will wind up the business of the past season and consolidate the league and innings conditions for 292.
EASTERN LEAGUE BATTING AVERAGES
Bayer and Club G. AR. R. II. Pcl.
Charleston, Htg 52 179 64 77 139
Beckwith, Balto 42 155 38 65 419
Wilson, Balto 55 196 40 73 402
J. Johnson, Hilldale 55 197 51 53 399
Cannondale, Hng 22 202 25 78 394
C. Carr, Hilldale 29 102 21 28 372
W. C. B. 58 219 48 81 270
White, Bacharesh 47 173 45 64 270
Mackey, Hilldale 64 189 44 67 351
Hixon, Harrisburg 25 195 50 63 354
Douglass, Brooklyn 275 71 18 28 354
O. Johnson, Balto 51 122 29 61 352
Winters, Hilldale 59 83 12 29 349
H. W. 67 297 48 72 248
H. R. 27 66 10 23 345
Spearman, Brooklyn 23 28 10 20 345
R. Gee, Lincoln Gts. 32 88 11 20 341
Smith, Brooklyn 31 124 28 61 332
R. Taylor, Harrisburg 49 176 27 68 326
Lloyd, Blyth 64 118 24 30 330
G. B. 33 118 24 30 330
Perrell, Lin, and Rach. 26 67 10 22 328
W. Johnson, H. Bg Gts. 39 123 16 40 325
Brown, Bachareh 50 186 42 60 322
G. Johnson, Hilldale 48 165 29 51 260
Jordan, Harrisburg 22 83 10 27 318
Chambers, Hilldale Qts. 22 19 4 6 315
G. B. 17 35 7 11 314
Warfield, Hilldale 58 202 43 63 312
Belges, Hilldale 58 228 52 71 311
Bibligo, Caban's 39 140 20 43 307
Jenkins, Harrisburg 72 225 62 65 302
J. Beckman, Harrisburg 62 23 22 22 301
Eggert, Caban 39 153 29 46 301
S. C. 39 153 29 46 301
Singer, Lincoln 42 106 31 59 301
Oms, Caban 41 147 31 44 300
---
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Southern School Protests Against Youth On N. W. U.
Chicago, Ill.—Jill D. Moore, tackle on Northwestern in college, was named the Tulane of New Orleans in their scheduled game last week due to the fact that she was the only player tested against the colored player. The students of Northwestern were asked to age for going on record as opposed to all forms of Seasons sent to see Northwestern in action reported that a colored boy was playing the game before the game that they would refuse to play if Moore was allowed to play. Northwestern notified Moore, who promptly turned in his uniform and asked to play through as an athlete for the school. The student body was very much openly stated that the game with Tu-
BOWLING
Bowling Is Every
You can't be too old, or too young
or too strong, to poor or too rich.
If you are beginning to feel out
your muscles get loosened up and do
To The
If you are too fat, start with a
you are able to bowl three or four
it will make in your waist line and
Bowl for Strength
Bowl for
BOWLING
Where Everybody Goes
1321-23-25 Pennsylvanian
MADI
3 THE
ONLY OFFICI
Howard
Washington
Lincoln
Pennsylvania
Grand Concerts
THIRD REGIM
Broad and Wharton
Wed., Thanksgiving
Admission
Howard-Lincoln
SHIBES ATH
Thanksgiving Day,
R.C.O.BAND
Box Seats, $2.50; Reserved
BIG "43"
Grand Re-Union R
THIRD REGIM
Broad and Wharton
Thanksgiving Night
HOWARD BAND
Admission
Square D
The Credit Jeweler S
MAKES IT EASY
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DAT THE SIGN OF
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To The Ladies:
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Bowl for Recreation
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Everybody Goes — Nothin
3-25 Pennsylvania Ave., Baltimore
MADISON 0069
THE BIG
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Lincoln
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Ad Concert and B
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Broad and Wharton Streets, Philadelphia
Thanksgiving Eve., Nov. 27
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R.C.O.BAND — HOWARD BAND
$2.50; Reserved Seats, $2.00; Ge
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Suggesting Night, November 27
HOWARD BAND AND ORCHESTRA
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WORKING ME
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S 511?
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You can't be too old, or too young, too fat, or too learn, too weak or too strong, to poor or too rich to Bowl.
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To The Ladies:
If you are too fat, start with a couple of games and work up until you are able to bowl three or four games, and notice the reduction it will make in your waist line and how your wind will improve.
3 THE BIG 3
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Howard
Washington
Lincoln
Pennsylvania
The R. C. O.
Wanamaker's
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THIRD REGIMENT ARMORY
Broad and Wharton Streets, Philadelphia
Wed., Thanksgiving Eve., Nov. 25, 1925
Admission $1.00
Howard-Lincoln Football Classic
SHIBES ATHLETIC PARK
Thanksgiving Day, November 26, 1925
R. C. O. BAND
BOX Seats, $2.50; Reserved Seats, $2.00; General, $1.00
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Ward And Richie Expected To Give Howard Trouble
Wu Fang Ward and Richie of Wilberforce are expected to give Howard plenty of trouble Friday when the two teams meet in Washington.
In speaking of the two Ohio players, Wilberforce said, "Of the teams I have seen in action this season, Ward and Richie of Wilberforce show the greatest ability running. Ward is reputed to be a 10 second man at the century dash. Richie, although not having the speed of a keen knowledge of how to run, any team meeting Wilberforce not well equipped with two good ends and an hour of great discipline."
G CENTER
Everybody's Game
hang too fat, or too learn, too weak
in Bowl.
d. try a game a day and see how
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Via Ave., Baltimore, Md.
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The R. C. O.
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ENT ARMORY
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ILETIC PARK
November 26, 1925
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ENT ARMORY
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November 26, 1925
AND ORCHESTRA
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NGMEN!
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Call VErnon 6016 Saturday, November 7
"Wu Fang" Ward Beats Ky. State In One Period
DOUGLASS-BOWIE
CLASH SATURDAY
Wilberforce, Ohio—Wu Fang Ward almost single handed, defeated Kentucky State here. Saturday in the one period he was in the game, the score was 25-0. Made by Wilberforce, the score, ending 25-0. Kentucky kicked to the Wilberforce 20-yard line. Wu Fang Ward, when called on to carry the ball—received it from center and ran through the Kentucky team for the first time in the game.
The cancellation of the Douglass-
Armstrong game Friday necessitated
a change of date in the Douglass
Bowen game, which was originally
replaced for November 13.
This did not satisfy him, for on another occasion, from the 30-yard he took, he booted around the right side, around Kentucky's left end for the second touchdown. The third touchdown was made by a 30-yard yard line. This seemed to be a day for Wu Fang. At the end of the second quarter, Wu Fang went to the right side, watched the game from the side line. Kv. State Nor. L.E. Willerforce Frances L.T.G. Russell Campbell L.T.G. Hayes Hogue R.G. Jones Edwards R.T. Evans Phillip Q.B. Stout Colman R.H. Jackson Patterson F.R. Campbell Substitutions: Kentucky. Brickerdine for Patterson. Willerforce-Calloway for Patterson. Willerforce-Calloway for Russell, Bickerdine for Jayne. Sister for Evans, Woolridge for Burrell, Richmond, Evans for Bickett, Simplinks for Richle, Campbell for Ward, Yerkey for Richle, Campbell for Browne, Ridge, Hassell for Dunkel for Yerkey, Troupe for Calloway, Brownlee for Browne, Jackson for Redden.
This Saturday Douglass will meet Bowle Normal in their annual grid contest in Maryland Ball Park. The game will start at 2:30 p. m.
Atlantic City.—Jack Farrell, crack featherweight of Cleveland, Ohio, who is now minking in the stands defended Billy Pimpus at Atlantic City pride, tonight at the Waltz Dream by taking seven out of eight rounds and one seven. Andersen was the winner at the arena in Philadelphia on the second show.
MORGAN COLLEGE (Balto.) vs. ("irenides") MANUAL TRAINING
SCHOOL (Bordentown, N. J.)
AMERICAN BRIDGE FIELD
Trenton, N. J.
November 14th - 2:30 p. m.
Admission, 50c
Tuesday, 5 P. M., Dead Line
EN - M
A SPECIALIST — READ M
Tuesday, 5
Touchdowns-Wu Fang Ward, 3:
Cambell, Point of view touchdowns
Rute, Fulker, Retief Turmsell, Umpire-Crestwell, Head Linesman-David and Marshal, timekeepers.
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ECIALIST
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ortant functions upon which the body depends for
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Farrell Wins
FOOTBALL
MOORE WINNER FROM 300 IN SCHOLASTIC RUN
MOORE WINNER FROM 300 IN SCHOLASTIC RUN
SPORTS PAGE
New York, N. Y.—To the distinction already enjoyed as New York's foremost schoolboy long distance runner, Gus Moore, sterling race runner of Boys' High School, Brooklyn High School in the Bronx, and schoolboy cross country race under the auspices of the Manhattan College over the scholastic course of about a decade and the third year at Fortordant Park. Running one of the best races of his remarkable career, the local champion outrun close to 300 rivals in the most recent current cross country season to date, winning by a margin of close to fifty yards from Captain Roland Ritchie, white, of the Schenectady High School team, who
Heavy Track
Moore covered the course in the sterling time of 13 minutes 20 seconds, a notable performance considering the time was leapy in league middles, and was partially covered with the ice aftermath of Friday's snowstorm, making footing treacherous at some stages of the chase.
Tuskegee, 40;
Florida A. & M., 0
Tuskegee, Ala.—Tuskegee eleven didn't hit the Florida A. & M. "Wildcats" here Friday in a one sided game which ended 40-0. Ernest T. Bailey was the outstanding player for Tuskegee scoring three of the touchdowns.
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CONSULT DOCTOR FOR MEN
MORGAN HOLDS LINCOLN LIONS TO 7 TO 7 SCORE
"Pinky" Clark Baffles Lions With Dazzling Forward Passing Attack
VISITORS OUTPLAYED AND OUT GENERALED
'Batering Ram' Anderson Scores Lincoln Touchdown Almost Unaided
Touchdowns--Anderson, Hill. Go from touchdown to touchdown. Referee--C. Jackson (Union). Timekeeper--Burgess and Taylor. Head linesman--Wright (Hampstead). Substitutes: Wells for Myers, Holson for Givens, Anderson for Lee, Carr for Williams, William Payne for Hines, Moore for Chase, Revannah for McIntyre.
It was a thoroly subdued and gentle pack of Lions that left Maryland park last Saturday afternoon. They were tame enough for children to ride and answered to the name of Dobbin.
The Bears of Morgan took their rour and gave them a nice gentle neigh to the old maids who did not fight children or old maids. The score was 7 to 7, but Morgan won a moral victory and if there is glory in a tie, that belongs to him.
Placed On Muddr Field
**Physic On Madness**
Almost stood in the stand and a goodly number of Lincoln roots kept up a continual din. The weather overhead was ideal but the melting snow at the field young man by the name of "Pinky" Clarke could and did hurl forward passes with the accuracy of a bullet. He lived up to an attack by brittle-built field runner. No, broken field runner. He did dodge, hop, skip with a change of pace that was remarkable.
"Pinky Clarke"
He also could himself a glutton for punishment. Four times he was rammed against Lincoln's stone wall with the force of a trip hammer; each time he did get portion of his mouth, what he could out of his eyes, nose and ears and in he did go for more.
The diminutive quarterback allowed his man to shoot passes. If he saw his man was blocked he then took off down the field with the ball leaving the opponents bobbing about the field, trying to intercept what they thought would be a
Bears Outweighed
Most of the game was played in Lincoln territory, altho the Lions outweighed their opponents 10 pounds per man. Hill, once right on the ball, completed a triple-slip. Two of Clark's long passes slipped through his fingers. The lanky end however took another 25 yard heave away from the Lincoln backs as slick as grease, and snatched another for a 40 yard run and
Anderson—Battering Ram
Battering Room Anderson, six foot, left foot giant, was Lincoln's hero.
Goodman, Lee, Morris and Butte knocked in blocks, gave all that in them but could make no impression on Morgan's line. Then Coach Young sent in pitches, which hit at midfield. Anderson started smashing thru the left side of Morgan's line—3—4—5—6—12 yards he gained at a smash. The times without change he hit the same spot. Only six minutes to play were left. Coach Law of Morgan evidently guarded and tackle took an unmurderful battering. Capt. Tad Lancaster of Lincoln, muddy and bleeding from using himself as the fist, pressing tearfully.
"I came the contested point of the game. It was the fourth down Anderson was given the ball. The team, tension, crashed together and the user part of Anderson's body just burst second. Then a Morgan close-cue ruck him and hurtled him back the one-yard line again. Anderson downed the hisses of the local fans. Anderson kicked goal, tying the score at 7-7. It was a last minute for Lincoln that saved the day. brother Against Brother Captain Ke Young led the Morgan team in outplaying Lincoln which is coached by his brother, U. S. Young.
Drew Keeps Amherst's Goa Line From Being Crossed
Amhz: Mass—Charles Drew, Amherst b. gave Amherst a shutout victory, or Mass Aggies here hererst's skyline, or line. Drew intercepted a pass that would have gone over for a touchdown and took the ball to the 20-yard line as the game ended. Amherst was 27-0.
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Shields Dropped From Union Squad
Richmond, Va. "Jimmy" Shields, star half back on the Union football eleven and All-American player, was asked to speak a week for breaking training rules. Shields was asked by the coach to turn in his uniform after the halfback did not make the regular uniform. The Union Panther squad will tackle Va. Seminary Saturday at Lynchburg. No team has crossed this line, and a hard battle is expected with the "Preachers."
NEWPORT NEWS COACH
PROTESTS OFFICIALS
Umpire In Game Friday Called Hesitant, Self Preservative, Usually Wrong
W. A. THOMAS CITES LAPSES IN DECISIONS
Says His Team Was Penalized Four Times Before Being Warned
To AFRO Sports Editor:
I feel it my duty as a coach and a lover of fairplay, to voice my protest against the wretched negligence of Mr. Burgess, who served as umpire in the Douglass-Huntington flasco at the Black Sox Park. Let me state first, however, that the Douglas team nor the coach Mr. Gibson, a gentleman in whose integrity and straightworthiness I have the highest confidence, and for whose ability I have the greatest integrity and respect.
In the first place Mr. Burgess has had no official connection with athletics since 1417 when he was an army football player, and has dedicated his life in basketball and football. His knowledge of the duties of umpire is ancient. Moreover, since he has not swallowed himself of the privilege of studying for the competitor officials who meet for such purpose at regular intervals his interpretation of the few rules that he has been able to communicate is hesitant. He is not a good writer. Judging from the following, I think you will agree with me, that he is at host, incompetent, and for the best interest of the game only not work in a championship game as well as a proficient as well as efficient.
Douglass Trick
The Doughtless backs are taught a trick of flinging one hand high in the air and quickly bringing it back into position when about to catch it. The backs are caught the man immediately runs it was used against Monassas and again in the Hunting game. Coach Lawson says the form is a trick that that thing was a signal for a faint catch and penalized accordingly. The rule is specific instating that when the hand is raised clearly to receive a punt he must not take more than two steps after the catch; he shall have right of way and must not be tackled. Mr. Burgess let them to get away on him
Forward Pass
Again, Doughass attempted a forward pass that struck the receiver's hands and was simultaneously slapped down into the mud by a Humphrey. Doughass hit his whistle. Doughass covered the ball. Now, a much criticised rule in Spandaubells book states than the ball, when passed is not dead. The ball was not grounded, caught by an ineligible player or thrown out of bounds. The play occurred in mid-field in clear view of the officials and spectators, yet Mr. Burgess picked up the muddy plum and declared the pass com-
On a punt by Huntington, the ball was recovered by the end after it had struck a Douglass man. Mr. Burress remained silent, until Mr. Jackson asked his decision on the protested play. A clever Douglass had quickly said, "didn't it make him a gentleman?" The gentleman true to form, promptly paraphrased the youth and said, "It did not strike him did R. Mr. Wright? (Mr. "Bee" Welch was not necessary. I am quite sure, to anyone familiar with the impresss duties even to a small degree. He gave his ponderous decision to the negative, surrendering his initiative and subordinating his authority to those of a high school boy and his assisting official, the head linesman. With a slippery snow and water covered field, a heavy fast charging mag has little chance of checking his rush or chancing in his jealousy of her reputation for clean sportsmanship recovered penalties totaling 38 yards for "ugentlemently conduct" when she attempted to stop a man who Burress remained silent to get away after being tackled.
Although the lines on the field were indistinct and covered with snow and ice, he was surrounded by 20 yards before being warned that we were offside because the gridiron was not parallel to the grandstand as would naturally be expected. He was standing behind lineman. He was just a little too officious. He ran onto the field of play after every door knocked in the敌队 that was so cold and nasty, and the game called for so little action on his part that he chose this means of keeping the game next day, he went on the field about five times and then only when the referee called him. It was a warmer day,
Let me close this tirade with the fervent prayer and sincere hope in the time of the great humble protest against the greatest drawback to all colored athletes, poor, incompetent officiating, will give impetus to a harder machine than the more fortunate writer of this letter, to set on foot a powerful movement that will rid our sports of these霉 officials and replace them with strong and unstoppable machines, by creating a more real realization of the great vista now unfolding itself on the horizon of the Negro world of sport. Yours for further officials. W. A. Thomas H. H. I., Director of Athletics.
Well filled stands at Black Sox A sprang a surprise trying the champion team 7-7. Inset cuts show Capt. Tao painted white helmet and a scrimmage by Grenqual Studio. PAGE ONE
THE WORKING STATION
Well filled stands at Black Sox Baseball Park Saturday when Morgan sprang a surprise try the chanting crowd knew would be a huge success. New York, Lancaster, of Lincoln his freshly painted white helmet and a scrimmage between the two teams — Photo by Gregional Studio.
WILBERFORCE vs. HOWARD
D. C. — Look into the Washington, D.C. game appeared to be a blurred mass, the smoke of battle had cleared away. WILBERFORCE will most likely to end in a tie, but a slight margin will have to be given to the boxers to be reckoned with and HOWARD will be in for a tough battle.
VA. NORMAL vs. J. C. SMITH
Renoke, Va. — The Hilloppers will will engender on the long end of the scoring. At home the Smith lads will show pleness against the Normal boys will outclass them.
UNION vs. SEMINARY
Lynchburg, Va. — This will be the during the week. "Jimmy" Shields' absence from the game will be a severe matter contest that is likely to end in a tie, but if Union takes advantage of the break, the Red and Steel colors will usKEGEE vs. MONTGOMERY
Montgomery, Ak. — usKEGEE will have enough to come out safely on top, but Montgomery will be a worthy opponent.
Institute, W. Va.—Four of her best men out of the game will handicap the St. Paul Tigers in an injured members back in the game, Lincoln will be able to hold her own, and the Tigers will be able to handle a harder battle than Howard. Although this game looks like another dealok, the St. Paul Tigers will be advantage of the Lions will get the decision. T. PAUL v. A. & T.
Goldsboro, N. (—) a hooton has been following the St. Paul Tigers all season. It will with the Tigers, “Tarneels.” A bitter struggle will take place, but the “Tigers” will find the going too rough. S. SHAW
Norfolk, Va.—In this game the scenes will be balanced because the St. Nealers will revenge the Tigers. The bands of the A. & sound. It will be anybody’s game until he is declared victors.
Bookers Pass Way
To 7-0 Win Over
Dunbar Hi Of D. C.
Norfolk, Va.—The "Fighting Bookers" of Booker, Washington High School in a minute, slayed of the Dumbar High School eleven of Washington in a hard contest here Friday by the score of 7 to 0. The lone tally came in the last quarter when the ball was hit by a pumphouse's layed line, and a pass from Johnson to "Bob" Tolliver was competed, carrying the ball over. The ball made.
B. WASHINGN N DUNBAR
Teamer L.E. Peyler
Teamer L.G. Gibson
Diggs L.G. Gibson
Tucker A.R.G. Johnson
Hart R.T. Williams
Tolliver C.R. L.H. Burton
Tolliver R.H. West
Tynes F.B. Lavale
Johnson Q.B. Lavale
Matthews' Impr
The Morga
Matthews' Impressions Of The Morgan-Lincoln Game
BY RALPH MATTHEWS
The Morgan Bear became a regular cage of apes to the Lincoln Lion when the two teams clashed at Maryland Ball Park Saturday.
Shortly after the whistle blew the Lion's roar was reduced to a squeak.
There was so much water on the field that the coaches thought it was to be a swimming match and they had brought the wrong teams.
After the first kickoff Lincoln men became nervous—every Morgan man looked like another Wu Fang Ward.
Hill gave a lesson in shoemaking. He gave the boys an opper- count the cleats on the bottom of his shoes while he was running for a touchdown.
Big Boy Anderson and Morris of Lincoln kept the Morganites from thinking they were playing a social game of whiffle with war of these boys coded that Boon War effect.
Pinky Clark thought he was supposed to run through most of the Lincoln line every time he caught the ball on a kick. He had a peculiar fashion of carrying out his thoughts.
Captain Lancaster was heard to remark that he hoped his team had better luck on Thanksgiving than it did on Halloween.
R FOR MEN
M. to 8:30 P. M.
oon
WHEN MORGAN TIED LINCOLN
DOPE
ST. PAUL vs. A. & T.
HAMPTON vs. SHAW
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
THE FOOTBALL CLASSIC
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
-ν₃-
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY
All seats in this Park are covered. Playing field is so arranged that ALL box seats and reserved seats are along side lines.
Tickets on fals in PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, WASHINGTON and NEW YORK:
Reservations may be made direct, by writing to Lincoln University Athletic Association, Ticket Reservation Bureau, Lincoln University, Pa. For general information write DR. W. G. ALEXANDER, Graduate Manager, 18 Webster Pl., Orange, N. J.
Office Consultation and Treatment $2
FOOTBALL
Wilberforce at Howard.
Va. Normal vs. J. C. Smith at Roanoke.
South Carolina State at Augusta, Ga.
November 7
St. Paul vs. & T.
Hampton vs. Shaw at Norfolk.
Union at Norfolk.
Morton at Montgomery.
Morehouse at Atlanta.
Lincoln at Vt. vs. Clark U. at Atlanta.
Tuskegue at Montgomery.
November 12
Douglass vs. B. Washington at Norfolk.
November 13th or 16th—Wilberforce at Brown.
Edward Waters at Tallahassee.
J. C. Smith at C. State.
Wiley, open—H.
Atlanta U. at Howard.
November 14
Morgan at Bordentown.
St. Augustine at St. Paul.
A. Hammond at Hampton.
Seminary at Va.
Fisk at Tuskegue.
Ferguson, Brewer.
Morehouse at Tallahassee.
Reg. Cavity at Lincoln.
Manassas Holds Armstrong To A Scoreless Tie
Manaassas, Va.-On a muddy field, the gridders of Manaassas Industrial School were held to a scorless lie by the Armstrong High School of Washington, D. C.
On the first few plays it was demonstrated that the Manaassas defense could not be penetrated and the hopes of Armstrong resisted upon the punting ability of "Big" but he punched from his 30-foot line to Manaassas 8-yard line on an attempted pumch Chambers fumbled and the ball was recovered by Armstrong on their opponents 8-yard line in bases of four, five and three-yards on their attempt at touchdown. This was the only time Armstrong looked dangerous. In last half, with the ball on Armstrong's 20-yard line, Chambers attempted a drop kick, which fell
Manassas
Waddell (C.) L.E. Armstrong
Wenderson L.G. Johnson
Long Island L.G. Young
Tolson C. Henderson
Fay G. Jordan
Pats R.E. Jordan
Waller R.E. Branson (C.)
Hanberra S. Seward
Henderson G.H. Dorsey
Woodson L.H. Nixon
Shepard F.R. Davis
Muskets. Manassas — Ford
Waddell: Pocheta for Tolson: Hendricks
for Anderson. Armstrong-Dahney for
Young: Hardy for Johnson. Davis.
Sessions of
n-Lincoln Game
Jack Frost won his game with the
spectators in the grandstand. He
made end runs over cold feet and
bigger tips for a touchdown.
Duck Gibson's youngsters cheered
for the big brother team, both have
done a lot this year to put the Balt-
limore far on the athletic map.
Now their big job is to keep us
there.
THE FOOTBALL
HOWARD U
LINCOLN U
Thanksgiving Day,
Philadel
Shibe Park, Lehigh A
HOWARD USES 2
TEAMS SWAMPS
N. C. STATE 70-0
Washington, D. C.—The Howard University football eleven scored an easy victory over North Carolina State College, of Durham, on the University campus here, Saturday, by a 70 to 0 score.
The air was filled with Howard passes, with Campbell and Long, the "Bison" ends, donig the receiving. Howard used a different team in each half. The Carolinians called to score a first down.
Payne, Howard's quarterback, dropped a field goal from the 35-yard line and added four extra points after touchdowns in the first half as the result of receiving passes. "Dick" Smith smashed through Durham's line for two touchdowns in the first half.
The substituting eleven had no trouble in piling up a score of thirty-three points in the second half. Tyson and Carter carried the ball over twice for touchdowns in the second quarter, and Ladson rushed it across once. Cole dropped three extra points after touchdowns out of five
Williams and Meekins were the
first to win the North Carolina
State aggregation.
Brown H.B. F.B. F.C. William
Trainer for Brown, D.J. Carr William
Trainer for Brown, D.J. Carr Nate for
Look, J. Jefferson D.J. Nate Nate for
Miller, J. Jefferson D.J. Nate Nate for
Miller, J. Price D.J. Nate Hall for
Rose, M. Dilard D.J. Nate Carrubell, H.
Rose, N. Carolina State State Johnson
for Williams, First Down-Howard, 18
North Carolina State State
SCROB: 1 20 13 20-0
N. C. STATE 1 20 13 20-0
Officials: Referee - Mr. Henderson, Hea-
man-Smith, W. Washington, Umpire - Mr.
BORDENTOWN BEATS PRINCESS ANNE, 14-6
Bordentown, N. J.—Princess Anne Academy of Maryland lost a 14 to 6 victory Saturday in a thrilling contest. The Marylanders made the first win of the season, grabbing a fumble by Lewis, Bordentown fallback, on Princess Anne's touchdown. The attempt for the extra point failed. The victory marks Bordentown had evaded the count by a forward pass from Hill to Tillman. Lewis scored a touchdown from Hill to Freeman, accounted for the second touchdown in the second quarter. The chances of both teams from scoring during the game, played Morgan College of Haskinsville, in North, N. J. on the 14th, Cheyney Normal at Hampton, on the 21st and 28th, will wind up in the season's schedule. Saturday be with the "Tigers" of Newark, Del.
Bordentown
Freeman.....L.E.
White.....L.T.
Kindy.....L.G.
Eldridge.....Beauty
Travis.....R.G.
Turner.....R.T.
Hillman.....R.B.
Hill.....L.B.
Pierro.....R.H.
Duck.....L.H.
Lovis.....F.R.
LINE-UPS:
P. Anne
Barley
Graves
Grays
Beauty
Light
Showell
Glasser
Glasser
Hutchins
Tallahasfer
Kiah
Coach Young Praises Work Of Bears In Saturday Game
Four Lincoln Men Hurt; Lincoln To Beat Howard, He Says;
Three Howard Men Inleigible
PENALTIES AID SHAW IN 7 TO 3 WIN OVER V. N. I.
Petersburg, Va. — Penalties aided Shaw to a 7-3 score over Virginia Normal in a lily court contested gridiron play. With five minutes to play, and the ball in midfield, Virginia Normal was leading 3-0. On fourth down a forward kick, the ball came up on a first down. On the next two plays, Retee "Dick" Gibson penalized Normal 20 yards, side line coaching measure against Shaw aerial ball. This placed the ball on the 10-yard line. Another penalty placed the ball on the 1-yard line. The next play caused the ball and迈尔 Martin kicked Virginia Normal scored in the third quarter as the result of a blocked kick on the ball square between the uprights for a field goal. Players protested Shaw's touchdown as it appeared, but actually did not go over. The game was marred by frequent penalties. Martin and Chambers were the outspinning Shaw players, while Smith, the V. N. & I. L. outfit.
V. N. & I. L.
Shaw
Thompson L. T.
Hushes
Shotton L. G.
Pridgen
Smith R. G.
Pine
Shugster R. G.
Oll (C.)
Tynea R. T.
Faulkner
Chambers R. T.
Ens. (C.)
Q. B. Cunningham
Ens. (C.)
H. H. H.
Joles
Allen R. H. H.
Minton
Sayles F. B.
Chambers, V.
Shaw 0 0 0 7-7
V. N. & I. L. 0 0 3 0-3
Coach Young P
Of Bears In
Four Lincoln Men Hurt; Lincoln
Three Howard
WHEDBEE'S LONG PASSES BEAT ST. PAUL 20-3
Lawrenceville, Va.—Captain Melvin Wheedle, Virginia Seminary quarterback, passed his way to a 24-10 win here on Saturday on Russell Field. In the third chapter Wheedle shot a 17-yard pass to Brown, placing the ball on the third down Brown went through center for a touchdown, and kicked the extra point from placement. In the final frame Hoyle graced a 17-yard pass line behind the third down. A placement kick by Brown added the extra point. Another long pass Wheedle to Brown placed the ball on Paul's 3-yard line. In the third and final touchdown. The try for the extra point from placement went wild. St. Paul scored in the third quarter. Hudson kicked a field goal from the 25-yard line on the fourth down.
# LOUGHTON
St. Paul (1) Pos. Seminary (2)
Bannister (1) L. E. Walker
Blackwell L. T. Walker
Williams (C.) L. G. Canyon
C.J. (1) H. Harley
J. Oliver R.G. Harley
J. Oliver R.G. Harley
Nelson R.T. Polk
Nelson R.T. Hayle
Scherer Q.R. Whedon
Robinson R.H.B. Perry
Hodson F.L. Stewart
# SCORE BY PERIODS
St. Paul 0 0 3 2
Virginian Seminary 0 0 7 13-20
Substitutionary 0 0 7 13-20
For Hall, Robinson for
Ribridge, Hall for Robinson, Byrd for
Bannister, Baker for Nelson, Oliver for
Virginian Seminary—Holland for Perry
St. Paul. Scoring—Field Seminary
Brown. Scoring—Field Seminary
Brown. Scoring After Touchdown—Brown. Scoring After Touchdown—Brown. Scoring After Touchdown—Brown. Head Linesman—Timekeeper
Carter (Howard). Time of 7-15
Forward Passes Attempted—St. Paul, 5; Va. Seminary, 16. Forward Passes Completed—St. Paul, 6; Va. Seminary, 1. Forward Passes Intercepted—St. Paul, 6; Va. Seminary, 13. First Downs—St. Paul, 6; Va. Seminary, 13. Penalties—St. Paul, 10 yds.; Va. Seminary, 5 yards. Fumbles—St. Paul, 4; Va. Seminary, 3. Pumbles Recovered—St. Paul, 3; Va. Seminary, 1. Punts—St. Paul, 9; Va. Seminary, 9. Ball Lost on Downs—St. Paul, 1; Va. Seminary, 2.
Probable Line Up In D. C. Grid Games
THURSDAY'S GAME
DUNBAR HUNTINGTON
Brownson L.E. Curry
Williams L.E. Curry
Gibson L.G. Balney
Hawkins R.T. Chamberlain
Hawkins R.T. Chamberlain
Halloran R.E. Winfield
Fowler R.E. Winfield
Garbler Q.B. Brown
Barton R.E. Brown
Newman R.E. Minas
George F.D. Sedgewick
FRIDAY'S GAME
HOWARD WILLEBROCE
Long L.E. Lewis
L. Smith T. Lewis
Thomas L.G. Bickett
Martin Buchanan
Nikki Deakes R.T. Wooller
Cambrel L.E. Richie
D. Brown L.E. Redden
Smith L.E. Redden
Taylor F.D. Bull
RTS
Some Coach
A. B.
W. A. (Bull) Thomas, former varsity tackle for Howard University 1918, 1919, now coach of Huntigan High School, of Newport News, Va.
Coach Thomas twice sent his man back into the game with Douglas Hill, after they wanted to quit because of alleged unfair decisions.
"Get back in there and fight," he bellowed, and they did.
raises Work
Saturday Game
In To Beat Howard, He Says;
Men Integible
By Amo Spors Editors
"I looked for an air attack, but I did not expect to encounter a team like Morgan put on the field Saturday," said Coach Young to the writer
Coach Young had nothing but praise for "Jim" Laws squad. He said a jinx had been held against him. "Play" Chick one of the outstanding performers this year.
In justice to Lincoln, the Lions have had their problems. They opened up the season with two clubs, a two weeks of idleness followed, then Wilberforce.
LEE INJURED
The suffered the loss of three men in injuries in the game Saturday. Dr. Curr took a picture of the injured member Sunday, and is trying to put the injuries into the game. West Virginia game next Saturday. Men on Lincoln's injured list are Lee, Taylor, Henry and Sanders.
The huddle system is entwined now in a developmental stage, said Young. He is uncertain about continuing its use.
"The Lions were held to a 7-7 victory by Morgan. It was a moral victory," the Bears fought hard and deserve all the credit given them. If the wine of well played games does not intimidate them, the present combination will develop into a powerful elven.
BALTIMORE A FOOTBALL, TOWN
The financial consideration is even a problem to Lincoln in Baltimore, where he gave evidence of great financial possibilities. It is just a question of a few years, together with more scientific methods of advertising when Baltimore will become a real football town. Asked what he thought the outcome of the Lincoln-Howard game in Philadelphia on Thanksgiving would be, young Lincoln would certainly be
BEAT HOWARD
The outcome of the Lincoln-West Virginia and the Howard-Wilberforce games will have no bearing on the replay. A Bison on a Lion is like red to a bull. Lincolnites say whatever the Bison on a Lion is, the BEAT HOWARD. We do not know what will happen when a bull sees red, but we do know what to expect. The other-Howard games will be played in their order of the C. A. A., according to the contract between the two schools. Howard has three players who will be eligible, and the Bison attempt to use them in the game reman is to be seen.
Flashes Win Opener But
Lose Second To Vandals
Atlantic City, N. J. - The Philadelphia
Flashes the flashes of Winston-Simoning Professiona-
l Wednesday night at the Walz Dream,
bearer of the On Thursday the Flashes met defeat
at the hands of the Vandala. The
Flashes the flashes of the Vandala. The
combination nosed out the Flashes in
the last few minutes.
THE LINE-UP:
Vandala Phila. Flashes
Howard P. Ransome
Pierce G. Lee
Lee G. Shields
Albany G. Graves
Jackson Claxon
KNOXIT
PROPHYLACTIC
Unnatural and mucous discharges can be avoided by destroying the germs of infectious diseases. $1.10 at all druggists.
AND TASTY FOOD
At The
RESTAURANT
we challenge competition. We sat-
ALN RESTAURANT
Open All Night
BANOS, Proprietor.
BALTIMORE
3
DOUGLASS H
MUDLARKS RC
HUNTINGTON
"Duck" Gibson's "Duck Home In Mud ^and Battle, Virginians Aw
PHIL WILLIAMS BACK IN DOUGLASS LIN
Locals Halted Five Time Visitors 4 Yd Mark; Place Kicks Missed
Coach "Duck" Gibson's proved better swimmers than the from Huntington High, New News, Va., and Douglas splashed and splattered their way to a 9-0 tory over the Virginians Friday snow battle in the Maryland pool.
The ground was covered with wires an inch deep, and a heavy snow raged during the winter when the ground became an unintelligible blur. A see of mud snow made tackling and handling difficult. Bubbles were frequent and good puddles was almost an impossibility after first half. A muddy on the field was so wet and freezing cold. Ulliforme black with mud, and features of players and officials were filled slush and mud. A muddy on the fresh unfortunate thrown into the slush puddles were tackled by opponents and few minutes were as wet and as their mud. PHIL WILLIAMS
Phil Williams, Douglas quiback, distinguished himself by flasy plying. Williams took the light away, and the only local man, who got through Huntington's line for precable gains. His speed was great, and he always required the secondary fuse to stop him.
In the third play of the game, llamas dropped back to kick, but the hall as on Hunterting player capped down on him. Unaware, the picked up the hall and won 34 yards as assisted opponents could stop him.
Twice Huntington started to leave the field for what they said, were unfair decisions by the referees, but each time Coach Thomas was called to the fray, telling them to fight it out.
Huntington was penalized 45 yards, once for interfering with a pass, and for unnecessary roughness, of the starch out of the visitors. One put the ball on their 15-yard line and the others on the 20-yard line, while one put the ball on their 25-yard line. A CAPTAIN MACK.
The first score was made in the second quarter. With the ball on their 5-yard line, Huntington kicked to Bannett, who fumbled, but reentered the field. Mack kicked a placement goal from the 22-yard line for the first score. Daughlass scored a touchdown in the last quarter. Mack kicked to Hunters, who plunged netted the Virginiaans no gain. On one of these plays Williams recovered the ball and Huntington, we penalized within 1 foot of the ball for roughness. Shields, who kicked the ball, the extra point was blocked.
Douglas backs carried the ball times to Huntington's four-yard. Each time the visitor held the ball from their goal post back out of danger. Spectators were loud in their praise. Donnion Thomas, a teammate, was back on field when they thought they had got a ten raw decision and started to q. TROY'S SPECTACULAR PLAY. In the line Troy and Vons, Donnion Thomas, a teammate, spectacular recovery of a fumble. Minns in the last quarter, paved way to Douglass touchdown. The fumble from the framer was tackled. Minns the only member of both teams knew that a fumble had been made. Donnion Thomas, a teammate, that Minns didn't the ball. Scrambled around and recovered it the whole Huntington team woke up and fell on him. Donnion Thomas, in every play but he and Allor made several miscues with the slippery and elusive ball. Once Allor missed a perfect pass the locals considerable ground.
Captain Sedgewick of Huntington was one of the outstanding player they were not accustomed to play on wet fields. The raging snow so awed the boys from the South, we water like the feathered fowl r which their coach is named.
SUMMARY
First downs—Douglas, 7; Huntington, 1. Fumbles—Douglas, 6; Huntington, 2. Fumbles, 3; Huntington, 1. Forward paes completed—Douglas, 2; Huntington, 0. Forward passes incomplete kicks—Douglas, 1. Kicking kicks—Douglas, 1. Placement kicks failed—Douglas, 4; Huntington, 0. Penalties—Douglas, 15 yards. Fumbles recovered—Douglas, 3; Huntington, 1.
Huntington.....Douglas
L.E......L.E.
Howard.....T.L. Vanantanen
Wildick.....L.G. C. Willis
Pannell.....R.G. Ves
Pannell.....R.T. T.
Winfield.....Q. W. Rhino
Winfield.....Q. P. Willis
Joyan.....L.H. Bennett
Hammis.....H.H. B. B.
Mins.....F.B. Scott
Sedgwick (C.).....Scott
Huntington, Willis
for Howard Brown for Curry, Skain
for Williams, E. Scott for Pann
for Shaw, E. Scott, Crump for Winfield. Douglas
Young for S. Willis, Russell for B.
Touchdowns--Shields. Field Godd
Mack, Umpire--Elmer Burgese (Syr
Head Linesman--Ike Wright (Han-
ton.)
Chicago—Above is the entire sound of Wendell Phillips football team. Seated left to right: Packler, "Fat" Buster, Wiley, Pepples, Harron, Brown, Jancison, Smith, Robinson, Hewlett and Watson. Standing: Jonk manager; Brooks, Ellison, Jackson, Imbert, Morris, Palge, Weaver, Evans, Kokner, Scott, Cobb, Gold, Steenison, assistant coach; Mosky, coach.
STANDING OF THE CLUBS
PIONEER LEAGUE
1 1.876
6 2.752
4 4.500
4 4.500
4 4.500
3 3.472
0 8.000
OUTLAWS WIN
B. CENTER
1st 2d 2d
Garner 1st 2d 2d
Redding 83 91 78
Lindsey 85 74 83
Morrell 112 101 91
Ellis 81 89 97
Total 430 435 460
2nd 2d 2d 2d
BELMONTS
1st 2d 2d 2d
Obev 1st 2d 2d 3d
Taylor 84 88 81
Brewn 112 91 91
Robinson 92 88 84
Wyatt 90 90 84
Pratt 90 108 87
Hall 112 87
Total 459 472 444
MOHAWKS DEFEATED
BICMELLS
MOHAWKS
BICMELLS
giney 78 82 70 65
sheer 78 82 70 65
herer 78 82 70 65
oward 78 72 70 65
ames 76 64 74 64
Totals 313 315 392
Totals 469 422 408
GIANTS ARE BEATEN
COLONIALS
GIANTS
BICMELLS
wayax 78 82 70 65
roon 82 104 101
tue 82 104 101
cart 86 80 92
art 86 80 92
aert 424 415 415
aert 424 415 415
TATTLERS LICK STARS
BALTO, STARS
TTLERS
BALTO, STARS
hans 88 80 87
ley 79 81 87
en 79 81 87
en 82 80 86
en 82 80 86
aAris 82 83 74
briscoe 82 83 74
goals 430 397 410
Totals 401 392 440
DOPE
Jackey's, dope sheet picked six of seven winners last week. The Petersburg contest was the on- missed. The last 2-2 scoring a touch-in the last few minutes of play in Petersburg had been penalized repeatedly for insportsmannliness. The greatest scoop was in the Lions' Morgan game. All the wise gave the Lions the victory in advance. Our dope was Morgan's the blood's weight, speed and brilliance. The game ended in a predicted Seminary would beat Paul, by practically the same score. Tampion score was 24-0. The pary-St. Paul game ended 20- Seminary. James Howard would Durham State. The contest 6-0 for Howard. said Wilberforce, would give in-state a severe drubbing;
MORGAN-LINCOLN GAME PLAY BY PLAY
Armstrong-Douglass Annual Contest May Not Take Place
Coach "Duck" Gibson Explains Were Penalties Were Meted Out In The Petersburg-Shaw Grid Game Last Saturday
Call VErnon 6016
in Putting Phillips On
guard of Wendell Phillips football team.
Harper, Brown, Jamerson, Smith, Robins,
Jackson, Imbert, Morris, Paige, Wes
Mosby, coach.
MORGAN-LIN
PLAY BY
FIRST QUARTER
Young kicked to Lancaster on Linne-
through center. On the next play Lee
lost 5 yards. McIntyre was hurt but
kicked up 5 yards. Lee kicked up 5 yards through left
tackle. Lee kicked out of bounds on
Young added five more and then
first down through right tackle. Pass.
Young's placement kick from the 40-
yard one was under bounds on
Young's own yards. Lincoln
kicked to Young, who brought the 15-
yard kick and the kill was on Lincoln's 15-
yard line. Lee kicked outside on his own
kick, got three yards, Lincoln
kicked to 2 yards. Wells went in for
kick, got three yards, then one more to
get three yards, then one more to make
it first down on the 20-yard line. Good-
morning. As both teams were off-side
the yards, but his next play netted him
no gain. Lee kicked to Clark on Linne-
11 yards. Young funneled, recovered
and on the next play picked up on
next play and Lincoln recovered the ball.
Morris went through center for a four yard gain, goodman got two yards in the first half, and other penalty for off-side, which made it first down with the ball in the end zone. He scored around right end Lincoln lost eight yards, and tried to make an end run. Lincoln attempted a forward pass, which was in trouble, and the ball went over to Morgan.
SECOND QUARTER
Lincoln was off-side and received a 5-yard penalty. Hicks picked up two 30-yard line. Clark was shown for a 5-yard lost on a fumble. Clark's pass to Young grounded. Young kicked one on his 25-yard line. He played play. Morris gained nothing; Goodman run through right tackle for five yards. Morris made it to the 30-yard line. Morris got one yard. Lee three yards and Morris ploughed through for two more. Lee kicked to Clark on Morris's 30-yard line. Morris dodged five yards to the 20-yard line.
On the next two yards, Young and Hicks failed to gain. Young kicked to Lee on the 45-yard line. Lee's plunge through center was for no gain. Goodman gained three yards and on the next play got two more. Lincoln lost the ball on downs. Hill sneaked out at right end but Clark's pass to him grounded. Young fumbled on the next play and Lincoln recovered the ball on the 40-yard line. Morris got two yards. Thomas intercepted a pass and brought it to midfield. Hines went through center 10 yards for first down. Hicks failed to gain. On a fake double pass Morgan got one yard. Clark's pass to young gained five yards. Young's placement kick was defected and went to the side of the goal. Lincoln's ball on the 20-yard line. Lee kicked outside one Morgan's 40-yard line. Clark got two yards through left tackle. Clark's pass was incomplete, but his next leave to Hicks gained 13 yards and the ball was on Lincoln's 45-yard line and first down. Clark's pass to Hill on a fake line. Clark put the ball on Lincoln's 20-yard line. Clark lost five yards on an attempted left end run. Clark's pass to
Armstrong-Doug
Contest May
Coach "Duck" Gibson Explains
Out In The Petersburg-Shaw
The scheduled annual clash between Doughass of Baltimore and Armstrong Tech of Washington has been postponed and it is probably the two teams will not meet this year.
The game was scheduled to take place on November 6, when the two schools made up their grid program early in the fall. The Howard-Wilberforce game which will be played in Washington on that date caused the Armstrong management to move the date up to Monday, November 9.
Doughass has a meeting with Booker Washington in Norfolk on the thirteenth Friday, which would prepare for the Virginiaans. Armstrong gave Doughass only a week's notice of the change and provision for the game without sanction of the Douglass management. Coach "Duck" Gibson stated to an APFO reporter this week that he coach to consider a game in Washington or Baltimore on the seventh and the local school would refund the stadium and give them a guarantee besides. Coach Gibson also stated that he would coach the Stadium and give them a guarantee besides. Coach Gibson also stated that he would coach the Stadium and give them a guarantee besides. The heads of both schools are expected to come together and arrange a game after November 13. The Moffett team regret at the delay and expressed the hope that the contest will take place this month. Normal Game. Coach "Duck" Gibson, who referred the Shaw-Petersburg game in Petersburg, last last Saturday stated this week that Petersburg was ready for talking but for using profanity on the field.
Hicks got five yards. Hooters greeted him with a golden opportunity to score by the end of the first half.
SECOND HALF
Anderson went in for Lee, Anderson kicked to Clark on the 30-yard line. Hines failed to gain. Young failed to gain. Hines failed to gain. Young kicked outside on the 40-yard line. Goodman was down by Hill in his tracks. Anderson lost one yard on an attempted run around right, and the 35-yard line was른. Clark brought the ball back to the 40-yard line. Young hit center for no gain. Hines got three yards on a fake pass. Young kicked to Goodman, who was down on his 20-yard line. Anderson picked up one yard from right end.
Anderson kicked to Clark on Morgan's 20-yard line. Hines failed to gain, but only the next play he got one yard around right end. Clark's pass to Thomas grounded. Young kicked to Goodman, who was thrown by Thomas and Hill on the 50-yard line. Anderson hit right tackle for five yards and got two more at center. Morris made it first down on Morgan's 40-yard line.
Morris got five and three yards at right tackle on his next two lunges. Johnson was penalized five yards for offside.
Hines for Morgan intercepted a forward pass and ran it to midfield. Clark's pass to Hill slipped through the latter's hand. Clark's pass to McIntyre gained 9 yards. Hill crawled out on his right end, caught Clark's pass and ran 40 yards for a touchdown. Lincoln was offside and Young's attempt to kick for the extra point counted. Score: Mor
Bourne went in for Lassiter. Young players were on the 40-yard line. Anderson went through right tackle for three yards. Anderson made it first down on Morgan's 40-yard line. Anderson got four yards at right corner. Anderson made it first down on Morgan's 25-yard line.
FOURTH QUARTER
Merris hit center for two yards. Anderson got three yards at tacks, tackles. Anderson failed to gain on the next tackle. Anderson first down on Morgan's 14-yard line. Anderson gained three yards at right first down on Morgan's 14-yard line. Anderson first down on Morgan's 3-yard line. More went in for Chase. Morris, no gain at center. Anderson left tackle for one yard. Bourne, no gain at center. Anderson left tackle for the ball over. Anderson kicked goal for the extra point. Score tested the touchdown and howled at Umpire Hillburn. Anderson kicked to Clark, who kicked to the tail to the 85-yard line. Payne gained two yards through left reception. Payne fumbled but recovered. Payne gained two yards through left reception a penalty of five yards for offside. Payne fumbled but recovered. Payne gained two yards through left reception a penalty of five yards for offside. Revanah went in for McIntyre. Anderson gained eight yards. Clark on Morgan's 30-yard line. Young gained one yard at center. Young played next play. Young kicked to Goodman, who fumbled on Morgan's 30-yard line. Anderson gained five yards.
Lincoln penalized 15 yards. The ball was on line, yard line. The Anderson kicked in Clark, who brought the ball to the 30-yard line. Clark's pass to the ball grounded. Grounded. Morris intercepted the next pass hurried by Clark. The next not hold it. The game ended with the ball on Lincoln's 30-yard line.
glass Annual
Not Take Place
ms Why Penalties Were Meted
new Grid Game Last Saturday
The Shaw touchdown did not come as a result of one these penalties but came when a Petersburg player pushed a Shaw man from behind to catch a forward pass from behind the goal line. This penalty put the ball on Petersburg's one yd. Shaw carried the ball over
Coach Finley admitted after the game that the penalty was deserv-
Harpers Ferry, W. Va. —The Stor-
tory college football victory by the Sophomores
Saturay eleven, will tackle Hager-
daryun in a hard fought game. The
team will face the
Higher-Ups Sought In Liquor Theft
By George E. E. Taylor
New York, N.Y. New York, N.Y. New
Richmond, Va. in their clutches; New
Richmond, Va. in their clutches; New
hunt for some higher-ups who alided, or
suggested the robbery and removal of
their stock, from the cellar of Allen Bond, a white
millionaire cotton broker while he was
his valet, Harry Bennett, of Harlem,
N.Y., who had much of the wet goods
distributed in Richmond, through an
advertiser, and high-class apartment houses.
With the 'hype of securing as much of it as they can, the ploys detects
The Security set knows not to what extent the valet has been made. The valet is not a uniform helves or: places that are beanything. It must to prevent the removal of any helves.
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
SPORTS MIRROR BY AFRO SPORTS EDITOR
RACE ATHLETES ON COLLEGE TEAMS
A number of Race youths are playing prominent parts in athletics in a number of the leading schools and colleges in the north. At Boston University, Charles L. Oswell is a member of the football team and was the recent center of a race discrimination controversy. Charles Drew and George Glimmer are the Auburn junior guard and junior pitcher, respectively. Tofts College and forward on the basketball team. He is also on the track team.
the onsite school. Charles and Dave Ray are backs on Bates College. Both have been
involved in holding some of the leading souls this fall.
instrumental in holding in check some of the leading squads this fall.
"Hank" Corrothers and R. P. Greene on Springfield (Mass.) are carried in their game, and Cooper, a former Cushing coach, is Cushing academy team. He made the only touch down his team scored against Andover. Cushing won, 7-0.
"Sol" Johnson is making a name for himself on the Coburn (Waterville, Maine) Institute squad. Crooks is an outstanding player on the Haskins team. He has in Dixon, a lad who bids to follow the footsteps of "Fritz" Pollard. Whittaker, Stubbs, Wormley, Payne, Wilkinson and Cook, while not members of the football eleven, of Dartmouth, do their bit by cheering from the sidelines. They are members of the
SOUTHERN PAPERS
The News and Observer, publishes Tuesday morning with a big head, Harry Wilk and won a battle from Floyd Johnson. Evidently the News sport Editor Johnson must be "dusky." It was the South Carolina team that Negro Negro with a small "n" and other when writing about colored people. The results of this fight would Observer if the editor had known th
The News and Observer, published in Raleigh, N. C., came out last Tuesday morning with a big head across the sport page, stating that Harry Wills had won a battle from a "dusky" opponent, referring to Floyd Johnson. Evidently the News sport Editor thinks that any one by the name of Johnson must be "dusky." It was real amusing to read the comment of the Southern writer how he referred to Johnson as "black," "dusky" negro, and "white," and appellation used in southern papers was writing about colored people.
The results of this fight would never have appeared in print in the Observer if the editor had known that Johnson was a white man.
BOGAN BACK IN THE GAME
"Billie Rogan, who was unabated City Monarchs, jumping the World Sea covered sufficiently to be able to do out on the Pacific Coast. The "Kay See" pitcher stuck a ball and threw it to Kansu that threatened to be of a serious sort is back in harness and will have as Hilldale club. In these two the Gia of the country in Rogan and the heihe of the Western fans lost heart when he was thrown in the sport in the game, the Monarchs would hit the championship.
"Bullet" Rogan, who was unable to play with his club, the Kansas City Monarchs doing the World Series on account of an injury, has resounded on the Pacific Coast. The "Kay Petit" pitcher stuck a needle in his knee a few days before the game, and the team was unable to play that threatened to be of a serious nature. However, the western hurter is back in harness and will have as a twirling mime, Nip Winters, of the Hilldale club. In these two the Giants are the righthand of the Western fans southpaw in Winter. The Western fans lost heart when they learned that Rogan would not be able to take a part in the series. Many believed that with Rogan in the game, Monarchs would have had a splendid chance of winning.
SOX AND HILLDALE SPLIT EVEN
The Sox are the only team that the season. They split even in the a slight edge on the champs in many Owner Rosser made it known stuff pulled this year from his ball. The roster is more than likely that it is more than likely that in the club's management next year. The Eastern league moguls will and several important changes and Just will get the franchise also be decided.
The Sox are the only team that got an even break with Hildale this season. They split even in their 10 games. In fact the Sox had a slight edge on the champs in many games they should have won. Owner Rossiter made sure that he not sold for any rough stuff because he would have to work the whole hell with the Baltimore clan in 1926 will have to walk a chalk line, says Rossiter. It is more than likely that Rossiter will take a more active part in the club's management next year. The Eastern league moguls will meet in Philadelphia in December and several important changes and trades are slated to be brought up. Just as soon as will get the franchise of the Wilmington-Potomac will also be decided.
DIAMOND DOPE
According to the dope advances Eastern player will be in the west of East and none will be on their press John Henry Lloyd, boss of the team will not be the boss we will sport in the fields of a Nazi Several radical changes are expected coin Giants. The Harrisburg team is in for the Hillary club will be the only The management of the Black made by the team this year. After material, the best the locals could place, when they should have been in Hillary club the battle of their lives AMOS HOP A village has no leisure class except the man whose wife takes in boarders.
According to the dope advanced among ball players this fall all the Eastern players will be in the west and the western players will be in the East and none will be on their present teams. City Bacharachs, according to reports will not head the Bees next year. Oscar Charleson, it is rumored will sport in the fields of a National ball yard, out in the golden West. Several radical changes are expected to be made in the line of the Lincolnians. The Hirlburgshire is in for a house cleaning, and it looks like the Hildahl club will be the only one left intact. The management of the Black Sox is not pleased with the showing made by the team this year. After scouring the for the best players, it was to finish hanging on to third place when they should have been in the thick fight giving the champion Hildahl club the battle of their lives.
AMOS HOKUM SAYS
A pessimist is a man who, hearing the knack of opportunity, tells the elf, thinking it the wolf.
IT DOES LOOK SIMULTANES IF EVERYBODY CAN SPOT A BOOTLEGER EXCEPT THE POLICE, COMPLAINS ELMORE HASTY, 1374 STOCKTON.
New York man caries liquor in his brief case. He calls it his..... quartello.
"They won't make a bricklayer out of me," said the hen as she shoved the porcelain egg out her nest.
In certain parts of England the belief prevails that a holly bush planted near a house will protect it from lightning.
A man may lie about his golf score and cheat when he plays solitary, but have you ever heard of a woman who paid a higher income tax than was necessary just to make an impression on the public?
Nothing enables a woman to keep sweet like becoming a widow.
Research shows that the green color of French oysters is due to a pigment present in their food materials.
Additional joy might be put into life if the railroad companies would get their train announcers to take a few lessons from the gentlemen who do the announcing at the radio broadcasting stations.
A mere mortal man never
realizes how weak he is un-
til he tries to quit smoking.
The Chinese language
has 15,000 words and
they all sound alike to us.
Grocer—When I was a boy I
received $1.50 per week and
working every day.
Clerk-Yes, but they didn't have any cash registers then.
Don't sit supinely, on your roost
But come along and help us boost,
For better things of every kind
And the things we have been
On every guy, who dean't boost.
She turned her back on love, so she got it in the neck.
Gladys, the stenogrammer, said "I'm better to opportunity isn't found on the keyboard of a typewriter."
SURPRISES
Life is not.
"One darned thing you can't bother."
As defined by an ancient Philosopher;
But it is.
Just one surprise
We have hope.
Whether pleasant or unpleasant Depends on the attitude We are toward them.
Surprises!
They are what makes life interesting.
across in Raleigh, N. C., came out last in the sport page, saddening that in a "dusky" opponent, referring to thinks that any one by the name of real amusing to read the comment to Johnson as "black," "dusky" appellation used in southern papers never have appeared in print in the at Johnson was a white man.
IN THE GAME
to play with his club, the Kansas ties on account of an injury, has reason to the uniform of the Royal Giants needle in his knee a few days before its City. An operation was performed on the wrist of a twirling mate, Nip Winters, of the arms will have the premier righthand side southwain in Winters, in they learned that Rogan would not as many believed that with Rogan he had a splendid chance of winning
at get an even break with Hilldale 10 games. In fact the Sox had games they should have won. but he will not stand for any rough layers. Whoever will be at the helm will be to help Hilldale to be a possiter will take a more active part meet in Philadelphia in December trades are slated to be brought up. of the Wilmington-Potomac will
among bull players this fall all the and the western players will be in the nteams, Atlantic City Bacharachs, according year, Oscar Charleston, it is rumorable bell yard, out in the golden west, to be made in the line of the Lin-a house cleaning, and it looks like he left intact. Sox is not pleased with the showing of occurring the country for the ball to was to finish hanging on to third in the thick fight giving the champion.
KUM SAYS
Try to have as much will-power as a sitting hen.
A writer in the University of Kansas claims the discovery of the super-irignant coed. She thinks alma mater means "sweet mamma."
A woman's second husband is always in competition with the dead.
Baby Peg has decided to let her name be used for advertising purposes by a face person concerned but still undecided about the reducing corset proposition.
All a man can carry home now-a-days is a grouch.
Keeping that school girl complexion isn't half as hard for some cuties as getting that "bathing suit figure."
Be sure you're wrong-then back-up.
It's mighty hard to tell, asserts W. L. Lowe, which upsets a town that挂货局, a good looking Woman or a homely rich old bachelor.
A thing of beauty is delayed forever.
ON THE TRANSMISSION OF SOLES Our berth is but a sleep and a forgetting.
He obviously had never tried an "upper" I'll testify there is no sleeping there.
The man who says honesty is the best policy never tried telling an ugly girl how she looks, cooler, mutters Clyde Mock.
The world's best After Dinner. Speech: "Waiter, give me both checks."
As a last desperate effort, Daves might try going over the falls in a barrel.
MODERN VERSION
Jack and Jill
Speed up the hill.
Aurelia there was sharp.
The car upset;
Jack's rolling yet;
Jack's jumping and a halt.
A JOB FOR THE MORTICIAN
He's dead. I killed him with an axe—I felled him with one blow. I'm confident he will be this guy, he Came back with, "Yes—and no."
Howard Gross comes out flat footedly to assert he would rather get wet than wear one of these new yellow slickers.
"Merchants have beautiful windows," says a headline in a Kansas paper. Bay window too, some of them.
The boss is never looking for a man who is looking for
Maybe Not So Beefy, But Oh You Classy
He Painted Mr. Dempsey A Picture
He Painted Mr. Dempsey A Picture
They say one of the reasons that Harry Wills fought so hard is the fact that his wife was a spectator at the fight. We advise Mr. Dempsey to ask an injunction against her attending the Wills-Dempsey tussle if such should ever materialize.
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Johnson and Robertson
Draw 'Wrath of Commish
The New Jersey Boxing Commission has barred Floyd Johnson, the lightning man, and that State again. The poor showing Johnson made in his bout with Harry Wills last Monday night was given as the reason. Barbara Johnson during the fight and some said he was under the influence of liquor. An examination of the boxer after the fight failed to show evidence that he had been drinking. Barbara Johnson were paid by the promoters. Honer Robertson was also suspended by the Commission for six months, and with Frank Moody, English middle-weight, brought on the ban.
Reginald Siki And Kaplan Draw In Wrestling Match
Los Angeles, Cal.-Reginald Skii
Sengelesse wrestler, made a decided hit with the Coast fans when he and
Karl Winstedt wrestled to a draw here.
Monday. The referee called the match a
draw after the two men worked for
shoulders being about of their size.
Skii was in pictures for two days
while he. He took a part with the
Gang at the Hal Roach Studio.
Monroe Suspended
Sacramento, Calif.-Jack Monroe
has been suspended for an indefinite
period by the State Boxing Commission
unresponsible conduct in juvenile
white, at Oakland.
REFEREE EXPLAINS
LION'S TOUCHDOWN
There has been so much discussion about the touchdown made by Lincoln Saturday in the Morgan Lincoln game and whether it was really made or given by the Umpire brought forth a statement from the Referee to an 'AFRO reporter this week.
Mr. Jackson, the referee, stated that when the ball, lawfully in the possession of a player, is declared dead by the Referee, any part of it being on, above or behind the opponents' goal line, it is a touchdown.
He further stated that even the player who has the ball may afterwards be thrown back on the field of play to the five or ten yard line this does not destroy the touchdown. He said the touchdown made by Lincoln Saturday was without a doubt a legal one as the ball was declared dead behind Morgan's goal line, but it was in the field of play when it was picked up.
The definition of a touchdown is found under rule VI, section 14. Mr. Jackson said he declared the touchdown as no one else had the authority to do so; as the referee has sole authority for all the scoring in a football game.
Altho it is stated in section I, that the Referee has general oversight and control of the game, section II, of the same notes that the Referee has appeal upon other officials for testimony upon other points within his jurisdiction.
Alabama, 57; Selma, 0
Selma, Ala.—The Alabama State "Horners" trumped the Selma University "Tigers" under a 57 to 0 score here Friday. Most of the game was played in a dazzling rain. The State Normal used two squads, the seniors registered eight touchdowns while the juniors got
Atlanta, 32; S. C. State, 0
Orangeburg, S. C.—Atlanta University romped away to a 32-3 victory over South Carolina State here where the will meet Morehouse on the I.
HAMPTON TEAM
It has been charged that Hampton and Union win because they have more beef than any of the other schools. Above we have pictured three of Hampton's stars. They don't win because they are powerful, but because they think why they win. They are from left to right: James Jones, Angie Butler and Oscar Pindle.
De Hart Hubbard Tells Of Early Athletic Trials
By DEHART HUBBARD
World's Champion Broadjumper
All small boys have some great boyhood ambition. Some want to be cowboys, others highway robbers, others Babe Ruths and a few even go so far as to dream of the States. But it was never my ambition to be any of these things. I always wanted to be an athlete. My mother tells me that I was always known what an athlete was I always talked about running and jumping. As far back as I can remember, I have engaged in some sort of training. I has always been ball, basketball, basketball, baseball or track, fall, winter, spring and summer. Having that inborn athlete instinct and desire, how could
Cincinnati is my native city. I first saw the light there in 1903. At the age of six years I entered the Doughties and I got to the 10 I entered my first track meet. N had wanted to enter before, but I couldn't make the team. There were four classes of boys: the 10, the 15, the 20, and the unlimited weight class. Although I weighed only 75 pounds I entered the 95-pound class for my first competition. I needed to be deadlift. Although I tried to make my legs go as fast as I could they just wouldn't keep up with the other boys and I was among the also-runs. Trying. Not disheartened by my first defeat I kept on trying. In my second and third meets I did just as about as well as I did before and I figured that if I kept trying I was bound to win some day. That has been my motto or guiding light all through my athletic career and I will win eventually." It has been a pretty good one, too.
It was two years before I won any
test. That was a long time to wait
Hubbard Has A Potential Rival In Cator, Haytian Broad Jumper
New York.—In line with an account carried over a month ago of the wonderful showing of Cator, the young Haylan bread jumper. In Europe, Howard V. Valentine of the New York Evening Telegram had the following to say in his paper in Monday of this week:
"Newspaper accounts of the recent French track and field championships held in the Columbus Stadium at Paris, reveal the startling fact that De Hart Hubbard of the University of Michigan, holder of the world's record of 25 feet 10.7-5 inches for the running broad jump, has a potential rival in European athlete circles. A young Haylan named Cator—a boy, cleared the amazing distance of 25 feet 4.7-5 inches in winning the French title from a field made up of the best of the Continental jumpers.
Not a "Flash"
"Neither was Cator's leap in the Columbus Stadium a "Flash," according to the French prints. Seven days before the biz Paris meeting the Haylan youngster, who is a powerful fellow: built on the lines of Ned Gourdin of Harvard, the former holder of the "broad" jump record cleared 24 feet 9 inches at a has several other performances of meet in Budapest, Hungary. He better than 24 feet to his credit.
"Cator, like his countryman.
Keeps On Trying
for victory, but when it came it was worth all of my efforts. I had advanced in weight and was running against some of the best boys in the schools. We had trial heats, and to my great joy I won my trial heatseason. Somewhere or other I had discovered the secret of running. Or maybe the class of runners in the schools that year was more proficient in previous years. Anyway I won my first trial and got ready for the final race. Even at that time I knew when the starter told us to get on our marks I got down like a veteran, even though my heart was about to burst. When the starter's gun went off I was gone and kept on going. About half way down the 60-yard stretch I closed my eyes and next thing I knew was when one of my teachers caught me after I had crossed the finish line. Of course I didn't know what I was running against me I cause my eyes were shut tight.
A. Tickled Youngster
When he told me I had won the race I was one tickled youngster. At last I had won a race, and at last I would be a here among the boys at school and in the gym. He has ever been sweeter than the winning of that race. And when I got the little gold button that was the prize I wore it and wore it and kept on wearing it. I've still got that medal and I will get it. After that first victory I continued winning. When I was graduated from Doughtas school I was a champion in my class. I had not considered jumping. In fact, jumping seemed too easy and not spectacular enough. But fate plays strange tricks and, while at that time I did not give jumping a thought, I was champion in the event, that I scored.
Theard who hustled Loren Murchison of the Newark Athletic Club to the tape in the British A. A. A. 106-yard championship in the first two years. He is decidedly a beginner and the French athletic experts believe that once he learns to jump properly he will do 25 feet or better consistently. "Cator's great jump at the French championships brings to mind the indisputable fact that the colored athletes are showing a decided superiority in the long jump." Race athletes have won the National A. A. U. championship in this event six years running. In the Olympics, he Butler all finished in the first three places. In the Olympic championship at Paris, last summer, Hubbard with, Wourdin second. In the Olympics, Heyman the fourth man in the history of athletes to beat 25 feet, with a leap that stamps him as thoroughly capable of maintaining his race's accuracy in the event that Hubbard grades or drops out of condition.
Tennessee, 19; Walden, 7.
Nashville, Tenn.—Tennessee State College opened its football season Thursday in Walden College in the Athletic Park by a score of 19 to 7.
**SUGGS LOSES ON FOUL**
New Bedford, Mass.—Phil Verde, from Chick Suggs, Houston, won from Chick Suggs, Houston, in the weight champion, on a foul, in the last night night. Suggs won bout here Tuesday night. Suggs won bout the fight until the unintentional foul was committed.
**DUDLEY BEATS BAIN**
Newark, N. J.—Harry Dudley, of Calif., in Newark, in a 12-round bout. Dudley clearly out-classed Bain, having him tied in a third round. Dudley weighed 147, and Bain weighed 147.
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SUGGS LOSES ON EQUIL
DUDLEY BEATS BAIN
Mrs. Tida Dewey of Corono, L. I., was a visitor to the city last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith Byrd, of Catonville, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dewey of Corona, L. I., New York, Saturday, one week ago.
Mrs. Genevieve Shruby, wife of Mr. Alonzo Shruby, of 119 Harlem, is now confined and will be queued with her friends very soon.
Mrs. Ella Nelson of Lansvale street, spent Sunday in New York city visiting Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nelson, L. 117 W. 11st street.
Mr. R. Humphrey spent a week in Philadelphia visiting his uncle, Mr. Eugene Bailley. He also visited in Churchville, Md.
Mr. William J. Gross and Mr. Clarence Irby, of D.C. and D. G., and Wanda of New York, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Weal of 1505 N. Carey street.
MISS SCOTT HONORED
Miss Edna Day, of Madison avenue, entertained at a dinner party in honor of Miss Marie Scott, of Washington, on Tuesday evening. Covers for fifty. Miss Irene Lennard Nelson rendered vocal selections, including "Saint Sakons," spiritually by Harry Burry. Miss Marie Scott played "The Mazzart Concerto in A Major."
DINNER PARTY
Miss Nina Neells, or Wilson Park, entertained the White Rose Whist Club last Monday evening at a dinner party. Forty-five guests were present, including Miss Nina Neells, Washington, Mrs. Nelson Nelson, Mrs. Charles Monroe, Mrs. Lenora Johnston, Mrs. Ada Carr, and Mrs. Maude Parran.
APPOINTED INSTRUCTOR
Mr. Charles E. Gwynn, son of Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Gwynn, of 333 Bound street, has been appointed interim printing and band music at Poseidon academy, Poseidon academy, Mr. Gwynn graduate of Hampston Institute, Hampton, Va.
IN MJAM1
FRATERNITY IN MIAMI:
Miami, Fl.—Elk Beta Sigma College
Fraternity has established a graduate
platter here.
COOKE HERE
DR. LOCKE HERE
Dr. Alain L. Locke, former Rhodes
scholar and one of the professors of
Philosophy at the University, was
in the city Sunday.
MARYLAND
SALISBURY, MD.
Saldisbury, Md.-Services were well attended at White's Chapel, Sunday. The Rev. J. A. Kahn preached the Holy Communion, and administered the Holy Communion. The Rev. Grant Schroeder, Mrs. Novella Kiah returned home Thursday after school three time visiting the W. Nutter, Mrs. M. and her grandmother, Mrs. Harriet Deshields, or Jesterville, Md. *Mr. and Mrs.* this past week visiting another, Mrs. Charlotte visiting on Garden street. *M. Jenkins of St. Michael's, Md., was present.* White's Chapel, Md., was visited by *Mrs. Harriet Deshields, at her post of duty as the Home Economies teacher, Mrs. Sarah E. Church, Mrs. Vivian Miss F. L. Bankes visited Mr. and Mrs. Shonae, the river lion near Saldisbury, Sunday. *The W. H. M. Society of the Salisbury church was at John Wesley Church in Saldisbury, and no Satire Society in a community sale at the parsonage, Mrs. M. L. Telm is dissected; Mrs. M. L. Church, treasurer, Mrs. Aida Phillips, district superintendent of the Easton district their convocation, and minister this week. The Memorial A. M. E. Church, The Salisbury Singing Band, held their John Honey, held their at St Luke A. M. E. Church, Sunday after 2:30 p. m. The Rev. Ashby is
UNDERTAKER CHARGED WITH FOGERY
Mrs. Virgile Ringold. Undertaker, was charged with forgery last week when a warrant was issued out for her at the Northwestern Poor
Bee Stainz, Lulu Green, 2016 Etting Street, left a check issued to her in payment of a death claim by the Home Friendly Insurance Company with Mrs. Ringgold for safe keeping. The check was endorsed by Mrs. Ringgold who forced the name of Mrs. Lulu Green. The check was
Earlier, the warrant charging forgery was sworn out because of the above circumstances. Mrs. Ringgold, Under-taker, was represented by white counsel. Mrs. Green was accused by attorney's Josiah E. Henry, Jr. and Gebert E. Macleish. Through the Court and with the acquiescence of Counsel E. Mrs. Green, Mrs. Ringgold was given a reasonable reply to Mrs. Green, through the court, the amount of the forged check.
1939
Hours: 9:30 a. m., to 5:30 p. m.
7 p. m. to 8 p. m.
MADISON 1488-J
DR. JESSE M. WILKINS
Surgeon Dentist
EXTRACTING A SPECIALTY
GAS-ADMINISTERED
Pennsylvania Avenue and
Presstman St.
BALTIMORE, MD.
LEVIN'S
BABY STORE
CHILDREN'S APPAREL
LADIES AND GENT'S
FURNISHINGS
HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR
539 & 539½ North Gay St.
BALTIMORE, MD.
WINDOW SHADE'S
All Sizes
EMORY GROVE, MD
Emory Grove, Md.-Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson, of Rockville, Md., were chairman Chambers, Sunday. "Millard Sellman and Allen Nugent were week-end congregation and pastor will go to Doysd, Md., Sunday, November 8, to congregation. "The Parent-Teacher's Association will meet Tuesday evening snow fall, the usual 11 o'clock service Sunday, was well attended at Emory several members attended the mass meeting in Washington, D.C. Monday night, at Ebenezer Church. "The Hallman Mrs. Sadie Taylor was well attended.
UNIONVILLE, MD.
Unlvillone, MD—Presiding Elder R. E. Ford held his third quarterly conference day night, October 31st. *The Harvest home service was well attended, Sunday morning. Ford preached. Sunday-school was held at 2:30 o'clock. Services at night were held at Jacob Sutton, of Euflore, in visiting his uncle, Jacob Sutton. *Davis Townsons, of Jossup, of his brother, Jacob Townsend. *Miss Melissa Jackson is able to be out again. *Charles Dobson will be on the sick list.
TREGO. MD.
Trege, Md.-Mrs. Mary Calman, near Keedsville, had a public sale, and he sold it to a home with her children. "Mr. and Mrs. George Hopewell accompanied by Mr. George, whom, motored from Baltimore here, to his mother, Mrs. Lavinia Hopewell.
— GALA E
Armistice Day
DAN
Wednesday Evening
8 to 1 A
New Albert A
1224 Pennsylva
H. THOMAS and
Presen
THE APEX WHITS
JOE SMALL'S COTTO
Washington Sensation
DIXON AND FURVIANCE
Pace Makers and Record Breakers
PRESENT 2 BANDS
SILAS CARTERS BAND
Washington, D. C.
IKE DIXON
Baltimore
Thursday, November 12th
8 to 1
New Albert Auditorium
EXTRA
Big Armistice Dance and Reception
Wednesday, Nov. 11th, Fishermen's Auditorium
HIGH BROWN Walking-Talking-Sleeping
A girl in a dress with a hat.
BELAIR, MD.
Debbie M. Milne, the nursery preached at the morning nursery and night services at Ames Church. Holy Communion was observed at night. * The series of sundays was quite a success, also the Rev. Rally are well attended. * The Oyster Supper Tuesday night, of last week, was quite a success, also the fish supper on Thursday night. * The Rev. Barnum and wife, of Havre D'Grace, and Mrs. Crawford, of J. never callers at the parsonage. * Steve Moore, who has been in Cleveland, and other cities, the last two weeks, is home. * The Rev. Barnum, her home on Alice Ann街, * Miss Paulina Lee, who has been visiting her parents here, and the Rev. Osborn is working in Baltimore. * Robert Maddox, who spent the summer here, returned to Baltimore and attended the parsonage on Wednesday evening: George H. Hall, and Miss Virginia fontagine, to Lincoln Williams, and Miss Estelle E. Banks. * Sunday afternoon, the Rev. Mr. Hall, his daughter and congregation, will be a, an, Mrs. Marie. * Fields, the District Juphar League Superintendent will address the congregation. * Sunday night the Rev. Mr. S. W. Fields of Rereford, MD., will preach. A pew rally will be held in automobile, the Ministers' Wives Club, and Mrs. Murray, on November 12th. * A program will be given a night.
____0____
SIMPSONVILLE, MD.
Wholesale and Retail Cleaning' and Dyeing
VErnon #20
4 SLEES
SPONGED AND
PRESSED,
$1.50
C. Thomas
PRESSING
CLUB AND
HAT
RENOVATORS
404 DRUID HILL. AVE.
At Eutzw
Free Call and Delivery
Ladies' and Gent's Garments Cleaned
Dyed and Altered
Suits Pressed, Hats Cleaned and
Reblocked While You Wait
Mrs. S. L. Goldman
Milliner
1434 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
ALL THE LATEST
FALL AND WINTER
STYLES
REMODELING
EVENT —
Day Celebration
NCE
Dying, Nov. 11, 1925
A. M.
Auditorium
Vania Avenue
and A. HUGHES
Present
CLUB of BALTO.
TON PICKER'S BAND
In Coming to Baltimore
IKE DIXONS BAND
Baltimore, Md.
November 12th
to 1
Auditorium
TRA —
Fence and Reception
Fishermen's Auditorium
Talking-Sleeping DOLLS
SEE THEM SLEEP—SEE THEM
WALK, HEAR THEM TALK
Stop giving your child that old bandana and Aunt Jemima doll. Give it to a child of any age or of any size a doll she will be proud of and will take anywhere she goes. This is not a composition doll. It is unbreakable and can be used for years with proper care. It sleeps walks; talks; in fact, does everything but eat. These dolls come fully dressed in different outfits. It is the material they will be on display daily at Bishop's School of Beauty Culture, and Doll Hospital Select your own best. It is too late as wickets are limited. If unable to call, drop us a card and our representative will call and show us a sample. B—We carry a hospital where we repair all sick and wounded dolls. We also carry a full line of doll heads, Wigs, slippers and clockings step in and look our stock over.
The J. H. BISHOP CO., Inc.
1425 Penna. Ave.
BURSILVILLE, MD.
Bursilville, MD. There will be a Thanksgiving dinner by the trustees. The Rev. Robbins, of Cordova charge; will preach on Sunday. Class was led by Jero Kennedy, of Woodbury. I must be in My Father's house. "Charles and John Walker and Freddie Walker, all of woodbury." I must be umbus the Walker, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Broadway accompanied them back to attend the funeral of their father, Cordova Walker. Woodbury, some years ago. "Miss Hallie Burke is visiting her mother, Mrs Indiana Burke. Those sick are: Frank Walker, of Woodbury. Emory Kirby preached Sunday evening. Prayer service was conducted by James Tolson.
Sugarland, Md.-Those who made perfect attendance for the month of October at school are Johnson, Johnson, Samuel Johnson, James Taylor, Elsie Lisc and Ella Johnson. Many of the children are out of school, and the owls, of Boyd, preached here Sunday afternoon. 554 was realized for the day. *Miss Adea Johnson* had her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. William Hebron, of Rockville, attended church here Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Johnson, Mrs. and guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. Johnson, Sunday.
WHAT'S
A FI
WHAT A CHANGE A FEW YEARS MAKE
Madam C.J.Walker's WONDERFUL HAIR PREPARATIONS proven safe and certain aids to improve the hair
COPPER COPPER
COPPER COPPER
COPPER COPPER
McDANIEL, MD.
McDaniel, Md.-Class students were here Sunday morning, November 1st. Avery small number were present. *A Halloween entertainment-was given by the children, a section of their teacher, Miss Hilla Moore on Thursday evening, a very commendable program was rendered by the Rev. L. Hodges and Mrs. M. Smith visited Mrs. Julia Waters and Mrs. Minnie Trott Sunday. *Mrs. Hodges and daughter, Ruth Moore, Mounts, Sunday. *Mrs. Catherine Turner has gone to Baltimore for an indefinite period. *Mrs. Hazel Pinney and two little daughters, Robert Trott, Sunday. *Charles, Hansome, Norwood Bernard and Stanley Caldwell were the guests of their grandmother, Robert Trott, Caldwell Adams is at John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, slowly improving.
OXFORD MD
Oxford, MD.-Services at Waters M. E. Church were well attended. The master, the Rev. Rew, was visiting and administered the sacrament to a large number of persons. At night, the Rev. Stanley accompanied the master, the Rev. Gregg, negotiation, pictured to Easton, where he preached for the Rev. W. A. T. Miles, of Asbury Church, to the last list, is greatly improved. * Alphans Whitington has returned to Philadelphia the week before spending quite a while have gone away for the winter. * Miss Jane Benton, one of the teachers, has received a letter from the Banks has returned some after spending quite a while in Baltimore, and Ridgley. She is residing at the church. * Mrs. Dr. Mrs. Oda Adams and daughter. Miss Lottie Adams, Messrs. James and orator. * Mrs. Dr. Mrs. William from Philadelphia, visiting their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Adams. * The local teachers attended the monthly which convened at Eaton last Saturday.
MOUNT AIRY, MD.
ABERDEEN, MD.
Aberdeen, Md. — At Mt. Calvary Church, the Rev. Ricks, pastor, preached at 3 p. m. the Rev. Ricks and his bongregation went to the Rev. Griffin's church at 3 p. m. communion was served. * Three will be a chicken and oyster supper, at 1 a.m. the Rev. Griffin, at 16 h. under the auspices of the Pastors Aid of Mount Calvary Church. * The Rev. De Prez, is burgering slowly.
MARYLAND
SUGARLAND MD
FEDERALSBURG, MD.
REMEMBER way back there when lard, tallow, petroleum and a spool of thread were the accepted articles to improve the appearance of the hair? How crude were the methods then, how irksome was the task. But now, ah, what a change a few years make. Today there are Madam C. J. Walker agents, thousands of them, in your city, everywhere, skillful, well trained and willing to serve you in the most advanced methods of relieving dandruff, tetter, eczema, itching scalp, thin and falling hair, baldness and to increase the length, thickness and improve the texture of the most stubborn head of hair. Their methods are recognized among the best, the products they use are
THOUSANDS of unsolicited testimonials in our files tell of stubborn scalp diseases cured, dandruff eradicated, short hair lengthened, thin hair thickened, hair grown where scarcely none before existed, etc., etc., in brief, positively astonishing results have been attained by our experts using only our World Renowned preparations. Quite a change from 20 years ago when diseased scalps made for unattractive hair and dissatisfied womanhood. Today, you too, may improve the health of your scalp and hair. You too may know the
SNOW HILL MD
LUTHERVILLE, M.D.
Lutherville, M.D., turns-Turmer, of Baltimore, and Catherine Turner, of McDaniel, Md., and William Daniel, of Baltimore, and Daniel, Md., spent Sunday as the guests of Miss Annabelle Adams. Miss Annabelle spent Sunday in Washington, D. C.
DICKERSON, MD.
Dickerson, Md.—Preaching was observed at Bells Chapel, Sunday, at all Colored, Mrs. Nella New York Protestant and family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown of Rockville, Sunday, Mrs. Mary McCormick of Rockville, Mrs. Harry Ambush, and daughter, on Sunday, * Miss Bessie Proctor entertained Mr. Fenton Johnson, Sunday evergreen, Miss Nella Proctor, and a guest, Sunday, * Dana King, * Mrs Barbara Hulima has gone to Chicago with and friends, for several days, * Thomas Proctor, spent Sunday with Miss Alta Chase.
UNION DE
Ten Years
Directly Opposite S. W. Corr
Lexington Market
U. D. P. DENTISTS
The registered, graduate grade, employing methods similar. Perhaps some of your friend, method, which removes all fear
UNION DENTAL PARLORS
Ten Years at Eutaw and Lexington
Directly Opposite
Lexington Market
S. W. Cor. Lexington and Eutaw Sts.
Phone
CALvert 2200
Muscle-Trim Plates
The finest plates you can get.
The newest product of dental science can be fitted perfectly,
no matter what the condition of your gums.
Guaranteed to Stay in Place
or Money Refunded
GET OUR PRICES NOW
Examination Free
Lady Constantly in Attendance
0 to 6. Closed Sunday.
For sale by Walker agents everywhere (there's one near you) Drug Stores and direct by mail.
The registered, graduate dentists of this establishment perform work of the very highest grade, employing methods similar to those of the best dentists of the United States. Perhaps some of your friends have told you of the Wonderful U. D. P. Nerve-Blocking Method, which removes all fear of dental work.
only necessary for the authorities to exercise vigilance in order that no one was injured on the stairway while leaving. The promoters are gratified with the promotion that they will bring Horace Henderson, brother of the famous Eletcher and his ten Collegians here on November 18th.
Mr. Louis Wilson a teacher in School 115, this city, and Miss Perla Dorsey, graduate nurse of Lincoln Hospital, New York City, were married Saturday morning 10 o'clock, at the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. Parker, 1316 West Lansyale Street.
and col-
that it
assembly of
it. It was
at the Lanvale street home.
PARLORS
and Lexington
and Eutaw Sts.
Phone
CALvert 2200
Y BRANCH OF DENTISTRY
ment perform work of the very highest
nists of the United States.
No Wonderful U. D. P. Nerve-Blocking
HIGH-GRADE CROWN AND BRIDGEWORK
Our bridgework specialists, by making an attachment to the healthy and adjoin- ing roots, allow this activity without requiring you to wear a plate. Of course, there is little or no pain in doing work of this kind.
Placing a crown on a tooth is the only way to get service from healthy roots of your teeth. The old way of pulling out roots has been aban- dored except in rare cases.
UNION
DENTAL PARLORS
end of a set of teeth. You know that they comfortable. There is a vast difference in the our Dentists are specialists in plate making. Delighted With the Courteous, ment Given Every Patient.
You may be in need of a set of teeth. You know that they should fit and feel comfortable. There is a vast difference in the way they are fitted. Our Dentists are specialists in plate making. You Will Be Delighted With the Courteous, Gentle Treatment Given Every Patient.
TALLOW LARD
joy of long, luxuriant tresses. Do as most up to date women do, permit Madam C. J. Walker agents, using Madam C. J. Walker's Wonderful Hair Preparations to enrich your scalp, and to improve your hair. They learned years ago it does not pay to experiment with inefficient hair dressers nor with inferior preparations. Your hair too, demands that you take no chances. Use only these preparations that for nearly 20 years have held high rank among the best, fastest selling aids to better hair.
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1,900 Maskers At New Albert
All Hallowe'en Dance-Records-Are Shattered
Purviance and Dixon proved their supremacy as dance promoters on Saturday night with a new record of 1,000 Million Dollar Mashed Bal D Art at New Albert Auditorium. An overflow of 300 was unable to gain admission.
The brilliant costumes of the promoter featured a color scheme which was unequaled by any similar display in the memory of the oldest attendant. A particular colorful costume was worn by the orchestra and promoters, this was a Spanish costume of stunning design and col-
Police authorities stated that if it was discovered that the eye was encysted, it was
Famous U. D. P.
Nerve-Blocking
Method
Removes all fear of
methods are like
those of the best de-
tention of the United
States.
With Natural Looking Gums. Fully guaranteed. Service, Fit and Appearance.
ePage os et Ral VErnon’ 6016
TEMES SU EN a QT
Pullman Porters Benefit
Association Of America
Statement of History of the Organization,
‘Its Purposes and Work Accomplished
. ‘The Pullman Porters Benefit :Aissociation of
‘America is composed -entirely of Negro employes
of The Pullman Company. It now has over eight
thousand members throughout the United States,
Canada and Mexico. Membership is entirely op-
tional with employes. All are ‘invited to join, but
there is no obligation tod do so. Local lodges are
maintained in the principal cities to promote ,the
welfare, social activities and fraternal spirit of the
members. The association is governed by the Grand
‘Association, which meets annually in November at
Chicago, composed of delegates from. each of the
local lodges. .
local lodges. .
me HISTORY OF THE ASSOCIATION *
The association was organized, has grown to
ite present proportions and is controlled entirely by
its own members. ,What were known as Zone asso-
ciations were organized in 1915 by committees. in
the various zones of employment. A small death
benefit was provided, which was found to be help-
ful to the families of deceased mmebers. The first
convention of the seven zone associations was, held
in-Chicago in November of that year. In that first
convention:the members evinced a desire for a-more
closely organized association in one: body to cover
the whole service and to provide for sick and acci-
dent 4s well as death benefits. A committee on or-
ganization was appointed by Chairman Barnett,
consisting of T. R. Webb, Denver, chairman; Wav-
erly Williams, New York, and Arthur Wells, Chi-
cago; to formulate plans and to report at the next
session. At the 1916 convention the report was con-
sidered, but was again referred back tp the com-
mittee for amendments. In 1917 the committee's
‘report was adopted by the convention, but was re-
jected by the porters in a referendum vote.
In 1919 another committee on reorganization
was appointed, composed: of the same membership
as the committee appointed in 1915, with the addi-
_tion of ‘W. H. Desverney, New York, and Perry.
Parker, Cincinnati. - This committee, after. confer-
ences continuing over several months, submitted to
the convention of 1920 the present plan as embodied”
in the constitution and by-laws of the association,
which were formally adopted by delegates of the
several zones in November, 1920, and became oper-
ative February 1, 1921. 2
"~The general supervisor or direction of the as-
sociation is vested in a Board of Directors elected
by the Grand Association, the latter being composed
of delegates from the local lodges. The member-
ship of the present board is: Perry Parker, Cin-
cinnati; T. M. Blanton, Philadelphia; Jo M. Sexton,
New Orleans; R. L. Williams, San Francisco; ‘I, F.
‘ Smith, Chicago; S. J. Freeman, New York, and T.
A: Crenshaw, St. Louis. Perry Parker is Grand
Chairman. of the association; O. E. Robinson, Grand
Secretary; J. W. Duncan, Treasurer, and T. R. Webb,
Comptrloler. All financial matters are in charge of
the: comptroller. All money received is deposited
in-banks to the credit of the association and cdit:be"
disbursed only by voucher issued by the secretary
‘and checks drawn by the treasurer, countersigned
by the comptroller. All officers are paid by the
association from association funds and are respon-
sible only to the Board of Directors and to the.
Grand Association. The .Pullman Company. has
-nothingwhatever to do with the funds except, to
assist in their collection. It-co-operates and assists
the officers in their work, but has no voice in the
disburserient of funds or the management of the.
association. © ©” . ‘eS .
_” During the last three years a new element has,
entéred the ‘association through the opening of the
repair shops to Negro employes, Several thousand
“Negroes are here employed and many of them have
becafve-members of the.association. .
“since the association was organized in its pres.
ent form in 1921, 386 death benefits, aggregating
$880,188.41, have been paid to’ beneficiaries. of de-
ceased. members; ‘7,738 sick-and accident benefits
aggregating $194,341.77 have been paid to members,
“making total disbursements for ‘benefits amounting to
$524,474.88. The assistance thus rendered to needy
dependents and to members and’ their families in
times of distress is incalculable. The association is
doing active, earnest work for all of its members
< Gnd is receiving the hearty co-operation. and’ support
_ of everyone. f :
PULLMAN PORTERS BENEFIT
ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA.
Issued by authority of: - we
Perry Parker, Grand Chairman | at
" O. E, Robinson, Grand Secretary Bot
_ oy ER, Webb, Coniptrdiler= ; i
a ,.d. W, Duncan, Treasurers °°. oe
! : er cen x rele
\ x : t a
STITT OTERO eT L
‘ETERRATES TENTH ANNIVERSARY
NEW BOWIE NORMAL BUILDING.
By Pa PGE ROS Sane PECAN: ale tee et ines
[eo ee cee ae CS oe
Lae i men MP ye yg RSS
URE eat grt thee 2 re ae SS
Photo. snows’ $10,000. admicstation ‘bulldnlg and boys, darm(ot
dedicated last week at the State Normal School at Bowle, Md. The frst
gealcated Ian eek 2 ne, a erat ies admilatatonoffow and an
fear contains 2 ess OO aman aleiing room or boys
fi iy BIG, SALE
CORONER'S JURY sgh come a
EXONERATES WHITES | O’COATS and SUITS
: $25.00 to $85.00 val- $Q).75
IN STREET KILLING|22°22 2.3220 "=* 89
5 a8 loW a8.
Failing to place responsibility for,
the doing to death of Edward Roberts,
700'block “George street, when gros
Jot white and colored men waged a
battle -near Centre street and Park
avenue, Sunday night, Frank Morb-
ferley, ‘white, who ~ admitted: hitting
Roberts, waa exonerated by a Coro-
ner's Jury. Tuesdya, :
‘The coroner's jury followed a hear-
ing’ inthe Central: pollee station in
‘which all white men connected with
the fight were freed and the colored
fined $5 and costs cach.
‘WAGED STREET BATTLE
The trouble started, it:was sald, 9
lear containing the men stopped ‘on
Park avenue where five white ‘men
were holding a man, thought to have
been a Mexican. Belleving that the
man, whom they thought colored, was
being manhandled, the men inquired
fas to the trouble.
‘This was resented anda fight on-
sued in which auto tools .and other
missives were freely used. * Roberts
was mortafly wounded and-one of the
‘white men severely cut.:
"A riot call brought two cars of of-
fRcors and-the men were arrested. At
the hearing Morberiey stated that they
were merely -holding the man. they
Found under the Influence of whiskey
when the five men rode up and started
the trouble. “This, the men dented.
MINTIENS MAKES
STATEMENT +
“The investigation was. conducted
fairly and impartially.” said. Captain
Mintiens of the Central District when
Interviewed. The only clue as to who
had. struck the dead man was given
by Frank Moberley, white, who con-
essed that he bad struck Roberts with
his fist und knocked him down, Ro-
herts who was decidedly under the in-
Guence of Hquor-struck his head up-
jon the pavement. An autoposy. re-
vealde that Roberts. had revelved a
fracture of the back of the head, and
Big: Statement was accented.
{.‘Mlie colored men did not act fairly
it the: department. Cantaln sinteng
rtiier'stated: ‘They refused to give
the: riames of the men-who were in
ible car and. nad Stcaped, and when
jeatloned as"to who had cut Mackin
fall knowledge was denied.
:MAGISTRATE'S. STATEMENT.
Jn arviving at his decision and pass-
ing. sentence Magistrate outhouse
stated, that ‘he took intp consideration
that f€ the colored'men had ‘not stoped
thelr car’ there would havo. heen no
isturbance, therefore he fined: them
Jand dismissed the white men.
Those fined, were: Howard Robin-
son, 608 St. Mary street: George Bald-
win, 437 W. Monument street: Louvon
Hillard,:514 Druld Will avenue: Arnotd
Cooper, 422 W. Biddle street, was dls-
missed. fs
“The white mo:who. were dismissed
fwree: Joseph Mackin, 600 F. Chase
jstreet; Marion Moberiey. 1643 Clift-
View avenue: Theodore Burkart, 2616
Enger-piace; Walter Long, 1224" Hol-
brook street. and Frank Moberly, 1643
Ciiftview avenue °° >
ae ro i
Here's'a Good’ ‘y+ Do You A’SIGN of Prospetily
‘4 C . ’ ° * ,
«SIGN:to read Believe in Signs? Ahead for YOU
ea WHETHER YOU DO OR NOT—THERE ARE SOME'GOOD SIGNS AND'SOME BAD ONES: >
| = you aré-now, paying RENT.to A LANDLORD Jit's 4 SIGN that you are a poor business-man, and. that unless you
|. 4BS== IF yoke achange you may die and leave your family without a home they can. call their own, also that you are not.”
=E=SSS faking advantage of the opportunity we are offering you for making that RENT pay for your home. SBE—
' SS - =
BSS==S). / : EE
a=. WILLARD VV 8 ALLEN
===S== i 1 ‘ Your Real Estate-Man Bie
) S==== ] < E are printing our‘ad in the form of a SIGN that it ‘
' ===== FOR SALE ~ Wray bring to you, who are renting, a message of FOR SALE
=== ; hope,—that you, may stop, THINK, and RBAD this ad 7
£===SS| _—_______—————___ - and consider your future and the future of your children. po
2S>==>=|. | You should see these Don't wait-until you ate old. before you start, begin , We have good homes
SS====| ‘ now, for every penny you pay on your Bis ’ |; :
., (BE===5) |houses before buying]. ov fpr every penny ved the day of, old age and |72.@very: section of
======| | elsewhere. adversity. the:city---
===SS— 06 W. Lafayette Avenue, f me Be é 1700 Block Westwood Avenue
st i 1718 W: Lafayette, Avenue I P > . peek Mowery, Street. z
BSSS SS) | te w. Carver Avcres -+ Investment Property 1 Siege w eeienont Ayton
ES SSS | 1002. N- Mount Street + | 929.31. and's3 LEADENHALL ST. /909 BLOCK N. WOLFE STREET |. | 1713: Larayersé “Avenue
Bessel: (iN. eet sect at: and #2 LEApaN ais Lock w. wOLre STREET ie teers eee aa,
BS SSS): ie & Satnoun gereet seein Beth Os ey eat eo, iter Wenercsin’ gurter
=SSSSH| |. sas N._calnoun street, See ea eu, “| eh Soiee A GILMOR STREET ¥400.Block Edmondson Avenue |.
‘SSS ‘522.Ne capone ‘Street’ 741 RYAN STREET—Ground Rent|319-21 N. GILMOR STREET a _.| 1800 Block Edmondson Aventie * ,
——— 512 N. Cathoun Street ‘$00.00. {00 BLOCK W. HUGHES STREET 700-02 N, Glimor Street Ae
EBSSSSI [sas w. Canvate street 2 on 811 N. Fremont Avenue
== —— ae ee Se : mea Wount:Gtrcer
SSS SSS) | oo. rremont avenue err os Suburban Property 1019-W. Payette street
, BBS SE S| «| ee We. momerry siroct ! ; dea W: Lagvate strest
= — eee Let us’ show you these: beautiful houses with every _| £400 Block Madison Avenue
=== a ee ae city convenience, electric lights, furnace heat, located “| R2GNattcs avenue
SSS SHHZj| | 1315 Meculloh Street : near schools and car lines. 7 Ti2.and 722.N. Glimor Street
SS SSS| | eco oie, We carvate street me aes 7 200 Block Mosher. Steet
SSS) ee ae te ttre Nie 423 P Ivania A Si emer | |
===e5 [See | ennsylvania Ave. [i Sonia.
=====S) oo
ee ie i 1 i 5 Phome Madigon 46897 0
os —— aaa dad aad EaDAAL IRD AAARERER DETAR ATTTET TATED ddd i dd;ddaaadaancanc are:
F TT ce ti
| Sopris Tittle fete |
2 Free Sérvice ere aes | Notary Public fe cs | ‘Look: for Our SIGN
BIG, SALE ,
. NOW GOING ON 7
O’COATS and SUITS
$25.00 to $35.00 val- 89:75
ues as low a8...
- SHAPIRO, the TAILOR
508 N. EUTAW ST.
x
MONEY TO LOAN:
On ist, 2d and 3d Mortgages
‘and Notes. Quick Service
PETTY B. GROSS
solo Drvld Hill-Ave, Phone, BEAA.T639
. ¢
Q* _ ;
> The Child Who Sees
‘The child who earns caatty' 1s §
the child who sees easily. 0
carefuly the: eyen of sour eld
§ tna give our advice about slashes
> DR. D, M. CHASSON |
9 OPTOMETRIST 8
successor To Geo."E, Schoteld.
1840 Pennsylvania Ave. 9
BP paurinone, Wo. 8
AAAOOOCOOOOOOOOCO?
LOGAN. JENKINS ‘A. Jones, Charles E. Dungee, Hal
m u Eranktin, eoree. J Sere, a
; iatchins George B. Murphy.
Society Orchestra [iam ‘Mossel, Annle Hazelton 1
}SIUSIC EXTRAORDINARY FOR Olivia Carter, Chas, H. Bennett.
* ALE OCCASIONS: °°: ‘The presnt officers of the lodge |
4. Logan Jenkins, Je, Business Mgr,|]| - Ulyesses C. Callis, W. Af. Wm,
HOibgae NEY Biate HP Acee | Jes 3. Ww.: Geo. Wade,
ones st Waa ye Na. sell ereary; Win. A tamale Recs
Estimates, Submitted —No Engage) ev. John W. ?MeCos, | Chapla
nent oo Large ut oo siiaite fl Tiny fe Teice, SDs Geo: I, Bul
red L. Willis, 8.8
SS lteter. FS. é
we
. ¢ 9c Per Pound :
Druid Laund ~
917-1634 Druid Hill Avenue .
MAdison 1664 ;
a SR tg cg eg
‘IN CELEBRATION
Anniversary “Of Joseph. L.
Smith Lodge Observed
With Elaborate Program,
GUESTS ENJOY BIG
! DINNER AND SPEECHES
Leading Citizens Join With
Organization ¥ ‘Tenth
Birthday: Party.
‘With an elaborate program S20".
dinner and more’ .than two. score
guests of honor the Joseph L.
Smith Lodge, No. $4 P. and “A.A.
celebrated. its tenth anniversary. at
the Masonic Temple Friday eventing:
‘The aflate, wien had.-been care-
quily arranged by a capable commit:
fee. brought together one of . the
most. briillent and representative
group of. Baltimore citizens over as-
Sombted at such an affair here. for
some. time. \
iho program, conducted by Past
Master James H. Cooper, a charter
member of the Lodge, Included mu-
sical numbers by. James A. Jones,
Chas, 'E. Dundee, Mr. and-Mrs. 1.
Maurice Butler and a recltation by
itis" Oijvia Carter. Thro a9 leo
Scriptufe reading by tho-Rev. J. W:
McCoy and a welcome. address by
W. Af, Ulysses S. Callis,
Elaborate Dinner
Folowing un claborate dinner,
qnomas I Jones took charge | 25
toustmaster and introduced the fol-
towing who responded: Grand Mast.
eer Willard W. Allen, | Supervisor
Francls N. Wood, Principal George
B. Murphy, Secretary S. S. Booker.
Gtand Chancellor George A. Watts.
Attorney W. L, Fitzgerald, Josiah 1.
Digus, W. A. Jones, Chas W. Simms
and George Arthur, ¥. M, C. A. Sec-
retary from Chicago.
‘The guests of honor tncluded:
Robert L. Pendleton, M. P. S. G.
Commander A. A. 8. R. Freemagon-
ryi James . Benson, secretary. Gen-
ral, Hf, Ex; David D.. Powell, G, 3.
Florida; Robert B. dfeMary, P. G.
M, North Carolina; Willard ‘W. l-
ien, Grand Master; Joseph P. Evans,
PG. Ma: George ‘t. Duppin, Grand
Secretary: Watace i, Smith, D. D.
G. AL; Morris C. Burke, I. C. C. HI-
‘wm Consistory; the Rev, Benest
Winiams, Grand Chaplain; “George
L. Berry, Grand Tyler; Charles.
Dungee, Grand Oraanists Harry 1.
Franig, RE. Grand Commander:
Charles “A. Gross, Thrice Til, G. 3
Royal Select Master; Charles i. Ben-
net, 1, Potentate Jerusalem ‘Tem
ple.
Mesdames Wm. J. Mossell, Basi
Hatching, Baward HS. - Boatner,
Francis . Woods, Georgo B. Mur-
phy. James A..Jones, Robert L. Pen-
dieton, James 7. Beason, David D.
Powell, Willard W. Alien, Joxeph P.
Evang, George T. Duppin, Alma Kel-
ley. Brnest §, Williams, ‘Edward ¥.
&. Boxtner, Francis N. Wools, James
A, Jones, Charles -E, Dungee, Harry
i! Frankiin, George L, Berry. Basil
Hatehins George B. Murphy. Wil-
am. Mossell, Annie Hazelton Lee,
Olfvia Carter, Chas. 11. Bennett.
‘The presnt officers of the lodge are
Ulveases C. Callis, W. af; Wm,
Jones, 8. Wei Geo. "T. Wade, J. W:
Geo. B. Fisher, treas.: John Ry 1.
secretary: Wm, A. Lyneh, Recorder;
Rev, dohy W. ?MeCor, | Chaplain:
Toi ®, Tice, De Geo: I, Butler
1D Bred L. Williams, 8. 8.5 Jas.
ee a rs
STATE. FEDERATION HONORS MRS, MCGUINN
Masog gave a progtam ct one of the
evening ' sessions.
(Greeting to the Maryland Federa-
tion" meeting “were sent from Mrs
Mary eBthune, President of the Na-
ilonal, Association, Callfornia Feder:
ation, and Mississippl Federation.
‘Recommendations in the addrese
of Mrs, MeGuinn which were adopt
ed by the Federation were:
(1) That the members of the Fed-
eration subscribe to the official Wo-
men’s Magazine.
™G) We recomend that the heads
of ‘the departments will function
throughout the year.
(3) That the Maryland Federe-
tion establish a Scholarship Fund.
(4)That a mass meeting be, held
early in December under the auspic-
es of the Federation for the bene-
At-ot the Day Nursery, Eva, Jenifer
Community House and © Empty
Stocking and Fresh Alr Circle with
the folowing committee to arange
for same? Mrs, J. H. Ross, Mrs. Mar-
tha. Thompson, Airs. M. L. Penn.
Other officers elected were:
Sirs. Helen Cardga, 2st vice; Mrs
Rhoda Thompson, 2nd vices Mes
Mary Robinson, 3rd vice; Mra, Mav-
tha whbs, 4h vice: AMrs.-“Annie E.
Durand, recording sec'ty; Mrs. Edna
[. Brown, corresponding sec'ty: Mrs.
VG. Coleman, musical directress;
Mrs. Snvalt Bailey, treasurer: Mrs.
Minnie L, Gaines." parliamentarian:
Mrs, Clara Harris, stat{stickan® Mrs.
Maud P. Bell, che. Ways & Means;
Mrs A. L, MeGutnn,- chr. Bxecutive
Board. 7
eeOrganizern: Mrs. :¥...T. “Lawsoi
jirs:Lucle Makel, Mrs. Bessie Joyee,
Mrs,“‘Thais Thomas, Mrs. Cora oJhn-
son, AMrarL. A. Crouse, Mrs. Eliza-
80, Ee
- 24-Hour Service”
‘ Special Storage Rates
First Class Service .
WILSON GARAGE .
511-519 Wilson Street MAdison 0443
gzgeeg Dr. Shor, Inc. |
Ee oy and. Associates |
bees: ata Loose plates and broken plates — |
BAPE) recct and refinished like new | foe'tn out
~ BES feed at a emall cost. . Sithout any
REM ee pas. itt
Fe cae Sot arige Sries Bagceeets | don |
ER Piseimeteleioat an
Sincere Dentists FREE EXAMINATION !
Sweet Air for the aah ee -
Extraction of Teeth PRYENTED SUCTION PLAT! |
ny age 99 itarenen CAMNOT:SLIPOR DROP }
Fears old, oF It you want one GUARANTEEDISYEARS 7 |
are tt doth oats eh : |
Seas poi “ ™ |
ee pant ri ot
Teeth Cleaned. 81.00, ee cae i
—~“Tady Attendants: Un ay i
daneay SUDOUOI |
|. GUARANTEED ISYEARS heli g heen
oe Drv Shor, Inc. |
6 a AND Agsoctares
0 Pg otras Gi Sweet Air Specialist
(tos 71 W; Lexington St.
| : come ta hay Tiesey Open Dally 9A.
K-Rare, 81.00 |
err cee mae
—=—SHOAm” FA. PehLhUUUT I. UNnNLKTAe- le
FIRST GO TO YOUR DOCTOR
Bring Us The Prescription To'Fill. That's 100 Per Cent of
Treatment. .
. Diener‘s Drug, Store €
Druid Hill & North Aves. MAd. 4195 |
Retiri 1s
Retiring Head. Of Women’s
apie
-.. Club ‘Elected -Delegate- To
California Meeting;
MRS.: JENNIE ROSS.)
ELECTED PRESIDENT
Federation Backs Scholarship
Loan Fund And Charity
Drive ‘
State Federation of Women's
ciStatfn session c=. sharp Strgat 3.
claps tn seieeewcek honored Its te
7, Church dent airs. W. Me
tiring Roy electing her ‘chairman ot
the executive committee and dele-
the exec National Association. of
Fate tee men's Clube which meets
Colored Wir Oakland. Cal"
nexra. ME, L. Penn was “elected al-
fennte Mitre. Nennle Rost w= 8
Herne ees hen ontin, W-
lected neeaieeominated for the of-
fice, refused to run.
‘dt was the, largest attendance the
gtdte Geacrationsnas had in its his
history. Clubs from the city as
Ristory ine counties were represent
well ine “Georges “County, under
terns eer aire, Tielen B-
Cardoza, had the largest county rep-
Cardozs, Jae An exit by the art
rete wag a fenture,
clubs Wut federation. of 30_sitis
7A, Junior’ Federation of ©) gly
No Matter Where You Live In Maryland You Can Have ALL THE CREDIT You Want With Free Delivery.
ALL The CREDIT You Want GREAT SCOTT THE GREAT PRICE CUTTER
420 N. HOWARD ST., 3rd Door South of Franklin
For 50 Years This Friendly Store Has Given You The Utmost Value For Your Money, A Square Deal And Liberal Treatment
Profit By These 50th Anniversary BARGAINS, Now.
SOCIETY
A party was given at the residence of Mrs. Junie Lee, 1118 Whitelock street, Friday, October 30, in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Fruitt Lee Wilson, who has been recently married to Mr. Wilson of Washington, D.C. There were twelve guests present. The time was spent in playing cards and dancing. The couple have left to spend the winter in Miami, Pla.
Mrs. Maggie Knox, of Ackermac County, Va., has returned home after visiting her sons-in-Philadelphia and Baltimore.
Miss Carrie Dorsey, of Morgan College, was the week-end guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Dorsey.
Beginning Monday A Great Sale of..Beautiful Coats...
Nowhere will you find coats to surpass these superlatively smart creations fashioned of highest grade coatings, lavishly trimmed with sumptuous furs. You will agree with us that they represent coat perfection; and every one at a price concession of note!
This Lamp and Shade FREE With Every Outfit
$75 Kroehler
Davenport
Beds $49
$150 Velour 3-Piece
Overstuffed
Suites $98
$175 Mohair 3-Piece
Overstuffed
Suites $125
HERE'S A 50TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL that brings you the biggest money's worth obtainable in a quantity. Suite Quirt of BIG Pieces, to be found in all Baltimore at anything near this figure. Handsome, French Walnut, in rich and beautiful gold-lined design. Full Vanity, with large center and two wing mirrors. Dresser with French plate mirror and four convenient drawers. Big, comfortable Bow-End Ded and roomy Chifforette. The excellent construction will give you entire satisfaction.
Anniversary economy opportunity for admirers of tastefully furnished homes. 60-inch Queen Anne Buffet. Semi-enclosed Cabinet, Oblong Extension, Table, Console Serving Table, of combination Huguenet walnut finish, 5 Leather Seat Side Chaise, and Arm Chair, Poly-hromme Mirror 28 by 8 inches, Fruit Bowl, 2 Candlesticks.
Unusual Festivities Add To Halloween Enjoyment
Society Froliced While The City's Throngs Revelled In Jolliest Celebration In Years
Charming Tudor Gold-Line
Attractive, Large Vanity with
4 Drawers Deep Chifforee
Graceful, Bow-End Tudor Bed
HERE'S A 50TH ANNIVERSARY S
Suite Outfit of 50 GI Pieces to be
Walnut, in rich and beautiful gold-lined
with French plate mirror and four con-
tents. The excellent construction will give you
14-pc. Complete
Anniversary economy opportunity
80-inch Queen Arm Gobble,
Console Serving Tailor of somby
Chairs and Arm Chair. Poly-thro
Unusual Festivit
To Hallow
Society Froliced While The
In Jolliest Celeb
With all of the social organizations having special affairs, and hundreds of small parties scattered throughout the city, local Baltimoreans spent the jolliest Halloween on celebration seen here in years. They costumes as well as party decorations presented a riot of color and mirroring appearances, as the smallest children to take part in the early evening parades and fun. Not only are free from any sign of rough action which often marts Halloween. IN PRACTICALLY every school in the 'city children and Halloween in celebration Friday evening the Seniors held their annual affair. Costumed as witches, ghosts, harriquette and other hands, composed of harmonics, jazz horns, etc., furnished appropriate music, and many kinds of games made the evening a huge success. At the P. W. C.'s FROLIC At the P. W. C.'s FROLIC 1428 N. Calhoun street a pre-Halloween party was given Friday evening. Here cards, games and games were made the evening the guests.
The Night Owls conducted the affair and provided the decorations and refreshments. MOLES CAVORT
On Saturday evening the Moles, one of the best friends of the party, at the residence of Xavia Fenwick. As with several of the social affairs, the honored guest was M. Carpenter and L. Johnson. The honored guest was M. Scott. Douglas Williams, Junius Carroll and Lawrence Young of the Bestland of Washington, were also present. Cider, hot dogs and
doughnuts, filled the refreshment bill.
JOLLY THREE ENTERAIN
It took the adjunct of early dawn to end the merriment of a party tendered their friends by the Jolyle Mackenzie, a nurse who know how to prepare novel entertainments.
For this occasion was furnished by Miss Fay Lewis, and among those present were: Misses Sue Lloyd, Blanche Sweet, Lila Lee and Harold Lloyd, Lincoln groups, 2007 Brud Hill avenue, and Miss Grace Murray, 2022 Madison avenue. At both of these venues, added to the facades and refreshments added to the frivolity of the evening.
SOCIAL HOUR CLUB
The Social Hour Club, composed of a group of junior girls, was held on Tuesday, 3rd, at the home of Miss Alice and Ruth Banks, 403 Mother street, Dawley lane, for thirty-two, Miss Norma Howard is president; Margorie Murray, secretary; JESTERS MASKED PARTY
The Jesters entertained with falcon feathers, at 137 Crest street, Friday evening.
The Oriental Art Club met, Wednesday, October 27th, at the home of Mrs. B. Jackson, 508 N. Dollas St., presented the vice president, Mrs. Euphilim Stevenson, a recent bride, with several pieces of silver. Mrs. Emma Lloyd made a national announcement. Mrs. Nannie, Atkins is president.
Copeland-Bunn
Mrs. M. M. Bunn, formerly of Richmond, Va., and Mr. Thaddeus Cope,land, Va., and Mr. Tuesday, October 14, in Washington, D. C.
The ceremony was solemnized at high noon, in the Metropolitan A. M. E. parsonage, in Mrs. Kate Thompson and her cousin, Dr. W. C. Johnson and wife, witnessed the ceremony.
Johnson served the party an elaborate luncheon in their home, 22-1-2 Oakdale place. For Richmond, Their Richmond friends extended, them their most hearty congratulations, they many courtesies and receptions during their short stay.
Quite an elaborate reception was given on their home by members and friends of the Leigh Street Memorial M. E. Church. A very high number of freshments were served in abundance. A purse and other gifts were presented them.
few, but very hefting remarks, Mr. and Mrs. Copeland expressed their appreciations.
Mrs. E. C. Eldridge, N. B. Jackson and Mabel M. Winston, assisted by Mrs. E. West, the bride's foster daughter. After showers of congratulations and good-byes, the happy couple met in 1922 Drudl Hill avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Mr. and Mrs. B., Jones, Ahtville, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. James Jones, Washington; Mr. and Mrs. John Fitch, Washington; Mr. and Mrs. John Irons, West Chester, P.; Bob Powell, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. John Murray, City; Mr. and Mrs. John Murray, City; Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Thomas, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. John Murray, City; Mr. and Mrs. Miss Chance Butts, City; Mr. and Mrs. James New, New York; Mr. and Mrs. Claim, New York; Baby Rose Whiting, New York; D. Nora and Tepoose, Washington, D. Nora; James Morn, Wash
$159
Deep Arm Chair
Metal Smoking Stand
Two Art Candlesticks
With Decorated Candles
These
Room Suites
$195 Over-Stuffed $135
2-Piece Daven-
port Bed Suites.....
Money-Saving
SALE of
New & Good
RUGS
27 by 52 in.....$2.93
Axminster Rugs.....
9 by 12 Ft. Felt Base $8.95
Rugs—Perfect.....
x12 Ft. Tapestry $13.95
Rugs.....
8 Ft.3 In. by 10 Ft. $16.95
6 In. Artex Rugs.....
6 by 9 Ft. Velvet $17.50
Rugs.....
9 Ft. by 12 Ft. $23.85
Velvet Rugs....
C
Solid oak: strongly built,
white enamel finish inside.
Gentlem CORCELAIN sliding
sliding
$35
RECKLESS DRIVING
CHARGE DISMISSED
Smith's Hotel
Mr. and Mrs. B. Johnson, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. and Mrs. Edward Dorssey, Philadelphia; R. Simmons, Washington; R. Frey; P. Peters, Annapolis, J. White, Ivey, Virginia; Mrs. Hamilton, New York.
Attucks Arrivals
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Cost, Brooklyn
Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Cost, Brooklyn
Battimore, Mr. and Mrs. Jiggs
A party was given at the residence of Mrs. Junie Lee, 1118. Whitelock of her daughter, Mrs. Willie Lee Wilson, who has been recently married to Mr. Wilson of Washington, D. C. There were twelve guests visiting her sons, who were spent in playing cards and dancing. The couple have left to spend the winter in Miami. Fl.
Mrs. Maggie Knox, of Ackermac County, Va., has returned home after visiting her sons in Philadelphia and Baltimore.
Miss Carrie Dorsely, of Morgan College, was the week-end guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Dorsely.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Scott have visited the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart, Master L. Robert Stewart, Jr. and Mrs. William Harris of Catonville, accompanied them.
Clementine Murphy and her sister Eugene, of Philadelphia, helped their aunt, Mrs. Violet Nixon, Sunday.
Miss Edith McMechen, who has been teaching at Belair, Md. is home visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. McMechen, 2007 Mcullah street.
Dr. and Mrs. Brown have moved in from their country residence to 415 Mosher street.
Dr. and Mrs. Forest Battles of W. Philadelphia, were the recent guests of Dr. and Mrs. Mason, 1323 Druid Hill Avenue.
Miss Helen Grace Pitts of Boston, Mass., has returned home after visiting her aunt, Mrs. Peter C. Neal of 2125 Mcullah street.
David Penn, a Lincolnite, spent the week-end with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Penn of 2021 Division street. He has his guest Arthur Williams of Norfolk, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Cliston Howard of Brooklyn, entertained at the day, November 14. Miss Melinda and Solon Howard of Baltimore.
A Breakfast Party was given Saturday morning by the Warts at the residence of Phil Jefferson, 1224 McCullah street. Among the guests presen- tion, Edith and Mildred McMech, Francis Moore, Stanford, Caution, Washington, Howard, Penn Elizabeth and Naomi Woodland and Johnson, Messrs. Coleman, Webb Silveria, Stanford, Keyler, Goosnell Woodland, Hayward, White, and Steptheu.
The Whipper-Snappers Club
The Whipper Snappers Club held its first meeting of the season Wednesday of Miss Virginia Hurris 304 Robert Street. The officers elected for the year were Miss Frances Matthews, president; Miss Bernice Holloway, vice president; Miss Harriin, secretary; Miss Regina Lewa, assistant secretary; Miss Vioia Blibb, treasurer; and Miss Audrey Cooper, business manager. After the meeting, a collation was served, at which time they were entertained by Miss Leola Marshall, soprano solist, accompanied at the piano by Miss Mildred Marshall. The next meeting will be with Miss Vioia Blibb at 1331 Division street, Wednesday, November 4th.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Williams, of 1600 Millman street celebrated their twentieth wedding anniversary, the wedding was beautifully decorated by Roger Nolan, brother-in-law of Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Williams, was attired in a cowl of gray satin back and stockings to match. The wedding march was played by Mme. Helen Copper Deane. The couple were married in a beautiful ceremony, after which prayer was offered by Deacon David Thomas. A delicious collation was served. Melvin Loggins, accompanied by Miss Lola Haskins, formerly of Staunton, Va., were the guests of his grandmother, Mrs. Bottle Matthews, Sunday evening. Mr. Loggins rendered quite a few piano solos while there. Wednesday Afternoon 500 Club
The Wednesday afternoon 500 Club was entertained by M. J. J. Wheeler of 2006 Division Street, Wednesday, October 28th, Mrs. J. J. Wheeler, new member. The club had as its guest, Mrs. Grace McCard.
S. S. Embroidery Club
The S. S. Embroidery Club was entertained Wednesday evening, November 4, by Mrs. Henry Anderson, of 1008 Madison avenue.
The Swastikas
The Swastikas, met with Mrs. George McMechen of 2007 McCulbish Street, Thursday evening, November 5th.
The Service Club
The Service Club hold its first meeting Tuesday, November 3rd at the residence of Mrs. James Hunter, president, 7018 Druld Hill Avenue.
Era Jennifer Community House
The Era, Eva Jenifer Community House, the Eva Jenifer Club, a chicken salad supper Monday evening November 5th, Mrs. Marsha Marshall, president.
Alpha Phi Alpha
Polnseita Novelty Club
Miss Dorothy I. Johns, the president of the Polnissia-Novelty Club was tendered a surprise party by the members in honor of her nineteenth birthday. She was dressed of the Misses Lillian and Alabel Macer. Those present were Misses Alice Copper, Mary Pleu-Flossie Watkins, Marie Paule, Paula Washington, Charlotte and Jane Gladys Crowner, Lille Washington, Messrs Cyrus and George Stevenson, Theodore and Herman Pettigrew, William Carter, Calvin Toddvin, Rustford Williams, William Butler, Hezekiah Butler, Joseph Chester, Mark Power, Alonzo Macer.
Boston-Smith
The wedding of Miss Annie Boston
Boston-Smith
Samuel La. Boston of Hartford County
Mr. James M. Smith of Washington.
Dr. C. was celebrated at the
home of bride on Friday
Friday 20th at 8 p.m.
The Rev. J. J. Stokes officiated.
Beginning Monday A Great Sale of ..Beautiful Coats..
Nowhere will you find coats to surpass these superlatively smart creations fashioned of highest grade coatings, lavishly trimmed with sumptuous furs. You will agree with us that they represent coat perfection; and every one at a price concession of note!
from $35.00
up to $250.00
Lustrosa --- Vivette --- Mosulara --- Montebello --- Kashmirdown --- Newvella --- Khasorette. Trimmed with Gray or Viatka Squirrel ---Beaver---Fox---Wolf. Flare and Straightline Models. Black and New Fall Colorings. All gorgeously silk lined; all interlined.
These coats represent the utmost in fine tailoring and careful finishing—they bear the stamp of expert handling, that is, after all, the deciding factor of a coat's success. These are high grade coats—and they look it!
Lauer's
449-457 Gay Street, corner East
INSURANCE AGENT
IN COURT
Through Mr. Barber, agent in charge of local office of the National Benefit Insurance Company, action was taken last week against Isaiah N. Thompson, formerly employed as collector. He was charged with the embezzlement of over $200 in premiums collected from policymakers. The vigilant eye of the National Benefit Insurance Inspectors discovered the improper accounting for premiums collected and got busy quickly to remedy this condition. Thompson was released from the amulet company and evicted against him was quickly collected. The Policymakers concerned were given full credit for all payments made to the company and showing against him was quickly collected. The Policymakers are first in the minds of the Company.
The National President R. H. Rutherford, made several trips to Baltimore in reference to the legal services of Attorneys Gobert E. Macbeth and Josiah F. Henry, Jr. to represent the Company in the matter. warrant was sown out at the Northwestern Police Station charging embeblement. At the hearing, through the Company, the attorneys, and through the acquiescence of the Court, Thompson was given a final chance to refund the amount embebzed. This lenency was shown chiefly because of the show of his patience and his promise to guarantee repayment of the amount involved.
"Natural Expression
The most important thing desired in a photograph.
You are sure of this at
The Grengual Studio
1621 DRUID HILL AVE.
Next to Y. M. C. A.
Phone, MAd. 5365-J
A Sensational Sale Coats and Dresses
GARVEY SHIP
THOT LOST
Norfolk—The Black Star Liner
"George W. Goethals" is believed lost in the Atlantic. Big storms in the Gulf coast have flooded the Steamer is two weeks overdue. Bad luck has followed this steamer since its purchase by the Garvvy organization of New York. It was owned on its first trip and afterwards lay in New York for months. It is now under lease to a white company.
Mrs. Mattle Carter of Morton Pa. is visiting her daughter, Mrs. C. Jones of 2004 Madison square ave.
CORONER'S JURY FREES DRIVER
CORONER'S JURY FREES DRIVER
Roy Bell, 1019 W. Saratoga street, was exonerated by a *Corner's* Juror from all blame, in connection with the accident death of George Hoover, the wife of the man walked in the path of his truck during the recent snow storm. Testimony brought out at the hearing showed the accident to have been unavoidable due to both parties being blinded by the falling snow.
Miss Josephine Gaskins, formerly of 1125 Angle Avenue has/moved to 1015 Madison street.
VIRGINIA
CULPEPER, VA.
Ashland, Va.-Gerocene Cross is in St. Philips Hospital in Richmond, Va., for operation. Mrs. Chas. Long is spending some time making his home in Ashland, again after spending several years in Bailtown, with him here. There was a Halloween party given by the boys and girls of his class. P's and the Order of Calathes, of Ashland District are having a very successful season.
WEST POINT VA.
West Bend Baptist Church October 18th, Nebo Baptist Church culminated its drive for the last payment on the loan. Raised. Thine Rev. L. V. Jeffries is pastor. During his last year, he had such programs. The Crispus Attacks Literary Society resumed their regular meeting in October by the Rev. L. V. Jeffries and adds much to the Literary and social upheaval being made for their annual banquet.
Harrisonburg, Va.-Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cox, or Beach Bottom, W. Va., were the honored guests. Mr. and Mrs. Harper Brown, Saturday, October 24th, at their home on Johnson street. * Russell Franklin, * Purcell White and children, motorized Sunday from Lexington, Va. in Mr. and Mrs. Purcell White and children, motorized Mrs. W. N. P. Harper, Their daughter, Miss Margaret Harris, returned with them for a short visit to her grandparent Miss Jeanne Francis joined Miss Harris on a week-end visit, also in that event, but the most prominent affair of the week was a Pre-Halloween party on Friday evening, but the most prominent event last Friday evening. * The Daughter Elinks were hostesses at a large hotel. * The prize awarded the best dressed couple was given Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jordan * Mrs. Maybelle Laird is on an annual trip to New York City, and different points in Pennsylvania. * The Prateral and Good Attended * Mrs. Fucus and M. Jackson, with the Misses Napier and Barnes, motor visitors to the city last Sunday.
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Page Twelve
CHARLOTTESVILLE
LEXINGTON, VA
ASHLAND, VA.
WEST POINT VA
HARRISONBURG, VA
Call VErnon 6016
Afro Agent Dead
Roanoke, Va.-J. C. Dugger, well known business man and for many years a member of the Funeral will be held Thursday a day. A wife, Mrs. Hattie Dugger, sur-
Atlantic, Va.—Service was held at the Shiloh Baptist Church, November 16th at the Mappville Baptist Church. *Miss Mastie Douglass has returned from the Mappville Baptist Church in October 29th, the Willing Workers, of the Shiloh Baptist Church gave their services to the Ladies of Jerusalem Baptist Church, and Willing Workers, of the Shiloh Church with missionary workers, of Herbert Baptist Church, Wachapreague, Va.
FREDERICKS AURG, VA.
Horntown, Yu.-Sunday was com-
petent. The rev. Lewis Levitts preached
at New Church in the morning, and
the rev. Lewis Levitts preached
at wasing was 66. Visitors Dee's Chap-
leur, were and Mrs. Levitts, were and
Mrs. Levitts, were and Mrs. O. H.
Spencer moved to Salisbury, Saturday
Spence, who spent one week with them,
W. T. Solly, who the guest of Mr. M.
Marshall, Norman Marshall, and Jessie
Justice, motored from Philadelphia to
shall. Mrs. Mary Dishroom motored
from Princess to Marshall. Mrs. S.
W. Fields and Mrs. Flosse Bryd
from Princess to guests of Mrs. S. W.
Browley, Monday.
THE CAROLINAS
GREENSBOBO. N. C.
Greenboro. N. C.—The mechanical department of the agricultural and technology department made numerous improvements in their wood-working division. In addition to the regular course in carpentry, they also introduced the type is called the cabinet-making and upholstering course. Under this heading, instruction in wood-working, cabinet-making, Wood Turning, Operation of Wood-Work Machinery, Furniture Finishing, Chair Caning, and Furniture Making. The course of or thirty months.
study covers a period of three terms, the first two being the basic and fond purpose. First—To fill the need for competent teachers of Manual Arts for trained Cabinet Makers and Upholsterers. Third—To encourage and support trained wood-turning workers. Unlimited opportunities are available in cultural and Technical College has the distinction of being the only institution in overstuffed upholstered furniture construction. This is the best course in carpentry, a building laboratory has been started. This room is large enough to present a complete class project. All of the brick work is in solution by student labor. All complete plans are being furnished by the intellectual Department of the Institute.
STAUNTON, VA.
ATLANTIC, VA
HORNTOWN, VA.
Taxpayers Win Full School Term In Smithfield, N. C.
THE CAROLINAS
WEST VIRGINIA
W. VA. TEACHERS TO MEET
Corksburgh, Ireland
Teachers. Teachers Association will be held here November 5th, 6th and 7th
Speakers include, Edgar Westmoreland, of Armstrong high school, Wash-
ington, Gordon C. Hancock, of Dublin Ireland
THOMAS W VA
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.
HUNTINGTON, W. W., Va.-Mrs. W. B. Brown, of W. 3rd ward who fell and broke her neck. Elliott has returned from a two months visit in Lunenburg, Va. Douglas High school, with Garnett High of Charleston, the score being 7-4. The School High Band, under the leadership of Prof. W. Crampton, High School Faculty, had as her week-end guest, Miss Mary E. Beckett the physical training, one of the pioneers of Huntington, died after a long illness. Vanity Smith was killed by a wild autist on the corner of 17th St. James Ave. and was buried Sunday morning from First Baptist Church.
Committed 75 Robberies
New York City - Confessing of 75
robberies, eight prisoners, ages ranging from 17 to 53 are held without
ball. They are:
William Daniels, 16, 162 W, 132rd
street; George Simmons, 5, 13 W, 123rd
street; George Simmons, 32, 55 W
Ninety- second street; Solomon Bailey,
22, 262 W, 132nd street; David
Watson, 20, 451 Lenox avenue; Winston
Thorne, 19, 101 W, 132nd
street; Leroy Reed, 21, 226 West
140th street.
Boston Clubs Open
Boston. Mass.-Public sentiment against the Boston Athletic Association for hair of barred Charles Oswell of Boston University. From the main dining room on account of his color, caused the club to change its policy.
The Somerset, Union, Alqonquin University and Boston Art Clubs issued statements that their doors are always open to colored Americans.
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The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Smithfield, N. C.—C. L. W. Smith, of Smithfield, N. C., reports to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People for a recently won a fight for a full 8-month school term for their children. When the Board of Trustees of the Smithfield schools ignored the request to reduce their ruling reducing the school term to 6 months, the colored taxpayers filed a complaint in court and had a summons issued against the Board. Before the time set for a court hearing the Trustees agreed to meet with K. J. Wellons, attorney for the civilization directing that the Smithfield Graded Schools he operated for a term of not less than eight months with requirements met for a standard. According to figures compiled by Negro taxpayers, it was shown that they were entitled to an expenditure of $1,688 on their schools an- d that the expenditure had fallen about $2,000 short of that sum.
$88,000 For N. O. Schools
New Orleans, La.-Of the $250
00 school bond issue authorized by
the School Board, only $8,000 is
for colored schools.
Pupils of Craig school have been
ordered by the School Board not to
enter entrance finding the
street where a number of white
families live.
DELAWARE
BRIDGEVILLE DEI
DOVER DEL
Lewis Chamber led the Miflord band in the Knights of Pythians parade on June 11, 2014, Dover Circuit, Saturday night, * accompanied by Snyrman in his new suit, accompanied by his invalid and retired brother, mother. * Those attending Dover State College are: Miss Indola Wolf, of Nassau; Miss Loreta Williams, of Nassau; Miss Del; Miss Christian Maul, of Nassau Del; Miss Loreta Williams, of Nassau Del; Miss Del; Miss Christian Maul, of Nassau Del; Miss Ida Pettjohn, Harrington, Del.
LINCOLN CITY, DEL.
NASSAU. DEL.
A. B.
Boston, Mass.-Dr. W. Alexander Cox, is a local physician who has been the general manager of the Atlas Real Estate Syndicate. He was born in Baltimore and is the nephew of Mr. and Mrs. James Cox there.
BALTIMOREAN MAKES GOOD IN BOSTON
BALTIMOREAN MAKES GOOD IN BOSTON
Boston, Mass.—Among the southerners who have made good in business, James A. Alexander Cox, native of Baltimore, Dr. Cox is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cox and the widow of James W. Cox, native of Baltimore, Alley and 1332 Whatcott street.
He went to Boston in November to attend a popular and successful dentist in 1900. He was admitted to the Massachusetts bar as an attorney in 1911 and to the United States Bar. Business and professional men turned out at Zion A. M. E. Church, on Columbus avenue, the Rev. B. W. Stuart, pastor, last year. He is also the treasurer and business manager of the Atlas Real Estate Syndicate, a $40,000 concern. a degree Mason, Shriner, an Elk, Odd Fellow and Pythian, a life member of the National Business League and was a close friend of the late Dr. Booker T. Washington.
He was a charter member of the National Bar Association organized in Little Rock Ark., and an ex-president of the National Medical
Kerlin At Downingtown
Froston News Service.
Kerlin, author of several books on Nero-poets and literature, and professor at Mt. School, was the speaker at the Vesper services here. Sunday, he informed us that he would resign from the faculty of the Virginia Military Institute, at Lexington, where his writings on the subject of Nero-poets
15:31pm J. H. N. Waring attended a recent conference. A new teacher, Katherine Kaunda, was erected. This building, it was learned, has been made possible by people who have released the insurance money paid after the destruction of the tradesmen.
Pittsburgh (P. N. S.)—When Joseph Lancaster ran breathless into the Alliquippa street engine house and gasped out "Somebody's trying to burn down my home," and dropped dead about t two weeks ago, members of the engine company were inclined to think the man was suffering from some sort of hallucination. Early Friday the dead man's $4,000 home in Gazon street, occupied by his survivors was totally depleted.
Cavalry Guards Court House
Asheville, N. C. — A cavalry troop of the North Carolina Nat'l Guards was mobilized here at the trial of Alvin Mansel charged with animal cruelty by the woman. An attempt had been made to lynch the prisoner.
PRESIDENT GREGG IN SOUTH
Raleigh, N. C. — President James E. Gregg, of Hampton Institute, is here campaigning in the interest of Hampton-Puskegee endowment fund.
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EXKELER TO MEDICINE C, Atlanta, Ga.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
Write for Particulars
MASSACHUSETTS BOSTON, MASS.
By Wm. H. SMITH
200 W. Springfield St.
Boston, Mass.-Miss Maduraia Christholm, left the city last week for her home in Ashville, N.C., where she came here with her aunts, Mrs. M. E. Diggs, of Windsor street, and Mrs. George Miller, of 60 School Street. Mrs. Beverly Bella Jones, of 11 Dilworth street, left the city last week for a two weeks' trip to New York City.
Theodore Madison Harris, 20, of 71 Moore street, New York; Sonnerie Evelin, 20, of 72 Harlem avenue, Sonnerie flied marriage intuitions at City Hall last week; and Riggs Burgess, 20, of 83 Riggs street, Roxbury, and James Penton, of New York City, were married Sunday, March 16, 2014, at Church. The Rev. Leroy Ferguson, pastor, officiated. William, of 86 Elmwood street, Sonnerie, and her sister, Mrs. Mary Jenkins, of 35 Copley street, was married Sunday, March 16, 2014, for New York City, to yell their sister, Mrs. Brown, who is seriously ill. Master, Joseph Leopman, of 26 Sussex street, was one of those honorably mentioned in the AFRD's Filmerlores puzzo contest last week. Leeman was a George Washington, of the Burdick school, of the postoffice league. He has been a member of the team since the beginning of the season ago. Of the sixteen teams in the league, Mr. Washington is the only team in the league. The team has never finished below third place. Wortham, of 27 Pleasend in Providence, R. I. The team is quite ill with pneumonia. The Cambridge Girls' Reserves will hold their annual social time in the
Mrs. jhaird Clerk, of Warwick SR.
Mrs. jhaird Clerk, of Warwick SR.
Hampshire, where she has been spent.
Hampshire, where she has been spent.
BIRTHDAY FARTY
Miss Florence Kingsbury, of 10 Worcester street, Cambridge, celebrated her day evening, and at the same time, announced her engagement to Charles Bury, a popular young lady of Cambridge High and Latin School. Mrs. Bury is by the fact that a large number of her presents were presented. The dining room was beautifully decorated for the occasion. Dances among those present were: Mr. and Mrs Hamilton and Mrs. Green of Sonneray; Miss Henry and Mrs. Green of Brocken; Miss Henry and Dr. Brocken; and daughters; Miss Moore and Ruth, of Winthright; Harry Pierce, Brookline; and Mrs. Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Burrell, Misser, some Ashby, Mary Payne, Alexander Harris, Mr. and Mrs Madison Bury, and Mrs. Kingsbury. A reception for many beautiful gifts.
ERATERNAL
A social session was held by the Popeontahus Lodge of Elks at the Elks 260 members, and guests were present 260 members, and guests were present 260 members. The Yellow丹顶洞 Club, gave a surprise party to the past matrons of the Yellow丹顶洞 Club, Monday evening at Smith's Hall, Mason's Temple. There was a large number of guests. The St. Joseph of R. Flower House, and ex-Grand Exceeded Leading Knight, have been visiting Mrs. Mary Sannuel, of Williams St. who has been visiting her mother in Philadelphia, returned home last week.
WORCESTER MASS
WORCESTER MARY
Worcester Mary, the Mrs. and Mrs. Cana
audience announced the engagement of their
daughter, of Worcester, Mass, now or
Boston. The date set for the wedding
the house of Mr. and Mrs. Cana. The
wedding will be the social event of the
October 20th, was a great success. A
Silent Four will present the Harmony
Serenaders early in December.
R. I. visited friends last week.
NEW, KENSINGTON, PA
Save the Drunkard
(Written by a woman who saved her husband's life by killing evil)
My man is very good to me.
No loyal kind and true.
He tells us he really drunk.
As other husbands do.
But sometimes, when he 'got too with that,' he said.
For heaven no sunshine in my heart.
When mournings in his head.
Some folks can laugh at such a plight Of some people might be aching heart And gily for Satan's tool.
And always feel that some too many.' I fear that we must part.
Praying for Satan's awakening in his head. There's no sunshine in my heart.
Within the garden of my life.
Love bloomed in every thought,
Love and love must come to naught.
And love must come to late.
I pray before it is too late.
I live in the garden of my life.
There's no sunshine in my heart, dear.
When there's moonshine in your head.
I read the book "The National Curse"
and I used the "Golden Treatment"
and I used the "Golden Treatment"
The splendid manhood underneath
In freed from Satan's snare;
Sorrow from Satan's snare;
Our beers have sunshine there.
I gave the powder secretly.
He never owen knew;
The owen knew today;
The act you cannot rue.
Our lives are very different,
and sad.
In our hearts are foods of sunshine,
And no moonshine in his head.
Save those, near and dear to you from w
I will do it.
You can do it by cutting out this coupon
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Fill in your name and address on blank
lines below. Then cut out this coupon
and fill in your name and address.
Illinois Blend. Cincinnati. Ohio. You can
receive in return coupon of the treatment
and fill in your name and address
in any form. You give it in tea,
and will stop defiling without knowing why.
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or R. F. D. _____
City _____ State _____
PENNSYLVANIA
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Philadelphia, Pa.-Mrs. Thomas Fran-
dale, Ph.D.
Attendance: 14 days
Attendance: CIV, 119, days
Attendance: CIV, 119, days
Dr. Uhges S. Viggins has moved into his building and the McCain of Atlantic City, a sister of John C. Gibson, was a guest at the E. Steppe, of Atlantic City, a friend of Sandy.
Joseph Bavenger, who has been in New York since 1950, has returned to the city. He was made an American and Robert Thomas Covington an assessor in the 11th Division of the Army.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Noln, 1202 S. Ninth Street, N. Washington, Md. Clifton Pierpe, Bridgerton, N. J., spent the week-incl in Mt. Alry and in Burley, in Mt. Alry, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson, 1808 N. Washington, Md. Van Pelt street, is suffering with a broken arm, the arm of New York City, was a visitor in the city, last week. Frank Agusin Jr., and Alexen Burnett, October 21st. W. Louis, of 412 N. 58th street, spent Sunday in Chester, Pa. the guests of Mt. and Mrs. Thomas C. Knox, of 2109 Nassau street, has entirely recovered from his recent ill-
Mrs. Bossie Ingram, of 2105 Bolton
is suffering, with a cold.
street, is suffering with a cold,
Mrs. Corrina Bassie, Municipal City,
Mrs. Corrina Bassie, Bassie Ingram, 2105
Bolton street, stopped over in the city
a few days, and she will stay three weeks.
Mrs. Baxter, of 2136 Master street
who has been sick a few days, is in
pain.
PITTSBURG, PA.
Registered at the Bailey Hotel this month.
Harrisburg, Pa.—Mrs. Lucinda Cophas who has been very sick, is much improved. John Smith, who has been sick, is a trolley car and internally injured. *Mrs. Rosa Price, New Haven, Conn. is here, visit Smith and Mrs. Susie Potter. *Robert Brown is ill again, and is confined to his bed. Mrs. Smith is a number of guests at her birthday party last Wednesday evening. The house was beautifully decorated, the color of the flowers, the reuset was served. *George W. Johnson has been confined to his home the past week, being slightly confined to his bed for a couple of days. *Miss Anna Robinson has returned home in Frederick, Md. Goo, Moore
THE PORO AGENT
A DISTINCTIVE
It Pays to PORO HAIR AND T
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is confined to his room with a badly prained arm, arm, and a fall. *A. B. Burden, of Steilton, is able to be out after an attack of the La Griffe. *W. R. Burden, in Washington, D. C. where he attended the National Convention or the Y. M. Jackson, in Singers rendered at Tech High Monday evening. * Robert Curtis, of Atlantic City, is visiting in this city for a few days.
ELECTED S. O. P. JUDGE
Phila. - Pa. William H. Turner.
2002 Oxford Street, has an office of judge on the Reedton ticket of the 17th division of the 47th ward.
Found on Street With Pneumonia
Edward Street, 537 Street, Darby, was found by police of the 65th and Woodland station lying on the sidewalk in front of 6305 Woodland av. Barran was taken to the Mercy Hospital, physician was suffering and case of pneumonia.
YORK, PA
York, Pa.—The Elis Band, under the direction of Hurry B. Baton, gave a performance on Thursday, October 20th, in the Elis home, 109 W. Princess street, those present were, H. Hulches, E. Kenney C. Howard, J. Nelson, H. Butler, M. and A. Preston, J. Nelson, H. Butler, J. Howard, J. Robinson, H. Willis, R. Brown, P. Counte, P. Williams, J. Wilson, M. Minnie Epps, and Louise Cunningham, gave a Halloween dance in Old Fellows Hall Saturday, October 20th. Orchestra were awarded to Miss Elsie Woods, for the best costume, John McBain, for best choreography, and best choreography dance. The High Item
ry Orchestra furnished the music for the occasion. The choir was led by Zion Church, York district, hold District Conference in the Rt. Rt. Rev. J. S. Caldwell is presiding bishop, and Rev. T. F. Dicegne were present from Chambersburg, Carriage, Shippensburg, Delton, Chanceton, and throughout the Cumberland Valley. Work to the Sunday schools was disbanded by the Rev. Rd. Building, directed by the Rev. Dr. Bodling. The Faith Presbyterian opened their basarar in the county's community House, North Duke street. Shiloh Baptist is working on the Compton Violeta Anderson and Mrs. Mary Miller gave a chicken and wafer supper. Saturday evening, the supper was quiteening.
PENNSYLVANIA WOMAN
Wants Long Hair
After a long spell of skiness, Mrs. P. O. Burton, of 1337 Christian street, South Philadelphia, Pa., has fallen out in hands and it was so short, she could everything she could think of, but got no results whatever. Finally, she discovered that her hair had grown longer to get anything to give results, when she discovered that her hair had grown longer. She continued to use the last preparation (which she made herself) and any drug store, and that she will write her and send to anyone who will write her and send to NOBEs—Mrs. Burton has nothing at all to sell. Out of pure gratitude she long beautiful hair. It is free. Just send stamped envelope to Mrs. P. O. Burton, Christian street, South Philadelphia, Pa.
LADIES'
SILK HOSE
GUARANTEED
FULL FASHION
$1 Three Palra for
2.50
Address
National Mail
Order Supply Co.
1344 Druid Hill Ave.
Baltou., Md.
Saturday, November 7
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
THE AFRO-AMERICAN
A Champion of Civic We
Published every day by the
Street, Baltimore MD, by the AFIC
H. John Murphy, Editor
CARL MURPHY, President
Sarah G. Searle, President
three months, (payable in advance).
Foreign Advertis 5 Representative,
Street, Chicago; $21 Victor Buildin
A Champion of Civic Welfare and the Square Deal
Published every Friday in the Afro-American Building, 828 N. Eutaw
Street, Baltimore, Md. by the AFIO-AMERICAN COMPANY.
John H. Murphy, Editor and Publisher, Baltimore
C. M. Murphy, Editor, Baltimore
L. A. KNERT MUNITY, Treasurer
Subscription rates: $2.00 per year. $1.25 for six months, to cents for
three months, (payable in advance).
Foreign Advertisers: Representative, W. B. Ziff Company, 608 Dearborn
Street, Chicago; 251 Victor Building, St. Louis; 404 Motion Building,
York City.
Independent In All Things: Neutral In Nothing
What. The "AFRO" Stands For
1. Colored policemen, policewomen.
2. Colored representatives on city
3. Salaries for equal work to
color or sex.
4. Colored members on board of
colored.
5. The organization of labor u
workers.
A university and agricultural co
the state.
Closer co-operation between f
agents.
2. Colored policemen, policewomen and teachers.
3. Equal salaries for equal work for school teachers without color to register.
4.
4. Colored members on board of State institutions where inmates are colored
6. The organization of labor unions among all groups of colored workers. 8. University and agricultural college for colored people supported by the State. 9. Closer co-operation between farmers and the State and Federal farm agents.
Thoughts Of The Founder
Thoughts Of The Founder
"It is as impossible to analyze the indefinable urge that attaches and makes us, black and white, one common brotherhood us it is to analyze and explain the affection of a mother for her child, husband for family, or patriot for his native land. It may be due to the fact that we blacks have been a friend to every struggle for freedom to the few attempt for justice and the foo of sham, hypocrisy, falsehood, pretense, crime and tyranny."
No good citizen can afford to drink and thereby debauch himself destroy his influence and usefulness, saying nothing of the humiliation and disgrace he brings on innocent members of his family—and as for these hellish bootleggers, every one of them ought to be sent to the Grand Jury and kept there. Present Grand Jury has opportunity to make some shining examples.
Write Your Will
Before trying to heat the train across the crossing or to make the speedometer hit the top take off a few minutes and hit the bottom in a short will. It will felicitate matters considerably after you have been disposed of.
Hallowe'en
"Times have changed but folks haven't" smiled the old merchant after Halloween. "The boys used to tear out my hitching posts and now they swipe the No Parking sign."
Drudgery
American inventive genius seems bent on driving dingdong out of the home, reducing the housewife's labor to a minimum. No longer is she required to debate between going out for an afternoon's enjoyment or staying at home to cook dinner. She can switch on the automatic oven and go out for the afternoon, knowing that dinner will begin to cook at four o'clock and stop cooking at five thirty, or whatever time of the day she wishes. No longer does she need to worry how will she get along without help. She has but to turn on the electric servant that can at once electric servant that can for cakes and bread, batter waffles and pancakes, cut shortening into pastry, mash potatoes, mix mayonnaise, heat eggs and iceings, shrimp and meringue, grind coffee, chop meat, nuts and raisins, strain soup, purées and sauces through a fine sieve.
There is also a candle for apples,
sauce, pennies, cottage cheese and
spinach. This electric servant chops
or slices vegetables, chips the ice for
the ice cream, shunt freezer, turns
the icecream and贮候 when the
contents are frozen.
Football
Baltimore long in the slough of football despond and a poor second rater suddenly wakes up to find itself with a high school team of championship calibre and a college team among the best in the country.
Douglass High School after twenty years of constant and bitter defeats came into lieu own this season by defeating the main Washington rival, Dunbar, and last Friday defeated in Huntington Hi School of Newport News, a team which has Armstrong's scapl dangling at its belt. On paper, the road to the football championship of the East is clear for the local team.
Not quite so fortunate is Morgan College, whose great team held Howard to a low score, last week tied Lincoln after completely outplaying the champions, and ought to beat Storer College, ancient Thanksgiving Day rivals, by the largest score in history.
Credit belongs to Coach James Law of Morgan who enjoyed his first ride on the shoulders of an enthusiastic Morgan football team last Saturday, and to Coach Leonard Gibson of Douglas High School. He brought fruit at last in two eleven, both of which are a credit to the city.
CALL VErnon 6016
MOTORIA
-DAMERICAN
Welfare and the Square Deal
Afro-American Building, 628 N. Eutaw
-DAMERICAN COMPANY,
and Publisher, 1886 to 1922
D. ABNETT MURPHY, Treasurer
ar, $1.25 for six months, 70 cents for
W. B. Ziff Company, 608 Dearborn
Ag, St. Louis; 404 Motion Building.
men and firemen.
county and State Board of Education.
per for school teachers without regard
of State institutions where inmates are
nations' among all groups of colored
college for colored people supported by
farmers and the State and Federal farm
Communists
Three score delegates to the American Negro Labor Congress met in Chicago last week and evoked more than the gathering of 10,000 Baptists or 25,900 Elks. The Congress, it was said, was held in Chicago, where his holiness of Russia. It was reported as advocating an overthrow of government, and of our present rule of the capitalist, the rule of the workers was to be advocate. Knowing that these ends cannot be achieved by peaceful means and revolution were to be advocated. This is what was supposed to happen at the Chicago Conference, where he learned from a perusal of his resolutions published in another column. The Congress calls upon the government departments, to open West Point and Annapolis to all citizens and to banish the color of Negroes from juries is condemned. Negroes are urged not to submit to the authority of courts where they are accused.
Residential segregation and disfranchisement in American cities are criticized, as is also the great Amegy, the grass struck a blow at the Klan at Jim crow in public boards, and the dishonesty of school boards, which fail to provide equal educational facilities for people where ever there are separate schools for the races. Clearly there is a great difference between what the Labor Congress has actually did. After all only this latter counts. Certainly there is nothing radical or red in the resolutions enumerating similar resolutions have been passed by every great National body of Negroes in the country, from the A. Church to the National Association of Colored People.
Pork Chops
Annot the looming primary fight in the State Republican party between Philip Hill, candidate for governor, E. Weller, the present incumbent, Mr. Frank Kent has the following to say in the Baltimore SUN:
"What it really comes down to is to be a juggler for the colored vote in a side that is not winning. That is all there is to a Republican primary fight in Maryland. The whole game is to line up the Negroes, and the white giddings have spread in the colored quarter. Next year isn't going to be a pork-chop year for the registered colored voter in a fried chicken and-turkey菜. Mr. Frank is a Democrat and the SUN is of Democratic persuasion. We notice that when the average Democrat would joke that all the white giddings alludes to the illegal sum of money used every year to bring out the colored vote for the white G. O. P. candidates. This is an ancient Democrat joke, but they have told it so often that they actually believe it. For this reason, it is worth while to get down on the ground and ask Mr. Frank a few questions.
Everybody admits that it takes money to win elections. The history of Presidential elections since 1889 when Lincoln spent $100,000 glas only $50,000, is that the presidential candidate whose party spends the largest amount of money wins. In the case of Mr. Charles Evans Hughes, who spent two million dollars while his victorious opponent, Woodrow Wilson spent a million and a half dollars. Two years ago, Mr. Coolidge spent four million dollars in order to get the Democratic Candidate. Mr. Democratic Candidate, Mr. Davis spent a million and Mr. LaFollette, another quarter of a million. There are very few colored Democrats, fewer Progressives and sixteen times as many white Republicans as colored. The two big parties are the Democratic and Republican whites in the last presidential campaign. What we want to know is whether the money went for pork chops or for fried chicken and turkey.
Republican ward executives in a recent campaign got something like the vote in their districts election their share as did the colored. The day. White ward executives got usual amount is something like $25 a second. Explaining the shortage, politicians around the polls declared that Republican leaders to Senator Wetler $20,000 for campaign purposes in Maryland, but that it had been agreed to use $20,000 of this amount to influence strategic voters to desert their party. We wonder did the Democratic workers use this for pork chops and chicken? We go to go into fur coats and automobiles.
Another Step
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Pay Doctors
The good doctors of this community are deserving of prompt reward for faithful services rendered. This can come only thru prompt payment of your doctors' bill and a kindly word for the good work they do.
We have said it before and we say it again. "The doctors are the worst imposed upon set of professional men known," but the happy part of it is, these services the many are getting away with the best just as are all good business men. It is right that they should in order to render the deserving patients the best service.
Of course, in charitable cases, the good doctor goes his limit, but it isn't right for him to have to suffer at the hands of the imposter. It is just as necessary that you pay your doctor as your grocer or any one else from whom you obtain service or goods. Pay your doctors if you would keep in good credit standing with them.
Logic
M. Perry Howard, attorney for the Pullman Company advises the Pullman porters not to organize for increased wages since the Company will be unable to pay it.
Present wage of the 12,000 porters is $67.50 a month. A ten dollar a month increase would cost the Pullman company a million and a half dollars a year. Too much says Mr. Howard.
Last Sunday the executive committee of the Railroad Trainmen met in Chicago and considered a 12 per cent increase for their $10,000 membership. Their present contract with the roads expires December 31, and the executives have about agree to ask that the cut taken off again. The proposals if adopted unless just after the war be restored will cost the company several million dollars.
The only reason why the train men can talk about a tpeel percent increase and the porters cannot, is that the former are organized, and the latter are not.
Ku Klux
Unable to beat the Negroes, the Jews, the Catholics, and the foreign combined, the Ku Klux Klan is taking them up separately. The program thrust the country in the elections this week was make friends with the Negro and the Jew to be at the Catholic candidates. With the largest element, the Catholic beaten, attention next will be turned to the Negro, for leaving the Jew and the Catholic until last, the Jews and laws both were urged to vote the klan ticket in Detroit Tuesday and the same means are being taken to defeat Senator Wabash in Massachusetts next year. Failure of the plan to work in Detroit means that a new policy will have to be developed. one in which the identity of the wolf in sheep's clothing is not quite so apparent.
(Norfolk Virginian Pilot)
The way to make the Negro a better and safer element of our population is not to organize fights upon imaginary alien seducers, but to conduct an intelligent offensive against the real domestic menaces that embitter the Negro's life and impel him to occasional acts of robbery. One of these menaces is the unspeakable lynching practice. Others of these menaces are execrual causing condemnation and unkind discrimination in the matter of parks and playgrounds.
The list is capable of considerable use, the only real danger that the American Negro may become radical. If he becomes a radical it will be America's fault—not Fulton. The cause causes and sure cure for such an infection are under our own control.
The antics of our security-leaguers over Norfolk Negro conditions are to deter an infestation from the real source of danger—ourselves.
Segregation
(From the New York World)
Despite repeated judicial decisions against race segregation laws, the effort to confine Negroes within fixation-crop outlines continually cropping out in our cities.
Of late it has had to take ingenuous forms. There is pending because of the need to suit determine whether one expedient—segregation by a property owners' agreement is brought by thirty Washington taxpayers who are trying to restrain a neighbor on S. Carolina from selling to a Negro woman. Upon the court's decision depends the fate of similar cases which have arisen Louis, Los Angeles and other cities.
Whatever the legal niches of the issue, the social impolity of permitting property owners to make the same claim to the same rights sells to a particular race is clear. Such agreements might become so general in many localities as to restrict seriously the right of acquirement of property from buyer to buyer; they might be enforced against German or Italian, Jew or Gentile, Catholic or Protestant, and might affect every kind of reality. It is plausible that their enforcement would be the whole spirit of American institutions and society. The consequences of race segregation are evident to any one who has been a Jew or Gentile" or the Jewish Ghetto. It was hoped that the Supreme Court decision in the Louisville case in 1817 had an end to the more extreme forms of discrimination cannot afford to let the spirit of that decision be flipped.
THE ABBREVIATED ORDER
BRING US APPOINTMENTS FOR MINISTERS TO HAITI, ARGENTINA, REGISTER OF THE UNION, POSTMASTERS ETC. ETC.
HAITIWENS
BENELEE G. BROWN
BECK DANIS
G.O.R.
WAITER!
THIS ISN'T ALL
OF OUR ORDER!
ONLY TWO
APPOINTMENTS!
MRS. HAMM
Q. BROWN!
BERT
DAVIS
G.O.P.
DAY BY DAY
WITH WILLIAM N. JONES
Lovett Fort-Whiteman's New Philosophy
"What" asks a correspondent to this column, "is Lovett Fort-Witte, young, young, young, labor congress in Chicago, driving at? What is in his program distinct from that which characterized other movements fighting for the Negro's peace the sun?" Answer this question yourself by entering by Fort-Witteman which sets forth his idea in a nutshell. Said he: "The Negro people as a race are the industrial class are one of the most important races in the whole world. Our aim is to organize the industrial sector the Negro into a fighting weapon." This may be communism, you say, or it may be led Ebolaism but con. IT IS THE NAKED TRUTH.
If you have lived in the South where opposition to unlimited progress of the race expresses itself in the open, you cannot but see the race of women, the close range you keep the race a "hewler of wood and drawer of water." Further when you learn social science that there is close range you realize that there is no such thing, as Fort-Whiteman says, "inborn race prejudice." Inside the white south a saphrophile race, economically. They were trained to live on the sweat and toll of Oceans. They were trained to live on a world like this, there can be no leisure class without its corresponding working class. What they feel by clutched sherry they sell so can keep by economic bondage. And in both the north and south all the worst of racial prejudice backgrounds. Aligned, as Fort-Whiteman well understand, with this general idea, are all the exploiting forces called capitalists.
The New England conscience of the white man cried out against slavery in the practical effects of racial prejudice which has for its basic motive the economic enslavement of one group that another may reap comfort has seemed ease and comfort has generated every section to the country.
Followers of the Meek and Lowly Nazareine, with their pockets bulging with the unearned wealth which they have from the toiling muses, sanction the "hewers of wood" philosophy; cater to racial prejudice and help to fight bloody wars that even stronger armies have been able to slide organization, told us that the color line must be wiped out and that the oppressed group of all races must join hands. It is this threat of universal suffering upon workers, the voice of economic bondage that forms the nightmare which keeps kings, queens and big mongols of finance whose days are numbered. There is a direct relation between extreme wealth, extreme poverty and human prejudice. One could hardly exist without the black, yellow, black and brown oppressed groups will wipe all of them out. That seems to be the philosophy of Lovett Fort-Whiteman.
If you tuned in Monday evening on WBAL, the new Gas and Elsec Company's powerful radio station at Baltimore, you heard it
Wanted A Common
Ground Of Union
Life Practical
.
In The Air
announcement of an ambitious program.
But you also heard Maud Albert wing "Old Uncle Ned." Like a discordant note you heard the word "nigger" grave against your sense of pride and spell a perfectly pronounced word.
Perhaps neither, the singer, nor Mr. Huber, who directed the concert, nor the officials of the university, understands. how that. word lusts the heart and soul of self-respecting members of our group, who never again be music to the twelve millions of our group who have passed through the shadow of the sigma it signaled. When Maud Albert, you ask. But why should any red blooded man or woman resent an insult.
Klansmen, Jews
And Politics
In Detroit this week, the Ku Klux Klan made a bid for the Jewish vote. Anything for power seems impossible now nothing more or less than an agency existing for the purpose of taking in ten dollar bills and distributing sheets and pillow cases on the Jews; in others they openly say they are not fighting the Negroes. Up in the Cumberland mountains recently this writer was colored in his attire and some of the members of whose family were said to be ku klux, was employed as domestic helper. Up there they have even asked for help in the fight against the Catholics. What does it matter to the men at the head of this organization who they are against just so long as they can be forced into cramped ten dollar notes.
HOOSIT?
By Robert P. Edwards
(For The Associated Negro Press)
2. He was the son of Eauan and Adah, daughter of Blon, the Hittite, who was a Negro. Before attaining the priesthood of Midian, he was the founder of a scale of law that to this day is the foundation of British and American jurisprudence. He was of great assistance to him, who was the greatest leader of a people that the world has ever known. HOOSITOWER to HOOSIT 27. Colonel Charles Young.
Weekly Lessons
In English
By W. L. Gordon
WORD OFTEN MISUSED
"Don't say, 'It is very unique' or
"most unique." "Unique" means only
one of its kind, and should not be
WORD OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED
Das Mielens (iowa). 'Pronounce.'
smell 'Da-mielens.' 'in day.'
in 'in roll.' 'accent on the last'
syllable.
WORD OFTEN MISPELLED
Pronounce. 'Proceed' has two 'e's.
but 'proceed' has only one 'e'.
SYNONYMYS
Transfer. 'transfer' transport, carry,
convey, conduct, bear.
SARINITY; clearness; calmness
the light manner."
THE FORUM
More About the Pullman Company
being best friend of the Pullman
porters.
To the Editor:
Kindly permit me to answer the letter of Mr. I. W. Davis of Chicago against the Pullman porters, deliberately misrepresents the movements in charging that the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters is fostered by the Pullman and its organizer is in the pay of A. F. of L. Both statements are absolutely and unquestionably false, many being the best friend of the Pullman porter is all moonshine. If it were, it is reasonable to ask that if it would give away the money that $67.50 a month is a living wage? And as for using the Employees Representation in the Pullman porter this is pure deception. It is a matter of common knowledge that the plan is a farce, under the auspices of an ill-matched and perpetual criminals. Why should the Pullman porters accept the plan and be attacked by the conductors have reflected it and all other railroad workers have condemned it. City
Forum
North Carolina speaks out. Denies
Alumni's assertion as to the mun-
ister's standard high schools in the
South.
To the Editor:
(Quoted from Alumnus, Afro-American, October 17, 1925) "It so happens that that teacher of the highest high schools. In the South almost every institution of elementary grade bears the pretentious name of 'college.' The institution with the less - bitious cognomen of "institute." With a very few exceptions there are accredited high schools. "Well equipped public high schools except in some of the cities are not maintained for the colored. The schools feeders for colleges and these private schools are usually an inharmonious mixture of elementary, secondary, normal and collegiate words that need careful definition and may not be banded about by careful people. I trouble with "Alumnus" may fall under anyone of several heads. 1. He may know better but must mistake facts to support his argument. 2. He may have secured his facts from data long obsolete. 3. He may really not know and that merely be unscillific in composition.
In 1924 the then 44 accredited North Carolina High School of Music group of whom $1 per cent went to colleges including all of the larger Negro colleges and of the mixed colleges such as Yale, Columbia, and the University of Pittsburgh and others.
In 1925 there were 1,012 graduates from 43 accredited high schools and 1,000 from 35 or more accredited high schools in North Carolina, the majority being public high schools. The faculty will do well to take notice of this fact, although we hope to make it unnecessary for our high school graduate to hold the job for first rate college education. W. A. Robinson, Supervisor Negro High Schools, Raleigh, N. C.
Sentenced to life for the murder of an Eastern Shore scoutman Captain John Perry appeals against help to the Editor:
Nearly every day, or week, cases appear in the papers of some white man committing a crime, cases suggest, in the act, that he is caught in the act, and sometimes, succeeds in hiding behind the colored race. And you know the outfit of the police, the police officer if he has a mighty good lawyer, he goes to prison or to his death. Let us turn to the case of the man Price had been found alive, he would have been charged with the crime, and, perhaps, with killing mood until they found out that Mr. Price was dead, and a white man was found to be the right man. Walter F. White, of the N. A. A. C. P., has condemned the manner in which Negroes have been made innocent victims of mobs hysterically.
I wish to clear my name of this crime. My heart and hands are clean; it is only on my name. Thanking AMO-AMO, I have been ARDO. Also Miss Eva A. Jessie for taking so much interest in my case, and who has been to see me on two occasions, to try and push my case along. I am very grateful for that much. Thanking a thousand times and move on.
We believe that most APRO readers unlike this one, appreciate information, coming directly from store hears, as to their policy toward colored customers
To the Editor:
In words in reference to an article which appeared in just week's issue which said "Thumbs Down on Our Trade."
I think the representative who wrote had a lot of time on his hands when he undertook to go from store to store to find out who wanted colored items and did not. I think he was a little offless.
Such actions only invite segregation and humiliation. We do not go into stores for art, nor do we resist the art品 we purchase or look at the things displayed. It doesn't matter whether we are wanted or not. It is a matter of your own. You cannot buy. If snubbed in one store, go to another.
Some have money to buy from the high class store. You cannot buy it if it is what they want.
I think it is an insult to the colored shops and makes you feel badly and besides it starts such wild
One I have heard: There is a man stationed at the door to tell the color in which cannot come in, which is not true. I want to ask the representative, after a meeting with him, he is going to do about it. I think such procedure must have come from down in Georgia. Please take it back. We do not need it in
A Casual Observer
Judge George E. Mix of St. Louis
says we get a square deal in his
court.
To the Editor:
My attention has been called to the news that the Governor issued an issue of your splendid paper concerning the case of Nathaniel C. Brown, a former clerk charged by me when the Governor
Kelly Miller Says
Kelly Miller Says
It takes all sorts of people to make a world; just so it takes the different types of movements to make a race. In the N. A. A. C. P., the Negro presented the clinched fist, demanding his rights under the law. In the Y. M. C. A., he presented the outstretched palm of friendly feeling. They are all working for that far off day when brotherhood shall prevail on earth as in heaven.
Y. M. C. A. Conference
Four important meetings were held in the national capital during the past week. The colorful Mersh Christian Association was the first to occupy the field. This great arm of the Christian world frankly recognizes the distinctions of race and bases its program upon this recognition. The colored contingent complacently accepts the line of racial demarration and works in more detail than the white beethoven. They have formed a motus vivendi which is perhaps the only adjustment that can be made in any of our interracial social programs. American mind. We might well call this the great Christian compromise. For even Christianity capitulates at the behest of the colorful November issue of the Crisis, after an appreciative account of the constructive work which the Y. M. C. A. is accomplishing, continues with important query "Whither? whither?"
Drifting Apart
The races are surely drifting further and further apart in all matters that involve social or semi-social interaction, or discussion or of opinion, but of plain observation. How far is it practical wisdom to fall into acceptance? And how far is it wise to resist it. I well remember when I first began to visit Detroit, the irreconcilable old guitarist who stood for the fighting, tooth and toe nail, the introduction of a Colored LY, M. C. A. The argument was that it would be but in edge to the entering wedge of race. The regular association, at that time, accorded a few colored men limited facets to face activities which would intimate contact with the white constituency. But the statesmanship of the colored department ignored the old dills and accepted the proposition of a Negro building.
To-day the Negroes of Detroit have the largest and best appointed Y. M. C. A., building within the city, to be found to be the stubborn protesters or with the practical compromisers? It makes no difference what we say, we all compromise with prejudice every hour in the day. Dr. Du Bois and proceed to describe the Washington sessions.
Unoccupied Field
The program of the whole session focused about the unoccupied field. The night meeting was addressed by Dr. Mooreland, Dr. Mooreland, and Dr. Ashby Jones, a liberal minded white man from Atlanta, Georgia. Dr. Jones is president of the Inter-Racial Movement, that is accomplishing so much practical advantage throughout the South and in some parts of the North. His spirit is fine, and his attitude genuine and sincere. His attitude genuine and sincere. His teaching of Jesus will make brothers in deed of all who sincerely believe and follow him. He made a most favorable impression, and fed many believe that after all the problem is not without ultimate hope.
Effective Leaders
Dr. Mooreland is the Hester of the "Y" and after long and efficient service has been retired at the early age of 61 years, spilled his blood in progress and promised of this organization which is calculated to accomplish so much racial and general good. As for the writer, it is needless, as attempt reports of this organization has the unlimited privilege to print.
I was absent on the second night, attending the South Side Fair in Friday, Friday, foli. Va. I may have something to say about this fair later. On Friday night, John R. Mott, the statesman of the "Y" world and Pilson Vernon, M. E. Church, the speakers. Dr. Mott emphasized his belief in the power of Christianity to solve all human problems. He was a straightforward pathetic account of the situation in South Africa, that touched the hearts of all who heard him. His gift of language and power of moving utterance never showed off to better
The conference hold daily sessions to compare notes and swap experiences and to gain new methods and fresh information. He obliges the master mind of the colored men's department showed himself to be a quiet, effective leader of men. Under his administration the work is rapidly advancing, his coworkers are also up their leadership and to hold up his hands.
Congregational Council
While the Colored Branch of the "Y" was in session the triennial council of the church was also in operation. This great wing of the Christian Church has stood perhaps more consistently and courageously by the doctrine of equality than any other denomination. The Washington session reaffirmed the ancient faith. They did not abandon it, but founded upon which they built immediately after the war. Not only did they reaffirm it to itself, better, but also, more selfish, their action in actual deeds. A colored man was elected vice moderator.
The Methodist Church has stood shoulder to shoulder to listen in recognition of the manhood rights of the Negro. This great Christian body has elected two of South Carolina sought to have this man taken to South Carolina for an alleged murder committed by someone twenty-one years old. This case was so filmy that it would have been a disgrace to have recognized the request of the Governor of South Carolina. I thank you for the well-reported news item and for the fair, square editorial. I thank rest assured that the colored people of St. Louis will be given a square deal in my court. Critical Court, St. Louis.
fullledged Negro bishops, all the power and prerogatives of procession. Just here it might be well to inject that the consideration accorded the African church to the Christian church is in direct proportion to the closeness with which they affiliate and jigzernize with the African church institutions. Collected "YI" Branch.
Colored "Y" Branch
The General Council of the Young Men's Christian Association followed close upon the special session of the meeting to have to do with the general government of the association as a whole. Several topics came up in which the colored bearer was asked to alert to safeguard the welfare of his group. We are all interested in proposition to establish the general headquarters in Washington in integral part of the whole movement. its treatment on this latitude of southern sentient and sympathies would be an interesting experiment to watch.
Washington N. A. A. C. P.
The fourth meeting to which I should call attention is the session of the N. A. A. C. P., to stimulate interest and collect funds to assist in the case of segregation in Detroit. Secretary White gave a vivid description of the tragic situation in the automobile city.
Clarence Darrow has lent his great talent to help safeguard the integrity of the right of residence. Over seven hundred dollars was raised from a meeting of several hundred people. It was the largest sum that one ever seen contributed upon an event or caused by a Washington audience.
The Clenched Fist
It was interesting to contrast the attitude of the Negro in this meeting with that of the white people described. Here he presented his clenched fist demanding his rights under the law, and condaining in the direct terms that language is perpetrated by white people against the defenseless Negro. They presented they presented the outstretched palm in friendly feeling, professing the while that all we be brethren. The spirit of far apart as the ends of the earth. Here again the reflexive minds ask itself which of the modes of procedure is the better, friendship is the method of the colored man's branch of the Y. M. C. A, or that of the white man's branch of the genius and method. They are both aiming after the same objective different methods of approach and
The one is pacific, the other is helligenet. The one uses the clenched fist, the other the open hand, the other for righteousness, the other demands rights.
Varied Methods
The facts that the race is being subject to such variety of conditions and situations will have to use methods which circumstances make necessary. The N. A. A. C. P. cannot say to the N. A. A. C. P. have no of need of the N. A. A. C. Nor can the Y. M. C. A. repeat the approach.
We must try all methods with the hope that some will prove effective. All were N. A. A. C. P. I. all were N. A. A. C. P. I. all were Y. M. C. A. where were the N. A. A. C. P.?
It takes all sorts of people to make a world; just as it takes the difference between earth and heaven. The adjunction of race is the transmittal that transcends all the wisdom which any of us possess. It therefore illly behaves any of us to beate his fellow who does not see the medium of his narrow vision.
AFRO HISTORY
(News selected at random from old issues of the AFRO-AMERICAN.)
NO LONGER A MYSTERY
November 29, 1922.—Personal note said that "Dr. H. Stanton McCardle of Chicago, is a frequent visitor, to Baltimore. Perhaps he has designs on some of Baltimore's fairest." (He loved one, and now has a daughter in college.)
1
AN "OLD TOWN" PARTY
November 19th, 1905.—The Gipsy Circle gave their first Halloween reception at the residence of Miss M. Wesley on North Central avenue. Among those invited were: Misses Esole Rochester; Bessie Thompson, Viola Bridge; Wadley Fisher; Misses Laurie Laure; Ella Mason; Carroll, Bennett; Extra Mison, Bennett Chester; Bessie Finney, Ida Denns, Alice Holland, and Mary Trace, president.
Messas, James Bantum, George Bantum, Clarence Jones, Harrison Dodd, Benjamin Looks, Howard Collins, Thos Jones, Alvin Stanley, William Lanyang, William Lynch, Harry Cephas, Robert Elliott, Elliott Thomas, Clarence Pall
HAFE SHURLEY
November 12th, 1910-Captain Lee Shilley, of the High School Five, had been putting in a great deal of time with his men. Three of the last year's members had reported, and the APRO sports writer predicted a successful season for the quintet.
EUBIE BLAKE AND BAND FOR "TWO BITS" THEN November 13th, 1915-Eubie Blake and his orchestra were scheduled to appear at the concert on November 5th. The Fifth Regiment Armory, of Montgomery said that Blake was one of the younger Baltimoreans, giving a name for himself, playing musical companies, were then handling some of his compositions. The admission was by 25 cents.
Saturday, November 7
HAVRE DE GRACE, MD.
HAVRE DE GRACE, MD.
SNOW HILL, MO
Snow Hill, Md.—Mrs. Mary Bishop died last Sunday morning and was buried. Wednesday from the M. E. Church where she had been a faithful member for several years. The Rev. Dr. Winder pastor, officiated. Miss Pauline Bishop, of New York, was here this week attending the funeral of her step-mother. Mrs. Mary Bishop. Mrs. Mary Purnell died Thursday and was buried Sunday from the M. E. Church. Where she had been a member for a number of years. The rally at the M. E. Church was a success. The high school has installed two drinking fountains and the children are paying for one and the Patrons' League for the other. Rev. A./J. Green and wife, of First Baptist Church, of Baltimore, who have been the guests of the Rev. and Mrs. E. J. Henry, left for their home Friday morning.
NEW CHAPEL, MD.
New Chapel, Md.—Sunday-school was conducted by William Griffin, Sunday-school choirs accompanied by his choir, motored to Newtown and preached for Newtown. Mrs. Henrietta Tilghman, of Bellevue, formerly organist of the church here, motored to Newtown and day the Rev. Roberts and his choir will render services here at 3 o'clock. *Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Christian motored to Newtown, Sunday. *Mr. and Mrs. Edward Webb and Mrs. Kelsey Johnson, The Rev. Johnson, John Sullivan, Ed Downa and wife, Robert Tilghman, family motored to Newtown, Thursday.
CARMIGHAEL MD
Carmichael, Md.-Chass was led by W. H. Anderson, and Holy Communion was observed by the pastor at the service by the Cross*. was presented at the evening service. Many people attended the service. Many people collected was 14:16. The Gallian Fisherman will turn out for their annual sermon, Sunday. The Gallian Fisherman will Stewart, who has been on the slick list, was able to attend church Sunday. The Gallian Fisherman has been sick is able to be out. *M. Estella M. Gould visited his sister, Mrs. Estella M. Gould, who attended the district conference here has returned to Baltimore. *M. A. Hutchins. *M. Susan Hutchins and Clarence Johnson, are on the slick list.
DARNESTOWN, MD
Darnestown, Md.—Mrs. George McDonald entertained the ladies of Sensee, Thursday. October 29th. *Mrs. Henrietta Jackson and Mrs. Henry Jackson.* Prayer was given by the pastor, the Rev. B. F. Hall, Mrs. Henry Jackson, the Rev. B. F. Hall, Mrs. Henry Harry, Clipper and Mrs. Henry Jackson, Jr. read very interesting pieces. Elise Jackson sang a duet. The Rev. W. Alton, of Seneca, gave an address, and the wives of men and women were served.* Mr. Oscar Jackson is on the sick list. *A large slider on the stump that grew near the well of Mr. Lloyd Cotes was blown in the stump that grew near the well of Mr. Henry Beckwell, Master James Beckwell and Miss Ethel Harvey and Mrs. Geo. McDonald, Sunday.
CORPERVILLE MD
Copperville, Md.—Sunday, October 25, on account of the rain there, the school day school was conducted at 2:30 p.m. m. Service by the pastor, the Rev. Hobson, not attended to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sherwood on October 22nd. The main man was not attended to few days. *Mrs. Mamie Jenkins of Jenkintown, visited her mother, Mrs. Abbey Church, Euston, nort. Mrs. Harry Goldborough, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goldborough, Daniel Copper, George Goldborough, Richard and George Goldborough, Daniel Copper, Mrs. Richard Blake, Jr. is visiting her father and friends in Jainfield, here we visit to their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard, Sr.
ROCK HALL. MR.
Rock Hall, Md.-Mrs. Carrie Sisco and her daughter, Tamie, have returned to Elsasville to teach Mrs. Mildred Williams, teacher in Edesville school, spent the week at Harvest Home was celebrated at both Aaron Chapel and John Chapel. Mrs. Chapel was delivered at John Wesley at 330 p.m. by the Rev. L. H. McArther, of James E. Cromwell and John E. Cromwell, Prof. A. C. Grant, supervisor of colored schools of Kent County was present and meeting to be held at Georgetown, November 10th, 3 p.m. at The Harvest Home meeting to be held at Chapel at 8 p.m. by the Rev. K. S. Stewart, of Port, Port, Delaware. "Mrs. Livy Warne, in visitation Mrs. Mildred Lillen, of Edesville.
SELLMAN and POOLESVILLE, M.D.
Mrs. Mary Copeland, wife of William Copeland, who had suffered a nervous week, and was buried in the Jerusalem cemetery. Wednesday, December 15, 2014, the month of October has been heavy. *The Rev. Rone of Sellman charge, held a lively 30-hour ballet with his wife, Mr. and Mrs. James Hallman hold a family reunion last week. All of her children, including two daughters, Misses Adelaine and Inez Hallman. The Rev. and Mrs.one, who have 75 years of a life long resident of Mt. Zion, fell from an apple tree and broke her shoulder and knee. *Wife of Rebecca Duffin, of Germantown, wife of Mr. Frank Duffin, after a brief illness of pneumonia, died of diseases and was buried at Brook Grove cemetery. *Mrs. Annie Onley is still with her husband, and Lyles have moved to Washington for the winter.
Let Aunt Dilsey Do Your Shopping
Aunt Dilsey hasn't enough work to do just editing matter for this page. She wants to be of more interest to buyers and has become buyer for AFRO readers, doing their shopping free. She wishes Baltimore, who want to take advantage of bargains advertised in the AFRO, have only to send an email and specify what they want. Aunt Dilsey will use all the taste and judge, grant she possesses and give the goods to her customers. WHERE POSSIBLE THE SAME DAY LETTER REACHES THIS OFFICE, WHERE THE AFRO is paying Aunt Dilsey to SERVE its readers. Aunt Dilsey shop for you free of charge. WRITE FOR US. AUNT DILSEY
BLASS, Druggist
408-410 N. Gay St., Baltimore, Md.
These Are Not Patent Medicines, True and Tried Remedies for 35 Years
Price of Remedies $1.00 & $2.00 Sizes. Cash with order, mailed $1.25. C. O. D. $1.35
Call VErnon 6016
TOWSON, MD.
TOWSON, MD.
Towson, Md.—A Tom Thumb Wedding was held at St. James A. U. M. P. Church this week for the benefit of the pastor, the Rev. J. F. Deshelds.
Mrs. Little Tyler, of Chesapeake avenue, is still confined to her home on account of illness.
A pig-foot supper was held at St. James A. U. M. P. Church last Wednesday evening, under the direction of Mrs. Mattle Lawrence.
Mrs. Mario Goldring, who underwent an operation at University Hospital last Sunday, is improving.
Robert Brooks, of E. Pennsylvania avenue, left for New York this week. His stay will be indefinite.
A chicken supper was given at St. James A. U. M. P. Church last Thursday evening by the trustee board.
"He's Helen Cohen, of Chesapeake avenue, left for Asbury Park, N. J. to the winter with her aunt, Mrs. Henryquin Foots."
Mr. and Mrs. Manson L. Tucker, of Fairmount Avenue, have been physically indisposed for the past week with the gripped.
Revival services are now being conducted at Mr. Olivier Baptist Church, under the direction of the Rev. H. Minor pastor.
Mrs. Jerome Dolman, of Falmouth avenue, has been confined to her home several days, suffering from a severe fever. The Teachers' and Parents' Association held its first meeting of the season on Monday, April 16, Prof. Jesse Nichols, principal, with the co-operation of the community workers, has advanced social conditions 100 per cent.
BARCLAY, MD.
Barclay, Md. — The harvest home service were well attended Sunday, March 16, by the Church. The Rev. Purnell, of Ridgesby, Md. preached. *On account of the bad weather school was postponed. *Education day will be observed at St. Daniel, on March 16, by Mrs. Richardson, Mr. and Mrs. Collier, Miss Bell, and Mrs. Clara Hins, moved Saturday evenings in Doe Park, on March 16, by Mrs. Day, *Mrs. Friend, of Chester, was the slater, motored to Skipon, last Sunday, *Mrs. Collier, and the Rev Hollis, Thursday.*
GIRDLETREE MD
Gidletree, Md.—Box Iron School, Miss Taylor, teacher, gave a very successful Hallowe'en social at St. Matthew's Church, October 29th. Proceeds were divided between the Junior Epworth League and the school. On Sunday, November 1st, Dr. G. R. Waters, of New Jersey, field agent of the Pension Bureau of the M. E. Church, lectured at St. Matthews Church, the Rev. J. R. Nichols, pastor. Edward Fisher, a student of Box Iron School, is ill with typhoid fever. Snow Hill dodge ball team will play Box Iron School, November 6th.
BARTONSVILLE, MD
Bartonville, Md.-Sunday-school was conducted at St James Academy, an independent, Miss Edna Bowie, Epworth League was held at St James Academy, Roy Bowie, Austin Bowie, Theatres, Beatrice, Edna and Maggie Bowie, Theatrical unit will be held at a circuit rally will be held at the church, November 22th. *Miss Bowie* will assume her duties as school teacher. *Lester Bowie*, a student at Storer College, has returned to school. *Lester* home, has returned to school. *Sunday* was daily day for the Sunday-school at St James Chapel. A program was rendered.
EAST NEW MARKET, MD
East New Market, Md.—The services at Mt. Zion on Sunday were largely attended. The pastor preached, after which the Holy Communion was administered. Dr. J. W. Jefferson was present at the Sunday-school and gave a very inspiring address. The Bible class was largely attended. At 8 p. m. the Rev. Robert Thomas, of Bridgeville circuit preached. The oyster supper, given by the parsonage committee on the 29th inst., was a financial success. The annual Harvest Home will take place at Mt. Zion on the 5th, 7th, 8th and 9th inst. A sacred concert will be rendered November 8th at 8 p. m. The Rev. M. V. Waters visited his daughter, Thelma, at Princess Anne Academy, on October 29th. Mrs. Hattie Matthews, Mrs. Mary Ross and Miss Gertrude Conawoy spent Sunday in Wilmington, Del. Miss Ella Jones spent the week end at her home in Ardmore, Pa. The Third Quarter Conference was held at Mt. Zion on Monday evening.
BLAS
408-410 N
These Are Not Patent Med
Price of Remedies $1.00 & $2.00
Throat & Lung Balsam
For Long-Standing, -Strubborn Hacking Cough. For Catarral Bronchitis, Asthma. Honoriness, Loss of Voice, Loss of Flesh. A Desirable Support Treatment in Comsumption (pulmonary) and all Waiting Disorders. Price $1.00 and $2.00.
Cough & Asthma
Syrup
It relieves that shortness of breath.
It stops that ticking cough.
It removes the pains and lightness in the chest.
It relieves the cough when you its down.
Those who have taken a heavy cold should with this use BLAZER ASTHMA MOXE. Price $1 and $2.
Cold & Grip Capsules
Will cure a cold in one day; break up shills and fever over night.
They stop the pain, aches and soreness in the body and arms or arms over night.
They break up coughs and tightness in chest. Head-colds, malaria. They move more easily day day. Price 50c, 103
Sore Throat Remedy will relieve throat in one day. ENLARGED TONSILLS Ulcerated Uterus, Hormone Hairloss Ulcerated Uterus, Bronchitis, 50c, 100.
Bronchial Cough
Svrup
It stops that tickling cough and wheat
stomach. It stops the cough. It stops the shortness of breath. It stops the pain and lightness in chest
and back. It stops the Grippy Gripy
suits. Price $1.00. $2.00.
Special Consumption
Nervine
For extrem nerveousness, sleepiness, twitching, nervous dyspepsia, headaches despondent, curvature of curving in stenosis and all nervous disorders.
Tape $1.00, mailed, $2.00.
Tape Worm Remedy
Will expel the worm in 24 hours. Price $1.00 and $2.00.
Price $1 and $2
Female Better Health
Tablets
A vegetable compound for the treat
weaknesses and disorders peculiar to the
weaknesses and disorders peculiar to the
have proven a blessing to thousands of
well
well
With these tablets see BLASS' DOUCHE
POWDER
HAGERSTOWN, MD.
HAGERSTOWN, MD.
WESTMINSTER, MD
Westminster, Md. — Hiram Carroll
Jonse, 76, died Monday night, at 50th Union street, after a long illness. He leaves his wife, and one son, Adolphus, two daughters, Mrs. Mary Chase and Mrs. Rosie Brown, of this city. He was a member of Union Street M. E. Church. Mr. Jones was formerly of New Market, but moved to this city 30 years ago. He has one grandchild in the U.S. Navy, in California, and two grandchildren at home. Funeral services was held Wednesday, 2 p. m., by the Rev. J. A. Reid, Pallbearers were, Messrs. Grace McGruder, Reid Sheffield, Ello Diggs, Charles Bellive, Norris Jones, Elmer E. Myers, Interment in Ellsworth cemetery. A rally held at Union Street N. E. Church, Sunday, October 25th, was largely attended. Lester Waller received a very painful wound by piercing his hand with a screw driver, working at Kroop Shop. Mrs. Florida Brown of New Windsor, visited friends in this city, Sunday, last. Burgess Bell visited relatives and friends in Baltimore, Sunday, A Halloween Party was held at Union Street Community Hall last Friday night.
NEW MARKET, MD.
New Market, Md.-On account of the rainy weather last Sunday the Newly organized choir met at the parsonage this week and made Miss Laila Pinkett and Miss Rosie Lee Wells attended the teachers' meeting last Saturday, October 16. Miss Catherine Pinkett, teachers of Thompson Mission, gave a Halloween party at the school on Friday, oyster supper given at this church Thursday evening, November 6th, by the trustees. James Cameron, president, and Roland Thomas, secretary.
ELKTON, MD.
Elkton, Md. — The Elkton Literary Club held its weekly meeting at the home of Miss Reba Hughes, on Wednesday evening. The evening was spent discussing a booklet on "Federal Aid to Negro Education," by Kelly Miller. Refreshments were served. The following persons were present: Medams Kinsley, Price, Dorsey, Johnson, Gottlieb, Bryant, Misses Hughes, Alexander, Crosby, Mathews, Bragwood, Messrs. Washington, Jones, Chase, Gottlieb and Wonderson. Last week the club held its meeting at the residence of Mrs. F. A. Bryant. Those present were: Mos-dames Bryant, Johnson, Goins, of Baltimore; Kinsley, Gottlieb, Price, Dorsey, Brown, Hodges, Misses Alexander, Cav-itt, Hughes, Braywood, Washington, Messrs. Chase, Gottlieb, Washington and Woodton. R. S. Chase attended the Lafayette-Colgate game in Philadelphia, last week. Miss Alyce Hughes, of Philadelphia, spent the week-end visiting her aunt, Mrs. Grace Hodges. J. Stanley James was a visitor here Sunday. Mrs. B. B. B. B. was a visitor here and friends motored to Philadelphia, last Sunday. The Rev. Mrs. P. E. Robinson is improving, after four weeks of illness. The funeral of Frank Thomas was largely attended at Bethel A. M. E. Church. The Rev. P. E. Robinson affiliated. The Rev. J. H. Dutton is pastor.
Tuesday, 5 P. M., Dead Line
ISS, Dru
10 N. Gay St., Baltimore
Medicines, True and Tried Re
$2.00 Sizes. Cash with order,
Tonic Nux & Iron
The great hailer and strengthener. It helps you better health, strength, energy, force, Force and ambition. It enriches your body and puts flesh on you. Also regulates the bowels.
Kidney & Bladder Tea
For weak up at night. For backache. For kidney or colon colored urine, too frequent desire to urinate; suppressed or, if severe, irritated information of the Bladder. It eliminates waste recirculation from the system and prevents recirculation.
Price $1.00 and $2.00
Rheumatism - Neuritis
For all kinds of rheumatism, swelling of the joints, inflammatory, sciatica, neuralgia, neuritis, lumbago, swelling of the knee, wrist and elbow, pleurisy, pains in
Heart Tonic
Recommended for Fluttering, Nervous
Feelings. Fruity, Irregular Pulse. Sootheing or
Feeling. Sootheing Faints. Blue Lips. Tobacco
Haze and Nervous Heart. Price $1.60
and $6.00.
Dyspepsia, Indigestion
and Gas
For Cotivation, racinee, stomach.
For Pain, racinee, stomach.
Perthumb, executive bake, sour stomach.
pains after sating and all stomach troubles.
Price $1.00 and $2.00.
Sweet Pink Powders
A valuable remedy for children when Feverish, Constipated, Droopy, Vomiting, Teething, Greenish Colored Stools, Bad breath. If given in time will prevent spams.
Price $5c and $1.00
Incontinence Mixture
For bed-wetting in children and aged persons.
Price $1.00 and $2.00.
Blass' Pile Ointment
Remedy
Ecuma, tetter, barbers' like, ring,
worms; scaly eumphs and all things
diseases of the skin. Give instant relief.
Price $8.00 and $1.00
Children's Whooping
Cough Syrup
50 Cents and $1.00
CUT PRICES ON PATENT MEDICINES
CATONSVILLE, MD.
Catonville, Md.-Miss Marcela Bennett will be the solist, Sunday morning, and will be the host of the Commonwealth concert band, of Baltimore, will give a talk, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Wilson, of Melrose avenue, have as their guest, for one week, the two children, Lavanda, and Kenned Sells, and mother, Mrs. Mamie Sells, and Mrs. Alvin Davis, all from Catonville. The King and Queen Rally held at Catonville on Friday night, October 29, was a success. The rally netted $675.00. Mrs. Chrina Williams, of Catonville, Karl Henderson have moved to Bloomingdale avenue, next to Mr. and Mrs. Karl Henderson. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Matthew have moved from Shiploy avenue to 177 Winterside. Mrs. Jennie Bronski moved to St. Mary's County last. Thursday and apologized for missing her mother, Mrs. Miller.
Miss Gladys Matthew underwent an operation on her hip in last week at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Francis Coe is a delegate to the Alline League Convention, which is holding a meeting at Handy A Church, Baltimore. Presiding Elder, P. J. Jordan will proach at Grace A, B Church, Sunnyside. He will attend the 16th. Quarent, November 16th. Little Helen Harris is benighted weekly by John Hopkins Hospital for her surgery.
Gollette King will render a special program in the Allen league at Grace University. Mrs. Sarah Foreman, 2 Falkerville avenue, had as a daughter, Davis, her sister, who she has not seen for 18 years. Mrs. Sophia Altrea will provide to Providence the WKREK.
EROSTBURG, MD.
Frostburg, Md.—Daniel Galloway met with an accident last week in the mines when he had his foot mashed, and two of his boys broken. He was carried to the Miners Hospital for treatment. He is still in the hospital, but is improving. "Mrs. Helen West, of Fairmont, W.V., is home, spending some time with her parents," Henry Able, of Ohio, is home no his vacation. While here, he is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Taylor. "Mrs. Lula Clarke and her son and daughter, James and Pannell, have returned home. While on their vacation they visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarke of Frederick, Md., and Miss Annie Xie and the South Daugherty, of Washington, D. C., Mrs. Lizzie Webster of Cumberland, Md., was in the city last week, visiting her daughter, Mrs. Henry Redman, and friends. "Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Carter, Leroy, and Mrs. Virginia Mary Jane, Ernestine and Master Paul Carter, and Mrs. Elizabeth Simpson, Mack E., Jr., and little Miss Beatrice Simpson, all motored to Creeptown, Md. "Harry R. Carter is making a wonderful progress in his taxi business." Those who visited the A. M. E. parsonage last week were Mrs. Rosa Davis and Mrs. Lizzie Webster, of Cumberland, Mr. and Mrs. William, of Pittsburgh, and the as-un-served president held at Dickerson A. M. E. Church last Sunday. All the services were well attended. The Sunday-school convened at 2 p. m. The Sunday-school teachers meeting is held each Thursday evening, under the superintendant, Mrs. Pannell Daugherty.
Thieves Use Dope
Hagerstown, Md.-The great success-attending the chicken thieves operating around Gavestown and Chippewa was attested this morning to the use of dope or some-powerful drug in the form of powder. The powder is thrown into the coops and when the birds become quiet the thieves enter with their sucks.
PIANO LESSONS
For Particulars call or write
1119 W. Saratoga St.
Wednesday and Friday Evenings
from 6 to 8, or at
87 Winters Avenue
CATONSVILLE 11
ggist
e, Md.
remedies for 35 Years
mailed $1.25. C. O. D. $1.35
New Life Tablets
FOR MEN
For least, most, most serious, seminal
weakness, nightly emissions, debilis,
and impotence. They act as a general
stress system. They need your worm-
work. $200 and $2.00.
Hot Flushes
Women between 40-45, due to change of life, usually use Cold Sweat, Cold Sweat, Neutroneus, Sheeplanes, Dependency, The conditions will be relieved by the Special Remedy. Price $1.00 and $2.00. High Blood Pressure
Tablets
Symptoms: Dipy skinp. pain in top of head, nervous attack. Headaches. Blepharitis. Price $1.00 and $2.00. Boxes.
Acid Stomach Powder
For gaseous stomach, swelling and puffiness. Bolishing, sour stomach, after eating and all stomach troubles. Price $1.00 and $2.00.
Nerve-Tonic Tablets
For extreme, nervous pain, apoptosis, headache, despondency. Lump in throat, quivering in head. All nervous disorders. Price $1.00 and $2.00.
Blood Tonic and
Purifler
For Skin Blemishes, eruptions and itching, skin diseases, inherited blood disease, scrofulous sores, catarrh, white patches on tongue, blotches on face and body. Price $1.00, $1.00, $2.00 and $3.00. Stomach and Liver
Regulator
For billowness, habitual constipation,
dizziness, sick or nervous headache, loss of
fuel, cough, food, food, breath, jaundice; sour gassen sore,
liver and intestinal tremor. Price $1.00
and $2.00.
Gall-Stone Tab's
Symptoms: Jaundice, habitual constipation,
dizziness, loss of fuel, food, breath, jaundice; sour gassen sore,
liver and intestinal tremor. Price $1.00
and $2.00.
Gall-Stone Tabs'
Symptoms: Jaundice, habitual constipation,
dizziness, loss of fuel, food, breath, jaundice; sour gassen sore,
liver and intestinal tremor. Price $1.00 and $2.00
per box.
P. D. Q. Dremedy
FOR SOCIAL DISEASES
$1.00 and $2.00
RUNNING DISEASES $1.00 and $2.00
Trusses
I have been biting and selling trusses
Drufts, Bed and Doodle Fans
Douche Powder
Cooling, Cleaning and Healing, Price 40c,
60c, and $1.00.
ONE WEEK'S USE BRINGS MAGIC CHANGE IN SKIN SAYS MISS NAOMI BEST
CUMBERLAND
Cumbreland, Md.—Holy Communion was administered at Metropolitan A.M. on 12th of March 1887. The pastor, Rev. S. R. Drummond, preached morning and night at Harry Fisher gave a Hallowell social in the basement of the church, east Friday evening. A flan supper will be given by a committee of ladies, on November 13th. The Martha Burgee Mite Missionary and Metropolitan A. M. E. Church will hold their regular monthly meeting at the residence of Mrs. Louise H. Leary, Frederick Street. A Children's Bazaar will be given by Mrs. Hilda Pough, on November 25th, 26th, and 27th, for the benefit of the church. Mrs. Hattle McNeal is spending the week with her daughter, Miss Rebecca McNeal, of Martinsburg, VA.
Mrs. James A. Halston, Nettie Darr, E Green, Helen B. and Misses J. B. Banks Lilliam Banke, A. Taylor, and Tohert, at the taking courses at the Maryland Hospital, in training nursing. The A. C. E. League of Metropolitan A. M. E. Church rendered an excellent program last Sunday evening. Miss Sylvia Stevens is chairman of the top-class committee, and A. Temple, president of the League. The Rev. S. R. Drummond, Mrs. Lee F. Drummond, and Miss Esther Drummond, motored a night at Baltimore last week and spent a night in Frederick. Md., the guests of Mrs. Marie Barnes.
MIDGELY MD
Ridgely, Md.—The official board met Monday night. All month, 11 members of the board met in Benton Downs left Thursday for an indefinite crowd from Philadelphia came on the excursion last Sunday. Lee Smith, of Denton, was quietly married at Trinity parsonage and declared. Pref. and Mrs. Washington, of Easton, motored here to the congregation of Trinity Church. Services were well attended at Trinity E. I. Purnell preached. Holy Communion was served by the usual hour. A. C. E. League at 7 p. m. If you want to know more news, read the AFRO-MERCAN
DENTON, MD.
Denton, Md. The services at church were well attended. At John Wesley,塞勒, Md. Preached morning and evening. *Harold Lewis has returned after spending a year in Ford, of Atlantic City. *William Stanford, of Atlantic City. *spent the week in Ford. *The monthly teachers' meeting was held in the high school on Saturday presided over by Mrs. J. D. Ward, county supervisor. *Those on the slick impaired, Mrs. Florence Lewis, Mrs. Adline Lewis, Mrs. Wilminson Lewis, Mrs. Arthur, Wayman, who spent three months in the sanitarium on account of failing health, and home on Friday. October 31st the funeral was held at Bethel A. M. E. Church. The Rev. Theodore E. B. J. Bullen, pastor of John Wesley M. E. Church. Resolutions were read by F. W. H. Survived by his wife, two children and other relatives.
DICKERSON, MD.
Dickerson, Md.-The Rev. J. F. Monroe preached at Hills Chapel, Sunday, "The Lord's Prayer," and caged with Mrs. Gordon Strong, white. "Miss Bernice Posey and her cousin, Miss Genevieve Posey, and their visiting relative, Washington, D. C., Mrs. Marshal Grason, of Adamstown, were the guests at dinner at her brother-in-law, Hurh Johnson, and a party at the home of his guest William Brown, of Rockville. "Quite a few are expected to attend the joint Guests to be held Monday." Miss John Proctor is on the sick list.
COCKEYSVILLE, MD.
Cookeyville, Md.—The Rev. Max H. Dorsey, preached Sunday morning at the Church of the Holy Apostle after meals and Bible Communion, *Sunday*, November 8th, there will be a grand rally. The Rev. Robert A. Acee of Baltimore will preside at 4 p. m., subject, *A Sunrise Man in Town tonight*, and Mr. Willis in Town tonight. Mr. Danielle the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chase, at Texas, on Sunday evening. Mrs. Iddie spent the evening at the dinner more. *Mrs. Lee Davenport spent a week with parents in Laurel.*
SKINNY MEN
Thin Men
Run Down Men
Nervous Men
You probably know that Cod Liver Oil is the greatest flesh product in the world. Because it contains more Vitamins than any food you can get. Because that Cod Liver Oil comes in auger coated tablets now, so if you really want to put 10 or 20 pounds of solid healthy flesh into a jar, you should ask any druggist for a bo. of McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets. It costs 20 cents for 60 tablets and if you don't gain five pounds in 30 days your druggist is authorized to hand you back the money you paid for it. It isn't anything unusual for a person to gain 10 pounds in 30 days, and genetically Cod Liver Oil Tablet."
ONE WEEK'S U
MAGIC CHA
SAYS MIS
Miss Best, 58 Montgomery St.,
Newark, N. J., in a letter
says, "Dr. Fred Palmer's
Skin Whitener is very won-
derful. I have used it only
one week and it has made a
great change in my skin".
This is only one of the many hundred of voluntary letters received daily, glorifying Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations. It is simply amazing the way these marvellous beauty preparations make even the darkest skin lighter, clearer and free from pimples, freckles, oiliness, large, ugly pores and snags of life, from Maine to California and from the Great Lakes to the Gulf, are improving their beauty, renewing the youthful texture of their skin and lightening their complexions with Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations, and there is a special preparation for each need. The Skin Whitener for lightening the complexion; Skin Whitener Soap and Powder for smoothing and beautifying the complexion and Hair Dresser for properly grooming mildly dressed eyes. The Powder no matter how dark, muddy or oily, Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment will transform it like magic into a lovely, soft, gelty skin—the
EASTON, MD.
一
Services as usual at Bethel A. M. E. Church. Sermon morning and evening by the pastor, the Rev. W. H. Baker. Communion was served at both services at which time quite a number of men, who had been serving in the diocese, attended the evening services.
• Isaiah Stewart has returned to England, after spending a few days in Balmore at Johns Hopkins Hospital, for treatment. He is a member of the Church of the Church of the Week-end with his mother, Mrs. Gooby. He is a member of the Church of the Week-A. Matthews spent Friday here at the guest of his sister, Mrs. Hartie.
• The first of these is the Rev. James of Hammondtown, John Thanton, Isaac Stewart, Mrs. Martha West, and Mrs. Rosa E. Johns, or Talbot Lane. • Mr. and Mrs. J. Wayman Johnson have the second of these. • Mr. and Mrs. J. Wayman Johnson have the third of these. • Mrs. and Mrs. J. Wayman Johnson have the fourth of these. • Mrs. and Mrs. J. Wayman Johnson have the fifth of these.
• The first of these is the Rev. Alastair the diocesan of Asbury M. E. Church, began Sunday, November 1, and will last until November 30th. Sunday morning sermon was by the Rev. W. A. T. Miles. Sunday-school, 2 p. m., Saturday, November 1, and will last until November 4th.
• The second of these is the Rev. W. N. Holt. Alastair, the Junior Church. 7 o'clock. Epworth League, Miss Alaverta Banks, presiding. Evening service, sermon by the Rev. W. N. Holt.
• The third of these is the Rev. J. Hubbard, of Church Hill, Md., visited friends here last week. • Charles H. Hodges spent the week-end in Baltimore. • Mr. and Mrs. John Harris gave a party in honor of their daughter, the third-month sister, the guest included Misses Minnu Demby, Bita Wing, Maude Harris, Messrs. Jno. Dohson, Lewis Nixon, Milton Greene, William Lewis, Howard Gibson, Milton Brown, and Mrs. William B. B. and Mrs. and Mrs. Walter Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sampson, Little Pauline Harris, Gibson and Dorothy Cornish. The house was beautifully decorated, and the room was a number of beautiful recessed quite a number of beautiful and useful presents. • Lewis T. Chase, who has been very ill, is improving.
BRUNSWICK, MD.
PRINCESS ANNE MD
Princess Anne, Md.—Sunday, the Rev. D. W. Henry, assisted by Joseph H. Hayman, administered the Holy Sacrament to 256 persons. Mrs. Little Johnson, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Wilson, Hawkin Avenue, left October 26th for Philadelphia. Wm. L. Gale left October 30th for Atlantic City. The Princess Anne Academy Quartet left for an extended trip to Philadelphia and New York. The Academy football team left on the same day for Bordentown, N. J., returning Sunday evening with a score, 14-6, favor of Bordentown. Mrs. Martha Waters, Upper Palmount, Md., is visiting her mother, Mrs. Emma Nutter Beckford, Anne, Mrs. Margaret H. Rector was the dinner guest of Mrs. Pauline R. James, Sunday, November 1st. Phillip Dennis, Walter Bacon and Thos. Dennis, of Dennistown, have recently purchased a new Pard truck. Wm. James Jr., of Bowie, Md., is visiting his family on Washington Heights. "Isane King, of Clarton, Pa., is at home for an indefinite stay." Mr. and Mrs. G. Samuel Hayman left Tuesday, November 3rd, for a visit to Philadelphia. The stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nixon, Beckwood street, leaving a bouncing boy.
LAKE LAND, MD
Lakeland, Md.-Services were con-
cluded at the Church. The Rev. F. P. Turner, J.
pastor in charge. *The moving pictures
night on account of inclement weather,
were held at the church on Monday,
March 15. Mrs. J. Turner, president,
Ladies' Aid, Mrs. Marge Magle, pres-
ident, is now the pastor in charge.
First Baptist Church of Lakeland, Ho-
*Mrs. Nannie Tate is a patient at
Freedman's Hospital. *Master Henry
Brooks, underwent an operation at
Freedman's Hospital last week. *Mrs.
Brooks, underwent an operation at
Friday evening to visit her daughter
Mrs. Effie Steward. *Little Miss Dor-
ney is improving slowly. *Miss J. Buck
freen, who has been sick for some time,
is improving slowly. *Miss J. Buck
day. *The Halloween party given by
the residence of Mrs. Rosa Brooks, on
Saturday night, proved to be quite
confined to her home with a bad cold.
blotches and the tan marks vanish, pimple clear up, the skin becomes clearer and lighter and the excessive oil which causes "shine" disappears.
Women everywhere are simply wild about Dr. Fred Palmer's Soap Powder for the delicate skin. Fragments of the skin the skinny and has a soft satiny appearance, Wind does not blow it off, it prevents oil from forming on the skin and keeps the skin from chapping in all kinds of weather.
Dr. Fred Palmer has developed the most marvellous Hair Dressing known to science. It makes the hair straight, soft, long and luxuriant, removes dandruff, keeps the hair healthy and makes the hair grow. No hair too stiff or crinkly to it. to imiture.
Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener
Preparations—four all—in Skin
Whitener, Skin Whitener Soap,
Skin Whitener Powder and Hair
Dressing—may be bad from almost
the same reason as race people. Be sure you get the
genuine by insisting upon Dr. FRED
Palmer's, and if your dealer cannot
supply you, they will be sent direct
from the laboratory upon receipt of
the sample. You will receive a dollar. If you want to try before you buy, send 4c in stamps for free samples of Skin Whitener Ointment, Skin Whitener Face Powder,
and Skin Whitener Soap address-
Dr. Fred Palmer's laboratories,
Dept. R, Al., Gt. 6.
Darlington, Md.—Sunday, October 18, was quarterly meeting with the staff and charges of services. He preached an interesting sermon in the morning, and charged a holiday, Sunday, October 28th, at 3 p. m., the reopening exercises were held by the seers were: the Rev. C. E. Walker, pastor of Hosanna Baltimore, Mrs. Aledeo Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Davis, David Gould Maryland, Mrs. Aledeo Roberts, Mrs. Mary Jenkins, M. Jackson, Miss Alexander, Joseph Spriggs, Miss Josephina Baltimore, Mrs. Aledeo Roberts, motored from Baltimore, Sunday, and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Bond, Attorney and Mrs. Minkle Presbytery, Chas. Bond and Miss Minkle Presbytery, Mrs. Bond, Mrs. Minkle Presbytery, Mrs. Minkle Presbytery, recently spent some time with her brother and sister-in-law, Mrs. Wesley, of Pennsylvania, recently visited his son and daughter-in-law, The Rev. Wesley, motored to Baltimore Sunday night with attorney Roy Bond.
Long Green, Md.—The Rev. J. C. McKaddy preached at the Rev. J. C. McKaddy preached at the Lord's Supper. "Mrs. Janette Newman and son, and Mrs. Janette Newman and son, and Mrs. Easwyn Gwynn for a week. "A large crowd from Saturday night, october 31st. "Mrs. Anna Grege and children for the past week. Henry Price, who was confined to his bed with pleurisy, Violet and Eva Jenkins spent the week-and with their parents at Fulleton, Violet and Eva Jenkins attended the medical service, of Summerfield, attested the medical service, of Summerfield, John Wells, of Baltimore, spent Sunday with relatives in the house. The annual Harvest Home who will visit Sunday, November 16th. "Henry Cormwell is president; Lawrence Waters, vice-president; Wade Waters, vice-president; Rev. J. C. McKaddy, pastor. "Mrs. Hattie Cromwell is spending the winter with Mrs. May Wells, in
ABaby
of
Your Own
Thousands of copies of a wonderful book entitled "What Babies Can Compiled by a retired physician, are being distributed." WKY is a woman because of so many child-loving couples and so many childless bones. Nearly every baby has been brightened by a husband's love and this is best accomplished by correcting the condition that may
This booklet clearly describes a wonderful treatment known as the physician-inpatient by this physician in years of maternity hospital practice and how easy it is for women to learn the marvelous tone of instruction has been demonstrated by remarkable success in writing and writing for this valuable Free booklet because it contains information that the "STERIL-UAN" should be as helpful. This little booklet gives absolutely nothing. No Obstruction. Just send your name and address to The Nervano Company 211 New Nelson Bldg. Kansas City, Mo.
Kills Catarrh Germ In Three Minutes
Chronio catarrh, no matter how bad, and cases of bronchial asthma now occur in the United States of a French scientist. This drugless method called Lavex kills the garm in a matter of seconds, less to the most delicate tissues. Your head and lungs are cleaned like magic. Sufferers are relieved in a single night, and you can treat them to a million sufferers in one month. I offer to send a treatment free and without charge. It no obligation. No cost. If it cures you, you can repay the favor by telling your friends no more. You can tell them you have tried, and send me your name and address for this generous free treatment and prove that you are a patient. Kansas City, Mo.
ATE TOO FAST
South Carolinian Took Black-Draught For Indigestion, and Says He Could Soon Eat Anything.
Ballentine. S. G—Mr. W. B. Ballentine of this place, gave the following account of his use of Theodore's Black-Draught.
"Just after I married I had indigestion. Working out, I got in the habit of eating fast, which I chose to feel a tight blot feeling after meals. This made me very uncomfortable. I would feel stupid and drowse, didn't feel like working. I was told it was indigestion. Some one recommended I should eat and I took it after meals. I soon could eat anything any time.
"I use it for colds and billions and it will knock out a cold and carry away the bile better and I have ever found."
Eating too fast, too much, or faulty chewing of your food, often causes discomfort after meals. A pinch of Black-Draught, washed in a swallow of water, will help to brim up prompt relief of sensations, eructations, a baird and other common symptoms of indigestion have disappeared after Black-Draught has been taken for several days. NC164
Theforded
BLACK-DRAUGHT
LIVER MEDICINE
THE REASON WHY
At times you are more susceptible to coughs and colds than at other times. Medical science explains that the reason for this susceptibility is, the body is usually undernourished and its resistive powers weak.
SCOTT'S EMULSION
is the easy-to-take form of cod-liver oil, that is famous because of its power to help keep people well-nourished and in fullness of vigor. Take Scott's Emulsion regularly to ward off weakness!
Baltimore, Md.
FREDERICK, MD.
FREDERICK, MD.
Frederick, Md.—Services took place Sunday at Queen A. M. E. Church. The pastor preached morning and night. After which, he administered the Holy Communion to quite a number of members. The marriage of James Boyd and Cora Bowle; Meshel H. Hill and Gussle Palm took place last Tuesday evening. October 27th, at the A. M. E. parsonage. The Rev. C. T. A. and the pastor of the church. A supper was being people's concert and supper was given last Thursday evening at Quinn A. M. E. Church, by the Captains of the Trustee Rally. Mrs. George Dinney, of All Salts's street, is seriously ill. Mrs. Laura Boyd and Mrs. Carrie Mohamed, are much better. Mrs. Viola Onley, who has been to Chicago for four weeks, the guest of her uncle. Grafton, the guest of the Revenue, returned home. Miss L. L. Johnson, formerly of Eassex, now of Harlsburg, Pa., spent the weekend as the guest of her friends, the Rev. and Mrs. E. T. Addison, 105 Ezra Street. A Alpha Lodge, Knights of Pythias, No. 38, held a very impressive memorial service of the departed members of their ledge. Sunday at Fythian Hall, Dr. W. S. Brook, C. C. St. • Mr. and Mrs. Harris and Miss C. Scott, motored from Baltimore, last Sunday and were guests of Mrs. Ida Wilson Middle Street. • Mr. Charles Wilson, who has been quite sick, is much improved. • Robert Makel, who has been visiting his cousin, John Makel, of E. 5th street, has returned to his home in Atlantic City, N. J.
TOWN NECK MR
Town Neck, Md.—Under the direction of the Town Neck School teachers, the Heavenly Light Quartette, Jubilee singers of Norfolk, Va., gave a concert at the M. E. Church, Friday evening. The Rev. L. A. Carter, pastor of the Lutherville M. E. Church, presided, and among those who were present and spoke was Mrs. Edna Groomes, of Baltimore. The concert was given for the benefit of new decorations in the recently constructed school, which is one of the Rosenwald buildings. Mrs. Martha J. Carter is principal, and Mrs. Gertrude Flippen, assistant.
BERLIN, MD.
Berlin, Md.—Sunday, October 25th, during the absence of the pastor, the Rev. Coulburen, the Rev. J. J. Mack preached at St. Paul M. E. Church, The Rev. and Mrs. J. S. Coulburen spent the past week visiting his old home, Deals Island, Md. Wednesday evening, October 25th, Misses Charlotte Brittingham, Elsie and Grace Coulbourne, William Briddell and Lester Rayne mgored to Salisbury, Md., to attend the district rally concert given by the W. H. M. Society of the district. Misses Brittingham and E. Coulburen sang a duet. Sunday, November 1st, the Holy Communion was administered by the pastor and the Rev. J. L. Molock. Quite a number communed. In the afternoon the pastor and his choir members motored to Snow Hill, Md., where the pastor preached for the Rev. C. W. Winder and the choir rendered muscle. Harlson Moleck, of Atlanta City, is visiting his parents, the Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Molock, and son, Harrison, Jr., who is quite sick. Mrs. G. R. Stevenson, also of Atlantic City, was the house guest of the Coulbourne family the past week.
BOYAL OAK, MD.
Royal Oak, Md.—Sunday service at St. Paul Church was rendered as usual in the annual memorial services of the Order of Knight of Pythias and Court members, was held Sunday, November 1st. There was an oration by Mrs. J. B. Browne, the president of Philadelphia, is visiting Mrs. Annie Jenkins. *Miss Carrie Fields, after spending time with her husband Mrs. and Mrs. James Fields, is now in Philadelphia for the winter, Mrs. Laura Lowis, of Baltimore, Mrs. Robert Lowis, of Baltimore, Thomas of New Road, *Mrs. Harriet Wheatley and daughter, Mrs. Georgia Moore held a plic social on Tuesday.
NOTED INDIAN DR. DISCOVERS PREPARATION THAT GROWS HAIR TWO INCHES LONGER IN TWO MONTHS
Willing to Give Free Samples to All Readers of This Paper to Prove Merits of His Discovery.
Several years ago in Gold Valley, California, two boys were playing a game of rock battle, and accidentally struck a bone in the neck, and the founder of the World Famous Blood Medicine, Herbs of Life was called in to press the case, and he was told to suffer with a fractured skull and conclusion of the brain. Dr. Hanna started a case with patients who were suffering to bring about satisfactory results; and at the end of thirty days, the patients had her hair over the bristled spot had grown to such a remarkable degree that both her family and Dr. Delano; so much so, that the doctor said she had been using on her hair during the treatment. Her reply was that she had been using on her hair during the ointment prescribed by the doctor.
With the given information, the doctor can find out more about the treatment and its connections with the roots and its connections with the twenty-seven months. Dr. Dehnan announced that he had discovered a certain chemical, and mixed together with pure Cocoanut All and California certain chemicals, and mixed together with pure Cocoanut All and California a healthy luxurant growth of hair. After finding that the experiment had one hundred cases, Dr. Dehnan placed his preparation on a table. Dr. Dehnan placed Dela Lolo on Cocoanut Hair Grower. From that day until the prescience and uninterrupted success. In Dr. Dehnan's research, he discovered a new solution for the infection (Sebum), and that hair roots very seldom die. Remove the infected hair roots from the prescience has shown that under most bald scalps the hair roots of his prescience is confident that his Coco-Tar Hair Grower is superior to his previous prescience to give a free sample to every reader of this paper who will send his or her prescience to the HE-BS OF LIFE INDIAN MEDICINE COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
Page
---
LONG GREEN, MD.
ABaby
Of
Yeur Own
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in Home Without a Baby
compiled by a retired pri-
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|Saturdey, November 7___Call VEmon 6016 _. The Afro:American—South’s Biggest and Best Weekly
Saturday, November 7 Call Vr 0
‘GHIGAGO SECRETARY |Skull Fractured 5 BRIDE :
ENDS VISIT tn By sposuog Gx. oOseuw OF SeaME In The vb
et Another -probable victim « was} , pS as ~* DUNBAR JUNIOR HIGH. SCHOOL /IMte
3 added to the mounting auto accident fag aR RENT IIne | saroline and Jefferson Streets ie
George Arthut Former “Y" Guanine xcattintsns| Cian a = emimetamar ac 1
Secsibagy Mave) vacesiona PEAS OO, Tt Lo cent ute a ee
tocaten a street car. Mee eee from In md. toe Seon leeaon In Ei
‘WHR Relatives [aaateaeeaee cident a umber « fe Psa aes "ati ntrte
Inaietehmacie avai) 7/9 GM taker ates NN el ne oe cet an
hoted the license ‘number and I. | pee nae eae NN The cechnique of, the teacher mas 2 |P"2
eis oF ms work. [fuein“cht Siti)” jae gee | eee re
IN WINDY CIT Y/|Atthe St. Joseph Hospital Mrs. Rob-| «| MagMebat ict Reed A etsts ‘ue puplis to the correct so- | tha
[denn med beet fo a eed wht Se
M,C. A, There Has Ane/WOMAN SLAYER SENT] (225 ge 2 A | ee
nual Budget Of $105,000) 79. (2 eX oo eee eens
Yearly TO JAIL-THIRD TIME | eee ee era Pa Pee
| Peo peeiow rast). alg Aciheer. SSeaa 4 * fie Rindergarton and First Grado, Mie | Sch
George Arthur, a former Baltimo-
conn, and now general secretary of
the Wabash Avenue Granch of the
‘Young Men's Christian Association,
Chicugo, stopped over In the elty en
route to bis home to spend a few
days with his slater, Mrs. Edna Har’
ris, 2012 Druld BA Avenue,
In sneaking of Chicago to & rep-
renentative uf tho APRO-AMERL-
CAN, Mr, Arthur said: "Ag vou prob-
ably know. our city: Is a sereat come
Juerctal and industrial center where
things aro one on. a. very ‘large
seale, Tum happy to say that this
spirit of large conceptions and great
execntions Is being deeply. imbived
hy our own group. ‘This 18 shown
fn the large and. magnificent -homes
and ehurehes which “are constantly
being aquired: fn the, vers bis ei
terprises they are undertaking, and
in the tremendous advances being
made. in profexstonal and technical
pursuits
We have two colored banks vith
aggresiie resources lolulling erecte
Aggrerate resources approximating
$2,000.00." ‘These have provided
Yeu! seryice in financing colored us-
ines enterpriges and saving home
property and churches to colored
urchasers,
Our ¥. Mf C. A. has become the
center around “whieh many of the
Activities of our group revolve. The
Churches rogard us ay qcsirong 20
fo them In providing heahful wetly-
ities for wkhich most of them ave
hot eulipped: mothers look pon Us
ax supplying a wholesame _ntmos-
Shere for thelr hoys: lo many men
Weare 4 20rt of poor men’s elub. and
te Inusiness tnd processional ‘mei
lensing house for des.
‘During the yeu $92 bora were
eared for at our summer camp,
cores of religious meetings were
held. and mumerous conferences of
Hwusthase and professional men tor
the selutton of many of the nroblems
that arise im the course) of (hole
work. In mang of the great com:
Ynereiat and industrial plants in
which members of our group. are
cinployed, feequentty ell Upon us to
Aeblirate iifferences that arise.
Some iden af tie Iiness of our
operations nay be grasped when you
Tenen that our next birder will call
for an expenditure of $193,000 for
the year, Despite. some untoward
elrenmstainees, | feel Justitied In say
ing that the wuttook for colored peo.
Me Jn Chieage Ig deeldediy hopeful.”
‘Mir, Arthur left for heme Monday,
eropping In New York City and Ruf.
falo where, In Ue latter elty, plans
Gre nearing ‘completion for a. new
And ltra-modern Y. M. C. A. bitid-
ing for colored work.
15,820 USED
sho, pita. bathe wtb. Wid. by
1083 Retteha durinyctaber and
HEA recreate Maundten at the
Bees ees Bans ot ee es
seer tore i ositmiaton:
‘Pils in, dervense, of 2.272. pers
sem PINE ayer aoe
Sho hain et the es
sic Wvnlora’ Argrle’ Aven Dath
Ay Es aa
FANE MO) the batts a tual of 9
ae al ss ae ot wa 8,008
Taneseat of fe
Sr a terotne treet, none
pie ah maton end 1At0 fenie,
TARE A2i? dea tive bathe.” The to
Lae Fe re Hl stron, near
Sette analy ani) 8 tome
maces Set cma ao Late pote
ROLES ian
Dr. Weglein To Speak
te, David. Waele, white, net
aerate ot buns Sele wl
Laney ne aah in uae enn
Se oe eee E tune of the
Se een ean aeitree coats
Se er ik Spee Anais
Hs aamemt aie. hw? ohio Ana
Nila Gresidene and John 3k Coton,
awashnigton tT Cardozo, was de-
Matai fom_princival of the Mone
raotety eheoT te the rank. 0€ teach.
samy eof the Sanrde
‘citacees whe, has ‘been In the
scheut sistem for more than {wen
se Sete chanced with nee
Hee Sa Ore eters Cation ta
Helene,” seams ‘suersisng, principal
iS'peinciont
E. Bernard Taylor
Was Granted Pivorce
crit 1, Bergan Taslor, Yosal cate
erartog we Blais ttre, obtained &
GRErce guety thea his wa, es
Seer enon Sentember Iéth, as
Sather ated be weennas tn PNFL 2, oF
subsea Court ahis| week
"Gagan vecar, shot that testimony
om getiion in "which "att nslor
Parked ns wife ith sbangening him
See Tg toe was ken. Hefore
Sramitee Sanpington on Sune 0th,
See oe Teed (0 appa In A
Ae te une hinge.
"Rho tavlors were marced Jn March,
ait at Elects Cie andes
$k et aut dune 18, Wee! there
Seer laren’ Ave. Payton ene
Divs! in'"Wahington recent.
‘Afro Demurrem Sustained
The demurrer filed by Warner T.
3cCuinn, counsel for the AFRO. to
ihe deciacation inthe case ‘of David
Wailer: white versus. the APRO-
DMERICAN for £28,000 cor libel, wns
fustained by Judge Symington. in the
Sourt of Common Pisas, inst Satur.
‘Tho everant“wWalor, wae. sven
38 cays in whieh to fig an amended
i ase
Skull Fractured
| By Speeding Car
Aotner” yfotanie aim wae
added to the mounting auto aeeident
toll Thuraday’ when Sica, Anno. ob:
fonon, 402-5. Sard. street, sustained
airaetured skull” when” she. was
fenocked down ‘hy a'ear ad she ran
eaten area car.
Although the automobile fled te
stgp atiar the aceldent, » number of
people. whe witnessed’ the necldent
oted che icenss umber and fe Re
Washington, walter Caconstlle, was
Inter summoned: to ratte. Court
At the Se Joseph Sfosmtat Mrs. Rob:
inaon was reported to be in 4 serious
coniiom
Two Postponements And Jury
| Deadlock Retards Justice
In Jealousy Killing
GIRLS “HAD IT OUT”
IN FIGHT OVER MAN
Antagonist Waited Hours To
Attack Her, Accused Girl
Says
| After her trial had heen postponed
for the third time, Mise Ruth Lew!s,
2, 127 Druld Jill Avenue, charged
win the murder of Miss Sadie
Dorsey, 66 Greonwillow street. wats
gain sent buck to the elly jail to
awit future aetion when fury fall-
fod to aree and was dismissed Wed-
nesday.
‘On. three previous occasions the
youre woman ad been rout
the eourt room when lengthy pre-
eoding cases forced postponement
of the trial, ‘Wednesday the trial
teas caerled out but tailed to ternal:
nate when the jury, after three
houra ef debating. ‘informed the
court that they could not agree xnd
were disinissed.
Mine Lewis was charged with
stabbing to death the Dorsey girl
after the latter had threatened to
deat her about a, mun known to the
pollee as "Gent." Axcording to the
Story’ told by the git? on the stand
Sadie Dorsey and she had had tron:
ble about the min In question when
the former eame to hor home and
sald she would watt outside untit she
Appeared. For aeveral hours, the
Eiri stated, sho was afraid to. eave
the house’ as her rival stationed
horsele near the door with a larKe
elub. Being able to stand It a9 lon-
fer she took small Ienige and went
out, She wirs assallod by tho girl
And. stabbed her in. self-dotense,
"The jury falled to agree when
somo of the mamhers contended that
the act wax premeditated while otl-
fer were of the opinion that it was
purely manslaughter.
‘Theoglore Conway Gives Ada Expla-
hation of Presence In Race olfuse
A color complex led Northwestern
District pelles to raid the house at
512 Asbuey court early Sunday
tharning and resulted in ight per-
cong being fined ont charge of Als
orderly conduct atter i hearing.
‘According to a atatoment mule hy
‘Theodore IK. Conway, white. 1316
Pennsylvania: avenue, he wes nxelng
the house when he save x very fal
Wonian talking. (a colored man.
Thinking she was a white worn,
he hieeaina angry and went over to
Investigate, “While he was making
sure that she was colored, another
woman Mary” Goldebrough, | 697
Greenvillow streat, eame out of the
Rouge and Tovited ‘him in. hy mpite
at the fact tat there wns no daub
ak to Mary's raciat Identity Conway
ecepted the invitation nnd entered
the huuse.
Police Interfere
‘The complex Arew when a police.
man my Conway entering the col
cred home and the four of soela
equality tend him to call out a rai
ing aqund. Six porshns taken from
the house’ were ned $5 nnd. costs
They wore Rahiert Carter. 164, Or
ford strent: Nelle Brown. 934 Little
Pine “street: Mary Goldhrongh. 601
Greenwillow street: Goorge Lewis
Toranto, Canada.
‘Richard Collins, owner of the
hose was diemisced when he test
fea the he had loft the howse jn
charge of Carter. An additonal fine
nf $28 was Inld upon Carter on 2
Charge of running n @isorderly
house.
ee
‘Eniertnin For Son
Mr.:and Mra, A. By Turner, O16
Genre Street, FAVS A masked parts
for thelr son, dames, and his
friends, Friday’ evening October 30.
The pasion and dining room was
Hecoruted to resemble q feld of earn,
‘with pumpleins, grapes. crepe paper,
sutifed dogs, rabbits and birds. Many
Eames were played after whieh he-
freshments. wera served ‘consisting
fof hot dogs. apples bn sticks, sweet
elder and hot pon corn, which was
hopped In an open fire in the mid-
‘Ale of the field. :
Mist Gemldine Harris of New
Yorke has returned home-atter a de-
Hghteut visit (a thls elty ay the house
guest of Mes, Fda Cole Dillard.
$915, Druid Hil) Avenue.
On Wednesday evening, October
28, Misa Winifred Watera ang her
sister, Mrs. Bana Woters | Finney
eave a. surprise party for Thaddeus
Peck it thelr homes, 2036 McCulloh
Htreet. “he evening was pont, in
playing © "= Rundred and Whist, “at-
fer whieh w delighttul supper was
served,
—
Is Lawson N. Duffin, well known
contractor and {raternat man reclin-
ing ina watery grave or must the
alleged “sulelde reported after, the
finding of hls cont on a Locust Point
Ferry boat be explained some other
way?
“Ehis Is the question that is baftting
police authorities “after © week of
Searching failed to reveal his body.
ine ‘person or persons supposed
to have seen Dutfin in his leup have
police investigations. From the of-
fice of Chief Inspector Henry. it
falledto put in their appearance at
wag learned that there is a possi-
bility that the body could have been
caught In an under current and lost
inthe swift channels at thp mouth
of the bay.
‘At any Fate it was stated the body
should have come to the surface at
some point, after the third day.
This rule varies -with the weather
conditions, “bodier ‘oat "sooner “in
summer than In winter it was learn
ae
CLOSE-UP OF BRIDE
be ie sep
y ff o> |
ff as r ™’ 2
PN ied ae a es
fy Soe 2 Se ek
ee Hee See yee ae a
\Vee ae creieoe edie mG
Ve See eee) Pee oe ‘
to alae So Le i eee oS oe
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gee 2 ey ee Sern 7]
Nay 2 ee sx
Washington—Ara, Gertrude Curtis-Norris, young, society woman, r¢
cont weenSd'to DE Fleming H. Sorts, Peueraburg, Va.
ee cc et
oh, eS
buon axioge, mp,
tnton HCN BROS AMPiten, soe
cian it eee i e| = THE REAL
Sane amy pe ot Sten Rael
ina em Powel | = ATLAGA
iSite Rive ok alimar®
Hee Cat Got sen Pris
SE eee tn ta ae! © CANE SYRUP
Tee, Ure er ele
ial, Hite incre Bien Ae roe
Rep ti os: “Si
agi se camo | ALOT CAKES
ite ad hoe Are pe
ageensTows, Ho. ‘
severe, an Men tage! HOT BISCUITS
fed by Wobert’ fazelton: Az o'elork,| 7
S83 "A number nt Beyn's members on By
asia ge cmt Net cehes| RN aaa
Rho the tialifean. Fishermen will have Sy Say ee
Gremtsmely* Sir War Home wit] LAG ss
Fhe seine rome a eh] — Meter
hares Sin mete] Rage)
ven ath ther Souham Spacers Fate Bie
Caysoivili. school. ai ES Sidi t ie
SLASENSEUNG. Cs. Sei na sak nate Wee)
‘Biadenshurg, Md.—On Monday even-
og the Parent-Teacher League and tho
Eiueration af tadtes ofthe Bludens-
burg divatisriilesirentwood and Lake:
Hind held’. leuawe for. three, nights
Gn Stony ‘ovoning the Feteration ren
Geeed a concert. Dee Re Muramee
Seng’ asoioy inmirumental sricetions Uy
Miss ‘Doratiye lanes and Me. How:
And Davie. Several choruses were Fil
fiered is the indies of the. Federation.
Mire. zaneille. Walker. president of the
Bederatlons made a ehort xneceh, aud
igo, the President af the Parent~toact-
teenie Sexe cartie Heemie Rave
St short tail,” ‘the program wan Rea
Safe ‘ating Regine ere, Broeerey
‘miinerys stey"gnotis, pertumeries a
Pateenhnents: he evening was weil
Spent "On ‘Tuesas’ the pup of, the
aie shout rendered a pageant, “Co.
Rnb’ “whieh was were inareesting
Aulon were sting by lea. Hieatrlen Wal
ines of Washington, D.C. sand 3m
Heston alee of Washington, A lane
Selnetion hy Mice rye, and several 36:
iSctlons ot Reading. from Nunuar were
fected tye Ales Sinith. of Washington
Five “pragram® forthe “evening wn
graye One Weineadny w eoneart, wa
ened tr he ines, Geehned, ad
rood rogenm™ wes “rendered Cor the
ening. sates, Te Robinson and. Ire
Tenkine, ‘teachers, were alsa. om the
program each night. © Prayer meet:
Ing. was Weld, on Thursday fow were
Dissent) Oa Saturday the. lus Ruban
Siusiend Gun and the Sunday -xeboo
Nala thelr annual “Hallowe'en Pale
ivan ‘wae a'suecess, On Sunday morn-
Inge. Very Intercatlige sermon wax. de:
ered ie the Ree. Pe SX. thamas, paa-
Ton Tt Seng vers uplifeing and Inapiriag
tho subsece wax, "Mallnw he Ths
Nhme:" Class yesting followed the ser
inom which Was very fires, all had
Jostol tine “The Hoke Commuton, was
feminists tur tne foe E'S, hat
Aanpastone. Minny were nearent, the
8%p. mg services were conducted by the
Ree. Re Uehonme a. shure, dinconey
USK delivered. "Fhe choir rendered. wey:
Tal elections, =the. Daughter Bike
ge desatiig wil etho. eats
fe Bladenshurl will he Uh” eguests
fhe Willing Worker ‘Cob, af food a
EU? pauls Baptist Chureh, Sunday. No-
Seinher Rue at Son mh.” AIL are’ wel
come: to ation hie meeting. A ser
fiom wits werdotiversa hy the Kev. 1
a Gaskins pastor. Solo, Will he ren.
dered "hy in inion of “the, Order.
fire punnenta Jews ts well again, and
Me Burdett Cally fe about the "same
He nag heen alek for xomno time.
Mis Mora Heott matorel to, Virginio
SE ee ae eee cad fclnet
CCIE
pc, See OE ad tira, basta 3
snot of the brthay of afgn Davia,
aga Aeshna San at her
‘Sichlng 16 aitetiand ie’ et
Sei ht Ui he's ee
sits On cet ete
SEM, Waal "ae
tee ert oranda ogi
Steet tt ha A. Bice Pe
we eran Is SOR, Ne
ab ie "Rau™ ton Si aa
ie, Wigan nas Sein sr
MexeOine ‘Robinson. lisa Wabb. din
Mec te taa: She a
US aindod Sle Fae!
-__conmunirY Wovee noves
eine oer entertain at
eee te * Bree aaa
Ronee aches chih, ne te
Paint line Shey thee he
SEE, A ha ial Maa
Et othe oa a Win Ba
seis oat athe aihrs wee
Seat meetin tn hares Canale
RS AR OEage ‘envied "ios
A Hallowe'en party, given by the
gue ot he hola ad Wa Mat
lls tate eat tos
ASU See a Se RRS
Bese eile Sh uate nce pee
ratte eth ental of ae
Pi geen anger aa Me
saat fie eves? tu ansoceaee
TA NTA. aM aT
THE REAL
ALAGA
CANE SYRUP
For
HOT CAKES
AND
HOT BISCUITS
Poe
bhi. Soe
LSet
SS"
Right From Where
me.
Sugar Cane Grows
NOW ON
Sale in Baltimore
‘The number of our readers learn-
Ing of the "sOX™ tat comes from
using Real ALAGA Cane Ssrup, with
Hot Cakes and Hot Bisealts is’ ever
Increasing, ‘hoy Iave also. learned
thay candy, Pumpkin ies, Cookies,
eles, “it for a King" are made with
ALAGA Cane Ssrup.
Regular shipments are now being
received, right from where the Sugar
Cane grows, 1 meet the rapkilly
growing demand.
ALAGA cane Ssrup Is the entire
juleo of the Sngay Cane plant boiled
down to syrup with nothing udded,
except # yery small portion of corn
Sprup to prevent sugaring In the can.
Yes! Jt ts gher than ordinary
syrups, but NOT HAY ax expensive
fas maple syrup: whereas 1 Is among
the cholcest of table and faney hak-
ing syrups, Nevertheless, 1 bas a
fHavor all {tg own,
‘Ask your grocer for the Teal
AVAGA Cane Syrup! 1Che does uot
have I, the following stores can
supply you ll your gracer’s ship-
eee aumtces.. Whened nolet
Lavin, 1000 Etting St.
Binet Min. Hn ecofek se.
ae sag ly HSMN
moe ia}
ee
BM. Meee ioe ut eitechen St
inch" ae Ean B
domaie, Wer so
So
Keener, |e Rm
eee «at esate
Seah ga ta,
fae a aes
ae ee
Moe feet, BS iy “hye
ye ie ee
fa ep ons
x Fst Ne ae sucy's
iia Rang
1 Neen, me
Fe se BS
Gagan 1H ta age
die ee Ar gt
qe iaglame HRT SPAERARF
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i eh,
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eed 1S tout, by
eee tk Be" alhons pt.
1 Sentean HLS. pes,”
i ee a
pie Be
GS BE age moe
See ca
: en Meat <
€ floes, Ug roel
a
i Be
i iia a
ee
Tie seieae St, cawey wet
Plan mw cee
; bac fee
Baie 300, §. Sharp treat
ee
Mee "wton aii W, Crom ateet
okt eam fue
idee toe tae
Hee TB saad
i ea a i Stats a
tae | Shoe
ee haa a oe To
< BEL fi 5 3 . ess
Biggest and Best Weekly Baltimote, Md. ol) Page tanga
re Dae ne ria
th The Public Schools IROCIR TW
F. LAZARUS AND SON
507 N. Gay Street
ABOVE BELAIR MARKET o
Open Monday Nights
ee SSS
BRING. THIS ADVERTISEMENT
WITH YOU THIS
Saturday and Monday
- TO PURCHASE
x N’:
ached Wool Sweaters... an IO
9998 Chiesa $2.29
Womagte Ful Fashion So Fee, OF a
Boys ee and Tweed Suits $2 59
\ AT—
LAZARUS—5O7N. Gay St.
DUNBAR JUNIOR HIGH. SCHOOL
‘Careline and Jefferson Streets
Oe ae ean, Prin.
About forty teachers of ae noes
trom this. and. the neighboring schools
Chserved a demonstration | leeson | In
Geography iver to pupils of Seven-A-2
ESoSAEs rorves, ‘traveling, In, interest
of the publishing ouse of Ginn ~ and
Company.
“rhe technique of the teacher was a
ng of ene, Her meat, of Aa,
UonlngLor estabuahing”” problems ‘and
Airecting. tne puplis to the correct 80-
{iuionsewas as near perfect as one
Might wah for, "Teachers who obs
fefved ‘wore toud in thelr, prasiee of
Riise Forbes, preformance. Betoro, lea:
Iie’ files" sgerkes congratulated , ih
Pieinbets. of SevencAce, , UOR thels
seer cenponses. and general conduct
Chroughowe the, lesson.
"Eriday. tho goth. found many Hallo:
agai Martles being. hela hy classes. of
Feosts af classes” ‘The Tite folk, of
fhe Kindergarten and First Grade, whe
Bun oceupg apart of he, first” floor
St ints inmttinge were given the As:
Sembiy Room for the meaning. Here
fonder’ the capable. direction ot Ms.
WeNent and Missex Jackson and, Rob:
inson, thes, had a. wondertul time romp;
ing and. playing games among stacks
of fodder and piles. fo wucumn lees
‘Minges” Adam and Berry | arranged
Jactighttut “programs for thelr cinssex
fr pproprintely decorated rooms, while
Slime Kngie arson, who de suDstituUe
Boe Mie porsey inthe phyateat, educe:
tion Wiepartmnet. had an exhibition of
ork of that dégariment.
Fhe ‘hese atiengance Feport for Octo
nee comes’ fram SevenoAct, Miss Helen
BF Garter, ‘home-room tehwner, “This
Report shows tat the folloxciog, 1
ils made perfect records in attendance
For the. month:
eadle Hutter, Grace Corer, Bernlee
natin’ peatrine Flood, Virgiala, Sack:
om, ‘ehelma -fohnen, Mary, StOKes.
Soveral weeks nen @ pupil returned
tothe amice n consdallae bill that iad
een" found. in one of the cits room
Rois week a boy returned a five-dotlar
Dt HAL he ad picked up, somewhere
about the. butiding. im. hott cases the
fmey wad returned 9 the Ioser almost
Hietore tive Toss was discovered,
iy Hara ot Ye, art bemacine,
Jcomlucting vai tntereating » experiment
Sra Prous of ehildeen, who exhib
Spnadergo talent in the Arf, tet
Sting, "Some of these punils nave al:
SURE: cagntoned. (rom clay xeveral com:
Imendahle though rather crnde ” pleces
ot work, all giving. nronisie. of intent
Rossibiites that tang” be ‘eallzed If
Rortect ideals are established and j-
ein tkoperis’ directed. The pian | in-
Pek a stady of the, world's greatest
enptors Sndzem anpeciation of the
‘hihar Oreheatta ts belng organized
ny SEA seknon, “Asatatant” Supervisor
Be Susie, and” Airs. Pauline. Whar-
2 Macher ut music. tn untae Juntor
igs oni are, much, eninge
There is togery prospect of effect in
janrorcantaatian {har will de credit to
The schol and, (he community. not to
fmendion the added interest In Instrt-
mention the itis bound to bring about,
HENRY HIGHLAND, GARNET Seto
Wien MgO OSTA RN e
BeBe oS
Widen Nea? Lawes *
sree Pet, Pata
othe elt iin
coh ee fea ee
er ea Faun a
iced bay ater
ro eet Ee tc ca
Fie Sat tit le Bik
aetna tate ikon tar a
ER Bei
eet toe are + shor
enantio ee
BR Riga eect aaron i
Bait tis” hota he
‘ho iw weds te neat.
cig sewed es
iareati
nc Fe, gh Soe Donan
dane Re Steg, Doesnt
Ba Eanes stad ast
ERP ett
ScHOOL No. 18
galls Rone
at Parent, ‘Teacher eb ae
2rd. ‘The special feature was fa re-
WR" tnepunnse of the ctutf to have
iat gi ht at
SCHOOL NO. 116
Merary programs, various g8mea were
indulged ine ihe’ sinB clase, Says Nar=
tin, tencher, won the. majority of prizes
offered. At the conclusion of the sec-
ond part of the program, refreshment
comslating of peanuis, apples, candy and
Gamer anops were served. ‘The. ailagen
Sonneon, Dutton, Clark, Fleming, Har
amon) Stewarts and--Woodwards’ com
posed! the Faculty. Comnittes,* which
teilted and supervised tho Hauewe'en
protects,
**Behea Xo, 116 bank is Delng enthus:
Iaticnlly supported by w group ot More
than two Runared depestges rhe bank
manager, Master Walter Banham, with
hig" student hookkeepers aan toler
nnd the lines. of pubih depoaltors: ives
Gre, the Impression of a reat Banik. The
Mani is open on ‘Tuesday’ betveeen 21:00
andra
"te Parent "Teacher Clu held ts
frst meeting of the Year on fast Tune
day might. A. large” group ,of paronts
find {enehers Wean prosent.” Prot, fran:
Gi Me" Wora,"Supervisar, 9f Colored
Shools, addressed tho club. Sirs, Laura
TEACHER TRAINING SCHOOL
“Eiratogs ang. Mount Sts
3ilgg Ak Bsdgthe Commer. Acts. Prin
Hallowe'en was celebrated in gala
fashion bythe students of the Teachers
‘Feniming School on Friday. events, Ox-
tober 20th "awhen the senlors "neld
IRefe anauat Hallowe'en Festival athe
School tie guests were costumed for
the cogins ithen, et DE
ques, Plorrote, and "Dlerretted, he:
ieee’ in plegeifal umber. stusic
wtS. urnishea” bg a apectal band, loi
frovised for che cceuion fom ar~
tuontens, faze Horas ang olte:makers
Sanse“novel ‘gamer’ and stunts efere
Mitiour fom for all, Phe acrangee
Monts Wore in charge of a commtttce
mith ate Frances “Aturphy, as chalr-
sGHOOL NO. 108
aeesn OO NO: 8
Hunry Bvt, Acting Principal
aod Ba eteate oP chal
xa tech henna siceting of he
i, ately he tna Ookoser.
ro eatt Msaate “guy TA
cot” teacher, en he
Ca ae er ne ad wa bene
fnigh heeauseo¢ the freedom | with
Al, nse atau Sapreeted aimee
a rae meth
Sree nN Ese nS te Mint ta
i
Hd aeventh and ight grades have
were SaeeON cig Ree taton
bees AG cto gegen Thats
crea cht ithe “acl
Seong tna to ver
ur Frenrs’ En, Acting Principal.
Mae Goan ea
MEE CUMS SBosteh, Presaent.
a
Black Cats Give
“« 9
Annual “Howl'
‘Tho annual “Howl” of the Binck
cats as held Hatowe'en even bs
five’ momvers athe ergantatton.
{cathy Tome cats Alteod Jonee,
ant Thurtoor aeher’ “task, Geta th
Rail cescunne wet thtetineted Cat,
born anata femnie, the evening
Wea apent tn huarioun fun unit Hs
eaten the ise Cate went no
Szecutive seeson ending. at 1:02
The Guis thon proceeded to cond
thereammuat nom whieh” wan the
inset intresting facure at the even
ings ‘The rooms: were, decorated 10
rgreaent he kanra ot a wal
Tee goure ith a fall. moon shining.
iSound’ rence ‘wns erneted onthe
farang. an upon, thie the Black
Nis “assemted and. began, thet
fw, toring whieh time they were
Bombasdar ny thee ues, wih
rca pricks houaenotd ween
mts ot pager mache. At might
Prag? Geek delven trom thelepereh
ney eacortadthele guem to the ott
criend of te gave they wer
Sioentustsly fea out ot. tin cant
garinge can and garbage” boxeh
Eile wero tino made of anor. The
Temalnacrof tho evening was open
isaac,
mone ine out of town, quest
present feora Mrs Mfg Jol
pactert Washington’. Ce ante
shady enestine and Augusta Mel
inst NewYork Ch
Tieden” som Gut Alfred Tonos
the ethos tes ttle Gat We
ie Heh atans Rerateh aay Terry
{iam ght Wad ag, Wate <c
Young other, members. are Black
SearGvaner Vv, sonnmon, Hany
Cate, VRgsnevale Nimrod, Warne
Jone an Walter 0. Spence, William
ence Dantel, Aekern,. ansio
enaeleue earton Be Vaughn
Chases 3: White
es
League Visits
‘The Ppworth League of St. Paul
M. B. Church visited the Allen ©. F.
League of Bethel A. M, E. Church
sunday,
The following persons partictnat:
oa on the program: atswes Rachel
West and Catherine Pindell. Mes:
dames Victoria Taylor and Seren
Jackson: Messrs, Wr. | Robinson
Toseph Batty David [. Johnson, John
Thomas, Morsell and’ Howard ‘Keys
David Johnyon was master af
ceremonies, ‘
a eee
‘A breakfast parly Owes Feidence
siite "Eola Brodie, ft" her residence
int utara ie honor af Mer aeter.
Meme Beane of Boston. Sate
alg gue Nocamar: Ae the ,auent®
uct apes hale Batson,
eelhetoee ae, Wiliam fo
Trae at! Are, Mm, Fer
Insopeatace: “aime Be Courier. AN
Siig fice © org
cues AT WEDDING
Among efna® Senta renent at the
oat? wen which ton thre
Otel Sener Zath were: Sinica.
Sanne" eteConson Chasen Sian
7m Silehel stages Bune Bal Yl
fat crise heal Sie Piya Getilngk
Tht Hew, ‘Beale sink performed he
The Rev.
aici ae
Rosenthal’s
300-306 N. Eutaw St., Cor. Saratoga
ee
“\ ‘a
WV fy a) WHAT
ites, bendt
ae FINE
APs hs amar
Giga, coats
Be eee :
Ele oa Fur Trimmed,
Sa Meg oe, tol al
Gee tai
al "eee orices
i: S96”
i
i / and
| ( 439:
Fashion has revealed nothing newer than these |
stunning Coats. When you see ‘them you will im- |
mediately be impressed by the superb quality
fabries—the gorgeous furs with which they are
trimmed and the clever lines on which they are
modeled. Every coat is handsomely lined. All
the wanted shades.
WE’D BE GLAD TO “CHARGE” YOUR PURCHASES
SOCIED
The Fitth Avenue Club gave a
pre-Hallowe'en Dance Friday even-
Ing ac the residence of Mr. and Mrs
Juilus Westbrook in Fairtietd,
‘Gypsies, Chinese, “Army, Officers,
and others attractively attired girls
danced and frolleked in beautifully
decorated rooms. to the, tunes. of
“Yes sir, that’s my baby," and. the
“Shadowiand Waltz.”
Friday, November, 6th
Turquoise "Social and _ Literazy
Club, Ine, will give Post Hallowe'en
Danganto’at Royal Palace.
Buide Club will render a’ musical
program at, Maryland Blind Schoo!
from 12 to’ 1 o'clock,
Monday, Noyomnber sth
Chicken Salad Supper at, Exn
Jenifer Comunity House, 1228 N
Tathoun street, |
BO ¥ Club will meet with the
president, Mise Idx 1andrlek,
‘Tho Cotiitions will meet with Mis
sino Townsend, 1418 Druld Tilt Ave
Penny Club will meet with Mrs
Addison, 1226 N. Gilmor street,
‘Tuesday, November 10th
Housokenpers’ Art Club will meet
vith Mra dames Hunter, 1826 Drutd
TUM Avenue.
‘Tuestay Afternoon Novelty Cut
will meot with Mrs, Ford, 2008 At
sun avenue.
Wednesday, November (11h,
The, tude Club meets with rs
Emmett Coleman, 715 Brune street
A Tiallowe'en Mini
__ The Hounekcenees Art Club save
‘a Hanlowe'on party at the residence
Ge Mrs J, Logan Jenkins, Saturday
October Sixt. One of the upper
Upper rooms of the catering estab:
Ushmene was used and was trans:
formed Into” schoolroom. It wa
tastily decorated In autumn leaves
Japanese parasols, und red and.yet
Tow lanterns, wlth lack eats “and
a huge skeleton in the middie,
‘The members dressed In rompers
ike ehildeen, with Mrs, Rodman
aeting is School Mistross, held 2
School session. Atter” the” session,
the “children” gave a Hallowe'en
Concert In whieh short poems and
Songs. were rendered. Children's
games folowed with both the mem-
hers and guests participating, ‘The
games were: What's Ino. Name, Bob-
Bing for Apples, Peanut Hunt and
Peanut Seramble, Carrying Hot Coal
Plueing the Donkey’s Tail Pincins
Eyes In the Pumpkin, Dipping tn the
Gip cf Fates, The Arrival of) th
Witeh who told the fortune of enct
person. ‘There was a prize giver
{othe winner of each game. “at
Toweren refreshments were served
consisting of peanuts, ginger snaps
apples and pune. ‘There were for
{y guests present.
Mra, Pilea Wayman of 1623 Preset
man Street, guve a Hallowe'enparty
Monday evening (rom 7 to 10. 0”
Glock in jronor of her grandchildren
‘After many games were played 1
repast was served at # o'clock.
Mra. Ada TL. Laws of 2327 MeCul
Joh street “has recovered from hei
recent Ilinest and wishes to thank
her many felends and meinbers 0
the Trinity Baptist Church for thei
kindness in sonding flowers and frul
AMiss Laura Patterson of 192
Madison Avonue, who has recentl
returned from visiting ler parent
In the milcdle west, was ontertaine
by Mr. edward Brown of 2103 Me
Culloh Street hefore leaving for New
Sore Clty where She will spent th
winter. é
Mes, Ella Bunks of 1024 Parl
‘Avenue is spending the winter
New York Chy visiting Mrs. Zita F
Dawson of 187 W. 129th Strect an
Mrs. E, Barnes of 6 West i16tt
Street. an
Birthday Party
A. birthday party ‘wus tendere
Miss Rost Smythe at the reaidenc
of Mr and Mra. a, C. Peck Thur
Gay evening, October 29th. Card:
fand dancing: were indulged in afte
Which the Ruesta were ushered in:
to tho dining room where a. sumptu.
pus repast was served. "Among thos
present wore: Mr. and Mrs. Willian
Baylor, Me, and Mrs, Bernard Benns
Mr und Aire J.C. Bock, Mrs. Ros
Harris, Misses obi Gray, Ein:
Hawkins, Jane Smythe, Jessie Ford
Erma Smythe, Grace Hughlett
Grace Reeder Mary Gray. Irene
Tranilz, Frances Camphell, Beatrlec
‘Tackxon and Messrs. Laurence Noss
Novel Paulson, Richard Paulson, Wh
dur Pinder, Howurd ‘Turner, Jas:
per Taylor, George Thomas,’ Arik
Sones, Jol Mason, James Carson
‘Arthur Royo, sWillam Young, Jas
Hlemy. leurs Brodxen, Edward
Clark. John Clark” and Willian
Sankeiti.
Misé Viola May Minor, daughter of
sis, dary “Holland, of #216 secuTton
pireet, left Thursday to visit friends in
Jacksonville, Fla, and also Mc, John T.
Wallnee, of Norfolk, Ya.
wn A'CORRECTION
‘ThE Marriage License Coluran In laxt
week's Afro statine fohere Cintle, 21,
Niauae Massey, tte of foie, K. Bruce
rerects should have read Robert, Clark,
tr, divorced, 1625. Druld Hill avenue,
Bande Mastiy 9, widow, 1812'S. Brose
Th seloty mviak arts gi
yore was a soclety mink marty lv~
env at ‘he residence” of SHE, land. Sex
Ganien Dennis of "1308 Argyle. avenue,
Saturday evening, October sist. There
mere many unigde enscunes, ‘rhe dln-
ingrown wan caseefaliy decorated. wih
the ‘contrasting "colar of sellow: “and
black “trimmings. Quite elaborate re
past was nerved after whieh the guest
fort for thelr respectful homes very well
pleased. os
Me. und Mea, #2 Elloworth $, Weisht
ae ivan ist gre ho resin In
Park. as
© THE BON TEMPS
slag wattle Tyler entertained The
Ron Temps. at atoweren parks on
PRnvale streets Saturdas. October g13t-
Nes. Phoebe H. Wheatley, Ins return-
ed front Harrinbura, fn. where She at-
fended thee uneral gf-iier aunt, IFS.
Mare ge winders, While, thers, 3g
Whencies prenched ae Fethel A." Fe
Church uke Revs Br, Gourses, pastor
Dr. and irs, Terie Martin, of Bos
ton Mass. passed throwgh the <i.
Saturday én mute Washington. Af=
Satordine ce venth-ertd there, UNeY
tere Mor. Patindclpnin,. wher & Mes.
Kinin wit stag, with ier parents, thy
Movs ni aire, WAL C. Hlughen, while
Ties Martin nesumes his dutter ad coach
teh fot teu of Hieain Ue
THE ETUDE CLUB
‘rhe Buulde Chet niet Wednesday, Oe
oer 28th, wth. tissue] “Commins,
1300 Deuld TH avenue. ‘the elub had
Aa visitors, (ier Aifuees Over anid” BERS,
Bach Stenchiors yar che: Mlgh sehanl, ed
Sietani are Howard Hh Mucphy. A.
Invsieal_program: was rendered. hy $1
Filiowing weeatxolection by. Rg, M2~
file Dike: Plano solo, hy Alea. Carrio
Barnes's Plana auet, by Mlas Fthet Cunt
mings and Mead. te dent, socal
Bee ix Misy Hana May Overs Plann
Bet BS SSS Adal’ Riilion, ond Mrs,
Whee an Speak eto Meg Wan
row, Nresitentyat, the eli. A music
Fro eonteseeHineed In leh shore
trai ¢eom Sarlous sms And, COM
pealtions, bor elnssteal anit popular,
Kone paged iy Misa ‘Cummings Me
Mitre Jones, reaeived the prize. a
feinner Dre Wings oe wale
Conted toy the elu ae 8 new tember,
Rlainty eoation wae sereed. the
uh arth old tee nest “meth, witht
Sipe. Smmate Goleman, 115 feune street,
Weinesday, November 11th.
PENNY cLUB
‘rhe Ronny Cli was entertained be
sere Weather, “of, 823 Meath
ites, “Sionday, November and, The
Hiab weil ment ext. Mtanay. Never
fer’ atte with airs." Addisons” 1286 Ne
ino ae
ee acai
‘The fe Ging Cent Circle met with
We inaere Penge, Tuestiny evening, Noe
mine fa hole teat neat ait
eieid Tuesday November 17th, with
Mee "Priges H8u) Mount street,
“rhe Hauekeeners "art Clu arn
planing. heele mid-winter lente, ty ie
ive Sew. Sone Day oma neal”
Entry farm, "they: nee arranging t
hae Seveal auteufeuonr featur, pro
ding the, weather permits, which "wilt
alindtowed by" 4 eountrs dinner In the
Rfceraoan
Beery af the Canter, snow, lly
preparing fen a resital to be given in
Fhetauditortar of Uke Church, at which
Rime the Pot “Onlee cise tub, and
Ue’ centers are presenting Mite," iihel
sea Sin, ye sopra, of soto,
Mr. Samuel Free sand frland, Mix
cavierine Connelize ga sister,’ 38,
BAU Halles, and Rephew, ‘Master Geo,
Bynum. n¢' New York, have returned
Ee thele onion after at pleasant motor
Wiig te thin eity, visiting. thle sleter
And friend, Sirs.’ Robert pms, 623 N.
Garey stent.
THE CYCLONE CLUB
‘rhe Cyelone Club held their inttlat
eqn of the season, nt Somes Iiall, Sat~
Reany October tate, Chore were a
howe tw hundred guests prasent among
vata there were oma from Hae
Bvu'Goiwaratty, Morgan cotlegm and in
gin Unicersits. Pha mvemivers of, ie
PySone Chu ato: Messrs. Cxrun tov
een patward Aller. i atelein Brees.
George Steveminn, Rutherford Jackson,
nd Hartison Logan.
A Correction
‘AL party in the honor of Mrs.
Hattie May Young of Athens, Geor-
Alurand atiss Minnie Brown of Phil-
Sueiphiy. was given by Mr. and Mrs
se fandolph Waters nf 849 Famil-
ton Terrace, and. not by Mr. and
Hrs. T. Heney Waters, ag stated in
ihe! Society column of Inst week's
APRO-AMBRICAN.
Mfr, J. Melvin Press of Howard
university spent. the week-end with
his parents of 1583 Druld Hill Ave-
Due ihe had ax his guests, Messrs,
Aaner Spencer, Wilbur Webb, Geo.
Stevens and Charles Freeman, algo
Stovsoward University. .
HALLOWEEN: PARTY,
digo ih, of 28, Ma
Rare nr Nk hunt
Fatt Ri ibe Mo
Renal, Grocam, Ren ares ee
: LET AUNT DILSEY DO YOUR. SHOPPING FREE OF CHARGE. THISIS THE AFRO’S NEWEST. SERVIGE PUR Ries
Tee eT
EE area - EE ma. fe =
RG BA) ee ld BY VAT Bed JF) oes A |eea A). =
6 PNGEGAZIING PeCe in| =
i a ay a la =
: EDITED BY AFNO'S WOMAN EDITOR—EVERY READER OF THIS PAGE 1S INVITED TO CONTRIBUTE 10 IT jz =
AFRO FASHIONS—By Aunt Dilsey
gro
AT) ae
b/s
J \0 m @& h
ON Qe
Bend 12¢ fn silver or stamps for our UP-TO-DATE Fall and Winter 1925-26
BOOK OF FASHIONS showing color plates and containing 50 designs of Ladies’,
Misses and Children’s Patterns, a CONCISE and COMPREURNSIVE ARTICLE
ON DRESSMAKING, ALSO-SOME POINTS FOR THE NEEDLE (Itlustrating 39
fof the various, simple stitches) alt valuable hints to the home dressmaker.
+" $213-—-CHILD'S COAT—Cut in 4 Sizex: 2, 4, 6 and § years, A 4 year size
requires 1% yards-of 40 Inch material with % yard of contPaating for collar and
Seults. Price 10¢. *
© 3050—BOYS' SUCT.—Cut tn 8 Sizer: 2, 4 and 6 years. I made as fMlustrated
a4 year size requires 3-yurds of S6-inch material with 4 yard of contrasting
“material for collat, cuts, lan and faclngs. Price 10e.
4, | PSLUGAGIRLS' “DRESS.—Cut in-4 Sizes: 6, 6-20 and 12 yenrs, A 10 year size
<gégutres 24 yards of 38 Inch’ material, with 1 yard of contiasting-material for
“collar, cults,’ belt and: pocket“facings., Price 10c,
2S Priée ‘of Ptaterns, 10 cents Iu postage stamps only. Orders should be ade
“ gressed 40 thie AFRO:AMERICAN, Pattern Bureat, (-i3 Sterling Place, Brook-
ty, N. ¥.° Use. no other address and‘use this address only for AFRO patterns,
Page:
Your Own
« Column
Feeding Baby
Vhealthy baby do not depart from them
pulp or four or five stewed pruncs and
se tetgatas ite Sat
wet ‘ewed prunes, oF plain rice puil-
’ WENT
BREAKFAST
Tokay Grapes
Broiled Bacon Hominy Croquettes
Ratsed Rusks Coffee
LUNCHEON .
Sainot Bue sate Pea
Cress Sandiwiches, Ginger Ale
‘Cup Cake with Coffee Sauce
aie
@ Cream of Spinach
* Cold Sliced Pot Roast
rill neath
eet Place
; eat Petes
rig ud "toh sonce +
i Prono
ream ahaa a
Ee tl, SENET Stefan Sa
ated tte ema a
Julce and turn soto eeoties mala. Rien
Earhuhne
ale
ee
Oh You Fritters
yah got pe et mal ete
eadhhc aah Ste Sate
Wie the Slo andi eae
Chestnut Cake, Why Not
Sek SONGS: SEE:
tees. .
{S88 cups. contectloner’s nusas.
1 teaspoon four.
1 tees ptom enna.
teres aa
Tian Sheets Santi tender, shell and
cadet A amooth ang Rad ere
ae eee enti Temon eniored, Sue
Tiour, sugar and salt together and add
door, Ue uaes then ‘anlias and last
Wi SHE. the besten emg whiten ten
{droite oft inaiekdual ting. dink:
sae Eel qraderate ovena30 be
SESRUIoe ens minute
Try Cranberry Muffins
cranberry muting, are. deticloun for
ester Wreuktant oF luncheon, Sit te:
Sunes Voetns of Rout wo. table:
Seeney cr caugars one-third of a ten-
Sooen? of alta four local tenapoons
Spoon Gor, hen add bradualiy
Seteteteate ota “cup ‘of milk, one
see eat seatendy ane then tables
Cee Une uae tiny Hended, add
seers tot cupstul of ermaberey
Erect ot Seemtoelie inane. Th
Pian
SR Se
Whep her blows he started to es:
cnpettSayt ine n't dodge these 008
gane—Says she don't dodge thi
Call VErnon‘6016
$5 Flimericks Puzzle $5
Sree IAL : ,
sa LE OF} 4
‘Toy sy .
; o On Pe
ae
s * SO
| Zo =
ee Ge: ee \
Fa |
e iT KS
Horvey - Pearcy
A toy, wagon, placed on ——— .
(ahere it would show)
Refused absolutely to____—__- :
* (remain)
- But to the floor____.,
(copped dorm)
And stuck out its —_——
(organ of speech)
At every one passing that —___-
. (Biren)
“Upon.the line write the word that is defined below it.””
LOOK!! LOOK!! LOOK!!
$5.00 will be given to one person THIS WEEK ONLY
who answers correctly the above puzzle. TRY IT.
‘Answer to this puzzle will be printed in the AFRO-
AMERICAN of November. Be sure to address your answers
AMERICAN of November 21st. Be sure to address your an-
swers to AUNT DILSEY, the AFRO-AMERICAN, Baltimore.
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S FLIMERICK
"A little black doo said, Moh my!”
: Show t wish I'd éhe power to fy!"
‘A good fairy heard.
Turned him into a bird:
Now he's barking about in the sky.
$1.00 prize winner: Catherine Jefferson, 1614 E. Monu-
ment street. ' -
Consolation prize, a book to Wilbur M. Dennis, 1920
11th Street, Washington, D. C.
‘Honorable Mention: Mrs. Pearl Webb. 1648 Abbott street: Rertha Hope,
Atlante Clery Elieworth Fuller, 136 W. Lanvale street; Thelma i. Lane, Wash-
eae SHS, imma Teeid, 918 White street: Boukih Opher, Cambridie, Md.;
eee campbell Annapolis, Ad.: Blaino Camper, 1218 Myrtle avenue: Olivia
Beown aa Laurens surect: Dorothy It, Bell, Frostburg. AM: elivabeth tones,
Rinntie tity; Brances TR. Spriggs, 618 N. Caroline street: Mabel Smith, Cockesss-
Arete acces Wilts, Tole Raker stvert: Thomas Purnell, Scotian, Md:
Robert Anderson, 1065 WW, Lexington street; 2siher Turner, 1927 Madison Ave~
rover anes JohNgon. 1638 Meculloh siceets Isabelle F, Stewart, Viedmont, W. Va;
Bd Neuman York, Pact Carrle Coleman, Thckner, Vaz lal Chapnan, Heston,
May Rete de Siowors, Hikion, Mat’ Willie Aine Sloun, Greenville, 8. G3
Mass: Gererege adelpiin: Roberta Smith, Brooklyn, N. Yai Frank Yates,
Charles Town, W. Va; Beulah Clarke, Sellman,,Md.; David Sehlossburz, 513 8.
Ceres remues Baits Berry, Penasgrove, N. Ji W, Euxene,Simmens, Charles
Freon peljorin Simmons, Atiantie City; Alberta Baltlmore, Cambridge, Nd.;
1 eee dtiam See afalvin Wilson, Queenstown, Md; XE. King, Nash-
Emma tong. Xalem. X. Ji sey. bd. C. Seoul, Charles Town, W, Va.
°
| Home Education
(ee ee
% ‘A PLACE FOR THE CHILDREN
: Laura B, Gray
teed NE. BAZ thant tae unaarione |IOR MY eNS, MnO fet
of fale size. Vale of Unix we screened F lifes: © Veal Ye
With canvas, and here Uie ehfidren tel A REN 7, ED:
sept the sear round, “We live on the * ea iis | ere
Pacite ctionigh we sometimes get zero |t| a aC Aig
secather, his, armapenent tote ‘one AG ) Ge) GiB
ine iene Ai taontt Pat ode a Na ewe
aloomined ine crate gallon, painted > oe
he woodwork white, hing some pret- te
Grown payer and pue them on the walls, |} <<< —————
had previnualy been in the living-room, |
all of their toys, UWwo ttbles and thelr) c \)
fad In keeping it tidy. it hax given No. 2
Every Samet bein has, that, lave of
possession, whether it he for a bedroom, |
poraceston, wenether yt g’noxcrone som {]| Dozen
FOO eis ‘own, A few siggextiona| jozen Cans
| f @ Ge, :
HK Lea a
| omni mr Frm ary
fas. CANNED |
wns eS OF ~ |
OF WEEK
STOCK UP AT THESE PRICES
IONA TOMATOES
3 GE 5c | | 2'"oe 25¢
Dozen Cans, 95c | 4 Dozen Cans, 70c |
RELIABLE 2 :
-Shoe-Peg Corn cm 25¢ |
Half-Dozen Cans, 70¢
_ Early June : | Cit Stringless |
“PEAS || BEANS
3 tm 250 |) 3 cm 25
| Dozen Cans, 95c | Dozen Cans, 95c
, ae logs 100
No.1 | New York | Iona
State | SAUER-
Walnuts ciper | KRAUT |
» 32¢ | Glo OE | cin 1 23 |
| DEL MONTE SLICED _ |
| PINEAPPLE “can” 25¢,
gf ae PICT m ps Ea |
Be Ne GL ee)
The ‘Afro-American=*soutl’s Biggest ‘aiid Best Weekly. ._Baltimore, Md._
Let Aunt Dilsey -
Do Your Shopping
Ye r Shopping
unt, Sisey fuer snough work to
ae ae aie
[Sho wants to be of mor: service to
Soe, Srantact, Pega! eke’ hus” become
BRO Stig “hall, ina wee
eeree ar ar
2 tae Baitimere, who, want
to ears aaiee hal erguine deers
aie EARS, er? hg
Sed Bee ToC pial. onder
lal nee lee ge a
se epalty was ey ate aed ude:
2, it clang ata Te. foots
ment he Puamnrsee Oe Seren pate
lek edSctetie Mue’satte BAY
TESTE Wescnes This Serice
SETer Pers, Gar ns enwice
area S Saae ‘Sunt oily
SERVES etude
RAYE Ie EOE hop tor you teat
atthe wae
unr pILSEY
The. Afro-American G2 Ne Buta Sty
‘Baltimore, Md.
mee Mg
Health Answers
‘M. P. S. Q—How can T get rid af
rel spot? Ur is nota pimple, but It has
Boye tere far ments, i
mg Nrould suwest that you have
acnig Caen See ba Ne want he to
fowtinie “tw recammend. & treatment
feitnuot glvingse rm examination.
AEG, Q—How cnn T reduce?
Xie Glimimatiig. from your Aleta:
far aa possible. stgars, starches, an
fats, “exercise daily, i the open. alr,
GE. RB, Quis tt possible tg cure 3
swwnilen gland in the neck by N-ras?
ye abilanie alse dletiny 2 vost
growih, ether than goiter?
ee Ulain method tm vers effactive. tr
come tunes our dactgr will stdvise
youl, i
20U) athe X-fay Is used for this pat,
pote! 'aino in some instances, but always
pore rahe direetiow oF sti) exert Mt tHe
ST ee ee cnents
clothes, are training these fitle Sty
clothes. Qtferiness and to We useful
10 dort car have, been oitt In the after,
After Wey Aesckecn to come Taek ta
ie rome omettmes. they DEI
ete agctriend to play with them, | 11ers
Thay cean romp without disturbing 409°
Me caildren's room is alsa a, Blessing
fo the rent of the famils. “After a hate
MRM Reugelesto get the wherewitha
Has sv brend for this ttle Wood. the
te ee ehuens home, his heart longing
Father Tweet, peacerulness of bis OW
for bis Rete nard. for iaim to hare 12
pearls imumedtately ater, supmer tn
Jump ited to amuse, His ehiklren with
apt blincGherawe spirits: IC Js equally
{eet the ehildrest to he contiswatly
bar eit and fold to be cauiet: hs, |
subdiiet Gre than anything pire, tongs
thinics weechuiren seek thelr plensures
buside the hen,
Mange ail the toss in one room maices
1 UaSIN Oe the matker, too. The hl
ik easier fontenved aul self-amusrd, 20
fren gy nother has not to Aauewer
the Ne often hye ulifieult question
Mv shall 1 do"
What tne every Rouse cannot have A
enttisera room, wut some corner shoutd
palielrs. a portion of the tiving room
we he Riehen, Ehey, should “Rave
OF ite Monkeatielf, rand w Wox for toys
FBI: Mywen in houses where there Ws
Luss ang room, i dining room de
8 drawiosing room, wut the cliteren’s
and AS eae inthe Bitehen, and the
fy we Setused to have the Tid, apened
feel: Taga te We taken aut, “Che eh
fiven wandered ail aver the house, Ee
Hing into evershods’s wax, OF Went Ou)
find, thera he, meses children
ust have something to do, they show!
fw terested in what they are doing
be ieee need a place in which to a
Aue fikee found a children’s r9om a
reat Help coward this end
RHYME-A-LINE
167 shoud die before i wale,
| Hil ing ma fee wieh a Mckee
“anmtard Eawrai Clarke,
iran Marytond.
Be Beautiful
Bs Katherine Wilson, for A. N. ®.
figs Harlem: Those larga patches
whieh You call andra? cy caustd
Sythe tinea worm whish fy common-
iy called the-rlageworm. This is 2 para-
is condition. of "he chip andthe
tinea, worm fe60s upon the hale shatts
theretore, the bales bzoKan off Unev-
fone on the spots aflaz:i9.
‘Thise disease’ ean, be eontreated and
comnunteated by using combs and
rushes after people who are so afc
ed. SInce thls, ailment. 1s s0_ highly
contagious and stubborn In slelding to
treatment, yau wilt have to send me a
tore detailed account of your condl-
on, ts duration, ete. (cindly Incose
stamped envelope for your answer.)
Miss Seatriee—Liver splotches may
ye likened to freckles, since the meth
ou of eradication Is Very much the same
in both eases,
‘An ‘exectlent Mleach can be made: by
ani “even parts. of peroxige a
Mitenchageh. afore weticing, walter
horougiis ctesnsing te face ‘with Not
water "and ‘8 pure soap, thig’ “Toten
Should: be. applied. frets, Wepeat the
Sheration after wasting the face tn the
‘horetog “emis bieseh can also be" used
{Drremeve tha conto shiner and
fighter. the ‘compleston ponerals:
rae this erontment. falls, Fwill be chad
sanyo the formula for x strong
eo blenet
Granumother—Baldness tn young and
midte sued" egple can often be traced
co herediey. "Since sou hae” passed
three score and ten, te ie only anja
at your hue showia fall out tn grea
Auindiies It negisetet
"athie condition is called Alopecia Slat
vis and ‘can only be remedied by” keep
theta wfetenn tn tone. Sou mal ave
refine ‘exerciae and proper food. We
find that petwune OF zene age, cho. have
feileed" tran active and hag ves: se
Seitate thelr diet with more veestables
Sat ie na ess mente
‘Toul abetinence feo pork and hen-
est eet "Ip algo ‘recommended ia ths
“Fiossie—rhe bulging of the nal
when ‘they appear to Ne. swale and
keane che tinget, a svmpton of
ther ooo
1 rout udvige that you see a special
sed Scones who wil advise yoW" along
Sin ting: b
Five gations, of gasoline has an ex.
plostve ‘ower equal to 418 pounds of
Aynamite.
In the North Pace Ocean there ts
a chasin inthe sea’s bed estimated 00
he six. miles deep.
(Se omer ———— er
“a Lf
LER g
fase 1 Be |t
Pet ee) |
te ee El
oe ay }
a, re ay
Ca |
?
You Don't
Have To .
Wait |
You donit have ‘to &
wait for service at J
the HUB Furniture
Co. All you have to f
do is to come down |}
to the store and call
for Mr. CARTER: he §
will see you and see
what you need, send f
you what you want
‘and make you hap-
pier for having come ||
40 the HUB,
Don't put off until f
tomorrow what you. §
should buy today,
but come down and |
tell MR. CARTER
your Furniture trou-
bles. |
| XmasIs_— fj
Coming
i Get Ready. |
| Get ready now to
furnish your house ||
"g anew with the good
f things you are going
B to nced for Xmas fur-
HW nishings. Come and
¥| see MR. CARTER—
that’s all you have .
H| todo.
YA stitch in time
fl saves nine.” | Be in
time to get what you
#) want for the holi-
d| days, and for the
comfort of this cold _
long winter, that is
coming. Don't de-
B lay.
fH! Your Credit °
A Is Good!
, :
Fir yeu dont beieve ont
4 your Credit is good, ask
woe
| foie fF
i fine eugeN |
Bip een
Be gee oe F
Hub]
Cer Eayy
410-712
Pennsylvania Ave.
a _ CREAM OF NOVELS
Fe, . “Veiled
Aristocrats”
—(, BY GERTRUDE SANBORN
| SAME ATT TRAM EE TMM ATM
Moses Kahn & Sons
The Ladies’ ‘*Kosy Korner’’ Store
-., . Gay and Aisquith Streets
A Store Where You Are Always Welcome and Where Your Credit Is,
OS Aladys Good e
_ New Fall Fashion for Coats
: _ Suits and Dresses
$7 : O00 Down--And? 1 -00 A
vOPEN SATURDAY AND. MONDAY-NI . y eek
Sul
‘The excliement of the night left
Nataife pale and shaken the follow:
inf morning. Care brought sone
tea and toast and marmilndo, into
the studio for her. He sald tittle
He was heartsick. Ifo was ashamed
He loved Natale tnadly, but he
didnot want her to descend to the
Surroundings in. which he was 9-
bliged to carry on existence. | We
Mid snot know what st wes best to
ao.
Rod was away.” Carr wondered
where he could have gone. Te had
eft no word. It was ‘odd, He
wanted to talk to him and he knew
Natale must miss him fn this sud-
den crisis, He and Natalie were
seh ‘splendid ‘friends. Tod was se
Kind and loving, and Carr had de-
Banded on his” Judgment In” thi
whole matter.
At that moment Rod was hun-
dreds ot miles away: riding into the
xouthland as fast_as steam and
turning wheels could take him, He
had lete Chieugo at a moment's: no-
tice, putting nis waderstudy In this
place fas Watteau had once sudden-
iy assigned a rols to Rod.
\ CHAPTER VI.
‘The mother of Carr McClellan
ved tn" an unpainted frame cot:
lage that, stood alone at the end
2 Uwisting Jane." Tt was perhaps
quarter of a mile beyond the out-
skirts of the small unkempt town
ot Bellvale, Mississinpt. 1s posi-
tion was emphatically” Isolated as
was the Jife of fis sole occupant
Sage McClellan. the mother of Cart
Rath the position of her house and
herself init had ‘been. determined
by fate, whoso decisions ure sv of-
ten trrevocable.
“The moon shone on the orderly
ooryard. Various homely Welle
vegetables were clustered there in
methodical rows. A moist pungencs
arose trom grotind Jacely. sprinkien
by dippers of water carried from
the well, ‘The eotiage raised its
frank, unearnished face (a the moon
fn ts’ cold flood, the nakedness. of
the little dwelling assumed an as-
pect of sublime rigidity. — During
the day dail” unmatched boards
stood forth hideosuly, red clay neer-
ed stickly through’ the "carefulls
mended walk, butat night the scene
was graciotisiy painted with the
| moon's silver paint and its Incongru-
{ies Tay _plactdiy enticing under th
luminous sonthern skies. ‘The sub:
dued song of crickets swept upware
through the trees,
Tod aprpoached Sara's dvoraten,
He looked In through the window
hefore knocking. Ife saw a, tal
wonan sitting In an attitude of deer
Gevotion hetare a hook laid oper
Under a thick home-made candle
Rod was startled by the outline of
the Itttle plaster Azure that hell Ui
candle, It was the same: exdulsit
clfish "form. that, skillfully wired
held the light on “Natatle's, des!
miles away on a northern boulevard
hut what’ more natural than. thi
Care should-send this dainty plaste
‘erenture af his soul Into the hanes
Of the two women he loved? ‘Ther
were no other ornaments. In the
room: no pletures. ‘Tha clear
Roors wero covered dy narrow strip:
of rag carpet washed to faint tues
They lay flat and even. There was
nothing to soll and mar the Lovell
ness of the shining nymph: tts sway
was absolute: Its rule inviolate.
Tod knocked.
Thore was aneintereal of silence
then the drubbing of a chair across
the boards followed hy slow foot-
steps. ‘The door swung half open.
Sarax face Inoked classic In the
moonlight. Like her son. the tn:
rint of proud’ blood dishonored
shone in her dark tace, ‘Thongh
past. middle age. the lines of her
Agure were firm’ and straight: he
lean hands were finely. molded.
‘She looked ‘fixediy at Rod, slow
wonder at the sheer beastly of lw
crowding her exes. Polsed ongeriy
lightly on the step. the quest of his
friendly soul warm In his face, the
moon iihuminated in him. quaiitie
ihespotlight had never shone upon
“Flow fo you, do—are you Mrs
isara ‘MaCletian?” “Yau are fro
the no'th!" Sara had caught Rod’
fistinetly enunciated words, the t's
Sighly railed. Instantiv she wn:
fname, “Carr—-Carr—whats hap.
ened to ms son—is he slek—is he
head"? error leaved into her eves
“He's very much allve! As alive
as Tam, but he's in some trouble—
nothing. that can’t. bo straightened
out, T hone—soon. Tam his bes
friend, Mra. MeClellan. He doesn't
Know I've come down here—I—"
Wou're Mr. Roscoe—3ir. Rod—?"
“Yes—yes—t'm Rod—"
“Ah've read of You many a tim
in Care's letters, ‘Sou're race. Wie
my own boy to me. Rest yo" hat.
Sit_on this eushlon—now tell, me
what's ailing my Carr?”
“Airs, Meclellan, £ have come
here hoping——"
Sara arose to interrupt hira,
“Would you all like some junch,
Mr. Rod? "Did you have any sup-
pany”
"Yes, Indeed. T don't, need a
ting, "1 just want to talc and ask
fjuestions ‘and get. answers.”
Sara sac down in an attentive at-
titude. Her quict was almost breath-
fess, but her hands twitched, She
fmoved the book on the table to
Graw. the cundle closer. tod not-
iced it was a copy of Browning -she
had "been “reading. Nothing” re-
mained between them but, the tri
(escent vells of the nymply and the
rising. falling flame of the candle.
‘The calm soul of Carr seemed a-
float In the room. Its gentle fluid!
ty cemented Rod and Carr's moth-
er with a strong ,invisible yond.
“Mrs, MeClellan, ‘as you know.
Care is x great artist, Dut even in
the north where we are more toler-
ant thin the people here, he. hos
encountered a thousand dificutties
hecause of his color. Nuw the most
‘overwhelming difeulty of all “con-
fronts him. He 11 in love—he loves
a -whitelwoman, and she loves him.”
‘A look of horror came into Sara’s
face but Rod went on.
“She. was brought up abroad, 0
she is tolerant of the Negro, In ll
the world there is not another wom-
Anvlike her, so understanding, so
ind, £0 genie... She nsks for no de-
tails’ of ancestry. Care, the artist
the here-now-and-today | man, | Is
enough for her, but her father has
forbidden Carr to see Her. 1 hive
come here when T had no business
fo leave my company, to her from
You the mame of Carrs’ white fa-
iher, thet T may match it against
the name of the man who is treat-
ing him'so abominably. Perhaps, |
may even be able to Ro to Carr's fa-
ther and secure his aid in stralght-
ening out. Ue deplorable tangle.
Carr McClellan isa gon of whom
ine father could be, juste proud.
Witt you tell me hie fathers’ name?"
“Lil tell you mo’ than & name—
1 tell you the whole story.” Sara
Grew closer to the table and nid
her folded arms upon it. Ler whole
helng seemed set In xn Immutable
mold, but her eyes were voleanie
Tod ‘marveled at her good English
and at her slight accent,
“My. mothinh was. blacit—my fa.
thah was a white man—a rich plan.
tah, Twas sent no'th to school b3
my fatah and when T finished there
Teaine back home. I was pret
then and full of life and xomething
almost like hope And so when Bud-
as, the son of a rich plantah io ouah
fon, told me about his love, 1 Ils
tened to him. You know, Mr Tod
public opinion in the south stil jus
fines the wholesale sprostitution a
Negro. women. Twas constantl\
pursued and nally allured by Bud:
fay Into @ feahtul condition that cus.
tom had set tis approval on. Cari
wax born and then Buddy went away
To college and T had to look fo" 1
siuauion, My_pldaunty took care
of my baby. THvent Into. service a
faay's mald to a daughter of one oF
the richest men inthe south Point
K. Drexel. My yout Mistress, Mrs
Fawn Drexel, was a very beayttil
girl of my own oge—and of my
own Face! Her mothah had “beer
ene of the Drexel house servants
She had fine features and creams
skin and. with her hale
piled high under a big womb, | she
looked mo’ Spanish than anything
else, Point Drexel was very fond
of bis dark daughtan as he nad nc
othah children ‘by his white wire
and go when his wife dled ho took
Miss Fawn home to live with him.
He edueatea her In the hest schools
and gave her every luxury. As
Point Drexel grew richer he becaine
ambltous fol political honahs, anc
thinking hls dark dauhtal might be
ike a'eindah in the public eye thal
was watebing him, he sent her a.
way. E traveled with her abroad
She’ grew very bituh toward. he
fathah when she found he was pay-
ing price to vecuah freedom from
Wer, and she changed her name. Fi.
nally. she found aman who loved
ier and they were. married, bat at
tall Mise Fawns’ baby was bo'n, her
Husband. sent_me back co. Mississip:
pi in ordah to, cut off ail corinections
With Miss Fans’ past lite.
‘When 1 got honie 1 found my ba.
bya’ big boy. He filed my room
with little dogs and rabbits and
Ro'ses all made out of red clay tron
the side of @ bank neah where we
lived. ‘Boa'ding with my aunty wa:
a young colored man named Grant
Meciellan. I'd konwn him all mny
ae
Saturday; November 7
life and he and little Carr wele
great friends, Presently Grant ask-
fd mo to marry him and he was so
sweet about Carr—said he'd be
good Kind adéy to him and that Carr
could take his name and he told mo
he'd help me to make a good man
out of him. We both worked hard
And Sayed ain we could so we could
send Carr away to school where he
could have lessons in drawing and
pajriting, Aftah we were married
Gnd settled down and Carr was i-
way at school, Buddy- tame home
from the no'th. He bothahed round
me saying 1 belonged to him. f
asked him please to let me alone,
but. that mage him mo’ and me!
anxious. He wore smaht | clothes
and dashed up and down the road
halloing and acting like all posses-
Keontinued Next Week ~
And She
Answered
NO!
4 don't betens that you would
sites eaten Se Za” that
Teed art protected by sick
Lat dghPnsurance?
Map SHE. ANSWERED
Not
fied asieir eesnny me
Her, ate ale teeald ete
pre eo
feet
eet sur agent ons tet him
Wheg ome teen a a ae
ies
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DOCTOR O'CONNELL AT HOWARD CONVOCATION
Dr. Peter Ainslie With Morgan Dean At Ninth Annual Gathering
THREE DAY SESSIONS
PLANNED THIS WEEK
ed To Speak
Washington, D. C.—The Ninth Annual Convocation of the School of Religion of Howard University will be held Tuesday, November 2nd, Wednesday, November 4th, and Thursday, November 5th in the Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, on the University Campus.
A number of addresses will be designated for the country during the sessions. The topic for discussion Tuesday, November 2nd will be "The Church and Social Reform." Those scheduled to speak on Tuesday will be Professor James L. Finn, Ph.D., the President of the American Federation of Labor; Professor James L. Finn, Ph.D., the President of the American Federation of Labor; U.S. Orrford, of the Associated Charities; Judge James J. Britt, Chief Counsel; U.S. N. Taylor, pastor of the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church; J. Jesse Hewlett, President of the Presbyterian Church of Cincinnati, Ohio; the Annual Convocation of the University Society; Dr. J. P. Personal Husset, of Brooklyn, N. Y., who is President of the unrecognized Society.
This topic for discussion the second day of the Convention, Wednesday, November fourth, will be "The Church and Business." Among those who will address the conference on this subject are: Dr. E. R. Wright, Jr., of Philadelphia, Pa.; Rev. Peter Ainslie, Dr. Peter of the Christian Temple, Baltimore, Md.; John E. Hpwking, Financial Review, Raleigh, NC; Dr. Michael D. D. Pace, Rev. James E. Kirillan, Dr. D. Pace, of the Union Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Pa.; Rev. Philip H. Phelps, Field Manager, Chamber of Commerce of the United States; and Rev. E. B. Watson,
The Annual Convention Dinner will be held in the New Dilling Hall on the University campus at 6:30 o'clock, during the Convention Dinner, a brief speech will be delivered by Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Charleston, W. V.
Among those who will address the conference on the topic "The Church and World Brotherhood," the third and last day of the Convention, Thursday, No. 18, at 9:45, are: Arthur D. Call, Secretary of the American Peace Society, and of the Inter-Parliamentary Council; Rev. John Britton Clark, P.V., P.V., of the First Presbyterian Church, D. D. Rev. Prof. Pezavic Gomm, Dr. D. Rev. Prof. Pezavic Gomm, Secretary of the Knockles and Director of the Religious Education, D. D. P. P. P. P. of the Baltimore Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church; Dr. J. Butler Pratt, Dean of the Howard University School of Religion.
Rev.Mr. Herbert Retired, Dead
Rev.Mr. Herbert Retired, Dead
Rev. Charles E. Herbert, an aged revered minister of the A. M. E. Church, died Sunday afternoon at his home in Cottonville. He was aged 101 and lived in 1875 and was adored many of the important postmates of his life. Because of continued illness he received from active service in the Army, and with a postage in the 1500 block of Drum Hill avenue removing to his late home several weeks ago. Rev. Mr. Herbert was a veteran of the War. His first phase from the Army to the E. Church, Outcottville Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. A large number of his brother ministers took part in the services.
30 Catholics Converted
Cincinnati. O.—Thirty conversion have been reported as the result of the week's mission conducted by the Rev. Leo Woolsh, pastor of Holy Trinity Catholic Church. This is why it is said included ministers.
East Indian Here
Mrs. Sahalia Eunicee, of Calgary, India, who has been a Christian missionary for 15 years, is the teacher of Mrs. Eunicee, lecturing in the interest of a processed industrial training school to be conducted by colored workers.
Philia--Rew. Iace C. Reddle
wound up a six weeks' evangelistic
campaign at the Baptist Tithorneer
Dev Sisters, plaster. There were
Alled to a churus of 50 at Rethu-
ber. The 40 were added to the church.
The evangelists began Monday a se-
cure meetings at Mt. Hibernon.
Cribbs
High Point, N. C.—Fifty-ninth
annual session of the Colored Pa-
tition. Concurrent with the Rew, S. L.
Paraphrase, pastor, last week.
When You Are Ready to Sell Your Car
Here's how to do it quickly:
See that the car is in good shape. Then write a comprehensive description of the automobile and the model, telling what service it offers. It offers man who wants to buy a good used car.
Put the ad in the classified There it will be seen by everybody in town who can see it. There it is certain to be interested, for there is a real demand for it. There will give satisfactory service.
When your ad is ready, bring, or
DuBois Admitted Garvey's Dreams Are Feasible
A new series of articles on what leading Americans think of the Garrery move, written explicitly by the author, are published in American Citizenship. Those whose opinions are quoted include Dr. W. E. B. Duliss, A. Philip Kendall, W. S. Scarborough, Prof. A. H. Moseley, W. A. Plecker and Ernest S. Cox, author whose latest book is dedicated *Citizenship*.
2 P. M. —Sunday School. F. W. Phillips, Superintendent,
2 P. M. —Sermon, to Stewardesses:
7 A. M. and 4. E. M.-Chuse meetings. 5 p. m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. 6 p. m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, H. W. Ebb and H. W. Manloo. Reservations: H. W. H. Manloo, minima
CHAPTER VI
Br Thomas L. Dabney
Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois, perhaps the greatest scholar of the race, has written several articles on the Survey Movement. From an article printed in the CRISIS for January 1921, he says, among other things:
"Garvey is a sincere, hard-working idealist; he is also a stubborn, domineering leader of the mass; he has worthy industrial and commercial schemes but he is an inexperienced business man."
His dreams of Negro industry commerce and the ultimate freedom of Africa are feasible; but his methods are bombastic, wasteful, illogical and ineffective and almost illogical. If he learns by experience, attracts strong and capable friends and helpers instead of making needless enemies, if he gives up secrecy and suspicion and substitutes open and frank reports as to his income and expenses, and above all if he is willing to be a co-worker and not a czar, he may yet in time succeed.
Among Churches
Among Churches
ERENEZER A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. M. E. Walden, Pastor
Monday Morning, S. 8 to 10
Monday Morning, S. 8 to 10
M. and M. Preaching,
2:00 P.M. M. and M. Preaching,
2:00 P.M. M. and M. Preaching,
Innovation, Sunday and Thursday
nights, 8 o'clock
Total Mass and Prayer Meeting Friday
nights, 8 o'clock
UNIVERSAL BAPSTEST SAMPLE
841 Place St.
Rev. Annise, S. 8 to 10
Pastor, November 8, 1925
1:00 A.M. M. Preaching, Preaching and Test,
Monday Preaching and Test,
Celebration, Account Meeting and Spiritual
Club, Preaching and Test,
Friday Prayer Meeting and Test.
GILLIAN M. F. CHURCH
Saint Peter Neal Baltimore
Tristesse and Ground Stone
1:00 A.M. Sermon by the Pastor,
1:00 A.M. Sermon by the Pastor,
1:00 A.M. "Way to the Cross",
1:00 A.M. "Prayer Meeting"
Please report all ground stone on
Historian, W. J. Willett,
Pastor.
THE PEOPLES CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Bond and Jefferson St.
1:00 A.M. Class Meeting,
1:00 A.M. Class Meeting,
N. A. will teach,
1990 M.-Rev. W. A. Moore, the blind
engraver, of Columbus, Ohio, will
AXES MEMORIAL M. F. CHURCH
Sunday, Nov. 19, 1925:
6:00 A.M. A.M. Morey Bible Place.
6:00 A.M. Morey Communion. Sermon by
the pastor.
230 P. N. W. W. School. Alfred Dixon
Superintendent.
BET. BRIEN Loom, Pastor
CONTINENTAL M. E. CHURCH
On Caroline, Al. Mam St.
N. Foster, Al. Mam St.
1:000 Church, Miss. Mam
Superintendent, Pastor
2:250 M. Simmons, Mr. Gold-
dorfer
Eagle Supporting Youth Growth League, Mine, Dean
President
A M. Serrano, by E. P. H. Green
Come and hear this veteran of the
Subs: "Pale Horse."
229 P. M. Sundys, ch.
We certainly do you to send the
children.
310 P. M. Ray, J. A. Briseuse, of Prime
Memorial, his child and congregation,
"and P. M. Allen" E. P.
"I am a beautiful morning picture
exhibition, of religious facts and scenes,
Come and hear, Silver offering at
the day.
"a Rata Jubilee Singers, Silver
offering,
"to me, the one from us,
and with an accuracy, during the
week.
Service each night Arthur Strane
Director, II. Brent, Superintendent,
Wm. B. Butler, President, A. C. E. Longue,
TRINITY A. M. E. CHURCH
Cars: Linda Ave. and Biddle St.
2 125 P. M.-Nunn School; membership rally
6 199 P. M.-Alen Leisure
1 599 P. M.-Stern to UniFutbil Relief So
11:00 A. M. S. Special School, to all the men,
Albury M. E. Church, by the
Church of
2:00 P. M. Sunday-school, Mr. Charles T.
Newbury, superintendent
3:00 S. P. charge and his people
4:00 P. M. Breaking Camp
with some help
W. N. Earhart, Pastor
11:00 A. M.—Sermon to the men, Rev. W. H. Pay,
3:00 P. M.—Sunday school,
3:00 P. M.—Sunday school, North Hedge,
Pastor M. Earhart Battel Church, His congregation will accompany him,
8:00 P. M.—Sermon by Pastor.
St. John A. I.
Lexington St.
10 A. M.—Bible Class, B.R. Brigh,
11 A. M.—Sermon by the Pastor,
2 P. M.—Sunday School, F. W. Ph,
2 P. M.—Sermon to Stewardesses,
2 P. M.—Sermon to Stewardesses,
8 P. M.—Testimonial to Mrs. Nellie
Twilight Tea from 4 to 7 p. m., by
Mrs. Rachel Chaney, Secretary,
7 A. M. and 4 P. M.—Class meetings
and Thursday, class meetings, N. p. in,
Samuel Carroll, Secretary, Rev. W. H.
THE CHURCH OF THE NATION
in at least starting some of his schemes toward accomplishment. Because does these things, and uses them quite he cannot escape failure. Again, in an editorial in the CRISIS MAY, May 1924, Dr. Du Bois writes:
"Marcus arvey is, without doubt, the most dangerous enemy of the Negro people. He is either a lunatic or a tristor. He is sending all over this country tons of letters and pamphlets appealing to Congressmen bush and educators to join him on a platform whose brief concealed planks may be interpreted as follows: Negro descent may ever hope to become an American citizens. That foreseeable separation of the Negroes to Africa is the only solution of the Negro problem.
"That race war is sure to follow attempt to re-use the program of the CRISIS MAY."
Bishop Hurst At Bethel Communion
There were five hundred communicants at Bethel's Communion Day Sunday, besides visitors and Friends, the morning sermon was given by the Rev. Stephen. The communion was conserved by the Bishop John Hurst. Dr. Albin Hurst was present on the morning service. Dr. James G. Robinson, view, preached a sermon from the view, preached a sermon from the subject "Romantic Faith" at the evening service. And interesting third Quarterly Conference was also held Monday evening. Dr. P. J. Jordan, presiding. William H. E. Church, with his chair and congregation worshiped with Bethel on Wednesday evening in the invitation of the Full Faith at the invitation of the Sampon, leader of Class No. 26.
Autumn decorations of gay-colored foliage and every variety of farm product were the master, Rev. F. C. Colbert on "The Christian Home" were the outstanding features of the Harper's Weekly morning at Greece Presbyterian Church, corner Dolphin and Etting streets. His text from Genesis 15:19, 19. Rev. Colbert, in his sermon declared that church, social, national, and governmental life can be no higher than the home life. He wrote that he may spend time in criminal investigations and international conferences to the exclusion of a selfless and important problem of the home.
After a brief description of the essential characteristics of a Christian home, he admired that it was the only chance for the children to be the diocesan sign of the times is the neglect of home life and the growing disrespect of children for parents. The anthems of the choir, of which Michelle Collins is direcress, were especially selected for the occasion.
5th Annual Christmas Treat to Patients At Bay View
I am again asking all those interested in something in my envelopes to assist me in giving my Fifth Annual Christmas View and to the 106 patients at Henryton Tibervilles Hospital on Christmas Day and to the 90 patients on New Year's Day to 900 patients. Music concert by the Southern Star on New Year's Day; also a Crownville on New Year's Day; also a Thank you for your assistance in the past. I am, respectfully yours.
BETHEL HILL HOSPITAL
Charitable Worker, Ind. College
46, Nov. 28
COME TO THE GOSPEL TREAT
The Christian Pilgrimage, entitled
"THE WAY TO THE CROSS"
will appear
JOHN WESLEY M. E. CHURCH
Montgomery and Sharp Sis.
Sunday Evening, Offering, Mrs. Ryan
Coleman, Dir.; Mr. William Cornish,
Chr. Rev. W. S. W. Thomas, Pastor
STOP! LOOK! and READ!
The Christian Pilgrimage, entitled
"THE WAY TO THE CROSS"
MACEDONIA BAPTIST CHURCH
Lafayette and Fremont Aves.
Thursday, Eve. Nov. 12, 6:30 p.m.
College Directress; Miss Carrie Howard,
Chairman, Rev. D. G. Jack, Pastor
MT. VERNEX BAPTIST CHURCH
Vernon Baptist Church, Okinawa S. Sunday
morning and night, then serve communion.
NELSON MEMORIAL HOLY TEMPLE
Rev. Elizabeth Green, Pastor
1:00 p.m.
M. Sunday school.
2:30 p. M. Sunday school.
8:00 p. M. Breeding and Test
Thursday. Breeding and Test
Thursday. Breeding and Test
A. M. E. Church
n Street, near Pine
Briscoe, Tencher,
or.
I. Phillips, Superintendent,
see:
rs. Harriday, President.
celle Paul, by K. of P.s.
l. by W. M. M. S. Mrs. Manokoo, President.
lings. $ p. m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
in., Friday, prayer meeting. H. W. Ebb and
W. H. Manokoo, minister.
Bethel A.M.E. Church
Bethel A.M.E. Church
Druid Hill Ave. and Larvate St.
M. S. - Sermon by Dr. Stepeau, subject, "THE MAN AND HIS CALL".
1:30 P. M. - Sunday Schole. Prof. Wm. H. Proctor, Supt.
2 P. M. - Sermon by Dr. Luke G. Reynolds, Trinity Baptist Church, choir and congregation.
7:30 P. M. - Sone and Praise Service, conducted by Rev. Maloy.
8 P. M. - Sermon by Rev. Fredrick Johns, Remarks by Dr. Stepeau, Anuples of Captains Stainback Johns and Wescott.
All are welcome. A cordial greeting, a cheering message await you.
Tea served in the Upper Chapel, Sunday evening, 5 to 7. Mrs. Chapman, chairman.
BACK TO AFRICA
A. B.
Bishop Matthew W. Clair, salts next week for supervision of his work in Monroeville, Liberia, W. Coast Africa, Bishop Clair's residence is in Covington, Ky., to which the Liberia area is attached. Last year the Liberian Conference was held in E. Liberia of South Africa, (white).
APPOINTMENTS
APPOINTMENTS
WESTERN DISTRICT
Ashville, G. H. Caldwell; Rossemer City, R. I.; Burley; H. H. Hockey; E. R. Ruffin; R. J. R. McLeod; T. M. Paterson; Catawna街道, E. M. McLeod; Theaville; Stanley, L. Davie; S. R. Ruffin; Franklin, J. B. Meeckine; Forest, G. T. Frazier; Gaston, G. T.; Foley; Hickory, W. T.; Lomax; Lawndale and Brooks, R. Smith; Lenolz, R. B.; Rhine; Lenolz, R. D.; Powell; Lowesville, J. J.; Ranton; L. R. Ruffin; and M. Holly, A. M. R. Irwin; Mach-Polk, and St. James, J. A.; Addie; Marion, J. W.; Shuford; Mooreville, and Mayhe, P. F.; Johnson; Newton and Connor, J. R. Dillard; Old Fort, R. C.; Little; Shelby and Kings, M. D.; II. Keene; Stateville and Philibulich, G. W.; Brunee; Sherill Ford and Denver, G. G.; Robinson-West, A. W.; Shoville, N. M.; Martin; M. Moran and Cornelius, S. H.; Prestly, S.
GREENSEORO DISTRICT
Brown Summit, F. J., Lee; Central Rand, G. W.; Moehead; Durham, G. T.; Johns, E. J.; Starr, S. W.; Murphy; East, P. L.; Well-Hines, E. J. S.; Moehead; N. B.; Greenshore, E. J. S.; Sutton, S. M.; Moehead; North, R. W.; Wotthorbe; Smith, R. S.; Green, R. J.; Lisham; Gollard, B. I.; Abes, S. W.; Henderson, G. P.; Pee, P. F.; Steele; Lenkeville, W. D.; Hriston; Newport; New, W. J.; Smith; Norfolk, A. S.; McFarman; "Benant Riddor, J. E.; Beeler; Reddville, J. R.; Brower; Raleigh, J. M.; Hartle; Rannauer, Robert; McRae, J. M.
MIDDLETOWN DEL
Plans have been completed by the officers of the Florence Crittenden Circle, to hold a mammoth runaway sale at the Maryland Baptist Church, corral street, Saturday, November 14th, from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. The use of the church was donated to the pastor, the Rev. Mr. Hickle, and ladies connected with the affair of the church, with useful articles to be sold.
Bishop Gaines Going South
Bishop A. L. C. Lines, of this city who has just returned from a brief visit to his work in the Middle West will leave in a few days for Conway North Carolina and in the east Carolina Conference of the A. M. E. Church for Bishop William W Beckett. From South Carolina Bishop Caines will go to Louisiana where he will give a number of his own conferences.
Liberian Missionary Here
Mrs. W. L. A. Corbin, a missionary from far away, Liberin, was in the city for a few days this week. Mrs. Corbin with her husband are at miles from Montrovie, this is one of several schools directed by Bishop W. Simpson Brooks. Mrs. Corbin left Monday night for New York from whence she will sell for her African home on November 18th.
Inspirational Melodies 25c
Folk Songs 45c
Gospel Carole 45c
FEV. ISAAC REDDIE
1923 Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md. 11
CATHOLIC CHURCH IS BEST FOR SOUTH
Senator Wm. Cabell Bruce
Declares It Best For Rural
Regions
UNIVERSAL FRATERNITY
TAUGHT AND PRACTICED
Church, Says Senator, Is Tutor, And Requires Deference To Authority
By Senator Wm. Cabell Bruce
(In the Catholic Review)
"Leaving out of sight all other fields of usefulness and points of view, let me say that in one social respect, in my judgment, the Catholic Church, if we may reason from its influence in Mary's life, we can conclude the lasting interests of the end South than any other church.
"As we know, in the South there are two races, each very numerous, which are sharply distinguished in gentleness and in salientness and other characteristics. In an eminent degree, the future peace and prosperity of the South depends upon the extent to which mankind is civilized, civilized and helpfulness shall be maintained between these two races. In the general promotion of these sentiments the mission of the Catholic Church, "The mission that it sets before us is that the humanity is so authoritative, that the relations between the communicants white and colored, are naturally enough regulated to a very striking degree by the principle of religious
"I have never been a Negro worshipped in a white Protestant Church since was a way, when a Negro was a Negro, we never time occupy seats in the galleries of white Protestant churches; but one does not have to go beyond Maryland to see at times white and colorful churches. We have a same roof of the same Catholic Church. Every afternoon on my way from my office to Calvert Station I observe going in and out of the church while Catholics who find in that church a convenient place for their afternoon devotions. The effect of these religious contacts altogether good. They make both whites and Negroes feel that they have a common interest in the most important of all human concerns, and that they are the universal Brotherhood of Men are red things and not more conventional phrases; and they cannot but result in kindler and friendlier lives between the races than would exist.
"Moreover, a church that insists upon due deference to authority, and frowns upon more illicit liberty and more rebellious disaffectedness, that is precisely fitted to teach patience and self-restraint to a race that has not a little injustice to complain of, and has not yet marked progress as an exercise of vigilant intolerance; and such a church is the Catholic Church.
Bible Thot Todav
O BEHATABLE:—Breathe. If a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are afraid of meekness; considering yourself, test thou also be tempted.—catal. 6.1.
League Celebrates 24th Anniversary
League Celebrates 24th Anniversary
The A. C. E. League of Trinity A. M. E. Church, Mr. Robert L. Henson, president began Sunday morning the 25th anniversary. The anniversary sermon was prescheduled by the Rev. Dr. William H. Thomas, pastor of the church. A regular 6 o'clock leisure service a special program was tendered. The speakers on this occasion being E. W. Spens, a sailor of Rute, and Prof. Howard E. Young, former secretary to Bishop Sampson Brooks, whose theme was "Vision. H. Albert Whittington was At 8 p. m., a special sermon was prescheduled to the league workers by Dr. D. G. Hill, of Annapolis, and a former pastor of the church. Speakers during the week, closing with a fine banquet on Friday evening.
M. E. Conference At Fisk
Nashville. Tenn.-The Annual Tennessee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, which last meeting in Nashville the past week, was given the privilege of holding its Sunday session in Fisk Memorial Church by authorizing a Halloween party in the hall of U. church Saturday afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. There were over two hundred tots present.
MRS. PHOBE H. WHEATLEY, Evangelist, returned from the west, after spending four years in the Moody Bible Institute, which is a member church. M. E. Pleasured to accept any engagement. Remain in Nashville-av., Baltimore. Thanks in advance.
WATERS A. M. E. CHURCH
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8th
11 A. M.—Prenching by the Pass.
2:30 P. M.—Sunday School. Proof.
3:00 P. M.—Waters A. M. E. Chu by the Pass.
4:00 P. M.—A. C. E. League.
Mrs. M. Purnell.
8:00 P. M.—Presentation. "The Library" gained credit. "The Wrute Thompson Hill, Directress; the Thur校, cornetist. In the interest "Renovation Fund. Silver Offering. The Library" Sunday evening night. Prayer meeting. Thursday hearsal, and Boy's Training Class on a cordial welcome to our religious especially welcome. Mrs. Emma St. Wateri. Secretary.
2:30 P. M—Sunday School. Prof. J. T. Maxwell. Superintendent.
3:00 P. M—Waters A. M. E. Church at The People's Church. Sermon by Rev. M. H. Davis.
3:00 P. M. A. C. E. League. Program by Mrs. Sarah Nichols and Mrs. Pirelli.
8:00 P. M. - Presentation, "The Music Lover of the Silver Spring Literary," a sacred canvita, "The Way to the Beautiful City." Mr. trude Thompson Hill, DirecTV, Ben Lester (Lecture), Mr. R. B. H. (Interview), the interest of Mr. and Mrs. S. Barnett, for "Renovation Fund." Silver Offering. The Class meeting Sunday evenings, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights, and Friday, Tuesday, Thursday, The Official Board, Choir Beats and Roy's Training Class on Friday nights.
hearsal, and Boys Training Center. A cordial welcome to our religious services. Strangers and community especially welcome. Mrs. Emma Stanley, Pres., A. C. E. League, J. E. Waters, Secretary.
MOTON AGAIN NAMED ON "Y" COUNCIL
Tuskégee Head On Commit-
tee Of 21 Of National Y.
M. C. A.
INTERNATIONAL VICE
PRESIDENCY TO MALONE
Other Race Representatives
At Big Body Honored In D.
C. Meet
Washington, D. C. Oct. 30.—High recognition was given several colored representatives by the International Convention and the National Council of the Young Men's Christian Associations, which have been holding sessions here during the past week.
A. E. Malone, of St. Louis, was elected vice-president of the International Convention; John R. Pinkett, of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company, was one of the speakers; and Mr. Malone, Dr. John Hope of Atlanta, Ga., Horace Sudduth of Cincinnati, and Dr. Channing H. Tobias, Sonior Secretary of the Colored Man's Department of the National Council, were members who identified the tomb of the unknown soldier at Arlington and placed a wreath as an expression of respect. The National Council elected Dr. R. M. Moton as one of twenty-one members at large selected from the entitlement of the National Council. Dr. R. Valentine of Bordentown, N. J., as vice-chairman of the Council, and re-elected Dr. John Hope to the thirty-six men from all parts of the country. The General Board carries on the work of the Council between the annual meetings of this
Eleven colored men and four colored boxes will attend the World Conference on the Environment in singforgs. Finland next summer as a part of the American delegation of the management of the New Hotel Willard, where the sessions were held. There were no all delegates. There was no color library in the library or dining rooms.
PROCLAIM PASTOR
A CIVIC LEADER
Resolutions Recall Public Accompaniments of the Rev. Junius Gray
A. B.
Resolutions praising the long career of religious and civic leadership giving guidance to the Nation's highest session of the National Baptist Convention, were the subject of much favor. Baptist ministers in a recent meeting of Baptist ministers in Indiana, during this discussion it was pointed out that the work of our oral work in Indiana, he has headed an unusual number of civic, educational and religious organizations, the outstanding leaders in the community life. He served the Rev. Mr. Gray headed the finance division of the organization entertaining soldiers and his successful wife, who served in a city wide reputation for positive accomplishment. He also headed the contributors and promoters of the successful nurses drive at home. One of the biggest educational events in Lyric Theatre in the city was managed by Rev Gray and the resolutions caused by him and praise he received from white and colored men and women in connection with bringing the National Baptist Conference to the city.
Few men, it was said, have a wider following and more general car of the leading forces in the community than the Rev. Justin Gray.
Tuesday, 5 P. M., Dead Line
M. E. CHURCH
t. near Orleans
Parsonage, 427 Aisquith St.
tutor.
J. J. T. Maxwell. Superintendent.
Arch at The People's Church. Sermon
Program by Mrs. Sarah Nichols and
Music Lovers of The Silver Spring
way to the Beautiful City." Mrs. Ger-
bers Berta Lee, accompanist. Mr. Ar-
t of Mr. and Mrs. S. Barnett, for the
J. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
nights. The Official Board, Choir Re-
Friday nights.
His services. Strangers and community
family, Pres., A. C. E. League, J. F.
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The text this week was suggested by the Rev. Junius Gray, Pastor Pastor D. G. Mack, Pastor Macedonian Baptist Church, Dr. D. G. Mack, Pastor Macedonian Baptist Church.
WEEKLY SERMON
The sermon this week was supplied by the Rev. J. H. Green, Pastor or M. H. Weidemann, Pastor. The sermon was supplied by the Rev. H. E. Wolden, Pastor Ehrenzer A. M. E. Church.
Physical And Spiritual Blindness
Text: "As Jesus passed by he saw a man that was born blind from his birth and Jesus annotated his eyes with clay and said unto him, Go to the pool of Salome and annotate it."
PHYSICAL BLINDNESS
The sight of a blind person always interested Jesus to such an extent that when he was stoned, he stopped by the road and annotated the eyes of the blind, though it was the Sabbath Day, and against the law of God he was compelled to move him to such an extent that he was compelled to render service.
Physical Blindness is bad beyond expression. To be blind is to be scarcely born at all. To become blind after birth is to be dead to much that makes life worth while. Blind people have always had to suffer
SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS
Spiritual Blindness is much worse be blind spiritually is to be physically blind effects the moral, social and intellect born spiritually blind and most of them a condition.
Jesus in speaking to the Pharisees, he not, and ears and hear not. The world and spiritually blind/people.
The most essential thing for them to cry when our word passes by and by. We miss it, go to the pool and wash. Our suffering from Spiritual Blind suffering can be from Physical Blindness mean to pass by and leave us crying with sight.
Nearly all of the suffering in the world the greatest job of the world to day is to spiritually. We can see through a glass moved. We shall see face to face.
Spiritual Blindness is much worse than Physical Blindness. To be blind spiritually is to be physically dead, because to be spiritually blind it must be the intellectual and intellectual the holding. All are born spiritually blind and most of them are allowed to remain in a condition.
Jesus in speaking to the Pharisees, he said, "You have eyes and see not, and hear not." The world is full with mental, physical, and spiritually blind people.
The most essential thing for them to do is to get in the road and eye and ear, and to commiss us to go to the pool and wash. Should we get to use the vitation, our suffering from Spiritual Blindness will be worse than our suffering can be from Physical Blindness. The Lord of life does not mean to pass by and leave us crying without helping us to receive our sight.
Nearly all of the suffering in the world is due to Spiritual Blindness. The greatest job of the world to day is to open the eyes of the people who are blind, and a glass darkly, but when the cause is moved. We shall see face to face.
CHURCHES
QUESTIONS
AND BIBLE
ANSWERS
If Parents will encourage chil-
dren to look up and memorize
the Bible Answers it will prove
priests harbile to them in
after years.
27.
Who gives us sleep?—Psal. 12:12.
From what source cometh help—Psal. 12:4.
What will quiet the fear of evil?
What covenant does the Lord desire to mike?—Hosea 2:18.
Who are riches and honor gained?—Pesach 2:19.
Who will receive honor from the Father?—John 12:26.
Who is said of the prosperous man?—Psal. 1:3.
Why commit thy way unto the Lord?—Psal. 1:3.
What performs all things?—Psal. 5:72.
What things are ours?—I Corinthians 3:21.
What the work be he lost?—Deus Christus 3:12.
Sermon
Chris
p. 12
m. 12
Thursday
THE
Sunday
French
Prayer
Night
Milk
Third
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
Sunday, November 5th: PAULS.
PAPEWELL AT MILLET. Acts 20s
Golden Text: Ye ought to help the weak, and to remember the words of the wise, and to remember that he himself said, it is more blessed to give than to receive—Acts 20:35.
Devotional Reading: Psalm 126:1-6
Reference Material: John 14:27-31; Ephesians 11:15; 14:21-13.
Primary Topic: Paul a Loving Leader.
Lesson Material: Acts 20:17-38.
Memory Verse: It is more blessed to give than to receive—Acts 20:35.
Junior Topic: Paul's Farewell at Milton.
Lesson Material: Acts 20:17-38.
Memory Verse: Acts 20:35.
Intermediate and Senior Topic: An Example of Faithfulness.
Topic for Young People and Adults: Responsibilities of Church Members.
Senior A. C. A. Prayer Meeting Topic: What Can Young People Do For Inquiry? Acts 17:22-18; Acts 17:22-19; Acts 3:25-29.
National Bandist Sunday-school Lesson: Paul's Parish School, Rockport, responsibilities of Church Members—Acts 20:25-38. Motto Text: "You ought to help the weak, not number the words of the Lord Jesus that he himself said, it is more blessed to give than to receive."—Acts 20:35.
MADISON STREET PRO
CHURCH
Madison St. near Park
MEN'S DAY PRO
11 A. M.—(1)—Speakers—
Dr. Francis M. Wood, Supervisor
Mr. Willard W. Allen, Grand M
(2)—Music—Masonic Choir,
11 A. M.—(1)—Speakers—Dr. Francis M. Wood, Supervisor of Colored Schools. Mr. Willard W. Allen, Grand Master of Masons in Md. (2)—Music—Masonic Choir, directed by Mr. Wm. Devans. 3 P. M.—Sunday School and Bible Class. Welcome. Rev. W. W. Walker, D. D., Pastor.
REVIVAL SERVICES
AT THE
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH
Corner Harlem Ave., and Dolphin St.
Subject, Sunday, November 8th:
"THE DIVINE CONFUSION OF BLOOD
TRANSFUSION"
Evangelist F. C. Phipps
of Pittsburgh, World Traveler and Lecturer, will speak on the important subject. Good singing and special music will be rendered.
Song Service Starts 7:30 P. M.
Mrs. Lottie Peterson, Music Director
Ed. M. S. Banfield, Pastor
一
Memory Verse: Acts 20:35
more than Physical Blindness. To really deal, because to be spiritually intellectual part of the being. All are them are allowed to remain in such eyes, he said. "You have eyes and see world is full with mental, physical, them to do is to get in the road and He may annotate our eyes and comish. Should we get to accept the Intel Blindness, will he worse than our mindness. The Lord of life does not urg without helping us to receive our world is due to Spiritual Blindness day is to open the eyes of the people class darkly, but when the cause is
ES NOTICE
5. S. LESSON
WHATCOAT M. E. CHURCH
and fraternity ninet
11:00 A.M. by the Prairie
1:00 P.M. M.-Sunday school.
1:00 P.M. M.-Sunday school.
8:00 P.M. M.-Sunday League.
8:00 P.M. M.-Sunday League.
Prairie
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday night-
ly
Meetings.
Wednesday Night—Prayer Meetings.
Friday Night—Official Board.
Friday Night—Official Board.
M. B. Cower, Supt.
M. OLIVER CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Division St. at Laureus
Services each Lord's Day at 11 a.m. and
8 p.m.
THE SOCIAL FREE BAPTIST CHURCH
St. Paul's Episcopal Church
REY, LEWIS GUARD, Church
residence, 920 George St.
Sunday, - - - - - - Covenant Meeting.
Practicing - A 1 - - - - Covenant Meeting.
Sunday-school - 2:30 P. M.
Practicing - A 1 - - - - Covenant Meeting.
Night service - S 0 - o'clock.
Wednesday 8 P. M.-Covenant Meeting.
Thursday 10 P. M.-Covenant Meeting.
Friday 10 P. M.-Covenant Meeting.
BIG ZION A. M. J. M. ZION CHURCH
Pennsylvania Avenue, near Dipoll Street
Rev. J. H. McCoy, M. P. M.
Princeton, N. J. and 3 M. P.
ALL, ARE WELCOME.
Let Aunt Dilsey Do Your Shopping
Aunt Dilsey hasn't enough work to do just editing matter for this page. She wants to be of more service to AFRO readers. So she has become buyer for AFRO readers, doing their shopping free.
Persons outside Baltimore, who want to take advantage of bargains advertised in the AFRO, have only to send Aunt Dilsey a postoffice money order and specify what they want. Aunt Dilsey will use all the goods and judgment she possesses and get the goods sent back. POSSIBLE THE SAME DAY LETTER, REACHES THIS OFFICE. AUNT DILSE has no money for the AFRO, paying Aunt Dilsey to SERVE its readers.
Let Aunt Dilsey shop for you free
of charge. Write
AUNT DILSEY
The Afro-American, 628 N. Eutaw St.,
Baltimore, Md.
T PRESBYTERIAN
URCH
Near Park Avenue
T PROGRAM
Serviervor of Colored Schools.
and Master of Masons in Md.
choir, directed by Mr. Wm.
Saturday, November 7 Gall VErn. 60:16 The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly Baltimore, Md. Page
I HEARD YOU HADDA GO UNDER MY OPERATION LAST WEEK, HENEY
I THOUGHT I WOULD OUT THE DOCTORS FOUND. IT WOULD BE UNNECESSARY.
THEY TOKED ME TO THE HOSPITAL AND MADE AN X-RAY PICTURE OF MY HEAD!!
WHAT IN THE WORLD MADE THEM THINK THERE WAS ANYTHING IN YOUR HEAD??
WHAT THA-??
Business and Industry A Weekly Review Of L s h o r and Business Conducted by William N. Jones
GOOD HOUSING IS GOOD BUSINESS SAYS COUNCIL
Federal Commission On Church And Race Relationships Opposes Ghettos
BALTIMORE PLAN NOTED IN HOUSING SURVEY
Home Makers Building Association Cited As Model Development Project
That the provision of good housing for colored residents may be made a satisfactory business investment, if an individual or organization is willing to accept a moderate return, is the assertion of a study entitled BETTER HOUSES FOR NEGRO HOMES which has just been issued by the Federal Council of Church's Commission on Church and-Race Relationships. Residential Prejudice
In some communities, the report reminds us, "Negro homes of culture and fine living are to be found. They are increasing rapidly in number as Negroes are winning larger economic opportunity." "Negro Americans however, have difficulties in finding places in which to establish homes, even greater than those of other residents, because of the prejudice against them." This operates regardless of culture or financial ability. Hoodlums have been permitted to break windows, houses have been bombarded, actual physical punishment on members of the family, and destruction of property by fire and other means threatened and at times carried out, are measures that have been forced to force the colored pen from homes in neighborhoods that are desirable."
vulnerable citizens. In no doubt court action has been resorted to and all the Supreme Court has declared the obstruction by order of the property owners to property holders have entered into voluntary agreements to exclude Negroes from property owned or consigned to the survey. The areas to which they are expected to confine their residence are those least adequate to the needs of the property, storage and garbage disposal, and other sanitary provision or with fire or police protection.
**Economic Limitation**
In addition to prejudice the economic limitations of colored citizens still further restrict their choice of housing of houses the distress of the Negroes is especially acute. Attempts of various kinds and methods to meet the needs of the Council of Churches seeks to outline some of the outstanding efforts in this line. The most important measure of residential facilities for Negro residents have been made by industrial concerns in order to meet the need for hous-
Such a community of homes has been provided by the Tallassie Power Company at Baden. N. C., with 495 three and four-room cottages each having electric lights, tumbling water, and an adequate sewer system.
Industrial Housing
The rent is low and for a few dollars more per month the residents may purchase the house. The people have their own baseball park, community center, recreational building, theatres and stores. Money for the churches is advanced by the Company, which also builds the building. The Company also supplements the county funds so that there may be school sessions for nine - months of the year. The prospectus mentions nothing in our scheme which tends toward philanthropy. Our business is the manufacture of big aluminum; but our policy is far-sighted enough to benefit the best results from our people, they must be contented." To do this, good housing, recreational facilities, and care for the health is provided.
Along the line of the commercial promotion of better housing for Negroes the survey sites in Detroit, done by the Detroit 1900 houses have been built and are occupied by about 2,000 Negroes. In this instance, while improvements are rapidly being made the conditions are yet far from ideal for Negroes themselves to get good homes is instanced in the purchase of the government-built town of Truxton, Virginia which was recently demolished. Of the 253 houses here, 153 are owned by their occupants.
Home Builders
Considerable space is devoted in the Commission's report to the very unique effort in 'Baltimore on Interagency Cooperative lines.' The Commission built a Association, grew out of an effort sponsored by Dr. Peter Ainsle and was developed by John R. Cary. John R. Cary is a church, social, and financial activities.
It consists of a corporation with charter powers, including buying, selling, renting buildings, management, and security. The board of directors is composed of both white and colored people and claims that it is "philosophically sound" in total value of the properties that have been purchased by this organization so far is in excess of $2,000. The Commission's report calls attention also to a model for homes in the rural districts that has been success in these plans have been successful in these areas and are available to anyone who wishes to build. The problem of housing for New Yorkers is one of concrete human need, fundamental and pressing. It is important that the public realize the negative attitude of restriction, violence, morality, and happiness of Negroes as of other people, and that a negative attitude of restriction and violence should guard the interests of either the white people or the colored people.
HEARD AND SEEN
IN
BALTIMORE
RALPH MATTHEWS
Jack the Slasher has been cutting quite a streak around Baltimore during the last few weeks.
For the benefit of those unfamiliar with the antics of this desperado who has been making a mousetrap of the police it may be scutted that he has slashed the backs of 38 female coats without being caught.
The flatfooters came to the conclusion that the cuts were made with a razor and the finger of suspicion pointed at everybody old enough to shave.
He could take the person's man and address and collect a per cent age when the sale is made.
Then too he could sign a contract with razor manufacturers. After each slash he could pay a silicone "This cut made with a "Tin Never sharp safety razor blade a sale at all drug stores."
A lot of women admitted that they cut their own coats so the husbands would buy them a no one. Many a husband is thanks that his wife had presence of him at the co
While one policeman was shadowing a suspect, Jack slipped up behind him and cut his coat.
Eight people had their coats slashed on the same street car last week and already the police have a good description of the car.
Authorities checked up on all the manies who could see if any manies had escaped lately. Of course this was a waste of time because most of the manies have never been sent there yet.
They can only locate all the crazy people by taking a census.
Who ever this slasher is he is not sure of the manies he has seen. Just look at the advertising possibilities going to waste. After he cuts a coat he should hand the victim a card and say buy your next Robben and Cheatem, Clothiers.
Howard Twitted On Holding Two Jobs
Chicago.—Debating with A. Philip Randolph on the advisability of pullman porters, organizing a union, Perry Howard of, Washington, was accused of, Washington, was Mr. Randolph maintained that Mr. Howard was morally unjustified in accepting a salary from the taxpayers of America, and that he was the United States department of Justice, and at the same time hold a job with the Pullman Company, a private corporation from whose effect it is to test the people. He forcefully pointed out that the low wage of $67.50 per month which the Pullman porters receive is sadly inadequate. Judging from the audience, Randolph who defended the right of the porters to organize won the debate.
A. And P. Employes Clerk
Philadelphia—Request of customers in the neighborhood of 1815 South Street, for the construction of James Baller as clerk in the A, and P, grocery store here.
E. H. HOLLAND
George H. Holland
PRESS AND EMBALMER
mens Open Day and Night
Hill Avenue
Adison 0692
Carriages for All Occasions
C. C. WRIGHT
Mr. And Embalmer
others look at PRICES. I can suit
expensive to go elsewhere
and an undertaker
Quality"
Baltimore, Md.
EDWARD RINGGOLD
Successor
Ar And Embalmer
and courteous service possible
to hire for all occasions
Y Street, near Gold
Never Closed
ATT A. ELLIOTT
Press And Embalmer
BRANTH OFFICES: 504 EAST STREET, 2109 DRUID HIL LAVENUE
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALITY
142 W. Hill Street 1027 Druid Hill Ave.
Garage: 542-44-46 Greenwillow St.
I have the finest grey hearse in the city. Limousines
for all occasions from my own garage. Country work.
Calvert Co. Md. work a specialty.
Complete Saw Mill
Word has been received here that A. C. Faulkner, a former Baltimoreian, but now a Liberian citizen, has completed the erection of the saw mill sent out by the National Baptist Convention, and will soon be producing the necessary library of materials for building projects of the Convention.
Mr. Faulkner has also organized the Liberian Chamber of Commerce in the United States and J. R. Faulkner, who has been a clichéd. He is a brother of Thomas zen of that country for 20 years, and its leading business man.
SOUTHERN RY. AGREES TO PAY OVERTIME
Company Also Restores Four Employees dismissed With-
A C T FOLLOWS CONFAB
WITH DINING CAR HEAD
Washington, D. C. (Afro Bureau)—Controversy between the Southern Railway System, lines east, and the Brotherhood of Dining Car Employees over the interpretation of a contract in which the state of may be agreeably settled last week. The Southern Railway Company was represented by its manager, the dining cars of the lines east. W. K. Washburn of the Brotherhood was represented by its president, Relinz B. Lemus, and member of the board of thetee, J. P. Covington, chairman A. J. Gouwens, P. H. Hamilton.
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Ricenza B. Lemus
The Contract between the Company and the brotherhood provides for a basic video day.
S-hour day. Under the rules, the company contended that a dining car employee was not entitled to pay for overtime unless he had done more than 240 hours service in a month. The Brotherhood contended that in cases where regular runs required less than the maximum number of hours, the employee was entitled to extra pay for all extra work performed.
The company through its representative agreed to the latter interpretation of the rules and to pay overtime whenever an employee was used on other than his regular run. This construction of the rules will provide definite schedules of work and of lay offs.
No More Dismissals
It was also agreed that there would be no further dismissals of employees indent of the lines cast and four compromises who were so dismissed will be restored to duty. The men who may be restored under this decision are Herbert Mills, a chef cook; Fred Goodwin, they are now employed on the Atlantic Coast Line as a result of the efforts of the Brothers. Mr. Kush assured Mr. Lemus that there would be no more dismissals of him that apprehensions might be made to him personally and he would give them a hearing at any time either individually or through
Seniority
On the question of seniority, it was agreed that where an older employee would be given him. All such requests had been previously denied. It was also agreed that there would be a period of time of dining our employees after it had been returned into the office by the steward. The manager ordered this practice dis-
Mr. Lemus will go to Charlotte, N. C., the headquarters of the lines east, next week to assist the manager in straightening out in differences over
He could take the person's name and address and collect a per centage when the sale is made.
Then, too he could sign a contract with razor manufacturers. After each slash he could pen on a sign that the razor would with a tape. Never sharp safety razor blade on sale at all drug stores."
A lot of women admitted that they cut their own coats so their husbands would buy them a one. Many a husband is thankful that his wife had presence of mind enough to use the razor on the coat instead of on him.
But it is a fact that a lot of women are taking an useful chance by cutting their old coat first.
A coat on the back is worth two in the salesroom.
It's pretty tough when a husband gives his wife money for a coat, that Jack the Slasher cut and then detects veneer threads on his own razor.
It was at first thought that the cuts were made by some practical joker but when you have to fork up the money for overcoat that's too blame practical.
To prove that they were on the job the police had to arrest him andarged him with the cutting. This boy proved he was so scared that knives he hadn't even cut his leg.
MARRIAGES
MARRIAGES
JONES—COMEGTS, Arthur, 20, 2208
BARCLAY—MELSERT, Abraham, 54
BARCLAY—MELSERT, Abraham, 54
Nanticope, MD.; Clarn, 38.
FOSSET—PETT, Pierre, 46, 1327
FOSSET—PETT, Pierre, 46, 1327
REED—WEAVER, Phillip, 21, 1503 N.
Dallas St.; Pearl, 18
Dallas St.; Pearl, 18
Etting; Maggie, 24
WILLIAMS—WOODS, Fred, 12, 1258 S.
HUGHES—CURTIS, Milton, 26, 2400
Stockton St.; Ruby, 19
Stockton St.; Ruby, 19
Laurens St.; Irane, 21
SPENCER—JOHNSON, Norma, 21, 921
ROBINSON—JOHNSON, Alfred, 24, 500
Orchard St.; Antha, 17
LILLY—BRISCOEH, John, 22, Washing-
ton St.; John, 22, Washing-
ton St.
JOHNSON—SAULSURY, Clarence, 46, 544 W. Lafayette Ave.; Corline, W., 26, 1535 W. Lafayette Ave.; Corline, W., 26, 1535
Wythe Ave.; Mattie, 16
DINON-GLOVER, Vernon, 11, 193 Winn
WILLIAMS-GHARRY, Harry, 31, 1929
Argyle Ave. Carle A. 20
Washington, D. C. George A. 4,
Washington, D. C. Daley, 22,
Bond St. 22, 522 S. Bond St.
Elizabeth, 18.
CLEARK-CHEKS, Joseph, 21, 1655
SMITH-BLANCHARD, Edgar, 41, 180
SMITH-BLANCHARD, Edgar, 41, 180
Vine St.; Marry, 29.
Mary St.; George, 22, 116
N. Mount St.; Martha 20.
MOREGREY-GALE, Clifford, 1118 E.
YOUNG - JONES, William, 38, 1416
THAGMAN-JUGGS, Alexander, 38.
1011 H. Carsey St.; Laurie, 35.
WILLIAMS—STEWART; Albert, 22.
JACKSON—FRANKLIN, Robert, 22.
HAMPTON—JOHNSON, Charles, 28.
Harrisburg, Pa.; Hazel, 25.
HAMPTON—JOHNSON, Charles, 28.
518, W. West St.; Irine, 25.
LEE—RIGON, Arhtur, 37, Lottie, 88, 208
RAWLINGS—DOLPHIN, Benson, 22.
Washington, D. C.; Margaret, 42.
Washington, D. C.; Margaret, 22, 1862 E.
Monument St.; Ruby, 10, 131, 1W.
Watteau St.; Perret, 24.
WATHEWS—WHEELER, Charles, T.
Odd Fellows Occupy Hall
New Orleans, La. Nov. (ANP) — The Grand Lodge Order of Odd Fell-
completed $100,000 five-tory home in Baton Rouge. Besides offices of the
order, the structure has a room, roof garden, and andorium. The lower
floor houses stores. The national
hall in Hallam next September.
Four Die In Wreck
Memphis. Tennessee. Four colored
and 14 whites were killed when the
Sunnyland express between St. Louis
and St. Paul, Florida was derailed near
here last week.
Mme. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
1828 PEN.A. AVF.
Hairdressing
Manicuring, Etc.
Hour: 9 A. M. 10 9 P.
MADison, S1166
Mrs. Jas. H. Dennis
James H. Dennis
THE OLD RELIABLE CUT RATE
UNDER TAKER
Edward Kelson, Mgr.
BALTIMORE, MD.
1303 Presstman Street
Phena, Madison 2078
MAKE GOOD, MONEY IN A QUICK,
easy way. Sell the best Hair Goods
and make money. We can sell to colorate people we offer you a start, without a penny. Write us now.
New Orleans, USA. 3614 MacMurray
New Orleans, USA. 10-24
GOOD MORNING JUDGE
The Afro Court Reporter
When Miss Stella Small, 2220 McCulloh street, was held in Standis Eisenberg's Dearmarut store some weeks ago she also spent 20 days as the city's guest.
The department store officials told the judge in Part 2 of the Court Truman. When the judge小明 did about a suspicious bag she was carrying out of the store. The store asked that the bag had been handed to her by a girl friend to hold for a few minutes. But it became suspicious herself that something must be wrong and decided to run. It was following this story that the judge handed out the 30-day sentence.
A Good Samaritan impulse of Jessie Turner, Pikeville, Va., the Grand Jurist of the Criminal Court this week, Turner, according to her, was inspired by the Northwestern Police station Sunday morning, went into a lunch room S.S. 1294, 420 Oxford street, had celebrated Halloween to such an extent that she made me feel fearing that some one would take his money from me, the eased it from himself, "Your Honor," said Turner, "I just took it for a friend of yours? Kelley was asked, "Judges never saw that man before," Judges
"Well maybe he can explain it with more success to the Grand Jury," reassigned the Maristrate, "and until then I will hold it in safe keeping."
John Black, of Hyvittsville, came to Baltimore, Friday night, with $50 in the check he received when what happened to him could be called a swirl time, he says. Bad luck and gloom commenced to gather around Black just as soon as he reached the turnip hill the turnip was in the Western basilite. The first jump of trouble turned up in his path. Armsted Reddick, 215 S. Eutaw street, directly in his path. Reddick took when he saw a girl disappeared with $33 of that $50 cash roll. The second turn of trouble came when he attempted to make a train back to Hyvittsville and urged on by a goodly sized drink of cotton whiskey, a gate-mat for not holding the train. He wound up in the station house. The lawyer took the remainder of his roll for legal services. But the biggest
MEDICINE
You've tried the rest From East and West And now the best Is for your test— KERR'S Kill-A-Kough
Myrtle Ave., & George St.
The "Druggy" Store
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. few applications of HAIR STAIN will positively restore the Gray, Faded or Streaked hair to exactly the natural Color. Beauty to your Hair and YOUTH to your appearance. Harmfulness—Easy to apply—No after washing. 50c a bottle.
YOUR HAIR depends on the condition of your scalp. HAIR parchment will replace the Hair Grows. If you want to have your Hair Grown One inch a month and to keep days of impressively Thick Beautiful Hair. Healthy and no more Itchy Scalp begin at once to use
MASKIN
GENERAL BEAUTY
Cocoa-Tar Hair and
Scalp Treatment
Maskin Cocoa-Tar Hair Grower...300
Maskin Cocoa-Tar Hair Grower...300
Maskin Vegetable Hair Tonic...300
Have a Smooth Bright Lovely Beauty
Maskin Vegetable Hair Tonic...300
Maskin SKIN WHITENER and MASKIN
Health and Beauty Skin Soap, 25c each.
Apparel to make men wear.
All the Maskin preparations are
sold on a money-back guarantee every
where.
MASKIN DRUG CO.
1539 MONUMENT STREET
Baltimore, MD
A Good Run Or
A Bad Stand
Good Samaritan
Must Explain To Jury
An Unlucky Night For John Black
SANTAL
MIDA
CATARR
of BLADDER
lump of hard luck came when the judge fined him $10 and cost and they led him back to the cell. "I had 50 bucks sure did so" he said.
FINED FOR DISTURBING THE PEACE OF DISORDERLY CONDUCT
Richard Lilly Virginia, $25: Edward Griffin, 209 W. Montgomery St., $25: Paul Lee, 12 W. Hughes St., $1: Virginia Jackson, 800 Peach alley, $5: James Miller, 407 Lennon St., $2: Joseph Cumberback, 347 Burgundy St., $1: Fredrick Johnson, 649 W. Lee St., $1: Clarece Call, 617 W. Lee St., $1: Mabel Brown, 622 W. Lee St., $1: Noah Watson, 821 China St., $1: Annie Fisher, 830 Peach alley, $1: Thomas Moore, 818 Eutaw St., $1: Jane Jones, 1014 E. Eutaw St., $1: Elmer Nelson, 634 W. Barra St., $1: Alberta Essex, 1330 Porrest St., $10: Eva Kennart, 126 N. Central Ave., $10: Roberts, 624 Central Ave., $25: Floyd Dabney, 733 Sterling St., $25: Elmer Wittmore, 1035 Greecamont Ave., $5: Tarfar Wel, 620 Albanna St., $1: Rita Cooper, 600 N. Bethel St., $25: Sloan Elliott, 825 N. Durham St., $1: William Mason, 1018 N. Chapel St., $1: John Burns, 721 Ruthland Ave., $1
FINED FOR ASSAULT BY CUTTING
STRIKING OR SMOOTING
Mantley Jackson, 1441 Anthony St., $25
Charles Jackson, 706 Schenner St., $10
James Finch, 1441 Johnson St., $25
Finch, 1427 Millman St., $25
James Mondy, 727 Kissor St., $25
HELD FOR LARCENY, ROBBERY OR BURGLEY
Arthur Young, 634 Jakech allert; Solopen
Horsing, 624 Burgardy St. John Nokes, 614
Burgardy St. John Nokes, 614
Burgardy St. John Nokes, 614
There were 53 deaths reported by the Health Department this week. Of this number eight were infants under one year of age. The list follows:
Mary Milligan, 60, 308 Forest St.
James Smith, 3, Battlesville, Md.
John Pitts, 33, 302 N.Edent St.
Margaret Kelley, 17, 946 Drill Hill Ave.
John Pitts, 33, 302 N.Edent St.
John W. Evans, 36, 1039 W. Wolf St.
Dorothy Montgomery, 21, 1726 Presbury St.
John W. Evans, 36, 1039 W. Wolf St.
Jeremiah R. Swann, 33, 765 George
Carrie J. Butler, 27, 32 Kelly
Charles S. Warner, 43, 1114 Russell
La Johnson, 52, 826 N. Mount
Alexille Downey, 38, 88 Annannela
Alexandra Armstrong, 54, 428 N. Regia.
Juan De Leon, 50, 404 Oak
Juan De Leon, 50, 404 Oak
Cora Jolly, 33, 1007 Drud Hill
Mary Simmons, 62, 1418 W. Lanalev
Mary Simmons, 62, 1418 W. Lanalev
Veronica Robinson, 17, 544 W. Saratoga
Harry E. Grayson, 24, 311 N. Arlington
Woods, 17, 121 Dylson
Elin J. Walker, 28 days, 1629 Jefferson
Gilbert, 28 days, 1629 Dorothy Schriner, 17, 802 N. Glimor
Dorothy Schriner, 17, 802 N. Glimor
Infant Banks, 3 days, 793 Vine
Charlotte Jones, 48, 124 Colvin
B. Williams, 23, 4245 Oak W. B. Widdy
Samuel Gray, 64, 414 St. W. Marys
Dora Hallay, 21, 1165 Berkeley
Roger Handy, 21, 1165 Berkeley
Rober Handy, 15, 1330 S. Clinton
Northwestern Pharmacies
Two Stores — Your Leading Neighborhood Store
Pennsylvania Ave. at Dolphin Fremont & Harlem Aves.
Phone: MAd. 4173 Phone: MAd. 5305
AND WORTH TEN TIMES THAT MUCH FOR THE GOOD IT WILL DO FOR ANY COUGH
IF you want your prescription filled WITH THE RIGHT DRUGS Bring them to us
DEATHS
Physician Arrested
Louisville, Ky—Dr. P. R. Peters pioneer physician and churchman here, was arrested for having in his possession 29 pints of whiskey. Several years ago his license was revoked for the alleged sale of narcotics.
IN MEMORIAM
MILLEER—in memory of our dear father and mother. Twenty-eight years ago eased his burden, to live with Him. On this date, October 28, 1924, one year ago, the same day he left home, we from us to live with him. We are left alone. We lost loving voices and beautiful amilies we do not hear nor see any more in our dear old home since 1824. His coat and socks are now in our hands, but away, no more to be used by our loving father, whom the blessed Lord has given to us. We stay to stay. But we shall see him again in the resurrection day. We will be our father and mother's loss will be our gain in heaven.
—Written by his young wrighter.
WANTED
WANTED
$10 REWARD If Magic Skin Bleach does not lighten your complexion, regardless of what it is now. Rapid and harmless. 50c postpaid. Money back if not satisfied. A. F. Veach Chemist Shop, Palestine W. Va.
AGENTS WANTED—Reliable agents who are good workers wanted to sell Wavine Hair Dressing, Skin Bleach and other products. Biggest selling line on market. You can easily make $30.00 to $35.00 weekly. Write for Information. Boyd Mfg. Co., Birmingham, Ala. cow.
AGENTS—YOU CAN CLEAN UP UNDEAR our new plan. Pay for goods when sold and plan helps you sell. Write for free offer now. Delano Company, Syrecuse, N. Y.
AGENTS—WRITE FOR FREE SAMPLES. Sell Madison "Better Made Shirts for Large Manufacturer direct to wearer. No capital or experience required. Many earn $100 weekly and bonus. MADISON SHIRT MAKERS. 562 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
AGENTS-Sell our line of quick selling
products and clean up our
warehouse. Be quick. Dr. Link
Medicine Company, 2646 Elm Street,
Austin.
AGENTS-Assist with
SLES. Sell Madison "Bacter-Made"
wearers. No capital or experience
required. Many earn $100 weekly and
$150 weekly. N. Y. Broadway, New York, N. Y. tt
ALL MEN WCEMEN, 18-60, wanting to qualify for Government positions, $140-$225 monthly, local or traveling, write comment, 430 St. Louis, Mo., immediately.
LEARN BARBERING
MAKE GOOD MONEY IN A QUICK, EASY
sail. Sell the best IHG goods and Toltec
colored people we offer you a start without
colored people we offer you a start without
colored people we offer you a start without
Col. Magnolia St., New Orleans, New
Orleans, Nov. 14
WHAT I WANT, US YOUR
$11.50 daily (easily for sowr
proof), introducing New Insured Hes-
tress, 10 seven months, Latest shades, Alredoal,
Grayuide, 15 seven months, Latest shades, Alredoal,
Grayuide, 15 seven months, Latest shades, Alredoal,
perfume required, 35 either, No容积 or
perfume required, You simply take
can deliver, suit yourself). Credit given.
PAY YOU DAILY, monthly bonus
winter lines now ready. Maccoe Tex-
lite company, Station 385%, Chinatown
Jay Watson.
THA-??
144 Farmers In Baltimore County
There are 144 colored and 3,651 white farmers in Baltimore County according to the 1925 farm census just made public.
Despite the fact that there are 40,000 fewer acres of farm land today than there were five years ago, the value of farm property has increased 56,000,000 in the county.
Figures for this year: land in farms 242,508 acres; value and buildings, 484,616.233. Live stock on county farms has decreased about one-third in the last five years and principal crops of corn, white, and white potatoes have decreased nearly one-half.
County has 6,734 horses, 16,412 cattle, 12,701 dairy cows and 5,833 swine.
906,604 bushels of corn, 109,230 bushels of wheat, 365,323 bushels of corn, 12,600 tons of hay and 312,328 bushels of potatoes.
Three Yr. Hi's In Omaha
Washington—In Omaha, all the-year-sessions have been proposed for the high school system in advance of the technical high school, in that city, with the four quarter plan, which has been operating 45 weeks a year for seven years, and the plan has proved very satisfactory, says J. C. H. McCormick, who adds: "A four-year class is graduated at the end of each twelve week quarter, and bright and energetic pupils may complete the entire course in three
City Directory
Repair Shop
1811½ PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
Expert Shoe Repairing
Special low rates to Homes and Institutions. City or out of town. For particulars please call Shoe. MADISON 318s. W.
Mme. Lillian Brown
HAIR DRESSER
1941 Penna. Ave.
MME. M. JOHNSON
BEAUTY SHOP — LARALLA SYSTEM
1032 Penna Ave.
Shampoo and Press. 800 and 750.
A trial will continue you.
WILLIAM HARRIS
Paperhanging — Painting
2053 Division St. MADISON 2230.
WINSTON
THE GREAT CLOTHES DOCTOR
601 Presstman St. MAD. 8475
Work Called for and Delivered
WILLIAM F. BETHEA
TAILOR
Men's Suits and O'LLOATS Made to Order
427 Robert St. MAD. 0132
ST. LUKE'S HOME AND
ORPHANAGE, Inc.
1620 Druid Hill Avenue
Mrs. Lula Billups, Pres. and Manager
Rev. A. B. Cailis, Secy and Treas.
armacies
Food Store
nt & Harlem Aves.
me: MAD. 5305
Saturday, October 31st
FOR RENT
PIRST FLOOR APARTMENT FOR
MENT—109 N. Gilmore street. Three
rooms, bath, gas, electric. Apply, 1701
W. Mulberry street. Phone, Gilmore
5346. tt
2117 DIVISION STREET—Furnished
rooms in good condition. 1t
2065 MCCULLON STREET—Two rooms,
suitable for two ladies or man and
wife. Phone, MADISON 7517-J. 1t
1311 DRUID HILL, AVENUE - Furnished
Call after 6 p. m. 11
rooms. Call it 827-1111.
505 MECHENCH-ST. ROOMS 11
bath, sir her week. Apply 507 McMechench-
st. Phone Madison 6038.
TWO FUKNISHED ROOMS WITH,
bath, electricity and steam heat. Gentlemen
preferred. Third floor apartment.
A. Morris, 1075 Madison-av. Call it
gate 5. Madison-av. ONE FURNISHED
room, right on second floor.
814 I. CALHUN-ST.— 3 STORIES, 19
rooms, baths; key h1X; Apply Frederick
Dongho, 13 N. Charles-ST. 2nd floor
Phone Plasm, 1523 N.
THIRD FLOOR APARTMENT AND 2
FLOOR. 2nd floor. Apply 1519 West
Lanvale-St. 11
1417 MCALHUN-ST. — 2ND FLOOR
apartment, for quiet couple. 11
1624 MADISON-AV—LARGE FURNISHING room, heat and light, second floor apartment. Man and wife, or single man, preferred. Phone Madison 3334-1.
1620 WHITLOCK-ST—ROOM, or front. Call after 2 p. m. Madison 8534.
1622 DOLPHIN-ST—ONE FURNISHED room, suitable for lady or gentleman.
1666 N. CALHOUN-ST—BEAUTIFUL first door, 3 large room apartment with stove, gas, water. All costs $6.50 per week. Apply 2925 W. Baltimore. Phone Calvert 422-92.
1627 N. STREKER-ST—ROOM APT: $5.00 per week.
1628 HARLEM-AV—ROOM APARTMENT.
1622 MADISON-AV—TREEP LARGE rooms: heat, gas, electric, bath, and junior service. 1922 Madison..
1628 DOLPHIN-ST—BRIGHT CHEF full room: kitchen, dining, or single light, heat and heat, all conveniences..
1628 MADISON-AV—FURNISHED rooms: floor front; suitable for man and wife.
2714 FENXSYLANA-AV-MODERN
apartment; 2 rooms, kitchenette
and bath, electric lights, steam heat.
11
1729 W. JANVALLE-ST 7 - ROOMS,
bath, basement, gas, electric, $11
per week, Key, 1729.
11
429 JANVALLE-ONE FURN-
ished room, with heat and one room
on first floor, suitable for office. Reason-
able price.
11
1823 DURO HILL-AV-FIRST LA-
ndroom, on Madison Avenue,
middle and N. Careyst. Apply above
PLAT FOR RENT—WITH A QUIET
family; gas range, water and heat.
Phone Madison 755-81.
DOUBLE GARAGE—WILL HOLD TWO
cars. Apply 1915 Drum Hill-cav. 2N4N.11
1633 Madison-AN.—FURNISHED
rooms for rent; 2nd floor apartment;
3rd floor apartment.
MATTMENT—ASLEASONABLE PRICE.
Apply 202 E. Federal-st. Phone Caver-
t 0652.11
DESIABLE APARTMENT—CHEAP
all rooms. See 292 Frazier. 292
Fair-pl. 392.
METAL MASTER—NEAT APART-
ment. 2 large rooms, gas range and
private meter. $7 a week. Apply 1712
Mediton-st.
712 NORTH MOUNT-STREET - APPL
Mrs. Riese. 10
FOR RENT
THREE-STORY
HOUSE
S Rooms and Bath.
Furnace
910 N. GILMOR STREET
White Bros., Inc.
Real Estate In All Its
Branches
Phones: VEr. 0356, 7952
1028 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.
First Floor
HOUSES FOR RENT
813 Hancock Ave.—store and 6 rooms,
$9.00 week.
1212 Whitacost St.—6 rooms, $6 week
112 W. Preston St.—4 rooms, $6 week
308 S. Vincent St.—6 rooms, $6 week
308 Cadro St.—6 rooms, $4.50 week
308 Clerer Alley—6 rooms, $5.50 week
318 Pierce St.—3 rooms, $2.50 week
APARTMENTS
13 N. Bond St.—1st floor, 3 rooms and
bath, $5.50 week.
11 E. LEXINGTON ST.
CALvert 0283
Miscellaneous
Mme. Gertrude Green's
Wonderful Treatment for Dr. and Scalp
2031 Penns. Ave. Mad. 6965
PASTRY SHOP
Hot Bread-Rolls-Pies-Cakes
620 Laurens St. Opp. Market
C. W. Smith, Prop.
Quality
Satisfaction
Get me beautify your home
Price to cut the times. Practical
Workmanship
Drop a line and I will call
W. LEROY WANSEL
PAPER HANGING AND
DECORATING
Residence: 421 Mosner St.
Fed: Mattress, $12.00; Mahogany-lost
Bed, $25.00; Silk Floss Mattress, $20.00;
Box Spring, $25.00; Hair Mattress, $25.
90% of the time. If your mattress is
murphy insider, if your mattress is
lumpy, call Vernon 9035 and talk it
over.
SANITARY MATTRESS CO.
821 Madison Ave. Baltimore, Md.
Handsome Dresses
For Sale
Sizes 38 and 40
Telephone, MAdison 2259
FOR SALE
HOUSES FOR SALE
IN ALL SECTIONS OF
THE CITY
Small initial cash payments, balance as rent. Apply.
PERSONAL WANT
A REAL BARGAIN.
$500 CASH
Balance payable in weekly installments will pay two five-room frame houses in excellent condition, newly papered, gas and electric lights, will rent for six dollars per week each.
M.T. WINANS
No Ground Bent To Pay
PHONE OWNER,
PLAZA 7560
11
1625 W. LAFALETTE-AV. — THREE-story, eight rooms; all improvements; three apartments; will allow commission.
Apply 1625 Lafayette-av. owner. 11
509 N. CALHUN-ST. — STORY, 8 rooms, and bath, electricity, furnace; illumination possession. George R. M. Cleary, 447 E. 25th-st. Homewood M. 11
HERE IS THE
BEST
HOME BUY
EVER OFFERED
$4500.00
. $78.00 Ground Rent
515 N. Stricker Street
3 Rooms and porch on first floor. Laundry in basement.
Large broad stairway. New roof. Shades and screens. Ample space for garage.
ACT QUICK
F.C
WEBER
& CO.
REAL ESTATE
North and J. Penna. Aves.
Phone. M.Adison 6620
HOUSE FOR SALE
2200 Block Druid Hill
Avenue
Even number side. Will finance.
Call
PETTY B. GROSS
MAIDSON 7630
FIVE (G) ROOM DWELLING
and necessary outbuildings on B.
& O. Railroad (13) Miles from city.
price, $200.00. Apply
DOWNTON
2 East Lexington St.
PLAZA 2776. 11
C.R.C.BUYING PLAN
Others have inquired and bought
by this plan. They also have been
given a discount and charge absolutely free. Let us
explain this new plan to you and
you will agree with us that it is
the cheapest best buying plan
ever offered you.
We offer subject to prior sale the
following properties: A new Gas
kiln with each home purchased
from us.
1035 W. Mulberry Street—3-story, 9
rooms and bath.
1036 N. Mulberry Street—3-story, 8
rooms and bath.
1037 W. Franklin Street—3-story, 9
rooms and bath, garage.
1038 N. Calhoun Street—3-story, 8
rooms and bath.
1039 N. Glimor Street—3-story, 8
rooms and bath.
1040 Mosher St—2-story, 6 rooms
1041 Mosher St—2-story, 5 rooms
and bath.
1042 Mosher St—2-story, 5 rooms
and bath.
1043 Mosher Carey St—3-story, 9
rooms and bath, garage.
1044 Block Franklin St—2-story, 6
rooms and bath.
1045 Block Droid Hill Ave—3-story,
8 rooms and bath, gas and electric.
BETTER HOMES FOR LESS MONEY
FOR SALE-Boston Cafe, with esth
fished business of five years lease
1533 Pennsylvania avenue. Owner leav
city. 2t.Nov.15
Milady's Shoppe
Classes Now Open in the Poro
System of Hair and Beauty Culture
Massaging and Manicuring. All Scalp
Treatment. Hot Shampooing. All Scalp
Diseases treated; Warts, Moles, Freckles and all Skin Blem-
ishes removed; Face Bleaching, Hair
Dyeing guaranteed; Lip Lapping,
Superfine Hair removed;
Hair Clipping, Bobbing and
Sing, Eye Brow Arching, etc.
Mme. Jennie B. Hammond
1623 Druid Hill Avenue
Hours $ a. m. to $ p. m., except by
appointment. Phone: MAD. 7528 1t
BIG
RUMMAGE
SALE
Thursday and Friday
November 6th and 7th
515 W. Fayette
Street
Bishopville, MD.-Services were well attended Sunday, all day at St. Johns Church. Mrs. Walker served in the morning. The fall revival is being conducted by Madam V. A. Watson. Mrs. Watson were converted at night service. The Rev. J. T. Taylor was able to be seen for three days. *Jacob Showell was buried week before last.* The daughter of Mrs. B. L. Walker was buried in Ohio, is very sick. Mrs. Webster is one of the teachers at Subysville, Del. *M. Minnie. Walter has been canonized more to the sick friend.*
AS NOTES FAIL; MAN USES GUN
When ardent love notes failed, Henry Hampton. 54 W. West street, used a gun in his effort to win back his wife Wednesday./
Asa result, Mrs. Jeanette Hampton was rushed to the South Baltimore Hospital with three bullet wounds in her body, Mrs. Hampton in her chest, and because of altered ill-treatment and had gone to live with Mrs. Guy Washington, 1113 Race street. It was here that to return to him.
Hampton sent letters imploring her
On Wednesday night, after scaling
the back fence, he gushed,
admittance and without warning began
firing on his wife, three bullets taking
effect. He made a statement in a
letter from Relay MD, stating
that he was on his way to Baltimore.
BOOTLEG WAR IN ANNAPOLIS
Isaac Brown, Waterbury Merchant,
Is Shot From Ambush After
Summons
Annapolis, Md.—An n e c Arundel
County authorities are investigating
the shooting of Isaac. Brown who
was hit by bullets fired from an
ambush home Wednesday.
November 4th.
If you are of paying READ
Here is a wonderful opportunity to REALTY COMPANY in the past six months home buyers and by this accomplishment of beautiful, modern, up-to-date homes lying at the front door each week collect citizens of the community. Don't wait only need a small initial deposit and we Look this over and phone or write us, as show any one of these houses.
We are in business to accommodate get in touch with us and we will explain Glimore 3210.
you are tired paying Rent
READ THIS
a wonderful opportunity to own your home. THE COMPANY in the past six months have satisfied a giver and by this accomplishment our clients are the modern, up-to-date homes with no more landlord front door each week collecting rent. They are in the community. Don't wait—Now is the time to small initial deposit and we take care of the re-er and phone or write us, and our agent will be the one of these houses.
in business to accommodate our clients, so don't with us and we will explain matters in full detail.
If you are tired of paying Rent READ THIS
Here is a wonderful opportunity to own your home. THE PARK REALTY COMPANY in the past six months have satisfied a great many home buyers and by this accomplishment our clients are the possessors of beautiful, modern, up-to-date homes with no more landlord's knocking at the front door each week collecting rent. They are now proud citizens of the community. Don't wait—Now is the time to buy. You only need a small initial deposit and we take care of the rest for you. Look this over and phone or write us, and our agent will be too glad to show any one of these houses.
We are in business to accommodate our clients, so don't hesitate to get in touch with us and we will explain matters in full detail. Phone, Glimore 3210.
1622 W. Lafayette Ave., 2-story 1714 W. Lafayette Ave., 3-story
1624 W. Lafayette Ave., 2-story 1304 W. Lafayette Ave., 3-story
1435 W. Franklin, 2-story 618 N. Calhoun St., 3-story .....
1100 W. Mulberry St., 2-story, corner 1408 W. Franklin St., 3-story
729 N. Fairmont St., 3-story 709 N. Glimor St., 3-story, corner
705 N. Stricker St., 3-story 711 N. Glimor St., 3-story
1629 W. Lafayette, 3-story 713 N. Glimor St., 3-story
1631 W. Lafayette, 3-story 1208 W. Mulberry St., 3-story
1633 W. Lafayette, 3-story 1208 W. Mulberry St., 3-story
1637 W. Lafayette, 3-story 314 N. Arlington Ave., 3-story
1719 W. Lafayette Ave., 3-story 1601 N. Glimor St., corner, 3-story
1702 W. Lafayette Ave., 3-story 809 N. Fremont, 3-story
Park Realty
1000 Edmonds
Berk Realty Compa
1000 Edmondson Avenue
Glmor 3210
FOR SALE
FINANCE
TERMS THAT ARE SALE
1305 W. MULBERRY STREET—Furniture
and bath, instantaneous hot
range. Financed for $4,500.00
1315 HARLEM AVENUE—10 rooms, hot
for $4,500.00
534 N. CALHOUN STREET—8 rooms
839 N. FREEMONT AVENUE—Finance
2400 BLOCK MADISON AVENUE—
ages, in fee, cheap.
1400 BLOCK MADISON AVENUE—
heat, in fee, cheap.
FOR RENT
2500 BLOCK McCULLOH ST.
900 BLOCK MORRIS
1600 AND 1700 BLOCKS W.
FINANCED
TERMS THAT ARE SAFE AND SANE
MULBERRY STREET—Furniture and electricity, 2 bath, instantaneous hot water heater, new whirlpool financed for $4,500.00
LIMON AVENUE—10 rooms, bath and electricity, F. $4,500.00
ALHOUHN STREET—8 rooms and bath, corner.
MEMONT AVENUE—Financed Easily.
BLOCK MADISON AVENUE—3 Apartments, with tubs, cheap.
BLOCK MADISON AVENUE—14 Rooms, 2 baths, in fee, cheap.
FOR RENT
BLOCK McCULLOH ST. 800 BLOCK CALHO
900 BLOCK MORRIS STREET
1600 AND 1700 BLOCKS W. LANVALE STREET
FINANCED
TERMS THAT ARE SAFE AND SANE
1305 W. MCGLEBRY STREET—Furnace and electricity, 8 rooms
and bath, instantaneous hot water heater, new white gas
Financed for $4,500.00
HINGE.
1315 HARLEM AVENUE—10 rooms, bath and electricity. Financed
$500.00.
2500 BLOCK McCULLOH ST. 800 BLOCK CALHOUN ST.
900 BLOCK MORRIS STREET
1600 AND 1700 BLOCKS W. LANVALE-STREET
Truly Hatchett
REAL ESTATE AND
900 N. Eulaw St., at Biddle
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
Ululaw St., at Biddle
VErn
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
900 N. Eulaw St., at Biddle
SERVICE!
THE AFRO AMERICAN SERVICE DEPT
AFRO AMERICAN CAR SERVICE DEARTMENT
THE AFRO AMERICAN CARRIER SERVICE DEARTMENT Is Now At Your Service.
STO
Taking A Chance At E
The Street Or Elsewhere
Have It Delivered Direct
ON THURS
This New Department
For Your Convenience
There Is No Need Of You
Afro, When You Can Ha
STOP
At A Chance At Buying An A
Sweet Or Elsewhere.
Delivered Directly To Your D
ON THURSDAY'S
New Department Has Been In
Convenience
Is No Need Of Your Going Afte
When You Can Have It Brought
STOP
Taking A Chance At Buying An Afro On The Street Or Elsewhere.
Have It Delivered Directly To Your Door
ON THURSDAY'S
This New Department Has Been Installed For Your Convenience
There Is No Need Of Your Going After The Afro, When You Can Have It Brought to You.
AND WE WILL HAVE THE AFRO-AMERICAN—THE SOUTH'S BIGGEST AND BEST W.EKLY DELIVERED DIRECTLY TO YOUR DOOR
Y.M.C.A.
The life problem Club will meet Sunday at the "Y" in the Lobby and the speaker is Prof. Geo. A. Owens, principal of School 106. A brief report will be made by the delegates who attended the International Convention that met Washington. Special musical numbers.
The annual Father and Son Supper will be served at the Y. M. C. A Friday night. November 13C. The address, November 13E. The evening will be made at Our Own Bishop John Hurst. 150 Fathers and Sons will be present on that evening.
The annual Father and Son Meeting will be held Sunday afternoon November 15th in the Y. M. C. A. Gymnasium. The speakers are Prof. Francis M. Wood, supervisor of Colored Schools and Dr. J. H. Walters, the president of the Chapel State Bank Y. M. C. A choir of 100 under the personal direction of Mr. A. Johnson Holsey will furnish the music.
The Bible classes opened at the Y. M. C. A. this week. Every Thursday, classes from $ to $ P. M., the Bible classes will be in session and every man in this section should avail himself of this opportunity to get new light on the Bible. The Teachers are Dr. Harold Steepleman. Dr. John Colbert, Mr. R. H. Beck. City-wide Boys Work man and Thos. H. Smith.
Bootleggers, it is believed, is responsible for the shooting. Recently Brown had apprehended before a grand jury against an apollo in response to murders against alleged traffickers, in whiskey.
are tired
ng Rent
THIS
try to own your home. THE PARK
months have satisfied a great many
ment our clients are the possessors
omes with no more landlord's kno-
collecting rent. They are now proud
await—Now is the time to buy. You
and we take care of the rest for you.
us, and our agent will be too glad to
update our clients, so don't hesitate to
explain matters in full detail. Phone,
1714 W. Lafayette Ave., 3-story
1304 W. Lafayette Ave., 3-story
518 N. Calhoun St., 3-story .....
1408 W. Franklin St., 3-story
709 N. Gilmer St., 3-story, corner
711 N. Gilmer St., 3-story
713 N. Gilmer St., 3-story
1208 W. Mulberry St., 3-story
1208 W. Mulberry St., 3-story
314 N. Arlington Ave., 3-story
1601 N. Gilmer St., corner, 3-story
809 N. Fremont, 3-story
Company
dson Avenue
3210
FINANCED
E SAFE AND SANE
Furniture and electricity, 8 rooms
hot water heater, new white gas
rooms, bath and electricity. Financed
rooms and bath, corner.
financed Easily.
E-3 Apartments, with two gar-
rue-14 Rooms, 2 baths, furnace
RENT
$800 BLOCK CALHOUN ST.
MORRIS STREET
W. LANVALE STREET
---
AMERICAN CARRIER DEPARTMENT
ce.
TOP
t Buying An Afro On
ere.
rectly To Your Door
RSDAY'S
VErnon 2839
WANTED- TO CARE FOR A COUPLE
of small children by day or week.
1132 Etting St. 1t
WANTED-Girl with expereince wants
job. General housework preferred.
118 N. Dallas street. 1t
AUTOMOBILES
See CROXTON
WHEN HAVING TIRE
TROUBLE
THE BOY WITH VULCANIZING
EXPERIENCE
All Work Guaranteed for
Life of Tire
Modern Vulcanizing Co.
235 W. Biddle St.
Robt. B. Croxton, Prop.
VErnon 2799
USED FORDS
ALL MODELS
BEST TERMS IN CITY.
THE BACKUS MOTOR
COMPANY,
10-20 EAST NORTH AVENUE
Open Evenings, 9 P.M.
If Money Grew On Trees
You could get it no easier than I
will lend it to you at 65% interest.
You can also make your own terms
on either standing payable 1st,
2nd or 3rd payment. Evening
service. Phono or write.
H. STEINHORN
1616 Fulton Ave. Madison 5248
41-Nov.14
FALL CLEARANCE SALE
THESE CARS GUARANTEED
1923 Overland 6 Sedan.
1924 Willys-Knight Touring.
1924 Overland Coupe, Sedan.
1924 Chevrolet Sedan.
1924 Impala Touring.
1924 Overland Touring.
1924 Columbia Winter Top.
Repainted, conditioned.
Come in and drive the car yourself.
Small down payment, balance weekly.
MOTOR CAR CO.
In Business to Stay—Since 1905
Mt. Royal and Maryland Ave. Ver. 7774.
Open Evenings and Sunday
REO
1925 Reo Speedwagon, Repossessed
1923 Reo Speedwagon
1923 Reo Speedwagon
1920 Reo Speedwagon
1924 Ford 1-Ton Truck
1920 White 1-Ton Truck
Can equip with used panel, stake,
express or dump body.
Passenger Cars
1925 Reo Sedan
1921 Reo Touring
1921 Reo Touring
1920 Reo Phacton, Water Top.
1920 Reo Sedan
Curry-Stout
131 N. NORTH AVE.
WASHINGTON
Taxi for Hire
SUNDAY AND EVENING
OCCASIONS
FUNERALS AT ALL TIMES
Theatre, Weddings and Dances
Moderate Prices
Day Service and Orders Taken
Residence Phone, Madison 1631-W
1616 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Baltimore, Md.
Hudson-Essex
1925 ISSEN Coach
1926 HUDSON Coach
1927 CHAMPION Touring
1928 JORDAN Touring
1929 HUDSON Sedan
1930 MAXWELL Sedan
1931 HUMOBILE Touring
1932 MANWELL Sedan
1933 HUDSON Conpe
1934 PARGE Touring
1935 ORLAND Touring
1936 CHANDLER Touring
1937 HUPMOBILE Coupe
1938 LEBRANTO Coupe
1939 LEBRANTO Sedan
1940 HUDSON Touring
1941 APPERSON Touring
1942 FORD Sedan
1943 FORD Sedan
1944 FORD Coupe
1945 TORD Coupe
1946 CHEVROLET Touring
1947 CHEVROLET Touring
1948 CHEVROLET Sedan
1949 GRANT Touring
Honesty, Quality, Courtesy
(Our Motto)
LAMBERT
USED CAR DEPARTMENT
116 RICHMOND ST. VERNON 3310
Between Park Ave. and, Cathedral St.
WHO NEEDS
MONEY
COME TO SEE ME
Star Loan Office
PAWNBROKER
We loan money on Jewelry,
Watches, Clothing, Merchandise
of Every Description
Unredeemed pledges consisting of
Jewelry, Trunks, Overcoats, Suits,
Suit, Casse, Clothing, Etc., for Sale
Star Loan Office
645 W. Baltimore Street
Dec.11
HOUSE WIRING
$69.00
Six-room house, complete with fixtures.
Nothing down. $1.50 weekly. 24 months
to pay.
HARFORD ELECTRIC CO.
2718 Overland Ave. tf Hamilton 2480
French Cleaning — Repairing
Erniest A. Brooks
Let me steam your Full and Winter
Coats the Brooks Way
1711 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Mad. 9244
Baito., Md.
ROY S. BOND
Lawyer
220 St. Paul Place
Third Floor Front
office "Phone, CAvert 0653
Residence
1620 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Res. home, Madison 7744-W
Home Hours, 7 to 9 p.m.
point sadness.
FREE SCHOOL CHILDREN FREE 5000--RULERS--5000
One to each child who calls at the office for the same. All you have to do is, come in, give us the number of your school and the name of your teacher, and we will hand you a brand new six-inch ruler. If you live in the county, send us your address and a two-cent stamp, and we will mail one to you.' Come early, as we start giving these rulers out Saturday morning, October 17th, and we are sure they won't last long. Yours truly,
CAPTURE SLAYER OF VA. GIRL
Trapped by Southwestern police officers in his home, 1628 W. Mulberry street, Moses Harris, who several days ago, stabbed to death his common law wife in a W.elcome alley restaurant, was arrested and held for the Grand Jurist, charged with murder.
The woman who has lived with her mother, Mrs.ella Jasper, at 1313 Cameron street, Alexandr. Va., for since the death of her father returned to her, she some clothes to other articles, Sha Jones at the Welcome alley address when he Harris entered. After a few words had passed between them Harris drew his knife and stabbed the woman before other women in the shop could intererate. She moved Baltimore, where she was pronounced dead. Her body was later removed to the morgue. News of the daughters death reached the mother while she was worshipping at Shiloh Baptist Church, Alexandr. Mrs. Jasper fainted and had to be carried from the meeting, the body being from this church Harris was arrested by Southern District patrolmen and is being held for the action of the grand jury charged with murder.
LINCOLN ALUMNI FIGHTS PREXY
Lincoln Alumni went on record Tuesday as unalterably opposed to the recent appointment of the Rev. Mr. Ewing, of Rahway, N. J., as president of that University, according to the Rev. J. T. Colbert, Secretary. Opposition to the Rev. Mr. Ewing, it was stated, was based on his limited knowledge of educational and social affairs among colored people. According to the Rev. J. T. Colbert and Dr. E. P. Roberts (the secretary and president of the alumni association, the new president was unfamiliar with such names as Kelvin and W. E. B. Dubols, when asked about them). The entire alumni association will oppose the appointment these officials say.
IN MEMORIAM
BROWN—In loving memory of my beloved husband, Thomas Brown, who suddenly departed this life six years Loved in life, in death I do the same it's lonesome here without you dear. Since you were called away
A precious one from me has gone, God took you home to rest Because he knows the best, But I have departed for retirement by me. By his devoted WIFE.
DENTON—In sad, but loving remembrance of my dear grudden, Wilmer A. Denton, who departed this life two years ago, November 2, 1923. Gone but not forgotten. By his loving grandfather, MRS. CINDERILLA LARKINS.
DIGGS—In loving remembrance of our dear mother, Annie Diggs, who died November 8, 1914. Eleven long years have passed. Today The love for you and longing Will never fade away.
By her children, ELEANORA STANLEY, MAZIE MACKEY, SAMUEL DIGGS.
GROOME—In sad, but loving remembrance of my dear friend, Miss Frances Groome, who departed this life, one year ago, November, 1924.
In my heart your memory linger,
tenderly, kind and true.
JESU MERCY
HOWARD-Octetine. Born in Baltimore, 1842. He cared for her bed, October, 1904, was confined to Sunday morning, 10 minutes to 4 o'clock October 25, 1925, singing and praying and ushering God for the pardon of sins.
Funeral services were held at the Elk's Home on Hoffman street. Shoa McCormick, 19, died on Thursday, October 20th. In interment at Mt. Auburn cemetery.
Thanks to the many friends and relatives of Elk's of Baltimore, the Daughters of Elk's of Baltimore, the Juvenile Council No. 7, K. of P., the Lime Klim Club, the Sarangani street, for their kindness during her illness, and for the floral designs at her death, to nourish their loss, a mother, father, adopted sister and grandfather, another, RUBY HOWARD, and adopted sister, HILDA EMORY, 231 Pearl street.
RUSSELL—In loving remembrance of our dear father, John E. Russell, who died one year, ago November 4th, 1924. We extend our heartfelt thanks to our place. Peaceful he thy rest dear father.
Tis sweet to breathe your name.
In life we loved you dearly.
By his loving daughters, BLANCHE and GENEVA.
WALKER—Mrs. Ethel Walker, beloved wife of Herbret C. Walker, departed this life on Wednesday, October 28th, at 10 a. m., Funeral services were held at 738 Pierce Street, on Saturday, October 31st, at 2 p. m. Interment at Laurel Cemetery.
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Anna Coston wishes to thank her many friends for their condolences and beautiful floral designs in her recent sadness.
DO YOU Pay or Invest RENT?
A. B.
This week's special is small homes. And we can make your sociation payments lower by See MARSE and change your MENT. THINK: are you a P
FOR SALE
300 Blk. Leurens St.
1000 Blk. Belvedere Ave.
800 Blk. Drudl Hill Ave.
800 Blk. Edmondson Av.
400 Blk. Mason Ave.
250 Blk. McCulloh St.
400 Blk. Calhoun St.
200 Blk. N. Arlington St.
200 Blk. Drudl Hill Ave.
250 Blk. Division St.
250 Blk. Lanvale St.
250 Blk. Fremont Ave.
600 Blk. Fremont Ave.
FOR RENT
2002 MADISON AVE.—Newly papered, first-class condition.
SPECIAL
For Sale
300 BLK. LAUREN
house, electric
steam hut, new
perod.
1800 Blk. Madison
1700 Blk. Westw
APARTMEN
2000 MADISON A
Hardwood floor
bath, electric or
Janitor service.
week's special is small deposits on the
And we can make your present Build-
ing payments lower by our refinance
URSE and change your course to L
THINK: are you a PAYER or INVIE
SALE
Arendt St.
Weddere Ave.
Hid Hill Ave.
London Ave.
Cullah St.
Houn St.
Arlington
St.
Hid Hill Ave.
Vision St.
Vale St.
Amount Ave.
SPECIAL
For Sale
300 Blk. LAUREN-
Simmons three-story
house, electric, gas
steam hut, newly pu-
pered.
FOR
1600 Blk. W
1700 Blk. W
1300 & 1400
300 & 1300
1300 Blk. H
1300 Blk. H
1300 Blk. M
1300 Blk. M
1300 Blk. M
800 Blk. R
800 Blk. R
APARTMENTS
2000 MADISON AVE.—
Hardwood floors, the
bath, electric and gas.
Janitor service.
CORNER PRE
Madison Ave.—
be made
useful and
home also.
This week's special is small deposits on these finer homes. And we can make your present Building Association payments lower by our refinance system. See MARSE and change your course to INVESTMENT. THINK: are you a PAYER or INVESTER?
FOR SALE
500 Bk. Laurens St.
2000 Bk. Druid Hill Ave.
800 Bk. Edmondson Ave.
2400 Bk. McCullah St.
2500 Bk. McCullah St.
2000 Bk. N. Arlington
2000 Bk. Sherwood Ave.
2300 Bk. Division St.
1700 Bk. Lavale St.
700 Bk. Fremont Ave.
600 Bk. Fremont Ave.
SPECIAL
For Sale
300 BK. LAURENS
Magnificent three-suite house, electric gas stair hue, newly patented.
1800 Bk. Madison Ave.
1700 Bk. Westwood Ave.
APARTMENTS
2000 MADISON AVE.
Hardwood floors, tile, both electric and gas janitor service.
FOR SALE
1600 Bk. Westwood Av.
1700 Bk. Westwood Av.
600 & 800 Bk. Carey St.
1000 Bk. Madison Ave.
3000 & 1300 Bk. Madison
1300 Bk. Harlem Ave.
1700 Bk. Baker St.
1700 Bk. Madison Ave.
1600 Bk. Calhoun Ave.
1600 Bk. Barclay Ave.
800 Bk. Rutland Ave.
1800 Madison Ave.
FOR RENT
2002 MADISON AVE.
Newly papered, first-class condition.
Corners Property - 1500 Madison Avenue. Can be made to pay for itself and provide a home also.
Money To Loan
1st, 2nd, 3rd Mortgages, Chattel Loans, E
Notes and Other Sec
WE ALSO REFINANCE YOUR
YOUR PAYMENTS
No Red Tape
24-Hour Serv
CALL-A-WAY WRITE-A-WAY
TO
MARSE S. C.
THE PEOPLE'S REAL
CALLOWAY BUILDING
Phones, Call: Office, MAdison 10296
ADDISON E. JOHNSON
LET US STOP YOU FROM
MONEY OR NO
We will put you in a Home,
parts of the city. E
MONEY TO LOAN
1616 Madison Avenue
START
BUY YOUR OWN H
Ed Mortgages, Chattel Loans, Etc., Autos, Furniture,
Notes and Other Securities
ALSO REFINANCE YOUR PROPERTY-MAKING
YOUR PAYMENTS LOWER
24-Hour Service
WAY WRITE-A-WAY FINISH
TO
RSE S. CALLAW
THE PEOPLE'S REAL ESTATE MAN
AY BUILDING
1305 PENNA.
Call: Office, MAdison 10296 - Residence, MAdison
DISON E. JOHNSON COMPANY
US STOP YOU FROM PAYING RE
MONEY OR NO MONEY
I'll put you in a Home. Spiendid home
parts of the city. Easiest terms
MONEY TO LOAN LIBERALLY.
Madison Avenue Phone, MAdison
START NOW!
YOUR OWN HOME BEER
1st, 2nd, 3rd Mortgages, Chattel Loans, Etc., Autos, Furniture, Personal Notes and Other Securities
WE ALSO REFINANCE YOUR PROPERTY—MAKING YOUR PAYMENTS LOWER
CALLOWAY THE PEOPLE'S REAL ESTATE 1308 PENNA. AVENUE
CALLOWAY, CALL Office, Madison 10296 — Residence MADISON 7439
ADDISON E. JOHNSON COMPANY LET US STOP YOU FROM PAYING RENT! MONEY OR NO MONEY We will put you in a Home. Splendid homes in all parts of the city. Easiest terms
Winter's Chilly Blast Begins
Small Cash Payments Balance
All Houses In A-1 Condition
Small Cash Payments Balance
All Houses In A-1 Condition
800 Blk. Harlem Avenue 2300 Guilford Ave.
1700 Blk. Druid Hill Ave. 2400 Blk. McCullor.
600 Blk. Carey Street 1800 Blk. Druid H.
OFF
0 a.
2 p.
6 p.)
Quality OF THE HIGHEST E
Service—PROMPT
DR. WI
Surgeon D
1028 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
TO
SCHOOL CHILDREN
RULERS
ITY OF THE HIGHEST Economy
service—PROMPT AND EFFICI
DR. WHITE
Surgeon Dentist
NSYLVANIA AVENUE SECOND
TO
CHILDREN FR
LERS--500
Quality OF THE HIGHEST Economy LOWEST PRICES Service-PROMPT AND EFFICIENT DR. WHITE Surgeon Dentist
will be given away at the
child who calls at the office for you in, give us the number of your order, and we will hand you a book in the county, send us your address, we will mail one to you.' Come out Saturday morning, October last long. Yours truly,
THE
els at the office for the same. As is the number of your school and you will hand you a brand new key, send us your address and one to you.' Come early, as we may morning, October 17th, and Yours truly,
THE MANAGER
PLaza 7855
PHONE:
VErnon 0356
If you are honest with yourself, and to your family you will grasp this opportunity offered in MARSE'S SPECIAL: Small Deposit And Smaller Payment
Plan
shall deposits on these finer
your present Building As-
by our refinance system.
your course to INVESTA-
a PAYER or INVESTER?
SCIAL
Sale
LAURENS—
at three-si-
electric, gas,
t. newly pa-
nied.
FOR SALE
1600 Bik. Westwood Av.
1700 Bik. Westwood Av.
1800 Bik. Bley St.
1930 & 1400 Bik. Lanvale.
1000 & 1300 Bik. Madison
1300 Bik. Harlem Ave.
1300 Bik. Baker St.
1300 Bik. Drudg Hill Ave.
1300 Bik. Madison Ave.
1300 Bik. Calhoun St.
1300 Bik. Calhoun St.
800 Bik. Rutland Ave.
1800 Bik. Madison Ave.
MENTS
SON AVE.—
floors, the
tire and gas
service.
Corner Property—1500
Madison Avenue—Can
be made to pay for
floor and provide a
home also.
Plan
MANS, Etc., Autos, Furniture, Personal
Other Securities
OUR PROPERTY—MAKING
ENTRIES LOWER
Service
No Publicity
A-WAY
FIND-A-WAY
CALLAWAY
REAL ESTATE MAN
1305 PENNA, AVENUE
10296 — Residence. MAdison 7439
JINSON COMPANY
FROM PAYING RENT!
NO MONEY
One. Spiendid homes in all
E. Easiest terms
JAN LIBERALLY,
Phone, MAdison 10427
NOW!
IN HOME BEFORE
Balance As Rent
A-1 Condition
2300 Guilford Ave.
2400 Blk. McCulloh St.
1800 Blk. Drudu Hill Ave.
Evening Liberty 2912
Economy LOWEST PRICES
EMPTT AND EFFICIENT
WHITE
n Dentist
REN FREE
S--5000
SECOND FLOOR
DOPE ADDICT'S HUSBAND HELP EXPOSE OLD RING HERE
If Your Dentist Hurts You--Try Dr. Varden
TEETH without plates: 15¢ up
Nerve-Bleeding with Novacaine is my specialty. Eliminate Pain.
Plates..... 8¢ up Fillings..... 8¢ up Crowns..... 8¢ up Extraction..... 8¢ up Bridge Work..... 8¢ up
Work Guaranteed. Easy Terms.
Nervous People Enjoyed.
Class of Air Administered.
Hours-9 to 6.
Sundays-10 to 1.
Add a stamper.
No Stamper Enabled.
Telephone-Carlert 1862.
Dr. VARDEN
SURGEON DENTIST
Entaw and Fayette Sts.
(Next to Paul's Theatre)
Let Dr. Varden stop that ache—and save that tooth!
This is just one of the many three-season dentists in Dr. Varden's patients—which are published only with the patient's consent.
Mrs. Blanche Sawyer,
11111 Avenue.
"I will gladly assist you in using my name. Your painless method of treatment is a blessing but than a Goesome to this community.
THIS WEEK ONLY!
REGULAR PRICE
$25.00
The DENTIST TO 20,000 People
PRICE THIS WEEK
$15.00
This Offer Ends Saturday Night, November 7, at 6 P.M.
Let Dr. Varden Extract That Bad Tooth Today.
If Dr. Varden Hurts--You Don't Have to Pay
MATE OF DOPE ADDICT HELPED EXPOSE GANG
Husband Who Cured His
Wife Of Deadly Habit Co-
operated With Agent
FOUR OF NINE CAUGHT
GET PRISON TERMS
General Round Up Is Said
To Have Broken Up Big
Ring Here
That a husband who helped to rescue his own wife from the terrible fate of the dope addict, helped a race agent to expose and bring to justice a dope ring was revealed at a three day trial of nine alleged agents in the Federal Court last week. Four of the men and women caught in a general roundup were convicted and sent to the Federal prison at Atlanta as a result of the
All of the accused were taken in a carefully arranged roundup conducted by Agent J. L. Taylor, a race detective in local group head of marital agents. Mr. Taylor was brought to Baltimore from New York when George Bailey informed Mr. Marital Agent that he was operating in this city if a colored agent could be obtained. Bailey declared that he had curled his wife of the dope habit and caused her to become an addict broken up. Because of his record Taylor was brought to the city and began his investigations with the assistance of Mrs. Bailey.
Plenty of Dope
According to agent Taylor, after he had been introduced to members of the ring as an addict he found it easy to purchase dope. Taylor came from which it came carefully guarded. Cocain which came in capsules was referred to by the peddlers in Seedable Herion was labeled Hertion.
After each purchase the capsules were placed in an envelope upon which was written the date and the name of the person from whom it was bought. Taylor signed the en-
ture, the initials of the informer were added and the package was turned over to Chief Martin, who filled it with information concerning the sale to be used as evidence against the vender.
Use Queer Names
Queer alliances assumed by the ped-
diers were also revealed. William Johnson, age 58, was known as "Rabbit." Cornellus Davis, because of a defective eye was known as "Cokey." Richard Brown, 1067 Ru-
borg street, a powerful six foot,
brad shouldered man bore the ti-
was known as "Peg Scofield." The tfe-of "Thunder." Charles Cofield,
The women had no assumed names. They were Bessie Catch, 604 Stump
Aley; Lucy Craig; Bevins street;
Edna Bacon, 615 1-2 Shrap St.; Sa-
rah; Luckett, W. York street; Lizzie
Striggs, 110 W. York Street; An-
nie, Cofield, 16 W. York street; Ida
Keys, 15 W. York street.
Lipson Johnson
Chris Lipson, 710 Sarah Anne
Street alleged middle man between
local peddlers and wholesalers at
Washington entered a plea of guilt;
Lipson combs his previous guilty
two terms in the case of similar
of guilty was stricken out when he took the stand
and attempted to discredit Agent
Tayler. Lipson combed guilty and
years and went to William Johnson were
sentenced to one year and a day;
Cornelius Davis, Richard Brown and
Sarah Luckett were given guilty
Charles Lipson were given terms of one year
and three years respectively late
this week.
"Y" Arrivals
Rev. W, H. Baker, Easton, MD; Md. Mayer, W. Parker, Philadelphia, MD; F. Montgomery, Cumberland, MD; R. W. Bingall, New York, NY; R. W. Franklin, Lincoln University, Pa; Rev. G. Chapman, Nucrom, IL; M. Lickens, Newport, R. I.
NEW YORK DRAMATIC SOPRANO
Alta Melba Brown's dramatic soprano has joined the Dixie Kleiber Singer's former trio. Ms. Brown is Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Brown is Mrs. Alta Scott Hayes, wife of a local physician. Given their separation, she has toured the West Indies andettled in New York where she has a studio. Dr. Hayes has moved to
"Elder Eatmore" Hit At Deacon
---
The dove of peace was absent from his accustomed place the outskirts of Evergreen Baptist Church. This enabled his Satanic Majesty to get in a big day's work, and what many regarded as a fine discourse on the Pharisees. Not so in the sight, or rather in the heart, on the occasion of his death, but in the dignity of his advanced age and proceded to tell the shepherd just where he goes. He was a man of Scriptures. Consternation seized the congregation. This was ingrusted when the shepherd fired a broadside into the erying
Feeling a disgraceful scene, some of the flock arose to go. However, the pansy was valed; the pansy's feelings were soothed, the wayward deacon recalled, the congregation quieted and the incident closed for the time.
Will Celebrate
Armistice Day
Final arrangements for the big mass meeting to be held Wednesday evening, day after, at Ames Memorial M. E. Church, the Rev. Ernest Lyon, pastor, were completed at a special meeting of the Ames APO-AMERICAN building, last Friday at 5 p.m. The Rev. Erwin Edgore, love of Annapolis, of Annapolis, will be the principal speaker. The League is also making plans for a special investigation directed by the Charles Street Bus Line and the De Luxe Bus Line operating between Builtmore and Washington. De Ernest Lyon, president of the League, and Miss Edna P. Brown secretary.
Miss Hazel Macbeth, well known civic and social worker, has accepted a position as assistant to Miss Elise Mountain, director of women's work for Colored women in Philadelphia.
Miss Macbeth has been intimately connected with welfare in Baltimore and has been interested in Red 'Cross work. Her direction of baby shows held by the Health Work Committee co-organized with the organization. Although having been offered a num er of positions, she accepted the Philadelphia post her graduation acquaintance with Miss Mountain.
No Bethel Report Members Alarmed
No Bethel Report Members Alarmed
Where's the report?
This question just: now agitating the minds of many of the members of Big Bethel A. M. E. Church.
The minutes of the last session of the annual conference have just been received from the printers, and a perusal of them discloses only blank spaces in every column calling for 1924 financial and statistical data. According to an aged member, this is the first time that Bethel or any church of its importance has failed to be reported in the minutes.
With a membership upward of 1,500 and an income last year estimated at $18,000 and hundreds paying "dollar money" in the hope of seeing their names in print, it is easier to interest, is so keen in the matter.
Dr. White's
Maternity
Hospital
1029 Madison Ave.
Phone, VErnon 5192
BADU'S
UNION
BUTTER
E. S. BRADY & CO.
Monroe and Laurens Sts.
Madison 9829
tf
The Rule of 3 in Home Hunting
Decide in what part of the
you work you want to.
Look carefully through the
"Real Estate" columns
and work what appeals
to you—
Telephone the agent or
owner and make appointment
to see the homes which interest
you.
And all that's left to do
is to install and sign the
deed. The "Real Estate" column
is for more over,
contain many of the best
offerings in the city.
THE AFRO
A Market Place for the People
Read for Profit—Use for Results
Will You
Suffer From
Colds This
Winter
IMMEDIATE RELIEF
TERPINOL
THE COUGH
COLDS
FOR CHILDREN & GROWN-UPS
PYTHIANS IN ANNUAL MEMORIAL SERVICES
More Than 300 Crowded Out
Of Meeting Which Paid
Homage To Year's Dead
DIGNIFIED PROGRAM
IMPRESSSES THRONG
Grim Reaper Visited 84 Sir
Knights, Ladies And Juven-
iles.
With more than 300 men and women
unable to squeeze inside the large
auditorium of the Regent Theatre, the
Knights of Pythias held their annual
services in honor of their dead Sunday
afternoon at 3:00 p. m. Some
2,000 members of the order and their
friends were seated inside.
* The services were presided over by Grand, Chancellor George A. Watty, and a dignified and impressive program was presented. The opening services were conducted by Samuel D. Hayward, after the funeral march had been played by Kerr's Orchestra. Besides several selections by the Peerless Glee Club, soles were rendered by Miss/Carlette Whittington, Alexander Freeman and Thomas, a duet selection by Thomas Casswell and Samuel D. Hayward, was sung. Following, Invocation by the Rev. C. B. Bishop, the oration was given by the Rev. J. U. King of Washington and a eulogy to deceased members was read by Mrs. Sara E. Travers.
The following roll of deceased members was read by Josiah Diggs, Grand Keeper of the Record and Seals.
FEMALE MEMBERS
Rosa J. Kleiberg
Elisabeth Dennick
艾琳娜 Cole
Elia Hutchison
Elia Woodward
Rattle Hicks
Rattle Hicks
Mary C. Bantom
Mary C. Bantom
Mary C. Treversa
Ananda Martin
Ananda Martin
Ananda Hooper
Cecelia T. Rawlings
Cecelia T. Rawlings
Mary Scott
Mary Scott
Tina Hoona
Gertrude Hemsley
Extella Lockerman
Emma Green
Emma Hawkins
Ellen Perry
Ellen Perry
Ellen Picher
Ellen Picher
Ellen Nichols
Ellen Nichols
Lavena Davis
Lavena Davis
Laura Magazier
Laura Magazier
Hubel Bergeria
Hubel Bergeria
Carlo Jones
Carlo Jones
Latitude Decorator
Vergle Crawford, 52
Sage Harvey
Sage Harvey
Darothy Ridleye
Marshall McHilde
MALE MEMBERS
Edwin Goldsbrough
Edwin Goldsbrough
Edwin Goldsbrough
James H. Jones
James H. Jones
James H. Jones
William H. Anthony
William H. Anthony
William E. Groomes
William E. Groomes
Henry Parthan
John C. Hawkins
John C. Hawkins
William T. Campbell
William T. Campbell
James Iacone
James Iacone
James Iacone
Jac. H. Goldsbrough
Jac. H. Goldsbrough
Allen Island
Allen Island
George W. Carroll
George W. Carroll
Harry Hall
Harry Hall
Charles Mitchell
Andrew Brown
Andrew Brown
Edward Woodward
Edward Woodward
Perry C. Haskins
Perry C. Haskins
William Toules
William Toules
Joseph Blas
Joseph Blas
0
New Evidence May Upset The Lorman "Suicide" Theory
A new chapter may be added to the recent mystery homicide of 22 years old, the victim of a body found near his body in Drudg Hill Park in October by evidence in the hands of the mother of the ill-fated youth.
A private investigation conducted for some time by relatives has revealed evidence, which, when made public, will entirely upset the suicide theory, according to the author. She shared this evidence to youth's body, it was believed that a reporter for this paper this week.
At the time of the finding of the body of a young woman was mentioned, Mrs. Faith Stewart, also mentioned in connection with the affairs, according to Mrs. Lorman, of the mother, and there could have been no engagement between 'her' and her son, as was stated at the time.
Ongoing obvious reasons, facts about the investigation, which is still being made, will not be published until some time later.
NICHOLS- In sad but remembrance of our dear mother, Elin Nicholse departed this life November, 1825.
When the evening shades are falling
And I'm sitting all alone.
And in the end there comes a longing.
In if only you could come home.
In if only you could be here!
Lonesome, lonesome, every spot!
Listening for your voice till weary,
No one knows the silent heartache.
No one knows the grief and pain.
No one knows the pain.
Some day we shall meet again.
No one sees me weep.
I shed my tears from a aching, heart,
I often sit and think of you.
For memory is the only thing
That grief can call us own.
H. AND CLARENCE NICOLS, ANXI
GRANDDAUGHTER, ALMA ALEX
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FEDERATION HEAD STEPS DOWN
A. B.
After three years as president Mrs. Warner T. M. Quinn stepped down from the direction of the State Federation of Women's clubs Enthusiastic club women elected her chairman of the executive committee and delegate to the National Association of Colored Women's clubs, which meets in Oakland; Cal. next July.
TRAPPED BY FIRE
WOMAN DROPS SIX
CHILDREN TO STREET
Being unable to make their way down stairs when a fire broke out on a lower floor, Mrs. Laura Hacken, Eaten street, and minor children, the second story window to safety Monday. Mrs. Hacken was caring for the children of Mrs. Jennie Taubman, Eaten street, and was at work at the time, when she detected smoke coming from the first floor which is unoccupied. She opened a window and dropped a bottle by a volley of smoke. Being unable to get down stairs with the children she opened a window and dropped a bottle by a volley of smoke. Being an injured toe received by Ethel Taubman, age 12, the children she opened a window and dropped a bottle by a volley of smoke. Having experience, Harry Been, 1406 Madison street, saw smoke escaping from the building and sent in an alarm. The children closed the second Litton, 1308 Chase street. The cause of the fire is unknown.
Attracted by a loud crash on the kitchen floor. Mrs. Sella Warner, 1114 S. Russell street, rushed from the kitchen to Charles Warner, age 44, lying at the foot of the stairs dead. Tuesday. An investigation made by the South Carolina police indicated that the man had been seized with a stroke of apoplex.
Capt Brown. And Dr. McRay Hunt
According to latest reports North Carolina game are hurrying and scurrying in every direction for shelter, word having reached them that all millimere sure shots are on the way. Captain George W. Brown of the Steamer Favorite and Dr. R. B. McRay left the city Sunday for a ten hour hunting trip in the Tarheel State. They are making the journey by motor.
Knocked Down By Auto
While attempting to cross from the north side to the south side of Liberty Heights avenue, ars. escaped from the car and struck and knocked down by an automobile Wednesday. She was removed to the hospital by the driver of the car. James Mullank, a resident of the city, she received first aid treatment.
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WOMAN ACQUITTED OF MANSLAUGHTER
Deformed Girl Stabbed Man
To Death In Packing Plant
Fight
GIRLS STORY
IMPRESSES COURT
She Declared That Man
Struck Her Over Head with
Tray Without Cause
Declaring that she stabbed her assailant in self-defense Miss Adelia Merton, 20, 1436 N. Payette Street, was situated in Part One of the Criminal Court Friday of having caused the death of Andrew Black, 103 S. Dallas Street.
Miss Merton, a diminutive slightly deformed woman was charged with manslaughter in connection with the stabbing that took place in the Jacking Plant of William H. Killen, Eden' and Allieenne Streets.
According to the girl's story she went to work at the factory about 5 a.m. on the morning of the stabbing and had been given a stand and tray by the foreman. She had not been working long when Black, who was a stranger to her, demanded the tray which she was using. She is said to have directed him to the foreman, informing him that it had been given to her by him.
Black returned a few minutes later and snatched the tray from the girl's hand and struck her_over the head with it. When she remonstrated and in warding off the attack the girl lunged at him with the knife. He moved his body and he died a few minutes later.
The straightforward story of the accused, who was represented by Attorney Gregg and Pazzer, impressed the judge.
No Differences In Parties, Altfeld Tells Lawyers
"The only difference between the Republican Party and the Democratic Party so far as their sense of fair play to all men is concerned, the other begins with an I while the other begins with a D." declared assistant states Attorney E. Milton Alffield in an address at the meeting of the Monumental Bar Association Friday night. Mr. Alffield also commended the work of the colored attorneys and the legal ledge of race progress and current affairs. Often during discourse he quoted from the works of Paul Lawrie Dunbar and Phyllis Wheatley.
New Members Admitted
Appointing Lewis, Flagg, Jr.
Vice President Roy S. Bond took the floor and
made a plea for the admission of the
younger men who have recently
begun the law practice in this city.
J. Stewart Davis resulted in seven
new members being admitted to the
Association. They were Gobert E.
McBeth, George W. Evans, Emory
R. Cole, Everett Lane, Lloyd Wood
George Hill, and William E.
Thomas. Twenty members were
present at the meeting which was
held at 1432 Drudil Hill avenue.
Messas Josiah Henry, Peter L. Wood,
and Daniel Baynum were hosts.
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New Boarder Pawns House Furnishings
Shorlin' after he had rented a room. Willie Jones. 725 Franklin street, robbed the house and carried several articles including furniture, to a pawnshop Saturday.
One section of the furnished house had been rented to Theodore Jones by Charles Davi, who in turn accepted Willie Jones as a boarder. While both of the men were away Saturday the boarder took two pairs of shoes, two overcoats, a watch and a victrolin to The Star Loan office on Baltimore street, and pawned them in the owners' name. He was apprehended and sent off when arraigned before Magistrate Ranft in the Western District. Sunday.
Awarded Degree By Columbia
John N. Cotton, 552 West Lanslaule street, vice principal of the Junior High School 101, received word that he was admitted to the University of New York, that he has been granted the degree of Master of Arts. Mr. Cotton, a graduate of the University, had spent his summers in the school at Columbia.
Speeding Car Hits Mother And Babe
While carrying her 14 months old baby in her arms, Mrs. Alice Parker, age 31, 1128 N. Carey street, was struck by a car and was for several feet, as she was crossing the street at the intersection of Winchester and Carey, Tuesday. Mrs. Carey dropped the baby when she was struck and it miraculously broke in two. However, received bruises on the arms, legs and body and serious abdominal injuries. After Mrs. Parker was hurled clear of the car, she dashed madly in a southern direction on Carrollton Avenue. Upon tracing the number which was taken by witnesses the car was identified as belonging to the driver, when it denoted avenue but the operator is as yet unknown.
George Suggs. 33. 1236 McEldrey street, used alcohol to start a fire and as a result was treated at the West Baltimore General Hospital for minor burns about the face. Suggs, 33. 1236 McEldrey apartment, was making a fire in the furnace when the accident occurred.
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It took a jury in Part Two of the Criminal Court all night to arrive at a verdict of "not guilty" in the case of Charles Wells, a deaf mate, 700 Sarah Ann Street, charged with the murder of Walter Shipples, of the same address, and who went on trial Friday.
The case went to the jury about four o'clock Thursday after a long drawn, out trial and the verdict was not returned until the opening of court the following morning. Wells was alleged to have stabbed Sharpless, to death on the morning of September 13 with a penknife following an alleged gas of craps. In spite of the fact that Wells appeared both deaf and dumb at the trial, witnesses declared that he had been known to talk up to the time of the murder and was said to have used rough language on the morning of the murder.
Blind Helps Deaf.
The peculiar feature of the trial was the employing of a sign language expert from the school of the blind to interpret what was going on throughout the entire proceedings. The statement of the judge which was given in written contended that Sharpless had crumbed over the head with a loaded piece of hose. A brick battle followed, when both men ran out of brick they began to struggle with each other at which time Wells claims that he stabbed Sharpless and ran.
He was later arrested and informed that Sharpless had been stabbed in the heart and was dead. A search conducted by police revealed the loaded hose which was introduced by the defense at the trial. Wells was found not guilty and was acquitted.
GENERAL RECKORD BACKS TRADE SHOW
WILL Make One Of Armories Available For Big Exhibition
Formal plans to develop the state wide business and industrial exhibition, to be held hear next March, were perfected at a meeting which was the project in charge, Tuesday evening at the Shapo Street Community House.
Announcement was made at this meeting that Gen. Milton A. Record, in charge of the armories of the city, heartily endorsed the movement and has given assurance that he will make one of the armories available. A plan to finance the initial expense of the project was outlined and the following heads of departments named: Industrial Exhibit R., Business Exhibit R., George Berry, Artis Products, T. I. Calloway, Arts and Inventions, Argeorgiana Fields, Mr. Harry M. T. Pratt, Artis and Inventions, Pratt, who is general chairman of the Executive Committee, will name a head for the School Exhibits, and will be conducted by William J. of the AFRO-AMERICAN staff.
A general program committee in-
terested in the development of a
Music Moss, George Berry and other-